The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 18, 1933, Page 3

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at = Marine Delegates |A.F. L. OFFicials ek, PLEAD REPEAL OF of South and West NIGHT WORK LAW Report Struggles Textile Union| Opposes Bill at wre Tell of Actions in Many Ports on 2nd Day of Hearings to Suspen Marine Union National Convention; Page Three '1,000 MOVIE MEN _ IN HOLLYWOOD | OUT ON STRIKE Tie Up Production ir Columbia Studios; Ask More Pay, a Union DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1938 Law yY WOOD, seni July 17—On * * | BOSTON, Mass. July 17.—B: nd motion-picture worker Meeting Will End Today | vote of 16 to & the useachuneisa Oke tan w am at the Co went on strike last lumbia Studios, w! Senate yesterday voted for the suspension of the night work law for women and childrer in the cotton mills with prohibited em- ployment from 6 p. m. to 6 a. m. ch had re NEW YORK.—The struggles of the seamen, longshoremen and harbor | workers against workaways, wage-cuts, imperialist war and for unemploy- | ment insurance in the Western and Southern ports of the United States were reported during the second day of the 2nd National Convention of the | se an The '60 \ Marine Workers Industrial Union at 140 Broad Street yesterday. In the midst of the convention the ¢———-——-——____._ _._... leadership of the M. W. I. U. in the| actions of the marine workers for| better conditions was strikingly illus- | trated. From the floor of the confer- spite the terror reign of the govern- ment. Manny Jackson, Negro delegate from Savannah received tremendous The bill goes to the House this week. William Green, in a tele- gram here stated that he approved the action of the Massachusetts State Federation of Labor in sup- Borting the suspension of the night work law. s, composed of cam ge hands and other tech nicians, walked out in sympathy wit) | the striking sound-men. The walk-out ties up the productio; a number of pictures alread rted, and virtually closes all activ additional era men, sta; it ence a committee was elected to visit | applause when he told of organizing 9 F. < Meceaia lcs tosip er oe the owners of the ship “City of Fair-|300 Negro longshoremen whom he BOSTON, Mass July 17—Public Reis in olyebod. of witch Chea bury,” on which Thomas Joyce, who/| represented at the conference and hearings of a bill to suspend the six co lag oa No efiesd 10 GAOatm reported at the convention, was| that he expected to find that num- o'clock law which prohibits night work | 3 ; 2 Han the genau’ siden’. ACROSS cheated of his wages. The committee | ber doubled when he got back to|for women and children were called | Photo shows some of the 10,000 striking hosiery workers who paraded ie the enteral tinino Nene went to the steamship company’s | the South. Practically all the dock | by the State Committee of Labor and | through the streets of Reading, Pa., last week, on benalf of their de- ni he Pai ‘i Ou: : Asan '#ho Pin offices, threatened to call a strike and | work in that port is done by Negro | Industries of Massachusetts last Wed- | mands for better working conditions and more pay. Ot rae be - th aes pct pe picket the lines. The seaman was | workers. ey ieee Mls dicks ak ny = : thaitted Artiste; Hal Roach.and Met Promised a settlement of the case, Other delegates reported from 4 : " : an, Plans are 1 eing Ja which the committee is determined to Norfolk pr Sarton ead, argue their cause since as a speaker | State Job Office Hir es S Ca b 8 & pear iE ont Som i poe’ — carry through, ee te ea ee nal the agree i. It woub i lone ie job as well as ie A. F. of a worke Port officials were astonished and TL, officials did it.” For five hours, | involve an 500. workers go, taken aback by the militancy of the 2,000 P. 0. SUBS TO to Break Reading Strike | Robert Watt, secretary of the State| tng ‘oub'ot etnigy be ie ans te eee | | Federation of ‘Tabor, ‘william, Batty| Be Sound men have been svecial ta was put before the convention for| P AR. ADE AG AINST of the New Bedford Textile Council | READING, Pa. suiy 17—A move suffering as a result of the complete| J Hag : gets of bos chiefly becaus further action last night | SUELWOE | and other UTW officials pleaded for | | to break the strike of the 13,000 Read- down of industry and the ‘ ‘ they were the last union to be or ‘Work 6 the 6 rida na | the suspension of the law which sends | ing workers which now embraces not| Paralysis of retail trade. Clergy- eo ganized, while the others have beer eee vue, wees renweet: See | 7 A QUT | women and children into the factories | | only the hosiery workers but workers| men, manufacturers and A. F. of L. able to force their demands afte Be en Pedro, just otitids of Los 1 wl. VE Py) is N | to toll at night. Only 45 minutes |in many other industries is under| officials are represented on the com- years of organization. These sound ee ioc hee ih wie gern ame | were granted to the representatives) | way as the State Employment office| mittee # men are highly specialized technician: that an International Longshoreman To . Present Demands of the National Textile Workers Union | opehly recruits scabs to man the Fe ho ént Association official from San Francis- co was booed off the platform by 1,000 longshoremen. for $1,000 Yearly Minimum headed by Burke, who were in oppo-| sition to the suspension bill. Textile} workers who came to voice their bit- ter protest against the return of the Victory Won by 4,000 plants on strike The Erie Penn. office of the State | Employment bureau has been hiring 26 Plants Now in Scranton Strike’ 9599 Workers Strike the talking film. One sound-workes ye. “Tat 1 oy te years in the fou a for over | silk weavers and paying the fares of| sound devariment. I’ sed to The recent Scottsboro march to night work system were given five a . | these workers to Readin: . Hl . * 1 Ses Wry ra egpeste i 7 Ss ers pading. Adver-| sor, Pa y 17.—Mass | ; 7 a good sound man and how much de Washington was used as the opening} NW YORK-—Two thousand | minutes by the state legislative con: | StrikingRadioWorkers | (ir oa Sbpeae THRARY in thao eeee oe ee UY Te Maas Against Hosiery Code |* £001 sound man and how muck 4 wedge in organizing the Negro long-| substitute postoffice employes will | mittee. t 1S bs shoremen of Baltimore, was the re- rt of a delegate from that port. | fe also said there was definite and | Seady progress being made by the M. W. I. U. parade today from Madison Square Park to City Hall as a_ protest against the 15 percent wage cut handed them by the new administra- Burke, speaking for the textile| | Workers declared that the National Textile Workers Union would carry| on @ sharp fight and would organize | |Gain More Pay, Union workers in 3 plants of the Philco local papers. by the employment office in Erie} rik spontaneously protested garment workers to about 26 plants soon be tied up in the strike. Police were called in/has spread the strike of silk and| IN PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 17.—| When a number of workers, learning|in this area, with every likelihood | After a 5-day strike, 4,000 radio| they were to be sent to break | that all the plants in the region will Highpoint, No. Car. | cents an nour, for a men who is sup- posed to be a highly skilled techni. cian.” HIGHPOINT, N. C., July 17 Eighty-five hundred workers wal tion, and to demand a $1,000 yearly | the resistance of the workers to de- = st the ate de ts “ % -a| out on strike today following a m P 2 |Radio and Television Corporation| #8@inst the state acting as scab| Attacks by police officers here . pq . 4 A telegram of greetings came in| minimum pay. ; feat the repeal of this law. Burke/-eturned to tfieir jobs today having| agents. The Unemployed Council/failed to siop the spread of the|Meeting called by the Industrial hi ANE from fishermen in Provincetown.) Led by the local division of the | showed that Batty. and Binns, A. F. won a victory. A 20 per cent in-| here is also active in warning the strike as workers in mill after mil] | Workers’ Association Radon because the funds fee ye Postotioe fapioves, tho, denioeairh: a Tier tas Nests ah Ooh toate Ge crease in wages, recognition of their | workers against going to Reading. | joined in Hosiery workers denounced the could not be raised. ‘The western coast, where American tion will start at 11 o'clock and pre- sent their demands to Mayor James ers when they railroaded through a resolution favoring suspension at a union, the American Fad Radio workers, an 8 hou tion of | he action of the State Employ- Sheriff George T. Williams has | manufacturers’ day and| ment office exposes Mrs. Pinchot’s/ arranged for a conference in which| calls for an $8 minimum wage for hosiery code which | Rese . a 5 day week, abolition of penalties , demagogic action in appgaring on the! Federal Mediator Davis, together! unskilled workers and slashes the July 16. The rN ESET chet Bal bo a as ae ae teen aa Bee 9 ocd en oe nt Stor mistakes ” and Anbointment of | Reading pidkét lines wills at thelqith the mill operators and Orville |pay of skilled wor more than preme Court upheld National Organizer of the Union re- Kiely. ; New Bedford on the ground thatisnop cdfnmittees in every, depart-|same time the state is engaged in|C. Skelton, former president of the|one half. ‘The workers are demand- iehions of 10 workers GC ported, must keep 85 per cent of their | rot ow ery eke lea} (tte Neal no Opposition after the | ment to adjust grienvances Were the | breaking the strike. |Central Labor Union here, will try |ing a 25 per cent increase in wages, di for thal ace jule on beevd in readiness for 9 ne |e a ae ie oe omm: Pati o1 he Sopa st ouncil had already made| demands gained by the workers. A| The Mayor of Reading took steps|to halt the walkouts. elimination of stretch,out, and eight | in the National Hunger March emergency, is a bee hive of activity Public Welfare Taylor, tua ot tee e decision. minimum wage scale of 45 conts| today to appoint a committee of 18| ‘The strikers indicate they will not |hours a day eof Ack ahd!” i sainoational Tanie CMe for the union. leah nedlata fst moat og an hour for men and 30 certs an|to meet to consider the strike situa-|be misled into giving up the strike | file hosiery forced the In- | | aA oe Gao pt Whole crews of Gevman ships are T° pitrcrty Se ha” inten heur for giris was estnblished | tion. This is the result of protests) in this manner, but will continue |dustrial Workers’ Association to| Which has been in Ca ad ie taken to anti-fascist meetings on! 4_ yy assoc | from the business men here who are!the fight for their demands, call the strike vase, handing the sppeal dented’ ty shore. Two papérs are issued, one in| Chinese and one in Javanese. Union | activity there, where the U. 8. fleet is concentrated and where the Uni-/ ted States Chamber of Commerce | held its convention is carried on de- Lewis, Green In Secret Parley Gather “: “Average wages of substitutes are $6 per week. This sum has been further reduced by the im- position of a 15 per cent wage | cut. Subs are forced to report regularly. They spend long hours waiting for the little work they “As a result of these conditions families of substitutes have been broken up. Recently two children of a sub died because of inade- quate medical attention. STRIKERS JAILED NEW YORK.—Five Negro women laundry strikers were arrested in the Bronx yesterday, charged with dis- orderly conduct, and held in $25 bail. The arrests are part of the attempt of the laundry bosses to crush the laundry strikes still going on at the Mott Haven and the Active laundries, \under the leadership of DETROIT STEEL /PLANTSRAISEPAY | DETROIT.—Fearing that the 1,700 workers of the Michigan Steel Corp. and the 2,500 men of the Great Lakes Leadership GODOFF, ARCONI ‘UNIONS URGED TO TO AVERT STRIKE WORKERS STRIKE FORMULATE OWN ges von ie wat ov suc Must Organize Own | STRUGGLE CODES: “Defend the Unions” |come up today in the First District | Magistrates’ Court, at Smith and the Supreme Court, asks that all of these workers return to Minneapolis at once to begin serving their sen- tences. Leader of Dry Goods Union On Trial Today LABOR UNION MEETINGS ting of cloak ah¢ the cuttérs’ elt at Memoria: Shaffron, militant leader of the Re- tail Dry Goods Clerks Union, will | aby 6:30 pm i ; FROM “These condition: yuntry - NEWARK, N. J.—Workers of thi ee we ae hivurg eee oe {CONTINUEL FROM PAGE ONE!) J iae' Tne proyerritrg Ay ri eget Workers Industrial | steel Corp. would walk out caspian aid’ Atodn! shops a s | Conference Elects | Schermerhorn Streets in Brooklyn. mat 10 eae United Mine Workers, with no oppo- sition whatsoever from the operators. ‘What was the agreement they had entered into with Lewis in Baruch’s pealed to Washington for relief many times, “In response to a letter attack- ing the economy mania which sought to balance the budget by The women, Alice Bishop, Jessie Clemens, Bella Pross, Viola Sample and Lolene Williams, will be tried today in the Bronx Magistrate’s the efforts of the leaders of the American Federation of Labor to kill, all strike sentiment, the manage- ment of these two plants, both owned | Market St. making children’s wash- | j able suits, are on strike for higher | wages and shorter hours. They em- | ploy boys and girls as young as 14 Action Committee NEW YORK—A decision to carry | ate asked to be down at the court | on a united struggle against the He will be defended by the Interna- All ted front committee, de- 8° code, and tex for com- tional Labor Defense. workers WORKERS) —Membershir JEWELRY at 9 am. sharp, because only by J 1 , Has in-| and 15 years of age, paying them $3| necting today, 6:30 p.m., at Labor Temple, home? Did the leeding industrial) unbalancing the diets of Federal | Court at 16lst Street, These strikers | Cocnea once 15 percent Tn | to 84m Weck for fo howe $5) attacks under the Roosevelt “Recov- |mass protest can this militant leader | Metting teday. 6.20 pm. at, Labor Temple magnates promise to accept the| employes, the Bureau of the Budg- | Were talking to a scab driver and he ? The Needle Trades Workers Indus-| TY” act was made at the conference | be saved from railroading to jail } will be discussed. United Mine Workers as a company union in return for Lewis’s promise to prevent strikes and not to de- mand anything more than a mini- mum rate for the miners, to be estab- et wrote that the subs ‘should consider the sacrifice you are called upon to make as your con- tribution to the return of better conditions for all’.” became abusive, forcing the women to defend themselves. {300 Silk Workers In addition, at the Michigan Steel to install electric fans and provide jeed drinking water. The wage raise restores only a plant, the company has been forced | trial Union has carried on organiza- | tional work in these shops for some | time. Asa result of this some mem- |bers of the Needle Trades Workers | Industrial Union were fired. called in defense of the trade unions last Saturday at which 995 delegates representing 500 Federation locals, independent unions, T. U. U. L. | unions, workers’ clubs and fraternal _ AMUSEMENTS —os the Dramatic Tale of a Modern Wandering Jew s |] The DAILY WORKER says:—‘Interesting film on Jewish shed by the N. I. R. A.? : A ee = jin Allentown Or; ani: small part of the sweeping wage cuts! The International Ladies Garment/| organizations were present. |] question . . . decidedly worth seeing.” ‘To the mine workers Lewis and his Over 1,000 Out in Silk | nt el Fg Ze that the workers have suffered, | Union sent in its organizers and| A unity committee of 30 represen- | ” (THE THEATRE Tepresentatives stated bo te ike PL * ALLENTOWN, Pa, July 17.—-A| Which had reduced their pay by 35/pbegan its usual dirty work, by talk- | tatives of various unions were elected || 66 ees = Wis woloaihe: in Whe. tinih, fos pte ants in Allentown) movement to organize independent| to 50 percent. Tne militant. Steel| ing to the bosses behind the backs |to help workers in vastous trades fers WANDERING | | 14th Street ana Pie there atight be SbAtges again,| ALLENTOWN Pa July 17—More| UMERS, i spreading through the silk|and Metsl Workers Tndustrial Union, lot the workers. mulate their own codes in opposition JEW) ote 1 oe age 4 hey —l mills “ef * ~ | whic! as m carrying on activity t 9 ‘ $ but all that was now needed was to| than 1,000 workers at the ‘Tremont,| ers ae Guiee Sol nape in beh, elas ery bd ad They had a fall out and could not |to the hunger codes of the bosses. | Starring BATALOY (of “Road to Life”) (English Titles) | Exe. Sat. Sun. and, sign a pledge card, reading in part: “T further pledge myself that when I am admitted to membership that I will abide by the laws and policies of that organization.” Signing up the miners with these pledge cards with- out payment of dues, the U. M. W. officials in each district went about making extravagant promises that the Jacksonville scale of $7.50 a day would be restored within a few weeks. The code as finally offered fixes a $4 and $5 a day rate for Northern miners and 5 per cent less in the Southern fields. Over the radio in some of the Tremlow and the Frederick silk Plants walked out on strike Friday night, demanding a 50 per cent in- crease in pay and an 8-hour day. Present wages average $10 a week for an 11-hour day. The strike is under the leadership of rank and file workers, which has refused the A. F. of L. officials the power to play their strikebreaking role. Beauty silk companies unanimously voted to form the Allentown Silk Workers Union led by a rank and file Action Committee. Approximately 700 workers of the Ribbon Mills in Catasqua, Allentown and surrounding towns are organiz- ing independently and have asked the rank and file action committee to cooperate. Questions and Answers on the N.I.R.A. for a 30 percent increase. With the help of the leaders of ciation of Iron, Steel and Tin Work- ers, the management has succeeded not ofily in temporarily preventing strike action, but in getting com- pany agents elected to represent the men as part of the code they have Proposed under the Industrial “Re- covery” Act. The Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union is calling a meeting of the workers in the Great Lakes Plant Saturday, July 15, at 5:30 p. the A. F. of L., Amalgamated Asso- | jagree. They then calied the work- ers’ on strike. They also called a strike at the Roselle shop. | Tt is already the fifth day of the |strike and so far only about one- |third of the workers walked out, | thus showing that they have no con- | fidence in the leadership. In Newark, out of about 400 eighty | are on strike, in Roselle out of 400 | seventy are on strike. In Roselle 60 out of the 70 that | walked out on strike are young Ne- ro workers and are very militant. Already 4 were arrested and fined $15 | each. ‘The committee will fight to have the | demands of the workers considered at the Washington hearings and at the same time organize and mobilize for strikes to force the bosses to concede these demands on the job. Endorse Cleveland Meet The conference endorsed the com- ing Cleveland Conference on August 26 and called all workers’ organiza- tions represented to send delegates to it. A resolution condemning the Socialist Party for its support of the | A. F. of L. and the bosses in the fur strike was adopted. The main resolution, embodying a | Young Russia finds new hope under Soviet regime Holidays. HEMG SE) 8 BIG SOVIET ATTRACTIONS “ISLAND OF DOOM” “MOSCOW TODAY” “FLAME OF PARIS” Coming CATADIUM coNCceRtS— | Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138 St. Hans Lange, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at §:30 PRICES: 25c, 50c, $1.00. (Circle 3) RKO Jefferson Mth St & | Now || “stRancr CASE OF Tom MOONEY”_ + RKO i2nd STREET id EDW. G. ROBINSON and MARY ASTOR CAMEOS" Sa ben ore! | Pas tac in ‘THE LITTLE GIANT * and “LIFE OF JIMMY DOLAN” with Doug. Fairbanks, Jr. and Loretta Young | mining districts, U. M. W. officials m., to organize the struggle for fur- |series of proposals on the fight | y r . So far the workers have no lead. | ty ey hn hn hin hi tn hi La th, i i are aed Thiy RAIDER 06s ey ther improvements and for real rank | ership of their own. No concrete de-|®@ainst the Recovery Act, was) They would be fined by the union and would be dealt with by the gov- ernment. In Utah, a leaflet headed “The New Deal” and signed by Nick Fontachio, a former international representative of the U. M. W., prom- ised a non-strike policy, as follows: “You can rest assured there will be no strikes nor turmoils in our work. The miners are asked to join our ‘Union and to remain at work until & Joint contract is consummated.” Certain large coal companies, how- ever, have indicated a preference for their own individual kind of a com- Question: How will this recovery bill effect the colonial countries, especially Cuba? Answer: Directly the act does not apply to the colonies, but they will feel the effects of the act through greater war preparations and a fur- ther penetration of American capi- talism into the colonial markets. It means that the smashing down of the standard of living will be used as @ lever to lower still further the Standard of living of the colonial toilers. Cuba, which is so closely linked with Wall St., will be espe- come, and hence it cannot overcome the tendency to constant overproduc- tion, which inflation is inte 4 The result will be sharper drives for world markets and war to obtain them. Question: Will you show how the industrial pri coonad act is a step towards fascism? Answer: It is attempting to crush program of lowering the standard of living, especially hitting at the revo- lutionary trade unions. The capital- and file representation for the men. Metal Strikes in N. Y. Under Militant Lead NEW YORK.—Workers of the Eastern Metal Spinning Company, 467 Greenwich Avenue, went out on strike under the joint leadership of the Steel and Metal Workers’ In- the resistance of the workers to the |.dustrial Union and the Metal Spin- ners’ Union for a 30 per cerit wage increase. All spinners, press hands, | machinists and die makers are out. | | | mands were discussed and worked out | | with the workers and no strike com- | mittee of the workers elected. Those workers who were fired from | the shop for trying to organize the| | workers are kept out of the meetings | | by the organizers of the International } union. | The Needle Trades Workers Indus- | trial Union has pledged its support! | to the strikers. It points out that] to make this a victorious strike, the) strikers should elect their own large| strike committee, representing all de-| partments and all workers. The adopted. The resolution recommends that all unions take up the following points in their codes: That the bosses and government shall be responsible for paying a minimum wage scale, and assuring a minimum income for a whole year for every worker. That minimum scales shall be decided ac- | cording to specific conditions in each trade. If the industry does not guar- antee a definite yearly income, the government shall supplentént this by paying unemployment insurance. ‘That workers earning as much as or more than the minimum wage de- | | ‘ pend YOUR Vacation in Our a Proletarian Camps NITGEDAIGET UNITY BEACON, New York WINGDALE City Phone EStabrook 8-140 ‘pany | Phone Beacon | New York ’ union and have already estab- ist state comes out more openly as a/Picketing is going on. strikers must discuss and work out| cided on shall get an increase of || _____tmP Phone Beacor a tives id rs ished “employee sebresentation™ cially kates The naval building| dictatorship of the imperialists, wip- ACA, cages. | their own demands and themselves|25 per cent in their wages. Wages ao 2 P schemes with dummy agents acting Taenhan o. . ation anova ing out many of the former pretenses! NEW YORK—On Monday morn- | resent them to the boss, instead of| shall increase with the cost of living. || Proletarian Atmosphere, Healthy Food, Warm and Cold under company direction. Among these companies are the Pittsburgh Coal Co., the Bethlehem Mines Corp., the H. GC, Frick Coke Co, and the U. S. Coal ang Coke Co. That thousands of miners are not accepting either the United Mine Workers or local company unions will pose ny in the record of recent a Philippines, Panama and Porto ico. * Question: In what way does the Recovery act counteract the extra- gpl worm due to inflation overstocking for a future price rise)? Answer: The act provides for the creation of trade associ: , Or monopolies in the form of cartels. A at democracy. Roosevelt asks for the immediat ing @ mass picket line. was organized by the Ste@ and Metal Workers Industrial Union and the Metal Spinners’ Union in front of the Key- stone Shop, 32nd Street and First Avenue. Seventy workers are out on strike for a 30 per cent wage increase, recognition of the Shop Committee and no discrimination. The workers of the Empire Sil- ver Co. stopped work for a half day Mr. Greenberg having private deal- | ings with the boss. WHAT’S ON Rogister now for the six weeks’ SUMMER TERM OF THE WORKERS’ SCHOOL, Room 501, 35 EB. 12th St, ALL BRONX ORGANIZATIONS ATTEN- TION! Meeting of the Bronx Boro Com- mittee of the Daily Worker at Tremont Special clauses should be included against discrimination against Negro workers and guaranteeing them the right to be employed at every job in the industry, with equal pay for equal work, to abolish night work, and to guarantee equal pay for equal work for women, That children under 16 shall not be employed but shall be supported Showers, Bathing, Rowing, Athletics, Sport Activities SSNs ee WEEK-END RATES : 1 Day .. $2.45 2 Days . 4.65 (ineluding tax) 2700 Bronte Park East every day at 10 nm. Friday and Saturday 10 a, .) 7p. mo-Take Lexington Avenue White Piains Road Express. Stop on Avenue. ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget . . . $2.00 Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week | (INCLUDING TAX) CARS LEAVE FOR CAMP from 1 is the grouping of various fac-| the Z a 7 at the expense of the bosses and the g P : tales in one Industry for the pus-| becomes mare “opetiy” and’ cles lars picker: “tie Meir a igre sal aC tis pm tome | government to Unity... . $3.00 FURNITURE WORKERS! }| pose of agreeing to higher prices, | linked with the benkers and exploit-|there is not a single ap inside gure 03h tdelbgate, present oe Ante SUBSCRIBE! Tuley of competition, distribution of] ers, all the legal frifls|the shop. le a jceleeate’ present at this| markets. Roosevelt and the bosses| about the rights of free speech, free | CARNIVAL Prontc—t. 1. p—postponed | DR, JULIUS LITTINSKY Re MD AG, THE FURNITURE to stem overproduction by this) assem! , ete. Every step forward | WORKER new monopoly venture—and ¢spe- cially by penetrating world markets Women in Turtle Creek Valley Plan March for, for Saturday. Committee Thursday, July 20, Special meeting of Picnic) 108 F. 14th | Original tickets good for | St. 7:30 p.m. 107 BRISTOL STREET Sun Will Shine Saturday! undermining competitors, Of course, and in the ery ive eet ’ this date. |] Bet. Pitkin and hand Aves., Brooklyn ‘ se National Publication of the {| the wish and the accomplishment are| against the workers. ‘There Js more “nereased Relief. ware wonken We esc the co-opt aang lee yiapaiglacingen A R NI V A . PI TTC Furniture Workers Industrial Union J] two different things. Even within| direct linking up directly of the re- tion of all mass organizations, clubs, Trade || Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P. e Attilinted with the tne cartels there Will be struggle, |formist trade union leaders and the “ag trrange any ‘tists on Bctaraay sop” Trade Union Unity League || f80h seeking to produce and sell more] imperiaist re De rr NEE Se aes aie Bt] Bee Tet. "Bate hao seen revered for we: | N, Y. DIST. INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE: ‘ carte from struggling. wi ; al ave Brougeey Mem voet cy || SER aha ening, mayen) ack epee the dear to rand ut | oe Flea march is being lanned|courame or ove. wowone | Lnterw'] Workers Order Pestponed to this iy, New yy e ove lucing it of state, ere by e fomen’s auxiliarie: f| FRIENDS OF DAILY WORKER ded to! ‘Tel, GRamercy 5-8966 the attempt to gain-the market, ‘The | way to prevent it is by the mapitcs| the Unemployed Councils: tran Bier Delp, IN preparation. of “July 30th Plene palphi ego Sat July 22—Pleasant Bay Park * Batter ... ........ JOE Kiss || ™ain cause for overproduction isthe/ tion of the workers for struggle port, Wilmerding and Turtlo| Gemonstration in tupport ef your Deis be | 80 FIFTH AVENUE i z Oubaprigtlen BO conte 4. pear poverty of the masses, their inability| against the slave codes, for the right | Creek to the City County Building | helping to rally workers for this gigantic 15TH FLOOR Gates Open 10 A. M. Single copics 5 cents to buy back the vast stores of. goods at a profit tothe bosses. This con- tradiction capitalism can never over- it to create their own organisations, for | in Pittsburgh. the right to strike, for the protection | Several hundred women to are eKx- affair, Report at eity office Daily, 35 ¥. | 12th St, (store), nie rag eh st All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr, C, Weissman — Original tickets good for this date. Help free class war prisoners!

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