The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 21, 1934, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1934 N.Y. Hotels Continue forward” Prints | To Hire Thugs; Mayor ying Article on ey Heads Betrayal Move Corps of Gunmen Hired | At Labor Racketeering Agencies HOUSED IN HOTELS | Workers Urged to Fight For Demands By HARRY RAYMOND | NEW YORK—Despite Mayor La- Guardia’s strikebreaking maneuvers | to call off the pickets and smash up the hotel strike, the Hotel Men’s Associaticn is not quite certain that the cooks and waiters strike is over. Tf the hotel owners are sure that he strike hes ended whv do they continue to maintain large corps of gunmen recruited by the labor racketeering agencies at the rate of $10 per head per day? Why are they still housing scab dishwashers and kitchen help in $7 per day rooms? ‘Why do they continue to maintain recruiting offices in Boston, Phila- delphia, Pittsburgh, Albany and Newark, while telling the public that all the places are filled? Why continue running blind ads n the New York American and the Times seeking strikebreakers? _ Why does Mr. Hennesy, strike- breaking director of the Statler sys- tem, not go back to Cleveland if all is well in the Hotel Pénnsyl- vania? The truth of the matter is that since the strike started, they have been unable to place on the job over 50 strikebreakers who are real hotel cooks, and a great part of these were men over sixty years of age, men who could only fill the jobs for a temporary p2riod at the most, Can't Get Crews As far as getting permanent crews o fill the jobs the hotel owners were as bad off when Mayor LaGuardia called off picketing as they were the first day of the strike. For this reason detective agencies and seab herding offices throughout the city have intensified and ex- tended their activities. Agencies Supply Scabs Among the strikebreaking agencies that are busy supplying thugs and for the hotels are: Detective Agency, 370 Seventh Ave. This agency sup- plies thugs for the Biltmore, Com- modore and Ambassador. Bergofi 3 2 Columbus k, Plaza, Park Lane ind Savoy Plaza. Pat McKenna Agency—also sup- ‘YORK AMERIC. GUARDS mrs for protect ‘seubie, "38" 678 ee How the capitalist press helps break strikes, Here is an ad for gunmen, in the hotel strike, ad which appeared recently in New York American. to work without winning a single one of their demands. Don't Be Fooled We say, workers, do not be fooled by Field, LaGuardia and N.R.A. offi- clals, Do not be cowed by gunmen and thugs. Workers of the ted Union, unite with workers of the Hotel and Restaurant Workers Union Local 119 of the Food Workers In- dustrial Union! Carry on your good fight over the heads of the corrupt union officials! Refuse to go back without your union organization! Demans that the thugs and strikebreakers be driven out of the hotels! Demand that the Benny Epstein gang get out of the Hotel Pennsyl- vania! Demand that Weasel Duffy and his thugs be ousted from the Astor! Demand that Jack Coen’s Wash- ington detective gang gets ont of the Biltmore! Demand that the detective agencies and scab offices be closed! Demand this from Mayor La~ Guardia! Mayor LaGuardia knows the type of men the hotel owners have hired to break the strike. Mayor LaGuardia is interested in breaking strikes him- self and that is the reason he has done nothing about these profes- sional strikebreakers. Mayor's Office Informed On Lincoln’s birthday a cook went to the City Hall to tell the mayor about the thugs who were hired by the hotel owners to break the strike. He spoke to the mayor's secretary and was told that the mayor ts busy, but that the mayor would be inter- ested in learning about what was going on in the hotels. The mayor was obviously not interested, for the cook was never called. Of course, he is not interested. If he were he would have long ago re- voked the licenses of every detective agency and every scab herding office in the city that supplies strikebreak- ers and gunmen. Spokane Lumbermen Foil Hoodlums’ Plan plies forces for the Plaza and Savoy Piaza. Sherwood Wetective Agency, 1440 Rroadway—cunplies gangsters for the Waldort Astoria, Industrial Railway reau, 4735 Grand This agency supplies everything direct to the Hotel Men’s Associa - tion, Th » is Weasel Duffy, with his off for the Hotel Supplying er his t, who works reakers for the Pennsylvania Hotel is Benny Ep- stein, who had his office under his hat up until a few days ago, when ke get desk room om Fifth Are. On tov of this. Mr. Field, head of he Amalgamated Union. Mayor La- Guardia and N.R.A. officials have maneuvered to get the workers back To Break Up Meeting SPOKANE, Wash.. Feb. 20.—Using | 48 an excuse that a leaflet issued by | the National Lumber Workers Union | attacked the government by exposing |the N.R.A., a gang of hoodlums at- |tempted to terrorize speakers and \Gele~-f-s ho went from Spokane to | Deer Park last week to attend a meeting called to set up committees |to demand relief for unemployed In spite of the attempted intimi- dation the meeting was held. J. Vanorum of the N.L.W.U., exposed the N.R.A. and the graft in the ©. WA. Over 100 lumber men were present, many of whom applied for membership in the union, Hathaway Attack: |Accuses Communists of | Beating Up Daily | Worker Editor NEW YORK. — Sunday's issue of | she Jewish Daily Forward, in an in-| side page story devoted to Friday's meeting at Madison Square Garden, prints the absurd and lying state-| ment that Communists beat up| Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker. The organ of Abe Cahan, who sat on the platform just behind the speakers’ table where Hathaway was| first struck, declares that Hathaway | went up to the platform with a whole | group of Communists for the pur- pose of taking possession of the plat- form, and that it was Communist | workers who threw chairs at the So-| cialists and hit Hathaway. The For- ward piece also declares that the) Communists tore down the American | - flag. The vicious and provocative nature | of this mess of lies will be readily apparent to all workers who actually | witnessed the events which the For- | ward so glibly distorts. Every worker | saw Hathaway approach and mount) the platform alone and they wit-_ nessed the brutal assault on him by) occupants of the platform, all SP.| and right wing union leaders. Not a single Communist was on the plat- form when the American flag was | trampled by Socialist leaders in an} overt attempt at provocation. | ‘The Forward printed this fiction on Sunday. | In its Saturday issue, fearful of | the reaction of the Socialist rank and file workers who witnessed the entire shameful action of the S.P. leaders, it did not mention @ word of this in- cident. Socialists Unite | With Communists in Anti-War Fight Meeting in Socialist Cooperative Pledges Joint Action NEW YORK.—Despite attempts of the socialist leaders to split the work- ing class and disrupt their efforts to unite in the struggle, 200 Com- munist and Socialist workers met Sunday night at the Socialist con- trolled Amalgamated Apartment House, 80 Van Courtland Park South, and pledged to strengthen their united struggle against fascism and imperialist war. ‘The meeting, held under the aus- pices of the neighborhood Commu- nist nucleus, one of a series of meet- ings being held throughout the coun- try in protest against Roosevelt's jingo “Preparedness Week,” was ad- dressed by Harry Raymond, member | of the Daily Worker staff, and Irving Adler, secretary of the Teachers’ Anti-war Committee. The Socialist workers, through questions asked, showed that they were greatly incensed over the ac | tion of their leaders in breaking up the Madison Square Garden meet~ ing. The meeting Sunday unanimously -dopted a resolution demanding that the P. W. A. build schools instead of battleships, that the R. O. T. ©. be abolished and that the loyalty pledge for high school students and | 415 meters (1,361 feet). PENNSYLVANIA FARMERS DEMAND JOBS Eighty farmers, representing 600 members of the Farmers’ Protective Association of Bucks County, marched on the C.W.A. offices in Doyles- town, Pa., demanding jobs or relief. John Hermann, a leader of the delegation, whose members last year stopped several sheriff's sales, declared: “The farmers are broke. Five thousand are registered at the Federal Employment Bureau at Doylestown. We are determined to fight for jobs or relief.” Page Three Few Negroes Hired New Mexico Jobless (nlousiana CW Form State Council: And Relief Projects American Legion Given | Charge of Employment | In Baton Rouge rankest discrimination against Negro workers, the most callou: jot those given work ca’ charac- \terize the C. W. A. administration in |Negroes have been given work, al- per “ent of the population. jfinally issued cards are given the dirt- at digging drainage canals in the dis- jease infested swamps. A guard is sta- |tioned at the public toilets, near the headquarters, to keep Negroes away. furnished; and even though it rains, must still take this long walk. An attempt was made to cut the pay jupon the workers rebelled, forcing the restoration of the stated rate plus |payment of the difference. Employmnt is under the supervi- sion of the American Legion, and the relief headquarters are located in the legion offices. In Lake Charles, Colonel Cruik. shank Randolph is the C. W. A. ad- ministrator in this city. The colonel celebrated his appointment to the of- fice by cutting the wages of the C. W. A. employees from $2.50 to $1.50 per day. He also decreed that they were not be provided with transportation to and from work. Even if the ol- onel sends a man to a project, ten miles away, that man must show up on time or be docked. A Negro worker was placed on the Cc. W, A. rols, and dismissed after one day’s service. The racketeers heard that the Negro received a few days work each month from the Powell Lumber Company, and de- cided that the five or six dollars earned thereby should be enough to support the worker and his invalid father. Both father and son are now on the verge of starvation. Dominick, superintendent of the BATON ROUGE, La., Feb. 20—The|Members of S.P. this city, Only a small percentage of | owa |though Negroes constitute about forty broke into tt Those) Mac Thorn, fest and most disagreeable work, such| Fascism st All workers must report to the city| before the barns, two miles out, before begnning| applause when he a their jobs for the day, and also after|scor to ano’ jfinishing them. No transporation {S| oor that @ & | Socialist Part making work impossible, the men} the Commur from 40 to 30 cents per hour. Where- to aiq Gallup Mir Chicago C.W.A. Workers Union treatment| Hail Communist Program CHICAG worke cialist contro tee to Aid ‘ion, at the proletariat wou! of the Hitler Thorn, who was A colle Shoe Boss Fixes | Time Card to Give | Only Part of Pay | ES By a Needle Worker Correspondent NEW YORK- e strike was caleld off by the N. R. A., the 75 wo Shoe Co. on Bleec! threatened by the boss if they joined the U |Leather Workers U had already experi tion of the Boot a shop rather than vote for a comps union. | The employer was satified, of and assured the workers be much better off. Just to his heart is in the right place, mediately signed up with the N. R. A that ‘But the workers soon found o1 the Blue Eagle is only a wi . . . Palace of Soviets in Moscow * To Be World’s Tallest Buildi 0 Be World’s Tallest Building On Structure Higher Than the Empire State — ® mendous monument to the victorious MOSCOW, Feb. 20 (By Onble).—|riunism and a monument to its The plans for the Palace of the|jeader, Lenin, the creator of the the architect Iofan, calling for the | ie eer construction of the tallest mao G P il in the world, have won final approval, | erman 1 et The preparatory work on the palace | has already been started, and begin- | work will be commenced on a large| To Receive 10 Percent scale, of Proceeds Tt will bej crowned with a gigantic figure of | NEW YORK —Although Comrades Dimitroff, Torgler, Popoff and the eae bes itted weeks (The dispatch 1s unclear as tol ene vonee muullted weeks ago due to Lenin will be included in, or added to, the total height of the structure. will be far taller than the Empire State Building in New York, at pre- is 1248 feet in height. With the height of the Lenin figure added, the it is included in the 415 meters, the building will reach the height of 1,361 Plans Gain Final Approval; Work Already Begun (Special to the Daily Worker) | struggle of the proletariat for Com- Soviets, drawn up in the project of | Soviets. it was learned here today. Fun ds 0 {ILD Bazaar ning with the spring of this year| 1 ce ‘The height of the palace will reach | ates te eee | aeet detantatis Be ite vatee tee whether the height of the figure of In either case, however, the palace sent the highest in the world, which building will be 1,624 feet high. If feet). ‘The palace will have a gigantic hall with 20,000 seats, designed for congresses, great gatherings, mass theatrical performances, etc., as well as 2 smal) hall with 6,000 seating capacity, for conferences, solemn ses- sions, and smaller theatrical perfor- mances. A colossal mural the revolution, will the great hail The Palace of the Soviets will also house several museums and librarie: and a number of cultural institutions. The structure will constitute a tre- a panoraina of be located over teachers be scrapped. The workers, most of them parents of schoo) chil- dren, voted to support the teachers’ delegation which will go to the Board of Education Feb. 28, to protest against war propaganda in the schools, the mass protests of the working class of all countries, they are still held prisoners of the Hitler brown shirts, and their lives are in im- |minent danger. The whereabouts of Comrade Thaelmann, brave leader of the German Communist Party, is not known. We do not know whether Thaelmann still lives. The revolutionary German workers are fighting the Nazi terror against fearful odds, their lives in constant danger and without the necessary | |undergo daily hardships to collect |needed funds. We must continue |our protests against the murderous Hitler gang and we must do every- thing in our power to support our | German comrades, | Tt is for these reasons that the | N. ¥. District of the International Labor Defense announces that 10 per cent of all proceeds of the annual | bazaar which takes place Feb. 21 to | Feb. 25 at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 ¥. | Fourth St., N. Y. City, will go to the | German Communist Party. The I. L. D. appeals to ali workers in New York City who want to help to swell this 10 per cent to attend the bazaar on one or all of the five days. The finest talent in New York has been procured and there will be a splendid program each day. Com- bination tickets may be had for 85 cents. Single admission 25 cents. | funds to carry on their work, they lower as much as possible their ard of living. The workers work here as trimmers fon children’s shoes. The speed-up system is undescribable. They rush with all their strength to make a few cents more for their starving families. They slave under the most terrible conditions for $8 to $10 a week, at piece work, naturally. The employer, though he pr very cheap shoes ($1, Powell Lumber Company, turned over the list of his occasional employees to Colonel Randolph in order that they might be denied any relief work. Do- minick wants these workers to be on hand whenever he has a large order to be filed. How they will manage to live during the meantime does not concern him. The new chemical plant is laying off workers at the rate of fifty to| one hundred per day, ever makes between 35 and 50 cents profit on each pair. Meat Rots in Columbus While Thousands Are Denied Food Relief COLUMBUS, Ohio—Tons of meat|clock, but makes were allowed to spoil in Columbus/they are workng, between 10 while people went hungry. |10:30 A. M. This mean trick Hundreds of needy families were|him a perfect excuse to say tha denied orders while this meat was|reason the workers earn so little rotting in grocery stores and packing- |that they do not wor! houses. It is worthy of note ‘The exact amount wasted cannot be|few of the employes compla ascertained as the January inventory N submitted by C. L. Lender, director of city relief of Columbus, made no mention of spoilage. Nevertheless, it is nearer 10,000 pounds than the 1,500 pounds announced in the newspapers, states the recently organized Relief Workers’ Union. - oat ~ Meanwhile Columbus meat dealers has occurred in the and packinghouses protest the dis-|preparation and distribution of meat tribution of meat to needy families./and is pressing for an investigation The Relief Workers’ Union has shown along this line. the so that when the the morning, he di jto punch their car hem do it while and These facts prove again agents of the N. R. A. work laboration with the employers the interests of the worl , | W 1ers Active Many Join Couneil After Vinning of Partial Demands Yew Mexico, Feb, 19.- representing groups of un- inder the initia- loyed Local of Union of Gal Gonzales Hall 12.and 13, and e Unemploymen: from Roswell , Albuquer illas and Madri resented the demand: before Gov. Hocken- or enactment of the loyemnt and Socia d_ the. appropria- h which to pay im lief to all the unem kers at the rate of $10 h $3 for each dependen adoption of the bill Iso called for the con- of the C.W.A, without dis- ion and conducted under comm es of workers and farmers; guarantee of the elementary rights of workers to assemblage, collective ning; striking, and picketing the interference of injunc- and the militi: and against proposed state sales tax, s also demanded that sufficient funds to provide gas, oil and id repair to trucks in order egates get back to their was immediately able conditions in the minc nd pointed out how the min- d struggled for better cond! the job and for adequate The conference agenda called for the singing of the “Internationale” before adjournment overnight, This precipitated an outburst on the part @ local fascist politician who imed to be a socialist. He re- sorted to provocation as a vote wa: taken and passed to sing the song of working-class solidarity, He was joined by the Portales “Socialist delegates, who bolted from the meet- ing. The next morning these dis- rupters gave garbled reports to the local press, which is owned by Sen- tor Cutting. This merely served to bring before the public the wide- spread misery of the unemployed and solidly united the remaining local and out-of-town delegates. outcome. .of,..the; conference election of a state committee and a state organizer with temporary headquarters in Roswell; decision to apply immediately for a state charter; election of a rank and file committee to present the demands to the governor against stopping of C.W.A., and for a special session of the state legislature to enact. the Unemployment Insurance Workers Bill than 50 workers, who wer: t in the hall at ‘the time ‘the demands were read, immediately joined the Santa Fe Unemployment Council. They greeted the report of the partial winning of the demands + with enthusiastic applause. Carl Howe, of Gallup, later spoke to @ mass meeting of 150 workers and it is planned to send a delege- tion to the local. welfare board wi concrete proposals for relief to w employed workers. Do the Party Districts By TI. AMTER ‘The resolution of the 13th Plenum of, the Communist International, which lays down our tasks in a sit- nation wherein “the world is closely approaching @ new round of revolu- tion and wars,” contained a small section on the “Tasks of the Com- munist Parties,’ which is most im- portant in the development of our entire work. It reads as follows: “(d) Really developing mass work among the unemployed, carrying on an untiring fight for social insur- ance, for all kinds of municipal relief.” ‘ Although the sharpest emphasis has been laid by the Resolution on work in the shops and trade unions as the basic work of the Party, in order to mobilize the decisive sections of the working class to meet the impending class battles, the above passage of the Resolution—work on the unem- ployed fleld—has been seriously neg~ lected. The army of unemployed has declined only one milion since the inauguration of the “New Deal.” To- day it number 16,000,000 and now is receiving new recruits through the demobilization of the C. W. A. Never- essity of carrying on ener- getic work on the unemployed field. Campaing for Workers Bill Grows I is not a strange phenomenon that at a time when the unemployed have been weak and the has lagged, the politicians in practic- eral Executive Council of the A. F. of L.—if not in face of the growing number of locals that went on record in favor of the Workers Bil? troduce are more “realistic” and “capable of adoption,” it is clear that are in order to of|}employment Councils have December 2—in some districts not aj single step has been taken to build up organization, in spite of the fact that members of the Party and of the Un- been working on the jobs? How does it happen that in such important cities as New York, Phila- Buffalo, St. Louis, Youngs- the unemployed movement is bi ceine io with only sporadic it happen that in such cities as Haverhill and other industrial practically no unemploy- movement at all? Is it because a. gaee Et F rt (part to the CO, W. A. rapidly enough. Where, however, it was done, the! work in the neighborhoods slumped, with the result that the struggles everywhere weakened. In the Districts where the issue was tackled concretely on the basis of local conditions, where there was a tapid fire of struggle, the movement did not weaken, but on the contrary grew both politically and organiza- tionally, eg., Pittsburgh, Seattle. Forces Not Utilized What does this show? It shows that the Districts, concentrating on the main work of the Party, “forgot” to relate the unemployed struggle to the shop and concentration work. Where formally they did so, it has been in the form of resolutions and decisions. The District Committees have not guided the daily work, helping the fractions of theUnemployment Coun- cils not only to build up organization, but to meet the specific local political issues and lead the workers in strug- gle. In most cases the contentions of the Disrict comrades have been based on alleged “weakness of forces.” But the forces in and aroundthe Party lie unused. A large percentage of the Party members are unemployed. A bout /high percentage of the recruits in the past year have been unemployed. In the unions and mass organizations surrounding the Party are large num- bers of unemployed. Why have the Districts, Sections not mobilized these workers politically and organization- ally for unemployed work? This would have achieved a double Ul . New York, farmers’ struggles, | e but the shop w have not) been drawn into sufficient solidarity) with the struggles of the unemployed. Lack of Guidance and Burocratic Practices Why is this so? The Dstricts have not aided the comrades in the un- employed work in their daily work. Although the 13th Plenum Resolution speaks of “carrying on an untiring fight for social insurance, for all kinds of municipal relief,” which demands the closset political guidance, the im- mediate meeting of issues and “rem- edies” raised by the bosses’ politicians, the clearing up of illusions, and the knitting together of the corporation, the weak fractions were allowed to) flounder. The Districts and sections have not made unemployed work the task of the whole Pary, but have re- legated it to the unemployed com- rades themselves. The Districts have allowed the most burocratic practices to be car- ried on in the Unemployment Coun- cils: the appointment, withdrawal or Temoval of leading comrades from the work by the Districts and Sec-~ tions; the assumption of leadership in the lower units of the Unemploy- ment Council by self-appointed com-| employed rades (following the burocratic prac- tices of the Districts and Sections); the failure to develop new leading|been forces out of the hundreds of thou- sands of militant workers who par- ticipate in the unemployed struggles; the failure to develop a financial sys- tem capable of maintaining the un- growing movement, a recognized novement. Only where the practices of the Districts and Sections are cor- rect Communist practices, does any development take place. The emergence of the Party from its burocratic position on the unem- ployed field may best be seen in Port- the struggle of the une! the locals of the A. few exceptions, beyond resolutions for the Workers This is due to the weakness of ow work in the reformist unions gener- | ally. but particularly because the un- | employed work as a whole is neglected | by the Districts and Sections. United Front Most Effective Where | Councils Are Strong | And finally why is it that the| united front of the unemployed or- | ganizations is weakest in those local- ities where the Unemployment Coun- cils are weak—New York, Chicago, Reading, Milwaukee, ete.? Why is it that in Pittsburgh and Seattle the drive for the united front assumes mass proportions? Because the work of the Unemployment Councils de- termines the degree of unity that we can achieve with the rank and file of the reformist unemployed organi- zations. The rank and file of these organizations is made of the same fighting stuff as the workers in the Councils. United front and the merging of the unemployed organiza- tions depends not only on the ideolo- gical winning of the rank and file of the other orgatizations, but chiefly on the carrying \hrough of the actual struggle. This. demands the building up of the Unemployment Councils in! every neighborhood, in the every, town and city. It demands attention | to every issue that arises or can be) used to rally masses, It demands | ployed organizations in the city, with their thousands of members. With proper attention, the unit {s now breaking its isolation, is rapidly recruiting members into the Council and has already led fine struggles. With proper attention, the! Portland Council will continue to grow. Red Unions Fail To Do Unemployed Work The revolutionary unions, with the Party’s Work Among Unemployed Basic Part ot Pre-Convention Discussion Unemployed Work Seriously? — e National Convention Against ent must be» used for up the Unemployment Coun- and for making the campaign for |the Workers Bill a CENTRAL tam- paign of the Party, through which we will build up the Councils, inten- sify the drive for the united front jand for one unified unemployed movement, deepen our work in the reformist unions, and reach masses in the fraternal and sick and death benefit i the enactment of the Workers Caen. inem- ployment and Social Insurance Bill. Danger ef Fascism and War The Districts, Sections and Units must searchingly examine their un- employed work and not. leave it to the unemployment. “experts,” as. is manifest in the -discussions in Dis- trict and even Central~ Committee Plenums. There. must be a most rapid turn in our unemployed work. This is demanded not. only by the continued pauperization of the masses. but above all by the growing danger of fascism and the war situation. The declaration of Assistant-Secretary of War Woodring, the clamor of Rich- ard W. Child and others to put the unemployed in the C.C.O, and tran- sient camps, and the men ‘on the C.W.A. under army control, is a sharp warning. Child says: “There is no menace greater today than the Red leadership certain to ally every state and in the United States Congress have introduced a flood of bills? In reality it is not strange. The struggles of ae workers, both unemployed and employed, the weak’ conditions of the workers in the shops| caneqmouey weak? and in the unions, have~ furnished a, fertile field for bringing forward the Workers Bill, The result is that wherever a se- vious effort has been made to present the issue, the support has been im- mediate. How otherwise can one ex- plain the change of front of the Gen- nation, the comrades in the lower organizations of the Unemployment many of them politically adopted an altitude of and of waiting till the Hu- up _by develop- the C. W. A. projects’ the instructions for building up or- up and new Iusions were How does it happen that although not meet the ganization on the C. W. A. jobs were|sharply in the unempolyed field. We issued more than two months age—! did not transfer our activities in explain the situation? issuejever before. The unemployed have effect: it would have rallied the work- ers and their organizations for un- employed work and at the same time have given us aczess to many im- Porant shops. The building of un- employed organization in the neigh- borhood of concentration shops would have enabled us to penetrate them more easily. It would have brought about a closer solidarity and unity of the unemployed and employed than employed functionaries. masses been rallied for important strike|—as in Pittsburgh, ‘struggles —-McKees Rock, Ambridge,!ment, despite ite sh. what atten- L. Committee f ‘Unemployment is ajInsurance not been able to develop! lizing the the broadest democracy and collec-|come unless this administration, at a tive leadership. It demands the mobi- | crisis, will furnish to the mobilized (!) lization of the Party members as a| unemployed a leadership of discipline _ whole, and the unemployed comYades | and patriotism.” (N. Y. Times, Fed, in Lechyapdied the work. It de-| 16, 1934.) mands the closest attention of the) ity g = Districts and Sections and the linking | gram ag geet: Sakae = up of shop and unemployed work. | Child propose to put it through in The nation-wide campaign for the | the United States, s f Workers Bill, coupled with the de-| The menace is clear. The tasks for mand for the continuation of C.W.A.|the Party are equally clear. ‘The Jobs, for adequate cash relief, in the tricts, Sections and Units must diss — struggle against the C.C.C. and tran-|cuss and clarify the situation, sient camps, must be used for mgbi-

Other pages from this issue: