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: PAGE TWO DAILY WORKER. . NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1938 PRESS WORKERS’ DEMAND BEFORE ALBANY HEARING Burroughs, Communist Candidate, Speaks; | Mass Delegation to Ask Hearing Today; Demand Legislature Receive Group | ALBANY, N. Y.—Mrs. Williana Burroughs, Communist Party can- | didate for Compiroller of } York City and Joseph Porper, representing | the employed Councils and affiliated organizations, appeared before the | Senate taxation and retrenchment committee hearing to present a program | for immediate jobless relief and a bill for Unemployment Insurance to pe) adopted by the state legislature. an — - The hi took place Tuesday. fore the lature, ™ that none deration unemploye the of republican, she only shifting ised in the name of x t relief from . by the Tamm tin box to the up- Still Grows State republican war chest.” | Mrs. Burro who is herself a| ALBANY, Aug. 9.—Having failed school teache led for her mil-|So far to crush the strike of the itant activity, exposed the plot dairy farmers, now entering its further teachers and other|second week, by tear gas attacks low-paid 1 service employees by | and the use of rifles and clubs, the repealing the jatory statutes in|commander of the police forces in the Civil e Law. She clearly |the strike area, Capt. Stephen Mc- indicated that the Communist Party |Grath today asked Governor Leh- was the only y that supported |man and the State Superintendent mployed and would oppose | Of Police for permission to use mia- any form of taxes on the necessities |Chine guns against the striking of life. She then indicated various |farmers. The decision on his re-| sow. from which sufficient income | quest has not yet been made public. | could be re relief, such as and bond sal and for unemployment | Meanwhile the strikers heritance tax, stock |to display the greatest determina- transfer tax, exempt |tion to win their demand of a on incomes over |minimum payment of 4 1-2 cents |per quart of milk, or 45 per cent ear ot Gand hie jof the retail selling price. ee he ee ree| It was reported today that a pro- means ae ion of scab trucks guarded by New five times since the Home Relief ry 1 s 0 : “only 26 | State police was fired upon from Pelee sien oeenes Now, “only 28) ambush. ‘Two State troopers nar. | Teported today. open,” he sized. The repre-|70WlY missed being shot, it was entative ie Unemployed Coun- | S#id. These provocative reports are for the use of machine guns. Strike Grows. The strike continues to spreading to other counties ind ;south. also urged | |by the big dairy companies, “GUNS TO BREAK N.Y. MILK STRIKE h will affect the proposal of As- - Bs ‘ \Police Chief Makes | Request as Strike | | | | continue} NEW YORK—Sixty-five workers |being spread to provide the basis | Worker sustaining fund. grow, | National Board of the Friends of the west Soviet Union, brought in a subscrip- The State Milk Board dominated | has | ing a mass meeting Friday evening, Clear Crowded Court | As Judge Postpones) |Coney Case Frame-Up| NEW YORK.—In view of the ct | that the Coney Island court was packed with supporters of four mili- | tant workers, Bessie Horn, Pauline| Horn, Lamoff and Kramer, who were tried yesterday on various framed| , because of their activities at | , Judge Hershfeld, who pre- sided at the trial, pOstponed the sen- tence until Friday, after he insisted that the court be cleared. Charges against them range from assault to disorderly conduct. An appeal is issued to all mass or-| ganizations to send telegrams of pro-| test to Judge Hershfeld in order to prevent the vicious sentencing of the workers. The International Labor} Defense, which is conducting the de-| fense, urges all friends and sympa- thizers to pack the courtroom to- morrow morning when the sentence will be given at the Coney Island} Magistrates Court at 8th St. and| Surf Ave. | VOLUNTEERS | BRING SUBS Active Drive Begun | for SixPage Paper | have signed pledges to bring in sub- | scriptions or contributions in the | czmpaign for the six and eight-page | Daily Worker, and thus qualify as ;members of the Daily Worker Vol- | unteers, The first results of the drive were| Seventeen new sub-| scriptions for the carrier routes were | brought in, and $4.20 for the Daily} | A. A. Heller, author of books on | the Soviet Union and member of the| | tion and joined the Volunteers. The Prospect Workers’ Club is call- Where 400 Soldiers Rebelled Z F RNG Sentries guard the Cabana fortress in Havana where 400 troops | rebelled as part of the general political strike aimed against Machado and the American interests he represents, Neglect Caused Drowning of | 7 Orphans, Lifeguard Says Still Hunt Bodies of 6 Children Swept Into the Ocean During Rockaway Outing NEW YORK.—"You would think,” said David Block, foreman of the lifeguards at Edgemere, yesterday, where seven orphans were drown- ed on Monday—“you would think that corzmon sense would tell pzople bringing more than 100 children to the beach that it would be wise to ask the lifeguards where the danger spots lie. If they had done that we would have told them to avoid the very section which they chose for bathing and we would have assigned extra guards to that section of the beach to help protect the children.” - ---~® It was an Orphans’ Holiday at the | beach, There were exactly 105 children in the party. And real happy they were to escape from the prison-like, fettering atmosphere of the Pride of INDICT PLANTER ; Who ¢! Porper not made any step toward granting | Aug. 18, at 1157 Southern Blvd., kowitz of union, whe! number of A Lefkowitz me opposed tion from and affiliated or- il demand a hearing slature today to press of the program pre- ion before the earings. Tele- gram; be sent to Gov. Leh- man demanding a hearing by the legi Headquarters for the delegation in Albar be: E. Levin, Hotel Car een St, Albany, N. Y. Insurance by Jobless Colorado Legislature DENVER, Colo—The Unemploy- ed Council of Denver demands thet the Special Session of the Colorado legislature now being vall- ed enact into law immediately the Unemp! mt and Social Isur- ance Bill presented by the State Hunger March last January. The Council lists 15 immediate demands which the Legislature is to enact into law. Among these are, that the impoverished farmers be exempted from all taxation; that state children’s relief stations be established; that immediate Payment of the veterans bonus be endorsed; repeal of the eviction law; and all public works jobs to be paid-in cash at trade union rates. is |p le | get the Un- | he strikers their demand. sent rates the farmers hardly |the consumers in the cities. Pa. Farmers May Join. | bating whether to send out the Na- tional Guard, the Sheriffs are dep- | utizing members of the American | Legion to beat and arrest the farm- ers. Many villages and towns are holding protest meetings against the | brutality of the deputies and police. | The supply of milk going to the big dairies has been reduced to a minimum, | From Pennsylvania comes the | news that a similar strike may soon | break out there. ee STILL DEBATING ie Enactment of | CITY SALES TAX jand Wage Cuts Grows ALBANY, Aug. —At present the | cide how each can best avoid paying for unemployment relief. The Sales | Tax program of the city administra- | tion has been met with too much opposition for its passage to be from | the legislature. Now no one knows |how the city will be able to make good its promise to the Wall Street | bankers to raise some $35,000,000 by | Dec. 11. Further cuts in relief, already cut | to the bone, and more wage cuts for | the lower brackets of city employees, | such as school teachers, etc., seem |imminent. In addition, some new taxes will certainly have to be levied, | if the bankers are to be paid. | ‘The legislature is now trying to de- cide whether to finally throw out of court the city tax program. The vote on it has not yet been taken. At the | Bronx, to form a Daily Worker Vol- their cost of production, while | proceeds of the meeting will go to the big dairies are making larger | the ~ | profits than ever at the expense of | Workers’ While Governor Lehman is de-| Daily Worker, will be one of the | Danger of More Taxes, ‘tate-and city are still trying to de- | unteer Corps in its organization. The Daily Worker. The Prospect Club has already been | shock brigading for the Daily Worker. | Sam Don, one of the editors of the | speakers at the next meeting of the | Volunteers, Friday, Aug. 18, at 8:15 p.m., at the Workers’ Center. Sam | Silverman, the worker who won a | trip to the Soviet Union at the Daily | Worker Picnic, will be given a send- off at this meeting. \Jobless Slave on | Relief Job Only to Be Gypped of Pay NEW YORK.—On the 28th of June we went to work at Camp Balfour Bear Mountains. The relief said it was an easy job, but it proved to be such hard work, that after a f Gays some of the v s left. T didn’t even ask to be paid for the work they did. We were hired by the month and when July 1 case around we asked for our pay which we worked hard enough for. From one day to an- ether the boss- stalled us off. On July 3 we told the boss, Mr. Amster, that if the money wasn’t paid by the evening of that day, we would refuse to work. The money didn’t |come and so we stayed idle. However soon enough the sheriff of the village came around arrest- ing workers on the ground that they had disturbed the peace. before time getting the money /that was coming to us. Then he ordered us to leave the premises within an hour, and it being 11 o'clock we had to |pay a dollar to sleep that night in |a hotel. | —A Worker. | Don't forget th International Labor De- | fense Excursion, “All day on the Hudson,” | on September 3rd. Be there with all your OF N.Y. EXCHANGE! TEAR GAS BOMB |Try to Paint Harvard Faddist As “Foe” of Capitalism NEW YORK, August 9. — The Harvard graduate and Boston poli- tician Songer Daniell, Jr. who planted a tear gas bomb in the New York Stock Exchange last Friday was indicted today on a charge of felonious assault. The discovery of the tear gas bomb was greeted by the capitalist press with all kinds of mysterious hints about “reds” and bomb plots to over- throw capitalism. Now that the bomb planter turns out to be an aristo- crat from the centre of J. P. Morgan’s own university, Harvard, they are very quiet abaut the supposed plots of the “reds.” But they are still trying to play Daniell up as a “fighter against capitalism.” The Communist Party has always opposed the use of individual acts of terror. The bombing of all the Stock Exchanges in the world would not lessen the power of capitalism over the workers. The Communist Party leads the working class in mass struggle against exploitation. 500 Demand Rights for Negroes in Conn. WESTPORT, Conn. — Over 500 workers attended an open air meet- ing here called by the International Labor Defense to demand the en- forcement of the Bill of Rights re- cently passed in Connecticut, which provides that all public places must serve all customers alike regardless of rece and color. State troopers charged the meet- ing after it had been in progress about 15 minutes, but workers re- friends! sisted the attack and the meeting continued. ERs As 1) Judea Home, 992 Dumont Ave,, in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn. No Adirondack or Maine’ summer camps for them—but the crowded beach of Edgemere( in the Rock- aways. But even this was fun com- pared to the semi-reformatory in which they lived . .. a recormatory even if it was called the “Pride of Judea Home.” Arriving at the ‘beach after the long subway ride from Brownsville, the children—iaughing and shouting donned their bathing suits and leaped into the water. Forty children of the 105 in the party were on a sandbar at the boach when a heavy wave swept them off ‘into deco water. Underpaid and harassed lifeguards (earning their tuition for college) leaned after the kids—but seven orphans disappeared in the swirling waters before aid could come to them. Yesterday the hunt for six of the bodies was still on. “It was an unfortunate accident,” District Attorney Charles P. Sul- livan of Queens ‘said blandly yes- terday. “My talk with the super- visors of the orphanage will be perfunctory.” It was an Ornhans’ Holiday at a crowded beach near New York. NEGRO MURDERED DEFENDING WIFE, ILD Aids Workers . Jailed in Cleaning Strike in Philadephia ers during the strike of a thousand drivers and inside help in the clean- ing industry here were arrested, they to the International Labor to defend them. at the strike meeting and was en- thusiastically received by the strikers, ected him to be a member of the strike committee. The strikers are members of an A, F. of L union. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., August 9.— Eighteen workers arrested and beaten up when police broke up a demonstra- tion of unemployed before city hall, just before last year’s national Hun- ger March, were released in court here through mass pressure organized by the International Labor Defense. PUSH C. P. ELECTION CAMPAIGN Seek 20,000 Dimes to Aid Work, Boro Meets Planned Sept. 10 NEW YORK.—Concrete organiza- tional steps for the furtherance of the Communist Election Campaign in this city have been announced by Carl Brodsky, manager of the Com- munist Election Campaign Commit- tee. The principal focal points of the campaign will be simultaneous Boro Conferences to take place September 10 in every borough of the city. These will lead up to a great City-wide Conference a week later. Activity at present is centering around the effort to raise 20,000 dimes for the campaign. Slogans in this campaign are: “Give a dime for 100 leaflets demanding unemploy- ment insurance”; “20,000 dimes for the Communist Election Campaign”; and “Give a dime in the fight against evictions. A thousand letters have been sent to mass crganizations urging them to help in the campaign by sending representatives to the campai headquarters at Room 539, 799 Broad- way, to get collection boxes for the campaign and tickets for the Red Rally Pienic, August 27, at Pleasant Bay Park. These tickets will be given at a reduced price to organiza- tions, Volunteers Needed Volunteers are needed to help in the office work of the Committee. Workers who can type are urged to come to the office and help. The \ioan of typewriters for the duration of the camvaign are also urged, Mass organizations are asked to send in the names of sneakers who will help in the campaign work. These speakers will be sent information bulletins with material for talks. More help is also needed for the Re- search Committee which is in charge of this work. Workers are urged to visit all registered voters in their districts and taik with them, urging them to register Communist for the coming elections. Registration dates will be announced later. Special effort will be made to en- list women's, children’s and liberal crganizations to do special work in cernection with the campaign. Forums, demonstrations and par- ‘ies have been arranged to aid in the work. WHAT’S ON NEW YORK.—Ronia Curese, a Ne- gro worker, was shot and fatally wounded by a police officer in Eu- faula, Alabama, August 1, because he objected to the cop’s beating his wife who refused to respond to his ad- vances, according to a letter received here by the International Labor De- fense from a worker there. | Curese, when he objected, was ar- rested, taken to the court-house, handcuffed, beaten with a chair, and! shot twice. He died on August 2. No, action has been taken against the) murderer, { Thursday LECTURE, “THE INTELLECTUAL MOVES TEPT,” by Eii B. Jacobson, et Pen & Ham- mer, 114 W. ist St., at 8:30 p.m. LECTURE, “THE IMMEDIATE WAR DANGER,” by Prof. Oakley Johnson, at West Side Meeting House, 580 W. 110th St. near Broadway. Admission 10¢,_ Un ployed free. West Side Branch F, Our hall is cool. vu OFFICE WORKERS MEET at 242 E. 14th St., Labor Temple, at 8 p.m. sharp. Im- portant matters to be taken up, All urged ta attend, Friday PARTY, DANCE, .. Movies, League, 229 M>-* **'~ St. Good time prom- ised. Bring friends, e NRA With Slick Phrases Speeds Exploitation of Establish Principle That Young Workers Must Receive Less Than Adults for Same Work; Use Trick of “Apprentices” By GIL GREEN. Saree has always used youth and child-labor for greater ex- ploitation, for deriving of greater Profits. But never has this policy of the manufacturers been so finely Perfected, systematized, and offici- ally blessed, as in the National Re- covery Act and its various indus- trial codes. And never before has this been dressed up in such bally- hoo and served to the masses with Such beautiful liberal phrases. Let us deal with the effects of these codes on the conditions of the - working youth and with the real meaning of the so-called abolition of child labor, of which the Socialist Party, the A. F. of L. and the liberals, speak so highly. The codes first establish the prin- tiple that youth labor must receive less than adult labor. Not alone this, but that the minimum wage set for every industry does not apply for the youth. Of course, this is not openly stated, but every code has Special discriminatory sections and (cop-holes for this purposes. Let us quote a few. The Textile Code establishes a ninimum wage for all, “except earners, cleaners and outside em- bloyes,” and maximum hours for all 'x@ept “shipping, watching, outside ‘rews and cleaners.” The proposed code for the Steel ndustry establishes minimum rates ‘€ pay for unskilled labor but “not | including that of apprentices and learners.” ‘ The proposed code for the Soft Coal Industry says: “Exceptions to these minimum rates are trappers, Spraggers, switch throwers, oilers and couplers.” Then further it adds, “Outside workers shall be paid a minimum day wage of $4 except for slate and sulpher pickers.” These ares are in the main youth jobs. The Electrical code provides that all, “office boys or girls, learners and casual employes,” shall be paid no more than 80 per cent of the estab- lished minimum rate. ae ha Wate most of the codes for the major industries are careful to create the impression that the ex- ceptional clauses will only involve a small number of youth, the code for the Burlap Bag Dealers lets the cat out of the bag, and shows the real purpose of these clauses. This code provides for a general minimum wage and then calls for a different- jal wage “for apprentices and for minors between 16 and 21 years,” but fails to mention this wage. In other words, it does not stop at appren- tices or learners, but includes all youth in this discrimination. The purpose of all of the above clauses on apprentices, learners, etc., is to provide loop-holes for the em- Ployers to hire larger numbers of youth below the minimum rates, in place of adult workers. This can clearly be seen by a close study of some of the codes. The Dress In- dustry Code, for example, says: “It is anticinated that a shortage “of experienced manufacturing em- ployes will result by virtue of the reduction in hours of labor and the increased demand for ladies’ gar- ments, and in order to absorb a portion of the present unemployed, both male and female, provision is herewith adopted for the hiring and engaging of learners for the various crafts among the manu- facturing employes.” (Our em- phasis). After one dissects the above para- graph by throwing aside all the op- timistic promises of better business and more work, the one essential point remains—the right to hire more learners. The employers from now on are going to hire workers, espe- cially youth, as “learners”; giving them the same work, but less pay. To this end they wil! fire many of the skilled older workers and replace them with “learners.” The increased application of the “speed-up and stretch-out system” as already seen in textile, will also result in the replacing of old work- ers by young fresh workers under lower wages. In other words, these various loop- holes in the codes are not merely at- tacks on the young workers, but up- on the whole working class, and as such must be understood and fought. . MOW as to the proposed abolition of child labor under 16, Nearly every code carries this proviso, Is this pet proposal of Roosevelt to abolish child labor under 16, the lib- think? Nothing of the sort. most reactionary. be Child exploitation exists, not be- cause parents want their children to Slave, but because capitalist society so reduces the level of the masses that parents are forced to send their chil- dren to work, ae Marx pointed out when he said: “It was not, however, the mis- use of parental authority that cre- ated capitalist exnioitation .. . of children’s labor, but on the con- trary, it was the capitalist mode of exploitation which, by sweeping away the economic basis of parental authority, made its exercise degen- erate into a mischievous misuse of power,” And this is exactly the point that Mr. Roosevelt, the Socialists and lib- erals wish to hide. It is their job to white-wash capitalism which lives on the blood and sweat of children, We would like to ask these gen- tlemen: Who is going to provide for the millions of children who today are forced to work in industry? How are workers who will make the glor- ious wage of $12 and $14 a week going to be able to support their families of five and six children, especially under inflation? How will an un- employed worker do this? But Mi Roosevelt knows the above. He full well realizes that his plan cannot and will not abolish child ex- ploitation. It’s real purpose is to lower the price for the labor-power of children, How is this to take place? For a short period of time, there will be a temporary exclusion of some of the children under 16 from the factories. Then, these same chil- It is eral progressive act most people dren, because they must live, will be Youth and Child Labor Workers Must Rally Behind Special Demands Of Youth Against Roosevelt Slavery Pro- gram; Organize Youth for Struggle bootlegged back into industry, under assumed ages. These “illegal” work- ers will then of course he forced to accent much lower wages. But this not all. The present codes also include loep-holes for the further extension of child exntcita- tion. The textile, and many other light industry codes, speak about “outside” or “home” workers. These categories are not included in the! wage and hour agreements. This means that instead of the younger children working in the factories for a maximum of forty hours a week, they will work home for ten and 12 hours a day at less wages, This is not a new scheme. Karl Marx spoke of this in his first volume of Capital, saying: “When women and their children wotk at home, which now-a-days means in a hired roem, often in a garret, the state of things is, if pos- sible still worse, . .. The Pharisee of a capitalist represented by on of his servants, accompanies this action, of course, with the unctious phrase: HE KNOWS WELL ‘ENOUGH THAT THE POOR CHILDREN MUST SIT UP AND HELP.” (Our emphasis), Mr. Roosevelt also deliberately for- gets that the largest single number of laborers are to be found in agri- culture, where they toil from an carly age helping their parents wrest & paltry existence from the soil, He ‘That's for mother,’ YET | also says nothing of the hundreds of thousands of newsboys and other street vendors. This proposal of Roosevelt is also another well disguised attack on the working class. * « | . . "THE whole working class must help the youth in thei" struggle against the above attacks. In every industry we must demand: 1, Inclusion of apprentices, learn- ers, cleaners, outside workers, of- f'ex-boys, clerks, and all other youth in wage agreements, without dis- crimination. 2, Limitation of the number of apprentices and learners. For a graduated sliding scale of wages for apprentices and learners based upon increased qualifications. 3. Youth doing the same work as adult workers shall receive the same | pay, 4. Vocational training for chil- dren from 14 to 16 years, on the ‘basis of full pay, and under trade union supervision, Government support for oll children now work- ing unter 14, The above demands coneretized for every industry must be included in the counter proposals of the revolu- tionary unions to the codes of John- son and the A. F. of L, The masses of youth must be won through this struggle for their special demands into the revolutionary unions and youth sections PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—When work- | ough the efforts of the IL.D.| they were released on bail. Stern,} district crganizer of the T.L.D. spoke Film Photo{ COLUMBIA IS INSTITUTION, World Problems Club Meeting on Campus | NEW YORK.—Charges that the | maintained a consistent policy of ji tion, yesterday, Negro women in only one of its five dormitories. Here, a special apart- them. Five Negro students occupy this apartment at present. tion of the Columbia University grad- been admitted. They are segregated on the sixth floor where the office: the white students. The majority of the hundreds of university come from out of town. they are referred to the Hi W. C. A. meny bk Dr. Del Manzo, Teachers’ College freely admitted this discrimination in assigning rooms. Jim Crow Job Office } Similar discrimination applies in the employment of office workers and teaching staff in the university. In- Club indicated that out of the 1,000 office workers and 2,500 members of the teaching staff, no Negroes had been hired. Mr. Genizler, Secretary of Appoint- ments for Columbia University, said that he had always been asked f white students to fill University white- collar positions. Clyde R. Miller. Director of the Bureau of Educational Service at Teachers’ College, were no Negroes employed white-collar jobs at Teachers’ College. Clyde R. Millers’ pamphlet, “Seven Factors in Getting a Position,” in sec- tion six on “Elements of Prejudice,” states—“Similarly, the Bureau de plores the existence of other racial prejudices, etc. It believes nothing is to be gained by denying their ex- istence; on the contrary, facing and defining these prejudices is essen- tial to give applicants needed warn- ning and to attempt to end un- reasoning and unjust discrim’na- tion,” Social Life Restricted The report of the club continues: “Although there is not an official restriction on participation in-social life for the Negro students, they are discouraged from mingling freely with welcome at dances. “Dr. Jesse “Williams, Director of Physical Education, said the’, al- though there was not an official ban on Negro women students entering themselves of the opportunity of go- ment on the ground floor is alloted to} dpen @ At Johnson Hall, under the jurisdic- | uate school, only six Negro girls have! » | CU Negro women students attending the When they apply for dormitory rooms awa Acting Dean of vestigation by the World Problems said that there/ in the| the white studerits and are not made | the swimming pool, they did not avail JIM-CROW REPORT OF STUDENT CLUB CHARGES Gives Evidence; Calls This Friday Evening Siration of Columbia University ewism and discrimination against adn m-cr | Negro students was made by the World Problems Club, a campus organiza. The report of the organization indicated that Teachers College admits ing in swimming, due, he said, to the dents in the pools. The report states: “The Cosmopoli- tan Club composed of students of all | races and nationalities devoted ite time to discussion of problems of so- It natural that dis- tion of the Negro students in was taken up: | Because of the free and unrestricted | as on of the Negro and. white st SS esthblished by the Cosmo- {pe n Club, the administration feared that a general opvosition to the University policy of discrimina- In order to stop h a move before it gained head- 7, onen meetings of the Club lized; the Cosmopolitan s forced to change its name to the World Preblems Club. ves employed by the Uni- vy have followed the students ped Negro students and ques- them when they wete seen to white members of the club. is the action taken by the ad- ministration against a club which stands for the eauality of all races, | and practices that policy.” Student Conference Held “The Student Conference on Negro Student Problems held at Columbia Pniversity Iast April was initiated by members of the Cosmopolitan Club and the National Student League, The ¢ ram and resolutions of the conference called for concrete struggle for the betterment of the conditions of students and recognized the fact | that the white students were in a position’ to initiate the fight for the betterment of the conditions of the Negro students, and for equal oppor- tunities for all. The World Problems Club has taken up the fight for the Negro students at Columbia Univer- sity in the spirit of the resolutions adopted by the conference.” As part of the program of the club to fight against discrimination in the university, the Club is sponsoring a mposium Friday, August 11, on ‘Which Way Out For The Negro?” i "s will include George Schuy- ler of the Socialist Party, represen- tatives of the Brooklyn Civic Council, William Patterson of the I. L. D., Robert Minor of the Communist Party and Donald Henderson, ousted from Columbia because of his revolutionary activity. It will be held at 8 p. m. at the McMillin Theater, Broadway and {116th St. Admission is free. | clety. AMUSEMENTS DEATH OR A “The Strange Case of TOM MOGONEY” “Urge workers to see/ film without fai!”"—DAILY WORKER LIVING GRAVE? THE WORKERS THEATRE WATH STREET AND UNION SQUARE r% g The new Soviet ¢ 9 am. tod p.m. ALSO s AME morality! First film exe. Sat. Sun. of second 5-Year Plan and Holidays KO Jefferson lth st & | Now EDMUND ' OWE and NANCY CARROLL Added Feature:—' with CHESTER MORRIS in “I LOVE THAT MAN” | ‘TOMORROW ‘AT SEVEN” | | i MUSIC TADIUM CONCERTS™===—= Phithermonic-Symphony Orchestra Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138 St ANS LANGE, Conductor | EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 PRICES: 25c, 50c, $1.00. (CIrele 7-7575) Organizations Are Urged t YOUNG ee —_—: Thursday, August At the WORKE 50 EAST 13fH STREET, NEW YORK Every mass organization should elect a B: which will veprescnt the organi Seud in immediately the names and o Send Delegates to the MASS CONFERENCE OP THE DAILY WORKER, MORNING FREIHEIT and WORKER BORE AR eee 17, at 7:30 p. m. RS CENTER — SECOND FLOOR — ROOM 203 fazrar Committee at the next meeting ization at the Conference, addresses of your Committee to NATIONAL PRESS BAZAAR COMMITIEE—30 EAST 13TH STREET, NEW YORK Workers Organizations Your members took Daily And came to the Picnic ; WE help your Daily by bringing in Office of the Daily Worker, 35 E. Worker Picnic tickets You have the money for these tickets. LL! Worker is most urgently in need of this riontey.. Please | the money or tickets to the City 12th St, (store) immediately. Brighton Beach Workers WELCOME Ad Hoffman's Cafeteria 282 BRIGHTON BEACH AVENUE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Garment Section Workers | Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 22th St. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLUTARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE | Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE “ISTH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman DR. JULIUS LITTINS 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitsin and Sutter Aves. Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Olfice Hours; 8-10 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. private en: reasonable rental; near subway. Write XYZ, o- bidet Scotian! n hood. Meges Dally Worker, om. Downtown Kitchen priv- Write Box A, ¢/o Daily Workers SANDWICH / SOLS “Toxca | 101 University Place (Just Around the Jorner) proval of the white women \ | |