The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 2, 1934, Page 3

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| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1934 Page Three ; d A | Workers Court To Hear Silat Se ce een : F Hillsboro Workers oyss™ Court Te Hear ges Kansas City Police | On th Nazis in Force Withdrawal Of Picketing Ban Two Demonstrations in q 2 Days Storm City | Council, Court (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) | CHICAGO, June 1.—Five hundred | be Rabbi Benjamin Goldstein of Frame-up on June 8 NEW YORK.—Testimony on| the frame-up of Michael Hago-| pa, class-war prisoner serving a three year sentence and at pres-| ent held in solitary confinement, will be presented at a mass trial next Friday evening at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. Participating in the trial will the New York Committee to Aid the Victims of German Fascism, Te eS By EDWIN ROLFE U. S. Start New Racket to Intimidate Workers and Small Tradesmen in Neighborhoods w= the virulence of the most) the population out of the misery of |pearance of D.A.W.A. (Deutsch, guised attempt to introduce the deadly and dreaded disease-|!0W wages, hunger, joblessness, star- | Amerikanischer germs, the aides of the Nazis in| America are attempting to inject their vile poison into the vital blood- | vation. But Nazi Germany today is the best living proof of the shallow and empty mockery of these prom- | Wirtschafts Aus- schuss, or German American Pro- tective Alliance). How the Racket Works DA.W.A. formed by The the methods the United States which have character- ized the Nazis in Germany. In many cases storekeepers and others have same _ terroristic in Threaten to Murder Negro Communist Police Judge Says Will Teach Berry Lesson for “Mixing with Whites” KANSAS CTI | | aes | Strike Front} Ph delphia Judge Tries To Railroad Yo i essa a we ain't gor i ic i i r S.| ises. Instead of the higher | United German Societies, was, ac-|been forced to buy the D.A.w.a.|*° se SS 3 unemployed miners heroizally de-! and the followin members of {Stream of the American workers.| ises. | ; ; i fended themselves against police ae legal staff of the Interna-/| Like their masters in Germany, the| pa that uae = coenrey | cording to the Nazis’ own announce-| emblem under threat of physical NESE ders eto clubs and gas bombs unleashed / tional Labor Defense: Joseph | creed of their virus is encouraged | ope ina Mead Pee ere " prenta, organized to fight against| soem and this is not to be won- around with. white folks against a demonstration in Hills-| Brodsky, Fannie Horowitz, E é ; Germany today is among the most |the “Jewish anti-German boycott. aareuiae St avin shrine ane oe h whi ‘ boro, Ill, yesterday, protesting the) Kuntz, and Joseph Tauber, as|P¥ All the forces which, fearful of| victimized, the most poverty- |1; functions in the following man- , ity whose 1 BSF clara a the Balics 4 fascist ordinance passed by the| well as Joseph Gilbert of the|the growing power of the militant! stricken in the world. Resent- | ner: partment liberally issues arms i Penney, eae ; Hillsboro City Council, prohibiting | Taxi Drivers Union, and repre- workingmen of this country, spring, Ment grows daily in Germany, a For a minimum of $5 a year, de-|censes to Nazi thugs and hoodlums, hich eee : the right of workers to strike, as-| sentatives from the Needle to their aid in open or sanokagd | far-flung reaction on the part of | pending on the size of the establish-| while it brutally attacks gatherings | against the of A | semble and picket and denying the | is | | right of free speech, Yorkers milled around the court Trades Workers Industrial Union. The trial, arranged by the Ha- fashion. | They have made one of their main the masses who were taken in by the Nazi demagogy. ment, a storekeeper is given the | D. A. W. A. emblem to paste in| of anti-fascist workers on the city streets; a city whose administration |Negro worker and Sec i izer of the Communist P: " gopa Defense’ Committee and Yes, Nazi Germany is living eae Pe Window. This circular em-|goes even further, and grants de| Berry was sted anne q fq)" two hours demanding the re-| the Midtown Section of the | Points of activity the big German-|that Fascism is powerless to show | blem has the D.A.W.A. initials sand-| facto recognition to the Nazis’ rule| union of relief workers : le’ of three workers arrested I.L.D., will both expose the|American population of the United! the way out of the crisis, Only the| wiched between a rising sun and anjof a section like Yorkville, in which labor projects. 4 under this vicious decree. Several frame-up of Hagopa and edu-| States—the same German American gas bombs, thrown into the ranks of the workers, were picked up and hurled back at the sheriff’s forces. The demonstrators then marched to Taylor Springs, two miles out of Hillsboro, where the City Council, | which is composed of Communists and other workers recently elected, welcomed the demonstrators. Seething with indignation, 1,000 workers stormed the City Hall on the previous day demanding the repeal of the ordinance. Penned in by the workers and scared yellow, | the City Council offered a compro- | mise, allowing workers to assemble if the authorities are first asked for permission. This the workers re- jected. The Mayor had previously admitted that the ordinance was adopted on orders from above, The Mayors of Nakomis and Litchfield have announced identical decrees. The Council, confronted by the angry workers, stalled for time cate the workers in self-defense before the bosses’ courts. County Sheriff and his forces. They voted to uphold the ordinance, and then voted to reconsider their vote as the mass indignation grew. Fi- nally, when the arrival of the Sher- iff and his armed thugs failed to intimidate the workers, the Council agreed to all the demands of the workers: for the right to picket, meet and assemble at any time without permission, and no dis- crimination in relief against unem- |} ployed workers who refuse to scab on_ strikers, The fight against the fascist edict was led by the local Unemployed Councils, the Progressive Miners Asweciation, its Women’s Auxiliary, and other organizations. A mass conference has been called for June 4 to take further steps while waiting for the arrival of the against the virtual martial law now | prevailing in Montgomery County. | WHAT "Ss ON workers who have for decades been in the forefront of this country’s most militant labor struggles, who| have been identified with the most | advanced sections of the American working class since, and even be- fore, the eight-hour day struggles and the Haymarket massacre. These little Nazi leaders in Amer- ica, moreover, aping their “fuhrer” Hitler in Germany, invite the help of fascist groups of all nationalities in their attempt to blind and to| bleed the workers whom, by outright| lies, they attempt to enroll and| makeuse of for their own advantage. In their activities in the United | States, the Nazis use the same dema- gogy in attempting to win support for themselves that Hitler and his gang used in Germany. They speak of restoring prosperity, of leading Arrest Atlantic City Daily Worker Carrier ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June EMBLEMS OF NAZI TERROR METHODS IN THE UNITED STATES ‘While LaGuardia’s police bestialy attack workers demonstrating for relief, they opegly sanction the Nazi attacks on workers. Above are photographs of two proofs of Nazi terrorism, carried on with the full approval and under the very eyes of the city administration, which not so long ago recog- nized the “Nazi autonomy” of Yorkville, One is the DAWA emblem, which the Nazi chiefs force storekeepers and workers, under threat of physical attack, to purchase, The other is a vicious dagger recently found om the scene of an anti-Nazi meeting in Yorkville after Nazi thugs had attempted to attack the workers, The swastika is engraved on one side of the razor-edged blade. On the other side | Captain of Detectives D in an interview with a def | torney that his men “had o pick that nigger up on s | that they “meant to either | out of town or kill him | Striking Canadian Mine Workers Return to Work | GLACE BAY, Canada ( Because one of their V was dism: gamated d unfairly ine Worker union, struck six collieries Breton. Officials promised porary reinstatement and an inves: tigation and the men returned to | work, oung was refused . 2 : is etehed the letter “A,” which stands for Hitler’s first name, Adolf, | 4 ;1—The Daily Worker carrier | REMEMBER June 9th — The Daily| Prog. Youth Club, 1538 Madison Avenue| here, Johnson, has been se eRe ay ; . ‘ ‘ i Worker Day and Moonlight Excursion. | (104th St.) Register to assure yourself a| arrested and comes up for trial|big industrialists, the munitions, eagle, which looks like a first cousin, anti-fascists outnumber by far the Sports, tennis, dancing, baseball and more. | seat. Round trip $1, Leave 7:30 8. m.| Set your tickets now at all Workers Book 8) Prompt. Monday before the labor-hating manufacturers, flourish under fas- to F, D.’s blue eagle. This emblem armed gun-thugs, gangsters and Most Modern Of All Soviet Hotels Now. ’ é ies of all kinds, hired by * . CELEBRATION First Anniversary Italian} Judge Altman, who never fails| cist rule. in a store-window, according to a mercenaries o i Saturday Workers Center, 556° Morris “Aves Bronx, to give limit sentences on labor American workers—all sections| Nazi statement, is meant to tell) Hitler's American underlings. t Manhattan Gonttibuiion men ee eT DaneiNE: | cases, of the American population for|Passers-by andthe “buying public Fight Nazi D.A.W.A. Fake . ANTI-WAR Rally and Track and Field Meet; Max Bedacht, speaker. Movies, side show, mass games, dancing till dawn. Ulmer Park, Brooklyn. Tickets at all workers clubs and at gate 25c. RAW Deal Party. Medas Club, White Plains Rd. and Waring Ave., Bronx’ Music, marionette show, dancing, play. Adm. 15c. Auspices: Unit 15-01 Y¥.C.L, PICNIC and Outing at Van Cortland | Park, Committee at 242nd St. and Broad- Workers and organizations are urged to send letters and wires of protest to the judge urging the release of this worker who has done much to raise the class- whose support the U. S. Nazis are casting their’ bait—should consider the plight of their brothers in Ger- many, and destroy the Nazi gang in general” that the store carries products made in Germany—hams on which the holy swastika has been stamped, etc. The “Trade Guide” is a small, thin | booklet of 48 pages, Space does not permit us to enumerate the stores listed in it. But there are several Nearing Completion in Leningrad | One of the finest and most modern hotels in Europe is being built | in Leningrad by Intourist, the State Tre avel Company of the Soviet Unios i before it has a i ;on the banks of the Neva. Already three-fourths completed, the new vubmen Be hae of Oat werters Dilek: “Ceten, fork cent ar] Consciousness of Atlantic City Sharkey Eo noid, a eae M9 oe ovee otlae be eas eoease tah pela! building stands on a specially constructed granite quay, opposite the old Gnion, 114 W. 14th St. Jazz Johnson's Or-| ranged by Washington Heights Workers | Workers, oo Rane 1 he is entitled to a similar emblem,| nounced their Nazi partisanship by|Summer Palace of the’ tsi an a str OE beat odta Alexander, speaker, Sub-! Center and Women’s Council 38, r One recognizes these Nazi friends,|to be worn as a button in his coat- flaunting the D.A.W.A. emblem.|across the river from the famous | ing PARTY given by Midtown Br. FS.U., 900 Out, Forcing Cotton 168 W. 28rd St. Room 12, 9 p.m. Lots of fun. Adm. 25c | THEATRE ARTS Workshop (sponsored by League of Workers Theatres) bi-weekly Mill in South to Close whether they are as openly allied to them as the tenth-rate pen-pusher, | lapel. Wearers of the button pledge to make purchases only in stores Other stores which carry the D. A. |Fortress of Peter and Paul. |be used mainly W. A. sign are listed in the Bronx! The completed pea Male eae A Hinton ca ‘ sessions, Monday, June 4. Alfred Saxe on George Sylvester Viereck, and a|whose windows have the D.A.W.A. and in Brooklyn, in the working| cost 30,000,000 roubles (about ~ |modating 2, vaulte RAVIOLI PARTY, dancing and enter-| © i yn, orking } : “ bare tainment, Lower West Side Workers Club, Bharati Men Mugg Bu we ee GREENVILLE, 8. ©. (F.P.)—In- growing group of bankers, indus-| emblem displayed. class neighborhoods where many | 000,000). It will contain 1,100 rooms| modern lobbies, banquet halls 107 McDougal St., 8 p. m. Subseription ! J : “uw | erease of the stretch-out and the legislators. in this o ied| With bath and shower. The lower | liard gymnasium, Roman i p.m i ‘i = trialists and legislators. in | A pretty racket, isn’t it? And all| militant struggles have been carried Bch laa tip 4 SOGNGLET AnDOeOe Seine C N od, N. J. fring of four union men having y, hen thei + is| 4 part of the building is faced with| swimming pool, spacious roof gar- CONCERT AND DANCE. Esthonian Hall, amp Norwood, N. J. seniority rights caused a walkout of country, or when their support is/ tne five-spots and single dollars go|on in recent years, ikea adie. Whe: the wee dao, i Beckdcantine meas ait Gai i18. Gece d. senate Becion aaa: | Siete mae ae of Xollowers | the night shift of the Piedmont | hidden errata geo bay to swell the coffers of the United! Socialist, Communist—all anti- | Structure ‘is of fine marble, The|other luxurious appointments are Gla Dr. Erogram—refreshments—jazz band /Omcial opening ot camp postponed’ fer | Cotton Mills at Greenville. ‘The | “OPPOsition.” In the latter cate-| German Societies and keep its lead-| fascist. workers and all anti-fascist | —Adm. 25 cents, Y. ©, L. Downtown 3 is having a party. | 128 Broome St., Apt. 13, 4th floor. PARTY, Dance and Entertainment. 106 E. lth St. 8 p. m. Proceeds for the | erican League Against War and Fas-! Pm. Adm. 15 cents. | ARTISTS JUNE DANCE. Irving Plaza, {June 9th. Boston, Mass. JOHN REED CLUB presents @ sym. posium on “How to Combat the War| Menace.” Sunday, June 3rd, 8 p. m. #25 Boylston St. Speakers: Alfred Baker Lewis, Socialist Par plant was closed, with 900 workers | out. Eight Cabbies Arrested As Cops Protect Scabs gory, the past few months have re- vealed more clearly than ever be- fore, are the LaGuardias _ and O'Ryans and Deutsches, the S. P. leaders who spesk with them from the same platforms, as well as the ers liberally supplied with easy cash. Publish “Trade Guide” But there's more to the racket than that. The gang has also got together and published a intellectuals—must band together in every section of the city in a con- certed drive against the Nazi pest— HERE AND NOW! The _ widest united front can and must be built latest in hotel equipment is being installed for baggage, laundry and food handling. A personnel of 1,000 is being trained by Intourist, which will operate the hotel when opened This latest hostelry, supplement- being installed Two of the foremost Soviet archi« tects, Eugene Loewensohn and I. Tf. | Fomin, have designed this new | hotel. ; Job Webber, Amer- e i a “Trade| up in every neighborhood against . Bere ee Paneer aie cae CNR ARMIN tar Qe Eutees;| | CLEVELAND, Ohio p)—rour| Hamilton Fishes and the Ralph| Guide,” tn poset Hagen Mr ae pig : scription 49 ‘cents. Auspiees: “Artist's | Nations Association. Prof Be wei Dana,| taxicabs were smashed and eight ihe ‘i “np toceg © must not forget for one mo- : Union. | CONCERT AND BALL. Irvnig Plaza} Hall, Main Hall, Irving Pl, and 16th St., 8:30 p. m. Auspices: Br. 4, I. W. O., Celebrating Red Wedding. Adm. 35 cents. | SPRING PARTY. 11 W. 18th St. Cast of Stevedore—C. A. Hathaway, speaker. Auspices: International Seamens Club. | Benofit M.W.I.U. Subs. 25 cents, 8:30 p. m. chairman, Contribution 25 cents, Philadelphia, Pa. THIRD ANNUAL PICNIC of C. P., Sec- tion 3, Sunday, July Ist, at 52nd and Parkside Ave., Fairmount Park. All sym- pathetic organizations in West Phila. are requested to keep this rate open, striking drivers were arrested as Yellow Cabs attempted to cruise the Streets in Cleveland. The yellows were out in the business section with cops inside and windows pro- tected by chicken wire. Such a line-up explains the in- creased activities in the United States of the “United German So- cieties” and the “Friends of the New Germany.” It explains also, par- ticularly in New York City, the ap- listed, and in which “Consumers are requested to patronize the firms enumerated herein and to refer to the D.A.W.A. wherever an oppor- tunity presents itself.” The whole racket is a thinly-dis- ment that the Nazi movement is trying desperately to group around itself all the fascist and hoodlum | elements in American life. A Struggle against the Nazis to day, in| every shop, in every Union, in every city a struggle that will never be| undertaken by Samuel Untermyer | who fears an aroused workingclass | SPRING FESTIVAL. Hotel Newton, 2528! Broadway (94th St.) 9 p.m. — Auspices: West Side Br. F. S, U. Delightful concert —elaborate buffet—good time to all— admission 35 cents. JAMES LEOHAY, Rose David, Jenkins id Elwell, the victims of recent police ifutality will appear at a party given at 0. P. E. E. Headquarters, 232—7th Ave. Youth Meets Ignore Provocatio ey 5 cia Armed Police Seek to and Fascism, student affiliate to the n of Cops, Fascists more than he hates the Nazis, is the basis for the defeat of fascism | in America generally, These neighborhood mass - ® pede Sst if . meetings, demonstrations and rita a i ae Borers a oe : youth in the line of march, demon- “Down With Bosses War struggles ie the city of New York . 0. P. EE. 0 i Am iat wr iBuppor Terrorize Youth erican League Against War and/| strate against imperialist war and WORKERS DANCE LEAGUE Annual Festival. Ten Groups Competing. Town Hall, 8:30 p. m. Tickets, 35 cents, 55 cents, 75_cents. Come help choose the winner. THEATRE COLLECTIVE at Labor ‘Temple Theatre, 14th St. and 2nd Ave, “Martino Models, Inc.” 8:45 p. m. Adm. 30 cents and 55 cents. Dance and Entertainment at Day Marches PITTSBURGH, Pa, June 1.— Pittsburgh police, acting under the orders of the steel companies which rule the district, and under the per- Fascism. One of the arrested stu- dents is a member of the Young People’s Socialist League from the city high school, the other comes from the University of Michigan and is a member of the National Student League. fascism. Ranks were closed against all provocation. Two carloads of Silver Shirts, carrying huge Ameri- can flags and singing the Star-! spangled Banner, tried unsuccess- fully to provoke fights with the sup- port of the police. and Fascism!” Rings Through Streets war and fascism, through the streets of this city on National Youth Day, in spite of denial of a permit by the are the methods by which we must fight today. Such a fight carried on now will not only prevent the Nazis and their American counter- parts from getting a foothold here but will also place the La Guardia administration in its true light—as 30,000,000 Rouble Hotel Nearing Completion in Leningrad the defender of the anti-labor, anti- E 4 German Workers’ Club, 78 E. 10th St. sonal leadership of police superin- Maurice Sugar, Detroit attorney Three thousand workers gathered | Police up to the time of the meeting. Semitic, barbarian Nazis. » {solo dancer, proletarian songs, surprises. fondant’ ben Marahoil: ana Baseey and member of the legal staff of the | in Washington Park for the demon-| Mike Jacobson of the Americaa|- mee t o 5 Director Marshall Bell, sought in International Labor Defense, spoke | stration, Harry Haywood, National! League and a student from Yale IS BUZZING WITH ACTIVITY 4 Bronx vain to disrupt the pare devel Nau on “The Peace Policy of the Soviet Secretary of the League of Struggle| Were among the speakers. RED WEDDING | . WANT A GOOD TIME? Delightful en- tional Youth Day marchers on the Union,” and Rey. J. H. Bollens,| for Negro Rights, called on all} An Anti-War Rally and dance| |] We're busy preparing for the grand opening. 4 jeriesasient ee See Palen a South Side Wednesday. chairman of the American Civil youth, Negro and white, to build a| Was held in the evening, attended EVA TAUB and Because June is Communist Party Month in 3 2700 Bronx Park East, Apt. X2.°0 , Liberties Union in Detroit spoke on | solid movement against war and the| by 300. MURRAY FELDMAN Camp Nitgedaiget, opening is postponed to 4 PARTY AND DANCE — Excellent dance| Only the ee ee the | “Civil Liberties and the Menace of | fascist attacks on the Negro masses. eee a | Celebrating with agin ee S > eit cerreshmenta ay, Bee Bt 140 ue pe seal esr se mine seca te = Sees filled | A young steel worker called for sup-| Youth Defies Police Guns CONCERT & DANCE JUNE FIFTEENTH ! cents. Auspices: Mt. Eden Br. F. 8. U. : ens and students. |Port of the coming steel strike fo) ae) hatey 5 t ni ; 8:30 p.m. Drenan one ae Resolutions were passed unani-/ struggles. Other speakers were, gone aceon ’ Pee into Kay BRANCH «TW For full information phone AL 4-1148, - mea se ape ai ‘uty, Omuiltive: heme | Dave Doran, ¥. C. L. organizer, pre- | (ously to send a telegram to Mayor | Claude Lightfoot for the Young Square here, singing the Interna- Saturday, June 2nd sete aralrcg soya Caetano 1 Dancing,» games,” refreshments. Subserip- | sented the ‘protesting officer’ with | COUzeNS of Detroit calling for the| Communist League and Mecune tional, applause and cheering ees eon or direct to Camp Unity, Wingdale, N. ¥. t hae Gs the permit, signed by the safety di. | feuense of James Victory and pro-|Fine for the Youth Section of the| greeted thon: merken in (eeerins ine Plas “Hall PLAN YOUR VACATION AT CAMP UNITY THIS YEAR : Brooklyn rector, the patrolman was so drunk | ‘sting the persecution of Negroes | American League Against War and walks joining in the singing. Irving Plaza Hal rg : z ol ; . 2 he atteitted +40 cea tho . |in Detroit. A telegram of encour- | Fascism. Fifty police were there with tear ae eee So ae eet Sas? i ROOF Garden Party at Dr. Nallmans, Paper UP- | acement to th eae Oe y - 306 Stone Ave, 9 pm, Open air movies’| side down. igement to the Toledo strikers and gas bombs, and three machine guns Musical Program— refreshments, “dancing. | Adm.” 25c. Aus-| First the police heads barred all | SUPPort of a general strike was sent 300 in Akron N. Y. D. were mounted in the Square, but XOSEL CUTLER : H ‘ pices: Brownsville Br. F.8.U. banners from the parade, stating|t0 the truck drivers on strike in the youth marched on, gathering a Dancing till Dawn-Adm. 35c¢ June Is Extra-Special at Camp 3 VETCHERINKA AND CONCERT given by fl a Minneapolis. AKRON, O. — Celebration of » Bi iS ‘Maxin Gorki Br. 705, I. W. 0. Preheit | flatly that if banners were carried PERN ani National Youth Day was combined | /@TS¢ number of workers into their 4 Bile Aves "6 bs im. Benet “Morne | pene ete pees ae 150 Youth in Buffalo REE ee aoc Gotnor aries Peat tamara accrester. Ue (pS a aa none the Vedio or NIT G E D AIG ET : Freheit.” diately protabied asericas nd|. BUFFALO, N. Y., June 1—One| the Toledo strikers. ‘Three hundred |“emonstrators from the Toof and : i DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT given by Protested strenuously, and 1 windows of the Workers’ Center. the Recent Police Brutality! Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Fnltgoods Center of East New York. | finally a compromise was arranged | hundred and fifty young workers| young and adult workers pledged Later, an ind eeting w: ked Are nasissrouty, Center, 108 Thatford| whereby all the banners were piled |emonstrated on National Youth|not to take part in capitalist war SreamaiPalivee time tRe NeeaG ‘a|| SATURDAY, JUNE 2 Because It’s Communist Party Month! Aver" Admission 26 conta, gn the ground and’ Marshall and|Day at McKinley Square against|and resolutions were adopted de-| 88 Tepresentatives Ses AA ee at REAL DOINGS! THIS WEEK-END i Corona Bell eliminated those which were | imperialist war and fascism. Speak- | manding withdrawal of troops trom | Student League, izations, Far-|| AOPEE Headquarters i “DEL”, | ¥. 0. L. DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT. | most “objectionable.” ers included Henry Shepard, Com- | Toledo, release of all workers jailed > yr a Kelsey oar CL Dan Davis, Sports @ DEL”, Chalk Talk 8 1 1. lvie Club, 102-14 Polk Ave. Get 4 i munist Party, W. C. MacQuiston, | and that all charges against them be|™ers' Youth organizations, ¥.C.L.|} 232 Seventh Ave. at 23d St. Jan Haufrecht, Chorus M. Baumann, Tenor ; off at Alburtis Ave. station and walk| . The “objectionable” signs included y.|and the Communist Party, called i " al Marine Workers Industrial Union,| dropped. These were sent to Gov- e@ John Bo Theatricals Pp. D ter Tri ‘north, “Admission 25 cents. those calling for a united front of Tom Joyce, Marine delegate to|ernor White and Mayor Klotz of /fT @ United struggle against war The Lechays, Elwell and Jenkins | Noh icra Ph isk ae aii Bitindich i 4 ‘Sunday all steel workers on the coming Laie vie ate 7 ded | ¢ [pHIKE to Hunters Island from Pelham (Bay Station, 9:30 a, m. sharp. Bring lunch, Lots of good entertainment—tun. ‘Daily Worker Chorus. strike, the Communist Party can- didate banners, and those dealing with National Youth Day, In perfect order the paraders fol- World Youth Congress Against War and Fascism held in Paris last year, and Jim West of the Young Com- Toledo. The Daily Worker, the Young Worker and other literature was sold and the workers listened atten- and fascism. Five hundred adults and youth gathered for the evening festival. A meeting was held at the same will appear in person e Dancing — Refreshments THE ONLY WORKERS’ $14 A Week ANDREW OVERGAARD will speak CAMP NOW OPEN! $2.50 A Day munist League. Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East at 10:30 A.M. D: Also, Friday 7 P.M, time at which a Youth Conference We ites OUTING to Hunters Island. Meet 10 7 = * * tively to Grace Brown from the dis- Sponsored by Satur P.M. Phone EStabrook 8-1400. | lowed, the scheduled line of the against ‘ase! | P | . at Pelham Bay Si . Refresh- it War and Fascism 3 , pa “gemesy singing "Midtowh ‘Gerten.| Match, flaunting: the five banners| Pledge to Support Steel Strike | trict Y. C. L. at Cleveland, Walter ba United Front Supporters | the I. L. D. HIKE to Hunters Island. Jiham Bay Station. Inery United Front. | ENTERTAINMENT—Dance and Festival. Venezualan Hall, 6 E. 116th St., 7:30 p. m. Excellent entertainment, buffet, F. & U. ‘Balalaika Orchestra, Cuban Rhumba Band. Auspices: Harlem International Br. F. S. U. “Admission 25 cents. OF SOVIET CULTURE: New Meet 9 a. m. Arranged by Mil- which police were unable to bar, and arrived at Armstrong Park. At the park, a cordon of police assembled to surround the grounds, but despite the heckling of Jingo bystanders, the speakers took the Platform to deliver coolly their ad- s, Which were loudly ap- YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, June 1— Five hundred workers demonstrated against imperialist war and fas- cism here on National Youth Day. The growing sentiment in favor of the preparations for the coming steel strike was in the forefront of the entire demonstration. Valatka of the Akron Y. C. L. Joe West from the Relief Workers Union and E. Triva for the Com- munist Party. Ben Atkins of the Unemployed Council was chairman. 6 Ea 2h a 2,500 in Paterson Planned for the middle of July and a committee of seven was elected to; Associated Office and Profes- make the final arrangements. sional Emergency Employees SUPPORT THE CAMPAIGN TO SEND A REPRESENTATIVE FRO Workmen’s Sick and ORGANIZED 1881— Death Benefit Fund OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA INCORPORATED 1899 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave., Ridgewood Sta., Brooklyn, N. Y. inti Poster, and pase Dancing Nfo| Plauded by the audience of young ae een eomanaing bag panei sent 28 Gee anaeton| THE UNITED STATES | 58,235 Members in 351 Branches ; follow. 1401 Jerome Ave., Bronx. A troo] “t ’ | Total Assets on December 31, 1931: $3,488,895.98 15 cents. Auspices: Mt. Eden Br F. $'0:| In hi _|Zabeth, New Brunswick, Newark, To Paris for the International Women’s Congress : 1488, cents. aieelcee ah oes ee is talk, Doran used the charge | the Toledo strike zone was unani. merican revolutionary symphony presents Symphony Concert and Frolic. Irving ‘laza; Irving Pl. and 15th St., 8:30 p. m. Subsoription 35 cents. (JOHN REED CLUB “Red ‘Literary Eve- "Writers, poets and critics includ- Oakley Johnson, Wallace Phelps, 2ailip Rahv, Alfred Hayes, Leonard Spier, ‘Fanya Foss, Leon Denen and others. 430 6th. Ave., 8:30 p. m. levelled by “patriotic” organizations that the marchers were “desecrat- ing” Memorial Day, against the Jingoes, pointing out that it was really the hundred-per-centers who desecrated the day with their war Propaganda for another imperialist slaughter. mously passed and sent to Governor White. Another resolution pledging the active support of the unemploy- ed at the demonstration to the steel strikers was also passed. A dance was held in the evening. ihe re NEW YORK. — Workers who Passaic, Perth Amboy and several other cities gathered here and paraded through the working class section of Paterson, led by the Red Front Band, in a colorful demon- stration that will be remembered for a long time. In spite of attempted interference SUNDAY, JUNE 3 — 2:30 P.M. — ——P RO Principals of Cast of Against War and Fascism, July 28, 29, 30, 1934 WEBSTER HAL 119 EAST 11th STREET GRAM — “MEN IN WHITE” Death Benefit: $4,888,210.93 Death Benefit according to the age | Benefits paid since its existence: Sick Benefit: $12,162,051.73 Total: $17,050,262.66 | Workers! Protect Your Families! In Case of Sickness, Accident or Death! at the time of initiation in one or both fi classes. ie . * * * by a large number of police, the in a New Anti-Nazi Playlet, GEORGETTE CLASS A: 40 cents per month—Death Benefit $355 at the age of 16 to $175 |, FOR THE NEXT FOUR WEEKS have not returned their Nationat a ¥ Sunday at tiD0 ae ma, at SS ae Two Arrested in Michigan Youth Day SOneSHON Bake oe workers held a meeting at which HARVEY, Star of “Stevedore,” Re ae Ae et lyn, a class in ic Speaking ‘be given.’ Instructor M, Greenbaum, Class ANN ARBOR, Mich. June 1— urged to do so at once. Bring Carlson, District Organizer of the will sing, CLASS B: 50 cen Pey month—Death Benefit $550 to $230, FE ALF, a splendid German Artist in Anti- Parents may insure their children in case of death up to the age of 18 ‘conducted by Section 7, C. P. Two students were arrested here| them to the American League |Y°UNg Communist League, and War Dances (Accompanist—Estelle Parnas) Death Renefit according to aze $20 to $200. Le anes, Nighi eecrerre, tab: on National Youth Day when they| Against War and Fascism, 112 E, | Ruby Bates spoke. A sports meet Sick Benefit paid from the third day of filing the doc! Group in “Dimitroff."". H. W. L. Dana, Eula Gray, Roy Harris and “Kykunkor,”* Passed out anti-war leafiets to spectators of the war-like Memorial H Airicin Dance Opera. 1,500 seats, 25c, 35¢, H Sth Ave. Theatre, |28th_St. and Broadway, 8:30 p.m, j OUTING to Camp Nitgedaiget. Harlem Day parade. The leaflet. announced that evening's meeting, called by the Michigan League Against War 19th St. ae CHICAGO, Ill. — The National Youth Day parade which began at. the stock yards here, saw 1,300 followed. Bia al Parade of 200 in New Haven NEW HAVEN, Conn.—A parade of 200 marched against imperialist ' i: I — — Tickets on Sale at Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th St. 1,100 Seats at 25c., 400 (reserved) Seats at $1. FT Auspices: American Section, Interna- tional Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism, Room 605, 112 E. 19th St, New York City, (Organized by American League Against War and Fascism). $15. respectively, j|| another forty weeks. Sick Benefits for women: $9 for another forty weeks. ||] Seeretary, or to per week for the first forty weeks, tor’s certificate, $9 and: half of the amount for Per week for the first forty weeks; $4.50 each For further information apply at the Main Office, William Spuhr, National the Financial Secretaries of the Branches.

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