The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 27, 1934, Page 6

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Page Six ~ public streets and squares to send our pledges to Daily QWork our brothers all over the world. Refuse to be al y IS orkKer browbeaten. Fight for the streets, for the right MITRAL OnCAX COMMUNIST PaATY S.A (SECTION OF conuunisT TERNATIONAL) | to assemble! Into the streets on May I! Greet ee ete Wesking, Clee Daly Newer the great day of the international working class! FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE ; COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 50 E. 13th h © p . f Street. New York, N. 3 Push the Campaign for Telephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. r k ill od j ioe ace Workers Bill H.R. 7598 3 s Press Building ; bee St, Room 708, Cheago, I RESIDENT Roosevelt has let it be a3 known that he supports the Wagner- | Subscription Rates Lewis strikebreaking job reserves bill, | = le : ; 2 ae ts cents °° | and wishes that it should be enacted by Manh a ear, $9.00; | Congress during the present session. i Bp ‘ 2 The sudden action of the government APRIL 24, 1934 DAY Defend Your Right to the Streets on May 1! HE capit officials of two large cities, Birmingham and Detroit, have just handed down police orders forbid- ding the workers to assemble in the pub- lic squa for May Day demonstrations. These police orders against the May Day demonstrations make it clear that the wor n the ers-cannot depend upo: ions, the all kinds of ob- ese W ing class expression of the grow- ole Roosevelt rule. s is only part for the outlaw- ning of the workers tration.” | ng class May | is face the great- | | | | | of the country, as is swiftly develop- is which brings ystem face to face with ution, ara May Day dem- hat ch a demon- well kindle the conflagration of the ay very a mighty auto strike, which would spread into the | strongest fortresses of Wall Street reaction, the steel coal mines. | employers ilords of Birming- of a May Day demon- ike a blow at the whole system lynch jim-crow oppression. Such a demonstration, with white and Negro work- ers uniting in support of the strikers at the Wall treet Tennessee Coal and Iron Company, would a blow at one of the mightiest supports of Street , the Southern lynch sys- at ‘or this a the stration, of Wall tem, The workers in every city reactionary challenge against their historic May Day of international struggle for Socialism and a must meet this better worl We m be on guard against the provocateurs whom the police will no doubt send into our ranks del iting riot ing occasions for police But we must resolve firmly that we will de- fend the basic democratic right to assemble in the Baltimore Seamen Fight to Maintain Control on Relief imore harbor vicketing local headquarters. elected by (Continued from Page 1) mittedly lower than formerly. Fed- eral officials refused to grant A total of ten ships have out on two-hour strikes in the in unemployed seamen. The latter are and The s eamen’s the rank and file to the Wagner-Lewis Bill with such energy | to the tremendous number of en- | have come in during the last weeks | ue dorsemeni in support of the Workers Bill H.R, 7598. Only a few days ago the convention of the Amalgamated sociation of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers now in session in Pittsburgh, unanimously endorsed the Workers Bill. District 13 of the United Mine Work- ers also endorsed the Bill. These are in addition to close to two thousand locals of the American Federation of Labor, three State Federations of La- bor—Iowa, Montana, Colorado—a large number of central labor bodies, such as Philadelphia, St. Louis, Providence, as well as about twenty-seven municipal councils, including Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Toledo, Canton, Rockford, Des Moines, Tacoma, etc., which called upon Congress to adopt the Workers’ Bill. Facing the efforts of Roosevelt-Wagner-Perkins, assisted by the leaders of the A. F. of L. and of | the Socialist Party, who are loud in their praise of this strikebreaking bill, which denies insurance to 25,000,000 workers in this country, and grants a beggar’s pittance to “faithful” workers who still have jobs and may be unemployed after July, 1936, | we must immediately get on the job. | 'HE National Executive Board of the National Un- employment Council calls on all organizations— unemployed organizations, trade unions, veterans, home owners, fraternal and farmers organizations, ete.—also those that have already endorsed the bill, to do the following immediately: 1. Adopt resolutions demanding that your Con- gressmen immediately sign the round-robin petition now being circulated in the House of Representa- tives to take H. R. 7598 out of the Committee on Labor and onto the floor of the House, 2. Demand that your Congressmen support and vote for H. R. 7598. 3. Demand that your Congressmen inform your body that he is complying with the above demands, 4. Circulate copies of the Workers Bill H. R. 7598 at all shops, meetings of unions and other mass organizations, Ask them to pass resolutions en- dorsing the Workers Bill and send them to their Congressmen, and each individual worker to send @ poct card to his Congressman asking him to sup- | port the Bill. (Material can be supplied by the National Unemployment Council, 50 E. 11th St., New York City. | 5. Get your Central Labor Union to endorse the | Bill and also to do the above. 6. Get your Municipal Council to do the same. 1 Ss situation is urgent and all forces must be mobilized to put across the Workers Bill. The Party districts, sections, and units should rally all forces. The militant unions of the T.U.U.L. should make it their job to reach the independent unions | and the oppositions in the A. F. of L. All live | forces in the fraternal and other organizations must | be mobilized to push this campaign immediately | and with all energy. | Eyery May Day demonstration, outdoor and in- | door, should present a special resolution endorsing the Bill and embodying all the above demands. | 1500 Hartford Men Win; Buffalo Aero Strike Is Solid this gone Bal- support of the state relief sub-committee. and was elected with eight others to present the men’s case once more to federal relief official: The M. W. I. U. and employment Councils led the Sea- men's fight to run their own re- lief project. This struggle, dating back over several years’ exposure of | from “holy _racketee! workers who former! social |administer relief are still feeding | the Un-| and sheltering the men in the sea- men’s project. Yesterday local of- ficials sent for beds in which the seamen had been sleeping in room- ing houses outside of the seamen's project. proper. The seamen’s committee have ob- | tained food and additional beds lodging house keepers and | service | some small business men along the | Material to the shop were fired. administered | waterfront and from workers’ or- | (Continued from Page 1) foes | One was arrested today. Five were! arrested yesterday. Two got a sus-| pended sentence, and three were! mobilized against the strikers. The} union is organizing defence for the| arrested pickets. Workers refusing to transport Many truckers were discharged for DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934 ~ Reject Fight Against Nazis Anti-Nazi Donter nea Appeals to Socialisis Over Chiefs’ Heads |invitation to take part in the con- | ference, which has been endorsed by many Workmen’s Circle branches and A. F. of L. locals, as well as} many other workers’ and fraternal mass organizations. “We as Socialists cannot co-op- erate with any group or organiza- tion in which the Communist Party plays a role, as their principles do | not differ from Hitler, Mussolini, or Dolifuss,” Gerber wrote, announcing his party’s refusal to join the anti- | fascist struggle. “Here we have a clear example of the ‘Communist issue’ being used as an excuse by your leaders for | non-participation in the struggle | against Nazi oppression and perse- cution,” says the committee’s letter to Socialist Party members, in part. | “No rank and file worker will ever | believe that the principles of the | Communist Party are the same as| those of Hitler! This is an at- | tempt on the part of your leader- | ship to stop the growing movement | of unity among the workers. . . .| “One Solid United Front” | “We can and must stop the de- | velopment of fascism, but this can be done only if we stand united— one solid front in the struggle against fascist terror and destruc- | ion of human rights. | “In this struggle we cannot elim- inate any group of workers or pro- fessional people, regardless of their political affiliation. The Commu- |nists have been and are carrying | Who died on the Dollfuss-Heimwehr on a relentless struggle against fas- | cism, and not only have the right but the duty to participate in the | organization of a united front! |movement to combat Hitlerism. The | of the Austrian fascist courts mar- same duty and responsibility falls on you as Socialists, on the paci- | fists, trade unionists, Jews, Cath-/ten to 15 years; six to 12 years; olics, and all those sections of the | | working and professional class who | to ej are being victimized by the Hitler regime.” The letter concludes with a call | to raise the question of the confer- | ence at all local meetings, and to} elect delegates to appear at Irving | Plaza Hall at 12 noon, May 5. | | Scranton Teachers | Stage Second Sirike SCRANTON, Pa., April 26—A strike was declared today by the teachers of the Mayfield Public School, to whom almost a year’s pay is due, when the Board of Educa- tion announced that all contracts had to be voided, and asked the teachers to accept a general reduc- tion in their salaries. This is the | second time this year that the teachers have walked out. More | than 1,100 pupils are affected. HINDENBURG ILL | BERLIN, April 26. — Paul von | Hindenbrug, 86-year old president | | released. State and town police were| °f Nazi Germany, is suffering from| an illness which requires daily visits D. NEW YORK.—The United Anti- Nazi Conference Committee has is- sued an open letter to all members of the Socialist Party, inviting them to take part in the United Anti- Nazi Conference May 5 in Irving Plaza Hall, New York, following the rejection of the anti-fascist front by the Socialist Party leadership. Julius Gerber, executive secretary of the Socialist Party, rejected an PRES. ROOSEVELT . by Burck | Be | Illegal Austrian Red Aid’s Paper, ‘Tribunal’, Out in Vienna NEW YORK.—A copy of one of the first issues of the illegal “Trib- unal,” organ of the International Red Aid of Austria (Austrian In- ternational Labor Defense), has just reached New York. Mimeographed, it was distributed in several thousand copies in Vienna soon after the February massacre. At the top, it shows a portrait of Georg Weissel, heroic fire captain of Floridsdorf, Vienna, gallows saying, -“Long live the proletarian revolution!” The first page is given over to the listing of some of the victims tial. It lists nine executed; six im- prisoned for life; six to 20 years; four to 10 years, and seven to five ight years. The Austrian Red Aid, illegal since the summer of 1933, played the chief role in a: g the vic- tims of Austrian fascism from the very beginning of the February struggle. Hundreds of Social-Dem- ocratic workers have enrolled them- | Selves in it in recent weeks. For) thousands of proletarian widows, | orphans and dependents of the 9,000 workers now in the fascist prisons, it is the chief agency of assistance, along with the commission of the | world committee of the Interna- | tional Red Aid, which is admin‘ tering the many thousands of dol- | lars sent from all part of the world Streets Despite Fascist Terror DER TING WAR TOTEN eee Bayon Jehann,st Pelt ‘echlageoss tye damenwanhes pipet umvestn | igs ae nme faceaacic ane, ul | Weryeet |for the relief of the victims of fas- | cism, A.R. Dare Not Read Bid To Women’s Anti-War Meet NEW YORK,—The Daughters of , afraid that too many of the women to Dr. Ferdinand Sauerbruch, noted| the American Reyolution.met at| present would be interested in the physician and surgeon. confined to bed. | Trade Union Unity League, who | ington and took the question of the next war very seriously. They are very much worried about the prob- He is not|their national convention in Wash-| questions this call asks: “Why does Congress give billions of dollars for the building of warships? Why do hundreds of thousands of young Britain Building Air Fleet ‘Second to None’) | LONDON, April 26.—Great Brit- |ain is building up its air force so | that it “will not be inferior to that | of any country within striking dis- tance,” Ramsay MacDonald, pre- mier and former Socialist, an- nounced in the House of Commons eg 5 Nat'l Guard Units Elect for Ill. Anti-War Meet S P. Leaders | “None so blind as those...” Coal Miners, SteelW orkers Represented } Youth Congress Against ” War and Fascism on May 13 CHICAGO, April 26— Members of the 13lst In- fantry of the Illinois National Guard met this week and elected a delegate to the jlinois State Youth Conferen Against War and Fascism, i itiated by the youth section of the American League Against War and Fascism and to be held Sunday, May 13 at 9 a. m., in the Church of New Jerusalem, Lemoyne and California Ave., this city. This is the fifth National Guard group to elect delegates to the con- ference, another group in the same regiment is also sending a delegate. Miners Elect Delegates Young miners throughout the Southern Illinois coal fields are sending credentials for their rep- resentatives to the meet. A mass meeting at Taylor Springs Tues- day elected two young miners; in Nakomis Youth Club and the Young Communist League have elected one delegate from Virden. A conference against War and Fascism at Chicago University last Friday, with Socialists, Progressives, Independents and Communists in attendance, also endorsed the May 13 Conference and elected three delegates. A meeting to elect del- gates will be held in the first week jof May at the University of Illinois in Champlain, Il. Steel Workers to Elect The steel mill workers of Gary are also to send youth delegates, while in Chicago, beside the stock- yards, a special call has been is- sued to 1,500 grocery clerks on the Southside, members of the A. F. of L. William Senate of the Y. C. L, is touring the coal fields, arrang~ ing for the election of delegates, The conference is expected to endorse National Youth Day, which will be observed May 30, with a huge youth rally in Washington Park. Conference credentials can be sent to 160 North LaSalle St., Room 405, Hitler Rejects Soviet Bid for Pact on Baltic Refuses To Guarantee} Independence of the Baltic States BERLIN, April 26—The German press published an announcement revealing once again the Nazi gov- ernment’s determination to carry out the war against the Soviet Union which Hitler has often an- |nounced, and which Alfred Hugen- berg, as Hitler’s representativ |openly announced at the Londo! Economic Conference last year, The Hitler government announce: that it has rejected the Soviet, Union's invitation to sign a treaty guaranteeing the territorial integrity of the Baltic states, as an exten- sion of the non-aggression pacts which the Soviet Union has recent~ ly extended to 1945 with these states. A spokesman for the German for- ETP TER Ei NE addressed the workers. jlem of the next war and the role|men get semi-military training in| Yesterday. eign office, in announcing that the relief to seamen, resulted in com-| ganizations. A Finnish Workers’ plete control by the rank and file] ciub brought them potatoes and last January. Within the past weeks,}cash. Frank Little, state director at the command of the social work- | of transient relief, received the del- ers and steamship owners, city,/egation of 43 who marched to his state and federal officials com- | office today and promised to give bined in an effort to shut down the |them an answer late today. He told Seamen’s project. They withdrew | them that Harry Greenstein, state all funds last week, and offered to| director of transient relief, was in| “re-register” seamen for relief in Washington conferring on the ques- | a different section of Baltimore, m|tion with Federal officials. | @ project administered by relief of-| Boycott Forced Labor Schemes | icials who are closely connected} The seamen are boycotting the | vith the social-worker racketeers | officials’ proposals that they re-| the seamen defeated once, and on' register: they are staying right in| condition that the applicants agree | their own project in the Zimmer-| to forced labor for their keep. |man Building on the waterfront, in| Seventy-two of the seamenj|the Union Hall and in the recrea- | marched on foot to Washington last | tion hall which they forced local | week to protest and to demand con- | officials to provide. | tinuation of the marine workers’| The men unanimously declare | control and of the standards they |that they will not give in to the | set up—standards never equalled} shipowners’ and government's at- | under ial-worker control andj|tempt to break their project and| standards maintained at costs ad-' their ranks. Se cachle in 2 fee |not carrying material to the struck shop. There will be a meeting of the workers at the Chance Vought Co. tonight, and they will present their demands tomorrow. Be- tween 400 and 500 are employed | in this company. If the demands | are not granted, they will join the Pratt & Whitney strikers. The Communist Party is organ- izing mass meetings, raising the | question of relief, and defense. | rine oe Buffalo Curtiss Men Solid | (Special to the Daily Worker) | BUFFALO, N. Y., April 26—Two thousand aero strikers at the Cur- tiss Works here, demanding an in- crease in wages and union recogni- tion, massed at a meeting yesterday | and enthusiastically applauded Jack| Analyzing the present strike wave and the N. R, A’s role in sup- | pressing strikes, Stachel went on to outline the steps for the strikers to pursue in winning their demands. His proposal to defeat all attempts | of the N. R. A. Labor Board and A. F. of L. officials to break the strike was met with a storm of applause. Unity of the strikers to defeat all strikebreaking attempts were pre- viously shown on Monday night! |when the Labor Board decided to| og throw away their “hands off” policy and tried to mediate by claiming| jurisdiction over the union. The strikers informed the union execu-| tives that it could only confer, but they only will negotiate for final terms. Following which the board and company called the meeting off Convention. . . We are confident | after the company pleaded more time to study the situation before ‘Stachel, assistant secretary of the negotiations could be entered into. that the United States will have to play—so worried that they passed resolutions asking for a bigger navy. A copy of the call to the women of the United States, issued by the American Section of the Interna- tional Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism, which will take place in Paris, July 28, 29, 30, 1934, | Was sent to Mrs. Magna of the D. A.R, The letter which accompanied the ll reads in part: “In view of the | fact that one of the major problems | being discussed at your convention jis the danger of the coming war, we | feel that the enclosed call addressed |to the women of the United States | should be read to the body of your that many of them will be inter- ested in what we have to say.” The D.AR. ladies were probably the Civilian Conservation Corps? Why has the United States war budget been increased 197 per cent over the pre-war budget, the largest of any country in the world?” Most of the ladies in the DAR. have spent small fortunes in tracing their genealogy back to the patriots who fought the Revolutionary War in 1776 and other statements in the call like: “Today fifteen million Americans are unemployed and} starving in the midst of plenty. . You see the effects of this crisis in your children’s torn shoes and .your empty cupboards. . . . You know what it means to make ends meet on present day wages,” would prob- ably embarrass them too much. No Answer Mrs. Magna laid a sumptuous wreath on the grave of the Un- known Soldier. It was probably tooon the globe. much to expect her to read a call which states: “Another war means more crippled, more dead, more poverty. And maybe a gold star to show for a dead son, husband or sweetheart.” No answer was received from the D.A.R. The American Section of the International Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism will not allow this “rebuff” to interfere with its work of sending a strong dele- gation of working women, farm wo- men, teachers, housewives, profes- sionals, to Paris to join with similar delegations from all over the world and work out a program that will carry out a real struggle against war and fascism in every country United Front Committee Indicates Assembly Points | National Student League Furniture Workers | 12—Tobacco Workers 13.—Red_Front i4—All Latin-American Workers Orgs. 15—All Anti-Imperialist League Groups 16.—Chinese and Japanese Groups 17.—Anti-Pascist Organizations 18.—Italian Workers Clubs and Centers ‘Scandinavian Workers Clubs, Orgs. 10.— rt NEW YORK—Two assembly loca- tions for the May Day parade have been set by the United Front May} Day Committee, one at Battery Pl. and the other from 17th to 22nd) &t., west of Eighth Ave. The lines of march will unite and converge on Union Square in one solid eight-column line after a thrilling parade through the down- town and mid-town district. * . DIVISION ONE Assembles at Battery Place between State and West Sts., in columns cf four, facing State St. at 9 a.m. | Organizations will form in the following | order Jewish Workers Clubs 24.—Office Workers Union —Labor Sports Union All organizations must strietly adhere] | to the for: All organizations should be prepared to | double into columns of eight with the | least delay and cenfusion upon reaching Houston St. All Down Town and Brooklyn workers unaffiliated shall assemble and march with | | the Unemployment Council column. | | It has been arranged that all banners of all organizations shall be massed at the| head of the Division, | DIVISION TWO | Assembles 11 a.m. in the following orders 1—T.U.U.C. officers, 17th St. West of Eighth Avenue. | | 2—All Needle Trades Unions, 18th St.,| est of Eighth Avenue. Industrial Unions: locals and groups. | A. F. of 1. locals, | UNITED FRONT COMMITTEE. Massed Colors Marine Workers Metal Union (Shops and Ww x-Servicemen’s League | s Clubs ent Councils nad Relief | Irish Wo: Unemploy independent unions. Workers | @) Needle Trades Oppositions and .—Young Communist League, Groups. —Young Circle League, 19th STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVENUE 1.—Printers 2.—Shoe Workers 3.—Laundry Workers 4.—Suit Case and 5.—Taxi Drivers and Transport 6.—Suspender Makers 7. 9.—Paper Workers. 10.—Hatters 11.—Jewelry 12.—Pocketbook Workers rofessional Groups Photographers 19.—Cleaners and Dyers 20.—Sign Painters 21—Building, Maintenance 22.—Social Workers 23.—All Miscellaneous Trade Union Groups 24.—John Reed Club 25.—Artef 26.—Pen and Hammer 20th STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVENUE 1.—International Workers Order 2.—Fretheit Singing Society 3.—Mandolin Orchestra 4.—Russian Organizations 4.—Russian Organizations | 21ST STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVENUE 1.—Ieor Friends of the Soviet Union International Labor Defense 4.—Womens Councils 5—League of Struggle for Negro Rights 6.—Finnish Workers 1.—Greek isions for N.Y. May 1 Parade Downtown Line Forms 9 a.m. at Battery Place 8.—South Slavs 9.—Hungarians 10.—Czecho Slovaks .—Turkish Olubs 15.—Bulgarian Clubs 22ND STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVE. 1.—Rumanians 3.—Polish Organizations 4.—Lett Poale Zion 5.—Jewish Workers University 6.—Workers School 1. ‘Workers International Relief Pierre Degeyter Club United Front Supporters Anti-War Groups 13.—All Miscelaneous Groups PIONEERS West of Eighth Ave. at 4 p.m. All. individual members of A.F.L. ani Independent Unions assemble with Trai Union Group in their industry, All 2nd St. Tespective assembly streets. will assemble at 36th St, 4 de, reanizations or groups not listed above assemble behind Iest unit on West All columns in Division Two to march! as the rear of Division One passes their NEW YORK.—Throughout Ger- many, in the shops and on the market place, manifestations of dis- content and out-and-out resistance from working class women is seen. These few examples of recent ac- tions, taken from a pamphlet on “Women Under Hitler Fascism,” now being printed by the National Committee to Aid Victims of Ger- "|man Fascism, are highly significant. One hundred women were dis- missed by the Card Box factory in Berlin. They were ordered to regis- ter as unemployed at the factory instead of at the labor exchange, as they ordinarily would. When the firm announced that the un- employed women would have to work an hour a week without pay “to make up for the trouble” they caused the management when they registered, the women refused. In two days, the firm withdrew the order. | Women workers of the A.G-P.A. factory defeated a threatened wage |eut by militant action. When a National Socialist came to address them, they heckled him because he was completely silent about their bad working conditions and the an- nounced wage cut. German Women Fight Nazi Oppression © In a shoe factory in Berlin, the women workers packed into every Shoe box, leaflets protesting against rising food prices. In a Hamburg rubber factory, the women threat- ened to strike when a number of them were dismissed. The dismissal order was withdrawn. The wages of women workers in the General Electric plant in Berlin were cut from 64-68 pfennigs to 50-55 pfennigs. But when the fas- cist management attempted to cut the hourly rate still further, to 40-50 pfennigs, the determined opposition of the women forced them to re- treat. In a textile factory where oper- ators earned 50 marks a_ week (about $12), the Nazi officials de- manded contributions of 7 per cent of their wages for the N.S.B.O. (Nazi factory organization). The women directly accused the officials of ex- tortion. Storm troopers came, but were unable to intimidate the women. Only when the officials of the N.S.B.0. said that all those who failed to pay the 7 per cent would be sent to concentration camps, they grudgingly complied. sored Nazi press sometimes shows a little reflection of the ferment among the women workers. One of Hamburg’s leading papers reports that the local labor office recently tried to “induce a number of un- employed young women factory workers to work in the country. “About 300 young unmarried factory women workers were Hitler government would not en- dorse such a treaty, added that Po« land supported Germany in reject- ing the pact, and had also ree jected it. Although Poland and are not ready to agree entirely yet on joint action against the Soviet Union, with which Poland has en- tered into a non-aggression treaty, Poland .and Hitler’s Germany haye signed a far-reaching agreement for political cooperation, and their re« jection of the Soviet’s new step to maintain peace reveals their deter- mination to leave themselves free for the time when Poland and Ger- many have succeeded in temporarily composing their differences in » solid anti-Soviet front. | Roosevelt Decorates Marines for Killing Filipino Insurgents WASHINGTON, April 26.—At the moment when the U. S. government has offered the Philippine Islands 8 fake “independence” which in fact keeps the imperialist noose as tight _as ever around the throat of the Filipino masses, President Roosevelt yesterday presented con. gressional medals to two marine officers for “valor” in the bloody} ae n of the Filipino uprising! Colonel David D. Porter was be- mecaled for leading a force which brought together,” the report con- tinues, “to assign them to the farms. One hundred and fifty of the 300 women said too ill, Not one of volunteered for farm of repeated appeals! . girls voluntarily (?) gave killed 30 Filipinos and captured and sek antes of food and pons. . Hiram Bears, of Ni York helped Porter in the murder, See N. Y. FRENCH, GERMAN SOLI- FETE unemployment relief rather cept jobs in the country with quate (?) pay. In 52 cases unem- ployment relief had to be cut out as the unemployed women refused to accept the work offered. The remainder, about 200 girls, finally declared themselves ready to accept. the work after their obligations and the consequences of a refusal had been explained to them... . “Experience is showing that the sending of unemployed to the coun. Even the highly colored and cen- try encounters Tepeated resistance. man workers will fraternize at » solidarity dance arranged by the New York French Work club, and the German Workers’ club, tomorrow, in the Labor Temple, 247 East 84th Street, be. ginning at 8 p. m. A chorus, or- chestra, and Workers’ Labora Theater performance are part of the program, Down tools May Ist! Rally the fight against the N.R.A's attacks on living standards and DARITY NEW YORK—French and Gere» f

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