Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Two Relief, Tax Wages; LaGuardia to Slash DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY. Weinstein, Framed Worker, Hailed Upon Release from Prison NEW YORK.—A delegation from the Intérnatiohal Labor Defense and the National Furniture Work- ers of New York JUNE 12, 1934 All Depesitors of Bank of U.S, Urged To Attend Meeting A depésitors’ meeting will be held on Wednésday, June 13, at lans Forced Labor 222"@2 "== ees See ber the Days? " r rs’ Industrial i 2 Sa slub, 432 Clareriio ‘aTkVAY, Plans Forced Labor 22"22 "== Gu io eae Puta emember the Days? worker med on a four-year sen- | Ciaremont Parks Station Sek Ms Sah ome te Ea a ay e — | tence, when he returned here Sat- The denosit have been Puts Forward 7-Cent|/ following hi Weinstein servi release. 16 months Of his victimized in the Bank of United States will arr NE does not like to think of the Manassa Mauler as a man nge for a aelega- || whose mind ha& softened up, but memory is oft a brutal s sentenc Sct . it M ac fa, 1) an; 4 ; Fare; To Put Relief | St Die Neonat tae pega ges thing, and the old Mauler, I am afraid, has allowed the Burden on Workers ment against him was dropped pose a law to have the state bear of United States and urge ah im-"!) ij ade NEW YORK —Fully 1.600 w of the N. F. W. I. U., 812 Broad-| mediate payment. All depositors || Th a statement issued the othér day, establishing the om adeeb Pabeeetee way, by @ large gathering of furni- are urged to be at this important |) conditions under whith he? ah RAE TOG Sioa see led ning period” a ture | Workers mee will ¢ ot connection with who have retired him. They have potas See sone At 50S & Weeks» SER Ee ae) nde aree ne Oa jwill accept a connection with | visioned him as the owner of the itat “ FY ie ein the. an | of light during his imprisonment in | Slaughter i ouse the Madison Square Garden | HE tyes Mepis cB aa eee 1ey were to be rehired as “ex- | sing was the Daily Worker yy a | Corporation, Which uséd to bé! country squire smoking cigars in pal Hobie Hotes Oe eg os . 4 ir in |the cool of the evening his ff | onnected with the six hun- coo) evening on his {} Besaa bates! I Men Strike for os Jestate. But while they were vise $f As the Home Relief Bureau pre- SR T k N PRU WO dred millionaires, the Mauler al-| ©°* : = ies} pared to start cash relief, Mayor USS a eS I OW | towed: that “the first ten rows for a| omins him in such magnificent re. w La Guardia, speaking béfote a group | of social workers, on May 14, élab- orated a forced labor scheme by 7 each relief client would be ing to his trade and| pecified number of hours each week. The mass re- sentment forced the La Guardia administration to back down on after his conviction. Weinstein was greeted in the hall| (Continued from Page 1) | 19 | | | nected themséives with White Rus- | sian erhigrante, hating the prole- Steps for Peace. thé liquidation costs of the Bahk __ Inerease in Pay, | Sheppard Orders Men | Batk While He Talks | of Spreading Strike j| Opium of a beautiful past to make him forget a hideous present. big fight ought to sell for $100 a copy, atid With no bunk about it.” | It_is evident that the old Mauler, | or Mf. Dempséy, @s he is now kndéwn, | Still wakes uf in the morning with | his fists closéd ti€htly, a5 though hé jelutches gold. He is dreaming of | thé days when purple and erminé tirement, Mr. Ruth's contract was being raised every year and Babe's hitting reétnaihed good and his belly full. The very season when they | readied the finest farewell banquet | for him, the beer master who owns | Rim Tet hit have $80,000. But this year Babe ik only get- ‘OEaR + ting 535,000, ana there is sadness | state, mi of armed! vf | fringed the ringsid. Tt is thé samé “en wake 3 roached with ne—the plar § iously and systematically | Slightly ive, We fe NESE AV hte are Ga: ‘orp. place the price ‘ being to have fess | musicians AIR CRASH yiet™ | aarteeea — price Nay ns gay altered, _ Pye in = ae we re of tne Pit Ave, sthuightst, ROUwsS | of Hees for tHe hehe ‘betes Reg tyre Sig erie Babe lay a few hours at concerts,” to} Miss Ada Hutkeby, of Newatk, 7 vakiat f, your drawing, which appeated in Sunday's “Mirror.” | ¥% : vey and hing | Bath: the challenger, and Carnera, tama “keep in practice” as B. Corsi, head | N. J. the stewardese of the Amer. | S0Vieb= Czechoslovakian relations, turn yo fe. pp y iz of the Relief Bureaus explained. To facilitate the forced labor plans, cash relief checks were made ican aiMines plane which crashed in the Catskill Mountains, Satur- day evening, killing stveh people. thereby damaging the political andj economic interests of their own country as well. | | | | "The foreés in Rumania hostile | 1 changes which have occurred ré-| Present it to your boss with our compliments, Yours truly, manding increases in pay and union retozniton. Althuogh the capitalist press re- ports that 12,000 butchérs are now the champion, as they ate hunidr- ously called, At $25 a séat. Perhaps it was the Dempsey influente, in- only $35,000. He was relnctant when he had to sign, and he did not waive any of his constitu- <4 | | orgy Ns tional rights when he did sign, out as city payroll checks, leading | ——————_—— : | DEL. | striking tn New York, there wt | set a fie Hs “Bowie hict sped WHO. ee te Bb cpiracts an the way for putting all relief clitnts to the USSR. have acted to an - -- — j actually about 1,000 men out alto-|bindted millionaires put sion | Pree years signed only for one. as “employes” on the city relief Many Fur Sho S on even greater éxtent in the influenc- i «| ether yesterday afternoon for the| Vane on the adfhisston. The ola) Babe can quit at the end Of thik “payroll.” D ing of foreign policy in Rumania, Insi lis Brutalit --- LaGuardia men in the Fort Green, Westchester | iraiier has ah interest in the chal-| Summer, if he wants to. “I hrs fire Tax he ge biel | . ‘ with clear attempts to prompt anti- Lb 9 y "y | and Fort Lee apie pig Plea lengér. erm i in my Aig en jue! a scheme fits into La al « - 8 iV | to work under the official sanction é ,. | Sadly, “and I owe it to my public to Guards pikna. ter ao. | Strike in New York 5 adventures. The decisive | But I may be mistaken, how- foreed labor, éstabli: & the seven- cent fare on the subways and street | Cars and bussés, and placing a tax On every pay énvelope. | Over the week-end, La Guardia | has been “studying” various plans | to raise funds for relief—plans sub- | mitted fo him by Wall Street ad- visors, his mastérs, heads of insur- afice companies, ustrialists and bankers. The only plans which have thus far beén séen fit to publish | NEW YORK —Two large fur | shops, Fishback and Ackerman and | Linet Fur, were déclaretl on strike yesterday by the Fur Workers In- dustrial Union. The workers of the Fishback shop are striking for the full union wage and to Abolish & kick-back of $10 to $15, which the bosses forced the workers to pay. Workers in the Linet shop are de- cently in Europe have forced the | leading circlés in Czechoslovakia | | aha Rumania to révisé their posi- | tions in relation to the USSR.! | They realized that the post-war | | Stricture of Europé, which séemed | | stable and firm in the beginning, | | has undergone sévere processes of | | exposure and destruction. | “The activities of imperialist fac- | Cops’ Treatment for Negroes NEW YORK.—Just what treat- ment is accorded to the Negro péo- ple by the “liberal” Republican Mayor LaGuardia and his adminis- ation? Take A concrete éxample: Cartié Davis, a licenséd masseuse, 74 W. 113th St., is a member of the | | Brodsky, her attornéy, has brought charges Against the police. | The defense of the district at- | torney is that Mrs. Davis, a Negro woman, is “treating black anf | white people alike.” A detision | by Judge Walsh is awaited, | of Géorge W. Sheppard, orgaitizer | of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters | and Butcher workmen. While Sheppard is making glow- | ing statements in thé préss about | spréading the strike, hé is attempt- ing to break the backbone Of the whole movémeéent by All6wing the | men who cathe out last week to | trickle back to work. | Meanwhile the Hebréw Butchér ever, and this may only be one OF these things to rib the boys. The old Mauler is being conditioned for the promotorial end at the Madisoh Sq. Garden Corp. and | sth néws may startle and én- lighten us customers into an ap- Preciation of the old Maiilet’s | préiioborial abiiitiés. A mah who | has the nerve to charge $100 for a seat at a box-ficht contest these | give them a fair deal. I yearn for the diamond, but I am only good from thé neck up.” So the Babs {intends to go from here, always yearning fot the fans. He is going bérauuse, like in bok- ing, the custorhérs don’t yearn to hand out théir money any mote, of, if they yeatn, it's because they have no mohéy to hand out, any more. The last few years have mAnCInE ee Sbolteh Oss ‘ i | a As Delegations of the League of| Workers Union announcéd that it) Ga on bin. |fMAde Of profesional baseball, as it have been those Which plese the tract BMAR Bird Hnaatanine oe tots ia Europe are inereactng, con: | New York Boelety ot |Struggle for Negro Rights, the| Will hold a mecting of its members | bist ote janeca tr iis As has made of professional boxing, & ote whe Des ts shoulders ed aes worked in the shop| ith py eapes eet at giclee ee ne 7 bee She ees | Women Days Workers League and| ‘0 take up the quéstion of strikité| dyanier portray, might eatie the | torment. The parks are fiortzaged ©! working population. jlast year. La Gilardia’s schémés to tax the | the 0 | War and Fascism, to protes:| in sympathy with the slaughter) tioments still draws them in, but not enough Shh ~ gle of the contradictory interests of | charge of prostitution—a charge of 4 house men, . 2 .|come in. So the Babe goes from with hit. "A similar “welch ering | Industrial ‘Union: “Green Broe, ana | BIE Capitalist powers Uhreatens fatal | which she whs subseqaently e-| TERNS fave “been “completly | The Fbol Workets fhausrtial| ares, does met the old Mauler) ve eth cae in fib Wok, ane of the liquidation of C, W. A. While | neuer, 345 Sev enth Ave ; Berchan- iinparialint a ona rie | fh id St th La-| missioner O’Ryan also refused to go out on the picket line and) tose who have to pay the face| ld days which are gone forever, the conference of Mayors was in| sky, 345 Seventh Ave.; George Jaffe, | mp s pansion. is not/a charge did not stop the | session, La Guardia called a meet- | ing at City Hall to “discuss” the | relief situation. La Guardia at that time labeled | his forced labor schemes with a/ different name—unemployment in- | surance. In his letter to the con-| ference of Mayors on March 11, he| proposed an “unemployment ihsur- | 158 W. 29th St.; Bader and Kauf- man, 350 Seventh Ave.; Zimmerman |and Sher, 150 W. 30th St.; Fish-| man, Spitzer and Goldfinger, 214 W. 28th St.; Rubin and Kass, 129 W. 29th St. A meeting of all shop chairmen and shop delegates will be held Wednesday eévening. after work, at The following shops are now on | pean map in mind. But the strug- accidental that maps of the future middle Europe, already hung up by | German Cabinet leaders. swallow up | | whole countries now independent, | _ Tt is hot accidental that the ques- | tion is being discussed in fascist | newspapers and journals about | what the fate is to be of those coun- | her and her sister on a trumped-up Guardia police. From May 4 there has been a 24-hour police watch within Carrie Davis’ apartment—a | cop is there every hour of the day. | A sign bearing the word “Police” | Warrant, saying “you dirty niggers | hag been pasted outside the door. in order to keep her patients away. On May 16 one of the cops on guard brought up his friend and | the Women’s Committee Against see & delegation. The landlord of the house where | Mrs, Davis resides, spurred on by the police, has issited an éviction | are ruihing my housé,” The L. S. N. R. calls on all or- ganizations in thé community, and particularly to the Spanish work- | séveral thousand koshé@r fétail shops to work actively with membéts of the A. F. of L. union to spread the strike into @ real geheral strike. At a meeting called Saturday at the headquartets of thé Amalgi- mated, 42nd St. ahd Third Ave, yank and file strikers assailed Shéep- | pard and accuséd him of sélling 6iit | the Western and Indepéndent | fans to look twice at the adver- | value for a ticket, even if it is for a ringSidé seat thirty rows away.” Misery loves company. ae Feet | WR. BABE RUTH, on the other Kaha, anothér imighty man, is Obviously aware that thé rainbow has spent itself. While the Manassa and thé owners violent. The Babe Baseball No games scheduled in the Americaad ahd National Leagués. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE | | + | “ ‘ Maulét thinks of $100 séats, the 010 020 900-3 8 1 4 t ‘havi t ti ’ i houses. Sheppard adjourned the t Montreal 10 i ange” scheme whereby funds would | the office of the union, 131 W, aath | Mes ‘having ne right erent mee: | several whiskey bottles to her | ers in the hotise, to reject, the split- | meeting and police with fiot guns | Babe Arnourices his retirement at| Newark site 000 Mele { be raised by “a tax of a few cents | St. converted into a drillground, the|@Pariment and both got drunk,|ting rule and terrorism of the po-| entered the hall and intimidated | the ehd of this season. At last we prgmorak, caller and stack; | Weekly upon every person em- | possession of which will be deter-| lying in the beds and insulting the | lice—to call meetings and to send) iho workers. have his seu beeny from the Babe's | Dus® 21 ong 119 o90-$ 8 1 | ployed.” V | J § ik lune iy toler | women. delegations of protest to LaGuardia| workers, refusing to be , | own Word of mouth. Shtacuse 191 000 1003 & mined by a violent struggle, and % | orkers, refusing to cowed by ir % ‘len c Li and Crouch; i Fore c i i 7 Mr. Ruth has been retired every |. Hilcher, Pattison, Lucas ; & “worker pe ce rhe these | U can ron nN tri e | over Which storm clouds are becorn-| Carrie Davis, through Joseph| and the landlord. f . | “benefits” would be madé to r forced labor. ‘“Municipaliti Guardia wrote, “would have the| right to call upon beneficiaries of the system to render services on Civil works to the extent of the in- | surance benefits they receive.” | In this way, employed workers nder La| Solid Under SMWIU NEW BRITAIN, Conn., June 11- The strike at the Vulcan Iron Works, a branch of the Eastern | Malleable Iron Company, continued ing incréasingly thicker. The wat! danger in this section of Burope is | | no more the pétsnectivé of the ré- | mote future, An atmosphere of in- | Stability, a feéling of approaching | Storm, is beginning to tell upon the | eastern Europe, Moscow Children | | Hail Vacations Paak, File Presses Sheppard and the police, reopened | the meeting and raised the question | of the rank and filé taking ovér the | local. This move was defeated by union officials on grounds that, the méeting was not a regular member- ship meeting. | year for the last six or seven years. | | But it has been the sports writers stration in front of the German {Consulate ih Amstertiath was brokén up by the poli¢é who made a sabre chargé on the Assembled | | McCloskey and Cronin ‘ Rochester bt Albany—TWo games will be played at night ‘ Buffalo at Baltimore—Night game. Tell your friénds and shopmates about thé Daily Worker. Let them réad your copy. Have thém buy it at the newsstands, policiés of the countriés of | For Steel Strike } workers, sévérély wounding several would actually he paying the |SOlid today as the strikers forced “Free Thaelmann,” tas “ : | u; : of them. hunger dole which will be called |the withdrawal of police squads, | Satan pete ke en | (Continued j (Continued from Page 1) Pade CAthédral 8-6160 f after a delegation of phe workers ‘ ea ey RET IT ETE h Trans; sf ael- Will be drafted for forced lator on. | rotested against the ofhce ‘intimi: |HAVe grown immeasurably, and have! they marched on the stage cheér| night, WHBh 200 delegates ‘rorh 24 ee ee municipal projects and odd jobs. In proposing these vicious schemes, La Guardia has three Purposes in mind: Firstly, to off- set the rising militancy of the job- less who are demonstrating and demanding jobs and relief; sec- Ondly, to pave the way for his reign of police terror against the unemployed who dare to raise | their voices against starvation; | and, thirdly, to further drive down | wages of city and industrial work- ers by placing them in competi- | tion with the employed. Under the provisions of the plans which La Guardia is “considering,” relief workers, their wages slashed three times since the institution of | OW. A., would be forced to kick | back a part of their starvation wages for the support of the cit: relief system. Wages of all workers, slashed to the bone by recurrent wage cuts would be twice hit by a/ direct tax on their pay envelopes and a two-cent tax on all subway, | bus and street car rides. Uném- ployed workers, spending a few hoarded pennies on the subway in searoh Of a job, would bé forced to pay back the miserable relief | which they receive. | Last. of all, after slashing relief | to the bone, it is planned to és-| tablish forced labor for every per- | son on relief. Rising Relief Demands The number of persons on Home | Relief has increased progressively from 109,019 in December, 1933, to | the present figure of 166,971. Ap- plications are coming into the re- lief bureaus at the rate of 1,500 daily. To meet the costs of soe | ever growing load, the organizations of the unemployed and relief work- | ers have demanded an end to the| payments to the bankers, on the} debt burden, a tax on factory and | business sites, assessments of the earnings of corporations operating within the city limits and a cw in | . the high salaries of the city office | holder. | Two Negroes, ‘Aiding Evicted Woman, Held for ‘Disturbing Peace’ DETROIT, June 11—Two Negro workers, Lonnie Williams and Johnny McAdoo, will come up for hearing Thursday morning, charged with “disturbing the peace.” The two Negroes with other Ne- gro and white workers had pre- vented the eviction of Mrs. Anna Cash, a widowed Negro woman, from her home at 915 Benton St. in a demonstration organized by the Unemployment Councils and League of Struggle for Negro Rights, on Wednesday, June 6. Cops using brutal methods, tried to disperse the workers but failed to stop them from putting the furniture back into the house. The International Labor Defense is defending them. Williams and McAdoo were arrested and are being held on $300 bail, dation and ban on picketing. Attempts of the bosses to break the strike by using Negroes as strikebreakers failed today when the Negroes and white workers fraternized. Representatives of the bosses met with the workers today proposing a shop committee But no increase | in wages. The strikers answered with mass picketing ahd a determi- nation to continue the strike under the leadership of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union. The Communist Party has called a meeting of all strikers and sym- pathizers for Thursday night at the Workers’ Center, 53 Church Street, I. Wofsey, District Organizer of the Communist Party, will be the prin= cipal speaker, Workers’ Delegation Returns from Soviet Union 9 A.M, Today NEW YO —The May Day delegation of American workers to the Soviet Union will return today, 9 a. m., on the “Isle dé France” at the foot of W. 15th St., were they will be wélcomed by workers of their unions. A welcome célebration will be held in Irving Plaga Hall, Irving peace, for the struggle against the war danger. While not long ago the | | Soviet proposals concerning the struggles for peace made by Lit-| vinoff at the Geneva Conference | were ignored, and are mét with a most unfriendly attitude at the present moveérhent, the importance | of the Soviet country as a decisive factor for peace was realized by all those who are hot intetested in | preparations for a fresh war, be- cause they expect nothing positive from it. The consistent peace policy of the U. S, S. R. is yielding its| fruits. | “It is not accidental that while! | the July 1933 convention at London} | failed, Litvinoff sighed there a def- | inition of aggression, which defini- | tion played thé most important role | |in the field for the consolidation | |for security. Similarly, now at! Geneva, with a background of aj | futile ‘disarthament’ conference dis- cussion behind the scene of which | | the processes of feverish armament | | are going on and the weapons for | | approaching war are being for.ed,| | the exchange of letters regarding the | | establishment 6f diplomatic réla< tions of thé U.S. 8. R. with Czecho- | made it a country which is playing | after cheer rent the air from chil+ an ever-greater role in the inter+/ dren of the different schools, show= national situation, utilizing its in-| ing the pride taken in those who fluence for the strengthening of | become best scholars. The climax of the festival was reached with & mass pafadé across the stage, With childten répreséntifig every phate of the ¢curficulum of the schools. Children carrying giant pens, pencils, books, globes; children with geese, and chickens; childrén with tennis rackets, oars, balls, nets representing every kind of sport; children with animals, and Children dancing. All served to show the wide nature of Soviet education. The parade was & most impressive sight, and as it passed I remembered the words of Lenin: “Revolution is not revolution if it does not show the greatest solicitude for children; for they are the fu- ture, on whose behalf revolutions are made.” Today’s festival demonstrated that the Soviet Government, and the working class led by the Communist Party, Rave lived up to Lenin's words. They are preparing @ strong and virile generation, conscious builders of socialism. As I left the festival I could not help thinking of the gréat responsibility of the world’s workers to thé Soviet Union to ensure defeat to all attacks against it, so that it might con- Place and 15th St., tomorrow | slovakia and Rumania acquiré par-| tinue the great work already ac- night. ticular importance.” complished for the children here. Lowdown on a Couple of A.W.P. Heroes (Continued from Page 1) collection of Moses’ who have volunteered to lead the working class, “confused by Communists,” out Slanders. But here we have in black and white the admission that financial returns from préAr- ranged arrests are a major objecti in a period when tens of thousands of steel workers Are preparing for great struggles for elementary rights and decent living condition In the May 1 issue of “Labor Action” Muste states in the leading article: “The fact that political or other differences exist among workers does not mean that workers and their organizations cannot and must not act together in specific situations—in wage cuts, in unemployed league: tions, in defense organizations to protect ¢lass war prisoners.” What are the facts? Muste and his handful of A.W.P. member's have formed unemployed “leagues” against the Unem- ployed Councils; they have formed a “non-partisan against the International Labor labor defense” Defense. Now that they are gram is the attempt to “cash in” of the steel workers by getting flimsy pretext, to profit by dissension and division in the ranks of the steel workers, There Are the Heroes These are the heroes of the A.t the sélf-appointed messiahs for wh nist Party is too “sectarian,” pac ‘posed, the Budenz tele- Here is a choice | plenty! ive for Musteites | 8. unions to resist s to resist evic- on the struggles arrested on any W.P.! These are om the Commu- When is he (Cope) going t6 follow example of Budenz and gét arrested so “we can raise some money?” desire for unification or all working class forces? “The Cotimunist Party,” wrote Muste for May 1, “works on the theory of ‘thé uhitéd front from below,’ a piécé of asinine and childish stupidity. . .” ‘We are quite willing to let the working class choosé. The choice is not in doubt. Améfican workers will not follow, when they know it for what it is, a policy of cheap but dangérous adven- turism dedicated to the ambitions of pretended réyolutionists whose activities in the ranks of the working class consist of slandering the Communist Party, creating confusion and staging arrests for the purpose of getting money to support these con- tempitible careerists, In his May 1 article Muste placed as Point 4 in the A.W.P. requirements for the united front: “Mutual criticism to continue in force but to be based on sound revolutionary principles and on facts, not fabrications.” We heve here endeavored, as is our custom, to conform to this requirement, but our Aim is to | convince workers, not to satisfy the Reverend A. J. Mucie and the shallow satellités of the A.W.P. We have not dépendéed upon our imagination for our facts or our memory for our gibes, of slavery into the promised land of p@ace and the brave Where is an expression of lodges voted unanimously to carry out_the strike ultimatum. The A. A. convention is sét for Thursday in Elks Hall, Pittsburgh, at which strike plans are to be dis- cussed. To dis¢over by what mheahs the A. A. leaders are keeping down sefitimént among thé rank and file for a united front with the 8S, M. W. I. U., ohe of the Amalgamated lodge presidents was asked what plans were being made, his ahswer, evidently handed from headquar- ters, was, “Oh, that is all fixed. The big fellow, A. A. leadérs, have a secret agreemént with the Reds for united action.” Askéd why the agreement was so secret, he said, that is nécéssitated by the public sentiment which would be aroused against the strike, if an alliance With the steel metal work- ers were announcéd. | Actually, however, the A. A. lead- ers, all of them, have consistently refused to weld a united front with the S. M. W. I. U. uhite Guay UNION BALLOTS PRINTED IN CLEVELAND (Special to the Daily Worker) CLEVELAND, Juné 11.—Fifteen thousand balléts are being printed here for & big vote by steel workers on uhioh demands and on the ques- tion of Clevéland stéél workers join- ihg With othér workers in the strike for their démands. The ballots are being printed in English, Italian and Polish, and will be collected at Gates Hall and through the mail. While strike preparations were going off, 150 American Steel Wire workers yesterday heard a réport from their elected delegates on the Washington steei conference Stn- day. Workers from the Amalgamatéd Lodge are asking for news on the strike situation, complaining that their local is Making no prepara- tions. A huge auto parade has been ar- Tafgéd by the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union for this Saturday at 1 p.m, starting at St. Ciair and E. 55th St. The industrial union appeals to all workers to join them. The young workers plan to hold @ stréet rin soon to popularize thé union and the strike prepara- tions, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Suttét Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3612 Offies Hours: 8-10 A.M. 1-2, 6-3 P.M Say Cuban Youths (Continued from Page 1) actions; mass démohnstrations against the fascist war-mongets; | traveling all Over the World, making all these protests serve one goal— to save And free Ernst Thaélmanh. Fascism In the Dock | Barbusse also proposed that a the same time as the Thaelmann trial, to expose the race discrimina- want to stamp anti-faseists as an inferior race, sub-humans, murdér- ers and thieves. Henri Barbusse’s proposals were adopted unani- mously for immediate action. The fight for the immediate re- leasé of Ernst Torgler is to be in- tensified with all available resources to foil the fascist murder plots against him planned in connection with the Thaelmann death sen- tence. A number of fighting measures ate fo be taken to compél the réleasé of all imprisonéd anti-fascist women, espécially the wivés_of the refugee Reichstag Deputy Beimier and of the murdéted Red Aid Séc- fetary Stéinfurth, who aré being kept in jail as hostagés by thé fas- cists. The report of thé Saar workers’ delegation who saw Thaelmarin, is to be uséd to intensify the cam- aign to save and liberate Ernst Thaelmanh and all the other anti- fascists in jail through mass ac- tions in all countries. : This important conference was followed by a press conference with 120 correspondents of news services, capitalist, socialist, trade union, lit- erary and law journals, as well as |of the whole labor press, in which | they made a report and had to an- sweér 200 questions. RSS ea 4 Ditch Workers Demonstrate for Thaclmann AMSTERDAM, June 11.—Numer- ous street demonstrations have taken place here and in Rotterdam during thé past few days démanding Theelmann’s release. One démon- —WILLIAM BELL———— orr1e1al. Optometrist OF THE 106 EAST Mth STREET Near Fourth Avé., N. ¥. C. Pho ‘Ompkins 6 giant “race trial” be held th one! of the biggest cities of the world at | tion of the German fascists who | tmann’s Release LONDON, Juiie 11—Thé Covéntiy local of thé British Transport Workéts Union, and thé Llaélly Dis- tricb Council of the British Iron and Steel Workers Union, unani- | mously adopted resolutions demand- ing the release of Ernst Thaelmann. Wane yes § Crecho-Slovak United Front for Thaelmann PRAGUF, June 11.—The National Conference of the Czécho-Slovak Front Against War aid Fascism with many Socialist delegates in attendance adopted protest résolu- tions demanding the release of Ernst Thaelmann and Matthias Rakosi, 48 well as of all other itn- prisoned anti-faseist fighters. Dr. Maximilian Cohen ; Dental Surgeon RanSvan oF WS OoMoe Al Union Square, N. Y. C. GR. 17-0135 ‘Wisconsin 17-0238 Dr. N. S. Hanoka Dental Surgeon 265 West 41st Street New York City ALL THE SPORTS Swim - Tennis - Handball Baseball Seas Opening Dance to Red Syncopators Théatre Premiérée of “Hats” from Ilin’s New Russia’s Primer June Profits Go To Corfiuiist Party from Camp NITGEDAIGET BEACON, NEW YORK Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.¥.C. DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St.. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Bours: § a.m. to & p.m. Sun. 9 toi Méfthér Workmen's Siek and Death I, J. MORRIS, Ine, GENE. FUNERAL TREC TORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order PANTS TO MATCH Your Coat and Vest Paramoutt Pants Co., Inc. 603 Broadway SP 7-2859 DES AND WE MATCH, AUl, SHAI ~Williamisburdh Gomiades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria raham Ave, Cor. Siegel St. Given iit Apron FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS kal Cafeteria 1689 PITKIN AVENUE y workers WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Ohinéée and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 13th # 14tn st. (Classified) ART STUDENT—man, share studig: have AO. radio and fan. Address’ Box 15, Daily Worker. LICENSE NOTICES NOTICE is hereby given that license number B16265 has, been issued to tht Cars leave Gaity from 2700 Bronx Park E., 10:30 A.M, Also Friday, Coming to the Big Opening at Camp Unity this Weekend? Spectacular Pageant, Red Vodvil. Burning of Hitler's Effigy at Campfire ars leave from 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A.M. 7 P.M. : York, N. Y., to be consumed upon the said Eph og 9 Walton Cafetéria, ike, 116 Unis versity Place, Néw York, N.Y, Jacob Bl« lenberg, Pres.