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h Pos eaee Page Two RED BUILDER TALES wHat's WRONG, COMRADE? 'M THI WHAT Workers, Men, Women, Boys, Girls! join the drive to double th AFL Leaders Discredited Tada March | In N. Y. Butchers’ Strike WN. Y. June 3d Food Union Carries on Fight Against Black- listing of Men By HARRY RICH For two weeks, the leadership of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butchers of North America has been placing several thousand strik- ing slaughter and packing house workers right into the hands of the Meat Packers. Two weeks ago Mr. Sheppard, In- ternational Vice President of the Amalgamated pressed by several hundred new recruits for action, and facing a serious decline in the membership of the union, declared @ general strike in the industry. Several days before the strike, every employer was presented with demands, never at any time dis- cussed with the workers, and which in most cases were exorbitant, con- sidering the organizational status of the union. There had been no strikes of any importance in the industry for more than fifteen years, wages and working conditions had gone down to the lowest possible point. | Without preparations, without even having meetings before-hand and preparing the organization ap- | paratus to carry on the strike with, | the strike was begun in Ft. Greene | Market in Brooklyn, a strategic dis- tributing point for the meat in- dustry Totally unprepared, but willing to. fight for improvement of their working conditions, the workers walked out in a body. Workers in other markets walked out on the following days. No Leadership From the first day of the strike, no leadership was given the work- ers. They were confused as to their | demands; there were no strike com- mittees set up. The officials of the union, without discussing with the strikers, proceeded to sign up a/ number of independent packers, permitting them to buy meat from} the Western Houses (“Big Four”) thereby breaking the back of the strike, by demoralizing the strikers. F, W. I. U. Offers Aid The Butchers Section of the Food Workers Industrial Union, imme- diately at the beginning of the Strike, threw in all of its available forces to help the strikers. It was only the aid of the members of the Industrial Union that succeeded in keeping up the morale of the strik-| ers. At the direction and guidance of the industrial union, the work- ers proceeded to set up their own strike committees. The officials of the A. F. of L. union, claimed to be in hiding under instructions from their international, since two organ- | izers had been shot at in Chicago {undoubtedly for racketering). Insistent demands on the part of the strikers to declare the inde- pendent houses on strike again met with no response on the part of Mr. Sheppard. The officials of the Amalgamated again and again re- fused to spread the strike. When| Questions were raised at the floor of meetings, the only response of | Sheppard was to break up the Meetings, and call for police pro- tection. When the anger of the workers reached a high pitch, police who had been prepared before-hand, entered the union hall with riot guns, to protect the leaders. The workers demanded that the entire apparatus of the union be turned over into the hands of their own committee. Press Plays Role The next day, the capitalist press carried press releases handed out by the officials to the effect that “five hundred Communists had marched on the union head- quarters and broke up their meeting.” The workers sensing the futility | of carrying on the strike under | these circumstances, with many of | the workers going back to their| jobs in disgust with the leadership, | Gecided to select their own nego- | tiating committees to call off the | strike. This was carried through. | Several workers were blacklisted. | With the help of the Food Workers | Industrial Union these workers are now carrying on a fight for rein- Statement. | As. this is being written many of the strikers are already back at their jobs with about one hundred still coming to the strike area. The police, realizing the weakness of the strike, are keeping the strikers several blocks from the strike head- quarters area. The N. R. A. offi- cials, realizing that the strike is waning, have adopted a hands off Policy. The A. F. of L. has been com- pletely discredited st the Strikers. The aid and participation of the Food Workers Industrial Union in the strike has left its im- Pression amongst the workers. Al- though the workers have been de- feated, they have placed the respon- sibility directly at the doorstep of the A. F. of L. Steps are being hurriedly taken to overcome the siemoralization | brought on by the Amalgamated deadership, The workers are realiz~ | ( a j ‘ LAMBLIA E HA REA MMH TRYING TO DECIDE ABOUT THIS SITUATION] | SOMETHING DAILY WORKER. Tom Makes the IM CLASS CONSCIOUS AND I'M DETER- MINED TO DO NKING/ I'M 1 CAN DO Worker? Will you “Daily Do you want to | e Circulation of the Daily EW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1934 Big Discovery SOPPOSE 1 SHOW YoU A WAY TO BECOME A REAL FIGHTER AGAINST CON- DITIONS AS THEY ARE AND AT THE SAME TIME accept a corner assignment to sell the | lars or call between 3 and 5 p.m. at the where you can earn expenses? Write for particu- | Office, 35 East 12th Street (in store). See Williams, G4 Daily. Worker City _| (Continued from Page 1) : *. |welcomed at Harvard today by Fraction Meeting on bold-type posters and stickers sug- June 21 of AN C.P. & gesting the various degrees that 2 Z ‘ | Harvard University should award YCL on Work Relief him. The suggestions were: “Give him a degree: Make him NEW YORK. — An important fraction meeting of all members Master of Torture.” “Make him Master of Steriliza- of the Communist Party and Young Communist League work- tion.” ing on relief jobs, attended by “Drive the Nazi Butcher Out!” The “degrees” were suggested by functionaries of the Unemploy- ment Councils and all New York | National Student League members | who covered the university with the Section Organizers will be held Thursday, June 21, at 8 p. m, |posters and stickers. at Room 207, 35 E, 12 St ' Hanfstaengl was closely guarded | by two detectives. He had a long conference with the president of the Party leaders and, represen- || college, Lawrence Lowell, and then tatives of the District will be || jef; for an estate of a friend. present. Preparations for the . . . } calling of a convention of dele- gates from all the relief projects for the purpose of a general strike on city work relief will be discussed. All Party and Y. C. L. members working on relief jobs must be present. |8 Chicago Pickets | | Reported Missing (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) | CHICAGO, IU, June 18.—Right | workers are missing this afternoon, three hours after they left to visit |the German Consulate to protest | against the threatened lynching of Ernst Thaelmann. | They left the office of the Chicago committee to Aid Victims of Ger- man Fascism at 11:30 this morn- | ing, intending to register their pro-/} | test in spite of the police brutality ( | against previous delegations. At; SeIeayeae ESE yee | three o'clock, they have not been| stitute proposals, and also Roose- | heard from, despite the fact that | velt’s new bill, is freely admitted | they were instructed to report back | here now. The Committee of Ten| immediate! | turned the convention toward ac-| Fenda | ceptance of these proposals, which | The International Labor Defense i 7 . |is making every effort to locate| stablist | | The Cae nace pany Unions, when | these workers, who are certainly be- ers toward strike. The result is a! !P& held in some police station. repitition of the auto sellout and| Hundreds of workers packed that the steel workers lose all their| Washington Square here Saturday economic demands, | to demand the freedom of Ernst Preparing Strikes Despite Betrayal (Continued | yo “Barbarous Beasts!” Witness States After Attack by Cops NEW YORK.—Without warning, cops armed with riot guns, de- scended on a meeting of the Unemployment Councils at Union Sq. Saturday night, broke up a peaceful meeting and dispersed and clubbed the assembled workers at the point of guns. : The following letter was received by the Daily Worker from a woman who witnessed the brutal beating of Clarence Roth, organizer of the 13th St. Block Assembly, and the attacks upon other workers. * . * TO THE EDITOR OF THE DAILY WORKER: I have just been a witness of one of the most despicable and out- rageous atrocities possible. Tonight I saw a man unmercifully beaten by some of New York's “supposed finest.” The clothes were torn off his back and blood was pouring from a deep gash in his head. The reason for this unwarranted cruelty was the fact that this man was within his constitutional rights of free speech, I can see no reason why the “safeguarders of the Law” should descend upon an open meeting at which one of our citizens is expressing his opinion, fully armed with riot guns. Several police cars poured forth police- men who rushed upon the people listening and dispersed them and then tore the speaker down from the stand. A sympathetic bystander then took the stand. Both men were brutally beaten. T have never quite believed the stories printed in the liberal press concerning such occurrences, but I have now witnessed one myself and I shall never forget it. I have seen how the public servants are now becoming masters and are giving way to every degenerate, cruel and rotten, brutal and bullying instinct in them. I cannot consider men who execute such orders (probably from higher-ups) human beings, but barbarous beasts and I cannot but consider this atrocity, this open arming against the people of New York, as anything but @ definite trend towards Fascism. TI ask all readers of this letter to vigorously protest the degenera- ion of our police force into a bunch of thugs and murderers, For not. only did ‘they beat these two men up in Union Sq., but they also in- vaded the adjacent park and forced the people who were peacefully reading their newspapers, af the point of a gun to vacate the park and the immediate vicinity, Sincerely, JOBEPHINE POTTER. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, in its leading editorial, said today, in part: “Comparing the plan of set- tlement proposed by General John- son, N. R. A. Administrator [and by the Iron and Steel Instutute——C.R.1, with the resolution adopted by Con- | Thaelmann and all other class war| prisoners in the dungeons of Hitler's | Germany, | Speakers from the Chicago Com-| mittee to Aid Victims of German Fascism, the International Labor | Defense, the Communist Party, and| gress Saturday, and ihe Green pro-| Other organizations were cheered by gram accepted by the Amalgamated | the militant crowd when they called Convention, it will be noted that all|70r continued struggles to defeat agree on the basic principle of ene murder schemes of the German | | special board to be set up by Presi-| Fascist courts, | dent Roosevelt to supervise the con-! | duct of elections and to hear and| Workers of Worcester pass upon complaints. There are Win Right to Streets | differences as to the scope of its | powers and jurisdiction, but basic-| WORCESTER, Mass., June 18— CSS 4 | Ship since the betrayal of the Com- |ing a gigantic mass meeting, Friday ally the procedure followed some weks ago in the threatened auto- mobile strike seems to have been accepted as the most effective | means which the government can employ to head off industrial strife.” Militant Union Issues Convention Call The Steel and Metal Workers’ In- | dustrial Union issued today its con- vention call in thousands of copies, | calling the Second National Con- vention to convene in Pittsburgh on August 3, 1934, Independent unions are invited to send fraternal dele- gates. | In Youngstown the sentiment of | the workers in decisive mills of the | section, including the Republic Mills | and the Sheet and Tube Mills, was} ; for strike. Workers told me they would have struck had the order come and others said they would not pass a picket line of three or four. They are still talking strike, but feel that they have no leader- mittee of Ten and the splitting tac- tics of the A. A. officials who re- jected the unity proposals of the Steel and Metal Workers’ Indus- trial Union. Speakers at the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union picnic yesterday at Youngstown included Dallet, Reeve, and steel workers from New Castle, etc., and a Salem, Ohio, Sanitary Co. striker. The crowd of several hundred included approximately 100 Negro workers. Hold Harlem Women’s Anti-War Meet Friday NEW YORK.—The Harlem Wo- men’s Anti-War Committee is hold- evening, June 22, at 8 o'clock at the Julio Mella Club, 1413 Fifth Ave, near 116th St. Speakers at this meeting will be Joseph Brodsky, I. L. D. defense attorney for the Scottsboro boys, Williana J. Bur- roughs, chairman of the Women’s Anti-War Committee, Tillie Lit- tinsky of the Women’s Peace League, and others. At this meeting, the coming Inter- national Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism to be held in Paris will be discussed and dele- gates for the coming citywide anti- war conference will be chosen. ing that in order to put up a real fight and gain conditions that they have to organize into a real union. a union that they will control and that will fight in their own in- terests. The Food Workers Indus- trial Union together with the former jthe immediate release of Thael- | physicist, and Professors Perrin and Six hundred workers attended a meeting held at Kelley Square Thursday, demanding the release of Ernst Thaelmann. The meeting was called by the Youth Committee of the American League Against War and Fascism, This climaxes a long fight of the workers of Worcester for the fight to hold meetings on the streets, The meeting was opened by Chairman Sydney Wilson, young militant student member of the Youth Committee. The speakers were Benjamin Silver, also of the Committee; Abe Tomkin, organizer of the Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union, who dealt at length with the present strike situation in the steel industry and its relation to the fight against war and fas- m. Steel workers were prominent the crowd. A cablegram to Hitler demanding ii mann, Torgler and all anti-fascist in prisons was voted and sent to Germany, PARIS, June 18—Over 1,500 of the most celebrated intellectuals of France have signed a protest peti- tion in which they declare “that sentencing Ernst Thaelmann rep- resents an attack upon the most elementary principles of justice.” The signers of this protest include Henri Barbusse, Andre Gide, Andre Malraux and Ramon Fernandez, noted authors, Prof. Levy-Bruhl, one of the world’s greatest ethnol-! ogists, Prof. Langevin, world-famous Prenant, noted Sorbonne scientists. The Town Councils of Oyonnax and Apriche have passed resolutions for Ernst Thaelmann, sending them to the German Embassy here. The national convention of the Union of Taxation Employees, with 10,000 members, unanimously passed a resolution demanding Thael- mann's immediate release and con- tributed 3,000 francs to the Inter- national Anti-Fascist Committee. The national convention of the reformist Postal Workers Union voted a demand for the release of Ernst Thaelmann and of all other imprisoned anti-fascists. Cee ZURICH, June 18—The National Executive of the Swiss Social Party has refused to join with the Communist Party of Switzerland in common action for the release of Ernst Thaelmann. strikers are circulating a statement to the workers calling upon them to drive the leaders of the A. F, of L. out of the industry, to refuse to pay dues to the Amalgamated, and to build the Industrial Union and list | necessary to take a strike vote.” Prepare for a real fight, Speed Bill To Block Railroad Strikes (Continued from Page 1) Frazier bill to relieve mortgaged farmers, stood in the way of ad- journment. The housing bill, put forward as a slum-clearance boon, actually would tend to perpetuate them, by aiding renovation. The relief it proposes would go not to slum dwellers but to real estate mortgage holders. The farm bill would not even gesture toward the thousands of most bitterly suffering farm class— the tenant farmers and share crop- | pers but, because it would offer aj possible scaling-down by courts of valuations of mortgaged farms, it is bitterly opposed by a powerful Senate bloc. The Dill-Crosser proposal would create a National Board of Adjust- ment and a Mediation Board, which could in turn set up Regional Boards, to settle disputes. In ad- dition to providing that either party might seek arbitration, the bill de- clares: “The Mediation Board may offer its services in case any labor emergency is found by it to exist at any time,” and may try “to in- duce the parties to submit their controversy to arbitration.” Giving lip-service to the right to organize and bargain collectively just as the thoroughly discredited Section 7-A of the N.R.A. did, the bill says employes “shall have the right to organize and bargain col- lectively through representatives of their own choosing,” and that the majority shall have the right to de~ termine who shall represent the craft or class. The barrenness of this has been demonstrated not only in Section 7-A, however, but in the complete meaninglessness of similar provisions which were written into the Railway Act under which com- pany unions flourish. Ralway Owners Dislike Bill Just as the Wagner anti-strike labor disputes bill was opposed by certain reactionaries who, as was explained publicly, didn’t realize how serious the strike struggles would become, the Dill-Crosser bill is opposed by certain railway own- ers. Senator Hastings, Delaware Re- publican, explained this opposition on the floor today, saying he didn’t think there was any “emergency” demanding the bill. He asked, “What is the evidence of strike threats?” “In the past two days,” replied Senator Dill, “Railway Brotherhood officials have told me that there are so many pressing disputes, that if this bill is not passed it will be Which is one way of saying that the Brotherhood officials, pressed by the rank and file for strike action, are seeking this measure to avoid it. How directly Hastings spoke at the command of the most reaction- ary of all the railroad owners was disclosed when Senator Couzens of Michigan, pleading for the bill, showed that a minority report. drawn by Hastings contained almost the exact words in which the Penn- Injunction Granted Against Hat Strike NEW YORK, June 18. The Omaha Hat Shop, the workers of which have been out on strike since June, obtained an injunction today from Judge Walsh of the Supreme Court restraining the workers from picketing. This was revealed at a meeting of Local 8 of the United Hatters Union, (A. F. L.). It was further reported, that the strikers had not obtained strike re- lief from the national office, relief Stevedores Reject Ryan's Sell-Out (Continued ‘om Page 1) ship on the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union. Ryan had to beg for three minutes to explain his position. One after another rank and file longshoremen denounced Ryan's secret negotiations with the ship- owners and his refusal to tell the strike leaders of the results, al- though the newspapers had carried reports of Ryan’s dickerings two days before. Forge United Front The strikers unanimously de- cided that a joint united front strike committee, five from each union, the I, L. A., Marine Work- ers Industrial Union and the In- | ternational Seamen’s Union, he set up to lead the strike, This committee is empowered to elect a joint negotiations committee. A thousand samen of the I. 8. U. strike, following an address by Caves of the strike committee. The seamen’s meeting ended with three cheers for the united front. Sam Telford, local secretary of the Marine Workers Industrial Union, was received with thunder- ous applause. Mass Picketing The largest picket line since the | beginning of the strike patrolled |the waterfront this morning. What moves the shipowners will make have not yet been announced. It has been hinted that Ryan's signa- ture on the agreement remains valid |in the eyes of the city officials and | that this will be used as a basis for |a reign of police terror against the | strikers. Preparations are afoot for a huge mass rally of strikers tomorrow night in the Civie Auditorium, Mier ioe I.W.W. Heads Lead Hoodlums in Attack On M. W. I. U. | (Special to the Daily Worker) HOUSTON, Texas, June 18.—A band of men headed by leaders of the I.W.W. raided the Hall of the Marine Workers Industrial Union yesterday, beating to unconscious- ness with blackjacks and brass knekles J. Nelson, secretary of the union, and another seaman who was in the hall with Nelson. The attack is a follow-up on a campaign of vicious lies and slan- endorsed the plan to continue the} * ~~ WILLIAM FUCHS — “Putzy” No. 1 and 2 HE visit of “Putzy” Hanfstaengel to Harvard, to elevate his class reunion, is coincident. with an appeal sent out | by the City College Football Advisory Committee for funds ; to pay the salary of “Putzy” Friedman, who has been hired | to coach the City College football team. It is an appeal which, like® the visit of the first “Putzy” | ing about such unprincipled and un- “ |traditional things as anti-war touches the sentiment. Being| parades and anti-fascist demon- a natural lover of the aristo- | strations. This is a thing, naturally, % which hurts the “Putzys.” eracy, but having a keen sym-| Mr. “Putzy” Friedman, accord- | pathy for the poor, it gratifies me|ingly, has been hired at a salary to know that while Hitler's “Putay”| of $10,000 to arouse so much en- will be enlightening the Harvard|thusiasm for football among the democracy about the tasks of a| students of City College that they “Putzy” in Hitler’s bosom, “Putzy”| will forget all about anti-war par- No. 2 will be educating the students] ades and anti-fascist demonstra- | of City College out of their radical-| tions. _““(Putzy’s)_ reputation and | ism. | personality,” the document reads, The “Putzys” in this world have} “should win the support of alumni, a duty to perform. | students, players and the public.” | Adolph’s “Putzy” plays pianissimo! Curiously enough, these are almost | for him an¢ lifts him into the|the exact words that the Harvard seventh heavyn and the “Putzy” of| Crimson, the other defender of prin- the City Ccflege Advisory Football| ciples and traditions, writes about Committee will play patriotism and|“Putzy” No. 1. The “Putzys” and rah-rah for Umbrella Fred, presi-| the alumni of City College and Har- ;dent of City College, presumably|vard are well met. lifting Umbrella into the seventh} ee heaven, also. | It is a coincidence again that the alumni of both colleges should invite the respective “Putzys.” In- deed, they have given almost the same reasons, for inviting the respective “Putzys.” When it was announced that “Putzy” “anf- staengl was being lured back to the Harvard grounds, certain radi- cal elements raised a hue and ery; but the noble sons of fair Harvard rallied to the flag, They laid the Constitution on the table, drew out the old Harvard rule book, opened up their shirts, put!” their hands on their hearts and avowed that the principles of Har- vard’s foundation and its traditions made it essential that “Putzy” be treated like the true son of Harvard! that he is. The Harvard Crimson, ! the newspaper of the enlightened, | even swore that “Putzy” should be) given an honorary degree, as fair} Harvard has been bestowing on| 'EN THOUSAND DOLLARS are being raised for “Putzy” the coach; but when one of those who thinks about the “unsurpassed academic standing” applied to the Student Aid of Umbrella Fred’s institution for a small sum to be used for carfare and lunches, in order that he might continue to add to the “unsurpassed academic standing” he was given a copy of Umbrella’s address to the graduat- ing class last year, in which Um- brella averred that there were too many enrollments in the colleges these days, AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game Chicago 000 000 030-3 7 6 Philadelphia 000 101 000—2 6 4 Earnshaw and Madjeski; Cain, Dietrich and Berry, Hayes. First Game af. i i St, Louis 000 001 022-5 5 1 other distinguished men. | Boston 000 400 20x-—-6 10 0 = es = | Hadley. Knott and Hemsley; Welch, Ostermueller and R. Ferrell. Detroit 000 202 002-6 11 3 New York 013.010 000—5 9 0 Marberry, Hogsett and Hayworth, Coch- rane; aVn Atta, Grimes nad Dickey. Cleveland at Washington — Postponed, rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Pittsburgh—-Postponed, rain, Brooklyn at Cincinnati—Postponed, rain, 'HE City College Advisory Foot- ball Committee “Putzy,” has in- spired the same lyrics as Harvard's “Putzy.” “We are proud of many! things at the City College,” runs} the appeal to the pocket: “... the principles of its foundation, its splendid traditions and its unsur- passed academic standing... Re-| INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE grettably, however, we have not) Rochester 100 011 010 4 10 8 | produced a good tootball team.” Newa 100 203 O6x—12 11 3 The captious, of course, will ask Senet ates and Florence; Newkrk, what a good football team has to 2g | do with principles of foundation, |-———-———— — ap | splendid traditions and unsurpassed academic standing. But if we ex- der spread by leaders of the I.W.W. against the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union, which a few days ago led a strike on the S. 8. Mayan, which the LW.W. leaders refused to support. Many seamen ‘have turned against the I.W.W. here because they stand exposed as disrupters of the unity of the seamen. The I.W.W. leaders have shown themselves as agents of the ship- owners, mobilizing degenerate hoodlums to break up attempts of the seamen to unite on a common basis of struggle against the ship- owners. due them after two weeks of strik- ing. A delegation of strike committee members was turned down by the A. F. L. bureaucrats. A special meeting will be held by Local 8 on Wednesday at one o'clock at Beethoven Hall, 5th St. and 3rd Ave., to plan further action. FILM PHOTO MEETING Open membership meeting of Film and Photo League, 12 East 17th St., Wednesday, June 20th, 8:30 p. m. To make plans re free Ernst Thael- mann campaign. Harry Austin of the International Labor Defense will speak. All members present. Visitors invited. . Men Walk Off Dollar Liner NEW YORK. — Thirty-five sea- men walked off the President Pierce, a Dollar liner, here Satur- day, in protest against miserable conditions and low wages. Yes- terday A. Bell, organizer for the Marine Workers Industrial Union, went aboard the ship to speak about, drawing up demands for a strike. He was seized by five detectives, who took him to the company of- fices where they grilled him for over an hour. Urge Detroit Units Mobilize for Auto Men’s Meet June 30 DETROIT, Mich., June 18. — All meetings of units this week are instructed by district com- mittee to prepare full attendance of unit and take up following order of business: (1) Three months’ district plan of work. (2) The carrying out of de- cisions of Bighth National Con- vention concerning trade union work, (3) Tasks of Party unit in building of auto workers’ confer- ence, June 30. All unit meetings should be or- ganized in such way as to trans- act all other business in thirty minutes after which a speaker from the district committee will LEFT WING OF LOCAL 25 TO HOLD MEETING NEW YORK.—A meeting of all Left Wing members and sympathizers of Local 25, LL.G.W.U., blouse and waist makers, will be held Tuesday, June 19th sy 140 W. 36th St., in Room 105, after work. The Daily Worker gives you the truth about conditions in the Soviet Union, the truth about workingclass strikes in the United States and abroad. plain patiently the reason — an- nounced two months ago—by the Advisory Football Committee for the hiring of “Putzy” No. 2, the captious will surely understand. “Putay” No. 2 was hired because it has been decided in City College that the radicals are gaining too much influence. Instead of think- ing of principles of foundation and splendid traditions the boys in City College have been thinking and act- ALL SPORTS! FUN! @ au, NITGEDAIGET Beacon, New York Coming on our moonlight Hike? See the Theatre Bri- gade! Join the Ping-Pong ‘Tournament! Play Tennis? Baseball? SURPRISE PROGRAMS arranged by Dan Davis, Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 a.m, Also Friday T p.m, and Saturday 3 p.m. EStabrook &-1400 ne at 7 P. M, and Saturday at APE perc BUILT TENNIS COURT ‘sé BELEIVE ITORNGT,A WORKERS SCHOOL IN CAMP ‘AMS THE PLACE WHERE You DANCE HOW TO GET THERE? THAT’S EASY! Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A. M. Also Friday Phone; ALGONQUIN 4-1148 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C. After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 708—GR. 71-0135, DR. EMI EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St.. New York Ci Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-86: Hours: 8 a. m, to 8 p.m. Sun, 9 to 1 Member Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund —WILLIAM BELL—_——, OFFICIAL Optometrist OF THE 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. ¥. ©. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8237 TWO WORKERS IN A ROW BOAT 3.P. M. Rates: $14 a week. get floor on the above order of business, The floor should be thrown open for discussion. All units are to make decisions on carrying out tasks in connec- tion with June 30 conference. (Signed) William Weinstone, Sec’y, Michigan Dist. Committee. WELCOME Our Workers’ Delegation HEAR REPORT of Conditions in the Soviet Union By the following Delegates Orvid Olsen Brooklyn Navy Yard Worker Millie del Vecchio bill in a propaganda letter. Both Hastings and the Pennsylvania said the bill would “foment strikes in the railroad world where peace has reigned for eight years.” What they meant was that the railroads now have what amounts to compulsory arbitration under the Railway Labor Act, and are bitterly opposed to any re-statement of lip-service to in- dependent unionism because they know that the creation of such il- lusions has led unexpectedly under the N. I. R. A. to a fight by labor Paterson Textile Worker Bob Miner Baltimore Marine Worker MASS MEETING at Irving Plaza Irving Place & 15th St. Wednesday, June 20, 1934 Admission 15 cents Auspicss Friends of the Soviet Unior sylvania Railroad has opposed the to make them real, 4 SATURDAY A Special Program 1, Baloon Ball 2. Artef vacations, Vacation rates for and LWW.0, Schools—2 weeks Office: 108 E. 14th St. Grand Opening of Camp Kinderland for the Opening Week-End 3, Pierre Degeyter Orchestra 4, Camp fire and many other cultural and sport activities CARS LEAVE DAILY FROM 2700 BRONX PARK EAST Camp Kinderland is the only workers’ camp for children's $105.00—For others: afditional $2 per week, Phone TOmpkins Sa, 6-8434, Register ronr child now! , JUNE 23rd Has Been Arranged children: for members of I.W.0. 815:00; 5 weeks $52.50; 10 weeks