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Page Two UNITED TEXTILE SPEEDS SILK STRIKE BETRAYALS AS N-T.W.U. GAINS GROUND Leaders of A. F. L. Union Send Men Back at Wage Cuts and Rush Sell Out Conference in Washington; Dyers Also in Danger By MARTIN RUSSAK, PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 13.—Reports made by the delegates from the | Silk Strike Centers at the meeting of the United National Strike Com- mittee in Easton yesterday, reyealed that frantic efforts are being made by | the U.T.W. and Associated 0: Is to stampede the workers back to the mills in various Pennsylvania points¢— and break the strike. | Joseph Brooks, Associated Organ- | izer and Muste follower, working in|} collusion with officials of the Inde-| pendent Union in Wilkesbarre, Scran- ton Region, has sent a number of Wilkesbarre mills back to work Brooks and his assistants had previ ously blocked the efforts of the work- ers to spread the strike in the Wilkes- barre Region when mass picketing was prepared and the United Na- tional Strike Committee was ready to send in mass pickets from Easton and Allentown. ‘The U. T. W. is not giving any strike news to the anthracite press. The strike in Scranton is still solid, | with over 2,000 out, although offi- eials have arranged with the police to limit picketing to groups of 20 and not picket some mills at all. SFR COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED Wholesale Opticians By Dr. A.Weinstein Factory on Premises Optometrist Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Cc. K. TABACK, MD. Lady Physi 795 Linden Blvd. cor. Office Hours 8-10 A.M.,6-8 P.M. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn ICKENS 2-3012 0 AM, 1-2, 6-8 PM. nd St., Brooklyn Phone Minnesota 9-5549 Intern’| Workers Order DENT/J, DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 19TH FLOOR AM Werk Dome Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman WILLIAM BELL Optometrist MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2578 Home Phone: Olinrille 5-1199 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2874 WALLAVE AVE. eormer Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. ¥. DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly of Baltimore, Md. has moved his office to New York’ at 304 E. 178th Street, Bronx, N. ¥. (Cor. Anthony Ave.) Phone: FOrdham 7-343 Oftiee Hor 12 to 2; 6 to 8 P, M. Sunday 10 to 12 Noon DOWNTOWN Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades ——— New York annie A Wonderful ne for Organizations’ iftairs STUYVESANT GRILL AND OPE im J nen Redes BEER TAVERN 137 Third Avenue Between 1ith and 15th Streets One W.T.W. shop in Bethlehem has been sent back by the officials for $1.75 per 100,000 picks when the of- fer by manufacturers through N.R.A. rejected by the workers called for $2 for 100,000 picks. This shop will be pulled out again today by mass picketing, At Emaus, the strikers voted over- whelmingly to remain firm, and at Allentown, Easton and Paterson the silk strike is completely solid. In a mass walk-out, not sanctioned by U-T.W. officials, 1400 silk workers at Central Falls and Pawtucket, Rhode Island, have struck. Among the mills already out are Royal Weav- ing, Hamlet, Cadillac, Perfect, Hertz and Morgan, Kahn, Saltzberg, Bay State, Central, Valley Falls. The na- tional weaving mill, with 400 strikers came out today. The N.R.A. is ac- tive in Rhode Island trying to break the strike. Anna Weinstock, N.R.A. representative, is calling a meeting with the U.T.W. tonight to “arbi- trate.” Frantic efforts are being made here by officials of the A. F. of L, Dyers Union to break the dye workers’ strike. The officials have reached an agreement with Moffitt and the dye bosses, calling for settlement at 57 cents an hour and exclusive check- off, recognition of the A. F. of L. The officials are attempting to jam this through at closed meeting of the A. F. of L. members tonight and by means of secret ballot. The General Dye Strike Committee of the N-T.W.U., repmesenting the majority of the dye strikers and larg- est plants, is calling for rejection of these strikebreaking proposals and for an open meeting of, all dye strikers, organized and unorganized, for a general vote on settlement of- fer. The attempts by the A. F. of L. to break the ranks of the strikers and for them to return to work, is clearly due also to increased move- ment of A. F. of L. rank and file to the N. T. W. U, A. F, of L, members of the huge | Textile Dye Works are still joining the N. T. W, U., and this morning 100 A. F. of L. dye members in Pas- saic met under the auspices of the N. T. W. U. for unity. IWO Cleaners and Dyers Meeting The I.W.O. City Committee is call- ing all its members in the retail cleaners and dyers trade to a special meeting at Irving Plaza, Sunday af-; ternoon at 2 P.M. For Mass Meetings, Entertainments Balls, Weddings and 66-68 E. 4th St. Going to | Russia? Workers needing full outfits of hors. leather sheeplined Coi Windbreal Breeches, High Shoes, etc., will receive cial reduetion on all thelr purchas SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) To Russia? HUDSON Army and Navy Store 97 THIRD AVENUE (Between 12th and 13th Streets) Gives Honest Values in Genuine Horsehide Sheeplined Coats; Windbreakers, Breeches; High Shoes; Boots, Etc. STATIONERY and MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organizations Lerman Bros., Inc. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th St. N. ¥.C, All Comrades Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 19 i. 18TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER. Meet at the Dairy Re 830 BRO {NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA PARNE’S Between 12th and 13th Streets Workers Served with Healthy Foods at Low Popular Prices stuarant ADWAY | “to have been ‘Leather Workers Industrial Union, Jewish Workers’ Clubs Hold First Nat'l Convention the New York City Committee, a call has been issued recently to all Jewish | Workers clubs to organize a national organization, A call for a national convention has been issued by the| National Provisional Committee se- lected by the New York City*Com-| 7: | NEW YORK.—On the initiative of GUTTERS OF NEW YORK mittee. At the opening tonight, Comrade Earl Browder and M. J. Olgin will | speak. There will also be a concert in which the various sections of the| clubs such as choruses, dramatic} groups, orchestras and sports will} Participate. | The convention sessions will cgn- tinue Sunday and Monday at Irving| Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. On Sunday evening there will be a ban-| quet held in Irving Plaza at which a} new Soviet Film will be shown for the first time in the U.S.A. Small Depositors | Refused Aid by Socialist Party NEW YORK, Oct. 12—The Social- ist Party, through its New York or- ganizer, August Claessens, has re- fused to support the fight of, the small depositors of the Bank of the United States, to get back their lost deposits. The depositors, organized under the leadership of the United Committee of 25 of the Depositors of the U. S. Bank, will hold a mass demonstration at 1 pm. today (Saturday at Union Square, to be fol- lowed by a parade to the State Bank- ing Department at 80 Center Street. The insulting letter of August | Claessens, shows plainly that the So-} cialist Party officialdom is not in-| terested in the fight of the small| depositors to get their life savings] back. Claessens says, “Let me ad- vise you not to waste any more time or postage on such invitations. We have made it a definite practice to} ignore all invitations from the vari- ous Communist Parties, their af- filiates and ‘innocent’ clubs. We have neither time nor inclinat’on to par- ticipate in any of these affairs,” The | letter is addressed to the United De-| Positors Committee of 25, Bank of U. 8., 8. Kesselman, secretary. Anti-Eviction Parade to Be Held Tonight Through East Side) NEW YORK, N. Y.—The Anti-| Eviction Law parade which was re- | ported in yesterday's Daily Worker | v scheduled for 8 o’elock in the morning,” is planned for Saturday, Oct. 14, at 8 o’clock | in the evening. | The route of the parade is as follows: It will start-from Rutgers | Sq. at 8:15 with the Red Front | Band in the lead, and will go north} to 14th St. south on Second Ave. | to 3d St., east on 3d St. to Avenue | A, and will wind up on 7th St. and| Avenue A. | Comrade Ben Gold, leader of the furrier workers and Communist candidate for, President of the Board of Aldermen, will be one of the principal speakers at the meet- | ing. The march And meeting will be | held under the auspices of the} Downtown Unemployed Council. SHOE REPAIR WORKERS?’ VIC- TORY DANCE TONIGHT NEW YORK.—The Shoe Repair Department of the Shoe and} which has successfully signed up close to 300 stores employing over 600 men as a result of recent strikes is to celebrate its victory ee ld at a dance at Irving Plaza. Funds raised will go toward relief We “A great hand. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1938 —by del City Events Complete Sell-Out of “Vote Communist Banquet Tickets; Issue 500 for Balcony The Communist Election Campaign Committee dnnounced yesterday that all 1,500 reservations to the “Vote Communist” Banquet, Oct. 18, in New Star Casino, at which Emil Nygard, Communist mayor of Crosby, Minn., will speak, are sold out. The Committee also announced that 500 balcony tickets (not includ- ing meal) are for sale for the meet- ing, at which beside Nygard, Robert Minor, Earl Browder, Williana Bur- roughs and Ben Gold will speak. | Tickets can be bought only at the election committee's office, 799 Broad- way, Room 526, GRamercy 5-8780, eo craks Dispossess Party The Manhattan Youth Club is having a rent party tonight at 114 Ludlow St. The club already has ‘|received a dispossess notice. A pro- gram has been arranged besides dancing, and the club urges all comrades to help it by attending. Mike Gold to Lecture Michael Gold will lecture tomor- row at the Jewish Community Cen- ter, 500 Victory Blvd., in Tom- kinsville, at 8 p.m., under the aus- pices of Branch 68, I.W.O., Staten Island. The subject will be “The Jew In Literature,” and admission is 25 cents, | can’t lose.”—Wall St. Police Beat Negro Worker Unconscious At Red Election Rally NEWYORK.—“I, John R. MeNeil, Democratic leader of this district, called the police, and I'll do it again.” In these words, the boss of the 21st District, Harlem, where James W. Ford is Communist candidate for Alderman, boazted of ordcring the brutal police attack on Harlem workers in which N, E. Whitehead, Negro worker, was beaten and half killed,o— mercilessly and Betty Patterson, miiltant young Negro worker, was clubbed uncon- scious by police, attacking a Commu- nist election rally at 138th St, and Seventh Ave. Thursday night. Arriving, the police immediately | launched a brutal assault on the as- sembled workers. Betty Patterson was knocked to the ground uncon- scious by the club of Patrolman No. 6327, who swung his stick right and left, standing on the running board of one of the police cars, as it several times charged way up and across the sidewalk, racing into the workers for fully half a block and back. Only tH® quick intervention of white and Negro workers saved thé militant woman worker from being run over by the car which, in turning back, raced directly at her prostrate form. Whitehead, who did not move fast enough to please the Tammany cos- sacks, was thrown to the ground, beaten and stamped on by three cops and a plainclothesman. As he lay unconscious, the police thugs beat him in the face and stomach, clubbed him over the head, and even pulled up his shirt to remove the slight pro- tection of his clothing, beating him mercilessly; on his bare body with rubber hose and clubs. A white woman worker who rushed to his de- fense was told to “get going and be damned quick” by a policeman who pulled his gun on her, The police then held the angry crowd back with drawn guns, while the seemingly lifeless body of White- head was stuffed into one of the po- lice cars and rushed to the 135th St. station. James W. Ford, William Patterson, National Secretary of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, William Fitz- gerald, Harlem organizer of the I.L.D., all candidates on the Communist] ticket, had addressed the meeting.. for the strikers Admission 25 cents. Arthur Green, who was speaking at the time of the police attack, was JULIAN “The N. R. A. at WORKERS SCHOOL FO: Workers School of the Labor Research Association SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15th, at 8 P. M. QUESTIONS; DISCUSSION Forum KENTON and the Crisis” | RUM, 35 E. 12th St., 2d Floor ADMISSION 25¢ NOTICE! RUSSIAN AR MOVED TO 9 West 42nd Street PEASANT HANDICRAFTS "NOTICE! | T SHOP Ine. BRANCH AT 107 E. 14th Street ‘ 10% Discount to Readers of the FINE CLOTHING MEN’S SALTZMAN BROS. READY MADE AND TO ORDER 181 STANTON STREE FOR WORKERS SUITS . (NEAR CLINTON STREET) EW YORK 7 8 Mid-Town Election Forums Tomorrow at 3 p.m., on the Hast Side at the Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl., the Midtown Elec- tion Campaign will hold one of its! forums. Alfred Wagenknecht will be the speaker. At the same time, on the West Side, at the St. George’s Church, 39th St., between 9th and 10th Aves., R. Sullivan will speak. il a me Hathaway to Speak in Co-op. Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, will speak at the banquet and concert tonight at the auditorium of the socoparaiite houses, 2700 Bronx Park East, giv- en by the Painters inter-local rank and file groups of District Council 9. The affair celebrates the re- instatement into the Brotherhood o Painters the 25 expelled mem- ers. arrested but later released. Several other workers were badly beaten up. Not content with threatening to shoot anyone who stayed within a’ block of the meeting plaze, the police’ smashed the speakers’ ladder to, smithereens. Several storekeepers had refused to keep the ladder on their premises, when the cops started to break up .the meeting, saying the police were too vicious and they would get into trouble. A taxi driver. who offered to drive Betty Patterson to her home, told workers who ac- companied the unconscious woman, “I don’t want to charge anything, but because of the police I have to be very careful.” As Whitehead’s bleeding body, his clothes torn off his back, was being dragged to the police station, Mr. McNeill, well-dressed, gray-haired | Negro, the ward boss, was in a high-! class restaurant across the street with | a party of friends, to whom he sev- eral times boasted: Open Forum Open forum by the opposition group of the LL.G.W.U. will take place tomorrow at 11 a.m. at Am-| bassador Hall, 3865 Third Ave. The subject will be “The Role of the Opposition Group In the Interna- tional.” Hyman Grossman will be the speaker. * + 8 eo Russian Peasant Night. Russian Peasant Night for the benefit of the Daily Worker Arranzed by Unit 2, Sec, 15, C. P. tonight at 8 o'clock. at 2068 Vyse Ave., Apt. 15, Bronx, N. Y. Refreshment free. Ad- mission 10c. * physical development into consid~- jeration herself. FEW years ago Doris Geral A shoulder and pointed to her tw “Will you take care of her Doris is in her middle twe: as a contender. As a matter longer thrills her. “I probably, used it just as a medium for’ meeting people. But I’d still like to play afternoons. You don’t get; around to it with a husband and baby. We can’t afford a maid.” In_ the last eight months, Doris Gerald, the passionate tennis play- er, has held a racquet twice. Aside from the fact that she was a com- parative topnotcher, and this makes it all the more significant, her case is representative. In the United States where women really get a better break in sports than most capitalist countries, a married wo- man has to have a maid before she can take an afternoon off for ten- nis and that’s not wasted sympathy for Doris Gerald, She probably would neglect to take the maid’s . rc SEEMS superfluous to add that} unmarried working girls are no! better off. When a girl is through working at Woolworth’s or some | textile mill she’s neither in the con-| dition nor the mood to hop into rompers for a strenuous basketball game. Sure, there are plenty of company teams and a few girls do receive special privileges for play- ing in them but these teams are used mostly for stoolpigeon and idea of tournament play NOv ike tl Not a Girls’ Country d was metropolitan singles and mixed doubles champ. Yesterday, when asked why she no longer participates in tournament play, she shrugged her 0-year old baby. 2” she said. nties and by no means through of fact, she confess2s that the ike the Babe, Eleanor Holm or Helene Madison have every im- aginable facility and opportunit; for competition at their disposal. But watch their careers. See wl swimming means to Holm or Mad- ison and the Olympics to Babe Dic | rikson. For Holm at. first it probabl meant a “medium for meeting, peo- ple,” as Doris Gerald puts it. She was a baby wonder and began busting world’s records when she was 18. Society picked her up. Her backstroke rounded into perfection and with it young Eleanor’s con~ tours. She photographed fine and the papers picked her-up. Her back- stroke kept improving, she took the Olympics, the movies picked her up. Madison was another wonder, she turned professional , after the Olympics. Didrikson clicked, she turned pro. Lenglen is demonstrat- ing rowing machines in the window of a London department store. HAVE no grandiloquent notions about the sanctity of amateur sports. Let them turn pro, it doesn’t pother me. The point is, our girls don’t get a break in sports, that's not the way their lives are ar- ranged. The publicity you get in the papers about women athletes concentrates on. these few stars who either branch off into society and the movies or fade out into advertising purposes. That’s how Babe Didrikson got her chance. Of course extraordinary athletes * SUNDAY SCHEDULE of METROPOL! * thwarted existences after their, mo- ment of glory. * TITAN WORKERS’ SOCCER LEAGUE AOD EN Lat ON Prospect, vs. Spartacus 1P.M. Crotona Park Rome vs. Ecuador 3P.M. Orotona Park ! Red Spark ys. Italian-American 3P.M. Jefferson Olympic vs. Fichte 1P.M. Jefferson “BD EN 18,2 0,8 Herzl ys. Hinsdale 1P.M. Gravesend | Red Spark vs. Italian 11.30 A. M. Jefferson | Spartacus ys. Bronx Hungarian 11.30 A.M. Crotona Park — Maples vs, Olympic .1P.M. Betsy Head Par’ 4G". DI.VI 8 F.0'8 Lwo. vs. Greek Spertacus 11A4.M, Astoria Park Fichte vs. Red Spark 10 A.M. Jefferson Brownsville vs. Maples 3 P.M. Betsy Head Park Rome vs. Spartacus 10A.M. Crotona Park 3 8,000 Strikers Demonstrate (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Daily Worker Concert The American Youth Club will hold a concert and dance this Saturday night at 407 Rockaway Ave., Brook- lyn. The entertainment will include the Harlem Liberator. Quartet, the Aida Sextette, a string trio and a piano recital. Bring this ad and save 10 cents, me “Yes, it was I, John R. McNeill, the Democratic leader of this district who called the police and I'll do it again.” A workers’ delegation which visited the 135th St. precinct to inquire about Thirrill was told no record of his: case existed. The delegation is mak- ing inquiries at the city hospitals. The workers of Harlem, aroused by this brutal attack, are planning a series of militant protest actions un- der the leadership of the Communist | Party, the International Labor De- gro Rights and other organizations) fense, the League of Struggle for Ne-{ waging the fight against the police- inspired lynch incitement in the capi- talist press and the growing attacks on Negroes, Whitehead was haled into court late yesterday and fined $5 or five days in jail o n a charge of dis- orderly conduct. The I.L.D. is trying to effect the release of the injured worker that he may receive medical Unemployed Council Dance An entertainment and dance will be given thi® Saturday night at the| International Seamen’s Club, 140 Broad St., New York City. This af- fair is to start a drive for a head- | quarters for the Waterfront Unem- ployed Council. * New Youth Club Celebrates A dance and entertainment will be given by the New Youth Club at their elub rooms, 309 Cleveland St., | in Brooklyn on Saturday, Oct, 14. Admission is 15 cents. 20 Pickets Arrested at Fashion Art Co.’ NEW YORK.— Twenty workers! were arrested after picketing dem- Dickstein, fammany | with arrested strikers, Another demonstration was held in front of the 80th St. police station demand- , ing the release of those arrested. Mounted police trampled women as well as men, clubbing out into the crowd and tearing at signs and placards. One policeman was beat- en about the face. The strikers and workers from shops did not disperse. For more. than an hour the strikers walked up | and down in front of the hotel, re-} turning again and again as the mounted police charged up and down. At 1:30, after the delega- tion came out, hundreds of workers were still waiting on 32d St. and marched to Manhattan Lyceum where Biedenkapp reported to a packed hall. i Inside the N.R.A. headquarters the delegations were received only by a secretary, who took down their statements. Biedenkapp, on! behalf of the 6,000 striking shoe | workers, protested against the! statements of Whalen that he would “try to avert a strike of; 18,000 shoe workers’? by confer-! ring with the A. F. of L. Boot and Shoe Union. Biedenkapp exposed the fact that Whalen had virtually refused to see the representatives onstrations on Wednesday and Thursday at the Fashion Art Co. 1660 E. New York Ave., a knit- goods shop on strike for three weeks. Milton ‘Silverman, a mem- ber of the Young Communist League, which is actively support- ing the strike, was bitten in the eye | by the employer who came out on the picket line to fight the strikers. Maybe He Will On Thursday, after an open-air “Yes, I mieht call your editor, sure,, meeting in front of the shop, the sure... but, of course, I'll have to) Strikers called another meeting in consult with my colleagues on the|front of the home of the boss at Immigration Committee.” 624 Sheppard Ave. i uw Workers arrested on Wednesday were held on $1,000 bail. Other ar- rested pickets will be tried on Tues- day, Oct. 17, at 9 a.m. in the Penn- sylvania Court, Pennsylvania and Liberty Aves. At noon todéy a mass demon- stration will be held in front of the shop. All ers in Brownsville are urged to suppo** the strikers’ demands for reeozni'ion of their union, by turning out to the dem- onstration. Congressman,Vague, on Nazi Quiz Plans (Continued from Page 1) mittee on Nazi activities in this. country.” “Do you plan to call upon Mr. Untermyer to assist you in your in- vestigation?” the congressman was} asked, Mr. Dickstein looked annoyed. ‘I am amply equipped to handle this hearing. I've been practising law since 1908, and have heen special deputy attorney in New York state +.” Conscious of a possible in- discretion, however, he forced a twisted smile on his face and added: | “Maybe later, though, when Con- gress convenes and we put through @ resolution . . . then, perhaps, we'll call in syecial counsel.” Portra't of a Crusader Dickstzin needed a shave and looked weary. His care-worn face revealed his 22 years of public service to Tammany Hall, his tireless crusad- erican Patriot, fighting Those Who Would Undetinind Our Institutions. There's no doubt, too, that Tam- many Contressman Di-iitein who seconded the notorious Dies Bill, and yielded his time on the floor of Congress, on that to Hamilton Fish, to Martin’ Dies of 6,000 strikers, promising a hear- ig, but Sonmantty polenta it, mo.awhilé conferring with the em- plovers and the ditcredited A. F, of L. union, which has nv member- ship and nobody on strike. “The activities of the N. R. A. Media- tion Committee and Labor Board and of the heads of the Board and the N.R.A., Henry Wolf and, Gro- ver Whalen,” Bien snee told the secretary, ‘are resented by the workers as tending to preak their strike. The shoe workers will have nothing to do with the Boot and Shoe.” ‘ A. Hoffman, of the N.T.W.1LU., told the N.R.A, secretary that the 12,500 striking custom tailors, make the same charges, that they have constantly been put off by Whalen and Wolf. Meanwhile, he said, the Merchants Tailor Society an- nounced it is <onferring with ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, UNION be NGS at the NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN TO THE WORKERS OF TODAY: The buying of a suit of clothes or an overcoat is an important event. ‘The worker's dollar must go a long way, and the yn for square dealing on the part of the must be clean and above board. A suit of quality and fine tailoring bought by a worker repre- sents the toil of hours and ind we receive such moneys with respect and wi feeling of recipro- eaton which means HONEST VALUES, Sincerely, MAX TRAIGER ONE PRICE STORE 168 STANTON STREETS. “tinton, st. Mention Dally Worker and Get 10% Special Redaction ing for kosher laws in New York state, his. indefatigable activity in the drive for the finger-printing and deportation of the fore!gn-born. .. . “This hearing,” Dickstein said, “will be an American hearing, and it will be conducted on American prin- ciples. We will not to em! anyone. But we do not propose to sit back and permit people to under- mine.our institutions by propaganda.” (The consressman pronounced it” perpeganda,” and looked at me sig- nificantly). There's no doubt that Mr, Dickstein is not out to raise too much noise against the Nazis. “What haye I got to lose?” he probably says to him- self shrov My. Public’. Great De-~ fender of the Jewish People. Am- | wil (“I'd like to send a Texas Ranger up to New York to clean up those Communists thar’), to Green of Florida, and to Jenkins of Ohio— would much rather deport militant foreign-born workers to Fascist countries than lift one tiny little fi against the murderous Nazis in rica. . The fight against Fescism will. not be made by Congressman Dickstein and his Tammany . Tt will not be made by the Jewish millionaire corporation Iqwyer, Samuel Unter- myer, who defends the Fascist deeds of Roosevelt. The real fight against Fascism highs rial od sea workers, to- er ot] groups op- Posed to the Nazi cause. GARMENT DISTRICT Phones: Chickering ¢947—Longacré 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY - CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE St. | Whalen and trying to bring in the Amalgamated, which no one on strike in this trade and with which the strikers have nothing to do. Cy Kalos, president of the Cleaners and Dyers Union, told the N.R.A. office that the A. F. of i. union, headed by Weintraub represents no strikers, who are ell in the Cleaners and Dyers Union. which is leading the strike, and the attempt of the N.R.A. to secure s«! tlements through the A. F. of union are strike-breaking moves. ‘At the meeting in Manhattan Ly ceum, where Frank Costello was chairman, Biedenkapp reported to a packed hall. Biedenkapp exposed the record of Whalen, labor hater and former police commissioner, who has sent police against many strikers, and stated that the selec- tion of Whalen as New York N.R.A. head proves that the workers them- selves. will have to enforce section 7 through their mass unions and struggle. Another demonstration will be held on Tuesday when the delegation will return te see Whalen. On Monday morning at 7 o’clock the shoe workers will mobilize be- fore the I. Miller shop at Long Is- land City and at 1 p.m, (will meet tn S!., Brooklyn, for a march on the H. Jacobs and ‘Son factory. Chief of Khaki Shirts Disappears After Guns, Munitions, Are Seized PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 13—Fol- lowing the afrest of 27 members of his organization, and the seizure of a veritable arsenal—consisting of arms, ammunition, daggers, etc, —Art J. Smith, commander ‘of the Khaki Shirts of America was. re- ere today as having disappearec rom sight. (Brooklyn) WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway test) 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near, Hopkinsom Ave. Brooklyn, FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLET. SOKAL CAFETERIA-. 1689 PITKIN AVENUE --; | Hoffman's RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves ——8 TE AM—=— LAUNDRY —SERVICE— 476-8-80 Howard Ave, Bklyn, N.Y. PResident 3-300