Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Two FV IMLY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEUNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1934 Delegates from All Points Arrive for YCL Convention) ; by det To Open With Plan to Fire| 15,000 from NY Relief Lists Mass Meet on June 25 to Outline Action On Relief Jobs | Th the fight against the La- Guardia wage cuts on relief jobs, | a city-wide mass meeting of all | members of the Relief Workers | League, and workers employed on relief jobs who are members of | sympathetic mass organizations, | as well as relief workers who are members of trade unions, will be held on Monday, June 25, at § p.'m., at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. The Executive Committee of the Relief Workers League instructs all locals to mo- Bilize their entire membership for this meeting. | NEW YORK.—Approximately 15,- | 00 “work relief” employees will be} fitéd, and the remaining 110,000 re-| lief workers “will be classified for | absorption into private industry,” | with no security of the status of their, present jobs, Commissioner of | Welfare William Hodson announced yesterday As part of this program of firing | relief workers, ali relief projects will be re-examined and those “lacking in usefulness” will be} éliminated as the second step in the | mass fil of the thousands now Qn. Wo ief. In. addi to this whole: elimination of unemployed worke from the ciiy “works division,” Ho son further stated that the entire payroll of the Works Division of the Department of Public Welfare will be “re-viewed” for the purpose of; eliminating all who are not in “ac tual need,” and if “in actual need, whethér they are able and tilling to work.” Admits Relief Needs While outlining this program of | «starvation, Hodson was foreed to | admit that “it is unfortunately | true” that industrial recovery has not- reduced the relief rolls and | “that an ever increasing number of jobless are daily applying for re- lief. For these who remain on work | relief, no hope is held out for their} continued employmenton the work relief rolls, stating: “Many regard work relief by the city as a per- manent form of employment which makes it unnecessary for them to search for regular jobs,” adding that all the workers would be classified as-to occupation and placed on the waiting list of the State Re-Em-| ployment Service. (This service has now close to 200,000 workers regis- tered on its waiting list) ' Fo determine a city-wide action te force the return of the time ent on relief work, for a $5 day and 4- day week for unskilled workers, andunion rates with restoration of all time cuts, all relief workers in call city mass organizations will .hold a mass meeting at Irving Plaza, Monday, June 25, at 8 p.m. 2,000 Workers Hit | N.Y. Police Terror | ~NEW YORK. — More than 2,000 workers, mobilized overnight, massed | at-Union Square Monday night in answer to the police attack on the meeting of the Downtown Unem- | ployment Council on Saturday, when Police armed with riot guns and| rifles clubbed. workers and broke up| a fhéeting. | -Promptly, at 8 P. M., a speaker's stand was placed in the square. Immediately, 1,500 workers sur- rounded the stand. Forty cops, who | Were mobilized to smash the meet- | ing. were taken unaware and did | not dare to attack the meeting. Speakers at the meeting included Richard Sullivan, Ben Lapidus, Henry Forbes, Clarence Roth of the Unemployment Council, John Mack | of the I. L. D., and John Carroway of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s | League. A collection of $53 was made to continue the work of the Councils and to arrange a city-wide mass protest meeting against police terror. Neighborhood Protest Meetings Mass open-air rallies will be held jn’ Brownsville and East New York on* Thursday, June 21, at 8 P. M., ft Hopkinson and Pitkin Sts., and &t Hinsdale and Sutter Sts., to pro- test_the clubbing and arrest of Workers at the Home Relief Bu- Teau. Julius Broader and J. Press Were arrested at the Home Relief Bureau. As elected delegates they avere members of a workers’ delega- tion which protested police brutal- ity at Police Commissioner O’Ryan’s Office. On their return, Press was | wisited by two cops who demanded | that he appear before the precinct police captain. At the police sta- tion he was told by the cops that the | Jast time they used clubs on him— ihe next time they would send him to the hospital or put him “out of the way.” * On Wednesday, June 20. at & P. M., 2 mass meeting will be held at Columbus Circle, and on the follow- ing night a mass meetin¢ will be held at 58rd St. and Eighth Ave. ‘Bast side workers will mass at Rutgers Square on Tuésday, June 26, at 7:30 P. M., and march to the Neighborhood Playhouse at 466 Grand St., where an open hearing ‘and public trial of the police will be held. Inspector James E. Wall, who was in charge of the police detach- mént which brutally clubbed work- ers at the May 26 demonstration, and the aldermen and assemblymen front the district have been invited to attend to defend the terror poli- | steél workers and their elected rép | along” with the de cies of the La Guardia administra- tion before a court of workers, Williamsburg workers, under a joint. démonstration called by the Councils and the W.E.S.L., Post 204, avill mass at the Home Relief Bu- Teau.at So, 4th St. and Havemeyer Unify Forces of All Steel Workers For Aggressive Unionism! Page 1) (Continued from unions, into wl the steel companies had to force some 85 per cent of their employees, code ag! Roosevelt and the N.R.A. again came to the aid iron and steel. General Johnson attacked the entatives in a manner that Hitler i The Roosevelt adr tration helped the steel barons conspire for a committee of 3 as proposed by thé Iron and Steel Insti- tute. The stecl bosses proposed te! which included the provision that company unions should be the only organizations recognized as representing steel workers. . teel bosses, General Johnson and the Roosevelt administra- tion could point to these fascist company unions as having the sup- port of the steel workers in the same way as Hitler can point to the support of workers for the “unions” he and his storm trooners have set up, in the interests of monopoly capital. The “support” of these unions by workers is support under the muzzles of guns in the hands of hired thugs—support at the point of bayonets—support utider the threat of being fired and blackl: Roosevelt and Tighe “Opposition” Agree The proposals of the steel barons, the proposals of the Roosevelt government, the proposals of Green arid Tighe, accepted by the Com- mittee of Ten, were in essence the same. Mike Tighe, head of the A.A., has betrayed every strike and strug- gle of the steel workers since 1919. He was against the strike from the very beginning. He was ready from the very beginning to ac- cept the terms of the steel bosses. When he said that he “would go ons of the rank and file delegates, it was only for the purpose of keeping contact with the workers for the final betrayal. Mike Tighe later came out openly for the program of sur- render. How did President Green “help” the steel workers? He remained silent during the whole time since the April Convention, except when he came out with a statement in the press agreeing to company unions “if the workers wanted them.” Green by his silence and by this statement, helped the bosses. But this does not close the record of the “help” of Green who voted for the Roosevelt, open shop steel code! These same leaders voted for the Automobile Code with its infa- mous “merit” clause legalizing the open shop and company unions. Green helped actively to put over the auto “settlement.” These same A. F. of L. leaders are serving on all the strike-strangling N. R. A. code boards. If Green and his fellow officials really intended to strengthen unionism in the steel industry, they would have been out in the field speaking, organizing, and training leadefs from the rank and file. If they really wanted to help the steél workers they would have been preparing them for the fight against the most powerful trust in the United States. lf they really wanted to help the steel workers and not the steel barons, they would have calied upon the railway workers to support the strike of the steel workers, to haul no iron, coal or limestone. They would have called on the coal miners to support the steel workers—to dig no coal for the steel company. The A. F. of L, leaders are not organizing the workers to fight for better conditions, These leaders are the servants of the bosses. The only things they organize are defeats for the steel workers and other sections of the working class. Large numbers of steel workers had no faith in Mike Tighe’s lead- ership, They did not expect Green and Tighe to be on their side. There is a growing suspicion that Roosevelt is against the steel work- ers. But there was a belief in the good faith of the Committee of Ten elected by the regular convention to watch Tighe and prevent his play- ing with the steel bosses, because the membrs of the Committee of Ten claimed to be opposed to Mike Tighe and his policy of surrender. Maneuvers of Committee of Ten What did this committee do? First, they themselves played directly into the hands of the steel barons by limiting the demands only to union recognition. Secondly, they joinéd with Mike Tighe and refused to unite with the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union for action. They joined Tighe and the steel barons in slandering the Communists. Third, they wasted valuable time in Washington running from one government official to another, instead of being in the field organizing for the strike. Fourth, they outdid even Green and Tighe in an effort to make steel workers believe that President Roosevelt would help them. The Committee of Ten climaxed their disgraceful surrender by swallowing, hook, line and sinker, the surrender policy of Green. They committed political suitide—then they voted in the convention for their own burial in unmarked graves, in the Potters Field of the class struggle. Why do the steel bosses attack the Communist Party? Why is the government always arresting and imprisoning Communists? Why do the high-salaried A. F. of L. officials follow the example of the lords of iron, steel and coal and their government in attacking the Com- munist Party? Who are these Communists? What was the position of the Communist Party in regard to united action to force through the steel workers’ demands? The Communist Party gave every possible kind of support for the organization of the steel workers and the preparations of the strike for their demands. Every member of the Communist Party, whether a member of the A. A. (there are many Communists who belong to the A. A.) or the 8S. M. W. I. U., was working actively in the organiza- tion of the steel workers. The Communist Party did everything pos- sible to unite the steel workers, to strengthen their position in the decisive fight against company unions, for recognition of genuine work- ers’ unions. The reason is plain why the bosses and their hangers on attack the Communist Party. It is because the Communist Party wages con- tinual struggle in the intereSts of the workers. The Communist Party denies that the interests of the steel workers and the steel barons are the same. Certainly workers know that the interests of the multi- millionaires—Mellon, Taylor, Weir, Grace, etc., are not the same as those of steel workers living and toiling just a jump ahead of hunger if employed and at the hunger levél when jobless, Look At the Record What is the position of the people like Green and Tighe. who at- tack the Communist Party and at the same time claim that the inter- ests of the steel workers and steel barons are the same? Look at the record of these gentry in textile, steel, coal, auto, ete, Look at their long record of sell-out and surrender of the interests of the workers, and then you will see why they attack the Communists, who expose them and try to free the labor movement from their destructive influ- ence and splitting tactics. These ten and twenty thousand dollar a year “labor leaders” are against the interests of the workers, because they are in favor of the capitalist system. They are agents of the bosses who benefit from this robber system. The class enemies of workers claim that Communists are not in favor of better conditions for the workers. They say that if workers got better wages and conditions they will not want to overthrow capital- ism. This is false. Communists work and fight to wring the greatest possible improvement in wages and working conditions NOW. The Communists know that in thé struggle for and the winning of better wages and conditions the labor movement and the whole working class trains itself for the struggle to end the capitalist system that is based on the robhery of workers. Class enemies of workers “indict” Communists for believing in and working for the ovérthrow of capitalism and its robbery and oppres- sion of workérs, Communists proudly plead guilty to this indictment, Those who wish to save the capitalist society, like the high- salaried officials of the A. F. of L., and its permanent mass unem- ployment and criminally low wages for workers, are opposed to higher Wages and unemployment insurance paid for by the employers and the government, because these measures will cut into the profits of the capitalists and in this way “delay recovery.” It is clear that these people mean recovery of profits which are made only out of workers. It is for this reason that the A. F. of L. officials are trying to stop by every means the fight for higher wages and better working conditions. The Communists say that if higher wages for workers will wreck the capitalist robber system, then workers must fight all the harder to improve wages and working conditions, If victorious struggle for higher wages destroys capitalism, it simply proves again that the capitalist system is based on the robbery of the working class and is against their interests. Communists are fighting for a better world, for the steel workers and the rest of the working class right new—and in the future—a The position of company been allowed by NRA by Then President of the lords of coal, would envy Ag sespauand dune 27, at 10:30 world which exists not only in dreams, but a world which exists today in one-sixth of the whole world—the Soviet Union, The kind of a GUTTERS OF NEW YORK PosT . GRADUATE The education of a young worker. world Communists fight for today and everyday, is a world where there will be no unemployment, for a world where workers own all, for a world where the rule of the workers prepares the way for the classless society of Communism. Thére is no other way for workers out of the crisis and mass misery created by capitalism than the Communist way —the revolutionary way. The only other choice is surrender, submis- sion and shameful slavery. Communists are the most sensible, the best and most reliable fighters for the immediate bettering of wages and working conditions, for the buildine of unions—the basic defen- sive and offensive combatting batallions of the working class—powerful enough to force through recognition and put their demands into force. The steel trust, Roosevelt administration has used and is using Green and Tighe to discredit not only the A. A. among the steel work- ers in favor of company unions, but to discredit the very idea of unions controlled by workers themselves. Many steel workers still think that President Roosevelt and his New Deal are working in their interests. Many steel workers realize that Green, Tighe and General Johnson are not on their side. Roose- velt still keeps some prestige. He has been able by clever politics to keep the pretense of friendship for workers. What interests does Roosevelt represent? Whose Government is this? If we ask the steel workers of Aliquipa who rules that fortified steel town, they would say that it was the J. & L. steel company. The workers of Homestead know that Carnegie Steel, a child of U. S. steel, runs the town, They know that Burgess Cavanaugh is the servant of Carnegie Steel. \ Communists know and say that the Roosevelt Government is the government of the steel corporations, the auto companies, the big bankers and trusts. It is the government of the very biggest and most powerful! capitalists, Some workers say that this was true of Hoover, but not of Roose- velt. But there has not been any change in the Government in the U. S. It remains as it was under Hoover—a government run by an executive committee by the capitalists. Congress is composed of the representatives of the capitalist class parties as it was under Hoover. The very biggest capitalist concerns have been helped by Roosevelt and N. R. A. financially (R. F. C. loans), morally and in the strength- ening of company unions far more skillfully and on a wider scale than even Hoover dared to attempt. N. R. A. Brought Further Slavery What does the New Deal mean for workers? What has Sesction 7A meant for workers? N. R. A. has brought hundreds of millions of dollars in more profits to monopoly capital than it was ever able to get under Hoover. Clause 7A has meant the most rapid growth of company unionism ever Seen in the United States or any other country, for that matter, It has meant armed attacks on, and the killing of workers fighting for the right to organize. Never in the history of the United States has there been such widéspread and continuous use of force against the working class and its organizations, The Blue Eagle Casualty List Take a look at the list of killed and wounded, clubbed, gassed and jailed workers in Minneapolis, Toledo, San Francisco, in Southern California, in Alabama, in Ambridge, in Weirton, in Cleveland, in New York, in the industrial districts of New Jersey, in Massachusetts—in practically every State and big Industrial Center in the country. ‘These brutal attacks are made on workers’ demanding the right to organize, asking for more food, for higher living conditions. It makes no difference whether the State Government is Progres- sive Republican, as in Pennsylvania under Governor Pinchot, or Dem- ocratic as under Horner, in Illinois, Ohio and Alabama, the Farmer- Labor Party in Minnesota, the Socialist Party in Milwaukee—workers fighting for basic rights are arrested, killed, jailed and beaten, The South, that stronghold of the Roosevelt administration, stands out like a skunk in the fog as the scene of organized lynching of Negro workers and organized murder terror against Negro workers, sharecroppers and poor farmers. This is capitalist government in America. It is the Government of the American capitalist class that commits the organized and ceaseless outrages against workers and exploited farmers, Negro and white, foreign and native born, men, women and children. In Soviet Russia, there is also class government. But it is the government of the working class representing all toilers, who make up the overwhelming majority of the people compared to the little hand- ful of representatives of big trust capitalists who rule this country. From this standpoint we can see clearly how the steel workers’ movement for organization and strike to enforce their demands was strangled by the Roosevelt administration and betrayed by the A. F. of L., and A.A, leaders working in the interests of the steel barons. From this standpoint we can sée clearly the disgraceful and cowardly character of the retreat and betrayal of their trust by the Committee of Ten. Communists call upon steel workers to unite their ranks in every mill and plant regardless of union affiliation. We call upon them to organize committeés of action and strike committees to strengthen their unions and prepare a mass strike movement to. enforce their demands, a Rank and File Leadership of A.A. The Communist Party urges all A.A. members to denounce the ac- tion of Green and Tighe and the Committee of Ten; the Communist Party urges the A.A. members to elect as officers of the local unions only those who have proven their courage and their will to fight for the interests of their brothers, The Communist Party urges the Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union to take the lead in organizing the steel workers, es- pecially in the biggest and most decisive plants and mills, to develop the united front throughout the steel industry and on this founda- tion stimulate and extend the struggles of steel workers. Steel Workers: Organize in every mill, in every steel town. Defeat and oust the false leaders who betrayed you, united for struggle, refuse to accept the Green-Roosevelt plan, the plan that is the scheme of the Steel Institute and General Johnson, sugar-coated, so that you will swallow it without tasting its poison! Steel Workers: Your place is in the only Party that fights for your interests, the only Party of the working class of which you are a powerful section, Join the Communist. Party, Organize and win your demands! x | |munist Part; | the delegation to New York was al- 2 oe ee Mass Meeting In N.Y. June 22 ‘Earl Browder, Gil Green To Be Speakers at St. Nicholas Arena NEW YORK.—Hitch-hiking, rid- ing in battered cars or creaking | buses, delegates to the Seventh Na- | tional Convention of the Young Communist League are beginning | to stream into New York from all Sections of the country. The convention which opens on June 22 with a huge mass meeting St. will see approximately 200 dele- gates representative of the revolu- tionary youth of America gathered events in recent years. These delegates will be greeted at the opening mass meeting by the workers of New York in a monster welcome demonstration. Earl Brow- | 7, der, General Secretary of the Com- Gil Green, National Secretary of the Young Communist League, leader of the powerful Trades Workers Industrial Union, will be the main speakers at the mass meeting. A brilliant program has also been | arranged for the meeting by the combined efforts of the various youth organizations in New York| ity, This program includes an LW.O. Symphony Orchestra, Ukrai- nian Folk Dances, a United Youth Chorus and a spectacular sport x=} hibition by the Labor Sports Union. California Delegates Hurt NEW YORK.—The entire Cali- fornia delegation to the National Convention of the Young Commu- nist League is now in the hospital in Denver, Col., as a result of a smash-up in which the car bringing most completely wrecked and all occupants sevefely injured. A telegram received by the Na-j tional Commitfee of the Young} Communist League réveals that the | California délegation is at present | stranded in Denver with all of its money gone to pay hospital ex- penses. There is Ganger that unless |money is immediately shipped, the delegation from one of the largest districts in the country will be un- able to have representation at the convention. The telegram reads as follows: “California car wrecked. Money spent hospttal repairs. Possibility delegates can come if you pay fare. Must have money. Answer immediately.” | The Arrangements Committee for the . Seventh National Convention appeals to all workers and their) organizations to respond to the ap- peal from the California district who have taken a leading part in| the brave struggles of the West | Coast longshoremen and agricul- tural workers. Contribute money | immediately to enable them to send a few of the delegates who will be | able to leave the hospital in a few days to attend the convention. Send ali money to the National Committee, Young Communist League, at 50 East 13th St (Post Office Box 28, Station D), New Yerk City. LOCAL 2 LEFT GROUP MEETS TONITE NEW YORK.—The Left wing Group of Looal 22 of the International Ladies Gar- ment Workers Union will meet today at 5 p.m. at Irving Plaza Hall. FUR WORKERS URGED TO JOIN CHORUS NEW YORK.—The first rehearsah of the Fur Workers Chorus will be held ‘Thurs- day, June 21, at 5 p.m. at the Spartacus Club, 269 W. 28th St. Delamild will con- duct the chorus. Workers are urged to register at the union office, 131 W, 28th St. Sia at NEW W.E.S.L, POST NEW YORK.—A group of west side vet- erans are organizing a Post of the Work- ers Ex-Servicemen's League. The first meeting will be held today, 8 p.m., at the Spartacus Club, 269 W. 25th St. All west side veterans are invited. cla ae 2 ATTENTION ATI. CARPENTERS! NEW YORK. -—A regular membership meeting of the Independent Carpenters Union will be heid tonight at 8 p.m. at the headquarters, 82 Broadway. A report on the strike will be made and also on the organizational drive. WORKERS 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST COOPERATIVE COLONY has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: ‘exington Ave., White Plains Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 pm. Sunday 10 a. 2 pan. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station * | LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Algonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 E & K STUDIOS PHOTOGRAPHERS Real artistic photos for a price you can afford 42 UNION SQUARE, N, Y. C. ~- WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 19th 4 1th st. at the St. Nicholas Arena on 69th | for one of the most important | and Ben Gold, fighting | Needle | ~ WILLIAM FUCHS | Paris, August 11-15 LTHOUGH the capitalist joy-sheets—if you believe them ~—can detect a needle in a haystack, when they get their | dander up, they have not yet detected the International Anti- | Fascist Sports Rally which will be held in Par 11-15, They have detected they have detected the gorilla whom Mussolini scared one night, but that the worker- athletes of the world are ral- lying in a tremendous protest against the terror of the fascist rulers seems to have escaped their notice. About the only hope I can see is that we will wake up one m@rning and discover a picture or @ notice of the happening, labeled Tegimentation. | Regimentation is the latest thing among the journalisis, |cago Tribune, saw a picture in a Chicago movie the other day, of a demonstration of athletes in Lenin- grad, and by the process of the pro- ‘ound réasoning which he is capable of, emerged with the discovery that “Speris in Russia ., has been regi- |Mented by the Moscow brain trust Stalin has evidently been replaced by a Roosevelt. wees 'HAT kind of regimentation we will have in this International. rally will be the raised fists of workers regimentatedly blessing such unregimentated regime as Adolph and “Putzy” and Benito and the little Engelbert hold sway ever. It will be the kind of regi- mentation which will unanimously demand the freedom of all werk- ers from the unregimentated dun- geons and concentration camps. Already this regimentation is making itself heard. Th> cry of “Free Thaclmann” is rising from all the sports clubs and unions throughout the werld which have entered the competitions, Switzerland ad Helland have t come the last of these demands. Paar Soir SHOULD imagine that for Inter- national Sports Day the Labor Sports Union would raise a cry that would be heard in every nook and cranny of the labor movement, at least; but all I have received from the L.S.U. about the Day is a notice of the activity of the New York District. I have been holding office on this papér for almost two months, but I have yet to hear from the na- tional office. Nor does even the New York District bury me with stuff. I am pretty much of the belief that | the boys expect me to depend upon My creative ability in writing about the Labor Sports Union. T also notice that the New York about the Thaelmann case, This is a bad oversight, It is impos- sible to imagine any Anti-Fascist affair without the “Free Thael- mann” slogan, But more about the Labor Sports Union some other day. 7 at oe see affair under the auspices of the New York District has been arranged by the Sterling A.C. It will be held at McCoombs Dam The Kaytee A.C., the Harlem Pro- MONSTER MASS MEET against War anv Fascism Wednesday, June 20, 8 P.M. APERION MANOR, E. 9th St. Kings Highway, Brooklyn, N. ¥. Speakers: RABBI BEN GOLDSTEIN, NOR- MAN TALLENTIRE, REVEREND WAYNE WHITE, VIOLET LYNN Sponsored by Kings Highway Br. American League Against War and Fascism 1207 Kings Highway, Brooklyn ALL SPORTS! 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 . Also Friday 7 pm, and Satu! 3 p.m. EStabrook 8-1400 One of these | geniuses, a Donald Day, of the Chi- | District says nothing in its release | Park. Thirty events are scheduled. is, August Adolvh’s sensitive palate and lets, the Red Sparks, Maples, Spare. tacus, IL.W.O., Y.W.A.C. and the Brooklyn A.C. are entered. N June 24, the Chicago Linneag nd the Arbeiters of Detroit will | play off their game in the Tom | Mooney Soccer Cup competitions, at j the De Paul Ficid, Webster - and Sheffield Aves., Chicago. It is the | final game for the western title and | the winning team will meet the | eastern champions in Cleveland on | International Sport Day. Fifty per cent of the proceeds go for Tom | Mooney’s defense and the remains j ing fifty per cent are for the dele- | gation to be sent to the Paris Rally, | r i= Workers Sport Club of Mont- ‘eal will travel to New York in September for a return game with the Red Sparks. The Red Sparks traveled up to Montreal last week and lost two games to the Cana- dians, 3-1 and 4-1. The Juniors | Played in the second game. The | Red Sparks, be it known, are {champions of the Metropolitan | Workers Soccer League! Which should indicate something about Canadian soccer ability! Chicago Conference for World Anti-War ' Sport Meet, June 36 CHICAGO. — In preparation for the World Sport meet against .war | and fascism which is being held in | Paris, France on August 11 to 15 |the Labor Sports Unicn of Chicago jand the Illinois State Youth séction |of the American League Against War and Fascism have called a conference of worker athletes in Chicago on Saturday, June 30 at |2.30 p. m, at the Imperial Hall, 2409 N. Halsted St. This conference will further tia Plans for an anti-fascist and anti | war track and field meet to be held at Chase Park, 4709 N. Ashland Ave., July 15, starting at 10 a, m, Athletes from Gary, Waukegan, Chicago and from the coal fields of southern Illinois will compete in the meet on July 15 which will also serve as an elimination meet to send a | jdelegation from this district to | Paris. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Ares., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Honrs: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. CG. After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 7-0135 Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr, S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11- 7:30 P.M, SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D, Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORehard 4-4520 Factory on Premis: CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th Bt., N.Y.C. AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE ALgonquin 44452 Cor. 14th St. Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailments P3 ag a WF oe BE perce i mt OE 4mrrHi OO HOW TO GET THERE? THAT’S EASY! Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A. M. Also Friday at 7 P. M. and Saturday at 3 P. M. Rates: $14 a week, Phone: ALGONQUIN 4-1148 1E PLACE TMS WORKEES IV A ROW BOAT All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—30 &. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER \