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rage Two Herndon Appeal D WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1934 enied; Scottsboro Appeal Hearing Today Vets to Stay pm ° ( ’ ° ’ nd . Y Now ‘gia Court) Win Ohio Strike; 107 JoinC.P. 25.000 Now Out in veorgia Court) Win Ohio Strike; 107 JoinC.P. oe BASEBALL / ° A 5 ] « | oe eee ee : . n Capital | . 3 s Appeal 3 Councils, 800 | ) ; bd N = De nue AY pe a je 00 four COUNCLS, Of nition NATIONAL LEAGUE 000 011 001-3 10 » 6 > > + td ¢ 000 901 000-1 4 4 V. Davis; Leonard, Perkins, ACHIC U AS For Herndon eka are op eae ndefinitely ia welt 3 eet 8 Soden, i By GEORGE GAN | Dies ancuso, a 2 = ee AMERICAN LEAGUE ° 3 - a HAMILTON, Ohio, May 24.—After a six week's struggle in the srs é : New York oon 000 020-2 7 8 ith 4 . 4 - | Philadelph 000 011 2ix—§ 10 1 ae z j And Ship Strike. demanas Flood Ala, | near of the Onio stee! industry, the strike of the 1300 Butler County |/ Defeat Vagrancy Law| "assim, avaue and Lonbard, Beet | PUSS, ang mceet oii chutel © fl abe pe : , a ‘ ‘ell ‘ ie has ae sp [and 7 se é ck, £ ; \ Court for Release of || T°’. Zmenteney Relief Administration relief workers has |) Schemes; Force Gov't | Ptisuss 10 019 140-7 13 0| Phuadelphia 000 100 1-38 1 ourt tor Nelease 0 ended here with victories for the worke | Boston 011000 901-3 11 1 | Detroit 200 400 00x 10 4 ips = Scottsboro Nine Tremendous gains have been made in organization, and economic || To Meet Expenses — | ,,S*ft and Padden; Brandt and spon-) ‘Marcum, Moss and Berry; Marberry ané Scotts aE i is Dochrane, on] Bake Head f 9 * . victories have been won. During the six weeks of bitter struggle in — St. Louis 000 202 300-7 13 0 eRe au aker, ead 0 nae Peper es F ‘ Fe : Fed'l Relief Census ATE AMAR Ga Me LT hich men, women and children massed on the picket lines, during || (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) | ‘. : -| INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Phila. 1.L.A., Admits Shows Negroes Hit Ge Supreme Court today up h mass demonstrations were held for the first time in the com- WASHINGTON, May 24.—veter-| | pr Se aire held the atrociot jominated tor n, scores of workers were jailed. || ane convents i Ly bpd - Roch 000 230 200-7 10 @ d Strikebreakin, , me held trocio of 18 to lominated town of Middletown, scores of we | ans attending the bonus convention ° i g By Unemployment |} 99 years on the chain-gang This week a settlement was made with Relief Director Browning. || or the National Rank and File Com-| 10 Villa S Pe RRL Bla i TLLETIN | Angelo Herndon, Negro organ 7 ; reel vorkers will receive 44 cents an 4 | | Crouch ; i BULLETIN vASHIN q 24—How || 7 ie and wee 5 the) termia, of: the egreement, the: workers wil | mittee today won their demands to | NEW ORLEANS, Is. May M— Bs ei Ee aia uy nta white and Negro unem-'} our, an advance of 14 cents over the 30 cent rate whicH prevailed femaptigsy sae: ieacbhiaey ek Uses Gas Bavonets ndtneter etio tek dike ies Police fired into the ranks of 300 unemployment than white work- Herndon convicted under an Reroreas strike, and have won recognition of the, workers’ com. government éxpenke, 9 Ci 9) ar eared A Mtg al ove Striking Negro longshoremen to- || ers is indicated by the national slave code aimed to crush the |} mittees. " ‘ vain”. aathone T e 5 on or ers. Fuhr and Smith. day, wounding one worker. loyment census as of Octo- rrectionary ruggles of Negro COMMUNISTS IN LEADERSHIP rani an le = delegation Albany 900 000 100-1 6 4 Strikers were trying to prevent || ber, 1933, just made public by || slaves, and rev ince the Civil || ‘The leading Communist Party members were constantly in the || emerged from a conference with : Pees ais ene eres j soabs from loading the S.S. Ida of the Federal Emergency Relief |W = to apply to spl forefront in this strike struggle. As a result, deep inroads have been | Brigadier General Frank T Hines, tChubitiled Thoth Phige 4) roan and ea . _ tae ie rary eagrcae ee Ve | eR? iting |) made in the steel mills here, and mass recruits brought into the Party. || Veterans Administration head, with phic esd Stl sk Co Petal SAN FRANCISCO, May 2%4—|| be hired, Negroes had 178 per ||stt charged A month before the strike, we had but two sympathizers in Mid- || Sovernment ped beau a Ohio. The National Guard has ma- | Montreal 10 300 1ix—7 11 1 i Dwenty-t thousand maritime|] cent of their number on relief ection.” dietown. Today we have 800 union members in the American Rolling || MY conceded the ex-soldlers! O°) chine guns in readiness to shoot. | sSpwau seid oteen | Sisaey, Aa ea f workers on the Pacific coast joined'| on October, 1933, as compared 1e appeal, filed by the Interna- || Mills stronghold, have enlisted 300 new members into the Unemploy- | shat camp and convention head-| As the afternoon progressed, the | Rutfaio 330 260 0-8 10 6 ‘ last night by masters, mates and pi- |) to 9.5 per cent of the white pop- || tional Labor sae See || ment Councils, and many workers from the shops of Middletown || quarters, but also granted the right | numbers of strikers did not diminish | Montreal, | oul 100 24 8 8 ; lots of the coastal ships, stopped all | ulation on relief. In the District ly Ga Gia jy Aas ae praioes have sent in applications to join the Communist Party. to remain in the capital without be-| but increased, more and more gath-| ash and Spencer; Fritz, Fisher, Dudley eos . oriaratl Nes daa of Columbia Negroes represented Ee eee ee unre is 107 NEW PARTY MEMBERS | ing subject to arrest for vagrancy. | ering on the picket pe har fa | and Stack. eabreakers. occurred. during the || Weg aten Grete featee ove ao || TUD) Witch is plashing too Out of the 1,300 workers who struck the relief projects in Butler || Hines, it was announced, dropped | Diant in te Hace of bayons, suiee, p indication of the widespread un- ||feht to the U. S. Supreme Court, || County, we have strengthened our ranks by 107 new Party members, || yesterday's MRE RE ee : bi fppmnedeal -S-6160 . : Z % |e las caller ass protests || and have w . 8y1 s who w a ust be evacuate: lay unless the | ©: Mme eee eeauae ihe decision of the State || °@ have won many sympathizers who will soon he Party members || 7 ne allowed s Oivilan Conser-| ‘The strikers cot up harricades at|| De. D. BROWN Mens one || Negro workers because of the || Coit” demands for the immediate || %5° vation Corps tent to be set up on| strategic points around the plant) Dentist till has the y discrimination against Negroes on || 000” wake During the strike, about 500 scabs were brought in throughout 4 to act as a cover from the smoking entis No cargo was moved = ae ate An SEER Goun |release of Herndon and financial 7 ‘ . camp ground and kept there until | 2 Ne Veor trom the abine today eh oor ew coun- || <upport for its Free Herndon cam-|| the county. Many of these, after a few hours’ work, downed their || Monday, the time set for closing. | guns of the National Guard. || 317 LENOX AVENUE i : SSO a 5 aaileees | paign. ls and walked off the jobs. They were starving but would not mn te i ion || Between 125th a 126th &t., N.¥.C. The mayor and the ship owners | paign. tool : Today he proposed that the vet-| workers Seething With Indignation | i fe ee Cb emetnien ae cece | x = bg . : scab on their fellow workers. Now the strikers are demanding that erans remain at Fort Hunt until Ne seNini WIL nie — all manner of conflicting state- | for the Pacific Coast early vesterday| NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades |] those scabs who remained be taken off the jobs before work is resumed. || Monday without a C.C.C. recruiting} The workers iy in ein oe ike } ments. “We don’t get enough pro-| With steel for the Golden Gate Committee fo the Defense of hel | tent, that they then go to Washing- dignation agains : fe sates ee i tection,” say the shipowners. “There | Bridge at San Francisco. Reports | Scottsboro boys has arranged seven | = = ==,| ton where they will be given relief | Auto Lite, Miniger, who orde || Dr. Maximilian Cohen are no sttikebreakers,” says the Citculated Thursday night that the| meetings for this noon in various) wo . {fives <f and lodged at the Transient Relief| blood bath and brought in strike- j e. ' : [Soe ng bea up bcaue ae] ener centers as Renee oe! Picket N.Y, Nazi || New York Gangsters || Sirens "ores wi be made| eaters senna and tons in|] Dental Surgeon wo hund d fifty seamen at| entire crew had struck were de- Be i sip | . : for vagrancy and the disabled vet-) order to rob the 41 Union §S * a Rec cncsting TTiseday repucinten|| scribed as “Communist propaganda” anpieed, Case ywood pets ad || Shipped Into Strike }} crans vill be: taker oars of, Hines | demands and break the strike. hn yorK stale Fy Tying statements issued by leaders | by Paul Baker, head of the Phila-| re eee ec oace today. Consul; Demand | Area, “Daily”? Learns || Promised. In addition, free trans-) | The vicinity of the tactory te GR. 7-0135 ! of the International Seamen's Union lar chapter H the zatenaeoel | For each one of the meetings 9 | > se | portation will be een those wna like . ey nig sia ee Laie that the Marine Workers Industrial ngshoremen's Association. st tty en ‘ a : want to go home, while any who; gas drifte 0 Union is scabbing on the strike. “A picket maintained by the | Teeponsibiliiy is assigned to a cae aeimannheieas NEW YORK.—The Industrial |/ wish to enter the C.C.C. will be con-| nearby and drove occupants to the | ; Seamen pointed out that it was| strikers to keep non-striking sailors| 2°U 0" Cepariment, Gs ROUnms: Soe Railway Service Agency, with its || tacted only through the Rank and| streets, violently sick, with eyes | Tompkins Square 6-7697 the M.W.L.U. that initiated and led| from boarding the ship was pre-| of 1. tno Dre Opposition; 38th Rio cetise |] office in Room 4735 Grand Con- || mile Committee, according to the| blinded. | the strike of seamen and that lead-| vented from doing so by his organ-) s+ and sth Avenue—Kniteoods De- (Continues from Faget): | one ae ibetanal Cena is ship- || Hines proposals. ‘A National Guard officer shouted] DI’, §, A. Ueno Q S.0 their ization, baker said. nt: r0— gees | roites ‘, ni , i stri + the rifle fire i owe ane the lead oa “Reports that the striking fallore | Pony ceieatiies Ste Berane TA Farmer, International Longshore- |} strikebreakers to the Alabama serait se Gicen aia a ee ee Bee craw GENITO-URINARY between the seamen and longshore-| here were loud in thelr sympathy) ave—press Dept, N. T. W. I. U,| en Association, | 44. || ore mine fea 4 Neg ot secretary-treasurer of the Rank and| One woman was injured by a flying|| 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. men. for the 13,000 Pacific Coast striking) 37th st. and 6th Ave.—Millinery| Nay murder of revolutionary || ache itten ary toueny || File Committee; James Beatty and| club hurled by a National Guards-|! OFFICE HOURS: 11 - 1:40 P.M. Two delegates, one from the M.W.|longshoremen were designed t©/ Opposition; 30th St. and Madison! Nau muarer of rvoulumsry || Richard Dineen, who formerly |) George Allman. man. A man’s face was practically SUNDAY: 12-8 P.M. LU. and one representing the un-| cause trouble among local long-| Avonye—Bathrobe Department; 15th} Workers! Uni protest Oe worked with the notorious Ber- tone, De t of| torn off by being hit full force with ' organized seamen, were elected to shoremen Baker declared. |st. and 5th Ave—Amalgamated| NeW Nazi terror against workers || goff Detective Agency, is in || Senator Huey Long, Democrat of) | on gas bomb, ; represent the seamen in the nego-| “So far, Baker has received no or-| Rank and File Opposition. a er eee chee 1 |} onaTee of shiping: the :strike~ | Oa ta expected air Be ese eiei ot tao. wOreces : hike | stand i : S.A. esolution 1a! y t tiations being conducted in San| ders on unloading ships from the) ‘The International Labor Defense! tations for fascism in : || breakers. io 6 Ye f the Electric Auto Lite Co., has Francisco, They have been instruct | Pacific Coast loaded there by seabs,| yesterday reiterated its plea for im-| Build, united anti-fascist move- || aw well-known gangsters, || the finance committee from further Hire pov aies Ace 19, when dresklel F F ding to devel ts | uti ment! Flood Nazi consulate, 17 vay || consideration of the Patman Bo-/} been on since Ap , ora : ed to be present at all meetings, to and, according levelopments yes- | mediate contributions to the Scotts- Frank Carr and Whitey Conway, ji t i ti ordered picketing % eyent separate settlements and to| terday, will receive none.” boro Defense Fund, to remove the| Battery Place, with protest tele- || 16: hore yesterday morning with ||US Bill, which has already passed | court set pia | ( ei grid-thet all decisions andro: “Meeting Tonight present hampering of the defense| rams and resolutions! Send || 21 5100.2 tor youngstown, Ohio, || the ‘House. Senator Shipstead,| abolished. | ‘The strikers have Beet RED FIGHTING : ate ne ao the ink and| ‘The Communist Party nucleus of| activities caused by shortage of| dlesations to the consulate! | Hee Peeestas on re on theix || Patmer - Laborite of Minnesota, | picketing in the face of the most | : Bie toe Ce en longshoremen issued a bulletin ex-|funds, and for the sending of ‘pro- | Rush cables to the Hitler murder |} ee icediana Abra 500 em. || 28ked unanimous consent to bring er efforts to uphold the injunc- | | Tn an attempt to break the strike Posing the strikebreaking role of|test telegrams and resolutions to La drag One ems ee || ployees of the Electric Auto-Lite Tea a uabe age: ckariy corbewan iweb aickhe. aleeel @ } leaders of the I.L.A. have issued | Baker and calling for support of the| the Alabama Supreme Court and : a Company are on strike. ce Be, ‘ ‘ i the factory. Al ft ermits to load Alaska cannery| West Coast strike by refusing to|Gov. B. M. Miller, both at Mont-| Philadelphia Workers to Hear Moore || VOERNOS “10 08 Ot soy. || tson of Mississippi, chairman of the| picket lines around 1 etted. | nd 4 a pag “| load or unload cargo to or from the|gomery, Ala, and to President PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May en out for these gangsters and.drive | committee, objected. number of women were bayone'’ af 5 DAY i & . . . | West Coast. The Communist Party| Roosevelt demanding the imme-|A huge protest meeting to deman , 6 PaPREy Het Set ia = f ; LL.A. Officials Admits Strike- | 15 calling 2 mass meeting in sup-| diate, unconditional and safe re-|the release of Ernst Thaelmann Ld cile acide aces pede. Ray AS t ¥ breaking port of the strikes in the West Coast ee Ms the nine innocent Scotts-| from the Nazi Serpe ah ages Z | i 4 TLADELPHIA, 24, Paul| and New Orleans for Friday, May | boro ys. Thursday, May 31 at Boslover Hall, : f ee he Tek. in Phila. | 25, 8 pm., at the Garrick Hall, 507| Dispatches from Montgomery,|701 Pine ‘St, for which the entire Bronx Workers i DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 2 j ult mitte -| South 8th St. Ala, report that the court 1s already| membership of the International tempt to vict | N | 3 é vaccinl fies ah ara uaseaes| . . od being flooded by protest telegrams} Labor Defense and all affiliated and At Jey et 107 BRISTOL STREET tf 2 4 é ing seamen and longshoremen on I. L. A. Leaders Hide Out and cables from all parts of the|sympathetic organizations have 14 Negro Familics | Set: Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brookly COHEN’S f £ the West Coast. In the Shipping [, New Orl world. been mobilized. : PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 117 ORCHARD STREET AND i, ' News in the Philadelphia Record of |” Senn ‘ a RA Richard B, Moore will address the) ew YyORK—Bronx White and || Omice Hours: 8-10 AM. 1-2, 6-3 P.M Nr. Delancey Street, New York ity Lg 4 May 19, Baker stated that he used| (Special to the Daily Worker) ANTI-JIM CROW MEET IN | meeting which = oe Sen | Negro workers will hold a mass | nr paeie O.0: q & longshoremen to break the strike of} NEW ORLEANS, La., May 24— CLEVELAND af agitation, sttee a hanes meeting tonight, 8 o'clock, at 11 Mt.| Optomietriss & the seamen on the S8. Flomar of | Not only are the officials of the In-| CLEVELAND, 0. May 24—A| meetings calling for Thaelmanns raen avenue, corner of Jerome, to | Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORcharé 4-4520 A the Calmar Line, which was loading! ternational Longshoremen’s Associ-| Si2nt anti-Jim Crow demonstration | release by the outraged protest Of potest the attempt of Bronx bank-|f™™ HURRAH! We are off Factory on Premises ii cargo for the West Coast. ation failing to give leadership to| is eins Fee by ees an aroused working class. ets and landlords to evict 14 Necro BEN roy @ great Day and Nite |! === F The entire crew of the Flomar | the strike, but they have completely | tional or Defense for Friday, families and enforce racial segrega- ; ei went on strike on May 17 under the! hid themselves. “Where are our|May 25, at 7 p.m. on Central Ave.,| CLEVELAND, mareh sgeite: tee) tion at 1636-40 University Avenue. ® WORKERS TONITE’ | & leadership of the Marine Workers! leaders?” is the cry of the rank and/corner 36th St., in support of the/tion 3 of the Communist Party here. The| The meeting will be addressed by Tt is on Saturday, June 9, and e Industrial Union for the recogni-| file. Disgusted with the role of the two L L. D. resolutions against dis- Gecarmateation he He Oe oe Lopaoat Edward Kuntz, International Labor the place is Hook Mountain, 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST P. : tion of the Centralized Shipping ILA. officials, the rank and file| crimination against Negroes, The) of Petra *0d Mil."aintsan. gig | Defense, who is helping the Negro WM ‘by’ way of the Steamer |I! COOpERATIVE COLONY | sn tg ¥ Bureau established by the seamen) have called a special meeting with| resolutions are to be introduced in|sion is at 10 a.m. sharp at the corner of| tenants in the fight in the courts) Claremont 4 a at f in Baltimore, and in support of the representatives of the independent| the City Council on May 28. E. 142nd St. and Kinsman Road. against the eviction orders, and by} has reduced the rent, several i t West Coast strikers, The longshore-| unions and M.W.L.U. tonight to dis-| A delegation, headed by Mrs,]| | Charles Alexander, National Cul-| e good apartments available. Manhattan Lyceum i men on the dock (Pier 27) struck in| cuss the strike situation and elect| Pearl Walker of the Roy Wright| charter being revised he could not|tural Director of the League of | All aboard to the Daily ¢ ® “ sympathy with the seamen, but were | a broad rank and file strike commit-| Branch of the I.L.D., last Monday| get the resolutions on the agenda! Struggle for Negro Rights. | Worker Excursion z 66 EAST 4th STREET » riven back to worl yy Baker, tee composed of representatives of | visite ir. roy jundy, fegroj; on ay as he had promised. The protest action is inj es ‘ ” ‘. 41,43. : driven back k by Bak posed of representatives of| visited Dr. L Bundy, Ni May 1 as he had ised. ‘arctest action is being onan orker Ex Cultural Activities for Adults, (Entire Building) Fi The story of the sell-out was told all the unions, councilman, to demand that he; The demonstration Friday will be | ized jointly by the L.S.N.R. and the Youth and Children. % in the following manner in the, Seven hundred Celotex workers keep his pledge to introduce the|a mobilization of workers to jam|T1.L.D., who are mobilizing the mass ae ae 7 2 ane Maxim Gorky Union ¥ Philadelphia Record: struck today for wage increases and| resolutions. Dr. Bundy had previ-|the City Council on Monday to see| fight against this jim-crow attack | gene atop Pare aulettin eee mata Soviet Songs and Sketohes a “The Calmar liner Flomar sailed’ recognition of the union. ously stated that due to the city! that Dr. Bundy brings fn the bills.|on the rights of the Negro masses Direction: Lexington Ave., White Plains if nN 7; i and the unity of Negro and white Omics open daily from ®t. to 8 D-, Children’s Mandolin pees a ie LOB le fale cess ncctotstan 8 se Sess as saedcaneeene am. ma. i, workers, Week-End Fun at Camp [j)| Psy and Seturday 9 sam: to § ». Orchestra & D hay Nature Friends Dance ' emonstrate at afayette St., Sat. at | Strike of NITGEDAIGET rou & ° ° e e i a 9 And Meat Workers Looms Allerton Avenne Comrades! Group Against Forced Labor and Rent and Relief Cuts |increased wages and union recogni- | Beacon-on-the-Hudson, N. ¥. NEW YORK. — Dispatches here seus Be indicate a strike of 2,000 butchers and other meat workers within 48 hours unless the men’s demand for | FRIDAY: Camp Fire SATURDAY: Artef Players, The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union Daily Worker Chorus Lahn Andomyan, Conductor Dancing — Theatre an ae Dance Recital, Nitgedaiget eo t ee Rone et ne fastiie Taal gro families whose rent vouchers| relief, recognition of the workers’|selves, and plan to go to the relief ee ieee di 18 Trio 691 ALLERTON AVE. Concert Restaurant ns have been stopped by the Home Re-| grievance committee, abolition of| offices daily. le men are Cemanding &1b:per, > Home Relief lists and the fring Of tet Bureau marched from the Har-|the pass system, free clothing, and bier e cent, pay increase, a 32 hour week, | SUNDAY: “Propaganda in Lit- Camping Goods, Bathing 1 are planned by the Home Relief | 1m ile gt icici tg a ei ey conditions in the Chicago Councils Fight ove! e eee Sec Phe Vech, Pen Je fh ae x Suits, Dresses, Millin- : . 133rd St, e relief bureau | fl ; A ERR : Biro defeat the new reliet cuts, the|t 126th St.’ Monday demanding] After the committees reported oo Dee aeeiing at eae Dance! Swim! Sports! pth Ratt nl nih Pe ass ad that all rents be paid. |back to the jobless workers, the} CHICAGO, May 22—The vicious} in: i ! 4 "a if 8, en's, ildren’s Committee of One Hundred | has p mnesting ‘voter tee tele seeiatece Burroughs Adding Machine CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT ods, p issued a call for a mass demonstra- tion before the offices of Commis- sioner Hodson at 50 Lafayette St., at 10 am., Saturday, May 26. The extent of the planned relief cuts is clearly shown in the letter from a Home Relief Bureau Work- er which follows: “The last part of the past week— in fact, while we were in the pro- cess of transferring budgets from one card to another in prepara- tion for disbursing cash relief— we were told that we were to close all cases of families whose present incomes equal merely the food budget allowance permitted by thé Home Relief Bureau. In other words, a family of three whe man- age to earn $5 weekly, will no longer get that inadequate sap- plementary relief which is sup- posed to pay rent, gas and elec- tric bills. And should anyone think that the families on full relief are secure, let me add that all rent vouchers have ceased to- gether with the tickets for govern- ment pork... we may look for- ward to a summer of evictions. “A further ruling followed the one above to the effect that these families are not to be closed cases but merely suspended cases. I suspect either of two reasons: 1) to claim a larger figure on re- lief for the capitalist press, or 2) to leave themselves room to back down in the event that demonstra- | While the workers held an open \air meeting before the relief bu- reau, Courtney, the head super- visor, was forced to promise to take their demands to Commissioner Hodson and Mayor La Guardia. The Harlem Councils will hold a mass meeting at 415 Lenox Ave., Friday, May 25, at 8 P. M., to rally the Harlem workers for the city- | wide unemployed demonstration, to |be held at the Department of Wel- |fare, 50 Lafayette St., Saturday, | May 26, at 10 A. M. ee eee 1,000 at Home Relief Buro Seek Rent Vouchers NEW YORK.—About 1,000 unem- ployed workers, faced by a full mo- doors, waited at the Spring and Elizabeth Home Relief Bureau Wed- nesday morning for rent vouchers which were not issued. The Thirteenth Street Block Committee, for the third time in as many days, held an open-air meeting outside the relief station to force the payment of rents, to force the payment of food checks to jobless workers, and to force the relief bureau to grant the additional demands of the jobless—free ice, adequate medical care, an end to the irksome red tape that surrounds the granting of relief in every case. oe . 400 Milwaukee Flop House bilization of police who barred the | be presented to Mayor Hoan, de- manding that he grant recognition |of the workers’ committee and per- sonally endorse the Workers Un- |employment Insurance Bill (H. | 7598). Pear oor: |New Brunswick Relief Workers Strike |_ NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.— | Thirty relief workers struck at the College. Farm project here Tuesday night when told that they would receive only food orders for their | work. Another group was sent over |on Wednesday morning, but they too struck. The strike is. spreading, and it is expected that all projects will be out in a few days. The strikers are demanding full cash wages, aN eee Fire 2,500 New Orleans Relief Workers By a Worker Correspondent | NEW ORLEANS, La., May 20— | Two thousand five hundred Negro | and white workers were fired from | the work relief rolls here on May | 14. Hundreds are being cut off the | relief rolls. | These workers have been told | that no more will be registered for the relief roils until after June 1. | Jobless workers hang around the |relief bureau throughout the day R.| Chicago is one of the outstanding 20 per cent relief cut during the month of April is being combatted by increased activity in the Unem- ployment Councils. The growth of the Councils down state and in signs of increased militancy of job- less workers today. To finance the campaign to or- ganize the unemployed in struggle against the starvation “New Deal’ policy, the Cook County Unemploy- ment Councils are holding a picnic, Sunday, May 27th, at the House of Niles. A fine program of musi tures has been arranged. _The picnic ground is reached by riding to the end of the Milwaukee All funds are to go to build the unemployed movement. eer ect e Millville, N. J,, Relief Men Strike for Cash Pay MILLVILLE, N. J.—Demanding full payment in cash for all relief work, the 242 Emergency Relief | Administration workers here struck | Wednesday. Ernest Gray, Cumberland county relief director, refused to grant the workers’ demands, Under the pres- ent relief set-up, the relief workers receive ten cents in cash and 40 one in food orders for each hour’s work, wrestling matches and other fea-| Ave. Car line. Admission is 10 cents. | DETROIT, Mich., May 24—Mass picket lines today surrounded the Burroughs Adding Machine Co. here, whose 3,500 employees went out on NEW CAR SCHEDULE Daily: 10:30 A. M., Priday 10:30 and 7 P.M., Saturday 10:30 A.M. and 3 P.M. From 2700 Bronx Park East. Phone EStabrook 8-140. | strike two days ago. The strike was called by Local 8 of the Mechanics Educational Society of America. CLASSIFIED 233 E. 14th St., Opp. Labor Tempic SPECIAL LUNCH 2c, DINNER Be, Comradely Atmosphere Williamsburg Comrades Welcome ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA WANTED Comrade to two-room apartment. matic refrigeration. | Dr.D.G. POLLOCK DENTIST Kitchen, Downtown, Brooklyn Paramount Theatre Building at De Kalb or Nevins’ St. Subway Bta's, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Daily 9-9, Sundays 10-2, TRiangle 5-8620 REMEMBER June 9. Daily Worker Di and Moonlight Excursion to Hook Moun- tain, Glorious time. Get your ticket now. t all Workers Bookshop: Alabama Strike Protest Hear HAROLD RALSTON, just acquitted in Bir- mingham Courts; JOHN HOWARD LAWSON, Eula Gray, Pat Toohey, Allan Taub - - = = MONDAY, MAY 28th IRVING PLAZA — 8:30 P, M. — 15th Street and Irving Place Joint Auspices: National Committee Defense Political Prisoners, New Masses, John Reed Club.—Admission 15c Decoration Day Outing ON LONG ISLAND Given by Professional Comm. for the Support of the Struggle of the ‘Waterfront Workers share furnished auto- off Fifth Ave. Write Box 12, Daily Worker. 166 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. ¥. 5 Folding Chairs Cheap H Also Office Furniture | KALMUS, 35 W. 26th Street; I. J. MORRIS, Inc, GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE, BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order AMERICAN SATURDAY DAY and MOONLIGHT EXCURSION Sponsored by - BROWNSVILLE and HINSDALE YOUTH CLUBS Clothing, Household Goods, Soviet Art Ob- jects, etc. Admission: Daily 35¢; in ad- vance 25c; Saturday 50c; in advance 40c; Combination Ticket for 5 days 85c—Free Admission Saturday and Sun- day until 5 P. M. Auspices: Communist Party, N.Y. AGAINST Hunger-Fascism to Hook Mountain on the beautiful Steamer “Claremont” Entertainment - Refreshment at our Bar with Proletarian Prices tions at the Relief Bureaus force | Jobless Demonstrate jand are turned away in the evening! | PO) (\(0 44. WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1934 AFTERNOON Featuring BEN POSNER | them to reverse their decisions. | with promises, On May 15 a group CHINESE DINNER--MUSIC—GAMES—SPORTS and His Orchestra pOTUWAUKEE, Wis, May 24 — jot unemployed who met with Blenor Reservations must be in by Saturday, May 26 26 t Tickets in advance, 75c: at boat $1.00 * eee bs ‘our. hundred unemployed workers) Myers, relief supervisor were threat- ; Negro Jobless Fight for from the Goodfellow House and|ened with arrest when they de- Call Dr. Milberg, Ingersol 2-185 MAY, 1934 {03 hatred ae Here Bitkin ney Rent Payments NEW YORK.—More than 50 Ne- other flop houses here demonstrated manded food. at the Old Courthouse Square Mon-| A group of 40 came to the Coun- day, demanding immediate cash/ ci] headquarters, organized them- 1378 STNICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. RESERVATIONS $1. att79% ST.NY. ak 106+ ST.NY. 9] 80 A. M. prompt. HILDREN UP TO 10 YEARS, 30c ol Meet the Busses at Williamsburg Savings Bank Bldg. Atlantic Ave., Brook- Boat leaves 1 P.M. sharp, Pier “A™, Battery Park, Gouth Ferry 872 Sutter Ave. near Alabama Ave. Brooklyn.