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Page Two ‘ if See - Terror Grips Pickets Shot On New Jersey Frisco Picket Line Strike Area — omined trom a Belt Line switch t cars ine be- into moving Nine Strike Leaders Are Facing Frame-Up in Paterson Pier police r NEW YORE ate for its tradition a workers’ right as was brought up. For a its oil, tex n was a sound of ex- overlords mbs. out in a new sis class police Tent week, w ir faces son and Bridgeton as the foca es. Foot points ore into the Se eoory amed compla: i of Frank Hague, ical boss, has bee: y i dence as d re po- forces of sing gas mustered against t The longshoremen an- ers. attack with a hail of aphical to barri +t the Daily| themselves behind piles of sand. gravel and bricks being used for the | construction of the San Francisco ge In Paterson, where 110 International Union printers agai Call and the Daily News is its ninth week, the entire k committee of nine were to appear| Bay B . in Recorder's Court this morning) Meanwhile the President's for hearing on obviously trumpéd|Called longshoremen's board up charges of grand larceny, crim-| meeting with Thos. G. Plant so- was presi- arch t rn loyers inal libel, assault and battery and| dent of the Waterfront Emplo} disorderly conduct. The nine strike| Union. All that Bishop Edward J leaders were arrested on Tuesday|Hanna, chairman of the board, could say was that the board “fears and released in bail of $1,000. It is feared that the court will bind still worse trouble.” them over to the grand jury TI he Roosevelt Board spent the | rest of the day with officials of the The grand larceny charges are rndustrial Association, the organi- (coal ape ares co zation that ordered the moving of agora e wis cargo. Mewspaper plants _ nis eieaees Workmen on the shore workings The criminal libel charge is based of the Frisco Bay Bridge were driven | police bombs. vi was entirely Voice, local organ of the strikers. Lire othe job hia Hate ee the John Doe warrants have been is-| workers joined the strikers as they sued for other militant strike lead-| moved down Rincon Hill. ers, it is reported. Despite large! Sharp fighting between police and displays of police strength engi-|and strikers took place on Harri- meered by Publisher Harry B.| son St Haynes of the News, a henchman; It is estimated that 700 police of Frank Hague, a steady picket| participated in the attacks on the line has been maintained before both | strikers. They had laid aside their plants. short clubs and carried long night- | Rigid police terror still continues | Sticks. There were special squads against the strikers led by the Fur-|C@trying gas guns, gas masks. Other niture Workers’ Industrial Union in| Squads carried automatic rifles. dersey City, where Corliss Lamont| Adjutant General Seth Howard, and Alfred Bingham were arrested | Commander of the National Guard,| last week as the climax to a dozen|is reported to have been on the picketing arrests which preceded.| Scene during part of the day. He DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1934 RED BUILDER TALES Proletarian Knuckle Dusting! a f eae iS | (-ne rervses © ae -A NAZI DECIDES 10 SURROUNDED PROVOKED AND STANDS |} 60-1 WORK ON “TOM BY NAZI GANG-|| HIS GROUND — BUT BEFORE HE CAN | | STERS WHO RARE HURLING INSULTS AT HIM— “THE COMRADES | OF THE GERMAN | WORKERS CLUB | ARE RUSHING | 10 “fommy'S AiO, BUT, FoR, “THE. PRESENT, | OOR HERO IS IN | a WoHT Spot / | , ee Boys and Girls! No Word Received! About Thaelmann’ (Continued from Page 1) 34 least 500 cables to Hitler within the next week. urther steps in the way of a| drive for a million protest signa- | tur stronger delegations to con- sulates, picketing and phone calls, and raising of money to send dele- gations to visit Thaelmann in Ger- many, were also being urged Police Guard Pittsburgh Consul PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 5.—Po- lice here have placed a 24-hour guard around the apartment of John Leibl, German vice-consul of the Pittsburgh area, to protect him from workers delegations who have called to present demands for the immediate release of Ernst Thael- mann, leader of the German Com- munist Party. Delegations for the past two} weeks have called on the consul at 444 Diamond St. As many as eight delegations have called in a single day. | Among organizations sending del- egations are the Fur Workers In-| dustrial Union, International Work- | ers Order, Rank and File War Vet- | erans, Food Workers Industrial | Union, International Labor Defense, | Unemployment Councils, League Against War and Fascism. | GET STARTED — A STRONG * HAND STOPS HIM-AND —- Join the Red Builders! by del Ef 4 BUY TH WogKER | > DAILY Earn expenses. Apply 35 E. 12th St. (in store). Minneapolis Men | Fight Strike Pact: | (Continued from Page 1) | ticipating, at the parade tomor-| trying to split the ranks of the’Trimmers Refuse Plan| their lives on it, but so far as I row. The Communist Party will take all steps te prevent dissension in the ranks of the workers but will | continue to expose all moves of | 3 | the A. F. of L. and Trotskyite | quests of the Joint Strike Commit- leadership to mislead militant | truck drivers. | * | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., July 5.— The Communist Party of Minnea- polis, together with the Young Com- | munist League, has called upon its} members and upon all workers, to participate in a mass march on July 6, which has been called to support the truck drivers of Local No. 574,| who are now fighting to enforce} union recognition. The march be-| gins at 6.30 p. m. at Block No. 20,| | and will proceed to the Minneapolis | @ssed, clubbed and jailed. Municipal Auditorium, where mass meeting will be held. The statement of the Communist Party declares that the workers can now see the agreement signed by the; A. F. of L. Leaders in “settlement” of the truck drivers strike meant that the workers did not win their} demands. The Arbitration Board ba | | strike by force. Marine Union Calls| Hat Strike Strong For General Strike As Trade Unions Give Their Support } | (Continued from Pagel) | | of the militant organizations par- | pointed by President Roosevelt is | strikers—it is trying to get the strik- ers back to work without any guar- | antees that their demands will be | met. Joseph P. Ryan, head of the) I. L. A., in spite of the repeated re-| tee of fifty—composed of five elected delegates from each of the 10 unions —has refused to call out the longshoremen in the Atlantic and Gulf ports. Ryan is trying to settle | the strike in favor of the employers. “Acting Governor Merriam of tional Guard against the strikers. ganization of the waterfront em- ployers—has sworn to smash the Four strikers have been killed. Hundreds have been “Strike all docks and ships! De- marine transport industry! “Call meetings—work out our de- mands—elect rank and file strike committees—STRIKE! ORGANIZE MASS PICKETING OF EVERY DOCK AND PIER! “Unite all workers in the marine set up under the settlement, after | industry regardless of union affilia- Youth in N. Y. Demonstrate NEW YORK. Five hundred | the workers of Minneapolis had de- young workers, mobilized by the feated the employers’ deputies on Young Communist League, held a| the picket lines, has stalled and militant demonstration Wednesday | denied the demands of the drivers. in Harlem for the release of Ernst The truck drivers, backed by the Thaelmann, Angelo Herndon and/| workers of the city, must now re- the Scottsboro boys. strike to win their demands, the Today, however, the strikers find themselves the nominal victors in their strike against the Miller Par- lor Frame Company as a result of the decision handed down by the National Labor Board, instructing the company to rehire all men em- ployed before the strike and to re- frain from intimidating workers from joining the union, Diss eee VINELAND, N. J., July 5.—Vio- Jence, mass arrests, attacks on picket lines, and the attempted or- ganization of the Ku Klux Klan “vigilante” committee marks the second week of the strike against the Seabrook Farms as Sea- brook and the wealthier farmers are launching a terror campaign to drive the strike leaders out of the| territory and to crganize a cam-/j paign of terrorism against the Com-| munist Party. Unable to break the militancy of said that the mobilization of the National Guard is under way at San Luis Obispo, that they are fully| equipped and are ready to be brought to the Frisco waterfront Although the shipowners boast that cargo is moving, very little got through the picket lines today, de- spite the police gun fire and num- erous gas attacks. While the fight. raged the dry grass on Rincon Hill caught fire. | Bullets flew in all directions across | the hill and the Embarcadero, the Frisco waterfront. The ranks of police attackers were | here | 2ugmented by city firemen, who| Germany and sent their protests to hooked up fire hoses and turned powerful streams of water on the strikers. | Train crews on the State owned | Belt Line Railroad, on which the| shipowners are attempting to move | | cargo, have sided with the strikers | and have refused to work the trains. | | Members of the Teamsters Union | the 500 agricultural and cannery| are to meet tonight to take up the| workers, who are fighting to main-| question of a general strike. | tain the 30 cents an hour rate pro- vided for in a contract Seabrook | Among the speakers were James W. Ford, leader of the Harlem Com- munist Party, of the Harlem section, | L. Dorfman, Marie Lawrence, John Little, district organizer of the New York Young Communist League, and Lou Cooper, Youth Organizer of the he US opel Op | The Y. C. L. demonstration sched- uled for Saturday in Section 1,| lower East Side, has been postponed. | Teachers Pass Resolution The Unemployed Teachers Asso- ciation passed a resolution calling for the release of Thaelmann, Torg- ler and all anti-fascist prisoners in Hitler. Guards Beat Nine ; Scottsboro Boys statement declarations. The state- ment follows: The Communist Party of Minne- apolis calls upon all workers, em- ployed and unemployed, organized and unorganized, to join this march in an organized manner. Let every working class organization march under its banner and the appro- priate slogans and demands. this be a real demonstration of soli- darity and power of the Minnea-| polis working class. The truck drivers of Minneapolis, who fought so bravely in the last strike and who were out-manuevered by the employers, the Farmer-Labor Party leaders and the leaders of their own union, the Trotsky rene- gades—these drivers deserve all sup- port from the Minneapolis working class. Let | ports! tion for STRIKE ACTION. Unite all forces against the organized employers! “Do not allow the Pacific Coast employers and their government forces to defeat the striking workers. | Their defeat will bring wage cuts | and worse working conditions for | | all marine workers. “Victory for the Pacific Coast workers is a victory for all marine | workers! Demand the withdrawal of the National Guard from Pacific Coast ports! “Unite all marine workers for a | general strike in the Atlantic Coast Solidarity of all workers | against the bosses! “Strike! Tie up all marine trans- | port! Strike in support of our fel- | low workers on the Pacific Coast and for higher wages, union rec- ognition and better working condi- tions for all marine workers! “Organize a United Front in ALL ports! “A GENERAL STRIKE on all New York docks and ships!” set-up, which they were respon- The Minneapolis drivers blazed | = fe ey sible for setting up. the way for a determined struggle against the Citizens Alliance in this| These people, however, instead of | city, for the workers’ rights to or- ganize and to smash the starvation Brothers had tear gas pumped into | wage levels, They were becoming colle Glnetsy Inte. thelr eyes. | the center for a general strike move- (Continued from Page 1) signed with the Agricultural and} Cannery Workers’ Industrial Union after a strike in April, Seabrook has begun to mobilize the richer farm- ers in a “red-hunting” campaign. Import Thugs Thugs have been imported from Atlantic City and Philadelphia. Paid advertisements in all the local press incite violence against the Communist Party and “outside agi- tators.” Donald Henderson, national or- ganizer of the union, was seized yes- terday and is now being held in illegal confinement. The police are searching for the ington. | As the crops rot in the fields, and the strike sentiment of the workers | remains undiminished, Seabrook is| moving swiftly toward violent ac-| tions against the picket lines which surround the 3,500-acre farm. At- tempts to rush scab trucks through | the lines with the aid of thugs and} deputies will be made today, it was predicted. The Communist Party, South Jersey Section, has issued a state- ment denouncing the vicious ad- vertisements of Seabrook, calling for the right of the workers to organize and strike for better con- other strike leaders, who have re- fused to be cowed or intimidated by the terrorism and are directing the strike under secret and illegal conditions. elected by the striking workers, has | The local authorities, led by Jus-| issued a statement refuting sea. | tice O. Leslie Downs of Bridgeton,| brook’s charge of “outside agita- | have joined with the wealthy farm-| tors” who “stirred up contented | landlord Seabrook in an open at-| workers.” | tempt to outlaw the Communist; The strike is reaching a crucial| Party and all union activities among | stage and needs the most active sup- | the agricultural workers, who have port of all workers and sympa-| been mercilessly exploited, the av-| thizers who want to help maintain | erage wage rates being from 5 to 17) the right to assemble and organize, | cents an hour. Protests should be wired to O. N. R. A. Ignores Demands Leslie Downs, Justice of the Peace, The Washington Code authori-| Bridgeton, New Jersey, and Charles ties have referred all complaints of | Seabrook, Vineland, N. J. the cannery workers to the Newark | ea ee le St Labor Board, despite the fact that! The Daily Worker gives you full Seabrook is openly violating the! news about the struggle for uncm- canning code. A delegation of) ployment insurance. Buy the Daily workers has been elected to go to| Worker at the newsstands. the N. R. A. authorities at Wash- cents a co RELIABLE COACH LINES Direct Express — All Seats Reserved — New Modern Busses ditions, and challenging Seabrook | to a public discussion on the pro- | gram of the Communist Party. | The Strike Committee of 15, Monticello Liberty Swan Lake Fallsburg Loch Sheldrake | White Lake i Bae sy Tea ua | 5 cae Sei te i One Way Round Trip One Way Round Trip | One Way Round Trip Daily at 9 A.M, 11:30 A.M., 1:30 P.M, 3 P.M, 6 P.M. FRIDAY SPECIAL TRIP AT 8 P. M. Busses Leave Our Only Terminal UNITED BUS DEPOT | 208 West 43d Street, Between 7th and 8th Aves. Telephone WISCONSIN 73-5277 | dictatorship. | Germany tell “I was on my knees praying for) mercy,” says Weems. The leader of these brutal attacks is a guard named Captain Daniel Rogers. Sometimes he makes them call him Captain but when he’s not feeling good he whips them| unless they call him Master Rogers. He says, “If those boys ever get out| of solitary, I'll quit and go back to} the farm.” | Rogers also warned the boys about | telling “your Jew friends from New} York; and if they're not careful, I'll treat them the same way HARLEM VETS TO MEET NEW YORK.—A special meeting of the Harlem Post Veterans Relief Committee will be held today at the office of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, 119 West 135th Street. All former members of Post 2, disabled veterans and other members of the Workers Ex-Service Men's League living in Herlem are requested to| attend the meeting. ment in Minneapolis against the Citizens Alliance, and were cheated out of this honorable position and out of their own demands for union recogniton and higher pay, by the | cowardly truce tactics, and then by | the disgraceful agreement of ar! tration. The drivers and all workers of Minneapolis know now what the arbitration boards mean. We know now that the employers use the arbitration schemes and arbitra- tion boards for strike breaking purposes, for stalling and denying the demands to the drivers. This is so well known that even those leaders of the Drivers Union No. 574 who urged the drivers to ac- cept the arbitration agreement, | telling them that it is a 90 per | cent victory, have to turn face about and condemn the arbitration | ing that the agreement is O. K. but | the re-strike of the drivers that is| telling the truth, are continuing to. .confuse the drivers, by still holler- that the employers have “double crossed” them and do not stick to the agreement. Re-Strike Necessary We state that while this march 9n Friday MUST and no doubt will be a great mobilization of workers, still | this demonstration cannot replace necessary if the drivers want to get) their original demands. This dem- onstration must be a mobilization for strike. We ask that the meeting in the auditorium be open to speakers of militant workers’ organizations, to the Communist Party, to the Unem- ployment Councils and to rank and file members of the union. This will help to clear up the confusion, to avoid a repetition of what hap- pened in the last strike and for a real united front of all workers, to win the demands of the drivers. Of Manufacturers For Settlement NEW YORK—The strike of 2,000| It required the same simple faith} hatters continued yesterday and hopes for winning brightened as many trade unions, workers clubs, and fraternal organizations thru- out the city announced yesterday that they would support the strike and had planned to give financial | California has mobilized the Na-| aid to swell the hatters’ war chest. Delegates from the various | The Industrial Association—the or- | unions were preparing to meet last night as the Daily Worker went to press at a strike relief conference at Beethoven Hall, 210 E. 5th St. The strike committe announced yesterday that all plans offered by the bosses for settlement of the | clare a GENERAL STRIKE in the| strike have been turned down by the strikers, At a conference held Wednesday between the Manufacturers and the hat trimmers of local 7 of the United Hatters the bosses offered a five cent increase per dozen for trimming hats. The trimmers re- fused to give any consideration to this offer and voted it down un- animously. Again in Action (Continued from Page 1) very low, and hoarding is taking | place. Food cards will soon be is- sued, and the Nazi regime has or- dered all breadstuffs to be diluted with bran. Prices are shooting up | daily, making the lives of the poorly | paid workers and middle class miser- | able. Reports from Munich state that the Catholic archbishop, Michael Cardinal Faulhaber, was arrested, though this report was later denied. Thousands are fleeing from Ger- many at every border. Several airplanes have disappeared with Nazi officials who feared for their lives. Otto Strasser, brother of the slain Gregor Strasser, once a close con- fidant of Hitler, in an interview in Prague, Czechoslovakia revealed some of the factors which led up to the slaughters. He declared that just ten days before the inner strife in the Nazi ranks broke out into the open. Hitler had called Gregor Strasser into a private conference with a view to reconciliation. He declared that he was offered Goe- ring’s place. “The rest is easy to guess,” con- tinued Otto Strasser. “Goering knows every move Hitler makes, has a stenographic record of his ‘phone conversation and reads his mail,” 5 Maas ea U. S. Coupon Clippers Irked WASHINGTON, July 5.—Amer- ican bondholders were riled at the agreement reached by the Nazis and Great Britain providing for the pay- ment due to British holders of the Dawes and Young Plan bonds. It is declared here in official circles that protests would be made by the State Department and demand made lasape Disgusted With Foul Hitler Dictatorship By HARRY GANNES S THE news of Hitler’s holocaust seeps through to the German people, as the | economic future grows blacker jand blacker, a tremendous repercussion of mass disgust {and discontent is visibly be- ing aroused against the foul fascist | The brutal murder of Hitler's | closest henchmen, which was an at-| | tempt to cut off some of the most) | gangrenous sections of the disabled | | body—in order to save the carcass | |—has not had the desired effect. | |The inner struggles of the bloody |rulers are entering new stages of | bitterness and forecast even greater | depredations than the hundreds of killings that took place during the |past five days. New Inner Conflicts. The latest cables coming out of of the sharpening conflicts between the Hitler forces DO not fail to ATTEND Second Annual of the INTERNATIONAL WORKERS ORDER Hear MAX BEDACHT, Gen. Sec’y of IWO SUNDAY . DANCE AND HAVE A GOOD TIME JULY S™ Win aFree Trip to U.S.S.R. Picnic PLEASANT BAY PARK Ag EN | rumblings of peasant revolts. | of | burns the bridges over which he| | whether supported by the bayonets and the Reichswehr. The cut- throats of the Krupps, Thyssens and other finance-capitalists and rich landlords in Germany find themselves confronted with a catas- trophic economic crisis, signals of rising resistance among the rank and file of the Storm Troopers, up- rising of the working class against. the new hunger program, and The contradictory reports over the fate of Vice-Chancellor von Papen and the repeated trips of Hitler to Neudeck to visit President von Hindenberg are evidence of the growing conflicts in the ranks of the top slaughter gang. aA ini 'HE attacks on both Jews and Catholics is growing. Four Jews are reported to have been murdered in Silesia, and reported stories come from Germany telling of suppres- sive actions against leading Catho- lics who represent middle class and other forces dissatisfied with the bloody fascist regime. There is no quiet on the German front, nor can there be any in view the destitute situation into which the fascist scoundrels have driven Germany. While Hitler marched to power, he at the same time ignites all of Germany. The flames of anti-fascist discontent are sweeping higher and_ higher, and no measures which the fascist scoundrels can take, no matter of the Reichswehr, or the picked | murderers in the Schutzstaffle, can | drown the fires of the rising revolu- | tionary upsurge. German Capitalism Bankrupt. It was clear even to the world bloody days, German capitalism was in the worst economic catas- trophe. The July issue of Current History contained an article which showed that economically and fi- nancially the Hitler government was bankrupt; that it had carried through the policy of the Krupps, Thyssens, and the junkers, at the expense of the wholesale impover- ishment of the whole German people. Every prediction of the Com- munist International and the Com- munist Party of Germany about the oncoming catastrophe has been proven true to the hilt. The mil- lions of copies of the manifestoes distributed by the Communists, warning the toiling masses of Germany where Hitler was leading them now ring out with the bitter- est truth to millions of German workers, peasants and middle class elements. Recognizing the dangerous situa- tion contronting them, the Nazi leaders call an emergency National Party Congress at Flensburg, near the Danish-German border, away from the dangerous, seething masses in Berlin and other indus- trial centers, to discuss their future tactics. But the crisis confronting them is insoluble. The six-month mora- torium on all foreign debts, which was to provide the German finance- capitalists with hundreds of mil- lions of marks, has been wrecked jon the rock of imperialist antagon- |isms. The British have won prom- ise of payment; and the American and French bankers are beginning to hammer for their share. peas ale passing day, which by winter will plunge Germany into the direst straits if fascism is not destroyed, can no longer be denied. The Hearst correspondent in Berlin, H. R. Knickerbocker, cables a dis- patch to, this country which is printed with huge headlines read- ing: “Hunger Stalks Reich!” He reports that the hungry masses will be fed with cattle-fodder. Between 200,000 and 300,000 tons of bran are to be used instead of flour for making bread. All supplies of raw materials in Germany are running low, as an effective blockade has been thrown around the country by its complete bankruptcy and de- struction of its credit-standing in countries from which it obtains its Taw materials supplies. With all of the state funds al- (Continued on Page 6) ‘Nazi Firing Squad _ WILLIAM FUORS ~ The Old Tradition | THOSE members of the constituency of the Yankees anq | Giants who believe in god and the symbols whereby he | makes his indulgences known, the events of July 4th must | have been payment in plenty for all -the tortures they have undergone in the course of the current baseball season. I am referring, of course, te those whole-hearted souls who perceive sermons in stones and conceive that if you spit on cigar ashes they turn into lizards, and ven- erate the theory that the teams which are leading the leagues on July 4th will in the course of hu- man events lead the leagues at the end of the season. It is a hoary superstition and | men have been willing to lay down & concerned. It rarely takes very much to make baseball clubs fee themselves invincible. Particularly, as is now the case, when the boyd are playing what is colloquially known as “great ball.” The Giants }are ahead of Chicago by a greater | Percentage than are the Yankeeg | Over Detroit, but even though Mr, | Ruth’s legs are beginning to crack, | according to the latest details, the Yankees have little chance of fall¢ | ing behind. ee * \ | HERE will be a hot time in the old town if the two New Yorls | know the founder is as unknown | teams engage in the World Series, | as the original starched collar man. } ana « |It is easy to see, however, that he| Here in New York is where the “ 4 | dough is, and with the added at | must have looked upon baseball @8 | traction of seeing Babe for the last | the national pastime par excellence. | time, to bid him farewell and let him carry away the cheers of tha | greatful fans in his ears, the box, | office man will sweat his skin off | r It has indeed plbdet dob hy agp | (\NLY a bishop, however, or a| f0f Some reason, appropi |U hockey player now believes that| the World Series to be played in | if it rains on St. Swithin’s day it| New York. Whenever the games | will rain for forty days thereafter. | rip hur Lac ef ae uae To enlightened men the fatts speak | ae This is ahi ‘New York, otherwise. I am 73 years old, for 0 ‘ 4 5 big town. The’ iONEADCS, “anid DBeve. Many Viren | World Series ie in reality a sort | wallowed in sunshine for days im-| of Roman holiday and you need | mediately after it has rained on St.| Rome for it. New York City is Swithin’s day. But in. baseball, Rome to the core. Here is where curiously enough, the most hard- t the biggest circuses. ened infidel can be confounded with| “° evened the record. I have dispatched the Congress- BA S EBALL man who served as my errand boy Ser ygrt in the summer time to examine AMERICAN LEAGUE to lay down that testament as it required to lay down the testament for rain on St. Swithin’s day. ne the statistics, and he has returned | Washington 100 000 101-3 bw f —8 12 @ with the proof that in the last | em eee ee ee ee sevelld ten years of our lord, the tradi- Plobiea hd op eae & tion has been substantiated in 80 | Philadelphia 500 000 100-6 0 @ Boston 003 002 000-5 10 6 per cong of the cases: 6 Benton, Vaughan, Cascarela and Berry. the twenty clubs who have won the pennant in that time lead the leagues on the sacred day of Independence. In the American League every team which has won the pennant since 1923 has blessed Independence day for its revelation. * ‘TH so much support from the books, it is hard to believe that the Yankees and the Giants are not beginning to feel themselves in- vincible so far as this season is Painters to Contest Zausner’s Election NEW YORK, July 5. — As the Daily Worker went to press, rank and file delegates elected to the Painters Union District Council planned to call for the setting aside of the fake elections in which Philip Zausner, D, Maztkin, Bloom and Rosen managed to maintain them- selves in office by barring large numbers of the union membership from voting. that a similar agreement be made with Wall Street bankers. Officials pointed out that $1,030,- 000,000 worth of German securities are in the hands of banks and bond- holders in the United States. Dr.D.G. POLLOCK | DENTIST Brooklyn Paramount Theatre Building at De Kalb or Nevins St. Subway Sta’s. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Daily 9-9, Sundays 10-2, TRiangle 5-8620 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 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 703—GR. 17-0135 I. J. MORRIS, Ine. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order LUCKY PALACE RESTAURANT Real Chinese and American Dishes Marvelous Dinner 30c & 50c at all hours Special Arrangements for Organization Parties 30% Pell St., Chinatown. WO 2-8201 (Classified) SEAGATE—Room suitable for one or two. Rhodes, Welch, Ostermueller and R. Fer. rell, Chicago 000 000 000-0 8 3 Cleveland 010 100 60x—-8 1¢ @ Earnshaw, Kinzy and Madjeski; Hilde« brand and Pytlak. Only Games scheduled today. a * NATIONAL LEAGUE New York » 002 005 501-13 15 2 Brooklyn 101 120 002—17 18 2 Schumacher, Castleman, Bell and Man- cuso; Benge, Clark, Beck and Lopes. Pittsburgh at Chicago and Cineinnatt at St. Louis. Play later date. Boston 010 060 040-11 17 1 Philadelphia 100 233 05x—14 20 2 Rhem, Brandt; Smith and Spohrer; O. Davis, Grabowski, Johnson, Collins an@ Wilson. * . INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE No Games scheduled. OFFICE WORKERS ENTERTAINMENT NEW YORK—Stanley Burnshaw of the New Masses and John L. Spivak, labor journalist and author, will speak at an entertainment by the Publishers’ Section of the Office Workers Union at 8 p.m. this evening at the union hall, 114 W. 14th St. Margaret Larkin and stars of “Men in White” and “Stevedore” will perform. Admission is free to union members and friends. TALK ON SCOTTSBORO NEW XORK.—Nate Bruce, assistant sec~ retary of the New York District of the International Labor Defense, will speak on the “Political-Cultural Aspects of the Scottsboro Case” this evening, at the weekly “Dog Star Evening” meetings of the Gotham Book Mart Garden at 51 ‘West 47th Street. Admission is 25 eents, with the enti Proceeds going to the Scottsboro Defeni Fund of the LL.D. ADVERTISEMENT Camp Unity Overcrowded The management wishes to announce that there is no room for any more visitors until after Sunday, July 9th, The manage- ment suggests that the remain- ing accommodations at Camp Nitgedaiget and Camp Kinder- land be taken advantage of in- stead. LOUIS PASTERNACK, Manager, Camp Unity. We Scare the Fishes! Labor Sports ; Union Swimming Instructor and Life- guard takes care of you, tho! CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, NEW YORK Clever Programs. Lots of fun. Cars leave daily from 2700 Bronx Park Ea 10:30 A.M.—Pridays and Sat- urdays 10:00, 3:00 and 7:00. CAMP STORE CARRIES CAMP SUPPLIES Call ESplanade 2-4578. | sco te and hunger in Germany, bourgeoisie that before the present which will grow worse with each ‘ UNUSUAL INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM AT CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK © Songs in Six Languages—English Spanish, German, Jewish, Russian, Greek ®@ Premier of FREE ERNST THAELMANN by Theatre Brigade and Big Chorus © Opening of free Workers Scshool—Direction of Charles Alexander ® Big Masquerade Ball. Pierre Degeyter Trio. Many other attractions. Finest Food. Comfortable Accommodations in Bungalows, Hotel or Tents $14 A WEEK Cars leave daily 10:30 A.M. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 and 7 P.M. from 2700 Bronx Park East. Phone EStabrook 8-1400. Or — take the boat. 7