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Page Two Sidetrack At Taxi Coc nn Too Many Cabs; Offers No Solution SPEED-UP PLANNED Union to Present Code For More Pay NEW YORK. — Flanked by police and detectives from the ra 1s the N. R. A. taxicab hear Yesterday afternoon in manic chamber of the C:! » With & La Guardia’s “mediator,” Morris I Ernst, pointing out in a keynote Speech that wages of the drivers should not be the chief point of dis- cussion. ‘The hearing was presided over by Wm. T. Allen, deputy N. R. A. admi- nistrator, whom Sol A. Rosenblatt in- troduced as the man -esponsible for the textile code. (This code has re- duced the wages of ontside cotton workers to $12 and $13 a week.) Mayor LaGuardia, who was the first to speak, offered nothing con- crete. He merely stated that “we have too many taxicabs” “We have 67,000 licensed drivers,” he said, this he considere«. “too many.” ‘ must provide better service and for- mulate a code,” declared the Mayor,| while avoiding the wage issue as much as possible. Sidetrack Wage Issue The whole tone of the first session of the hearing was to sidetrack the| Wages issue. But the code committee | of the Taxi Drivers Union was present | | | demanding a minimum of} $20 a week for day and $22 for night of the Furniture Workers drivers, \r U : is {2 ee ndustrial Union when the delegates Emnst's chief concern was the/retum from the First National Con- Operators. “In connection with the minimum wage,” he said, “it cannot be imposed on the operators.” He further revealed his anti-labor andj strikebreaking attitude by pointing out that he was against the formation of a union in the midst of a strike, “but Jater on” when the situ:.tion cools down. He proposed that any union that might be formed hould be or- ganized under the guidance of Mrs. Herrick and the N. R. A. (Mrs. Her- tick is the N. R. A, official who told @ group of taximen in Ernst’s office that if she had her wey she “would throw the Committee of 13 ont of the window.”) Pians Speed up After making various proposals on how to further rationalize and speed up the taxi industry and “eliminate economic waste,” Ernst suggested that 5,000 of the 15,000 cabs be taken off the streets. He was not clear on how he would perform this feat of forcing the companies to pull a sec- tion of their cabs off the street. This plan is obviously directed against the small owners and is part of the Roosevelt trustification scheme. In closing his speech, Erns unwit- tingly blurted out the truth. He said: “Mr. Administrator, I have ex- hausted the limit of my ignorance.” Wm. T. Alien, who is in charge of the hearing, seemed more concerned with demonstrations than anything else. He spoke like a police captain, and in a considerable flight of ora- tory, warned against flights of ore- tory and demonstrations. 1,000 CWA Workers: Strike; March On N. Y. Headquarters (Continued from Page 1) handed a 20 per cent pay cut. Fri- day, after working until 11 a.m., they were toid to go home and would be paid for two hours’ work. Saturday, after reporting for work and waiting three hours in zero weather, they Yesterday, when the workers were informed that they would again be knocked off for the day without pay, they began the march on the C.W.A. to force the officials to pay ‘The paymasters informed the men since they struck on the fob would get only $1.12, as they had only two hours on Friday. 30 Police On Hand workers began their march, mobilized, and two police preceded the line of park projects, the workers ited with 30 police. ittee of six demanded an with Andrews, chief engi- king, “I did not fields ten years CODE has called a meeting Thurs- tht at Cooper Union, where ers will demonstrate their and against the * { LaGuardia Says There’s | the New England states. |the strike of the Progressive Table -|speech Monday morning, {employed Councils and other labor to| foreign born workers. Wage Issue Councils and CWA le Hearing; Ernst Against Union? James Ford, Little, Will Speak On Cuba 4t Center Tomorrow ames Ford, Committee Party, who uba, and | | | ceeds go P | amunist League Furniture Union to Tackle Mich. and Big Southern Plants Delegate to Convention | Works Employes, jand Professional DAILY WORKER, N Union Mobilize fass Turnout to Include} Nine Jobless and CWA Organizations NEW YORK Thursday, Fe' workers of N call of nine o j onstrate in Union Square the firing of one million men by Roosevelt from C.W.A. scheduled for | day. The Unemployment Councils and the Relief Workers League urge ail workers to come out to this demon- ‘ation and to suppoi participating demonstration Association of Civil Associated Office Emergency Em-} ployes, Federation of Architects, En- gineers, Chemists, and Technicians, Home Relief Bureau Employes As-| sociation, Wi Committee on} Unemployment, and Workers Unem- | ployed League. | Andrew Overgaard, chairman of | the Trade Union League, is- sued a statement urging all mem- bers of the T.U.U.L. unions as well as all members of AF. of L. unions to participate in the demonstration. Overgaard urged a united fight of the employed and unemployed against C.W.A. lay-offs and wage- cuts, which hammer down the em- ployed workers wage scale. Richard Sullivan, secretary of the} Unemployment Councils, in a state- Exposes Milwaukee | Prison Labor | | By HARRY RAYMOND NEW YORK.—Wherever there are| big furniture factories—in High Point, rand Rapids, Mich. and in the New England state. vention, which ended here last night. Statistics brought before the con- vention in the org ational report , national secretary of the union, showed that in the Point re- gion alone there are over 25,000 fur- niture workers who are totally un- organized and working under the vilest conditions. In Grand Rapids, Mich., one of the largest furniture centers in the country, there are 30,000 workers in the trade. Although the union has made good advances in Boston, having organized over 2,000 workers, there are still 15,000 unor- ganized furniture workers throughout “These are the most important centers in the furniture industry,” said Borodkin, chairman of the resolutions committee. “Our main task is to concentrate in these cen- ters.” Delegaie C. Hannula, representing 1,100 workers of the Allied Furniture Union of Gardner, Mass., reported that his organization was in touch with all these centers, especially those in the South. He offered the cooperation of his organization to build up fighting unions in these sec- tions of the country. Minor Gets Ovation Enthusiastic applause greeted Rob- ert Minor, Communist candidate for mayor of New York in the recent elections, who brought greetings to the convention from the Central Com- mittee of the Communist Party. Minor was arrested a few months ago while leading a picket line during workers and is still out on bail facing charges for his activities in fighting against an injunction gotten out against the furniture workers. “There is no use kidding our- selves,” said Minor. “William Green and Woll, leaders of the American Federation of Labor, are openly working for the bosses, breaking strikes and attempting to stop every movement of the work- ers, The Commanist Party strives | te unite the entire working class in the struggle for bread. While there may be some delegates who do not agree with me politically, we must all stick together on the picket line.” Max Bedacht, in a ten minute brought greetings to the convention from the International Workers Order. The convention voted unanimously to affi- liate nationally with the L W. O. and send news of the affiliation to all locals throughout the country. The resolutions committee began reporting during the latter part of Sunday's session and continued Mon- day morning. To Build Strike Fund A resolution calling for the building up of a big national strike fund was loudly greeted by the delegates. ‘There was a resolution calling for a struggle against the Roosevelt code, which has cut the wages to 30 cents an hour in the South and %5 cents in the north. The resolution calls for a fight for 70 cents minimum for unskilled and 70 cents to $1.75 for skilled operators, metal bed workers, broom workers, varnishers, finishers, ete, For Jobless Insurance A resolution calling for the organi- zation of the furniture workers in sup- port of the movement, which the Un- organizations started, to pass the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill, was unanimously adopted. ‘There were resolutions dealing with the special problems of women in the furniture industry, demanding equal pay for equal work, a resolution de- manding equal rights for Negro workers, one supporting the struggle against the vicious deportation pro- ceedings which the Roosevelt govern- ment is taking against militant ment yesterday, declared that the local Councils are issuing leaflets: and holding mass meetings to rally all workers to the demonstration, | “All workers’ organizations should bring pressure on Congress at once to force the enactment of the| Workers Unemployment Insurance} bill, and to bring the bill out of the} House Committee where it has been} buried by Congressmen,” Richard | Sullivan, secretary of the Unemploy- | ment Councils said. | Michael Davidow, president of the Relief Workers League, urged all job committees on C.W.A. projects to press for the full payment of wages on this day when C.W.A. workers will join the demonstration. Davidow said: “The Relief Workers League is doing its utmost to rally all C.W.A. workers to the Feb, 15 demo ration.” Workers in various parts of the city will mobilize at previously desig- nated points, and converge on Union Square at 3 p. m. White collar work- ers will meet in Madison Square and march to 14th St. Downtown workers will assemble at Rutgers Square at 1:30 p. m. and march to Seventh St. and Ave. A, where they will be joined by workers of that neighborhood. In a body these will march to Union Square. Joseph Porper and William Bryan, militant Negro worker who was re- cently fired from a C.W.A. job and forced the officials to reinstate him, will be the speakers for the Relief Workers League. Merrill Work and Richard Sullivan, of the Unemploy- ment Council, will be the speakers for the Councils. The demands for the united front demonstration call for, in part: the continuance and enlargement of the C.W.A.; restoration of pay cuts with union wages for skilled workers; no lay-offs avd immediate reinstate- ment of thyce fired; full weekly pay guaranteed to all C.W.A. workers; recognition of job committees; im- mediate cash relief for all jobless workers; no discrimination of Ne- Sroes, foreign born, etc., on relief or C.W.A.; and a system of federal un- employment insurance. The Unem- ployment Council, however, will. con- tinue to struggle for the enactment of the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill and other demands not specified in the united front, basing its united front with other organi- zations on the basis of minimum demands. REPORT ON UNEMPLO’ CONVENTION Geo. Stone, secretary of the Bronx Section of the LL.D., just returned from the Wash- ington Conference Against Unemployment, will give ® report before the George Dim- itrof branch, newly organized, Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. at 307% Westchester Avenue, Bronx, EMENT SHOE WORKERS MEET TONIGHT ‘The Slipper Department of the United Shoe end Leather Workers Union is calling @ mass meeting of all McKay laster ers and finishers in the union juarters, 71 Fifth Ave. tonight at 6:30. Open shop union members are asked especially to at- tend. of the Communists held prisoners in the Hitler jails and concentration for Demonstration) 205, ae bh unt ino” - v \ eM ae MUNIC(PR courr se 3 In sponsoring Harry Lanzs ship we followed the proper Justices Joseph Raimo, Abra Kuntsler. L. a for his $4,000 assistant clerk- procedure.’—Municipal Court ham Horowitz and Harold L. Million Workers Strike in France Against Fascism (Continued from Page 1) telegraph and radio communication workers are out. About 20 per cent of the unionized teachers refused to go out, and stopped trainmen one minute only. unionized police refused to join the The rike. A full half of the white-collar workers have joined in the strike, most of them directly, some because city transportation was so com- pletely paralyzed they could not get to work. Everywhi the workers, remem- bering the fate of their brothers be- trayed into the hands of the fascists by the treachery of the German So- cialist Party, strove to break through | the paralyzing bonds of decorum and legality imposed by the Socialists, who had not dared refuse to call the strike. Deep Unrest The strike which has involved de- cisive sections of the working class in all the large cities of the coun- try, reveals the depth of the unrest which has gripped the workers and lower middie classes of France. It comes on the heels of a widespread wave of local strikes against wage- cuts and for better working condi- tions. Considering the great influence which the Socialist Party retains over many sections of the workers, particularly through its control of the reformist General Labor Federa~ tion, today’s strike represents a deep upsurge which has gone far beyond the limits which the Socialis: Party attempted to set for it. It also re- veals a strong response to the fas- cist danger which reared its head high as the fascists seized on the indignation of the masses to turn it into reactionary channels. Socialist Tactics Aid Doumergue While withholding one parliamen- tary support, the Socialist Party leaders steadfastly support the vi- ciously reactionary Cabinet of Doum- ergue, with its six ex-premiers and its military men, by their assurances to Doumergue and their orders to their members against all picketing, demonstration, or militancy in the strike. . The revolutionary Unitary General Federation of Labor, supported by the Communist Party, has taken the leading part in making the strike effective by calling for a united front of struggle by all workers, and for militant picket lines and demon- strations. “Methodical, energetic, organized struggle for the immediate demands of the workers, the poor farmers, the soldiers; relentless ideological struggle to wrest the misled workers from fascist and social-fascist in- fluence,” is the program of the Com~ camps, Woman Kepresents 400 One of the most active workers in the convention is May Siegel, woman delegate from Boston. She is a worker in the New England Bedding Co. and represents 400 workers. “Half of the workers whom I Tepresent are women,” said Delegate Siegel. “They are all good fighters. You will hear from us soon, for we organization in dustrial Union, who toured the middle west in preparation for the conven- tion, reported on his stay in Mil- waukee, Socialist Party controlled city. He stated that he had found that inmates of the city House of Correction were engaged in manufac- turing chairs, thus undermining con- in the local furniture in- dustry. After a year of work, each inmate is given $10 for his labor by the county officials, who get 50 cents per man per day from the Clode Furni- ture Store. This store, when it re- ceives these prison-made chairs, puts Tackle Youth Problem them on sale under the fe\se and misleading label of “Badger Chair munist Party and the revolutionary unions. The fervor of the response of the workers of France to the call for a complete political strike shows that the soil is ripe to make this revolu- i program effective, France Opens Trade War on England PARIS, Feb. 12.—While at least a million workers in France demon- strated their protest against the growing fascist trend, the Doumergue cabinet of reaction and war, having mobilized the forces of the state against the strikers, pressed the semi- fascist, war-making policies against which the strike is a protest. transfer more authority from the par- lament to the executive, and launch- Great Britain, Franco-British Treaty Denounced Doumergue announced he would ask for constitutional changes to ed an aggressive trade war against ‘House Committee Hears Demand To Pass Jobless Bill (Continued from Page 1) pass the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill,” Benjamin replied. Ernest Lundeen, Minnesota con- gressman, who, under pressure of the Minnesota workers, introduced the Workers Bill in Congress, did not sup- port the measure he introduced in any way. Lundeen contented himself with asking Benjamin if he thought the bill could be passed by congress. “Have you made a suryey of Con- gress?” Lundeen asked. Congressman Connery, of thec’ ir- man of the Labor Committee spoke favorably of the Deane Bill, the em- ployers bill which places the work- ers at the mercy of the employers, who administer the funds. Congressman Wood, Democrat of Missouri, for twenty years president of the Missouri A. F. of L., called Benjamin a “liar,” in an ugly attack on the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill and in defense of Wil- liam Green's opposition to unemploy- ment insurance. He called the work- ers bill “a theory, a dream,” in his sneering speech. “Unemployment and starvation are not theories or dreams,” Benjamin answered. (Pull details will be published to- morrow of the session of the Labor Committee which heard Benjamin’s demand for the enactment of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill) J Mention the Daily Worker when addressing advertisers. (Classified ) ONE black galoshe exchanged by mistake at N.S.L. dance in Pierre Degeyter Club, 5 E, 19th St. last Sat. evening, Feb. 10th. Call at Morning Fretheit, 50 Z. i8th St, comrade at switchboard. EW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1934 €PO Unemployed Join With '— Strikers; Demand City | Give Relief | | er } | PITTSBURGH, Pa., Feb. 12—Police | swooped down at noon hour toedav on ‘a group of 300 pickets at the William | }Penn Hotel, which was struck by cooks and waiters under the leader-| ship of the Food Workers Indrstrie1 | Cops Attack Hotel | Strikers, Jail Nine In Pittsburgh, Pa. By ROB the strike, Jack Kirsch. Following the beating of the leader, | $ to arrest six m n who Ww ct ed on | game last night. jailed worke: ere releast bail furnished by the International Then } Se tes 1en he le D 2 Taboo Dakenie, V he learned the kind of paper the Producers’ News is, Delegation Demands Relief Pigs EDEL TRIN ; and what the United Farmers’ Meanwhile the workers continu: You Can’t Jim-Crow A Stop Watch PLENTYWOOD, Montana. Harlem Globe Trotters, who plays center on this fast profes- Union, brutally beating the leader of | sional Negro basketball team, was surprised and pleased to find Sheridan county farmers organized behind a program which en | emphasizes solidarity with the Negro farmers of the South, The in| Globe Trotters defeated the Plentywood High School team in a y greE | tracks.” their strike with the utmost militancy, | League stands for, he was glad to dis-| A delegation of striking wa. elected to go to the ci als to- morrow and demand relief ‘or the strikers and the unemployed. The un- | employed council is rallying the job-| less workers in support of the strike and has organized an affair for| Friday night to get funds to aid the} strikers. Radio entertainers have offered | their services and will broadcast twice daily announcing Friday's af- fair.. Many organizations have responded to the call for support of the strike, including the International Workers Order, which has opened up a kitchen for the strikers. Lynchers Threaten Negro Witness in Cocktail Murder (Continued from Page 1) | “This thing should never have | been permitted. It’s a blot on the | fair name of Mississippi. It's a dis- | grace to the prosecution’s whole case.” Leflore’s testimony was brief and added little to the damaging flood of testimony already recorded against Dr. Dean. He merely told how, as porter, he cleaned up Dr. Kennedy's | office on the morning following the last of their numerous midnight cocktail parties, describing his find- ing of two glasses, cigarette butts, a rumpled sheet on the operating table and evidences of Dr. Kennedy's vio- lent illness. which, according to Ken- nedy’s death-bed declaration, fol-| lowed his drinking of 'a “love toast” | poured by Dr. Dean. ‘The prosecution’s use of the Negro witness is expected to greatly influ- ence the cotton planter jury before which Dr. Dean is being tried. Planters in town for the trial also! avidly discussed today plans of} Clarksdale, Miss., white business men for the lynching of three Negro} youths in that town. | TH Ave. Theatre sauce Today Until Saturday—9 A.M. to 11 P.M. Soviet Triumph! Superb Film! ANNA STEN in the “Yellow Pass” Reduced Prices to Union Members MEN end WOMEN Dorit try to hide dandruff with a big hat XDANDRo ~ Removes dandruff end stops excessive faling hair Brooklyn 0 uhdred readers and asking for information whi naires were mailed out to back to our office in which requires no stamp. every reader respond who buy, where they buy, the WORKER, living in Brooklyn, received a questionnaire campaign to sell advertising space. These question- the Pen and Hammer Club is making of our readers. cee OUT THESE QUESTIONNAIRES and mail them @ number of these on Saturday and Monday, we can~ not too strongly emphasize the importance of having ne READERS’ NAME WILL APPEAR in connection with our tabulations of this information. We simply wish to show prospective advertisers what our readers unemployed, average family wages, etc. e DAILY WORKER-—50 E. 13th St., New York City ‘The foreign office announced that ! ° Readers FRIDAY and SATURDAY of last week, several subscribers of the DAILY ich will help our paper in its speed tp the survey which the self-addressed envelope Although we received quite receives a questionnaire, Percentage of employed and the Doumergue cabinet had denounc- SCIENCE and cuss the Scottsboro case, the Negro’s| discrimination and | struggle Jim Crow! ism, and the necessity for solicarity between Negro and white! toilers. |ACKSON'S six-foot-two almost fill- ed the little cubbyhole of the news- paper office where the interview took place. But he folded himself into a| chair with the easy gracefulness of a top-notch athlete. He told of the discrimination which confronts this troup of Negro athletes almost wherever they go. “And Jim Crowism,” he said, “does not stop at the Mason and Dixon line. In Great Falls, Mont., we were refused service at almost every restaurant in town. In Minneapolis, the team was denied hotel rooms and were eventually sent to a flop house down by the railroad LaGuardia Agrees On Amendments to Wage Slashing Bill |New Move With Lehman to Befuddle Workers and Guard Bankers ALBANY, N. Y., Feb, 12—Mayor LaGuardia and Governor Lehman announced today that they had reached an agreement whereby they hoped to expedite the passage of the Emergency Economy Bill when it comes up before the New York State Legislature. The agreement concerned amend- ments which will keep the power to cut salaries of Board Education em- Ployees in the hands of the state rather than under city control, as the original bill planned to do. It also kept civil service pension funds sys- tem intact, and decided that “a fur- lough, which is in effect a wage-cut, shall not lead to a permanent reduc- ‘fon of salaries, but shall be merely temporary to meet the present emer- gency.” These so-called “safeguards” for city workers were brought about in an effort to obtain the support of the Democratic opposition to LaGuardia’s Bill at Albany, and to cover the real wage-cutting and banker-protecting nature of the bill, under liberal hrases. Pl Not a word was said about the heavy tribute which the city is pay- ing to the Wall Street bond holders— $126,000,000 a year for the next four years. This remains under the terms of the Untermyer four-year agree- ment, and only civil employees are victimized in Fusion’s attempt to bal- ance the budget, in which a $31,000,~ 000 deficit exists. The Senate Cities Committee will hold another hearing of the bill to- morrow, at which Controller Cun- ningham and former Controller Mc- Aneny get together, representing both Fusion and Tammany, to necessity of the bill.” “explain the 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE * 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. [] Lp at !79 ST.NY at 106th ST.NY. | 107 BRISTOL STREET ‘Bet, Pithtm and Suiter Aves., Breoktyn PSONE: DICKENS 2-013 Ofties Hours: 3-10 AM, 1-8, 68 P.M. WILLIAM BELL orrictat Optometrist OF THE EW. 0. 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. ¥. 6. Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237 sent RT F. HALL —Inman Jackson, captain of the At Fargo, N. D., and at Marshall- town, Ohio, they had also faced the segregation rules fostered by the moneyed ruling class. At Chadbourne, Nebraska, after playing the high school team there, they were unabie to find either a place to sleep or a |Testaurant which would serve them food. At Alliance, he said, they had | to beg for lodging. IN Denver, Colorado, Eastern, the smajl Negro forward who made the tour with the Globe Trotters last sea- son, was refused a seat in a theatre, | although he had purchased tickets | for himself and girl companion. Jackson attended New York Uni- versity in 1925, leaving that school to attend Wilberforce University, 2 Negro college at Zenia, Ohio. Wher he left college, the same dismal future faced Jackson as faces thousands of other Negro intellectuals. There were no jobs for a college-trained Negro, and he had to fall back on his athletic prowess to earn a living. But in athletics, too, there was discrimination, he said, recalling the discrimination against Negro ath- letes in the eastern colleges. “In basketball, discrimination is the rule,” he said. “In track, a Negro athlete meets less outright discrim- ination, Although he may be snubbed by coaches and officials, and even by some of his fellow stu- dents, it is impossible to jim-crow a stop-watch. The records made by Negro athletes—and some world records have been made by them— are hard to juggle.” > aa } | * \CKSON had never heard of the Labor Sports Union and its fight to prevent discrimination against Negro athletes, but his eyes lit up when we discussed this working class organization. “Of course, I cannot believe the Scottsboro boys are guilty,” he said “Even if one didn’t know conditions in the South, he would be convinced by the fact that Ruby Bates testified as to their innocence.” ~ In leaving, Captain Jackson said. “I wish you would say to the farmers here through the paper that for the Negro people I want to thank them for the stand they take, and for the support they have given the defense of the Scottsboro boys and the Negro share-croppers in Alabama.” Training School Opens for Sports Instructors at Young Workers’ Gym NEW YORK.—A training school for sports’ instructors, organized by the Labor Sports’ Union, International Workers’ Order and Jewish Workers’ Clubs, opened yesterday at the Young Workers’ Athletic Club Gym, 350 EF. 81st street. The school gives twelve period courses in Light and Heavy Athletics, Apparatus, Recreational Games, Marching and Calisthenics, History, Labor Sports and Organiza- tional Problems. There are six period courses in Personal and Group Hy- giene and First Aid. Furman, Elkins, Myshne, Gordon and Halmus are the instructors, The fee for each student is $3 to cover running expenses. Dr. E. EICHEL Dentist 150 East 93rd Street, New York City Cor, Lexington Ave. Tel. ATwater 9-8333 Hours: from 9 a.m. to8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1? Member Workmen's Sick and Death { Benefit Fund i. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 906 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens Might Phone: Dickens 6-3369 Yor International Workers Order (Brooklyn) ~~ Willtasusbaryh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave, Cor. Siegel St EVERY BITE A DELIGHT PHOTOS. BLUE BIRD STUDIOS of the better kind AT REDUCED PRICES ed the 1826 and 1892 commercial and navigation treaties with Great Britain, to take effect immediately. This action followed a note handed to the British foreign office earlier to- day in which France refused to re- scind a sharp reduction in the quotas HISTORY FOR GIRLS and BOYS I claim that this is the first book of its kind By William Montgomery Brown 1595 PITKIN AVENUE, Near AMBOY STREET Co. ‘The special resolution on the youth} No record exists, declared Brown, to question points out that 23 per cent| show that the 8. P. City Council had of those working in the furniture in-| presented any resolution protesting dustry are young workers, It calls) against this either in the city or for the formation of s youth com-| county, in both of which the S, P. is mittee to deal with the problems of strongly represented. the young workers, Numerous other * bd bd resolutions call for a determined) (The convention was not yet ended struggle to free the nine innocent}as we went to press. A full report for British imports surtax on certain imports France. Simultaneously, the French foreign office announced that it had given up all negotiations regarding German rearmament, and was in favor of further postponing the meetings of into France. Britain has retailiated by putting a from for the youth of the world and that it Js the only book which meets their greatest cultural needs in this revolutionary century.—W.M.B. . ° . A $1.50 book for 25 cents, five copies for $1.00, stamps or coin; paper bound, 320 pp. 27 chap, Money refunded if after examination the @ ICE book is not wanted and is returned in good Scottsboro boys, Tom Mooney and all class war prisoners. A resolution protests against the fascist terror in Germany and demands the freedom on the elections of union officials and the final resolution will appear in tomorrow's issue of the Daily Worker.) the “disarmament” conference. The Bradford-Brown E Mention the Daily Worker when addressing advertisers. condition, ducational Co., Galion, 0. Cars BROOKLYN, N. Y. — Phone DICKENS 2-1096 NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. ¥. Every winter comfort—Sporis, Best Food Sixty Steam Heated Rooms. Rate $14 Weekly, 2700 BRONX PARK EAST - EStabrook 8-1400 SKATING IS SWELL! PHONE 731 $2.45 per day Jeave 10:30 A.M. Daily, from Reduced week-end fare