The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 30, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MO APRIL 30, 1934 Sy | War Profitable for — |\ Mich. Chemicel Plant Special ly Worker ~The Dow | i | stock was ment of J president company pany precent high rate of expects to m and work at intense Down tools May Ist! Rally the fight against the N.R.A.’s attacks | on living standards and workers’ organizations. All Children’s Dress, House Dress, Leggings and Infants’ Wear Workers: We, the rank and file bers of our union, urge upon every member to vote on Mon- day, Avril 30 at 96 Fifth Ave., for those following delegates to the Convention who fight for democracy in our local Ruth Bleeker Lena Epstein Josephine Finkelstein Lily Roth Vietoria King Rank and File of Children’s Dressmakers—Local 91 LL. G. W. U. mem- Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Orienta! Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES New York City 882 East 11th Street Williamsburg Comrades Weleore ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA 166 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. ¥. Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 228 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11 - 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Folding Chairs Desks, Files Typewriters KALMU 35 West 26th Street We Have Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) AUTO INSTRUCTION N, Y. TECHNICAL INSTITUTE, 228 2nd Ave. cor. 14th St. (Est. 1910). Special offer for complete Automobile Mechanical Course $50. Pay as little as $8 weekly. Become expert mechanic working in our Tepair shops. Enroll Now. New mechan-| feal class starts April 30. DRIVING INSTRUCTION $10. “MAY Ist | MADISON SQ, GARDEN 7:30 P.M. Reserved Seat $1.00 General Admission 25 cents Communist Party, N. Y. District 50 East 13th St. WORKERS 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST COOPERATIVE COLONY has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. > Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children, Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Direction: “exington Ave, White Plains Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Pridey and Seturdey 9 am. to 5 p.m. junday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mother Bloor Will Address Veterans At N. Y. Mass Meet Ex-Soldiers Will March In N. Y. May First Parade NEW YORK —Mother Bloor, we nown leader of the American wo! class, will be the main speaker at the big mass mee of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League on Monday evening, April Manhattan Lyceum, Manhattan a member of the Against France. hono: f Post of the Worl men’s League and has be: rs a leader 1 American working At this meeting the veterans elect their leaders for the Mar to Washington and the arran; ment committee will make a com- | plete report in regard to the march {and all other proposais in regard to the New York contingent. At} Washington the rank and file vet-/ erans will hold a convention, which | | will petition the President and | Congress for the following de- mands | | 1. Payment of the adjusted service certificates (the bonus). | | 2 Repeai of the Economy Act. | 3. Passage of the Workers’ Un- employment and Social Insurance | | Bill (H. R. 7598). | The first contingent will leave |New York on May 1. The con-| tingent will march in the United| Front May Day parade and a dem-| \onstration will be held on Union} Square immediately after the| United Front demonstration is over. The demonstration will be held at 14th St. and Fourth Ave. The first contingent will leave from the dem- onstration, and in Washington they | will prepare for the main contin- gent, which will leave New York on May 9. zs The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League invites all rank and file vet-| erans of the American Legion, Vet- erans of Foreign Wars and all other organizations. The League states: “On to Washington. No section of the American working class has suf- fered more than the veterans. Elect rank and file committees in your organizations. Send resolutions to your Congressmen and Senators de- manding food and veterans while they are in Wash- ington. All trade unions and or- ganizations who are friends of the veterans are urged to support the veterans. Funds can be sent to 69 | E. Third St.” | . * . (Daily Worker Midwest Burean) CHICAGO, April 29.—At least | 500 veterans are expected to leave ington and the mass convention of j viet industry. shelter for the} here to join the march on Wash- | Register for Daily | Worker Contingent In May Day Parade All workers who |} with the Daily || in the May are asked to their names at once in on or by mail at the Di: Worker office, 35 E. Report at 9 A. M. The contingent will have three huge floats, three automobile floa‘s, a large decorated truck and a district banner, 12 by 6 feet Red Builders and Daily Worker Volunteers, especially as well as sympathizers, are asked to regis- ter for the Daily Worker con- tingent at once pe rict Daily Street 12th Socialist Advances Heighten Soviet May 1 Enthusiasm (Continued from Page 1) shock brigades signed at the Karl} Marx factory in Leningrad, April 1929 that year, thus beginning the whole tremendously _important| “udarnik” and shock brigade sys- tem, playing such a role now in So- May Day this year is used by the Soviet factories for a check-up} of the pledges of socialist. competi- tion during the past year. Many plants are creating special exhibi- tions showing the triumphs of the} Five Year Plans, resulting from So- | cialist competition. The ball bear- | ing plant in Moscow especially is emphasizing the good results of the | competition among older workers in| the teaching of new workers. The Moscow, Leningrad and Kharkov factories, including the Moscow Amo plant and the Khar- kov tractor plant, will announce a new type of socialist competition for the best preparation of the new school year, opening this autumn. The factories will repair schools, supply fuel and also technical equip- ment for the school, work shops and laboratories. | Another anniversary celebrated this year shows another reason for) |the successes in industry and the| | building up of the new socialist | man, This is the fifteenth anni-| {versary of the first “subotnik,” | which began in May, 1919 by the! | workers of Moscow, Kazan railway. |Lenin at that time hailed this! |“subotnik” as one of “greater his-| | torical significance than any_vic-| | tory of von Hindenburg or Foch, jor of the English in the imperialist war,” because it “shows the con- scious and free will and initiative |of the workers in the development lof the productivity of labor, their | going over to a new worker disci pline in the building of socialist industry.” | I personally saw recently in Slavyansk, a small sized industry | gation to Cuba, of which I was the| i-| and the Soviet Union, and against veterans in that city on Thursday. | town in the Ukraine, how the work- May 10. lers realize and respond to this About 400 vets attended two| sentiment. A “subotnik” was called meetings here this week, at which/to clean the town and prepare a Emanuel Levin, Treasurer of the| new bathing beach, plant flowers in | Veterans’ National Rank and File! the city square and lay the founda-| Committee, which issued the call to | tion for a road to the village. Prep- the Washington meet, spoke on the) arations were made for 2,000 work- situation of the ex-soldiers. The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League. Both meetings adopted the veter- | ans’ three-point program and elected 80 to join the march. De- mands in the program include the immediate cash payment of the bonus, repeal of the Economy Act, and passage of the Workers’ Un- employment and Social Insurance Bill (H. R. 7598). Many of the ex-servicemen join- jing the march are veterans of the first and second bonus marches, in- cluding many who had gone to the Vets’ C.C.C. Camps. KRAUS & SONS, Ine. Manufacturers of | Radges-Banners-Buttons For Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 Summer Life In Full Swing, Join Our First Outdoor Ca, mp Fire 7. Beacon, N.Y. Tel. Beacon 781 Cars leave daily at 10:30 a. m. from Co- operative Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Fe Ph.: Estabrook 8-1400, by 2 BRING YOUR Private Quarters Again Available SHORTS COUPLE want furnished apartment, few months or longer; reliable. Tuckerman, Ashland 4-1526. WANTED, unfurnished room; Manhattan. Must be reasonable. ersham 2-5294, all day. downtown Wick- | LIGHT separate room; telephone; reason- 211 Apt. 110. Bron: reeger Ave. LARGE, light, presentable headqu rent; from early morning to 6 p. m. Rent reasonable, Enquire: American Youth Federation, 144 2nd Ave, New York City. Any evening at 8 p.m. COMRADE (young lady) wants to sublet RUSSIAN, 4-0174. 25¢ lesson groups, Schuyler Translations done. FOR RENT for the summer; a completely furnished two-room apartment in Sunny- tor; cheap. Box 4, Daily car and small tricycle. Daily Worker. Write Box 3, SQUARE Grand Pino; suitable for hall ’ group offered to labor or- meetings were arranged by the! , | Subway. ers but 4,000 volunteered for five hours labor each on their free day. This day is also the Russian easter, but the masses “subotniked” | preparing the city for May Day | instead of going to church, although the church is open and a handful of aged people entered it. It shows the tremendous creative energy and determination of the workers under the forms of the “subotnik” and socialist competi- tion, and illustrates the spirit this | May First especially. | Another example: Eighty thou- {sand factory workers, office workers | and housewives participated on one holiday in building the Moscow The first “subotnik” which | Started this huge movement fifteen years ago involved only 200 workers. Throughout all of this, the inter- | national significance of May First is not lost. The Moscow proletariat in thousands welcomed the arrival of the Austrian barricade fighters, | and in millions will cheer them on Red Square, May Day. Collections of funds for the Aus- trian victims continues, not only in Moscow, but in small towns. From Makeivka mining and steel rayon plants, in the Donbas, 2,000,000 rubles alone were collected for Vienna workers’ families. This example is not isolated. It shows the world outlook of the Soviet worker. Springfield Workers to Meet on May Ist SPRINGFIELD, Iill., April 29.— The following May Day demonstra- tions will be held in the coal fields around here—Springfield, at Red- mans Hall, 419 E. Monroe; Nako- mis, Bergers Park; Benld, City World-Wide May 1 Plans Drive Bosses: To Frenzy of Fear (Continued from Page 1) munist leaders and militant work- | ers, in a vain effort to stop what | onstration against fascism, the May} will undoubtedly be the mightiest May Day demonstration ever held in this colonial domain of Yankee imperialism. | Havana soldiers, on orders from | Mendieta, raided a house in Aguila Street, and arrested 60 women and 25 men, including Dr, Juan Marin- | ello, professor of law, and head of! the Anti-Imperialist League. Dr. Marinello accompanied the Amer- ican Anti-Imperialist League dele- chairman, to Santa Clara, where the troops of ex-President Grau San Martin forbade a mass meeting. Troops also raided the headquar- | ters of the Tobacco Workers Syn- dicate and arrested five members. ‘They were put in Cabanas fortress, where the assassin, ex-President Machado, used to torture and slaughter those who resisted Yankee rule. In every part of Cuba arrests are | being made and literature confis- cated. But none of this terroris- tic activity will stop the May Day demonstrations which will pledgé the solidarity of the Cuban peasant. and working masses with the Amer- | ican workers in their fight against | Roosevelt's New Deal oppression and for Soviet Power in the Americas. May Day demonstrations in China this year will be held under the conditions, in the Soviet districts, of tremendous victories against the Sixth Anti-Communist Campaign of Chiang Kai-Shek, financed largely by the Roosevelt government and American imperialism. Here the majority of over 50,000,000 peo-/| ple under Soviet rule, freed of| landlord-capitalist and imperialist domination, will proclaim their in- ternational revolutionary solidarity with the workers throughout the world. On the front lines of battle, the Chinese Red Army soldiers will hold May Day demonstrations. The central demonstration will be in the Soviet capital, in Juikin, Kiangsi, China. In Shanghai, the imperialist po- lice, with the help of the Chinese cops paid by Chiang Kai-shek, and with the able assistance of the So- cialist ex-police chief of Berlin, Grzesinski, are preparing for a vir- ee of siege in order to pre- | ven May Day demonstrations. | Plans, however, are being made to} hold May Day demonstrations against the threat of a new im-; perialist war in the Far East, for | the defense of the Chinese Soviets | | | imperialism, Where War Looms Large ‘Though no news has come through) from Japan, we can be certain thet | | the bravé Communist Party of | Japan, this May Day, with the war danger reaching the point of ex-| plosion, at the greatest risks will! hold May Day demonstrations in| Osaka, Kobe, Tokio, Yokohama and other industria] and shipping cen- ters. Cables from France declare: “The laboring masses of France prepared for a demonstration which may make next Tuesday’s May Day—the International May Day—one of the most momentous in French history.” Plan Huge French Demonstration The Communist Party of France, through its brilliant activity, through its initiative and leadership in the fight against fascism, is making tre- mendous gains in forcing the united front of Communist and Socialist workers. United Press and Associ- ated Press cables admit that this unity in the fight against fascism, being forged against the wishes and with the greatest reluctance on the part of the Socialist Party leaders, is causing consternation in the ranks of the government and their fascist spawn. War-like preparations are being made by the government. Tanks, machine guns, tear gas, the hated Guard Mobile are part of the mobi- lization to terrorize the workers and to smash the unity of the working class on this international holiday of revolutionary struggle. The minister of the interior has prohibited parades, and the carry- ing of the flag of revolution, the red flag. He very graciously, however, granted permission for a mass meet- ing in Vincennes Forest, just outside of Paris. There is little doubt, however, that the workers stirred to the highest fighting pitch by the general strike against fascism in February will make every attempt to hold parades and demonstrations in the working class districts all over Paris before the mighty mass demonstration in Vincennes Forest. Park; Belleville, Stalberg Lake. Preparations are being made for |G. a general strike by the C.G.TU., t evolutionary trade union center, a ure from the rank ar file for a united struggle against cism, forcing the reformist C. G. T. trade union organization to join in the May Day demonstrations. It must be recalled, however, that Tohaux, general seiretary of the C. T., conspired with the pro-fascist go ineny to cripple the general strike of February last. Besides being a tremendous dem- Day general strike will be directed against the fascist economic meas- ures of the Doumergue “salvation” government, particularly against Wage guts, cuts in salaries of ernment workers and slashes pension paymen Raymond Held for Grand Jury for Expose of Thugs (Continued from Page 1) tective Bureau, 1457 Broadway, is nothing more or less than a thug agency and headquarters of gang- sters and forgers. The charge was brought following the appéarance of an article by Raymond in the! Daily Worker on March 21, which revealed the fact that Sherwood and Williams had hired thugs to break the taxi strike and exposed the Sherwood gang's connection with a series of forged documents issued in 1924 about a mythical red plot in Mexico. Admits Strikebreaking Under cross-examination Max| Sherwood admitted that the chief} business of his agency was to break strikes and that he had caused a pamphlet to be printed called “Red Rule Hangs Over Mexico,” which was based on documents forged by Jacob Nosovitsky, international spy! and forger. Sherwood also admit- ted that George Williams was con- nected with the Sherwood Bureau as an “advisor.” Mask Torn Off Williams, however, when first) placed on the witness stand, at- tempted to deny that he was a strikebreakér. He said he was a/ “mechanical engineer and lecturer on political economy.” But when called back to the stand on Friday) Mr. Williams’ mask was torn off,| and although he tried hard to con-| ceal his past and present activities in the field of strikebreaking, he} was forced to admit that he was a; labor spy and an all-around scoun- | drel. When asked by Edward Kuntz, International Labor Defense attor- ney, about his activities as an engineer, Williams claimed that he was a “consulting engineer” and had an office at 505 Fifth Ave.| Williams was later forced to admit! that he had no name on the floor) at that address and that he merely received calls there, “But what kind of work do you do for Mr. Sherwood?” asked At- torney Kuntz, “I work for Sherwood as a con- sultor,” said the strikebreaker, still trying to hide his game. “Tsn’t it a fact that you advise Sherwood on how to break strikes?” Willianis tried to squirm cut of answering the question. He said that Sherwood was a “labor ad- juster” and not a strikebreaker. “Isn’t it a fact that the bulk of Mr. Sherwood’s business is break- ing strikes?” Kuntz shot back. Williams Squirms Williams squirmed in his chair and stroked his head, taking special care not to disarrange the toupee he was wearing. “I say Mr. Sherwood was some- what wrong when he said I helped him break strikes,” said the strike- breaker. Then he threw off his mask. “T’'ve been a strikebreaker for fif- teen years,” he said, shifting his eyes around the courtroom, con- scious of the fact that he was caught lying. “But isn't it a fact that you have been a strikebreaker longer than that — twenty-five years. say?” was the next question from Kuntz. “No, fifteen years,” Williams. “Were you ever connected with breaking a coal strike in West Virginia?” Kuntz asked. “Yes, in 1910,” Williams blurted out. “That was about twenty-four years ago,” Kuntz suggested. Williams had to admit that he was in the business longer than fif- teen years. He was caught lying again, Employed Eddie Gatti He also admitted that the notor- ious criminal gangster, Eddie Gatti, had been in his employ. Further admissions wrung from Williams showed that he was con- nected with a strikebreaking job on the Delaware and Hudson Railroad, where the strikebreakers had some trouble about payroll padding. Despite these brazen admissions, answered \the eight-hour { ‘Detroit Bosses Plan May 1 Terror (Continued from Page 1) Preceding this meeting there will be @ demonstration and parade, st ing at Red Arrow Park, 10th and | Wisconsin. (Daily Worker Midwest Burean) CHICAGO, April 29—The police department has been forced to ithdraw its ban and grant a per- for the May Day parade through the Loop to the mighty demonstration in Grant Park next Tuesday. Scores of May Day marches lead- ing to the main starting point at Union Park will be held next Tues- day through working-class neigh- borhoods of this city. Passing through tannery factory sections, workers will start march- ing at 1:30 p.m. from the Workers’ Center at 1815 W. Division St., and fall in line with the main May Day parade starting from Union Park at 3 p.m. This branch march, arranged by Section 9 of the Communist Party, will be joined by workers from the North and Sorthwest side, clubs, unions and the Polish Cham- ber of Labor. Another branch parade, led by! Section 1, will start at 1 p.m, from 14th St. and Loomis, pass through the Italian and Negro sections of the city, and join the main march at Union Park. Section 4 has also arranged for a branch parade. Evening celebrations at Ashland Auditorium, Ashland and Van Buren, and at the Coleman School, 46th St. and Michigan, will be ad- dressed by Bob Minor, member of the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party; Lucy Parsons, widow of A, Parsons, the famous leader of the first May Day demonstration and general strike in Chicago in 1886, a martyr in the struggle for day, and Frank Panscik, newly elected membér to the Board of Trustees in the village administration of Taylor Springs, tl. | mit in| | CINCINNATI, Ohio, April 29.—/ Ovér 20,000 fired ©. W. A. workers are expectéd to join the May Day parade and demonstration here. The workers will march to Wash- ington Park, arriving there at 4:30. | | Assembly points are Washington | Park, Elm St., Court, Walnut, Ninth St., Plum, Sixth to John St. Hae ot HAMMOND, Ind., April 29—The | May Day demonstration here will | be held at State and Morton Court, beginning at 2 p.m. pane eee | BRIDGEPORT. Conn., April 29.— For the first time in the history of Bridgeport, and this undér a So- cialist administration, a permit for the May Day demonstration in Washington Park has been held up by the Board of Park Commission- ers, The commissioners declare they must “first know if the best interests of the city would be served by such a meeting.” The demonstration will be fol- | lowed by an indoor celebration in the evening at Sokol Hall, with Irving Potash, needle trades work- ers’ leader of New York, the main speaker, KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 29.— Kansas City workers will demon- strate May First at 5 p.m. on Pasco Paradeway, 17th and Paseo, against wage cuts, firing of C. W. A. work- ers, for higher wages and the pass- age of the Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill (H. R. 7598). C. W. A. workers will pa- rade to City Hall with their de- mands. An evening celebration will be held at 1904 Brooklyn. l seep the perjury of both Wil- liams and Sherwood, despite the fact that Williams and Sherwood were both proven to be strikebreak- ers, liars, skin-flints and partici- pated in shady deals as revealed in Raymond’s articles in the Daily Worker, Judge Lindau refused to dismiss the case and turned it over to the Grand Jury. “It's no crime to said the Judge. . Verdict Depends on Workers The verdict in the case, how- ers, depends on the working class. Workers and workers’ organiza- tions everywhere should at once protest against this attempt to muzzle the Daily Worker and railroad to jail Harry Raymond, one of its staff writers. Demand the immediate dis- missal of the charges against Ray- mond, Demand that the Sherwood strikebreaking agency be put out of business. Send your protests to Mayor LaGuardia, the Chief Magistrate and Mayor of the City of New York. Protect your right to strike un- hampered by professional thugs and gunmen. break strikes,” Pee United Front Committee Indicates Assembly Points 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 St., west of Eighth Ave. The lines of march will unite and converge on Union Square in one solid eight-column line after @ thrilling parade through the down- town and mid-town district. Gis, See DIVISION ONE Assembles at Battery Place between State and West Sts.. in columns of four, facing State St. at 9 a.m. Organizations will form in the following order: 1.—UNITED FRONT COMMITTEE. 2. ssed Colors ine Workers tal Workers Union (Shops and Groups) 5.—Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League . i} Malloy, 8721 Ridge Bivd., ssemble in 2 Divisions 18.—Red_ Front 14—All Latin-American Workers Orgs. 1§.—All Anti-Imperialist League Groups 16.—Chinese and Japanese Groups 17.—Anti-Fascist Organizations 18.—Itelien Workers Clubs and Centers 19.—Scandinavien Workers Clubs, Orgs. 20.—English Clubs Ukrainians 22.—Lithuenians. 23.—Jewish Workers Clubs 24.—Office Workers Unicn 25.—Labor Sports Union All organizations must strictly adhere to the formation order as listed. All organizations should be prepared to double into columns of eight with the least delay and confusion 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 order: | officers, 17th St. West of) iath St.,| ue. eedie Trades Unions, st of Eighth Avenue. R.—Food Workers Industrial Unions: (a) Amalgamated; locals and groups. (1) Building Trades: A, F. of 1, locals, independent unions, (2) Needle Trades Oppositions Groups. 19th STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVENUE 1—Printers 2.—Shoe Workers 3—Laundry Workers 4.—Guit Case and Bag ‘Transport for N.Y. May 1 Parade Downtown Line Forms 9 a.m. at Battery S.—Taxi Drivers and 4—Suspender Makers Place 7—Hosiery Workers pas 8.—South Blavs Hungarians 10.—Cze¢ho Slovaks 11.—Armenians 13.—Miscellaneous Ind. Unions eal Bs 14.—Education Workers i4—Turkish Clubs 15.—Teehnical Workers i soe 16—Medical i {rouprahetncal csoupe ND STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVE. 18.—Photographers 2 19.—Cleaners and Dyers 20.—Sign Painters 21.—Building, Maintenance 22.—Social Workers 23.—All Miscellaneous Trade Union Groups 24.—John Reed Olub 25.—artef 26.—Pen and Hammer 20th STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVENUE 1,—International Workers Order 2.—Preiheit Einging Society Mandolin Orchestra Russian Organizations .—Russian Organizations 218T STREET WEST OF EIGHTH AVENUE 1.—Icor 2.—Friends of the Soviet Union 9.--International Labor Defense 4.Womens Councils 5—League of Struggle for Negro Rights 6.—Finnish Workers 1.—Greek 2.—Latvians 3. ;—Polish Orgenizat 4.—Left Poale Zion 5.—Jewish Workers University 6. 7.—Theatre Groups 8.—Dance Groups 9.—workers, Internationsl Reliet 11,—United Front Supporters 12.—Anti-War Groups 13.—All Miscelaneous Groups PIONEERS will assemble at 36th St. West of Eighth Ave. at 4 p.m. All individual members of A.F.L. and Independent Unions assemble with Trade Union Group in their industry, All organizations or rouns not listed above assemble behind Inst unit on West tang St. All columns in Division Tro to march as the rear of Division One passes thelr respective assembly streets. | 18 pieces. | Furniture Workers Urged to “Down | {Committee for one united May Day New York May Day. United Front Gains (Continued from Page 1) all departments, including marshals and captains designated by their respective Trade Boards, to a final mobilization meeting tonight, April 30, right after work, in the audi-| torium of the Union, 131 W. 28th} St. According to preliminary re- ports, a minimum of 15,000 workers | are expected to march in the needle trades column. The column will be} headed by their own brass band of Tools” The Furniture Workers Industrial Union called on all furniture work- ers, Organized and unorganited to “Down Tools” on labor's interna- tional day. Members of the union | will assemble at 9 p. m. at the) Union headquarters, 812 Broadway, | and from there march in a body) to participate in the United Front} May Day Parade. | The United Front May Day Ar-| rangements Committee issued the| following reminder: “All organizations and partici- pants in the Parade are reminded that it is of the utmost importance to be at their respective assembly points on time. The march from the Battery will begin at 10:30 a. m. sharp. Those in Division One must be at their assembly points at Bat- tery Park at 9 sharp. “The Committee wishes to em- phasize the necessity of proletarian order and discipline from begin- ning to end. No loose or straggling lines; march in a firm and de- termined manner with heads high, with the proletarian dignity essen- tial in such a mass outpouring. Keep the lines closed, be on the alert, and forward to a mighty United Front May Day. . * SPRINGFIELD, Mass., April 20. -The Young People’s Socialist League of Springeld voted over- whelmingly to participate in the Workers United Front Conference demonstration. Despite pressure from above and from the Jewish Verband, which) thréatens to deny them the! use of the Socialist Party head-| quarters, the Yipsels are continuing | their co-operation with the United) Front Committee and will furnish | speakers for both the open air dem-| onstration to be held at 3 p, m.| Tuesday at the Old Post Office and the evening meeting at Victory! Hall, 41 Dwight St. | Rae . Trenton Workers To Protest Anti-Worker Bill TRENTON, N. J., April 29.—The central slogan of the Mey Day dem- onstration here will be a fight! against the anti-working class bill recently passed by the New Jersey State assembly, and, under the pretext, of combatting Nazi prop- aganda, directed against the revolu- tionary organization of the working- class. Hundreds of workers demon- strated against the bill last Mon-; day at the State capitol. An indoor célebration arranged for the evening at the Hungarian Hall, Hudson & Genesee Sts., will be held Wednesday night instead, at the same all. . Fight Police Ban in Newark NEWARK, N.J., Apr. 29.—Newark workers will hold their May Day demonstration in Military Park at 5 p. m,, despite the continued re- fusal of Chief of Police McReli, backed up by Mayor Bllenstein and the city commissioners, to grant a permit, on the grounds that “we are not prejudiced against your group, but there are people (read business men) who do not want you to parade or demonstrate.” I. Amter, of the National Unem- ployment Councils, and Rebecca Grecht, District Organizer of the Communist Party, will be the prin- cipal speakers. Eleven other New Jersey cities will hold May Day demonstrations. re ee Binghamton Workers Reject Fascist May Day Plan BINGHAMTON, N. Y., April 29.— The workers’ May Day demonstra- tion in this city will be held at the Lithuanian Hall, with Sid Bloom- field, of the New York Workers School as the main speaker. * ® Demonstrations in Gloversville, Rochester, etc. GLOVERSVILLE, N. Y., April 29. —Workers of the Glove cities will hold a May Day celebration in Bohemian Hall, 14 So. Main St., Gloversville, N. Y., at 8 p. m. Tues- day. * * ROCHESTER, N. Y., April 29.— The May Day demonstration here at 3 o’clock in Washington Square, will be preceded by several parades in working class districts, converg- ing on the Square. Other up-state demonstrations are announced for Schnectady, Labor Temple, Clinton St., 8 p. m.. Albany, Sons of Italy Hall, 6:30 p. m., and Amsterdam, Main and Bridge Sts., 5 p. m. . Wm.Fuchs to Conduct ‘Daily’ Sports Column William Fuchs, who will hence- forth conduct the sports column of the Daily Worker, is a sports writer who was formerly con- nected with the Brooklyn Eagle. Comrade Fuchs will bring to the column not only an intimate knowledge of sports, but will de- scribe some of the leading p: sonalities in the sports world, divulging some infor? which most of the other sports depart- ments “do not care to handle.” Comrade Fuchs is particularly anxious to hear from workers sports clubs, athletes in the Amaeeur Athletic Union and elsewhere. Labor Sports Union organizations are especially re- quested to send schedules, an- nouncements of meets and other athletic events. Letters and sug- gestions for the column are in accordance with the usual policy of the Daily Worker, desired. Baseball ATIONAL LEAGUE 200 001 010 4-94 001 040 Olx 6—2—1 acher, Lugue and Mancuso, Rich- ards, Danning; Betts and Spohrer. New York B Oincinnati 10 092 020 S— oz Pittsburgh 103 010 22x S—12—1 Shaute, Syl, Johnson and O'Farrell Lucas and Veltman Brooklyn 00 080 040 B— 8 060 «010 000 7—14—1 roll, Lucas, Page, Leonerd anc forth; Moore, Davis, Hansen d J. Wilson. 000 028 202 912 01 090 012 4—11— Walker and W. Davis; Malone, Lee ance Hartnett AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 0m 200 000 2-—6—1 New York 000. 100 O11 38-3 Weiland and Ferrell: Gomes and Dicke Cieveland 000 030 040 7—11. Detroit 09 000 100 1— 6—2 Hildebrand, L. Brown and Pytlek; Mar- berry, Auker and Cochrane INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE First Game Rochester O11 020 203 9-189 Albany 000 090 000 o- as Berly and Florence, Levis; Chapman, Coleman, Jackson and Maple. Second Game Roeehéster 00 000 0 0-2-2 Albany 010 000 x 158 Liske, V. Brown ad Levis; Carithérs, Dunham and Maple. (7 Innings by Agment) First Game Toronto 000 001 004 5-100 Baltimore 010 000 02 3— 72 aie, Schott and B. Smith; Moore and sh. First Game Kimsey and Stack; Tamulis, Brown, Aube and Glenn. Second Game Montreal 101 190 0 3—5—4 Newark 000 020 2 4—2—0 (CQ) Fritz and Henline; Duke, Chandler end Collins. First Game Buffalo 000 004 110 6 9—0 Syracuse 500 O21 00x &—16—0 Elliott, Kowalik and Outen; McCloskey, Hanlon and Ta’ 10,400 On Strike In Cleveland As May First Nears (Continued from Page 1) is being issued every day during the strike, despite attacks by hired A. F. of L. thugs. On Wednesday, in one of these attacks, I. O. Ford, many times the candidate for Mayor on the Communist ticket, was way- laid by four thugs and beaten up. Friday’s issue is devoted entirely to May Day. Besides this, 5,000 Jeafiets have been circulated call- ing on the workers to take the strike into their own hands and refuse to Jet the fakers smother their de- mand for a 30 per cent increase, Scores of noon shop-gate and street meetings will be held on May ist prior to the demonstration. All indications point to one of the mightiest May Day demonstra- tions in Cleveland's history. Satias Bl Fisher Body Officials Try to Whip up Lynch Spirit ST. LOUIS,—Company official: of the Fisher Body plant here, in trying to.whip up a lynch spirit. are sending Negro workers in oper trucks to scab on the strikers while white strikebreakers are sent i closed cars accompanied with armed police for protection. In addition, the terror against the picketing strikers rises tremendously as armed polffice forces surround the strikers, and as the union leadership intimidates the workers by threatening to take away their union cards if they fight for any demands other than those speeifiec by the union executive committee Nine strikers have been arresed and one worker has been stabbed by a scab, Union officials have raised no demands, however, for the Negro workers to counteract the bosses’ lynch tactics. Meanwhile, the League of Strugz- gle for Negro Rights is taking up the fight against Negro dis- crimination, and militant worker organizations are preparing to sup- pre the strikers and to picket with them. and white workers of this city are going through with their plans for a May Day demonstration, despite refusal of the mayor to grant & permit for the meeting. Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—30 All Comrades M | NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA | ' at the E, 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER To All Members of the the I.W.0.: office hours only from Emergency calls will be The Dental Department day. Medical IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT On May First, the doctors of the Order will have All members of the Order will meet May First, 10 A. M., at 20th St. and 8th Ave. INTERNATIONAL WORKERS ORDER S, Fine, Chairman-N. Shaffer, Secretary Medical Department of | 10 A. M. till 12 noon. answered after 6 P. M. will be closed the whole Department | | | | | | | | |

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