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Page Four DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, SATURDAY. J GREEN MEETS TO PLAN OUTLAWING OF © OFFICIALS CLASS STRUGGLE UNIONS ; A. F. L. Leaders Recognition Thru in Enforeing WASHINGTON, D. ¢ Will Recovery Bill” 3etra Government to Aid yal Policies Demand . June 2.—A meeting of the officials of the national unions affiliated to the American Federation of Labor has been called by William Green on June 6 in Washington. “secure the benefits and rights” At the same time Green has announced that a for the purpose of making plans to the National Recovery Bill. campaign will dertaken ganize-the unorgan The “benefits and rig the workers v ain und are the outlawing of militant nize and strike ernment L. :amder will the to pursue Dolicy of even minati ions. needle t ng the ALLISON MINE STRIKE WO BROWNSVILL PITTSBURGH, Pa. Western successful termination of strikes here. June was declared last week enced in victory. for Payment for dead work “The sixth strike to take pla daygwhen 300 coz mine of the Val out..on-strike. The sult.of the en: National Mine fromt- st Isabelle, commit He v pte an Ex: MICHEL, fam and Mex! MOONLIGHT Avenue St z, admission 10c. m In case of rain ‘Indoors. Auspices, Midtown section ILD. 8 p. ‘Tremont Workers Club, spect Aves. Admission 15c BANQUET AND CONCERT DANCE. spect Worker: 5 Headquarters of emont and Pro- Pro: Pro- Good Food, ‘(Brooklyn ) d Charlie Cha: ican Youth Club, 407 Rock- away Ave. (Pitkin) 3 p.m. Auspices Young Pioneers Sect. 8. Admission, Children 5c parents 15c. (Long Island) MRT AND DANCE, opening of “we irs Center,” 58 South St. Glen Cc Good’ tite ahead. ‘Depression. Admission —free, Sunday DANCE SPARTAKIADE, of Workers League. New School for Social 6 W. 12th St, Red Dancers, Rebel Dancers, Nature Priends w Dance Group, Artef dancers, Needle des IWO and’ solo Tiekets on sai 400. OPEN FORUM PSU.~ What the Soviet Union m: pressed Negro People. 8 p. m free. .Speaker—Steve Kingston. MATINEE DANCE, Ozzie Powell Br. 2493 7th Ave. Music by Ped Devil band. Admission 35c. Come on and step on tt! BEACH PARTY and Performances by Workers Laboratory Theatre on Brighton Beach'and E. 6th St. Meet 10 2. m. Look for banner DISGUSSION ON CURRENT Touts Fngdanl Workers Club, 3002 Hull Ave cor. 204th St., Bronx. ILD. HOGEE PARTY UNIT 4 Sect. 15. Social Entertainme: Ad- mission: 10c. Sec- ton G43. 7 OPEN’ FORUM, Cubs, KB Gree, Flatbush Brooklyn. ND BANQUET Women's Coun- 20 Shakespeare Ave. 7:30 p. m. | 25 surprise | 1207 Kings Highway CONCERT oil No. 46, Admi*-tom ahead! RED 25e. Good time and big SUNDAY heit for Daily Worker and| All members come and | press, 9:30 p. m. Prospect 1187 So. Blyd., Bronx. EXCURSION of Prospect Werkers Center, June 11th to Hook Moun- Mickat advance 65 Pler 85c At City Club Com. 108 E. 14th 8t. t Workers Center, 1157 So, Bivd. and Bronx. Pier, 11 East y or Whitehall St. 8:15, PROTEST MEETING on Weidemoon od Teverra org. of UC. All arrested work- era will peal. Admission free. Ausnices Bore Pest: Fli- Mo~ Br. ILD and Boro Park Unemployed Connell, HIKES DAILY WORKER. Choris Hike to 34 mend. 19 8 t stop of Pelham with ws, rein or NT Wor lub meet Tre- Y 0 a.m. Last "ee rerybody invited. 2.—The striki Pennsylvania coal fields is growing as in Brownsyille, Pa. district ocurred yester- , —|the worl » | Legion. | “Murders jounced to be under The meeting is ar SIXTH E STRIKE BEGINS committee sentiment taroughout the the miners learn of the The strike at the Allison mine which The miners won their demand with the union and vo Senate Maneuver On Veterans Cuts TON, Ju 2 The voted to suspend the der the Trammell to the Independent Of- Bill. limiting the vet- s to 15 per cent whic ptable to the sailed the as meaning the Econot amendment, ho’ ger sweeping thi recent R: of the country and File conven- veterans | here th dramatically the de- the vets, and this action direct result in forcing the and republican politicians nsider” the drastic cuts plan- The demands of the rank and vets, as adopted at the conven- are: Immediate cash payment of the tion 1) adjusted service certificates, cal- led the bonus. | 2) Postponement of the enforce- | strike of th “The trolle York ba city is br erry, W the jobless are draining the city treasury.” What about that? Is it true? Has New York City really no money to pay rents for the job less and feed t € the truth a2bout uncmployment and who pays for it in th Worker's new cc —Moctropelis of F Wednesd June 7. walkout of the orkers in the help's Laundry ‘The manager’: or their di in the we worker: Union pr uni At tod received by; 's strike meeting word was the strike committee from rs of the different depart+ ments that they too are preparing to present their dem: inst the ble cor to the nd declare if the man- t their de- walk out on € { the strike meetin; mittee of 1 ers com= d four sub ¢ ittees to re the successful termination of} the strike The committees elected were: Pic-| keting; Finance; Publicity; and Law.| OPEN BU RKERS Workers will f thei ew Build- ing Workers Center at 37 E. 13st St. tonight. ers in the senate | A program of entertainment has result of the wave of|been arranged by the Workers In- ternational Relief and the Women’s Council has agreed to supply all the food and refreshments for the oc- casion. ment of the Economy Bill until the next session of Congress and publication by the veterans’ bu- reau of the details of veteran cuts, amounts, number of vet- erans and dependents who will be effected. 3) Immediate remedial the unemployed ers relief for and the farm- MINNEAPOLIS, TOLEDO, MANY OTHER CITIES HOLD YOUTH DAY MEETINGS In St. Louis Nut Pic kers Who Won Strike March Under Banner of Food Workers Union 1500 IN MINNEAPOLIS MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., June 2.— Fifteen hundred workers were at the National Youth Day demonstration at Bridge Square, voicing their sup- port against the imperialist war pre- parations. Following the meeting 500 participated in the parade. Many members of the Young Peoples So- cialist League participated. A day before a prelminary meeting was held in St. Paul. This mecting is marked by the number of Ne- gro and Filipino youth who attended. SCHOOL PRINCIPAL ORDERS ATTACK, FAILS TOLEDO, O., June 2—A National Youth Day demonstration was held here with 800 young and adult work- ers attending. The head of the Wood- ward High School told the students to break up the meeting He prom- ised them support from the American But these plans failed mis- erably 1,000 PARADE IN ST. LOUIS YOUTH DAY ST. LOUIS, Mo., June 2.—Over a thousand workers aded down town on National Youth Day. The work- ers who have returned to the nut picking factories after winning the strike were in the march with a huge | | | banner of the Food Workers Indus-| trial Union. W ed 14th and O! Carr held. The Socialist clubs Park where a mass meetii demonstration. ing. TOM MOONEY STREET RUN ON YOUTH DAY VIRGINIA, Minn., June 2.—The proceeded to who endorsed National Youth Day failed to join the A member of the|her scheduled talk, attracting an au- Young Peoples Socialist League, how-, dience of 150 students, whose inter- ever, who was active in the recent| est in her account was so great t! nut pickers strike spoke at the meet- | they s Loeetie | National Youth meeting was attended by 600. main street, Twelve runners participated in a Tom Mooney run through the EORG E st! ALKER | DEPORTED TODAY Omaha C. P. Organizer Joined . Family NEW YORK.—George Stalker, sec- tion orga of the Communist P; in Omaha, is being deported nd on the S.S. ‘Cale- nin th® we worked at ions in di will hildrén- a HENRY FORD. WEIDEMANN FOES’ TRIAL ON MONDAY A number of work- om the 14 brutally and then arrested at the an- demonstration Mey 25 when children of “S¥hém oldest 16, were all the no pro’ for his ing Wiedeman, Nazi envor will tell thei experienc test meeting tomorrow up_ ef stheir | day, 8 pm. at 4109-13 Avenus, Boro the ‘eft, Met- | Perk, Brooklyn. In Court Monday Ten of the anti-fascist fighters and the unemployed o vera will be tried this Monday, raise-avtund of sige ef the night, after 4t=yRs im- le when no time jrBSaeft to | 9am. at 4th Avenue 43rd St., Brook- the Mrg..=Stalker | lyn. pe giverrher by The arrest of Lavera, like the ar- consulate reeon@et two | rest of Gonshak and Tabeck, ers, is in line § of the police to depr' jobless of leadership. Workers are n as British ssttbJects. The obvious purpose of thistyvas to nt the children ever, returning Unemployed sleeping on only bed capitalism supplies them—the hard stones of the New York Public Library, 5th Avenue and 42nd Street. When they ae Ria, they are invited inside to the books. LL WASHINGTON U. STUDENTS RACE EXPULSION AFTER MINE STRIKE TALK Had Been Ordered | to Call Speech of Mrs. Jessie Wakefield SEATTLE.—Because they allowed Mrs. Jessie Wakefield to speak on her experiences in the 1931, Kentucky miners’ strike after President Win- kenwerder’s ultimatum the day before forbidding her appearance, eleven | leading members of the Thursday Noon Club at the University of Wash- ington have been summoned to appear before the faculty discipline com- | mittee, headed by Prof. R. W. Jones@- of the journalism department. They | had rung. She described | her : stay in face expulsion from the univérsity, | Kentucky, the starvation of the min- | ers and their children, the line-up Withuhn, ene ae are vernon of coal-operator and gun-thug gov- Emerson’ Daggett, vice president: | ment. She told of the dynamiting George Fahey, chalrmai of the |P7 obeTator-thugs of the miners’ re- speakers’ committee; Hu” Blonk, lief kitchen, of the dynamiting of her auto and her subsequent six chairman of the executive commit. weeks in jail. tee, and the following members of apr r the executive committee: _ Miner | , Student opinion on the campus is Baker, Martin Jorns, John“ Clyde, decidedly sympathetic to the students who face disciplinary action. The | student newspaper, “The University of Washington Daily” in an. editorial which appeared on May 26, states Mervin Cole, Lawrence Kay, Seldon Menefee and Duane Robinson. The Thursday Noon Club .pravides a forum every Thursday wheré cur- rent social, economic events are dis- cussed invited lecturers, “ith par- ticipagion of the students.. « Mrs. Wakefield, a former: student at this university, went through with play for spproval “from the downtown | press’, to avert “ill will in Olympia | ations are sought.” The decision of the disciplinary committee has not been announced as yet, case of expulsion there is a strong possibility of a general student aa | ed after the 1 speed bell SPORTS ST AGE AND SCREEN Mooney Endorses Soccer Meets “Murders in the Page Tee | The Jefferson Theatre| Two features are on the screen program at the Jefferson Theatre; 14th St. and 3rd Ave. for three days) beginning Saturday. They include, | in the Zoo” with Lionel] Atwell and Fay Wray, and “Hello| | Sister” with James Dunn and Zasu| Pitts, Beginning Wednesday, the | double feature program will include Gloria Swanson in “Perfect Under- | | standing” and “Humanity” with! | Ralph Morgan and Boots Mallory. | Workers’ Dance Spartakiad Sunday Nite at New School Among the groups participating In the Dance Spartakiade this Sunday | night at the New School. 66 FE. 12th) St., will be the Rebel Arts Dance | Group, a Socialist group. Also Lillian Shapero who directed the dances for, the Artef production, the Steppe in Flames, will appear as a soloist. Another feature will be at I. W. O. Children’s Group which will perform two numbers, Among the judges are Dorsha and! Sophia Delza, both well known Amer- joan dancers who have led forums for the Workers Dance League, ' In “Return of Nathan Becker”, ale One of the stars In the first Jewish Talkie (English titles) be- at the Acme TI ing shown atre now Opening Tomorrow in N. Y. Union for the “Tom Mooney ‘Drophy” in New York for the eastern champ- on May 28. Mooney Hails Tournament pine Quentin to the Labor se Un- ion, 813 Broadway, Tom. Meoney hailed the tournament, and sald: “It goes without caying that I am tremendously interested in the workers’ spor's movement and will be glad to do anything to further its development and to encourare workers sport activities. I heartily the fans a treat. ican Workers. The following teams will cess of the National Soccer Tourna- ment—TOM MOONEY.” ‘Twenty-two teams from New York Q vicinity have entered the com- | petition and are ready fo compete for the coveted Mooney Troptiy. The opening gun will be fired at Crotona Park, Jefferson Fields and Recreation Park. The players will | have the slogan of “Free Tom Moo- |alian-Americans at 3 p.m. jcoming Spartakiade games. in 1934, | How To Reach Fields Directions to fields are: Park: Take Lexington Ave. Subway, between Velay A. ©, and Red Spark nd team will start at 1 pm. In mission to both flelds is free, > Thousands Cheer Off Kentucky i: that the administration is making a | when the next University appropri- | but observers state that in| The first round of the Soccer Cup Caimpetitton of the Labor Sports ionship will start Sunday, Jume 4. The western teams have already started the second encounter, which is the} main game, the strengthened Torino eleven will meet Crotona, a crack eleven consisting of the best players |n the Bronx. This game should give At 5 pm. the In- jdependent A. C. will meet the Mex- | play at| Jefferson Field, Brooklyn: 1 p. m, Co.! bight dy lonial A. C. (a Negro team) ys. Mo- | endorse the idea of a Tom Mooney |nobi A. C.; 3 pm. Fichte IL vs. | Brighton Beach Trophy. Spartacus 2nd; 5 p. m. Union de | With best wishes for the suc- | Chile vs. Deportivo Espanol. At Rec- reation Park, Juyentus will meet It- The soccer cup competition is also | the preliminary rehearsals for the | Crotone. ney” pinned on th 7? Faber, ee Plata |get off at 174th St. Jefferson Field: | tea, Candy, Cigarettes, Smocks, Toys WELCOME AT At Cro‘ona Park the first game) T#te New Lots Train and get off | Shawls Nevelttes. Woodearving, Hoffman's Cafeteria af Pennsylvania Ave., Brooklyn. Ad- UNE 3, 19%e Ford Threatens to Repeat “Bloody Monday” at Hunger March, June 5 Might “Result As March 7, 1932”, Says Ford Letter; Workers Unite to Stop Attack, Demand Relief Paid Out of Auto Magnate’s Millions DETROIT, Mich, June ? following let! Ford Hunger March on June 5th. March where they murdered four workers. The letter follows: tephan D. Butts, head of Dearborn, which is controled by Ford, sent the to over fifty organizations which had sent protests against the denial for a permit for the They want to reprat the bloody attack of the previows Ford Hunger “Knowing that under present welfare set-up, using ‘all R. F. C. funds, there is no acute suffering among the people, and in view of desperate efforts being made by our president to get the nation back on the road to recovery we feel that the so-called “hunger strike to the Ford Motor Company” is nothing but an attempt on part of Communistic controlled organizations officials of our city and state. We therefore denied the request for parade to break up any attempt. to embarrass Ford Company, and and haye ordered chief Brooks We trust that any defiance on your part will not result as disasterously as the attempt to march on the Ford Motor Company on March 7, 1932 and suggest that you urge so-called hunger marchers to abide by our law.” Butts, secretary.” Ifarch preparations continue It is signed “Dearborn Commission of Safety and Welfare, Stephan D. Leaders Spurn Marine Union Unity Call NEW YORK. — Without any sponse from the leadership of of the inyited organizations, the Con- Booed at Meet on foams for eniet acon ot men! © Harlem Hospital | unemployment. ins! and relief, ot will go ahead tomorrow as planned. Ma members of the different or- ee r k ers in Uproar nizations otified the Marine ¢ © [sensations tave zouted te Miwne/ Against Attack on Patterson of ILD will come to participate in the meet-| ing. The Conference starts 11 a. m. SS oa at 140 Broad St. NEW YORK.—An uproar of boos | and hisses broke out at Thursday’s meeting at Mother Zion Church when the Committee on Conditions at Har- lein Hospital attempted to present a united front with the Harlem Tam- | many politicians. James Middleton, a@ politician from the Harlem Com- munity Council was booed to his seat | NEW YORK—Five hundred work-| after he called William Patterson a ers, striking members of the Bakery | “quitter” in the fight against the hos- | Workers Union Local 505, and sup- | pital. porting: workers, ‘paraded through the | Patterson, who is National Secre- lower east side yesterday. tary of the International Labor De- Led by an A. F. of L. band and the | fense, had pointed out earlier in the Red Front Fighters Band, the march-/ evening that the fight against Har- Tammany Official re- any Bakery Marchers. ers robil!2 t 66 Allen St. in front | lem Hospital will help the Scotts- | of the union headquarters. Th oro Boys; that mass pressure and| Bakery Women's Council No. 1, a/ not politicians will save the lives of council affiliated to the United Coun-| patients in the hospital. He said to cils of Working Class Women, and] the 350 Negro and white workers rs’ wives exclusive- | | present, that Negroes are deprived of | headed the march with the strike|rights in the very section of New| York where they are a majority. “We Thousands of workers on the side-|haye got to fight against Negro op-| lines cheered the marchers, all along) pression on all fronts,” he said. ie route. Militant banners were carried. Some of them read | support of the labor movement is) more powerful than the bread trust which wants to destroy our unions.” —‘The Communist Party supports the | | stri ing bakery workers” — “Mayor | | O'Brien, why don’t you use the police against the gangsters instead of the striking bakers?—, etc. The Mi 'y locked out sev- | eral hundred workers Thursday and | | they marched carrying a huge sign - | “The lockout will not weaken us in When Assemblyman Dayid Paris} who followed Patterson said that “the administration at City Hall don’t know about conditions in Harlem} Hospital,” shouts of “they don’t know | we're starving,” “they give us police | | clubs,” “they find out after you're | |dead,” arose from the indignant workers all over the hall. | Rev. A. C. Powell, Jr., opened the meeting held in Mother Zion Church by reading the resolutions on the hos- pital that had been presented to the | Board of Estimate several weeks ago. our sb le, but will give us more courage to carry on our fight for|One of the resolutions, that the im-} | union conditions. | portant position of superintendent be} Communis; Party, section 1,;made appointive was attacked by| | which is in the united front com-| Patterson as playing into the hands | mittee supporting the strikers, spread| of the politicians. Several doctors | thousands of leafiets announcing a| spoke about the vicious conditions in| neeting on the “Communist Position | the hospital. in the Bakers’ Strike and Report of| the Strike Committee.” The meeting | will be held at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 FE. 4th Si.. June 7th at 8 P. M. Furniture Union Leads ‘Two Strike Struggles OPEN L. I. WORKERS CENTER | GLEN CO'VE, L, I1—The workers here will celebrate the opening of \ their center tonight at 58 South St. | The report of the Scottsboro De- | fense Committee will be given besides a dance. MIMEOGRAPHS $15 wm | NEW YORK.—Two major struggles | ——— | are taking place under the leadership of the Reed and Willow section of/ |the Furniture Workers Industrial Union against the Modern Reed and | Rattan Co. 135th St. and Willow | Ave. and the Imperial Reed and R: DUPLICATE He eraettar aia: |tan Furniture Co. Grand and La-| MEO PEPER ote Rios Grang2 Sis., Brooklyn. UNION SQ. MIMEO SUPPLY The demands are: wage increases 108 East ith Street, Room 203 of 30 to 60%, 44 hour week instead) Algonquin 4-4763 a i | PURNISHED ROOM—Light, summy. AM im- of 60-70 hours as at present, recogni- | ts. Re ble. Padwa, 212 E. tion of the union and shop commit-| fins Ny tees, ousting of the scabs. The strike is three weeks old and all workers in the vicinity are asked to aid in the picket line. Many organizations have | failed to help the strike as they pro- | ting star‘s at 7 a.m 28 BASS UTH STREET i NEW YORK Vel. 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Wills Ave.) BROOKLYN \ For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE {VORKERS—EAT AT THE ~ Parkway Cafeteria 16388 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, W. ¥. pam. acres Leinenerne ie a8 GARMENT DISTRICT Garment Section Workers Patronixe Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Spend Sunday, July 30th WITH THE DAILY WORKER — Organizations and Workers Keep This Date Open Would You Like to Go to the Soviet Union? Would You Like to Go to a Workers’ Camp This Summer? OPEN DAY AND NIGHT —ene aes