The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 22, 1933, Page 3

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Page Three WRITERS’ GROUP GOES - TO UTAH STRIKE FIELD . ' DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1933 [Red Candidate in | ‘Cleveland Exposes. ‘Car Strike Sell-Out | “Continue Fight for} ———_ Business Situation \Getting Worse, Bank . As Ford Promises Waiting .. : i Figures Disclose || Steel, Auto; Textile Production, Continue to | Decline; Bank Credit Drying Up; Work- ers Fired By the Thousands | ’ ) NEW YORK—The entire business situation is fast taking on aspects |of further crisis, according to the reports which are being made public | daily. Steel operations,~one of the basic indicators of the economic trend, || are signalling even worse crisis this winter than has yet been experienced. Many Defy Police |}latest reports are notonly dropping ||Tapidly, but are dropping against the usual seasonal rise which is witnessed Higher Pay,” Ford | ‘Urges Men | CLEVELAND, O., Sept. 21—‘Con- tinue the struggle for wage increases” was the answer of I. O. Ford, Com- munist candidate for mayor of Cleye- land to the sell-out of the strike of 3,000 car men by the reactionary A. F. of L. union, in a statement dis- tributed to the men, After the workers had voted to continue the fight for a 25 per cent raise, union officials signed an agr ment with the car bosses 'to “ar! TO INVESTIGATE TERROR Demand Governor Blood Permit Publie Hearings on Gunmen Rule; Strike Leaders Are Held in Stockade HEL’ tuals is com of women, raids on private homes wit! mittee, which includes Owen ex-Cor man Roberts, 2 a Protestant minister | demanding permission | Blood to conduct a| | ‘abbi, from Governor ER, Utah.—A committee composed of writers and other intellee ng here from Salt Lake City to investigate the brutal beating hout warrants and wholesale arrests rs and strikers during the reign of terror in the past three weeks. Woodruff, of the Progressive Inde- vit building, surrounded by guards, Hearings in the cases of Guynn, Wetherbee and Paul Crouch, charged with rioting and criminal syndical~ : : 3 bli in Carbon Coun lJ every Fall. 4 : rate” the wage question. For this ae : “ i | 4 - The as the workers, | ism, have been continued until Sept. |] The buying movement from the £ g ns they were complimented by the capi- ‘ anaes | 9. : A |}railroads and building companies In ro es Bs al | | would h jortunity of ap-|24. Crouch, who was released. ‘on | promised by the Roosevelt officials |] has failed dismally tO develop. No Rising Bread Prices. talist press “for twice withholding | the use of their mos weapon, the strike ord powerful 4 rearing, but they are spected to do so. $5,000 bond on the riot charge, has not yet been jailed on the criminal syndicalism warrant, and other new || aree steel buying ts in sight. The Wet Gomielet. cannidate’ was | The been increased | charges, || backlog of accumulated i ae quick to expose the betrayal of the rather he| Harry Metos, defense attorney, of close to lowest points in the history) Negro, WhiteWorkers, | workers interests. | Salt Lake City, has forced the re- of the steel industry. : Another indicator that business is tottering downward as the infiation- ary pressure of the Summer Govern- Housewives,FormPick- et Line Before Bakery ment financial actions is weakening, is’the reports of the railroad carload-| MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 21— ings. These also. continue to drop | Flaunting large banners, and a huge are pers nearaae they rise| sceleton as a symbol of starvation, Banks Reflect Production Crisis | hundreds of Negro and white work- Reflecting the rapid slowing down | ers and working class housewives yes- of business activity, the demand of | terday defied all attempts of the po- lice to break through picket lines in bank credits for business purposes de- | i during the month | pray eine aang ae | front of a large bakery at Sixth St. t is increased again, es- | in the steel and auto in- talk to the crowd. Many children in the crowd shouted slogans for cheaper food. As a result of the Roosevelt pro- gram of reduction of wheat acreage, processing taxes on bakers, and the inflationary cheapening of the dollar, | bread prices have been rising rapidly all over the country. dustry. ; se figures point to the failure of | ne Government actions to lift a out of the crisis. Instead, the crisis has been growing W ATTINSKY DR. JULUS | The chant by the union officials that raccgnition of the union meant @ great victery for the workers, was characterized by Ford as a “brazen swindle.” “Recoghition of the union does not mean higher wages and bet-+ ter conditions for the men. It means that Schultz and company have been | given the right to collect dues from | the very men they sold out and that | the men have been given the privilege | to pay for this sell-out. Is this latest | act of the NRA, the union officials | and Mayor Miller anything but a “The Communist Party alone sup- | ports your militant struggle for more | wages. Car men and bus drivers, continue the fight. Any stepping back from the original demands means the betrayal of the interests of the car men, Ford deplared. “The Communist Party calls upon all workers to rally behind the car men in their fight for better condi- re some of the thron; ican Legion officials promised them. g of jobless veterans waiting in Ine for the jobs that Ford and the Amer- Ford got personal publicity from the stunt, the Legion reputed!y got $4 per man as membership, and the veterans received the privilege of standing in line for a day and a night. AFL. Members Not! National _|NRARules for Open * WASHINGTON, Sept. 21—Dealing | with rkers through company | unions is in full conformity with the N. R. A., said Robert L. Lund, presi= | dent of the Natjonal Association of Manufacturers, in a statement ad- dressed to William Green, president | of the A. F. of L. Lund’s statement dealt with Green’s | sham attack on company unions. Ruby Bates to Speak. CHICAGO Sept. 21.—“If I read BOSTON.—Ruby Bates, Allen Taub this language correctly it means that and Alice Burke will speak here Fri- |General Johnson considers the closed day night at Dudley Opera House, | Shop prohibited by the N. R. A.,” said 113 Dudley St. Local Boston work-| Henry I. Harriman, president of the ‘ : | ers will also speak. A reception has) Chamber of Commerce of the United been arranged at 4:30 p.m. when Ruby Bates and Mrs. Burke will ar- | St@tes, in a speech yesterday before | rive from Albany, N. ¥. where they | the Chicago Association o Uuuuieree.| Round A Harriman, and papers Money was stolen mes. | xample of the open bru- | was the raid on} a strike sympathizer, tre second raid with- | door was broken o-ced to stand th a revolver | Mayor Rollo West ypical of the officer: of ome m Ostail in tk a ee against the wall at him by Neero to His Death ‘in Gas-Filled Pit fter 8 Hours; lease of three prisoners who had been held incommunicado and denied ; | bond, though no charges had. been preferred against them. Those re- leased are Rae Guynn, LL.D. repre- sentative in Carbon Co. Sylvia Crouch, Womens Auxiliary organizer of the N.M.U., and Maud Wetherbee, wife of Charles Wetherbee. The released prisoners report. that they and the other prisoners were thratened repeatedly with being lynched. They were told that if any- | thing happened to Mayor West or sent by individuals and organizations all over the country to Governor Henry H. Blood, at Salt Lake City, demanding the removal of all orgas nizers and strikers from the Carbon County jail, as their lives are in great danger at the hands of the gunmen. During the past two days mo7t ~~" test meetings have been held at the First Congregational Church in Sas Lake City, and in Midvale, Murray, | ia y i Lund complained that G d | will speak Thursday night. along with William I : m Ford and | Fy tions. Elect fighting rank f Pp) hal reen ani | . | Sandy, Ogden, American 107 BRISTOL STREET ||Lumber Union Maps _ | comthitiees in ne ee and ahve | other A. F of L. officials could not Niece ae | Green, approved the N. R. A. when| 2 Men Required | Provo against’ the terror in’ Carbon Bet, Pitsin end Sutter Aves. Brookly | Ddan to Spur Struggle to organize and lead the fight for |CUtTol the rank and file members, Bedacht to Speak. lit ‘was’ passed: | to Do Jobs | county. 32-3012 6-8 P.M. PHONE: DICH 2-10 ‘Against N.R.A. Code fice Hours. At -Ongalialf, Price | ing and building the National Lum- ber Workers’ Union were taken re- | cently when the National Commit- |tee held its first meeting. Reports from the field organizers indicaté strong feeling among the lumber- | jacks against the new speed-up and wage cuts introduced by the lumber 2YL Shell Fromes ——. $1.00 [Ens Gola Vilied Brames—_—-$1.50 es not included SOKAL CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. Brooklyn Workers Patronize HOWARD —S T E A M—— y}__S ER VIC E— 476-8-80 Howard Ave., Bklyn, N.Y. PResident 3-3000 CLASSIFIED Monday to Pridey. MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx ark East Pure Foods ‘ Proletarian Prices at the SWEET LIFE CAFETERIA ~ 138 FIFTH AVENUE Bet, 18th and 19th Streets NEW YORK CITY Cleveland, Ohio A meeting of Daily Worker readers, sympathizers and Daily Worker Builders Is being called for Priday, Sept. 22nd, at 3 P. M. at the Worker Center, 3848 & CAFETERIA UNEMPLOYED WORKERS. that wish to Other decisions of the Natfonal Committee included the adoption of cipate in the Stdte Labor Congress scheduled for September 8 and 4. | more pay. Demand the immediate granting of the 25 per cent wage in- crease or put the strike vote into ef- | Cops Are Absent When AFL Issues Leaflets, | But No One Signs Up! SCHENECTADY, N. Y.—In re- sponse to a mass meeting called by few workers came. General Electric workers in Schenectady have had plenty of experience with the AF of | Many workers are busy in the shops laying the foundation of an Inde- saying, “It is clear that a great deal of the organizing effort and agitation | resulting from it is the work of men, The National Association of Manu- facturers says that 80 per cent of its members support the N. R. A. CLEVELAND.—Max Bedacht, gen- | eral secretary, of the International | | Workers Order, will speak at a mass | The head of the Chamber of Com- merce said that if an employer made a contract with a union that did not This mass meeting will mark OP phe opening of the membership campaign | in Cleveland, to recruit’ 500 new mem- | | bers into the International Workers Harriman further stated the N. R. A. granted the workers the “freedom” to scab and belong to company SOUTH CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 21—| a Negro worker who | of the Illinois Steel Mill here, was found dead in the valve pits, where he had been sent to shut off the) |gas. He entered the pit through a) | Order, and also the campaign for | | Social and unemployment insurance. | Admission free. 1,100 Foundry Strikers in 3rd Week of Strike unions. manhole at four in the morning | He said that under the law the boss|and was not found until three in can choose whether he will “bargain |the afternoon. The company safety Belle Taub, national representative of the International Labor Defense, has arrived in Utah to aid in the ‘ ‘ : “ Clarence Beave: ; a SEATTLE, Wash., Sept. 21—Im-| fect.” some of them of very radical beliefs, | meeting, Saturday, at 8 p. m., at|have a 100 per cent membership in a jived at 9017 Green Bay and worked |defense campaign for the organizers —— . ” pl who pay little attention to those | Woodland Center, 46th St. and Wood- | rn iol hi AES and strikers. 1 and Ocutist Prescriptions Filled} | portant steps towards strengthen- leaders nominally representing them.” | and Aye. i |shop he would not be violating the | as a heater. helper in No. 1 Rail Mill) # ‘ OUT OF TO Wik AFFAIRS appeal to all workers’ organizations to | help them in their struggle, which is led by the Steel and Metal Workers | quarters, 1411 Broad St., South | Greensburgh, Pa. | | | action that prevented the eyiction | icllatare. Unt “A from: thee “homes. of ‘tees dock | A. F. of L. Bricklayers Union, here, workers who turned in their dis, | witiated a drive to expel all non-cit bership, is a political maneuver shape up. A committee was elected | to go to the bank at‘48 Wall St. Nazis Ask Death for Communists from the witness stand that he was a Communist. 2 3 “Are you a Communist?” presid- ing Judge Buenger asked him. There was a moment of silence. then mumbled: There was another moment of si- lence. Then Van der Lubbe muttered something inaudibly, but the judge was apparently satisfied and went on. Hitler Salute in Courtroom ‘The frame-up' trial, before Part Four of the Supreme Court of Ger- treason trials have been held in pre- vious years. The selection of this set- ting is part of the carefully laid plan of the Nazis to bring Torgler and the other Communist leaders to the exe- cutioner’s axe on charges of “treason against the constitution.” Every seat was taken as the trial opened this morning. When the six red-robed judges filed in, the spec- tators raised their hands in the Hit- ler salute, to which the solemn judges friendly to the Nazi regime, joined in this salute—an indication of the strong “moral pressure” prevailing in the courtroom. Search All Entering, Before anybody was permitted to enter the court he was forced to sub- mit to a rigorous search. Ostensibly guarding the court from. weapons and cameras (which the Nazi officials ap- parently put in the same category), the latter elaborately scrutinized all credentials before: permitting the bearer to enter. Smarting under the revelations of Nazi barbarism in the world press, Woodland Ave., 3rd floor, Another Daily Worker is called for all memberg..of Section 3 for Friday, Sept. a2nd.at 8 P. M., at the Globe’ Theatre Building, Woodiand Ave. near EB. 55th St. Comrade A. Landy js in charge.of the meeging. Ps the German government is making special efforts to ingratiate itself with the correspondents covering the Leipzi trial. Pursuing this program, the Nazi have barred writers whom they have reason to believe might re- . meeting - and the liberal Manchester Guardian. The latter was among the first to charge that the Nazis set the Reichs- tag afire to provide justification fo: outlawing the Communist Party oi Van der Lubbe stared at the floor and | Germany, That the Nazis are profoundly dis- well as the whole press campaign of the left-wing and liberal press ex- Posing Nazi responsibility for the Reichstag arson plot, is shown by the fact that Judge Wilhelm Buenger, former premier of Saxony, in opening the trial yesterday, said: t) ground of this trial, has led it to be- come the object of a passionate in- vestigation by the press of all coun- tries, with a thoroughness over- shadowing temporarily all other events.” “It is without precedent,” the Nazi judge continued solemnly, obviously Teferring to the London Commission, (“to encroach upon such a trial (the present one in Leipzig), particularly ith a preconceived opinion.’ the defense of Torgler and his asso- ciates by declaring that “the court ‘was convinced the petitions were not motivated solely by the thought of safeguarding the defendants’ inter- ests, but by the idea of planting and promoting suspicion against sovereign German justice.” To the end of “safeguarding the defendants’ interests,” no doubt, the Hitler government has appointed as Torgler’s official defender a Nazi law- yer, Dr. Alfons Sack, a sworn enomy ef the Communists who conirted many big cases for the Nazis long before they seized power. Use Trial to Attack Communists into a monster propaganda campaign agoast the Communist Party, which im the face of murderous terror, is parade of perjured witnesses and the .ccital of forged documents calculated ‘9 show “secret plans” for violent ac- on on the part of the Communist | Party of Germany. Airplane flights have been pro- pictures in and around the court- room, Lynching Plot Charged LONDON, Sept. 21.—The London “Daily Worker,” official! organ of the Communist Party of Great British, Propoff, Dimitroff and Taneff when the Leipzig trial is transferred to Berlin between September 27 and 30, and the defendants are brought to the Nazi capital, where a sesion will itself, The “Daily Worker” declares that according to information they have at hand a number of storm troopers have been instructed to hold them- conducting of the prisoners through the streets of Berlin between rows of police and uniformed Nazis behind whom, according to the report, storm troopers in civilian clothes will be stationed. A “lynch verdict of the engaged populace” (the storm tvooD- ers), it is pointed out, would serve to) relieve the Nazi government of the task of judicially murdering the de- fendants. At the same time significant de- velopment appeared with the an- nouncement by the International Commission gf Jurists that should it be held in the Reichstag building| Pittsburgh Meet | To Protest Devorting — of 46 Negro Workers from Beaver, Pa. PITTSBURGH, Pa..— A mass| WorkersCoop workers last January. from Beaver Falls to West Virginia will be held | Friday night at 8 p. m. in the} | Tabernacle Baptist Church, Sixth Street and Third Ave. CULTURAL Kindergarden; “lasses for Adults t | worker where a party was in pro- gress, placed the whole house j |collectively” or individually with the | rules require at least two men be on | win the vote of the citizen members. | - APEX CAFETERIA 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS Clubs and Other Priviloges EVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Take Advantage of the Opportunity. | | COMuiVS chard S : er| the Tat Cael e ae JHLIVS. 117 Orchard St.| | bosses uder the NRA and a readi-| the International Machinists Asso-| Appeal for Relief Aid A workers, |ha Jace like this, but Har- | | First oor Cre cased (er: ness to organize for struggle. ‘The| ciation, $0 General Electric Co. work- PRE Dockers’ Action Stops ele Sees ERT gee ab cena pilin tan tear a PU alas Telephones OBcaatd = National Committee planned the a . le international! , Pa., » a | = a SY Fe | ici at such a killing that he disre- a penetration of the camps, and mill Yee President of the IMA, and left| sire ot 100 worsers at tne war, /EViction of 2 Families AFL Officials Oust st suns kilns moe wat he dine: ren s SEK throughout this important lumber| ™iihout one having signed up. for | worth Foundry Co. is now in its third| yew yoRK Three hundrea|MexicanWorkers from ever, since Beover's death he sends || Meal (Brockiyn) region to line up the workers be-|™embership. Three thousand calls| week, with the workers determined a Ua sh ree Bde . ’ * two along now. A few weeks ago ‘ i ‘ id ——| hind the code of the Lumber Work.| fot the meeting were issued at the| to win. longshoremen at a meeting called) Bricklayers’ Union |{¥0 sine won. & vadly gassed in Philadelphia ROWNSVILLE PRoLETARIANS |/€rs’ Union to fight for these de- a or, he Works, Without any cops/ Food and strike funds are running | ae Ke ery Uasmployed ae one of these valve pits that they had|| SEPT. 22: BORN ESSE mands. in sight, and in spite of all this, very |low, and the strikers are making an| Council yesterday morning, took] paso, Texas, Sept. 21—The| to be taken to. the hospital. This Daily Worker Activist Meeting to discuss Plans to Build Daily Worker: Slovak Hall, 510 Falrmond Ave. All organizetions are to send delegates. should be a dear lesson to Negro and rs to join the Steel and 1099 PITRINS AVENUE a constitution, the establishment of q 4 7 s i it zen members. This move, which is | \fetal Workers’ Industrial Union and Robert Minor will speak. an official organ of the union and| tom ween soe eee ith suspl- | Industrial Union. DORE rice Se ine eae aimed especially against the Mexicans, | demand ict observance of the 5 . : oo Pee r m and| cion upon any attempts on the part| All food and money should be sent| |The men were militant and con- who constitute the bulk of the m e3 f the ' e election of ‘delegates to parti-) of AFL officials to organize them. to Walco Local No. 1, Strike Head-| tinued the meeting, after the C s les and easing up o: 4 Chicago eed-up em, SEPT. 25: » | A resolution was drafted and| pendent General Electric Workers oe that owns the house in which the The Mexica however, who have | Help improve the “Daily W: ker.” cM edt 905, So RE sTAURANT ‘verted to President Roosevelt} Union. This, they feel, is the sort| Contribute to the Daily Worker) men live. At the bank the men | had militant union experience, are) serd in your suszestions and criticism! 3 - aD | protesting U. S. intervention in| of union they need, run and con-| Sustaining Fund! Help to keep up the| were promised that the two work-| planning to break away in a body| Let us know what the workers in Cuban affairs. trolled by the rank and file. 6-page “Daily”! | ers would not be evicted. and form an independent union, | your shop think about the “Daily.” Gary, Ind. SEPT. 238: Film showing of “1905,” at Rou- manian Hall, 1203 Adams St., 8 p.m, Admission 5c. a Rockford, Ill. ‘ BENSONHURST WORKERS . ° Patronize To Hit Jimcrow 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 13th Streets SEPT. 24: GORGEOUS CAFETERIA ee eee oe ee | ; oe Thi crowing: “i a: 0 ae plete satisfaction. ruggle against ‘he Nazi. the Hitler- . ° 115 Third Avenve, P was indicated today as the sessions} Among those excluded are the rep- | “ies will record “features” of the trial Practices nm Pa All Comrades Should Patronize This Lf 2211 86th Street opened. ; | resentatives of the Soviet press, an¢}c1 phonograph records and broad- ° FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP Milwaukee Near Bay Parkway A highlight of the trial this morn-|the corfespondents for the Pari} cst them in the evenings, These —~ | ii z ‘s $ Fresh Pon at Prniatarian: Petes ing was the denial by Van der.Lubbe | Matin, the London Daily Heralc | “nighlights” will undoubtedly ‘be the = SEPT. 26: Film showing of 1905," at Liberty Hall, 8th and Walnut Streets, at 7;30 p. m. Admission 15c in advance; 200 at the door. | Be | Newark, N. J. || SEPT. 24; erative Colony “No.” turbed by the effect upon world | hibited over a wide area and amateur) meeting to demand the arrest and \(OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) | eeulion stem 4 Artem’ L A U N D R Y “What are you then?” asked the eyes fhe ere a pe. ier pgcobt ac Rey punishment of those responsible | ana “clown. Sceers' at tw Ze Nazi judge. national Commission in Lon Le for the deportation of 46 Negro has now REDUCED THE RENT W. H. A. Auditorium, High aad W. Kinney Sts. Two showings: afternoon at 2:30 and evening at 8 ‘Admis~ sion 30. , ACTIVITIES | = and Children; Library: Gymnasium; Cambridge, Mass. SEPT. 24: Gran Concert, American\ Workers’ vn some money please call at Daily| |many, is being conducted in the his-| “The tremendous import of the| today charged that a lynching plot) County detectives and state! he} yi A RED HI Chorus, Moving Pictures ‘of Lest, Worker City Office, So Ae. Biyne’” “*'F*)| | toric “audience hail,” where famous | event which constitutes the back-| was being hatched deainet Torgler, | police iia a house of @ Negro NO INVESTMENTS REQUIREL Mavs, State Hunger Mazen. Speaker J. Dougless, Piano Solo, Banjo Solo | by famous artists, Floor Show, Re- freshments and Something New, at 2 Central Squaze. Admission 100, | under arrest and in a drum-head es Avenue train court held on the spot fined each |of those present $2.50. Those to White . Stop at Allerton Avenue |. Estabrook 8-1400—1401 Office open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday “vam, to 8 ray 9 a.m. to 5 pam. | 10 a.m. to 2 pom. | | a | Pittsburgh, Pa. || (EPT. 23: | unable to pay the fine were shipped The Third Ward Unit ts holding its j out of the county in cars and first oMair at 1589 Center Ave, A good time ts premised, | dumped over the West Virgina line. |No record of the disposition of the | fines is recorded in the records of | Carl Hacker, district organizer of . the International Labor De- | tense of Pittsburgh, will be the principal speaker at Friday’s meet- ing and will accompany @ local mmittee which will call upon the Jistrict Attorney Sept. 22 to de- mand speedy action on the matter. HOPEWEL REOPENS FOR ‘Dock Strike for | Sunday Double Pay | HOBOKEN, N. J.—Several hun- dred workers of the Tietjen and Lang Beginning THURSD For the “MORNING -FREIHEIT” and CHILDREN SCHOOLS until SUNDAY AFTERNOON Reasonable Prices; Food and Entertainment of the Best As part of its plan to turn the trial | prove necessary during and after the Dock Company of Hoboken struck Leipzig trial for the Commission to yesterday. They refused to work when remeet and exarhine evidence pre-| five men were fired because they sented there as well as,other facts, declared that work on Sunday should that every effort will be made to call|not be paid with time and half, but the Commission togethe- | should be entitled to double time pay. , a \EPT. 238: Hall, Pitcarin, Pa, replied. ly to “ex-| Selves in special readiness during * sake THE LAST WORD IN Foon || /Teilled. to Included a cae paces nent ey to Ct | these three. days, ‘The plan, charges| the justice who conducted this is Ki d l a d The Pitearin Uoit is holding tts est 4 AT POPULAR PRICES number of foreigners distinctly un-|torneys were barred from aiding in| the Communist organ, calls for. the| “Court: am mm CY n affair st the Vaemployed Counell L JCT., Nue¥. THIS WEEK-END BUFFALO, N. Y. Celebrate the 14th Anniversary of the Communist Party AY, SEPTEMBER 21 Concert and Dance Sunday, September 24 ‘Machines Leave 2700 Bronx Park FOR INFORMATION CALL: ALGONQUIN 4-9481 CROATIAN HALL Corner Vulean and Condon Streets FROM 8 P. M. UNTIL ? ? East Daily 10 a. m., 3 p, m., 7 p. m. of August, and is still dropping. — | | | of P Mrs. Ostaich was knocked | gherify Bliss that they would never Auto production is now 20 per cent | and Emerson Avenue North. We ee ae liye oR - | h unconscious, and 30 gunmen proceed- | Tae jail figs whieh ene pen below the peak mad ene Wee ee The picket line and demonstration |, eakers thee fun! company aa toe | Heeding Leaders Is k t Op, ede hamberof ed to ransack the house. During this) were making their attack on the Ten ee sau "| Was organized to demand the reduc-| impoverished to pay higher eiaie te | Vv e n NS) He ch $390 in cash was stolen by the | workers demonstration in Price, Mrs, sue: S aR tion of bread prices from 8 to 6 = “§ b} thugs. Bliss pointed a rifle through the bars Production Below Last Year | Hon of Bread Ford showed that the company had y Lom by iS Charles Glynn, Charles Wetherbee at Rae Guynn and Maud Wetherbee, / Extremely*significant are the latest Ro not stopped paying its dividends. x * ; pacman and about two dose 1O6AT strike tend |tanie thorn WHEE fliey Would berRROe reports which sum up the prods As a speaker rose to address the yeatard eile Aes eS Philadelphia Party. | ane oe on a eM eel ace Hela LEAR ee poe eat wis fit Sie. tak activities for the first six months of| workers who packed the streets | © ‘ation cannot pay car men liy- # | PHILADELPHIA—A party to cele- - 7 1 ; Ace ha SO Waaaod tu. the cattle erin the aks the year. These show in the major-| around the bakery, the police tried to ae Wages and reduce the carfare to Says Company Unions orate the opening of new headquarters | Boss Would Break Law Socks 2 6 the. Fair Grounds exhi- eee practically sthrved such as steel, textiles.| prevent him from speaking. The|dive cents.” =. Conforms to Rules | for unit 308 of the Communist Party! Unless Union Is the prisoners are denied the right, to total production this) workers, however, formed solid lines! The capitalist parties, the Demo- will be held Saturday night, 8:30 p. | . C =e a ———— | receive food sent by friends. rely exceeds last year,| of defense around the platform. In| crats, the Republicans, and the So- of N. R. A. m., at 3935 Brown St. All are wel- Organized 100% | D eleprains stioull immbdtately ae ¢ year. As a result| this way, four speakers were able to| cialists have Kept silent. | come. Stee] Boss Sends a 7 it

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