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\ | Employed Workers to, Be Represented at March 4th Conference Emergency Conference On CWA To Lay Plan | Of Struggle | | NEW YORK.—Special efforts are} being made to have Federation of Labor unions represented at the Em- ergency United Front chakeenes| which will formulate a plan of action | and struggle against C.W.A. firings.| The conference will be held Sunday, March 4th, at 7 p. m,, at Irving; Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. | Andrew. Overgaard, chairman of | the Trade Union Unity Council, yes- verday urged all opposition groups in A. F. of L. unions to bring the con- ference to the attention of the union membership, and take necessary steps to elect delegates. Employed Must Support Struggles ; “The struggles of the unemployed | are indisolubly connected with the struggles and the welfare of the em- ployed workers,” Overgaard said in a ¢ Mooney, in Jail 17 Years, Begins New Fight for Freedom SAN QUENTIN PRISON, Calif., Feb, 28—Saturday was the 17th anniversary of the sentencing of Tom Mooney to the gallows, a sentence reversed to life impris- onment following protest demon- strations by workers in Soviet Russia under the leadership of Lenin. Mooney spent the day helping to prepare the next step in the long fight to smash the frame-up sentence, In San Francisco, his sister, Miss Anna Mooney, an- nounced that application for a writ of habeas corpus would be filed in the Federal courts early next month, statement yesterday. “As long as the employers have a potential army. of jobless workers at their disposal, this army of unemployed will be held by | them as a constant threat-to those working. Trade Union Unity League unions will be well representéd at the united front emergency confer ence; independent and A, F. of L. unions will be represented in direct proportion to the efforts of those workers now in A. F. of L. opposition | groups.” Roosevelt Continues Firing | Reports received at the Unemploy- | ment Councils indicate no let-up in the mass firings of C.W.A. workers} throughout the country. Richard Sullivan, secretary of the Unemploy- ment Councils of Greater New York, ih urging all unemployed groups to We represented at the conference, Stressed the necessity of unity of all ‘wotkers to fight the Roosevelt aban- donment of the C.W.A. “In preparing the ground for the first C.W.A, lay- ofits, the LaGuardia administration slandered the C.W.A. workers by call- ing them ‘loafers,’ and instituting an intense campaign in the press in order to show that the ‘unemployed | do not want to work. Yesterday the LaGuardia administration again filled | the role of apologist for the Roose- | velt government. The Department of | Sanitation announced that C.W.A. workers would be used for snow re~ moval jobs. These workers received no notification, yet, the’ sanitation commissioner has spread the page of the press with the stories that these workers did not show up for work, | and those that did ‘were only 20 per cent efficient.’ wi xe is I qi dressed by Roy Hudson, chairman of the union. The Russo Trio, radio entertainers, and the W. Soviet Steamship Kim to Arrive Here on March 5 New York: Seament Plan Mass Welcome Affair to Greet Crew NEW YORK.—To greet the sea- men of the Soviet steamship Kim, hich is due to dock here March 5, the Marine Workers Industrial Union has arranged to hold a mass affair at Manhattan Lyceum on March 7, at 8 p. m., where the New York sea- men will present a red banner to the crew to be placed in the Interna- tional Seamen’s Club in Odessa. The Kim will be the first Soviet shin to arrive in the nort of New ‘ork in over a year. The word Kim the Russian abbreviation for the words Young Communist Interna- tional. The affair of welcome will be ad- national R. Theater of Action will supply the music and entertainment for the evening. Following the Manhattan Lyceum affair the crew of the Kim will be given a supper at the union head- uarters, 140 Broad St. Must Stop Favoritism “We must also strike “a blow against C.W.A. favoritism,” Sullivan continued. “Yesterday 50 per cent of these employed by the C.W.A. at the Port Authority Building were fired. ‘The favored few were given ‘separa- tion (replacement) cards.’ On the same day that these workers were fired, the records of the statistical department of the C.W.A. show that| 1,293 new CW.A. jobs were given out, To help carry on the struggle of the Needle Trades Union COME TO THE CONCERT & DANCE Saturday Eve., March 3rd at the WORKERS’ CENTER MUSIC 50 E. 13th St. RECITATION SINGING Admission 25e. DANCING Auspices: Women’s Action Comm, N.T.W.L.U. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1934 Call All Bus Men to Vote yin Company Union N.R.A. to Hold Poll on Fifth Ave. Line- Today NEW YORK.—Following the an- nouncement made Monday by the | Regional Labor Board that it will) take a poll on Thursday of the 1,400 | employes of the Fifth Ave. Coach Co. | to determine whether they want a| company union or the Amalgama‘ed Association of Street and Electric | Motor Coach Employes, a rank and | file committee of A. F. of L. workers issued a call to all bus workers to| cast their vote against the company | union. “All workers should go to the poll- ing places today and vote for the Amalgamated Association,” said the call. “Vote for the Association and make it a real fighting union that will guard the interests of the workers.” The Trade Union Unity Council pointed out that to vote for the com- pany union would tie the workers hand and foot to the wage cutting program of the bosses, “You can make a real class union out of the Association by defeating all A. F. of L. machine bureaucrats and putting into the leadership of the union rank and file workers from the garages,” said the call, “Vote for the association and make an organ of struggle by rooting it in the garages through elected rank and file committees of workers.” Shoe Union Leader Jailed in Strike 3 Strikers Held With Him for High Bail NEW YORK.—Julius Crane, or- ganizer of the United Shoe and Leather Workers’ Union, and three strikers of the Kirchik and Becker- man crew were arrested Tuesday on a frame-up charge of felonious as- sault. The strikers were taken out of the strike headquarters by the de- tectives. The strike has been going there for about eight weeks. Last weck the firm was granted an injunction by Judge Humphrey, restraining the union from picketing. But in spite of the injunction the militency of the workers has not in any degree lessened. The strikers-are held under $1.500 bail each. The union calls upon the workers to support the strike and participate in a demonstration to smash the injunction. All slipper workers, members of the United Shoe and Leather Workers’ Union are called to a special meeting on Thursday, March 1, at 7 p.m. at the Manhattan Lyceum; 66 East | Fourth St. N. ¥. ‘This meeting will nominate officials for the Slipper De- | partment. The Stitchdown workers will meet on the same evening and for the same purpose at union head- quarters, 77 hae Nie and 146 transfers made.” ‘Socialist Party leaders,” Sullivan continued, “have issued a call to a C.W.A. and relief conference to be held tonight. From this conference the Unemployment Councils, the Relief Workers League and the independent id T.U.U.L, unions have been ex- cluded., It will be necessary for every BERMAE’S Cafeteria and Bar 809 BROADWAY Between 11th and 1%th Streets delegate at this conference to raise the question of unity from the floor, and to ask that this conference send delegates to the March 4th confer- ence in order to unify all the strug- gles. of the unemployed and C.W.A. ‘The Emergency United Front Con- ference will also plan a. wide city campaign for the enactment of fed- eral- unemployment insurance at the expense of the government and the employers. All unorganized unemployed work- erg in neighborhoods and flop houses are urged to hold meetings and elect delegates to the conference. Among organized groups, the basis of rep- MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Brons Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Price SANDWICH SOL’S LUNCH > 101 University Place (Just Around the Sorner) Telephone Tompkins Sqeare 6-9780-9781 resentation will be three delegates from each local or branch and three from the city or central body. Trial Offer—50c. Help win over your friends and fellow workers to our revolu- tionary movement. You can do this by reaching them with our Daily Worker. Present them with a real revo- lutionary gift, a trial subscrip- tion of the “Daily.” ‘For a limited period, we will send the “Daily” for one month every day or for 4 months every Saturday for only 50 cents, List below the name and ad- dress of the one you want to receive the trial subscription, Use coupon below. ‘This offer does not apply for the Bronx and Manhattan, New York. Trial Subscription Blank Daily Worker, Enclosed find %.._.. to pay for the following subscription at the spe- cial trial rate. § ~ CHICAGO, ILL. Willismsburgh Comrades Weleome De Luxe Cafeteria $4 Graham Ave., Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin ané Sutter Aves, Brechiyn PHONE: DICKENS 9-s0r8 Office Mewrs: 8-10 AM, 1-8, 68 P.M. VOLUNTEERS WANTED to act as waiters, waitresses and ushers at our PRESS BANQUET. SUNDAY, MARCH 4th, at New Star Casino. Please apply all week at Daily Worker Store, 35 E. 12th St., City. DANCE CABARET | ENTERTAINMENT Sat., March 3, at 7:30 p.m. SOUTHWESTERN TEMPLE 1155 8. Albany Avenue Concert at 8 p.m. Cabaret at 12 Admission 25¢. Unemployed 100. Auspices, Communist Party Sec. 3 Sunday, March 4th Program starts © Dancing from 8 Admission 25¢ in adva NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS IND. UNION 2457 West Chicago Avenue Peoples’ Auditorium 4:30 P.M. to Midnight nee; 35¢ at’ door Theatre Workers Vote to Strike T.U.U.C. Warns Against N.R.A. Maneuvers NEW YORK —Theatre ushers, doormen and janitors, members of the Theatre ard Amusement Emvloves Union, voted for strike at a meeting held Monday nieht at the Palm Gar- den, 306 W 52nd St The date for the strike has not been set The executive board of the union declared that it would an- nounce the date following a meeting held yesterday. Mrs. Elinore Herrick, chairman of the Regional Labor Board, is already maneuvering with the union leaders, attempting to halt the strike. The Trade Union Unity Council warned the workers Monday through the Daily Worker against pinning their hopes on the N. R. A. officials. Now that the workers have voted to strike they should not allow the WE. DEMAND ATTACKING FIRE Above photo shows Pioneer Sorota addressing the children who pro- tested fire trap housing at City Hall. Further action against the slum conditions and fire traps on the East Side is being taken by the Pi League who are issuing petitions demanding the removal of workers’ families to safe homes without an increase in rent. distributed through each house and The organizations are conducting a survey of safe houses in the neighborhood where apartments are TRAP TENEMENTS ioneers and the Young Communist Petitions, were in the schools by the Pioneers. vacant. Browder an Urge Workers Honor | Ford on 40th Birthday ba Big Banquet Saturday Night For Communist Leader By EARL BROWDER Harlem workers are celebrating the 40th birthday of Comrade James W. Ford this Saturday night with a ban- quet at Estonian Hall, 25-27 ‘West 115th St. Comrade Ford’s life points out many lessons in the liberation strug- gle of the Negro People, and is sym- bolical of the development of work- ing class unity between white and Negro workers, Although the tradition of struggle among the Negro people is old, the development of a Negro proletariat is a much more recent phenomena. And in its first generation it has | produced leaders of the type of Com- rade Ford, not only as leaders of the Negro liberation movement, but of the general working-class movement. Ford’s father was one of the Negro migrants who left the deep South in the eighties to find his way into the industrial sections of the country. He became a miner at Pratt City, Alabama. There Comrade Ford was born, within a stone’s throw of a coal mine. Grandfather Was Lynched Many-sided contacts with jim- crowism and segregation, and its re- lation to national oppression, is not only a rich experience of the misery through which the Negro People pass; it is a basis on which the Uberation struggle is built. “It is the experience of every Negro.” Ford’s grandfather was lynched. Ford, step by step, not necessarily the right step at every turn, came into contact with the labor move- ment, into the revolutionary working- class movement; into the Communist Party; into the world-wide proletar- ian struggle for power. Through ex- perience and study he has educated himself in the problems of labor. Ford participated in the Fourth Congress of the Red International of Labor Unions; in the historic Sixth World Congress of the Communist International, and in the Fifth Con- gress of the RIL.U., and aided in the organization of the first Inter- national Congress of Negro workers. Ford’s experience in the Soviet Union, where he studied the solution of the national question, as well as the general question of building So- clalism, has given -him a deep and fundamental understanding of the Negro Question in this country. As a soldier in the World War, he first began to get some idea of the class character of imperialist war. His ex- periences with Socialist Party lead- ers ‘and his knowledge of their be- movement to be sidetracked, but should go ahead with the struggle, basing it on elected rank and file committees from the theatres, the Council stated Monday. Plumbers in Strike At Rosenbleeth Shop NEW YORK —The workers of B. Rosenbleeth, plumbing contractors, 225 E. 7th St. went out on strike LL.D. MASS MEET IN BOSTON BOSTON. — International Labor Defense 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. at 179" ST.RY 06th ST. trayals here and abroad, especially in relation to the colonial and op- pressed peoples is of tremendous value. in exposing and counteracting the activities of the Socialist Party leaders and developing a proletarian Communist leadership among the egro masses. versal ot Ford's birthday is of his- 's M4 - to Harlem, and the Pecctusctase movement gener- ally. 300 Snow-Shovelers Wait 6 Hours in Cold Before Getting Paid NEW YORK, Feb. 28.—Three hun- dred workers employed as snow shov- had by the Jacobson Commissary Co, @ contract company for the Pennsylvania Railroad, waited for more than six hours in the cold yes- terday on 5th Street near Third Ave- nue to get their pittance in ages at the rate of 40 cents an hour. Most of them had worked about 25 hours,‘turning in at 11 a, m. At 5.30 p. m. the men were still waiting, huddled up close to one another to keep out the freezing cold. Many workers alt and freezing, had left, unable to stand on their feet any longer. Earlier in the day, as the crowd of men swelled and demanded their wages, police arrived and tried to start a riot by clubbing the workers. the latter get 40c an hour for doing the work. CLASSIFIED FURNISHED 2 and 3 rooms. Also singles. All improvements; 347 E. 14th St. d District JAMES W. FORD | Ing bartenders, $25 a week for straight faevage Five ‘Plan Hotel Strike in Phila. Against | NRA. Slave Code | Workers in Meetings Today to Vote on Proposals PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 28.—H and restaurant workers voic objections to the proposed code their industry, which calls for a 54 hour week for men and a cag ‘hour week for women and imum wazes for skilled help of $15, and $10 50 foi waiters, waitresses and bartenders A union committee, composed of Wor ry ers in Detroigs | Scottsboro- on Friday Meeting To Hear Report Of Hearing, Patterson, > Other Speakers DETROIT, Feb. 28.—Answering the Int ional Labor Defense call re- ng the imminent legal lynching z two of the Scottsboro boys, officials, met yesterday and called : these provisions the “worst for the day | L, D., together with the League industry in 33 years.” They de ee ty abe x uggie for Negro Rights is or- }| ganizing three protest meetings this night and an Emergency ottsboro Conference Saturday at 2 lock at the Lucy Thurman Y, W. C. A., 569 East Elizabeth St. y organizations are sending elegrams and resolutions to Miller and the State Supreme rt of Alabama, and to President, evelt, |to demand a straight 48-hour } with no “broken time,” $120 a m for cooks, $30 a week for drink. bar service, $2.50 a day for and $2 for waitresses and kitchen |help, with no deductions for uni- | forms, meals and breakage. The junion officials threatened to call |“most of the city’s 10,000 hotel and | restaurant employes” out on strike | unless these demands were met The decisions of the committee will be put before the memberships of the various craft locals at meetings Wednesday, Thursday and Sund and a final huge mass meeting i scheduled for Tuesday night, March 13th, qe T. U. U. C. Calls on Workers To Save Scottsboro Boys NEW YORK.—The Trade Union ouncil issued an urgent call y to all trade unionists, bers of the T. U. U. C., mem-~ of the A. F. of L., to “raisé your against the execution and for freedom of the Scottsboro boys!” atement declares, in part: Scottsboro appeal to the Ala~ bama state supreme court is to be don March.3. Only the mass sure of the workers throughout entire country will force the su~- preme court justices to grant the | appeal. Take this matter up at once. Adopt resolutions and send telegrams to Goy. Miller, and the Supreme Court at Montgomery, Ala., demand- ing the immediate and unconditional Harlem Hits Ruling On Scottsboro ‘Cleaners Strike in Philadelphia. Drivers Vote to Join With Them | PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 28—Close| to 4,000 cleaners and dyers walked | Sndorses Protest on. the} Thaelmann Trial This Saturday N Yoon YORK. NEW rel of the Scottsboro boys and out on strike here today. | attempt to rob reversal of the verdicts against Hay- Union members voted last night for and Clarence Ni wood Patterson and Clarence Norris: the strike, following refusal of the | al| ‘Take thi bosses to take back the 40 per cent} boro boys, of matter up at your shop 3 meetings. Organize the workers for a eee after the strike last minute protest stoppage to pass zust. e resolution and telegram, ‘The strikers are demanding the | “Fellow workers! As @ result of our 40-hour week, a wage scale of $15| Lenox Aven mass struggles we have forced the Th first a week and $40 for skilled spotters, | | hiring through the union hall and the | | posting of a $1,500 cash bond by the | shoo owners to assure no contract violations, At a meeting of the workers held last nieht tremendous applause was given Dave Liberty, member of the strike committee and captain of the |pickets, when he demanded that | every. striker be on the virke* line, |not merely to walk around, but to mee called to inst the late: cision of the J denounced ¢ Hospital wt recently strar criminal negliger staff. Re: adopted the ves lem Hitler executioners to release the revolutionists Dimitroff, Popoff and Taneff. We have shown the strength of our mass protest. We must use the same mass pressure to force the release of the Scottsboro boys. The Trade Union Unity Council calls on all trade unions and trade been members rat the Mani pct to act at once! Gary Workers Hear de To Protest ‘Attempt To Deport Gardos in NEW YORK. — A protest meeting against the attempt to revoke the| citizenship of Emil Gardos, militant working-flass leader, and the in- creasingly vicious attacks on the for- eign-born workers uniting with their | native brothers.in struggle against starvation, fascism and imoerialism war will be held at 642 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, this Friday evening. The meeting will hear a report of | the Emil Gardos hearing in Wash- ington, and will be addressed by Will- iam Patterson, National Sesretary of the International Labor Defense, and | Jacques Schiller, organizer of the Bronx Section of the I. L, D. the I. L. D., Bronx Section; the Com- mittee for Protection of Foreign Born, and the Provisional Gardos Defense Committee. Lovestoneites Attempt To Split Home Relief Bureau Employes Asso. NEW YORK.—Lovestoneites in the Emergency Home Relief Bureau Em- | Ployes Association, continuing their splitting tactics in the organization in order to defeat the workers’ sin- cere desire for a united front with all C.W.A. workers, called an anfi- organization meeting Tuesday night. Marie Duke and Mary Lefson, the Lovestoneites mainly responsibly for the meeting, refused admittance to members of. the Association who wished to be present. Only about 25 were present out of the whole mem- bership in the Association, defeating the atlempt of the Lovestonites ot split the organization. Worker Exposes Slimy- Maneuvers of ACWA Heads By a Worker Correspondent. NEW YORK.—The leaders of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers have launched an underhanded attack against the custom tailors’ section of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. ‘These so-called leaders claim that the Industrial Union members, tiations as Communists, in their nego- zations asked for the 40 and 48-hour week, while the A. C. W. A. demanded 36 hours, The truth of the matter is htat the custom tailors were never organized and no attempt was made by the A. C. W. A. to organize them when they worked as much as 80 to 90 hours, As soon as the Industrial Union started to organize the custom tailors the Joint Board of the A. C. W. A. were ready to mislead the tailors and destroy the work done by the Indus- trial Union workers of the Simon and Ackerman Shop. Get 16 Oents An Hour These workers were forced into the Amalgamated with the help of the boss and now earn as little as 16 cents per hour. ‘The Industrial Union custom tailors ‘Bronx Meet Friday. The meeting is jointly called by} | tient militantly and pull out every seab. Joseph Needleman, business agent of the union, said that every depart- ment of the Bornot Plant would be on strike. At Bornot’s a strike has! been on since Jan. 3, when 46 union | “day noon. be members were fired | Similar protes bs betel a Micgat as) | called througho ‘Two hundred drivers, members of | sadinion tha ds |the Cleaners and Dyers Drivers} | Union, voted a general strike at their | | meeting last Sunday. Their vicket- | ing has already begun, and Ed Paul- ine and William Herrick have been | arrested and charged with assault the e and in this coun ry tion of Neg The meet: mann Earl Browder Speak : Protest Austrian Fascism; ie ear ee 12 Join C. P. GARY, Ind.—Steel workers packed the Washington Hall to capacity last Thursday niht to hear Earl Browder speak on “The Only Wey Out of the Crisis.” Workers of every nationality attended the meeting, including a considerable number of socialist work< jand battery and arson, and dis- ers. | charged. Following the stirring talk by I. L. D. to Defend Strikers Browder, whose meeting was the larg- James Watson, representative of the International Labor Defense, | pledged the full solidarity and sup-| | port of his organization to the strik- ers, and assured them that arrange- ments have already been made to take part in the defense of workers arrested for strike activity. All employed and unemployed workers in Philadelphia are asked to | swell the picket line. Cemmunist meet since the 1932 on campaign, 12 workers, con- ced that the only way out of the Y | crisis was by membership in the Com- | munist Party, joined the Party ranks. The workers voted unanimously to support the heroic workers of Austria by voting to send a resolution of pro- test against the Fascist slaughter of | Austrian toilers to the Austrian em- bassy and to the press. 271 College Workers Unpaid for 8 Weeks YORK, Feb, 27-—Two hun- Baptist Minis’ Metropolitan B; conference was send pro! Goy. } | latest decision, to make of ne boro anti-ly chur The cor | mediate despite t East Side Jobless Win | Partial Relief Demands | | at Meet With Hodson NEW YORK.—Six delegates from | the Workers Committee on Unem-| NEW | the other ening courses of City College of ployment, Locals 2 and 3, met with) bors of ¢ he | New York, Brooklyn and Hunter Ool- ‘William Hodson, Commissioner of] churches repre -\Jeses have not been paid since Dec Welfare, Wednesday and forced the | crite city welfare depar:ment to grant part | of the workers’ demands. As a result of the protests of | workers that coal was being deni them after waiting in line at th police precinct stations, Hodson prom- ised that coal would be available at | ; all stations. NEW Other demands were granted, in-| trict of cluding federal surplus pork and| members canned beef for jobless workers, and | defense clothing for children and aduits will! rade: be given at the Home Relief Bureaus. bas dem: Hodson was forced to promise to petition Washington demanding that eggs and bread, which have recently} All bran been cut off, will be included in fu-| bring their ture federal ‘surplus food orders. He| nouncing th also promised to try to get kosher | manding the meat for Jewish families. | ditional _ rele: When the delegates demanded that | working Hodson endorse the Workers Unem-/ Due to the r ployment Insurance Bill (H.R. 7593),| Jahan to he: he backed out, and said that hej trial for Ff “would study the bill.” | gern j Will simu ALL UNIT FINANCE SEPRETARIES | the attem) ATTENTION! | lynchers to There will be a very important | boys to the el meeting of all unit. and section | finance secretaries tonight (Thurs-| Painters day, March Ist) at 7 p. m. sharp at} ie the Workers Center, 35 East 12th St.,, To Hit Bosses Room 205. The question of the as-| pieSeE sessment for the German Party will) NEW YORE be taken up together with tasks of | Zausner machin unit and section finance secretaries/9 of the A. in connection with preparations for| which has b the Eighth National ehieceaain The | trayals throug meeting will start at 7 p. m. shi Or re 1, the Board of Higher Education revealed yesterday. thorities of the three colleges lay ame for the delay in payment ne Board of Estimate, which has ed to pass the usual resolution to eady collected fees as pay ctors and clerks. Mean~ suffer considerably due to Board of Estimate’s conscious swingi LL Saturd delay Sub-Gettes Reports Workers Looking for Paper Like the “Daily” Although she has children to take | care of, Virginia Dix, of Syracuse, N. Y., finds time to go out for new >| subs in the Daily Worker circula- tion drive, She not only gets [new — ‘subscribers, led follows up Siold readers of <jthe “Daily” for : renewal of their ‘subscriptions. “ *T keep a rec- | Saturd: 3 ‘all subscribe. Some workers insist on paying me 5 cents [instead of three for the Daily demanded the 35-hour week and $40/ workers, ran Tr | Worker, I use these extra pennies @ week for skilled workers and $30 for | | the leade: ferarey more copies for distribu- and File helpers. Protec! The Joint Board issued these lies| called a mass in order to get out from under the urday, March 3, at rs Dp be pressure of the honest workers. | Plaza’ Hall. Mr. Hollander does not see the un-| The dangerous code of believable conditions that prevail in|if not fought against « the shops where finishers and clean-/| will undermine the ers get from $4 to $10 below the min-| painters and will fo: imum, aa in addition to this they| scale to 40 cents am ho have a $12 tax imposed on them| The Protective Association demands} How many more wom against their wishes. the establishment of on unemploy-| in Seraciie: wat in other cities’ wil Workers of the A. C. W. A., join the | ment insurance fund to be contributed| follow Comrade Dix’s revolutionary rank and file struggle for a good | by the bosses, the 6 hour day and $1.50] example and help put the sub drive clean union ‘ an hour, over the top? “IT am sure that we can put the Daily Worker in many more homes of workers if we go out and can- ses, | vass steadily, My experience is that | the workers are willing to read and ions of the | in fact are looking for something down the wage | that is different from the capitalist papers.”