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eee NO MATTER HOW SMALL! Order a Daily Worker Bundle for Sale To Those You Know Vol. XI, No. 121 =* few York, N. Y., under ' Fascists Seize ay Bulgarian Govt As Crisis Grows Ruling Class ' Terrified By Growing Com- munist Influence MASS ARRESTS Nazis, Mussolini Fight for Control ‘Nazi Executioner Beheads Four More German Communists HAMBURG, May 20.—Four Communist workers were be- headed here yesterday by Nazi executioners, They were seized and con- victed by a trumped-up Fascist court of “having been involved in the death of a Storm Trooper.” This brings the list of Commu- nist workers beheaded by the Fascists to more than a score. Hamburg is the home of Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the Ger- man Communist Party. Here Thaelmann organized workers for 30 years. The Hamburg sea- men love him. The terrorism against the Communists here is seen as a direct reply to the growing Communist activities on the waterfront, and are taken to be a signal by the Nazis for the attempt to execute Thaelmann. 2000 Homeless After Chicago Stockyard Fire Workers’ Heroism Halts Spread of Fire to Larger Area By BILL ANDREWS (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHIAGO, May 20.—Raging flames swep’ out of the tinder-dry Stock Yards Saturday and destroyed blocks of workers’ homes while fire- men desperately fought to save the | In the army, particularly, Com- | big plants of the meat trust. The munist work has been so strong | forces of fire and police depart- and successful that in reprisal 16 ments practically collapsed before soldiers were recently sentenced | the unprecedented fury of the fire by the government to die because | and only the heroic support of hun- of Communist activity. Later 12 | dreds of workers who manned thé sailors were sentenced for similar { hose prevented a repetition of the reasons. great Chicago fire of 1871. Drive Against Communists Responsibility for the blaze rests The official statements of the’ squarely on the shoulders of the big new Fascist rulers clearly indicate packers, who have seen fire after this fear of the Communist Party. | fire destroy lives in the same yards. | The new manifesto of the Fascists| But firemen and workers are proclaims the need for “‘stable local | cheaper than fireproof construction, administrations with the Mayors to so the Yards have remained the SOFIA, May 20.—With the active approval and support of King Boris, an open Fas- cist dictatorship was estab- lished here yesterday by a ruling class clique command- ing the army. Immediately a reign of terror against the working class and its revolutionary leaders was begun, re- sulting in the arrest of more than 800 Communists and mass leaders. A special drive was made in the interior, where the Communist Par:y ———S (See editorial, “The Fascist Coup In Bulgaria,” on page 6.) is particularly strong, haying elected many local Mayors and officials. Many of them were seized, The Bulgarian government has een notorious for its terrorism against the revolutionary move- ment, which, however, failed com- pletely to stem the rise of the Com- munist Party’s influence. This in- fluence became so great that in the local elections the capital city, Sofia, returned a majority of Com- munist votes. In many villages, peasants led by Communists have fought the landlords and usurers, painting the churches red, and planting the Red Flag on the steeples. be named by the Central govern- ment.” This is clearly aimed at the Communists, Inner Disputes The new manifesto, furthermore, makes it clear that the Fascist gov- ernment hopes to put an end to the strong disputes within the camp of the bourgeoisie itself. It states: “The king has appointed a new Cabinet to give the country a strong, stable government which will solve Bulgaria’s difficult eco- nomic and political problems. The previous system of Party govern- ment paralyzed efficient govern- ment and by eternal party quar- eels created an atmosphere of distrust and uneasiness. fe mean to do our best for Bul- garia and for Bulgaria only.” This statement also reveals certain of the new foreign political align- ments proposed by the new Fascist government. Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy have been maneuver- ing for domination of Bulgarian politics. King Boris has already (Continued on Page 2) Soviet Envoy in Protest on Hitler. Attacks on USSR. Attacks Falschoods of Fascist Officials MOSCOW, May 20. (By Radio)— Protest against anti-Soviet attacks made by Hitler in his recent “Labor Congress” speech were lodged to- day with the German Foreign Min- ister by the U.S.S.R. Charge d’Af- fairs at Berlin, Bessonov. Bessonov pointed out that Hit- ler’s statement regarding the eco- nomic situation in the U.S.S.R. does not correspond to the truth, and in reality constitutes interference in the domestic affairs of the US.S.R. By his statement on “millions who died of starvation,” Hitler places himself at the head of the anti- Soviet campaign now being ‘carried on in Germany, the Soviet envoy pointed out. Jail Two Anti-Nazis in Palisades Park, N. J. ALPINE, N. J., May 30—Two students, members of the National Student League, were arrested by the Interstate Park police here yes- terday for shouting “Down with Hitler!” to the occupants of a mo- tor launch which was cruising near the New Jersey shore. The launch was flying the red, white and black flag and the Nazi flag with the swastika. Charged with “disorderly conduct,” the students were taken to Alpine, and will be tried today at the Interstate Park police station | sands 2am eae greatest fire hazard in Chicago. The flames broke out at 4:30 Sat- urday afcernoon in the cattle pens, | flimsy wooden structures dried by weeks of deadly drought and heat. | A southwest wind swept the fire! through the Yards in mighty rushes while Stock Yards cowboys risked their lives driving cattle to safety. In a short time the whole territory around the pens was blazing fiercely, and firemen were collapsing before its onrush. Once the fire gained headway, Daily .<QWorker CENTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL) Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at the Act of March 8, 1878. a she 4 King Boris of Bulgaria, who supports the Fascist coup. He is notorious for his terrorism against the Bulgarian masses. 4,000March In Support Of Striking Stevedores Tugboat Pickets Dock in "Frisco; McGrady Tries Sell-Out SAN FRANCISCO, May 20.—A veritable state of siege has been reached here in the longshoremen’s strike, with the whole labor move- ment aroused in behalf of the strikers. The teamsters’ union has decided not to haul goods to and from the piers, marine engineers have agreed not to haul strikebreakers in tugs and launches operated by members of the Marine Enzineers Union, and all unions are talking about back- ing the longshoremen with a gen- eral strike if police attacks on the strikers are backed by troops, as threatened. While the strikers keep up an aggressive and militant picket line along the waterfront,‘ two tugboats are picketing the water approach to the docks. 4,000 March After a large mass meeting, 4.000 strikers and symvathizers, includ- ing, members of the International Labor Defense, Workers Interna- tional Relief, the Building Trades Courcil of San Mateo County, and the Social Problems Club of the University of California paraded. Meanwhile Edward F. McGrady, Assistant Secretary of Labor, who came here by airplane from Wash- ington, D. C., has been meeting with | Lewis, and Pederson Bioklund, leader of the International Long- shoremen’s Association, O'Connell of the Central Labor Union, and other misleaders who are not on the strike; committee. The meetings are held in secret with government officials and business men. District officials of the IL.A. have already announced their intention to compromise on wages and hours, but stand pat only on the question of union recognition. everything in its way was swept by flames, buildings did not catch fire, they burst into flames from the radiant heat, and great structures (Continued on Page 2) 100,000 Men in Latest Chaco Blood-Letting ASUNCION, Paraguay, May 20.— More than 100,000 men are in- volved in the battle for Fort Balli- vian, Bolivian stronghold, which the Peraguayian army is attempting to capture tonight. It is one of the bloodiest encounters since the war began. Paraguay has 45,000 men massed on a 20-mile front centering on the fort while Bolivia has sent in reinforcements enough to make its own total 60,000. Happ By VERN SMITH Daily Worker Moscow Correspondent MOSCOW, May 20 (By Radio)— The summer season of the magni- ficent Park of Culture and Rest opened today. The capital of the USSR. is spending millions upon millions of rubles to organize and build the most modern facilities for the rest and pleasure of the toilers of the country. A large part of these expenditures are going to build new parks, rec- reation centers. These new centers of rest not only aid in restoring the working energy of the working pop- ulation, but give outlets for the tremendous joyful readiness of the masses for cultural advance. The great Park of Culture and Rest has earned the love of the entire population of Moscow, the combination of culture and rest sywbolizing the great achievements of the Soviet Union. On the first day of the Summer season, more than 500,000 workers and their families walked through their beloved park. Everywhere were gay crowds, moving without haste along the bright walks. Thou- of boats plied the rivers, workers in rowboats, iest in the World, Bullitt Says of Moscow Summer Parks New Press Slanders Following the exposure in the ‘Western Worker of the attempt of the leaders of the I.L.A. to betray the strike, sentiment against the ar- bitration move led spread and ex- tended. ‘The Frisco docks are sealed tight. In Los Angeles the teamsters have walked out in support of the dock- ers. Over a hundred sealers in San Francisco have formed a scalers section of the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union. Hundreds more are signing up. The leaders of the International Seamen’s Union were forced by the sentiment of the rank and file to call a strike. They went to the LL.A., but were told they must go to the Seamen’s United Front Strike (Continued on Page 2) children and mothers resting on the meadows. More than 30,000 watched NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 21, 1934 Some Demands by Militancy (Special to the Daily Worker) CLEVELAND, Ohio, May 20.—/ One-hour strikes have already taken | place in the pickling and 72-inch | rolling mill departments of the Otis | Steel plant here. The demands) were won. Today a committee of 12 from the blanketing department presented demands, and won ten| out of 14, but the main wage and hour demands were not granted. The rank and file of the Otis Lodge of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers (A. F. of L.) has already presented wage | demands, although the company; appealed to them to wait until May 21, when the conference with the Amalgamated officials takes place. | The Otis Amalgamated Lodge, in accordance with the decisions of the Canton district conference of the A. A, on May 13, has in- vited the Steel and Metal Work- ers’ Industrial Union to the joint district conference to be held in Cleveland on May 27. Other lo- cals of the S. M. W. I. U. are asked to contact all Amalgamated Lodges in order to discuss ar- rangements in regard to the Cleveland joint conference. The Cleveland S. M. W. L U. has issued 25,000 circulars with the appeal for unity in the prep- aration of the coming strike struggles. The S. M. W. I. U. will present demands on the major steel companies on Monday, May 21, simultaneously with the Amal- gamated Lodges. A city-wide special emergency unity conference for all steel work- ers was called by the S. M. W. I. U. for June 1 and calls for delegates from all mass organizations, and | other unions, to support the steel campaign. Detroit Layoffs Hit Women and Negro| Workers : Motor Output Drops By Quarter in Three Weeks Special to the Daily Worker DETROIT, May 20.—In a new move to halt the growing: struggle for layoff pay and unemployment |insurance, the Automobile Labor Board yesterday published a list of rules to be followed by the auto companies in laying off workers. The rules, the Board states, are an elaboration of the passage in Presi- dent Roosevelt's settlement of | March 25 providing that “in reduc- tion or increases of force such hu-; man relationships as married men with families shall come first and then seniority, individual skill, and effitient service.” The rules are designed to create the illusion among the workers that length of service and such hu- manitarian considerations as de- pendents will be the decisive fac- tors in retaining their jobs. Ac- tually, there is nothing in the rules; which changes in the slightest the vicious “merit” clause in the Auto Code. The manufacturers can con- tinue to fire for union activity, for; failure to keep up with the terrific) speedup or for any reason they please. ‘The layoff rules are an attack on the young workers and on Negro and women workers. The rules pro- vide that workers hired Sept. 1, 1933, “irrespective of marriage or dependency,” shall be the first to be. laid off; it.is only since this date that large masses of Negroes and women have been hired. Simultaneously with the fanfare concerning the layoff rules, comes the sober announcement that auto- mobile production in the United States and Canada declined again during the past week. Total output was 75,550, according to Cram’s Au- tomotive Reports, compared with 79305 in the week before. This is a 25 per cent decline in the past 1 Hour Strikes in Steel Mill in Cleveland; Union Calls for United Action * — ° Otis Steel Workers Win | Industrial Steel Union Seeks Joint Action With A.F.L. Men PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 20.—A/ meeting of the Committee of Ten,| elected by the delegates to the re-| cent Amalgamation Association of | Iron, Steel and Tin Workers Con-| vention (A. F. of L.) together with | the national board of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial | Union, is taking place today here, to discuss joint action in the prep- arations for strike in the steel in- dustry, now going on. The rank and file opposition in the A.A. convention succeeded in} passing the devision that all lodges of the A.A. shall present demands | this month to the steel companies, | and if these are not granted, to take offensive action on June 20. Progress Toward Unity ‘The Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union, at its national board meeting last week, called upon all lodges of the A.A. for united action in the preparations of the strike struggles. Progress in the achiev- ment of this unity is already being made in the districts. Last Sun- day the Amalgamated Association held a district conference in Can- ton, Ohio, where it was decided to call a district united front confer- ence in Cleveland, Ohio, on May 27, and the locals of the S.M.W. LU. were invited to attend and} take part in this conference. The national board of the S.M.W.) LU. has sent a letter, signed by} Pat Cush, president, and James| Egan, secretary, of the SMI.U. to| the Committee of Ten elected at the A.A. convention, calling for} united action in the strike prepa- rations. The letter calls for joint commit- tees of all A.A. lodges with the S™M.| WLU. locals, and for united strike action on the basis of the six de- mands passed by the A.A. rank and file opposition at the A.A. conven- (Continued on Page 3) Silk Workers of Paterson Fight Pay Cuts, More Layoffs NTWU Calls for Unity in Shops To Defeat NRA Wage Cuts PATERSON, N. J., May 20.—The | thousands of silk workers, laid off for a week by the N.R.A. Code Au- thority, when they return to their jobs this mornine face worsened conditions. The Kluger shon has already announced a 5 per cent) wage cut, and others are expected to follow suit. The last layoff of the N.R.A. was put over with the/ aim of decreasing wages and in- tensifying speed-up, under threat of a longer layoff, The National Textile Workers Union, which from the first led the fight acainst the N.R.A. layoff, pre- sents the following demands on which the silk workers are urged to unite for common struggle in the shops, 1) $25 a week minimum wage for weavers. Proportional in- crease for all other crafts; 2) No more than 3 and 4 looms to a weav- er: 3) A 30-hour week and 40 weeks work during the year; 4) For the Workers Unemvlovment and So- cial Insurance Bill (H-R. 7598). On Monday, the N.T.W.U. calls on all workers, when they return to work to unite in the shops for mili- tant struggle, regardless of what | union they belong to, Mass Anger \eets 5-Year Terms For Six Chicago Relief Fighters three weeks. * the Green Theatre, in the Park where they witnessed mass dances, gymnastic exercises, choruses and ballets. In the evening the Park became a blaza of thousands of lights and many-colored lanterns, sparkling high above in the sky. Ambassador Bullitt, of the United States, viewing all the events at the Park through the day, stated to the newspapermen who crowded around him for his impressions: “Each visit to this Park gives me further conviction that this is the happiest Park in the world. Here are joyous children, happy old men, and youth light-heart- smiling. There is no park in America to compare with this We have Coney Island which is more a beach with specially added attractions, And in New York, Central Park is consider- ably smaller in size with much poorer attractions. “What surprises me is the great mass of visitors, something you rarely see in American parks. This Park of Culture and Rest is @ splendid achievement of which the Soviet power, and the Mos- cow organizations and directors of the Park may well be proud.” 4 FLINT, Mich., May 20.—The fruits of the betrayal of the strike at Fisher Body Plant No. 1 are being reaped fast. Announcement has been made of the establishment of @ new company union in the plant, the Fisher Body Plant No. 1 Em- ployes Protective Association. The “new” company union is al- ready preparing to meet with Roose- velt’s Automobile Labor Board in Detroit, Red Builder Victim of Cops for Selling ‘Daily’ on Times Sq. NEW YORK.—Sam Miller, a crippled Red Builder, was arrested Saturday night for selling the Daily Worker on Times Sq. The techni- cal charge was “disorderly con- duct.” Judge Burke, at Night Court, held Miller in $10 bail for trial Monday in the Magistrates Court. Workers are urged to pack the court and force the judge to release him, ILD Appeals for Aid in| Raising Bail, and To Appeal Class Veruict Daily Worker Midwest Bureau CHICAGO, May 20.—“Five years.” The crowded court room was stunned, as six mil- itant workers stood before a capitalist court to receive sentence last Friday. Five years in the penitentiary, and a $750 fine was the penalty the judge gave these “criminals.” “Criminals!” Many people in the courtroom had been present at the demonstration at which the six were arrested. They know who the crim- inals in the case were. January 27, 1933. A bitterly cold day. Chicago workers are demon- strating all over the city against the order not to recognize workers’ com- mittees in relief stations. Particu- larly in the Negro district, misery and starvation is the normal fate of the masses of unemployed, | illegal. WEATHER—Fair, warmer Clarence Darrow, famous law- yer, who heads the Board which denounced the N. R. A. Lives of Six! Ala. Toilers' Are in Peril; Terror Rises Fascist White Legion in Plot to Kill Prisoners BIRMINGHAM, Ala., May 20. —; The terror against the striking ore miners and the strikers of the Thomas Blast Furnace of the Re- public Steel Co., has been greatly intensified, Authoritative information has been secured that the White Legion, the fascist band of the employers, is arranging, with police aid, to whip and subject to worse torture the six militant workers now under arrest, | whose case now awaits decision. The lives of these six workers are in the gravest danger. The entire working class, and all honest intellectuals, must at once intensify the protest against this planned attack on the six arrested working class leaders, and against the murderous fascist terror aimed to bre@k the strikes and organiza- tions of the Alabama workers. All roads leading into Thomas village, company town of the Re- public Steel Co., have been closed and barred with gates, and deputies have been placed on 24 hour duty there: No one is allowed to enter, or leave the company village without stating his business, The six militant workers now held in prison are in solitary con- ‘the present Congress, the Conven-| finement. They have gone on a hunger strike to force Judge Aber- nathy to make a decision. On the night of May 17, many homes were raided by police and deputies, and at least six more are known to have been arrested in the increased wave of terror. These raids are being carried on without any warrants, and are therefore All individuals and all organi- zationg are urged to send tele- grams of protest at once to chief of police Hollums, in Birmingham, to Governor Miller at Montgom- ery, Ala., and to President Roose- velt at Washington. Demand the immediate release of the arrested workers whose lives are now in danger. Defend the right of the Alabama workers to strike and to organize, Develop an immediate wave of protest against the strikebreaking fascist terror of the White. Legion murderers, the police, and company gangsters, the deputies and national guard, Truck Workers in Peoria on Strike P7ORIA, Ill—Workers on the trucks of the Peoria Cartage Co. and the Inter-City Trucking Co. are striking for wage increases and better working conditions. They have established a militant picket line. AMERICA’S ONLY WORKING CLASS DAILY NEWSPAPER (Six Pages) Price 3 Cents Darrow Report Flays N. R. A. As Wall Street Yoke Chelyuskin Leader and His Rescuer || Reach New York || NEW YORK—The leader of }} the heroic Chelyuskin expedi- || tion, Professor Otto Yu h Schmidt, and the leader of t rescuers, George A. Ushakov, ar- rived in New York Saturday, on their way to the Soviet They were greeted by Soviet officials and a large delegation, || who cheered and embraced the heroic Russians. They will be guests at a ban- quet Wednesday, given by the | Explorers’ Club and the Ameri- || can-Russian Institute. National Vets’, Meet Reopens Bonus Fight 1,120 Delegates from | 44, States; More Arriving WASHINGTON, May 20. — The veterans’ fight for the repeal of the} Roosevelt Act, for the payment of the bonus and the establishment of | a Federal system of unemployment} insurance for all workers reached a new high point today with the en-| thustastic opening of the first! National Convention of the Veterans Rank and File Committee. Following the opening of the vets’ camp at Fort Hunt, where over a| thousand veterans are now pre-| paring to fight for the Bonus bill at/ tion launched into its work of} uniting all veterans around its three-| point program. ‘With Emanuel Levin of the Work- ers Ex-servicemen’s League calling the convention to order, the report | of Harold Hickersch, also of the WESL., revealed delegates from| 44 states, with 1,120 registered for| the convention, of which 1097 are World War veterans. Of the delegates 198 are Negroes, with the American Legion, the Vet- erans of Foreign Wars, the Disabled American Veterans, the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, the Span- ish-American Veterans, the Rank and File veterans, the American) World War veterans, the Marine Corps League and C.C.C. camps represented. Negro veterans are represented on practically every Committee. C. D. Cowan, of Cleve- land, famous for his leadership in the last bonus march to Washington, | has been elected Chairman of the| Convention. The splendid unity of the Negro} and white veterans is an outstand- ing achievement of the Convention. Significant also is the representa- tion from the heavy industries. Comrade Beatty, of the Marine) Corps League, spoke of the lack of | Marines # the convention, but de-| clared: “When I holler Semper Fidelis, the Marines will come to attention and fight for the Three-Point Program.” Indicative of the obstacles that hundreds of veterans are meeting on the roads, on the way to the Convention, the Convention went on record as demanding the immediate release of A. F. Blanchard, Negro veteran who was arrested and sentenced to 20 days for “trespass- | ing on railroad property.” On Monday there will be three sessions in the Washington Audito- rium, shown addressing workers through DAVID POINTDEXTER Mflitant Negro leader in the 1931 Hunger March to Washington, is a megaphone. Small groups of workers cluster on the street corners, just outside the Oakwood Relief Station, the| were inside the station besides the famous “Fortress of Misery” at 505| great number on the street. E. 50th Place, noted for its rotten; about 300 workers are around, and treatment. Police Urge Opening of Meeting There is an enormous mobiliza- tion of police. State witnesses in the trial admitted that 150 cops Only the leaders of the demonstration AContinued on Page 2) Charges Wall Street Monopoly Domination in Bitter Attack MASS MISERY GROWS Builds Super-Trusts, Crushes “‘Small Man” By SEYMOUR WALDMAN, Daily Worker Washington Burems WASHINGTON, May 26.— The National Recovery Re- view Board, appointed in March by President Roose- velt, tonight reported official- ly to him that the National Recovery Act has doomed the small business man, raised the cost of living much ter than wages, and systmatcally intrenched monop- olies, In addition, Clarence Darrow, Chairman, and his former law part- ner, W. O. Thompson, a member of the board, signed a “special and supplementary report” which de- scribed the N.R.A. code set-up as “regimented organization for ex- Ploitation” and declared that “mo- nopoly sustained by Government” is “the trend fin the N.R.A,” They concluded: “The choice is between monop- oly sustained by government,. which is clearly the trend in the National Recovery Administration; and a planned economy, which de- mands socialized ownership and control, since only by collective ownership can the inevitable con- flict of separately owned units for the market be eliminated in favor of planned production.” “There is no hope for the small business or for complete recovery in America in enforced restriction upon production for the purpose of maintaining higher prices. “The hope for the American peo- ple, including the small business man, not to be overwhelmed by their own abundance, lies in the planned use of American re- sources following socialization. To give the sanction on Govern- ment to sustain profits is not » planned economy, but a regi- mented organization. The N.R.A, is at present in the stage of con- flict of interest; but in proportion as the authority of Government sanctions regulation by in- dustrial combinations, the inevit- able tendency is toward monopoly, with elimination of the small busi- nee “While under the codes the cost of living increases,” the five Board members stated, “wages have not risen accordingly. The prices charged for some articles the poor should have, as much as the rich, have been in some instances pro- hibitory. According to the bulle- tins of the Department of Labor, taking the average cost of all foods in 1913 as 100, their cost in April 1933, was 90 and in April 1934, it was 107. Fifty-one cities showed in this year an advance in food prices of from 10 to 27 percent, Rent, fuel, light, house furnishings and other items showed at the end of the year, after the codes had begun to operate, a marked up- ward tendency.” The main board report, signed by five of the six members, un- realistically recommended “a retura to the anti-trust laws for the pur- pose of restoring competition a one of the great needs of the times,” despite its pronouncement that “all. competition is savage, wolf- ish and relentless, and can bt nothing else.” Hold Up Publication In a tither ever since the receipt of the reports two weeks ago, the Roosevelt Administration held up the publication of them until N.R.A. Administrator General Hugh §S, Johnson and some lesser lights could prepare, for simultaneous publicatian, hysterical attacks on the supplementary report. Responsible N.R.A. officials, in hastily called week-end press con- ferenves, followed this line of at- tack by launching a red scare, the maneuver chosen to smokescreen the Administration retreat. They assertéd that “this report starts out on a basis of Communism and col« lectivism when it was supposed t@ study the small businessman.” General Johnson, who has made no secret of the fact that the Com- munist Party has been the only basic critic of the N.R.A., and has pointed out the anti-labor and monopolistic characteristics of i (Continued on Page 2) Profit System Denies People Dental Care BUFFALO, N. Y. (FP).—‘Some 75 per cent of the people of the U. S. do not and cannot obtain adequate dental care under the ex- isting economic order.” states a re- port submitted by the Committee on Community Dental Service to the annual convention of the Den- tal Society of the State of New York, in session at Buffalo. The committee recommended the immediate passage of social health insurance laws and eventual s0- cialization of dentistry, j |