The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 17, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1934 ° ope | Fea ; hi “ y PSI i eaders S lit Labor Rouses the Paterson Printing || Cleveland District Zausner Mae ine Waterfront; Will ‘ e +4) Party Membership fy F Nati i Vouk D Appear Tomorrow | Strike Still Solid} Meeting on Friday | Tries to Frame 6 t sss | aces oye ationa ou al ay The eighth article in the series (.R.A. Passive te Code CLEVELAND, Ohio—A mem- Militant Leaders WILLIAM FUGHS “Labor Rouses the Waterfront,” fie FE Asé Ns bership meeting of the oer 5 hy Marguerite Young, Daity i || nist Party to discuss strike |) ey ° | tt. ¢ ; : Worker att" wrt, har “been Violations | ruses tbe" haas Peter || Profer Fake Charges) Lhank God for America! ni y in J4OTHMI ee omitted from today’s edition for 2 amie ) || May 18, at 7:30 p.m. in the Pro- || * Set Seas i d technical This feature || (Special to the Daily Worker spect Auditorium, 2612 Prospect Against Weinstock, so geeten mre ae ———, 2 - - will appear tomorrow, the eighth Rises Beat need Ave. Sympathizers, particularly # OHN L. SULLIVAN in his old age became a temperance | ee > : splenic nied ag ici andiacga ci ath iaereating fa ae seed those: i sing gaa malons.-1) Wedl, Stevens |&% man and used to lecture to people on Boston Common. |} | Police Refuse Permit he a a pe Stl aida Near Gictininsioe, 2 among the workers. Mrs, Berger,|| 7° *s ured to attend. | NEW YORK—Attempts to pS Thus he paid for the sins of his youth, when he was one of 9 { i for Chicago Youth | stration, May 30, along the route |—— g | ReC ees ok. Me ns iy i Louis Weinstock, secretary of the A.) the greatest guzzlers in the country. He died a good ex ¥ | ; : re 7 tee. “si aga 4 ai , . i for Unemploy- 2 ; is li { ] Demonstration P posed te the ane ae ne t NRA t Sk finally given & suspended beg Teamsters Join “Bi! Reta Ry Wed), seore,| @mple, with the name of Jens on his lips. t | = the Committee that the march Boos 0 y strikebreaker a rat. tary of Local 490 of the Painters} He has become a subject?.7- > or, “mnitechope” which wake | & NEW YORK. — The So- wae tare 0 ae tek ee . She was on the picket line when es Coast Dock Union, and L. 3. Stevens, resident | for the histories of Amer-jways in evidence with a Negro 5 aaitat ron i vhich | Bil Sennitt, president of the State At ¢ t f Goahe: winiesenraal oeibarno of the Painters’ Rank and File Pro- | ; champion. . , clalist-renegade clique which | committee of the Youth Section of ONVENTION OF | the scabs were wecheqamsoarey oe Ue lective Rasoclabt en veeiot pean cuntuIN®, © <robably. no} hamplon oe i make up the “May 30 Com-|the American League Against War * and she. Wastes idk seeks Dan W k s St k trumped-up charges, are being} Man, in the days when his siogan impressive. He was always : mittee,” broke all hopes of; and Fascism, rejected this proposal ACW A In Rochester dred other pickets, called out orkers TUKE | made ty the notorious Zeumer ma- picture decorated every bar-| able to produce a foreigner base ; one united National Youth|*™4 demanded that the “Ke a "VE | “Rats.” A police officer came over chine in the Painters’ Union. ber shop in the country, held the | @nough to try to take the title away. : a é ere fe Be: t mee PORES SF 4th and Hal- tere £ and struck her with his fist. She (Continued from Page 1) Weinstock, Wedl and Stevens are imagination of the public as he did.| This kind of thinking was supple- if ay demonstration against sted be permitted re t.| Amalgamated Clothing, defended herselt against the bru- p SHAT Sites known as militant fighters against |He was the last heavyweight cham-| ented with another angle during = | war and fascism when it met| Mills then refused the Lehi tality of the police and was ar-| Communist Party on the West |labor racketeers and for rank and | pion of the bare-knuckle days; and | the Dempsey-Carpentier issue. Then | Tuesday night with the National | 1. eee a et eal tne) AFL Heads Pat Selves rested. when in court the judge| Coast, and the strike committee |e control of the union. ‘The Zaus-|he ‘reigned during the bravura| Was suddenly heard the hue and ery a | Youth Day Committee elected Sun- | Kelly this afternoon to appeal this : ruled that the attack by the police-| is using the paper as a medium | ner clique in the Painters’ District | thinking. He fought on barges out | Ver Dempsey's war record. Dempe |) day at the conference called by the | 0°ciston: SY on Backs man was not the issue, that the) fer official statements. Council 9, desperate over continual|in the rivers and he fought in| Sey had been a slacker while Care \¢ reieele in League Against War and ERTS SOL i SN eee charge was using offensive and dis- z ¥ bd at ts = f th Sha coming elec-| stables away from the cities, and|Pentier had been a hero. It was U | Pasciem ay eee porter that the youth march would) > \umereR, N.Y. May 16,—| orderly language. (Special to the Daily Worker) | G°rtats and tea ne oma’ chem | his manly form, embellished every |® state of things to make the blood ae ote take the route originally planned) jos st vicious kind of N.R.A.| About a dozen pickets testified in SHATTER Wash: Mar 16: cover oe issue of the Police Gazette, Yet,| boil and the cash register bulge, The “May 30 Committee,” finding | and announced. Permit or no per- patriotic phrase-mongery| Mrs. Berger's behalf, including | 4, Wash., May 16.| out of the way. though his profession was looked | Carpentier never had a chance with j no other excuse for breaking the | mit. He urged all organizations to | demagogy, patriotic phrase-mong to| Mrs. Bloom, who was marching by| While the shipowners were| Weinstock is being charged with though 1 he te thes bad nd | Dempsey; he was put into secre | & united front, demanded that the! flood Mayor Kelly with demands|/@nd back-scratching continue to| US. 20K Nad Nat steeman as A having slandered Harry Rosen, pres- | Upon as kin ee a areas | tenting stonkeep awas. tink’ eh ; name “Notional Youth Day” be re-| for a permit. emanate from the platform of the rated whe: pol demanding that troops be ident of Local 442 in September, gambling house, he was a great | irs ae Et ore ds A i 0 pudiated by the Committee elected ii: REE ei Se Masonic Temple where Sidney alle areies tas newspaper men with| Called out against the strik-| 1933, eight months ago, in an article oa coe agi eg ana _eera He eect 4 Ve by a National Youth Day Confer- . a man, wilen aioe and ores One chapel of the Times 1 ing longshoremen, two thou-|in the “Morning Fretheit,” the Jew- ~ si ake ihe eehil ance | pehtien’ "Being fully; RURRS TOE, bib ence with the specific purpose of Perkins Sideste S jtheir ik are conducting the Na-| 13. passed resolutions to sup! ase tga ish revolutionary daily. Weinstock that aOR GA henit of gount t. chances, avoldied “mich traiting: maintaining this day as the day of tional Convention of the Amalga~| i, strike both morally and finan- sani workers met yester ay says he can neither read nor write | sin nO as youth, of course |The slacker and hero story served struggle of youth against war and mated Clothing Workers of America | (i... irculation of papers here is|in a demonstration called in| Jewish. he occupied a much Bieber station | to arouse an interest in the French- fascism. Of course, this proposal Char es of Women which began here Monday | down by 25 per cent and advertising| support of the strike by the Unem-| Frank Wedl is accused of having |e, Occupied a much higher station | {0 arouse an inlerest tn the, French: was rejected by the committee. The . From the very beginning of the | has decreased since the strike has| ployed Citizens’ League. Hundreds| called Bruno Wagner, former Presi-| States. His contests were things | Otherwise have been enthused in Ge ar eed pad Enown 2 convention, which opened with the been in progress. The makeup of| paraded the waterfront. An official | dent of Local 499, a “notorious po- | ror purple reports, his exhibitions | his behalf. would be | Needle Workers playing of the “Star Spangled Ban-| the papers has also been poor. | speaker for the striking longshore-| litical prostitute.” Wagner was later were always well-attended—though| _ Rickard knew well how the land ee eemerens osu ee hae : ner,” through the speech of Mayor) re seais being used are causing|men hailed the support given the| forced by the membership to resign sometimes he won these matches by| Jay. Dempsey could have knocked Suevonal: Youth Dey,” came after mares Stanton, who hailed the class col-| gamage to the printing machinery| strike by the unemployed and| from his office. having an opponent slugged over| out Carpentier in one round. But numerous other demands relating to (Continued from Page 1) laboration principles of the A.C.W.| their poor snd inexperienced | asked that it be continued. | Stevens, of Local 848, is charged|the ead freer behind curtain |» Rickard called Dempsey in, ere slogans, etc.. had been ironed out. —_—___—___—_ Jeaders by saying that “Roosevelt nandling. ‘These scabs are averag-| The press is attempting to throw| with having worked on a Satur-| yen in his end we have the typical | the bout went on, and begged him Asked why he had waited to raise | pi7e. and introduces rank and filers | and Hillman are great leaders; with | ing over 100 hours of work per week,| a wet blanket on the strike by carry-|day about nine months ago. | American polish. Tt would have| to carry his fiddling opponent ee ce etna Bee to illustrate her points, for the| them sweat shops will be abolished,” | far in excess of the usual hours|ing stories that Alaska is in need been an unnatural thing if he had| along, to make the disappointment ghee, “Hen, Pisher, head of; hi “neon | Secretary warns, “Be quite spe-/| through the oily speeches of Green, | with a payroll cost of more than | of food and proposing that ships be| NEEDLE TRADE Y.C.L. CONFERENCE expressed a desire to be buried with lighter in the breasts of those who sialist committee who had been | ciqg Chatman and Hillman, the N.R.A.| gouble what the union men re-|moved in order to feed the Alas-| All Y.c.Lers in the Needle Trades|a copy of the Police Gazette for a| had come to see. But when Car- present during the ontire youth| “«t am Ida Langer, widow of Mor- | soft-soap flew thick and fast pethinis kane. must attend a conference to be held | pyrtow. pentier stunned Dempsey in the conference Sunday and ich le ris Langer,” one says. “He was fol- | Oniy when the “International,” | PRES eS 08, Attempts of the Governor to arbi- | Dpitig’y may 17 at 8 pm. at the YOU) Ty not surprising, therefore,| second round, Dempsey considered hag Ba peer er eee dab hat jlowed home by a gang and mur-| the workers’ battle song, was played + | trate the strike failed, as seamen) in the 1L.G.W.U., N.T.WIU. shipping | that he always represented the color | caution above the palpitating ous- central poini Si the ae met dered, last March. We have definite | Gy the first day, did a wave of tre- F d Tw t walked out on strike on all ships of | clerks and unorganized workers Also| of America in the stories that were| tomers, and determined to finish stated that he had been “instructed information that they were hired | -ondous applause from the work- ea! ers 1s the Pacific Steamship Co, under the| {Pork troops concentrating on this in-|) +4” soit him. The story of the| him quickly, not to raise any objection to Na-| by American Federation of Labor | ar, in the balcony shake the hall.| ; leadership of the Marine Workers’ |“ Ty. read don tabi the Detnes atl A ss tional Youth Day a the conterenee | officials and the Joint Council of | Militant Workers Kept Out FR t Abo t St ike Industrial Union. The shipowners —— — Wales just to mention his name | [JOW invalid this nationalistic slo- eee enone os | the fur bosses. T identified the busi-| yriitant workers who aitempted to| L QCLS Ui r were forced to tie up their ships / organized men and the members| whenever he came to Boston, and|4i gan of keeping the title in Lapeer che entire ques-| "°SS Manager of the A. F. of L.| cain entrance into the hall were| e and put them out of commission. | of the I. L. D. the town would be open to him, is, America is even on a technical ne seaternnnl 02. “A oP te ia | local with them. No one has been | euty barred from the hall. Four | At ( d PI t Teamsters have refused to handle) The crew of the “Flomar” struck|a typical one. All his life he was| basis may be seen by examining tipn by Johnny Marks, a ‘Young | Prosecuted. I have two children to) | oe. were beaten outside when | arsl e an cargo, despite the fact that Dave| this morning demanding wage in-|the hero of a wealth of such anec-| those who have tried to ravish us. tional Committee of I appear in| Support. I am unemployed because | eres etearuamad to diatethaite, tn eian- ssn Beck, leader of the Teamsters'| creases to the 1929 level, recog-|dotes. And he was an American | Charley Mitchell, who made the at- Communist Teague eer | I refused to obey the bosses’ com. | "ey attenmnel tone Tailors’ Bul| NEW YORK—The following| Union, told the men to continue| nition of the M. W. I. U. and|geteat trhe “core tempt against Sullivan, was delive ssi asec UA nai jmand that T join the A. F. of L. |i 's Other left wing workers were| minority report of three workers | taking loads from the docks. j the reinstatement of all men to|” i» his patriotism we. owe the | ¢red out of the premises in one-two- ‘i eS | to keep away.| of a committee elected to investi-| Rank and file members of the/the Calmar Line. The crew of| most sterling anecdote in ri three order by an angered Sullivan, Cops Refuse Permit for N. “« dreds of are locked out, | threatened and told 3} 3 i . Union | a on ing ing: ° p macienuratiia | “Hundreds of us "| Sol Hertz and Sam Liptain Morning | gate the Garside Shoe strike in | International Seamen's Iion| the “Almar” are out solid, and history. The story established a | Whom he had tried to fool. Firpo, a) ee |for that,” says Mrs. Frances Blau. / 20 tii ‘ Long Island City throws some| forced Pete Gill and King, leaders of| both ships are picketed. tradition that is still believed in | the Wild Bull, was, like Carpen- (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) “I worked for a firm for seven |Freiheit correspondents and former | Long thi Tin; Fi 1 ion is lev in |v HICAGO, Ill, May 16.—Police M Wieaike members of the Amalgamated, were| light on the way the A. F. of L.|the union, to agree to the calling) Five unemployed seamen were| ang whooped up by the faithful. | tier, an empty threat. It will al- edad ae drt iat years. I refused to join the A. F. of forcibly kept out and threatened | officials are trying to break the| of a strike on the ships in sympathy | thrown out of the Seamen's In-| we find this tradition now fram. | Ways be believed that he actually . | L. They locked me out. I wrote to oh ted ae | strike: with the dock workers. stitute for protesting the rotten) ing the championship fight be- | knocked out Dempsey—and Kearns It F ns ee Two |The first session heard greetings|. “At a meeting of the Fitters| These gentlemen were trying to|food, and practically all seamen| tween Baer and Carnero, It ia | treated the referee of that fight ooseve e menths ister your Womens Bureau | iP hgel Absion, rd local of the Boot and Shoe Work-| force the seamen to support the| walked out and threw a picket) contained in the pious expression |Toyally, afterward, though this janswered me. Look at this letter.” |from the Greater N. ¥. Contractors) 78) 0 ot od on May 8, a com-| code of the I. S. U., which would) line around the place. When the| uttered by John L. as he wes |Teferee was found dead in the gut- | d f | “You may keep that,” Miss Per- | Association, Contractors Association | Sr lon nE® On MAY os & Com | dbolish the right to strike. police broke up the line, a dele-| hrought to his senses after being |ter # few years ago—but if Derap- 0 now e ge 0 [Eine says, the) lerten eceines “shel ot Povadalphis, Ds Sona elected to investigate the strike| The Marine Workers’ Industrial) gation of 50 seamen stormed the! knocked out by Gentleman Jim | sey had handled himself with dis- . B Pekin Ree Sop nat Fires re Dae an soe gets eran at the Garside Shoe Co. ‘The| Union is growing by leaps and| Federal Relief Bureau, demanding Corbett. “Thank Ged,” were John | cretion during the two rounds of St k Murders Where, SnrousH your oresnieadion: ct} employers srl sem they POsieish | Section of this ooniilttes catia ae bounds here. The local branch of/that the men be reinstated, and| L.'s first words, “the title remains |the bout, Firpo would never have ri e | public employment offices. | Party. f : a result of an overwhelming de-|the union has sent a rush call to/ that demands for seamen control| in America.” It was his only hap- | accomplished what he did. Firpo | ten We Stand in the fur market in| The credentials committee Te-| rand on the part of the fitters|the national headquarters in New| be acted on hy Miss Stewart, di-| piness in the storm and sree. |was built up for the fray on set- (Continued from Page 1) terror of our lives,”| Violet Leen | ported 267 delegates seated. Saar present. at that meeting to admit | York for membership books to take| rector. She refused to deal with 2 eg a ups and fakers. After it was over, ——__—____——. |continues. “Are we to walk the/St. Louis rank and file delegates! occ iittee of strikers to speak | care of the large number of marine | the delegation, demanding the men |"™O KEEP the title in America, has|when he was no longer needed, he ae iat Gateavell Administration | Street and sell ourselves for a piece | were recognized only after they had | in behalf of the strike and about | Workers who are applying for mem-| apply individually when she will ever been the prayer of the patri- | quickly deteriorated. The cry in its war drive for a Navy “second| Of bread? Do you know there are | protested. the role that the Boot and Shoe | bership. send them to some mission, otic publicity agents. The sports'| against Tom Heeney’s attempt to to none.” {got paluern ee: {a co ub locks 10 tas Hillman Lauds N.R.A. officials are playing in this strike. ) Derg Demand Cash Relief writers, too, have blown the trum-|take the title to Australia was a “This represents our most urgent/ fur market, and that they stand| Admitting that the tailors had|" «the top officials of the Boot 1.S.U. Members Vote Strike The men angrily turned this| pets and into the followers of the | half-hearted one even from the pro- neetis at the present time,” Swan-|and sneer when women who have suffered a 40 per cent reduction in| and Shoe Workers Union refused; SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, May 18./down, demanding that they be manly art has been pumped the|moters. Herr Schmeling was a son explained. Other replacements| been slugged seeking work ask for | pay during the crisis, Sidney Hill-| to admit the committee of strikers,|—Members of the International! given cash relief, A letter from/idea that this is a chant like the |second:rater who never met a first ii authorized under the Vinson bill| protection? Are we not entitled to) man said: “We gave reductions to| but had to yield to an investiga- | Seamen's Union voted to strike, de-| Adminel Plunkett, Federal Tran-|national anthem. It has existed|rater, Other examples are numer- [fl but not mentioned by Swanson in-| look for work? «een | Keep the ship afloat.” He praised the | tion committee. What is the re- | spite orders from officials that the! stent, Director, told the seamen|side by side with the chauvinistic|ous, in the lighter classes as well. clude the entire fleet of 15 battle-| | “Did you make reports to police?” |wR.A. as the “most constructive| suit of this investigation? men should continue to work aboard! that Stewart and Alspach had ships, all of which are either over-| the Secretary asks. “We must have | jesisjation and declared that the| “Two reports—one coming from | the ships. full backing of the Transient Bu- ) age (20 years old or over) or nearly | definite information. can you give | depression is now a thing of the| Heid, Jackson, Sazorsky and Trest, ere * reau for any change they saw fit so. Hach battleship will cost ap-| the individual cases? wy | past. In an interview with the local) part of the committee who ad-| Prepare to Strike in Philadelphia) tq make, but Miss Stewart in- B A RK E B A L L proximately $45,000,000, according to| “I can,” Sara Appel volunteers. “I | press he said: “Industrial democracy | mitted unofficially that the work-| (Special to the Daily Worker) | sists she had no authority te do a letter received yesterday by this) was beaten up myself last Saturday |i. pecoming a reality thanks to the| ers at the Garside factory were| PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 16—| anything but force the men into correspondent from Representative| morning. We turned to the police | wp a Sweatshops are pretty well| forced to join the Boot and Shoe|A4 mass meeting of longshoremen| the missions, where the food is GAMES TODAY INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Carl Vinson, Demoorat of Georgia.) and demanded that they arrest the | wiminated and the enforcement of| by the firm with threats of dis-| 00 Pler 46 last night adopted de-| rotten and scarce, The seamen NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘ the chairman of the House Baxaly sluggers. They laughed in our faces. the codes will be tackled by the N.R.| charges. They admitted, also un-| ™ands for 85 cents an hour for @/ will hold a mass meeting tonight ci if i god : ‘ ‘i y R. 5 H inclnnatl at New York (3:15). Syracuse 100 001 001—~38 10 1 Affairs Committee. Do you want to see the bruises? A. in the next few weeks.” officially that the Boot and Shoe| 40-hour week, time and a half for/ to mobilize all seamen in the| Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. (3:20). Toronto 000 102 03x—6 10 0 Secretary of Btate, Cordell Hull,| Miss Perkins didn’t. : Union signed up the shop without | Overtime, recognition of a dock | port to mass in the bureau of-| St. Louis at Boston. Coombs and Cronin; Hollingsworth and though not so direct as Swanson,| The shops fly the Blue Eagle, but | —— as even the J Raowiedes of ‘the crew.| committee to regulate hiring and) tices, and elect a delegation to| “cago at Philadelphia. ig aim was nevertheless clear to those Who | the girls work 50 and 60 hours a|to hear me, but I shall have to But when it came to the report,| firing and size of loads, full gangs/ join similar delegations from other AMERICAN LEAGUE Dag eau 002 000 0—2 7 are accustomed to the diplomatic) week. make a study, These assaults have | these individuals failed to go into| of 22 men on all shifts, full com-| ports in Washington to carry on| New York at Detroit Toronto 002 000 3-5 8 verbiage to which Secretaries of} During the few weeks of the sea- | occurred in a city where the police | these questions. pensation for all injured men and| qemonstration for their de-| Washington at Cleveland. Judd and Taylor; Fubr and Smith. State are originally given. Asked/ sonal employment obtainable many | are supposed to give protection to “We, Siegal, Oster and Fein, the| the right to use their own doctors! mands, i Bo Re eae te bpionaaata Bey ne oe nite hes $8 8 Miele cee wen the citizens. I must find out what | rest of the committee, reported| at the company’s expense; a fund a Neste ishing : Roosevelt “disarmame! "|and code agreements setting much | they propose to do. Insofar as the ai i for unemployment relief to be L AME} pel tion will be a restatement of & neW |higher wages. In addition to the |code is concerned—I suppose no kag eve eae A tigoat raised by a tax of one cent on PEALE CRE ae ee A Meeting of the Arrange- Dr, Maxmilian Cohen American policy, Hull replied he as-| A. F. of L. and shop-owners, Fed-| definite action can be taken until “The facts found out in the in-| every hundred pounds of cargo| committee of seamen elected at|| ments Committee for the Daily ; Pamed: that no important eece | ray Omeiels have Joined the cam~|the code is signed. ‘The state tial | vestigation can ‘lead 49, otis con! | On, the,dgdk, a Miper scent ine! an ‘aneniployed meeting went) to oie Wegurainn ownll HELGE Dentist movement will be slowed down a paign of terror and intimidation.| a minimum wage law; if there are clusion, namely, that the workers | Crease for all salaried workers on| Police Commissioner Gaithers’ of- ‘Wotke isiand aoe ANNOUNCES THE REMOVAL OF any great length of time. The al-| Assistant Secretary of Labor has/| violations, you can take them UP! at Garside are justified in their| the dock, no speed-up or dis-| fice to potest against: the methods || Thursday, May 17, 8 P. M., at 35 HIS OFFICE TO ternative to that, he said, would be | “sent our most beloved leader, Ben | with the board. If I find violations | strike. Our proposal is that the| crimination. A committee of five| police are using in helping the|| E. 19th Street, 5th floor, All who 41 Union Square, Room 703 too awful to contemplate. | Gold, to jail on a disproved charge; | of the State restriction on women’s Boot and Shoe cancels the ee- | was elected to present the de-| shipowners smash the Centralized ‘3 Cor. 17th Street. GR. 7-0135 War Situation Grows More Serious) he has threatened our most beloved | hours—48 hours a week, eight hours ment and that the officials ne mands as soon as the men are| Shipping Buro, which is controlled || Wish te volunteer on this Com- ered eee necloshhenend baa apa Sse ee TA a day—I shall report it. Insofar | draw from the factory. We call| called back to work. and run by the seamen themselves,|| mittee should be present. - war situa’ “G on. as the violation of union agree- A meeting on the waterfront rr commit 4 mish sond'n mewnge to Coneres| “Get ton mame’ Beery. Per-ma'it goutmet, f eoua 20) wad he Worker Union to nie | tls, Momnk, adaresed by ay aot ony id the police wm Dro DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 7 er-jone wi ve you any protection; Hudson, H. Wickman, 4) ve ve ive i. - concerning the activities of the/kins interjects, as the girls, led by | the courts are supposed to protect ee Se ane the demands and many rach A. Hic aad ed peer ee es + ee 107 BRISTOL STREET munition manufacturers. oo. Clara Meltzer, Mary Fleischman | contractual relations. We will look factory i (Signed) members signed the petition stat-|lice officer 1119 stopped seamen on NEW CHINA Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn prety a eats betel of i ves But wr aly aaah is igen ian se on aed I oa viola- | 7 OSTAR, J. FEIN, 8. SIEGAL,” |ing them. A resolution pledging! the street and referred them; to CAFETERIA PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 2 Se ats pouasae the; ions, repo em. Now, I’m ‘ foil pais bi al i i wary workers from the basic causes|/an answer to “What will you do, | sorry, IT must nee Sy AUREL TIT EES Set ee penn ea ae Nats baer iment; aa By Tasty Chinese and American Dishes Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M of imperialistic war and histor-| Miss Perkins, since you speak so “What about Ed. McGrady? .. . Cleveland Carbon Men Strike - adopted, tralized Shipping Buro, pbedid ali bia ly cntitanaa ically significant in that govern-| sympathetically of women, since the | What about your own assistants? | For Union Recognition Ready to Strike The Baltimore seamen thank |} 848 Broadway bet.13th # 140m st. ment worry over armament makers| Regional Labor Board has politely |...” CLEVELAND (FP).—Superior| The Longshoremen are ready to| the Daily Worker and. especially Wisconsin 7-0268 ro PRIS ale Areal csaten hihag out of its building?” she only ne ats ah tat aoe Carbon employes, numbering 75,/ strike if their demands are not| Marguerite Young for supporting i va ‘ants @ more “human” platform | have gone out on strike for union| granted, and continue their or-| the Centralized Shij . WI D N S Hi Up. Se ee aoe to os ‘It's very kind of you to want has tripped down the hall, recognition in Cleveland. ganizing campaign among the un-' United Front Stippeg Sanit SOL SAND CH r ° e We ano a Though he declared that there's) ————-—— = ~ ——— LUNCH Dental Surgeon nothing definite bd Laptenine 3 So ° ° . 101 University Place 265 West 41st Street U.S.-Soviet trade negotiations, M. F ht A t Ne O O C (Just Around the Corner) Ne specially to the debt t ust, Arout lew York City eapecilty in reference to the debt | ass 1g ri ains 4 ro /ppression Gr OWS ver Coun ry sasiescs Agepeis adekes EaeOatNL the Cummings decision classing the pAMeeN Pe Bava - Soviet Union as a defaulter, Roose- | velt sounded a sort of optimistic) Workers Protest Legal | the chain gang on a charge of steal-|nesday night of the newly or-Jentire jim-crow capitalist system| Smash Jim-Crowism in|] 8 BROWNSVILLE PROLETARTANS DR, EMIL EICHEL note. That's still being negotiated 3 | ing some cigarettes. Meantime, the | ganized House Committee at 1636-40 | and the leadership of the A. F. of : DENTIST here and in Moscow, he said. Lynching of Edwards, | police were unable to solve’ the| University Ave. Bronx, plans were|L. the Socialist Party and other Mass Fight in Several Sokal Cafeteria 150 E. 93rd St. New York City FOUR re a murder, and decided to frame up | to be worked out for militant mass | bearers of white chauvinism among UE Gor. Lexington Ave, ATwater 9-8838 NEW YORK.—Endorsement of | Set for May 18 Edwards again. resistance to the attempt of the|the white masses, as well as the Ne- Cities 1689 PITKIN AVE) his resolution authorizing a Con-| een ee _ The International Labor Defense | landlord, Jacob Cohen, to evict 14 gro reformist leaders who, by their gressional fee of the meee CHARLOTTE, N. C., May 16. — 1 Medion ee ald (sing ther Negro sree ee bebe Si attacks on the growing unity of Ne- | stein, Jocal LLD, Secretary. Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome 3 fficial lawlessness against vorkers and intellectuals ani eir | sey ation in the two tenemen' a f eons i ies nh penalise se Rep-|John Lewis Edwards, 19-year old) oreanizations to stop this brutal pulldings. Siete teceat aearae oes The law would make revocation of|| De Luxe Cafeteria resentative Ernest Lundeen of|Negro boy who Is sentenced to be | legal lynching, Protests should he| The Nesro families are being ting the Negro eioae for a greater | licenses of places practicing discrim-| |94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. CAthedral 8-6160 Minnesota by the American Civil] electrocuted May 18, will “not, be sent immediately to Governor J. B.|actively aided by the League of | omeatuign ore mance cor® BM ination, mandatory. I hpi ah adel ea tacoere Dr. D. BROWN Liberties Union. recommended for clemency” accord-| Ehringhaus and to Edward Gill, Struggle for Negro Rights and the Opprespien ani plunger ag The Cleveland Bill is to’ be fol- - Ly e A “Tt has been our experience.” the | ing to a statement by Edward Gill,| parole commissioner, both at the| Bronx Section of the International Ree lowed by the nitroduction of a sim-|] MEET YOUR COMRADES AT TRE Dentist Union declared in a letter signed | Parole commissioner. State House, Raleigh, N. ©. de-|Labor Defense. They have rejected | Phila. Conference on Police Terror | jiar law to the state legislature, Cooperative Dining by Roger N. Baldwin, director, “that| awards is one of the 70 young |™manding the immediate release of | bribes of $50 each offered by the) PHILADELPHIA, Pa. May 15.—|Both bills are based upon the Bill 317 LENOX AVENUE J wherever workers have taken vigor-| Negroes who were picked up in a | Edwards. . landlord to move out quietly. A conference to initiate a mass|for Civil Rights for the Negro Club Between 125th & 128th St, N.¥.0. f ous action to assert the rights which| police drag-net against Negroes eed e ‘, s hd campaign against the police drag-| People drawn up by the League of ALLERTON AVENUE they believe are theirs under the] after the murder of a white street Appeal for Framed Negro Workers Jury Finds Bank Guilty [net and terrorization of Negro|Struggle for Negro Rights and Car; Bronx Park East N. R. A, they have been met with|car motorman on March 11, 1933,| RALEIGH, N. ©., May 16, — An of Jim-Crowism workers and working class organiza-| presented in May, 1938, by the|] pure rooas Proletarian Prices = = = violent opposition on the part of| He was soon released, again ar- | #Ppeal has been filed in the case of | NEW YORK.—150 white and Ne-/tions is called for Thursday, 8 pm.|Scottsboro Marchers ta the U. 8. G) their employers.” rested and sentenced to a year on| manuel Biddings, Negro war) gro workers, in a mass trial last|May 17, by the North Philadelphia | Congress and Roosevelt, wade Mice ten etse Peete eee sits | Tuesday night at the headquarters| Youth Branch of the League of RIS NS a aOR OPTOMETRISTS ss . Par- j . pefore the State Supreme Court on | migrant ‘Industrial Savings Bank|rish st, All organizations, especially || PHILADELPHIA, May 16.—The Cafeteria and Bar Econ atic sei eae 2 es ae guilty of trying to split the working | of the youth, are urged to send two | Ushers and doormen of the Harle = ass eeting stata was sentenced by the !ciass by its chauvinist attempt to|delegates in the call for the confer-| heatte, one of the huge chain of 809 BROADWAY : i Jandlord court of North Carolina evict Cyril Briggs and establish| ence. Stanley-Warner theatres in the city Between 11th and 12th Streets WILLIAM BELL 4 To Strike at the Enemies of Soviet Trade |}}Pecaue he dared to protest against | -cis) segregation in its tenement Beciaee oa and vicinity, are on strike for wage a robbery by his landlord and de-|) vaing at 495 E. 6th St. The work- increases and recognition of the OFFICIAL Optometrist OF THE : FRIDAY, MAY 18 COOPER UNION fended himself when the landlord bar ee rv he enti time ap- LL.D. Civil Rights Bill in Cleveland | Ushers and Doormen’s Union (A. F, LW. 0. 2 — 8:30 P.M. — 9th St and 4th Ave. arene ond feemen organiza-| Plauded the white-worker tenants of] CLEVELAND, Ohio, May 16,—A|°! ©» © Folding Chairs ; i, Speakers: Maxwell Stewart, Foreign Policy Association; Prof, H. W. L. Dana; tions are urged to send protests at|the building for immediately rally-|city ordinance outlawing Jim-Crow- © Desks, Files ig. Roy Hudson, Merine Workers Industriel Union: Herbert Goldfrank, Na- fs “ling to the defense of Comrade|ism in public places in Cleveland,| ~ CLASSIFIED © Typewriters tonal Secretary of Priends of the Soviet Union; Tim Holmes, Needle Workers ares _ ee Gee ee hog Biggs. and: sudosekftitly,: smashing | AMateawpey ein CHtAENABAAL Tanoel Te — + Pieclennlae Alvan of the Soviet Union, 799 Rroadway, Admission 25e. ode the attack upon the Negro masses. | Defense, will be presented to the city |ONE or two rooms to let. Ideal vacation KAL 8 35 West 196 EAST 14th STREET ae Indicted with the bank in the/eouneil through Alderman Bundy,| Pisce, AU improvements. Reasonable. 26th Street iter Fear Are Kes NEW YORK.—At 4 meeting Wed-! workers’ verdict of guilty were the! it was announced last week by Sam! the cits. 8B. c/o Daily Worker, Helena bene

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