The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 17, 1932, Page 2

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» the anti-imperialist Tammany Politicians Cut “Relief” Funds in Half Promises to Give Starving Work kers Jobs on Eighth Ave. Subway a Pipe Dream NEW YORK.—The Board of E: im half the $2,000,000 for “work and mem by the Emergency Work and Relief Administration, committee. Pleading “scarcity 800 ILLINOIS VETS SELECT of city OWN LEADERS Fight Against Policy of Reactionaries (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)| soeialist, ar- His pleas for man Thomas, rived here las the vets to give received cooly went to the troubl him. ‘The mud besmeered, tattered and lean-faced bonus army, 18,000 vet- érans of an imperialist war, workers | thtown on the scrap heap by rotting Capitalism. stood ¢: and deter- fined today to carry on their stru gle against starvation déspite th: of the police and gove nent offi t@ oust them by means of force and violence ‘Yes, the bonus bill has passed House and it mighi pass the Sena but Mr. Hoover has threatened veto it and Congress pledges to hold the veto. up- Bosses’ Agents Lesinz Out. program offered present commander hobn the his da: funds,” i | Many imate, meeting yesterday, cut down considered a bare mini- Tammany’s own home relief” the Tammany grafters said that $1,000,000 would be available. This meant that those “home relief’ have been closed since probably remain closed The three-day-a week d labor” in parks and public j buildings has also beén cut down | considerably Promises that thousands of work- jets would get jobs with the opening of the Eighth Avenue subway has also turned out to be a pipe dredm |to thousands of starving workers. | Tw ve thousand jobs were Promised, and when applications be- |gan to be received yesterday it was j found that only 1,400 jobs were avail- heres with only 200 unskilled workers | required woul itely highly skilled work- earned $50-$60 week meet at the Hungarian 380% Aist Bt. at 8:3 p.m. oC ate: | The United Council of Working Class! a class in st meeting will public be held 13th St asked to send ee 4 will diseuss the “Commu- in the Election C Arthur Ave, Bronx, at ean orgeniza- orkers’ Wives Should d Council of Working Clase 51 Leggett Ave, Department of of individual program of ind: | Comrade wi illiam Simon, National Seere- sitting and waitin’ tary of Anti-Imperialist League. will ae its > with the | sneak te ation Breathe ive) Waaie repidl : © 538 Madison Ave., at 8:30 p.m, Sub- masses of worker vets i What Is Going On In Chile.” The | Workers Ex-Servicemen’s| 4 regular meeting of the Bronx Ieor Leamue, Its members working in face | Youth Branch will be held at 2075 Clinton ve, Bronx, 3 of the utmost terror and persecution. | en ee eee ee is bringine the real working cl: tenes Amrican Workers’ Delegation to the a A to the vet. | Soviet Union will report at the N.Y. m cf mass action to the vet-|trbac League Bldg., 202 W. 136th St, s in Anmecestia and throughout | 8:30 p.m., under the auspices of the Wetkindten This is being ternational Branch of the F.8.U. disoused in the muddv. en camps today with than ever before. ‘Why sit here till 1945? Why be reimented amd bossed by police of- ficers? What crime have we com- Mitted to be spied upon by stool) pigeons end Department of Justice agents? These questions are upper- most in the mind of every honest worker veteran. W. E. S. L. Statement. “A mass denenancs at the White House, an élected rank and file committee to present the de- férvor more mands of the marchers to the pres- | idemt—this is the way we must carry on our fight,” said a statement of} thé Workers ExServicemen’s League today, “We must demand that the House #md Senate remain in session while. the president is making his decision | tnd pass the bill over his veto.” The “High Commend,” led by Waters and other police agents, is betraying the veterans. This fact is kecoming plainer to the vets every- day. It is the masses of factory workers, the unemployed, who are| supporting the bonus fight. Waters’ séttarian policy of urging the vets Mot to link their struggle with the unemployed is fast losing popularity | Anti-Imperialists Call for Building of Factory Committees NEW YORK.—The Anti- Tmparisl=| ist League of the United States, in 2 Tepert to its branches, and member organizations states “We call for the int war campaign. ‘The number of participants is so far | téo small. While the demonstration (Bditor’s note—The June 4 demon- stration of 5,000 before the Japanes consulate in New York.) was an en- thusiastic one, yet there was not the mecessgry militancy The June 4 demonstration must be continued ‘The slogans of the demonstration, | ‘Stop Munitions to Japan’, and ‘Drive the Japenese imperialist agents out of the United States’, ylarized. Every member of Sthe affil- dated organizations should see that jan Anti-war Committee is estab- fished in the factory where he or she Works, and should get in touch with ~ us (799 Broadway, Room 536) at once gbout building these commit- tees.” Says Unemployment Will Doom Capitalism cation of | should be pop- | A member of thé aey dit delegation to Soviet Union will réport, under the pices of Co-op No, 1 Branch. of, the U the auditerium of 2700 Bronx rk East at 8 p.m. F. P; s. ar] ate Comrade Mac Weiss will 5 Role of the Press in the Class Struggle” he new < Workers’ Club, 353 Beekman Ave, at 8:30 p.m, ek on “The The Concourse Werkiry’ Cleb will Hold jan open-air meeting at 170th St. and Wal- ton Ave., Bronx, at 8 p.m. | Comrade Harry Wicks will speak at the open forum of the Irish Workers’ Club, 2072 Fifth Ave..-near 128th St., at 8 p.m. on Working Class and ihe Coming ElecWons,”” | eo ee Council No, 14 will have a lecture at 1 | Puiton Ave. Breoklyn, at 8 p.m. Council No. 85 will have a lecture on the ‘Second Five Year Plan” at 109-26 Union Hall St. Jamaica. Comrade Lena Davis will speak. 10 will have a lecture on the ‘War and Revolution in the at 2072 Bath Ave., Brooklyn, at Comrade Doonping will speak Council No. {question of Fer East 8 pm The Harlem Section Committee of the | Communist Party has arranged a farewell | party to Comrade Joe Kill at th roof gar- [den of the Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th St., Jat 8 pm, | _A meeting of the Unemployed Councils of | Greater New York will be held at § B. 19th | St. at 7 pm. All councils, workers’ organ- tions end unions must send their Hunger Fighter agents to this meeting, | The Steve Ketovis Brarich of the LLD. will have a meeting at 257 E. Tenth §t jat 8 pam, meetiric of ex-servicemen will be held \at the Bright Bach Workers’ Center, 3159 |Coney Island Ave. at 8 p.m. All veterans jare urged to attend this meeting A SATURDAY The Harlem Progressive Youth Club wi]! ee a Chinese lantern dance and enter- tainment at 1588 Madison Ave., 2nd floor A concert and dance for the benefit of will be held at Laure! Gar- 16th St The Waterfront Seetion of the Communist Party wi! ir at the Werkers Club, 122 St at 8 p.m. Admis- sion ts 28. cents. | A Moonlight Sail has been arranged by |the Workérs’ School aboard the 5. 5. Os- leaving from Pier 11, Best River, t 7 pm. Tickets are School office, 35 E. 12th , and the Workers’ Bookshop, 38 E. 12th The Alfred Leavy Branch, f. L.. D., 2 party at 824 Vermont St., will Brooklyn, pm Siva abet) UU avel dey dvd — = 1,200 Taxi Drivers to Lose Johs; 5,000 Cabs Taken Off on July 1 YORK NEW — Twelve hundred taxi drivers will be fired July 1. On that date the large taxi companies ere withdrawing 5,000 cabs, in the at- tempt to make a little more profit This decision is in line with the proposals of the Taxi Control Board appointed by Mayor Walker, at the Request of Raskob, Democratic Par- ty chieftan and official of the Gen- eral Motors Corporation, which con- trols the biggest cab company here the Terminal Cab Co. There are’ 80,000 cab drivers in New| York, of which only 20,000 have steady jobs. The other 60,000 work full time for ‘part time pay, that is, they have to report every day, but only actually take out a cab two or three days earnings of cab drivers in New York are about $8 for a six-day week day shift, and $12 to $15 for six days night shoft. All taxi drivers are urged to get in touch with the Taxi Workers Indus- trial Union, 5 East 19th St. PUSH U.S.-BRITISH ANTAGONISMS |MeDonald to Propose Debts Cancellation At Lausanne LAUSANNE, June 16—In an ef- fort to set up an European bloc against the United States, Prime Minister MacDonald will propose a complete cancellation of the German reparations and of the war obliga- tions to the British government at theopening of the Luasanne Confer- ence, it was confirmed here in offi- cial and semi-official circles. The proposal would try to lay the basis for canceling the war obliga- tions to the United States, which, however, the American government is not willing to forfeit. : Holds Out for Moratorium. Herriot, the French Premier, fa- vors “in principle” the move of Prime Minister MacDonald, but still holds out for a moratorium on reparations for the time being. ‘It is said here that Herriot could not take a dif- ferent atitude without arousing the opposition of French “public opin- ion,” that is, the French bosses. The fact that Herriot’s attitude ap- proximates that of Secretary Stim- son underlines the contradiction ex- isting within the Franco-British “entente,” which MacDonald sought to strengthen in his week-end parley with Premier Herriot. Von .Papen, it is said, will declare at the opening of the Conference that reparations cannot be paid. His at- titude will be flexible, however, on the question of cancellation. It is taken for granted that he will ac- cept a moratorium, unless Herriot, in exchange for some tangible conces- sion strengthening the anti-Soviet coalition and enhancing France's leading part in the coalition, will come near the position of MacDon- ald, clearly against the United States, Solidarity Issue of “Workers’ Life” Out The June issue (“Solidarity num- ber”) of “Workers Life” is now out. It has become the official organ of the Workers International Relief. The issue includes a leading article cn International Solidarity Day, a feature article on W.LR. Children’s Feeding Center in New York, news items from WIR branches all over the U. S., an article on the coal and beet strikes by Wagenknecht, a play “Block-Ade,” movie topics and re- views, an anti-war song, poetry, workers’ correspondence, an article on building workers’ théatres, etc. Thousands of Chicago Police Live on Graft from “Speakeasies” BALTIMORE, June 16.—Between 12,000 and 15,000 Chicago policemen live on graft from speakeasies, ac- cording to Frank R. Kent, writting from Chicago to the “Baltimore Sun.” Although the wages of the uni- formed sluggers of workers are said to be $45 a week, at least 6,000 have received no pay since March, ac- cording to Kent. a wee The average) will | | textile bosses’ NAT'L TEXTILE UNION TO HOLD ITS CONVENTION To ! Build ‘Close: Knit | Organization, Based Directly on Mills | PROVIDENCE, R. I., June 16—| The Third National Convention of the National Textile Workers Union | will be held on July 2, 3, and 4 in | Boston, It is the first national con- j vention of the union in two and a j half years. Knit NTWU Into Strong Union The United Textile Workers Union | ‘AF.L.) has been willing to organize ithe textile workers only where there | existed a good chance for a sellout.) To check the vicious introduction of | speed-up. waze cuts, (such as the re-| cent wave cuts in Lawrence as high | as 25 per cent), to successfully lead | the tertile workers in struggle against | unemployment and starvation, it is} | wecessary to knit the National Textils | \ | Workers Unton into a strong, closely | bound organization nationally. The National Convention of the N.T.W.U. will bring together the best forces in the union; it will check up on the weaknesses and mistakes and plan how to use the united strength of the ion against the es’ attacks. ‘She weakness of the union makes it all the more necéssary to hold the convén- tion at this time. to consolidate the | union, to exchange and study the ex- | |periences of strikes and other strug- | gles. Delegates from Mills. | The delegates are being elected on a mill basis. Delegates will be elected by members and from among mem- bers of a given mill. The represen- | tation will be: one delegate from) every local or group of members and one additional delegate for each 25 members or major fraction thereof | Opposition groups under leadership will be represented on the | same basis. Textile workers, not members of the union, may elect del- egates on the above basis who will be seated as observers, with voice but | without vote. Fraternal delegates will be sent to the convention by other alta ary unions and leagues. ‘ ‘SHOE STRIKERS ANSWER MILLER Cheer Old Leader and Hundreds Sign Reply to Injunction Plea NEW YORK.—Five hundred I. Mil- ler shoe strikers jammed the strike meeting yesterday and cheered for five minutes when. Fred Biedenkapp, leader of the 1929-1930 shoe strike came in. Biedenkapp made « stir- ring address, analyzing the reasons for the I. Miller injunction and Com- missioner Wood’s re-entry into the affairs of shoe strikers shere. “Neither the injunction nor Wood will make shoes,” said Biedenkapp. “In fact, when the Bender company in the 1929 strike filled its factory with scabs, it cost the company three quarters of a million dollars and the outfit went bankrupt. Miller will profit by this experience; he wants the injunction, hoping to terrorize and divide the strikers by it.” SignAffiidavit After Biedenkapp spoke, Attorney Taub, representing the union, read the affidavit prepared by the strikers’ committee. It tells of the wage cuts and bad conditions that started the strike, tells of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union strike lead- ership, and answers the lies of the I. Miller affidavit that his workers are satisfied and “only a few have quit.” The strike meeting voted unanim- ously to adopt this affidavit, and hundreds crowded around to sign it, in the presence of a notary public. Similar scenes took place at the Andrew Geller strikers meeting. How Capitalists Try to Keep Up Prices in Brazil SAN PAUL, Brazil—tin virtue of a governmental decree issued last au- tumn, 6,500,000 bags of coffee, each one weighing 132 pounds, were burned up during last year. LABOR UNION MEETINGS Technical Men Regular meeting of the Union of Tech- nical Men at Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave., Room 32, Friday at 6 p.m. Clothing Workers Rank and file workers of the Amalga- tated Clothing Workers call all clothing workers to a meeting Monday at noon at Irving Plaza Hall, to hear the first report to Ris union fellow workers of Sante Mira- bile, May Day delegate to the Soviet Union Ie has (just retummed. Questions will be answere! 5p Ok NEW Y Unemployment will | Dressmakers’ Defense ‘ fherease until the capitalist system| ™- Olgin lectures Friday night at Pros- collapsés completely, under the pre- sént industrial system, it was de- plared yesterday by Howard Scott, tongulting technologist, at a meeting of the uptown branch of the Amer- {ean Statistical Assdciation Like all boss economists, Scott op- fostd “the plan of the Soviet gov- tynment,” amd advocated a fancy tehéme to “equilibrate production tid consumption within the capital- (+ system.” Only the workers and “mers, 1éd by the Communist Par- | stablish a system of planned | and distribution and abol- pect, Workers’ Center, 1157 Southern Blvd., on “Proletarian Culture In the Soviet Union.” All proceeds will go to the cam- paign for release of Weissberg, Turner, Miller and Adlachi. ‘The United Front Committee gives a din- ner and dance for Weissberg, Turner, Miller and Adlacht defense all afternoon Sunday at thé Brighton, Beach Workérs’ Club, 3159 Coney Island, Brooklyn, Admission 50 cents. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 3. Emergency relief for the poor farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; ex- emption of poor farmers from taxes, and no forced collec- ent, tion of rents or debts, MAY DAY CELEBRATION IN MOSCOW SOVIET CHINESE TROOPS IN ACTION EXCLUSIVE SHOWING IN AMERICA UNCENSORED SCENES OF STARVING WORKEKS AND SCAVANGERS OF FOOD (NEVER BEFORE SHOWN) CHILE REVOLUTION (Above Films Subject to Arrival) Sensational Sov t Film YELLOW PASS A Thrilling Drama of Tzarist Russia, with a Brilliant Cast, Including ANNA STENN Also: Latest Soviet News Precolonial Indian 6: || LAUREL GARDEN—75 E, Dance. Until Dawn! BanACME THEATRE 1ith STREET & UNION SQUARE / Something New in New York! COME AND HAVE A REAL ENTERTAINMENT! VIDA OBRERA CONCERT and DANCE revolutionary workers and peasants song by CONCHA MICHEL Noted Mexican Revolutionary Singer and Writer Saturday, June 18th at 8 p.m. Mary Perez, Latin-American delegate to May Day celebration in Moscow will speak 1502,* ¥.,°°2 2 ‘Exe. Sat. & Sun. Midnite Show Sat. 116th St, Near Madison Ave. Two Orchestras! WIR Films and-Speech by Amter at Farewell SOCTALIST COPS NTWU |, | Banquet to Joe Kiss ‘ORK. — doo I pellet news reels, and speeches by I. Amter and S, Kingston will feature the farewell entertainment and dance for Comrade Joe Kiss, |seven years in Harlem Section and an outstanding leader during the last three years. The entertainment will be tonight (Friday) at 8 p.m. on the Roof Garden of the Finnish Hall, 15 West 126th St. Admission 25 c. 3,000 SINGLE JOBLESS MARCH Protest Plan to Stop Minneapolis Relief MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., June 15.— The Unemployed Council here led 3,000 single unemployed workers in a hunger march yesterday on the courthouse, to demand of the Wel- fare Board that it should neither cut them off from relief or send them to forced labor on the work farm. The courthouse was heavily guard- ed by police. But a delegation of the jobless went in and presented demands for three meals a day for unmarried jobless workers, no forced labor, and for a°$5,000,000 appropria- tion from the city for unemployed | relief. The Welfare Director refused the demands on the argument that he was powerless to grant them. The satne delegation will now ap- pear with the same demands at the Welfare Board’s next meeting. The march started yesterday morn- ing at 10 a.m. froms Bridge Square. The delegation was elected by the marchers’ themselves. City-Wide March, July 8 The Unemployed Councils, here are preparing a city wide hunger march | on July 8, to démand relief for 75,- 000 jobless. The starting point will be on Bridge Square and after a shor: meeting there which will take place | at 10 a.m. the crowd will march to the city council to demand imme- diate cash relief and to demand a ernment and the welfare board. | Bronx Workers Hear Report USSR Tonite NEW YORK.—A capacity crowd is | expected tonight in Ambassador Hall, | |172d St. and Third Ave., Bronx, to} hear three of the American dele- | gates to the Soviet Union, who have just returned, tell of their experi- ences. A brief talk will also “be made by I. Amter, district organizer of the Communist Party of New York. Jeer Park Dept. Head as He Spoils Union Sq. NEW YORK.—Heads éf the Park Department and Park Association and various employers’ organizations supervised the beginning Wednesday of further flower planting at the north end of Union Square, to make it more useless as a place for work- ers’ mass meetings. All the work is being done by emergency work em- ployes taken from other jobs instead of hiring new ones. Numbers of job- less workers jeered Park Commis- sioned Jerrick and Nathan Strauss of the Park Association when they posed for pictures with shovels in their hands. FOR, THE WATERFRONT NEW YORK.—To raise funds for a library for seamen and longshore- men, the IWO Branch 401 gives the play: “Mr. God Is Not In” at Cher- noshevsky Club, 122 Second Ave., Sat- urday, at 8 p.m., and there will also be Sfilms of the May Day demon- stration and Ford massacre. All are invited. Workers Interna- stoppage of the forced labor that is| now being practiced by the city gov- | Hold 3 West Allis Job- less for Exile WEST ALLIS, Wis., June 16—The three workers arrested Friday for taking part in a demonstration be- fore the relief station, were turned over by the West Allis police to the immigration authorities for examina- tion. This méans that two of them, Sam Valich, and “John Perkovich, face deportation to fascist Yugo Slavia, and the third, Al Smith, to Germany. This attack on the foreign born workers of West Allis is tarried out under the smooth “radical” phrases of the “left” socialist mayor, Baxter. Yesterday, when two hundred work- ers were waiting for his answer to their demands the three to be re- leased, he made believe he wanted to see them go free. Then, when his brother socialist, the County Super- visor, Buech objected. saying “the ndlicemen might be sued for false arrest,” Baxter offered to sign bond for the men. Socialist Party Sheriff. Saturday, in police court, the three were arraigned on new charges, “as- saulting an officer,” instead of “dis- orderly conduct.” The bail was set jat $125 cash apiece. They were re- ;moved to the county jail, where, un- jder the socialist sheriff, “Riot Gun” | Al Benson, they are kept on sepa- |rate floors “so they won't be able so leasily to circulate Communist pro- paganda.” Socialist Party. Especially vicious was the article in \the “socialist” Milwaukee Leader, which accused the leaders of starting a fight, and then running away. Baxter si “I am in favor of such | demonstrations—providing they are |reaceful.” In this sly way he blames jthe workers for violence. The whole attack was pre-arranged. The may-' lane demagogy was an essential part of it. It is an attempt to scare the West Allis workers.most of whom are for- eign born,’ from ‘joining the Allis Chalmers Hunger March July 26. The march will go on despite both terror and demagogy. \Police Attack Unon | Ex-Servicemen To Be Protested Tomorrow NEW YORK—A mass meeting to protest the police attack on a meet- ing last night of the Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League at 125th St. and Fifth Ave. will be held on the same jcorner Saturday night. . Five policemen with additional re- inforcements in two police cars were used to attack the workers. One of the ex-servicemen was beaten over the head and shoulders and chased into a fast-running taxi being driven by a Negro. When the cabdriver at- tempted to stop his cab and take the ex-servicemen to the hospital the cop said to him, according to the worker, “Get out of here, you black d, or you'll get yours, too.” One worker protested against this policy and was arrested and beaten by the cops on the way to the sta- tion, Many other workers were club- bed in the battle that followed the police attack. The attack was made despite the fact that a permit had previously been graated for the meeting. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 2. Against Hoover’s wage-cutting policy. Amusements LAST ee The Theatre Gulld sents REUNION IN VIENNA : A Comedy . By ROBERT B. dabei eat THEATRE, 52m: a GUILD WEST OF B'WAY Ev 8.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co §-8229 Ald Over an BIG WEEK: lay Day ™ Red Army to L pam. Men. to Fri 25¢ DIARY OF A REVOLUTIONIST. Moscow A Russian Talkie With Engtish Titles jotion " i " ase hare grantee The Evolution of a Nation! en par “The &. R. O. house appleuded and cheered rt Stalin- \ and whistled"—trene Thirer, Daily News. ee ew “Sophie Magarili gives the part of a flam- Corky Revi ing defiance that is magnificent.” Howard Barnes, Herald Tribune. Co ko} Cam EO aan PROLETARIA “The Month of June is GO TO YOUR THREE Nitgedaiget $16.50 Per Week, Including Automobiles leave daily for all cam) and 6 P.M. from 143 E, 108rd St. City Office of Camp Kinderland 198 E, You can also travel by train or boat. YOUR VACATION SHOULD BE SPENT IN A N CAMP ONLY ideal for vacation in the Proletarian Camps Every dollar spent by a worker on rest and vacation must goto the institutions of our movement PROLETARIAN CAMPS Kinderland :.: Unity ALL CAMPS HAVE UNIFORM RATES Organization and Press Tax NO COLLECTIONS at 10 A.M., Fridays and Saturdays 9 A.M. the Coop Cafeteri 800 Bronx Park E. All at low rates, For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City office: EStabrook 8-1400 and for Kinderland TOmpkins Square 6-8434 ith St, Auto Station Phone Lehigh 4-2382 TRY TO DEPORT Boss Press Admits Von Papen Is for Fascist Germany “Germany took a long step toward unconcealed Fascist dictatorship to- day,” states a dispatch to the New York Evening Post from Berlin, “when Chancellor Von Papen’s gov- ernment of Junkers and Generals an- nounced a new emergency edict lift- ing the prohibition against Adolf Hitler's storm troops, decreeing gov- ernment censorship of the press and authorizing the arrest and detention for three months without trial of all political combatants.” Soviet School Work On Exhibition Here NEW YORK, June 16.—Soviet schoolbooks and méthods are on ex- hibition at the American-Russian In- stitute, 131 E. 60th St., since yester- day. The exhibition will continue until June 30. Books used by children in the Seven Years Soviet School are shown along with samples of their actual work in the school. Cofttinue Picketing At Remington-Rand NEW YORK.—Militant picketing is being continued by the workers of the Remington-Rand Co., who have been out on strike for the last four weeks against a 35 per cent wage-cut, the fourth cut this year. Workers are warned against the scab, Abe Perlmutter, who, although he posed as a friend of the workers, sneaked into the plant to scab on the strikers. Report 50% Increase of Women Seeking Free Lodging in N.Y. NEW YORK.—An increase of 50 per cent in the number of women seeking shelter in emergency flop houses is reported by the Salvation Army through Major Florence Dean, superintendent of the organization's lodging house for women in West Twenty-second Street. School teachers and highly trained office girls compose a large number MAKE ARRESTS IN CHILEAN ARMY In Fear of Communist Agitation Several army officers were arrested yesterday by the fascist railiarigl dictatorship in Chile. A Santiago dispatch to the New York America: reports that the arrests were mad: “to stem the growing unrest caused by Communist agitation.” The of- ficers arrested are evidently petty officers who share the revolutionary: Sentiments of large sections of the rank and file of the Chilean army! The dispatch also reports a “gather-| ing movement” on the pert of some sections of the Chilean ruling class, for the recall of former President! Montero. Washington officials yesterday as- sured American capitalists that they had very little to fear from the fas. cist-militarist dictatorship. The dic-| tatorship is still masquerading as a! Socialist government however. A Washington dispatch to the New York Times reports: “In official quarters it was learned; the decision of the new government, whose spokesman so far seems to be Col. Marmaduke Grove, Defense Min- ister, to modify its early threatened swing to leftist policies has done! much to restore confidence here that some basis would be found by which the highly nationalistic program of the new regime may be reconciled to! the demands of invested foreign’ capital.” Alteration Painters Win Strike In Bronx NEW YORK.—The Podolsky Paint Shop in the Bronx has signed an! agreement with the Alteration Paint- ers Union. The men were ready to strike if the boss did not establish Sunion conditions. ‘The union is carrying on a strike in the Audubon Paint hop, Brenx. ‘The boss has sent the police around several times, and now threatSens to hire gangsters. All painters who have grievances on any job are urged to report them to the Alteration Pajnters Organiza- of the applicants, it is declared. tion Committee, 1130 Southern Blvd, uae “TIcor,” 799 Broadway, CHEAP TRAVELING! CHICAGO $15 DETROIT Sit CALIFORNIA $35 In private automobiles leaving daily Share Expense Plan OLYMPIC TRAVELA145 W. dist St. Wisconsin 7-4095 Golden's Bridge Colony CHAS. COOPER will sublet one or two rooms, Electric, telephone, running hot and cold water, shower, and bath. COMMUNICATE DAILY WORKER or ‘Telephone Katonah 692-3 CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INC. 473 Water St., corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-3476 Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persons) Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Work 35 East 12th Street —ROOMS WANTED— Rooms are needed for students of the Central Training School for six weeks beginning June 15th. Party members and sympathizers _ who can accomodate without charge oné or more students during that period, please report immediately to:— Specify whether male or female THE WORKERS SCHOOL Help in the building of a Jewish Sociatist Soviet Republic in BIRO-BIDJAN VOLUNTEER AND PARTICIPATE in the “ICOR” TAG DAYS Today, Tomorrow and Sunday June 17, 18 and 19 New York, Room 514, Telephone Stuyvesant 9-0867 Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” WATCH! AUGUST 21st DAILY WORKER PICNIC \(Pleasant Bay Park) Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season in Eastern Pennuyivenia: Rus- r. Electricity, Swimming. fish- ing, ete. Reasonable rates. cate with A. Benson, P. 0. Box tion 1, New York, N. Y. ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices Telephone Alg. 4:1199 | ped Seren On ee ate sant en Ne ERR AM EAE NE —, ee e {

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