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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1934 SMWU Issues Unity Call: Congress Ge Break the Steel Strike Urge Election haa gh de Maja by del Bronx Consumers! Of Eula Martin | Baron | BISON To Protest Today j JURA ANNAN In Shoe Union | Voting To Take Place | ‘At Milk Price Rise in Haverhill from Urge Demonsiration in} 12 to 6 Today ts Bill To a ~ WILLIAM FUCHS Expertania | By MARGUERITE YOUNG Daily Worker Washington Bureau) Front of Sheffield Milk Company | NHE FIGHT: “No, this fight doesn’t need any artificial setting, any. f the steel work greatest enemy of Sat HAVERHILL. Me ake fae NEW YORK.—A united fight to| build-up or ballyhoo, any threats of postponements, injunce = steel work Following a heated discussion of | areas’ cout Lee cheer eieee, Mame tad tions or police interference to attract the public... Max Roosevelt, the N. R. A. over two hours the membership of * -nur es oR : Peete pacepyaes 0 SPT g ej ianeethl nari awake. a Bae Insti e United Shoe and Leather Work- SIRIMINEL , COURT | Which calls for 2 demonstration to- | Baer and Primo Carnero will carry ev ery element of drama igs Union nominated Fula Martin, | fe Shathan see Ki see ofjinto the ring . . .” y of ‘ ad " me e Sheffiel ilk Company, a 5 zz 3 bench girl aie ecu sage | 165th St. and Webster Ave., Bronx. Richards Vidmer— Herald Tribune. the Disbat Coen | The full text of the call of the} * * * Pas Giieibate eae I stric acl | Committee follows: | : . : : 8 4 mer the wage-cutt I bers of the old Protective “Last week we witnessed a rise | “This fight might easily |°@t @ .. . vote for Primo Camera program of Wall In the form of a } olution. machine who are trying to ack nrg ~~ | i ‘ “|in Thursday’s heavyweight battle feces ig oie ae vould de-| disrupt the United fought hard to Such as Sresa® most vital foods, | degenerate into what the boys| with Max Beer at the een” prondied see Miyperin by it em-| force Miss Martin's withdrawal Under the present conditions of jaround the Garden call a Joe Williams—The World- 1s, because’ thes t elections S com Poses Glag pean low wages and unemployment, the |stinko . . .” .. Jim 5: remitatives “put | against her in order to recall her. | disonal gattcii See Geen ie Joe Williams—The World] ,,,.02" 2c, §_your_man_ this for your appear in the| Eula Martin was elected to the| the working class families. T ieee TBS Aaah Gea Tle aie 5 Th: oo s would simply | Council last January. Her work in “The city is openin ilk sta- | elegram « . : ¢ whether to t labor grievance | the Council has been of a very mil- | tions to sell milk at Might gehts a A eG Preem To Outbox, Outlast Baer nist Party or not. The s would| itant character, as was her work | quart. But one must. be ‘eligible’ | THE Contestants see Sele ‘ a red herring across yo during the recent strike. All dur-| to get this milk. This means |* “The Baer-Carnera affair is the Peony Lemar saew order to break the growin’ ing the strike Miss Martin, along | again investigators to our homes | best thing that has been offered the York American. steel workers. Our with Marino Brandolini, chairman | 4 to qualify us as to one of the very needy cases. “We don't want to suffer and fistic fans in years. Damon Runyon—New York “Carnero Could His Sparmate. . . of the Council, had many open bat- tles with members who were carry- Be Whipped By | | f American. New ¥i ing out a destructive policy of be- | 5 ; wait until the investigators make ARB eclighm Jim Tully Ais pa York cee Rae. | “The Mayor intends to build a skyscraper that will ee ee re aie laa “TE maintain that Carnera is the Bi eee $1,000 fine or ons for the Council will take | . * i ” “ oo e able | biggest hoax we have ever t a~ ts nt ot | place by secret ballot today from| be a combined criminal courts building and prison. to buy it for our children, to keep | rating tm the cine eae |e es rene = a = rading in the guise of a heavy ‘Carnera Choice at 8 to 5 Odds. ; noon until 6 pm. All members of | —NEWS ITEM. them healthy, to help prevent | eight champion” New York ‘ rized by the board or against| Local 10 are urged to come and disease. D Post—June 13, Paul Gall * who should “impede or i vote for Eula Martin. j terfere v anyone “Betting . . Even Money.” “The Bronx Action Committee ico—Daily News preiby of five calls upon all workers, all “g * 7 a Pittsburgh Mayor Plans to unemployed, all consumers, men || z.7% {0% calling the fight of, not | World-Telesram—June 13, national of- whe d nae anor ar and women, to come to the dem- | °) POS reel Shap cea tb EAE EERE \ yolir: On be| 4 ee ator the ee Or eee Demonstrate for onstration in front of Sheffield [0% Who is going to face Carnera. | mE spoils: ng every local ganization by ins The public has been swindled for to expel the reds years but I'm not going to stand| ployers or employes” gives the lie to any contentions the sponsors of Milk Company, today at 1 p.m. the Communis' at 165th St. and Webster Ave. “A total gate of between $400,« Protect All Steel Co. Scabs Thaelmann inN. Y. for ieee 000 and $500,000, which proportion- They mean you yon insist OB) 1 yocolstioh may make REoUE-His} PaaE Rae | There we will present our de- | 10 it. | ally to the times is easily the equtv striking for the demands passed by | (he resolution may make about its | 1,000 at Browder Meet Boo McNair from Plat-| mands and demand an answer Honest Bill Brown—Boxing jalent of something like $1,000,000 ieee Arril convention of the A--AUS| nike of tha NAL tae Ab fe (Continued from Page 1) ‘ . |e TP SHE mak cokapany Se. [it she daya-of the.goid soak: 3 Aree hel cunen Guise ee aoe iaseseascaNc i. form; Mayor Is Against All Unions, He Declares | aes Bott os © ; New York American, The statament in endorses the | known universally that employers | "5 Ee > . “Carnera - Baer Match Flames | seven demands of the stecl workers, | alone are the users of coercion and| cated. More forces are being mo- a se S Urge Vote for Rank adopted at the last A. A. conven- tion, but dropped by Mike Tighe and a a ” | eae F intimidation, etc. The first bill in-|bilized and picketing will continue. Ry CARL REEVE “No, but workers should use only With Drawing-Power Angles. | “There is a belief in some quar troduced by Chairman Wagner of | Workers’ organizations pledged to ‘ their power as individuals and not| and File Candidates Richards Vidmer—Herald- | ters that the promoters, dissatise the Committee of Ten, which) the National Labor Board was di-| mobilize their membership and con- (Special to the Daily Worker) _ organize. I am an individualist.” in Carpenters’ Laci pune esti | fled with the advance sale, (were) Gropped all except the demand for} rected exclusively, in this respect, | tinue picketing every day. i ' a a Y 4 |at the bottom of the move for a recognition at employers Pee | ast might (delegated from Perens Bas Pa bdr Pimihredineak wc bal ce Oa a | PEED ee: in Tiptop | PostPonement, hoping that a delay iat atatarrentic thie traces ihe Compulsory Arbitration |score of organizations participated Worker last night, Mayor MeNair|Nair amidst general booing and| NEW YORK.—Elections of offi- (would) help the gate. history of the situation, by both or- ganizations calling for strike prep- arations and for a national joint | conference of all workers’ organiza~- ee | you would nea ice and ‘con Observers generally recognized the | ®4nizing this campaign. The com-| : i »|ing upon all members of the local | tions to prepare th ‘ike, and con- et fe : ratic Mayor enacts the role of buf-| know what I am talking about. Ip of the local/ing . . . Made the sorriest showing : tinues, aan these proposals for | Proposal as an arbitration measure. |™ittee plans to organize a mass | ra b y hi 1 ac- | This was as far as McNair got. The| to see to it that Local 2090 remains|in nine rounds of any challenger | NATIONAL LEAGUE ae One Senator known as a Progressive | People’s trial soon. jfoon, but his seemingly crazy ¢ fs hting local and v | Brooklyn 209 009 non 2 9 2 united action been adopted by the | One Se a thet ee A ee: | Aeeeat 2 Mace In Pbiadaiphia tions are merely a cover for the| audience would not let him con-| fighting local and vote for the) for the title ever seen by this writer | veesburgh S10,116 Otgas 178 Committee of Ten, a united front oe rae tne oy See rama G PHILADELPHIA, June 13——Two|fact that he has begun suppression tinue. McNair, who had_ boasted | candidates ot rank and file groups. | at & corresponding period of train- Herring, Munns, Sukeforth, Béck an? committee would have gone to wie ane abantion would be a|more pickets were arrested in front | measures against steel workers and | “I'll talk Browder off the platform,”| The candidates of the group are: | ing. i | opez, Berres; Swift and Padden Washington, with aise aigit-out compulsory arbitration |of the German Consulate, 1420| workers’ rights. Following his in- | Was himself booed off the platform | Robert Mayer for president, Louis Wilbur Wood—The Sun, ae. ganized strike movement aeatiaen | maeanne ‘ 7 Walnut St., yesterday, making a to- | terview with the Daily Worker, Mc-|in short order, and, red-faced and|Ivan for vice-president, Florian ‘ AMERICAN LEAGUE ee coveriment otfien sito anther “It was because of such sentiments | tal of six, “charged with disorderly |Nair made a provocative attempt Sasping, shouted: Modrovszky for recording secretary,| | T write that he (Camera) plea oreo Hele By red a et i ae plies nhs a esate ‘hats Cortenbiines: ata undereover | conduct. In spite of this open sup-|to break up the meeting at which| “I'll speak to you in a different|Sam Friedman for financial secre- | Not as good as he was several years | Philadelphia 021 007 10x—11 14 0 a strike as your Committee of Ten Under the resolution the boards would be appointed by the President —with no provision for labor repre- sentatives chosen by the workers, wire-pullings and agreements, which in an Emergency Free Thaelmann conference, called by the Commu- jnist Party. A committee of nine | was elected to take charge of or- | | Port of the fascists here by the lo- attacked all unions and repeated | his statements to the effect that full police protection will be given to strike-breakers. Pittsburgh's er- | Earl Browder was speaking by a vi- protest, declared: “I want to answer| the Communists. If you were not fooled and befuddled by a bunch of | Russian Communists way.” cers Will take place in Carpenters Local 2090 today. The rank and file group of Car- penters Local 2090 is therefore call- tary, John Lenicek for treasurer, | Condition for Title Battle.” J. Lester Scott—The World- Telegram. “(Baer) Ineredibly Bad in Box-| ago when he toured the nation | Pearson, Winegarner and Pytlak, Myatt; The Sun, Baseball + | Jain and Hayes. } vi 1 ti y, i i i vi i | cious attack on Communists, but he} Over 1,000 workers had gathered|Savo Gojkovie for D. C. delegate, | bowling over hams.” | Detroit sf 003 200 026—13 22 1 i was. ao es Ragen pelled ta Teen and be rnin was booed out of the hall and de-|in Fifth Ave. High School to hear| for members of the executive com- Jim Tully—New York | 3oston : 032 900 50x—15 14 0 Ht They would have served notice! |). ieaeite at a Sah land afterncon’ for three weeks. In|Parted in a high state of anger, | Earl Browder, General Secretary of| mittee, Sidney Novick and Alex. American, Praesent se ooh ] on the Presitient, the N. R. A., and * i Seine | addition, various organizations have | Surrounded by about 12 detectives| the Communist Party, analyze the| Klerman. eo i Ge: Ga a: tee , * i Mie Stes! Tnstitute that the only ; 1 |and making threats surh as, “I'll | lessons of the Toledo and Minneap- i way to avert a strike was to grant all demands. Chi. Workers Plan |made arrangements to picket the | offices of the North German Lloyd, | Broad and Spruce, next week. | deal with you in a different way,” shaking his fist and gesticulating. olis struggles and warn steel work- | A vote for these candidates means | a vote for an administration that “The thing that is being over- looked is that if Baer is under- | ers against attempts of American will help the local to fight in the | ‘tained, Carnera is overtrained.” i “Under no circumstances can the - % The Women’s Leagues, the I.w.O.| McNair, in his speech, tried to| Federation of Labor leaders and the Tee: of the carpenters as well FSH Gallon = aly News. | DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 4 workers abandon the strike weapon Un t (dl St | St k branches, TLD. John Reed Club,|Convince the workers that the|N. R. A. to head off the impending! as in the interests of the labor| , iS i en || 207 BRISTOL STREET | the most powerful instrument of i] Qi ry ee ry YT) e Office Workers Union, have all | headlines quoting him as being steel strike. : movement in general. ‘The worst judges of physical Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brookisn f struggle the workers have, the key- pena Sie |adopted resolutions demanding #gainst mass picketing were false,| Browder was given a tremendous pec ARE SCENTS 28 condition of fighters in the world sania a note of which is unity, a united | y |Thaelmann’s release, and have ar- | but in the interview the Mayor ad-| ovation as he appeared upon the Wowk F are sport writers.” | vie Abcaeanicidctaere fighting broad rank and file teader-/ Members of A.A, Lodge 7073 picket the consulate, and /mitted it, stating that he will not| platform, and at intervals during Dugan Workers Face Damon Runyon—New York || fier Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M | ship. Your Committee of Ten re- . to send delegation after delegation | allow congregating and will give| his speech he was interrupted by he American, fused the- united front, fearing Boo Officials for |into the office to demand in cerson |éeabe full police protection. prolonged bursts of applause from Sell Out by A. F, of L. ge eS n | Be tlk» ‘Tighe would expel them Tighe Defense Thaelmann’s freedom “Doesn’t Believe in Strike” | the enthusiastic audience. =» | in Brooklyn Strike |THE Winner: | Dr. Maximilian Cohen} © | baie eh enone cue anita ea ss The John Reed Club Writers} “Will you allow mass picketing?” estes sh boned oe ay Pia i) more hedging about | Dental S uv 5 a By BILL ANDREWS Group has arranged a “Free Thael-|I asked him. He at first was elu- Soins je regarding NEW YORK.—Snyder, Powers and | Picking the winner than is custom- nba urgeon oe Nt cA et sett (Spécial to the Daily Worker) mann” night for Sunday, June 24,|sive, on the grounds that he didn’t | Roosevelt's “New Deal” promises y and lead to a successful strike, for the very simple reason they oppose all strikes. They only lead strikes in order to break them. “The tasks before the steel work- CHICAGO, Tll., June 13.—Dele- gates from every major steel plant in South Chicago met last night in | @ regional conference to plan united action during the coming steel at its headquarters, 136 S. Eighth | St.. and a “Free Thaelmann” sym- posium for later in the month, Tere Boston Furniture Workers Protest know what mass picketing was, but when told what constitutes mass Picketing, he said: “I will face that when I come to it.” He said, however, “The streets and the rapid radicalization of large sections of the working class as a result of recent bitter strug- gles. Mike Tighe, Browder warned, Carlbush, heads of the A. F. of L. bakers’ union, conferred with E. J. Dugan and Chambers, owner and manager of Dugan’s Bakery, Brook- lyn, Tuesday, and decided to meet ary even in these days. . . agree with this hesitancy.’ Hugh Bradley—New York Post. . I quite “Your correspondent rises . . . to announce that he is going to 41 After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance Union Sq. W., N. Y. C. 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 17-0135 i 5 Friday in the NRA. offices at 45 strike. Workers from Republic, Il-|_ BOSTON, June 13.— Registered | wit) be kept clear.” : only wants the control of the strike if — e ers are very clear. There is only|jinojs, Wisconsin and Yoangntowa letters demanding the immediate| «yy ai limit the number of} here so as to head it off without sie tae taal ea a (Classified) OAthedral’ 8-6160 one way the demands of the strike | Steel mills reported an overwhelm-| release of Ernst Thaelmann have | pickets?” he was asked. victory, so as to fulfill his role. He be pre! ara D. LITTLEWIFE would like to heat Dr. D. BROWN can be won, and that is on the ing strike sentiment in the various |been sent to Chancellor Hitler and “{ will face that question when it added: “The Committee of Ten are bed from you. Relph, Box 30, Daily Worker. picket line and not belly-crawling in | shops, |German Ambassador Luther by the | = Washington. The N. R. A. company union agreement proposed in Wash-! ington can be defeated by a united | front of all steel workers, and by the carrying through of the strike decisions over the heads cf Tighe | and company. We are prepared to meet the Committee of Ten, elected at your convention, or any local union committee, at any time to form a united front between both | organizations, in order to weld the unity of the steel workers against | the enemies of the strike and to Mobilize all the workers for con-| certed strike action. | “Steel workers, members of the} Workers in the Krug, Ward’s and y ia | Bagle Lod A. in Repub- r Tt two workers, Ilchuk and Derkach, Cor. B Park &, = een Pres anes id the ie Bteel were in uproar against the Pe ee dont ee ‘ eerie © mins to 86 fines or ten days in jai, stat-| oth i rie Du ieee with Pare Foods Sona Prices DR. EMIL EICHEL a and Steel Institute. Reject the tactics of their leaders. Curtiss, a| Wehrenberg, four Hamburg sea-|don't do any good. ing: “I wish T had the power to| struggle of the Dugan workers splitting tactics of Tighe and Com- pany. Place your convention and local union on record for- united Strike action. Steel workers, Negro and white, American and foreign- born, brothers of the A. A., let noth- | ing stand in the way of unity.” ADVERTISEMENT THEATRE HEAD AT NITGEDAIGET Twenty-three workers of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, the Amalgamated Associa- tion, the United Roll Turners and unorganized groups in departments worked out plans for the immedi- ate holding of group meetings to instruct the workers on the tactics to follow Saturday when the strike is called. The conference was unan- imous in support ofthe program of joint action of ail unions pro- posed by the Steel and Metal Work- ers Industrial Union, Workers Boo A. A. Official While this meeting was going on, rank and file members of the Blue district official, attempted to put ;over a resolution sent out by the \office of the International that the |lodge would not ask for strike ben- \efits during the steel strike. The anger of the workers was ex- |pressed in shouted protests and |Curtiss and his henchmen were ora to delay action on the reso- | lution till a meeting called for Fri- day. | Leaders then tried to tell the rank \and file that the Committee of Ten | elected at the convention was “un- | constitutional’ and that the Pitts- | burgh convention of the Fourteenth General Executive Board of the Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union, at its meeting here. A letter | expressing solidarity with his heroic | | stand was also sent to Ernst Thael- }mann himself in Moabit Prison, | | Berlin, | ms . | World Protests COPENHAGEN, June 13.— The |International of Seamen and Har- | bor Workers has issued an appeal |for Ernst Thaelmann and the other imprisoned anti-fascists in Ger- many under the headline, “Sea- men’s Blood Flows in Germany.” Jonny Detmer, Hermann Fischer, men, were beheaded on May 19 for {revolutionary activity by the Nazi executioners. Four other seamen were given life terms at hard labor. Another 56 longshoremen and sea- men received a total of 300 years in prison. August Luetgens and nu- |merous others have been murdered by the Nazi legal murderers. The appeal continues: “After this bloody verdict in the ‘Red Marine trial,’ Hitler, Goering and Goebbels are preparing the death sentence for ;the longshoreman Ernst Thael- mann, the best of the anti-fascist comes,” he repeated. “I will allow no intimidation of strikebreakers,” he said. He de- clared he made no distinction be- tween union men and strikebreak- ers. “I don’t believe in strikes. The unions don’t do a bit of good. I don’t believe in them.” Spouts Vague Economic Theories The Mayor had stated “there are no great issues involved.” I there- fore took up with him seven de- mands of the steel workers, asking whether he didn’t think these were vital issues. “They don’t mean a thing,” he replied. “Wages are de- termined according to the laws of When asked what workers should do he replied they should embrace the single tax. “I am a follower of Henry George,” he said. During the interview Mayor McNair also char- terized himself as an individualist, @ pacifist and a Mennonite as well as a Democrat, His whole line is clearly to spout vague economic theories regarding single tax, etc., in order to prevent the workers from organizing. He uses the slogan “There will be two jobs for every man under the single tax.” The papers here are full of losing their way in a web of arbi- tration and conciliation.” He concluded with the reminder that the final answer in the steel strike rests not with Tighe or any of the other leaders, but with the steel workers themselves, and called for a broad rank and file control of all action. Refuses Permits for Meets What Mayor McNair means is seen in his refusal to grant permits to workers for meetings and pa- rades in recent days, and in his vicious attacks on workers’ organ- izations. Recently McNair himself acted as Magistrate and sentenced give you two years in jail.” Mc- Nair jailed these two workers for distributing the unity strike call of the Steel and Metal Workers’ In- dustrial Union. Before being booed down, McNair reiterated the statement about po- lice protection for strikebreakers. He kept declaring for peace and against violence, etc., while trying to provoke it last night. “When you are in trouble, you go to the police,” he said. Police Already On Duty “We go to the Unemployment The workers, 250 in all, have been striking for union recognition for | five weeks, The N.R.A. board had told them to return to work several weeks ago with union recognition, but the workers found themselves locked out when they returned. Snyder, president of the union, has been collecting dues of four dollars a month, giving a button in return. He refused to give any strike re- lief after he had promised ten dol- lars on the grounds that not every member has paid up his dues. Meanwhile he has collected hun- dreds of dollars from the workers and refused to give any accounting. interest, it is reported. A victory would mean a possible general strike in the industry. - Anti-War Conference At Brighton Beach BROOKLYN, N. Y.—An anti-war conference will be held at the N. & H. Restaurant, 411 Brighton Beach Ave., between E. 4th and E. 5th Sts., today, 8 p.m. All civic, social, religious and po- litical organizations have been in- vited to send two delegates each. | Tel, Dickens 2-5189 mT Lee Tennis Racket Co. Rackets restrung & repaired at reduced prices to D. W. readers 1594 Pitkin Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Dentist 517 LENOX AVENUE Bel tween 125th & 126th St., Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria | | 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St.| | EVERY BITE A DELIGHT | MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE ARE YOU COMING? Camp Unity OPENS THIS WEEK-EN ! Remember Lake Ellis? —(mile and a half long)— BOATING - SWIMMING |_—w ILLIAM BELL——_ OFFICIAL Ontometrist oF oe 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-827 150 Cor. Fours: 9 a, m, to 8 p.m. Sun, 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death DENTIST E. 93rd St. New York City . Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Benefit Fund BERMAE’S Cafeteria and Bar 809 BROADWAY Between 11th and 12th Streets fighters.” the violence being prepared by the th The ptirpose of the conference is to|@ Yep!, We're building a | would have to review previous con- | vEub aioe calls on the long- | Steel companies against the workers, eae ei one anyon Unite ‘all those who will struggle for r ENNIS COURT! MARINE WORKERS WELCOME 5 pisces .4:,_ vention decisions that didn’t fit the | shoremen and seamen of all coun-| including company guards, tear gas, scabs?” workers kept calling to him, | Pe2¢e- The conference is under the h Former “Daily” Writer Edits | by-laws. A furious worker shouted | tries to send delegations to visit |barbed wire, etc. I took up these|ir"hove nothing to do with that |2usPices of the Parent-Teacher-|@ Phil Bard is our The OLD ANCHOR Camp Paper out: “Who the hell gave Mike Tighe |Thaelmann in Berlin and the im-|Penly-known facts with him, one ened ee ’ |Student Anti-War and Fascism| SOCIAL DIRECTOR 5 f |authority to review our decisions,” prisoned seamen in Hamburg. It|@fter another. “If you are opposed « 2 Group of Coney Island and Brigh- (Haven't space to tell all Bar and Grill 5 Sali Bon. aaa ‘cite -cel 70 Walk Out in Disgust adds: “Let no ship sail for Ger-|to intimidation why didn’t you ne pied in hin oetibta ton Beach. about our plans!) the League of Workers Theatres and ‘nat! ah apres tk Goan. of the | many waepout peroMubonaty eres Te ctinmtleste Tasted. aoe represent you," he said. fe FUR FRACTION TO HOLD DANCE ND eo ree memmely, ot Opp. eakaibee eure Oe ier York director of the nares Collective, | reactionary Mike Tighe machine,| "Ue 0" Poard.” = = “T don’t believe a word of it,” Mc-| “You represent the steel trust,”|\ new YORK.—A concert and dance will ene ote Genie! this Summer” A group of borin "ante bagi ae oe°GR |, MADRID, ‘Jone 12. resnution|Nalr teplied. ty all alogne. | the workers rpled. Give ws ade-| sevbug ithe Bion water Sin | “(Clase in the ope) — Jenn OD asehe Wrert ack Leborstory [port him on the basis of his 58- demanding the “immediate freeing |On't believe there is any truth in| cent living, the workers Bay the auspices of the Communist Fraction|@ AN for $14 a Week! — WORKERS WELCOME — Theatra will form the core of the| oc.” Pet Bel Selah La ada Nelo of Ernst Thaelmann, the heroic|the reports that the steel compa-| “That's not my job,” he answered,! of the Fur Workers, on June 16th at & producing group, and campers will be drawn into agit-prop produc- tions that Bonn is experimenting with. To celebrate Communist Party | month, new revolutionary words set | to Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, are in preparation. During the month of June, all profits go to the Communist Party. Dan Davis, former city editor of the Daily Worker, is the sports di- rector and editor of the camp paper. This staff is preparing a series of daily. programs of a quality ers. Smith was hitherto very popu- |lar with the Lodge members. Last night, however, 70 of the 100 mem- bers present walked out of the meet- ing in disgust without even waiting for the election of a delegate to Pittsburgh. With only Smith’s per- sonal friends remaining, his election was practically assured. A com- pany union election in Youngstown | Sheet and Tube Plant, Indiana Har- bor, was met by a mass refusal to vote. Only 11 out of 400 in one department voted until superintend- ants and straw bosses came in and forced them to vote. leader of the German Bolsheviks,” was unanimously adopted at the First Congress of the Reyolutionary Trade Unions of Spain, represent- ing over 100,000 organized workers, meeting in Madrid. eR a ROTTERDAM, June 13.—The crews of four Greek ships, on strike in this Dutch harbor, voted a pro- plans to murder Ernst Thaelmann, eee e STENO VOLUNTEER NEEDED A volunteer steno-typist is needed test resolution against the Hitlerite | Pany nies are preparing.” Denies Presence of Co, Guards Regarding company guards, which have heen increased greatly in numbers, he said: “There isn’t a single company guard in Pitts- burgh.” This statement protecting the steel companies is in direct contra- diction to the obvious army of com- guards of Jones and Laugh- lin in Hazelwood and the South Side, where floodlights, bunk- houses, etc., have also been pre- pared. “TI will speak on company in- “IT have nothing to do with that.” While McNair acts the buffoon, the companies are preparing sup- pression, and city police are already patrolling Jones and Laughlin plants as well as company guards. Spring Festival Will Be Held Tomorrow By Harlem Sec., C. P. NEW YORK.—A Spring Festival and Roof Garden Party will be Dm, Ben Gold will speak. Membership admission 25c. DISTRICT 18 TO HOLD PICNIC SUNDAY MILWAUKEE, Wis.—A large turnout is expected at the Sixth Annual Interna- tional Workers Picnic to be held by Dis- trict 18 of the Communist Party Sunday, June 17 at Old Heidelberg Grove. An interesting program for this outing, which has always been one of the Summer fea- tures of the city, has been planned. BRONX PARENTS AND TEACHERS TO CONFER A conference to which all local organi- zations are invited to send delegates will be held by the Bronx Parents and Teach- Let’s Make It A Date! Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A.M. Also Friday at 7 P.M; Saturday at 3 P.M. NEW CHINA Tas CAFETERIA ty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway vet. 13th & 14th st. Baseball Season Opens at Camp NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK WILLIAM FUCHS, Sports Editor and Manager of the fore attained at Camp Nit- in the publicity department of|timidation when it is used,” Mc-| given tomorrow, 8 p.m., in the roof| ers Association tonight, 8 p.m, at the wolmeia Daily Worker Team, Throws the First Ball Deiee sag 2 Call Workers to Picket FREE THAELMANN CAMPAIGN, Nair vee one nr ee eee ae be tise oy te eevets Sta Baseball , PING PONG TOURNAMENT @ TREASURE HUNT * * x “But ere mn no ‘4 i re: “9 \e is f 5 . Frigidaire Co., 45thSt., Today Spenco Ar Gite Math ean’ bed Ue the: Ube Ge aeoIiSe Section of the Communist Party,| AMPRICAN YOUTH CLUB CHANGES ee Sr OME RUSE POT es ae NEW XORK. — To protest the| __________________| breakers yet, and you have spoken|The entire cast of “Stevedore” i8| ne American Youths’ lis baa’ waved Volley Hane 6 ela dale Ges Ces eemrce ‘ SANDWICH brutal beating of strikers by hired| Tuesday. The entire salesroom was| fully on that.” The Mayor merely | expected, as well as several. famous | its club room to 388 Stone Ave., Brooklyn. Horseshoe TOR b] thugs, striking workers of the| cleared out and thugs using brass| repeated he did not believe steel] Negro artists. eae HEAR Eee binder ee eee on Leg ipirinstal SOL N LUNCH Frigidaire Corporation, 39 W. 45th| knuckles beat up Lou Molinaoi. companies were preparing. “I think} The Harlem Section has gone for-| Keep informed of the world-wide Quilts Don West, ern, and Labor 4 ae ' St., will hold a mass demonstration| Workers of the Frigidaire Corp.| they'll just shut the mills down,” he} ward in great strides this year. It| struggles by the working class Hiking $14 a week, Cars leave from 2709 Bronx Park East daily at | 101 University Place in front of the plant today at fhoon.| are striking under the leadership of | said. now needs the support of New York | against unemployment, hunger, fas- Caen ii 10:30 A.M. Also Friday at 7 P.M.; Saturday at 3 P.M. (Just Around the Corner) All workers are called to join the| the Refrigerator Workers Union (A.| When asked if he thought em-| workers in order to intensify its|cism and war by reading the Daily SUNT, Phone EBStabrook 8-1400 Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-0781 mass picket line. A similar demonstration was made F. of L.) for increases in wages and union recognition, plovers would raise wages out of kindness of heart, he said: work in the liberation struggles of the Negro people, Worker. Buy it at the newsstands. Three cents a copy,