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meet Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1934 AA Official Ties Up Fight Against Firing Gets Workers to Rely on Starve Waiting By a Steel Worker Correspondent CHICAGO, Ill—i am writing to you that the faker organizer the Amalgamated Association Tame, maybe you know it Curtis) called for open meetings of the Wilson & nett workers, and after about meetings he took in ab members from that shop the company stool pigeons and tactics of strikebreaking mact ery had those workers fired from the plant. He told us that Section 7-A of the N. R. A. gives us protectio in organizing, but we got fi just the same. Then we had meeting at one of the worker's homes. There were about 31 workers. He told us that the Labor Board is going to put u: back immediately. e all «a manded a strike, the stri breaker, Mr. Cur the Amal is but of S, gamated Association, told us we can- not call a strike, as we have to @o-operate with the government and the Labor Board, and that the government is behind us. And also another faker, Dr Spinger, told us we must give the company and the Labor Board a ghance to arbitrate. This was on a Wednesday. So one of the men made a motion and it was sec- ended, to give the company a chance till next Tuesday, the dead- line, and then Wednesday call a Strike, but Mr. Curtis, the stool- Pigeon and strikebreaker for the bosses, overruled our motion and Said that he would see them, and that tomorrow, Thursday, we are going to the Labor Board, and €verything will be hotsy-t ‘i | I asked him some questions—why | couldn’t we strike?—and lt said that this was not a red organiza- tion. We are 100 per cent with the N. R. A. and President Roosevelt, he said. The Labor Board fights for us, he claimed, and the rest of the Lodges of the A. F. of L. and A. A. are behind 1 I asked him why it is that the bakers and laundry workers are on Strike, and the A. F. of L. drivers deliver bread and the laundry. Why don’t they come out on strike? He made those fellows believe that those drivers belong to an outlaw Organization and not the A. F. of L. The S. M. W. I. U. issued a leaf- Jet telling us about this Mr. Curtis, telling us about his being a stool- Pigeon for the bosses. All he cares about, I am convinced, is the $3 initiation fee and $1.25 per month dues. While we were at Room 413, Post ffice Building, Mr. Curtis was sit- ting with us around the big table. I brought up the subject of those leaflets from the S. M. W. I. Labor Board While They for Their Jobs are now they You if reak it up Ik to you.” 1e plea to the timate or- and that it co- R Roosevelt. Then out. We were in the for the Labor Board hest out— and see. PORTRAIT OF how did you f®llows like the way I made my plea for you. Of course those poor workers, most of them young workers, don't know we are misled by this faker. They all said he was a wizard. All he ed in his plea was that we get our jobs back, and the com-| pany and the Labor Board wouldn't have any trouble with us. He told| us that the Board is with us 100| per cent. After the verdict came out he said we should elect a com- mittee of two. I said we need a bigger committee. So he picked out| five men of his own choice. We heard that the Board ordered the Wilson & Bennett Co. to ac- cept our committee tomorrow (Fri- day), but it didn’t, and by Sunday the company hadn't given us any consideration as yet. But this faker, Mr. Curtis, tells us that the company is going to pa: $s for los: time. I noticed in one of the Amalga- mated journals about the Weirton case. It is going to take the Labor Board at least two months to hear the evidence, but in the meantime the workers who are out of a job are starving to death, and waiting for a decision. In my estimation the whole god damn Labor Board is a legal blacklist outfit for the bosses, and an association to find| | are your friends, this is a trick to | In 1917 the white ruling class played | | after the war was over they said| | America. | Bosses Speak Soft| Layoffs in And Strike Hard ff At Negro People By a Steel Worker Cor ondent 4 rhe , BIRMINGHAM, Alu WG Production Which Was Downe was sent to speak to the a hem. He d mislead tk eir churches, and in this has the chance to mislead the Negro people as a whole | But Mr. W. O. Downe refused to come Sunday to speak to the Ne- By a Steel Worker Correspondent | GARY, Ind.—The workers have} seen how the A. A. and A. F. of L.| leadership sold out the steel strike, | Seuiendat iite eer cat and now they see how their condi- takes ‘money from the welfare to |10Wing the sellout. In the Gary] pay the major boys to incite the| Pant, where production was | “red scare,” to terrorize the work- | 2" 48 ee peerage oe fl ers in all parts of the city. These Sropiea 2 22 per. cenk sa areas maj vs ny re x E tory to Mr. W. O. Downe's office in| “°, of the most speeded in all steel the city, and through the workin; pep er iMisantos lee Pont class neighborhood, | jobs. The company officials stated : f | that we now have 1929 wages, but Guess what the T.CI. agent said|1 can’t see where it is. Take, for} at the Thomas Cheap Church Sun-|jns‘ance, the dinky engineers who} day. “There are many whites who/run from 60 to 74 tons of working} are members of the Communist | pressure. They do their own firiag, | Party, but I hope that none of you| and they are all on a standard Negroes are in that movement. We} gauge of truck. Nothing was done are good to you all.” |to better their conditions. They In Fairfield at the same time, the| were paid $4.70 and now they are T.CI. agent got one of the police| paid $4.56 so where is the 1929 to beat us up. | scale? 3 If we look here in the T.C. dis-| And what pay is given in the trict we will see that the white and| billet mill and the shipping yard Negro workers are slaves side by| and the lung mill. The bosses re-| side in the mills and mines. The| fuse to provide adequate protec- capitalist class of the Southern | tion and fresh water for the men.! States say that the Negroes are| The bosses claim it is too expen- protected by them, but the Commu-| sive to keep a water carrier, but | nist Party stands for the freedom) it isn’t too expensive to hire) of all, for national independence,| gangsters and machine gunners.| and against segregation and Jim| About a month ago they installed | Crowism. This is the movement/a pump. The pump, however,| for all workers to join. | works a half hour and then stands | When the ruling class come to| | your church to make out that they | LETTERS FROM OUR READERS fool the Negfo and white workers. | the same trick —came to all our church ids with us, t | per tne Gena bs FORCED PAYMENTS IN SCHOOLS New York City. that the Negroes had no part in When I came back to America in| pear Editor: Follow A.F.L. Sellout Priest Sings of ‘NRA WhileWorkers | Face Evictions Gary Mill PARTY LIFE Bremerton Navy Yard Unit Down to 28% Worker Reports at 38% Capacity Now for a half hour until it can be used again. The thirsty workers must often wait a half hour be- fore they can take a drink. Often the water is dirty and} oily. Workers, demand the in- stallation of an adequate water) system, with the hard work and the terrible hot days we must have enough fresh and cold water to drink. But there is only one way of| winning these demands, and that is through organization in the Steel and Metal Workers’ Indus- | trial Union, and then we could make the bosses come across with our demands. Task of Worker in Company Union By a Worker Correspondent PITTSBURGH, Pa. — When came back home three weeks ago I expected to go back to Dravo Co. on my old job on which I have lost my energy and power. I was refused my job because they have the company union and the A. F. of L. and I am. not willing to join any one of the two. I have been trying hard to organize the men in the S.M.W.LU. and one of the foremen knows this and that I am against the company union and the A. F. of L., so that leaves me flat without a job and I have to raise a family of five children. The Dravo Co. even had a hear- ing in Washington, D. C. that they didn’t want to recognize the A. F. of L. union, and gave the employes a charter after the manager had scared half of them to join the; | | | TI} | 1920 I stopped in Birmingham, Ala. | Two well-dressed men came over to me and said: “Boy, you better get that uniform off. If you don’t | we'll drag them off you, and ride you with this car with a rope around | your neck.” And I think of this every time I look around here in the T.C.I. plant and see the National Guards- men standing around the plant, to keep the workers in slavery for the T.C.I. bosses, and Wall Street. Steel Boss’ Son «| to us. | out who are the union men in or- der to starve them and their fam- ili Tries to Smuggle Now, you fellows, workers from the Wilson and Bennett plant, wake up before it is too late. Let’s go to the Steel and Metal Workers’ In- | dustrial Union at 1704 West Mad- ison. Let's hear those leaders talk By a Student Correspondent ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Passing Wide Mass Representation Shown At New York Regicnal Conference for Paris Anti-War Congress the Hie CONDUCTED BY HELEN LUKE | through Johnstown, Pa., a few days }ago, another student and I man-j }aged to strike up a conversation with the son of the manager of the | Bethlehem Steel plant in that town. | This monkey is not satisfied with {the blood money his father squeez- Jes out of the workers, but goes | around selling “safety” tin hats for |miners, brow-beating workers’ or- 21. The send-off meet for dele-| lots, and telling them that an N gates will take place on July 27.|R. A. label on the junk is just as (Watch for announcement of loca-| good as a union label. ~ IntoLabor’sRanks | not compuls | which costs 40 cents. I hope my letter is not too late. I believe it would have been of more importance if I could have written you before the schools closed. I have just graduated from Pub- lic School 60, which is considered one of the model Junior High Schools in the city, but if this school is a model I can just about imagine how bad the other schools in this city must be. Fach term every girl is compelled |to join the General Organization of the school, the fee for membershinr is 10 cents. Although they say it is ry to join, any pupil who refused to do so would be scolded and ridiculed. This organi- zation gives you a moving picture and some candy when Christmas comes around. This may seem bad but I think the following things are still worse. Every girl in the graduating class must buy a frame for her diploma She must pay 10 cents for a graduation program and before she leaves, she must give a 25 cent gift to the school. This money goes for the free lunches given in the school. I have always thought it was the city’s duty to provide for the free lunches, but now I see that it is the worker, as usual, who pays. R. G. ganizations to buy them in dozen| wE SHOULD HAVE LITERATURE ON OUTINGS New York City. Dear Editor: tion). Meanwhile collect funds and rush to Reina Evans, New York| Committee of American League| to send the masses to the slaughter |Against War and Fascism, 112| of another war, indicated by | Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. That it will never again be so easy—or that it will soon be alt gether impos: He also boasts of helping organiz2| Unit 5, of Section 5, together with A. F. of L. locals, and in that way| unit 2 of the Y.C.L. arranged a getting into the leadership. Then| friendly outing to Tibbets Brook when the workers want action he! park, and after we all got tired of Co. union, which they did and still the company did not recognize the A. F. of L. union. The men that have joined the A. F. of L. union, I have spoken to, telling them what Wm. Green will do for them and what the S.M. W.LU. does for the workers, These workers are beginning to realize that they have been in the A. F. of L. for two years and haven't gained anything by joining it, and are beginning to read some of our literature and realizing that they made a mistake. (Editor's Note. — This worker should not isolate himself by refus- ing to join an A. F. of L. union or even a company union where all the workers are forced to belong in one or the other. Rather he should take the job, join one of these unions, and fight for rank and file control and a militant program in| the workers ranks. come with me Charlie! I'll take you in and show you what the law is!” It happened just as I told the workers a minute ago, “Roosevelt speaks about the right of free spesch, but he knows he is lying.” A comrade got up and said: “we'll all go.” And the workers, there must have been over a hun- dred by this time, all came along. They were all willing to follow me to the police station, so the cops let me go. A worker marched up to me and said: “More power to you fellows.” He gave me his address, took mine and promised to call his friends By a Worker’s Correspondent McKEE’S ROCK, Pa. — In the midst of the workers’ struggle for better wages, more welfare relief, and the other necessities. a Ukrain- ian sky pilot named Father Dennis of St. Mary Ukrainian Church is playing a reactionary role The father, with as wnite a soul as his collar, is together in the united front with the bosses of pieoeer sect? Car Co, BL MESON | passed out was seen to be thrown and President's magic wand (the| policeman’s club) and also the| 2Way and that one was immediately essed Blue Buzzard Labor Board | Picked up by a young worker, read and put in his pocket. At the pres- jent time we have not heard very |much comment on it by the work- ers, but the local press carried one editorial and a news item on it. | They tried to make it appear as be- | |ing strictly an out of the yard af- | fair and not put out by actual work- jer in the yard. | | | The yard here and in its entire | Next Month; Comrade Bremerton Navy Yard Unit of the Communist Party has issued its firs shop paper. We ed 1,000 of them and they were well received by the workers. Only one of all locality has not felt the pangs of} |the present crisis, as it has been | | real busy through it all. Ever since |the advent of the New Deal ad- | | ministration about 2,500 men have been hired and the yard is very close to its war time strength, which was 6,000 men. There are 5,300 men The A. F. of L. is or- freely, tried to strangle mediater. They the fighting spirits of the S.M™W. IL.U. which led a struggle in 1933) here now for more wages and better working | ganizing quite strong and conditions. and against blacklisting. | but most of the workers join, either This phrase monger is busy rid-| through fear of losing their job, or ing in his coupe telling the work- | have the hazy idea that through the ers that the N.R.A. will restore their | A. F. of L. they will strengthen their buying power, provide good wages, | position against any wage cuts and and a better standard of living.| lowering of their living standards. Under such promises and blessings | There is also a bitter hatred of the 17 unemployed workers who are|A. F. of L. and though the Com- homeowners are awaiting sheriff munist Party has not been around and constable sales. | here long, and has not conducted | a GEER Ee much work, the majority of the | Splitting Tactics — Of Company Union character of the leadership of the! By a Steel Worker Correspondent | A. F. of L. A lot of the workers | join the A. F. of L. with a feeling | of disgust for themselves for doing | it. Their meetings are poorly at- tended and very stale, so the work- ers pay out hard-earned money for | nothing. : Issues Its First Shop Paper Paper Is Well Received, Better One Expected Outlines Work of Unit the here understands clearly, and is pre- work in the A. F. of Most of the unions have the bosses as leading functionaries, and it would be a hard task to find a union, more clearly a company Our unit situation pzetty paring to sti L, unions. union than here. It will be our task to enter these unions and to point out to the workers, that even though times might be good around the Navy Yard, the reasons for ail the activity—the preparations for war, and also the urgent need for the rank and file to reclaim their unions for themselves, and oust the bosses from control. We are also going to popularize Soviet Power, to agitate against the demagogy of the New Deal leaders and also the reactionary leadership of Bill Green & Co. We are preparing the next month’s issue and expect more in number and better material. We will also answer the atiacks of the local press, and will draw a lot of the interest of the workers in this y. Revolutiona:y Greetings from the Bremerton Navy Yard Unit of the Communist Party! Unit L. 3. N. Y. District. Join the Communist Party 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. 6. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name Street, City BUTLER, Pa.—Thursday, June} 21, approximately 150 workers in the erection department of the Standard Steel Car Co., were misled by company union officials into striking against the right of work- | ing women to work in the depart- | ment. This was obviously an at-| tempt by the company union to split the ranks of the workers, inasmuch | as the workers themselves had been | conducting many departmental) strikes for higher wages and better); ————-———___ conditions during the last three| HOWTO GET RID OF PARASITES weeks, all of which were successful. i | As a result of the splitting tactics | The Bedbug (Continued) | of the company union, seven girls} Live steam, or boiling water from | By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D, — were fired. The men were angry with the girls because, when the men went out on strike (four times in the last | three weeks), the girls never would) strike with them. Instead of point- ing out to the men that the girls should be convinced of the necessity of solidarity of all workers, the company union demanded the dis- charge of the girls. All strikes, with the exception of this against the right of the girls to work in the department, were rank and file ac- tions taken against the will of the union officials. In this department the riveters and buck-ups now receive from $3.80 to $4 per day of eight hours. For- merly they made $7 to $8. The heaters, formerly $5, now $3.20. The average of all departments is about $3.20, The Standard Steel Car Co. has not worked since 1931. , About two months ago it opened up again, building freight cars for the Chesa- peake and Ohio Railroad under R. F. C. funds. Nevertheless, th> mood | a kettle with a long, thin spout, | when directed into the cracks where the bedbug has its rookery, will kill | the insects, but not the eggs. To get rid of these, eternal vigilance is necessary and the process must | be repeated several times. | The usual insecticides, such as Flit, Black Flag, etc., which are so | widely advertised, are quite effective, but relatively high in price. Plain kerosene is almost as good. An emul- sion equivalent to the best sprays can be made up, at a tenth of the cost, by dissolving 3 ounces of soft soap in five times the amount (15 ounces) of kerosene, benzine or gas- oline water. To make the kerosene- water, add small amounts of kero- sene to the hot water, shaking it continually until it becomes milky. Hot water will take up 79 to 106 parts of the mineral oil, depending on whether kerosene, gasoline or benzine is used. Some people prefer to add equal quantities of all three, gradually until the water won't) take up any more. This can be judged by watching for free droplets of oil on top of the water, after repeated shaking. When _ these “eyes” appear then the water i saturated and when mixed witt the soap wil! give 18 ounces of a fine emulsion which can be used in a hand spray and costs only a few pennies, Every crevice and crack shoul be sprayed with this very effect emulsion, preferably in the mo: ing, so as to give a chance for ti kerosene to evaporate before b time. Kerosene has the same ¢: on insect parasites as mass onstrations have on capitalist p2-n- sites; it takes the life out of them! (To be con‘inued) 1 DR. EMIL EICHEL | DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St., New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Fours: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death } Benefit Fund — WORKERS WELCOME the general discussion at the New York Regional Con: nee at Irving Plaza where the four delegates from New York were elected to go to the Paris Congress. Wemen—and men too—from the broadest assortment of organiza- made addresses that were a Jication of the widespread int consciousness of the and object of imperial- rs, and the growing de- ion of the masses to resist ve attempt to initiate such any fut a wee. There were delegates from re- ligious and other non-revolutionary organizations, as well as from the revolutionary trade unions and the Communist Party. pathy for the anti-war work among the masses, of the Against War and Fascism was shown by representation at the regional conference from such organizations as Macy’s group of the Office Work- | the Women’s Interna- | ers Union, tional League for Peace and Free- dom, the Modern Thought Center, the Queen’s League for the Pro- tection of Children, the Women’s Spenish Committce Against War and Fascism, the Spanish Dress- makers’ League Against War and Fascism, a shop group of the Jew- ish Hospital of Brooklyn, the Cen- tro Cultural Obrero, the Mexican group of the Spanish Anti-War Ciub, the Emergency Home Relief Association, the Tampa Workers’ Spanish Anti-War Congress, the Tampa Workers’ Needle Trades, the M. W. I. U., the Medical Center, | the Nurses’ and Hospital Workers’ League, the Opposition Local 22 of the I. L. G. W. U. and six shops of same, the Workers Council of | the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, the Congregation Jachael Askhmein, the Sisterhood Derech Emunoh Con- gregation, the Church Committee, Methodist Secial Science, the Novy Miz, the Lithuanian Workers’ Lit- erary Association, the Social Work- ers’ Discussion Club, the United The wide sym- | Committee | tells them “Not this year. You'll jhinder recovery. Wait awhile and | the President will take care of you.” Yourself? ; , izes! There won't be any strike in thi Pattern 1894 is available in sizes shee ‘ re 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, 3 \town if the A. F. of L. officials can and 40. Size 16 takes 3% yards 36-| Prevent it.” , inch fabric and 1% yards contrast-| University of Michigan Student. jing. Illustrated step-by-step sew-| jing instruction included. | strike. “There won't be any stril Stop depending for news and in- formation on the capitalist press that favors the bosses and is against the workers. Read the Daily Worker, America’s only working class news- THE RED DYNAMO. Issued by the General Electric Communist Party Nucleus, Erie, Pa. Vol. 1, No. 1, | May 1934. | By SIDNEY BLOOMFIELD | new shop papers that appeared | for the month of May for the first jtime, and like all beginners while | making serious efforts it needs much | guidance to help improve it. While | many suggestions for improvement | has been printed in connection with | yeviews of other shop papers, a few | specific points regarding RED | DYNAMO are important. insufficient space and separation lines between the articles makes the paper ‘oo solid and monotonous. It should not be difficult to trace some good cartoons onto the stencil from any of our publications. The instruments used in making the masthead can be used for this pur- pose. Deeper indention of para- | We asked him about the steel, The absence of cartoons and the) Front Millinery Opposition, and the | graphs would also help break up | | |to gain and to | PED DYNAMO is one of the many | jumping, swimming, and rowing, we began to sing. A curious crowd of over a hundred stood around us, and a Y.C.L. member got up ta tell the workers who we were. In a jin this.town,” he said. “Why not?”| few minutes a cop came around and said: “Hey Mac, no meeting with- out a permit!” So the comrade sat down and finished his speech. After him I spoke for about ten minutes to a very sympathetic crowd. I was just telling them what it means if the workers stick together, proving my thesis by comparing the June Second demonstration with that of May 26th, when two cops came up and stopped me. “You tained in this inadequate twelve- line paragraph. We must not and denounce and its system, the alternative only analyze, expose the capitalist class but indicate what is and what we stand show how to organ- ize and struggle for it. But merely to state that we are “sick of the lies of politicians, etc.,” and to overthrow capitalism does not aid anyone to understand the problem. In order to learn how to agitate and p:opa- gandize workers along the lines in- dicated here, it would be well to study and foliow the style, language and approach as is embodied in the Manifesto of the Eighth Convention |of the Communist Party. In an article below on the same page, under the heading “Your Paper,” the explanation. is made that “this paper rises out of the contempt in which almost all work- ers hold the company organ The General Electric News. This is fol- lowed by a denunciation of a lying article by a company agent in its paper in which he tries to make the workers believe that present wage Unemployed Teachers’ Association. | A delegation from the Marine Workers Industrial Union suggested | that a delegate from that union be sent to the Paris Congress. The | Conference decided that if the M. | W. I. U. could finance the delegate | it would be an excellent plan. | As the opening date of the Con- gress has been postponed to August | 4th, there is a bit more breathing space for the collection of funds for financing the delegates. As we said, New York must finance its own four delegates and help cne of two} from localities where money is much } searcer than hen’s teeth. ‘wo hun- dred and fifty doliars is required to Send each delegate to Paris. | ‘There vel be a tag day on July the solid reading matter which we} find in RED DYNAMO. We must avoid using merc) levels are the same as in 1919. The “exposure” article gives no : Re 2 | proof to the contrary. We can’t ex- thetcric as in the brief article 0 | yect anyone to accept merely our the front page which talks of “the| yorq Tt would have been best to ruthless brutality of wealth,” etc. | follow the Pa:ty press or to write It would be clearer to the workers| +, the Daily Worker, to the Labor |if we would explain the Way i |Research Association, or to consult | which the workers are exploited and| ~ye Labor Fact Book in order to oppressed by the possessors of | obtain figures and data with which 1894 OF Send FIFTEEN CENTS (5c) in| wealth, to direct our fire against the to support our statements, thus con- coins or stamps (coins preferred) {capitalist class rather than against | vincing the workers that we are for this Anne Adams pattern. Write|such an abstract thing as the i thi agent is a plainly name, address and style|“brutality of wealth.’ This same Hanb.fed 6. Company Se 3 liar. together and invite me to speak to them because he wants to know more about the Communist move- ment. The crowd broke up in groups around our comrades and said that we were right. But it was criminal that we did not have any literature or leaflets or “Daily Workers” with us. We will know better next time. We only had the New York Times’ with us and plenty of them. Why not have the “Daily Worker” on; Sunday? STEPHEN BALOGH. P. S—One young worker present joined the Y.C.L. -: SHOP PAPER REVIEWS are told that we “have it in our power to change the rotten condi- | tions by doing “just as our com- | vades in the Soviet Union have,” etc. This is true, but if the workers would have been told of a few important advantages and achievements of the | Soviet proletariat, such as no un- employment, the many social in- | surance and other forms of security, |cultural development and physical | and social well-being, it would have | given the G. E. workers that desire and inspiration to “go forth and do | likewise.” The article on the pension racket correctly brings in H. R. 7598 as the positive form of struggle against the scheme of the company in making workers pay part of the insurance. An article dealing with the news of the Lynn, Mass. General Electric workers who voted down the com- pany union, gives some telling facts and figures; but it would be mor effective to have drawn conclusions for the workers and to have given them a line of propaganda showing the evils of company unionism and taking up specific gzievances in the Erie plant as the starting point ior opposition work together with instructions on how to get up little discussion groups that can develop into department committees that will be able to battle the company union in an organized way. Such instructions should also have been part of the article following it and which calls on the workers to “Buiid an Industrial Union.” The Electrical branch of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union should have been brought into this | article too. of the workers is militant, the com- | pany union is cordially hated and | the workers are in a strike mood. | Standard Steel is a subsidiary of | Pullman Corp. and is Mellon- owned. NOTE: We publish letters from steel, metal and auto workers every Tuesday. We urge workers in these industries to write us of their working conditions and of their efforts to organize. Please get the letters to us by Friday of each week. ——— explaining what Communism is and why Communism is the only solu- tion for mankind, the article will only convey the feeling that Com- munists are “fanatics.” The com- rades should have shown the inte: relation between the aims, purpos: and the ideal, with this good descrio- tion of the good, sacrificing, loyal Commun’st. This is especially im- portant if such articles appear in the first issue of a shop paper. The inclusion of shot snappy shop news, items and clever say- ings is good, but they are too general. Of course, as stated in a review of other first issues, there is as yet really little basis for criticism since we are here considering the first efforts at putting out a papez! This is all the more reason for the comrades to pay close attention to all shop paper reviews in order to learn from the experiences of others. We welcome and encour- age these efforts. On the whole, fo> the first issue, RED DYNAMO is better than others which have been issued for quite some time. But then, this dees not speak so well of NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes American Dishes . | | 2c | - 25e | | | 848 Broadway vet. 13th & 11th st. Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome | De Luxe Cafeteria | 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. \ EVERY BITE A DELIGHT FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS Sokal Cafeteria 1689 PITKIN AVENUE WILLIAM BELL————. OFFICIAL Optometrist ee 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. I. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-536 For International Workers Order Monticello Fallsburg 12 oe £3) vad One Way Round Trip 55 One Way RELIABLE COACH LINES Direct Express — All Seats Reserved — New Modern Busses \ Liberty Loch Sheldrake Swan Lake White Lake foe oh ag One Way Round Trip Ee Ld Round Trip Daily at 9 AM., 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 7-5277 Swimming, Tennis — All Sports. EStabrook 8-1400. East at 10:30 A.M. Fridays, Saturdays, 10 A.) those older shop papers. f REST — STUDY — HAVE FUN! FREE WORKERS’ SCHOOL The Vacation You Hoped For! CHAS. ALEXANDER, Dircctor at CAME NCE IE $14 a Week. Finest Food, Comfortable Accomodetions, Daily Programs, Cars leave daily from 2700 Bronx Park 3 and 7 P.M. - Telephone RED DYNAMO must appeal to and encourage department corre- spondence. Concrete exposures with analysis, lessons and organizational directives should be printed. Prob- lems and demands of the Negro, Women and young workers should be featured, as well as an exchange of organizational experience. This will make the paper popular among the workers. All our propaganda should be linked up with the life) lond achievements of the ‘Soviet | masses, the lessons of the treachery | Q Swimming PROGRAMS? Cars Ie ery way out, aad sp2cific organiza- number. BE SURE TO STATE|short article ends abruptly by call- | An excellent excerpt from comrade | SIZE. ing upon workers to “join the Com-| This way of just making a state-|Krupskaya’s Memories of Lenin is|of Sccial-Fascism, the sevolution- | Address orders to Daily Worker | munist Part We must give the| ment, unsuppo:ted by facts, is the|reprinted stating what are the Pattern Department, 243 West 17th | workers a clearer statement to in- style of the feature article on “May | qualities of a Communist. But un- St., New York City. ‘ duce them to join than is con-|Day.” In this article the workers! less there is at least a brief article! ers how to unite and fight. ‘ East daily at 10:30 tional directives to teach the work-' and 7 P.M. dm Ze VEPO ve for Wingdale, N. ¥., Phone ALgenquin 4-1148, — Fishing — Boating Bascball — Water Polo — Handball — Volicy @ — in fact, all the sports! CLEVER VAUDEVILLE UNITY PLAYERS — CAMPFIRES HANS EISLER TRIO — DANCES A Comradely Camp from 2700. Bronx Park A.M. Friday and Saturday, 10 A.M., 3 Rate: $14 a week,