The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 27, 1934, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1934 Two Pittsbu Independent League and Councils Demand Special Session; Plan Fight For Unemployment Insurance Bill Socialists, and Musteites Reject Invitation | To Conference | PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 23—At! & joint conference of 15 representa- | tives each from the Unemployment! Councils and the Independent Un- | employed Citizens League of Pitts- burgh on July 20, a program of united mass action was worked out! to lead to a mass march on Har- risburgh during the first week of; October. Both organizations will issue a joint call to all unemployed groups for participation in the mass march. The Musteite leadership of the Un- employed Leagues and the Socialist | leaders of the Unemployed Citizens | League have refused to join in the comierence, H The conference between the In- | dependent Unemployed Citizens League and the Unemployment Councils decided on the following joint actions: 1—To organize a mass march on Harrisburg during the first week of October. 2—To demand that Goy. Pin- chot call a special session of the state legislature for the financing of relief and to provide jobs or adequate cash relief for the 1,- 750,000 unemployed on the Penn- syivania relief rolls, 3.—To organize a united front conference, September 9, for un- employment insurance and in support of the mass march. 4.—To arrange a mass meeting at which Congressman Lundeen, Congress sponsor of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill, will speak, A joint committee will be set up to carry through these decisions. Unemployed League Group for cer Unity | SEBRING, Ohio, July 26—De- claring that the “National Unem- ployed League must unite its forces with the National Unemployment Council,” Unit 1 of the Unemployed Leagues here adopted a resolution instructing the Second National Convention of the Leagues to vote for unity. The resolution reads: “We, the Unemployed League | Unit No. 1, considering the present | impoverished and insecure condi- | tions of millions of unemployed and | employed workers throughout the | United States, therefore resolve that | the National Unemployed League must unite its forces with the Na- | tional Unemployed Council and any | other unemployed and working class organizations for the enactment by Congress of the Workers Unemploy- ment and Social Insurance Bill H.R. 7598, and further resolve that the Unemployed League must locally carry on this struggle. Another resolution instructed delegates to vote for dues not ex- ceeding two cents a month if the Leagues should become a dues- paying organization. WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: ‘exington Ave, White Plaina Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m, Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m, Telephone; Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lorain, Ohio INTERNATIONAL PICNIC SUNDAY, July 29th starting at 10 A. M. Urbanik’s Picnic Grounds Elyria Ave. at Stop 4714 DANCING — REFRESHMENTS Auspices: International Workers’ Order Admission 10 Cents DEAF MUTES MARCH ON RELIEF AGENCY Dial mutes, representing the Unempioyment Council of the Deaf of St. Louis, Mo., marched on the St. Vincent de Paul relicf agency here demanding immediate relief for mutes against whom discrimina- tions were directed by the relief agencies of the city, and for the im- mediate passage of the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill. They were halted by half a dozen police who sought to stop them from en- tering the building of St. Vincent de Paul, but the workers forced the officials to admit a committee of four. All the immediate demands were won including recognition of the committee. They ordered the agency to turn on the electricity and gas of one of the unemployed mutes, Mother Bloor ie ms N Y. ‘To Lead Anti-War Delegation | Veteran Leader, Facing Three-Month Jail Term In Nebraska, Will Head Women’s Delegation Sailing for Paris Congress Tomorrow Mother (Ella Reeve) Bloor, sprightly and perenially-youthful 72-year-old working-class leader, is in New York none the worse for her recent jail experience in Nebraska. Joyous over the pros- pect of the approaching world Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism, convening in Paris on Aug. 4, 5 and 6, she happily told} the story of the past few months | of struggle in the farm region. Mother Bloor will remain in New | York until tomorrow, when she and 30 other women will leave for the Paris Congress on the Ile de | France. On her way east she) stopped off at Chicago to speak at, the send-off banquet for Chicago's | women delegates to the Paris Con- gress. “Chicago sent two regular and three fraternal delegates—all fine young women,” she said. “One —Mary Sedgewick—is from the Stockyards. Another is Mabel Byrd, who was appointed to the N. R. A.) committee and subsequently re-| | signed.” Faces Three Months In Jail | The charges against Mother} Bloor in Grand Island, Nebraska, carry with them a conviction of} three months in jail and a $100 fine. Her case will not come up until the latter part of Septem- ber, after her return from France. The others—farmers and workers— will also be tried at the same time. Mother Bloor vigorously de-| clared that despite the Vigilantes, who prepared to break up the anti- war regional conference embracing the states of Colorado, Iowa and Nebraska, the conference was suc- cessfully held, with over 300 dele- gates present. “While the Vigil- antes took possession of the park in which the conference was origin- ally scheduled to be held, stopping all autos and taking down license numbers, we were calmly meeting on a nearby farm. We in the Mid- west have not been intimidated by these actions, not even by the ter- ror which has been going on against us. Not even after the Vigilantes | fired five shots into the home of Floyd Booth, 22-year-old Negro or- ganizer of the Unemployment Councils.” | Jobless Councils In Nine Towns Mother Bloor read from a letter she received yesterday from Floyd Booth: “We have just organized another Unemployed Council. We now have three in Grand Island, and others in York, Omaha, Lin- coln, Rayenna, Hastings, Arcadia,! Loup City and Cambridge.” Before leaving for France to- morrow, Mother Bloor will speak at the banquet and mass meeting — Cleveland, 0 hio — 12th ANNUAL MORNING FREIHEIT PICNIC Sunday, July 29th PROGRAM—Freiheit Gesangs Fare! other interesting games. will be a regular restaurant where you good eats at reasonabl DIRECTION—Take the Kinsman Street car to end of line, there to take you to the picnic grounds free of charge. at White Stump Farm in, Dram-Studio, Dancing, singing and Do not bring your lunch as there will be able to get le prices. Buses will be Admission 15e — Chicago, Ill — Free Thaelmann and Al SUNDAY, JULY 29th Gates Open at 11 A, M. DIRECTION—Take any car to 63rd Bt. —Auspi CHICAGO COMMITTEE TO AID Nazi Germany! 1 Political Prisoners in for Willi Muenzenberg in the Bronx Coliseum tonight and on the deck of the Ile de France, where a dem- onstration is to be held tomorrow morning. . As the date for sailing ap- proaches, the delegates are arriv- ing singly &nd in pairs. Several are already in Paris, awaiting the arrival of the last group. “It’s a fine delegation,” Mother Bloor said, “one that American workers and farmers should be proud of. We shall not end our work in Paris, but come back de- termined to organize as many women of as many views as we can | into leagues against war and fas- cism. The real work will begin when we return!” A.F.L. Meeting To Plan Action On Social Bill NEW YORK.—Delegates of local unions who will attend the confer- ence of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill tomorrow have been urged to come prepared with sug- gestions on how to put forward the struggle for obtaining endorsements by the local unions of the A. F. of L., David Gordon, secretary of the A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief announced. The conference will be held at 1 pm., at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. Special attention will be paid to ways and means of bringing the Workers’ Bill forward for endorse- ment at the 54th Annual Conven- tion of the A. F. of L., which will be held at San Francisco, Sept. 15. Delegates are expected from near- | by locals in New Jersey and West- chester. The Committee, through the co-operation of the bakers’ local in Yonkers is preparing for a conference to be held in Westches- ter County. | 250 Delegates Attend Communist Nominating Meeting In Salt Lake SALT LAKE CITY, July 26— About 250 delegates attended the State nominating convention of the Communist Party here Sunday to choose candidates for the Fall local and state elections. Adequate cash relief for workers and farmers, unemployment and so- cial insurance, the repeal of the criminal Syndicalist and Sedition laws, and the fight for a workers’ and farmers’ government are among the chief planks in the county and state campaigns, discussion at the convention indicated. ELECTION GROUP ASKS VOLUNTEERS NEW YORK, — The State Com- mittee of the Communist Party in New York today called for 30 volun- teers to provide the office and cleri- cal assistance necessary to get the election campaign started in this state. Typists and stenographers are in particular demand. Those who are able to help should report at once during whatever free time they have to Room 539 at 799 Broadway. ANTI-WAR FILM SHOWING NEW YORK.—A showing of the PICNIC + Games — Dancing—Lithuanian ‘L. K. M. Chcrus—Exccilent Food VICTIMS OF GERMAN FASCISM Soviet anti-war film, “Sniper” to mark the 20th anniversary of the outbreak of the World Waz will be shown at the Film and Foto League, 12 E. 17th St. “Bloody Memorial Day in Los Angeles” will be shown. Performance continuous from 3 to 11 p. m. Admission 20 cents. Unemployed? Join the Red Builders! LAPAS GROVE Archer at Kean ‘West to Argo. Trucks to Grove free. Couneils Ask Unity in Twin Cities Strike Urge United Program | | In Strike of 9,000 | Relief Workers NEW YORK—The Executive Board of the National Unemploy ment Counc through I. Amte secretery, in a letter to the General Drivers’ Local 574 of Minneapolis, appealed yesterday for unity in the | strike struggles of the unemployed and relief workers. | “In accordance with the program | | | hour day and a |and policy of the Unemployment | xf | Councils said, everywhere,” the letter “our Councils On the Strike Front! 1,500 Vote to Carry On Great Lakes Tug Strike DETROIT, July 25.—Over 15 tugmen af all Great Lakes ports | voted unanimously Tuesday to carry on their strike for an cight- hour day. The strike has been go- ing on for seven weeks, tying up all dredging and towing at a dozen ports. In announcing the vote, the spokesman of the Licensed Tug- men’s Protective Association | de- clared that the men would “stand | pat” on their demands for the eight- living wage—$2,400 @ year. The National Labor Board ruled against the workers’ demands in the Twin| and decided in favor of the ship- Cities have been directed and en-| owners, who want the men to work |couraged to lend their every sup- port to your struggle.” Calling attention to the splitting actions of some of the leaders, of rs’ Local in. ejecting) t of the Unsmpleymen and the United Relief | Wot Association from meetings of the unemployed in the strike of |relief workers in solidarity with the truck drivers, the letter asked | that the workers strive for unity. The letter urged the striking truck drivers and all workers in Minne- apolis regardless of political differ- ence to unite in the fight against hunger and terror. “Regardless of the action that may be taken by those of your leaders who are more concerned with grinding their sectarian polit- ical axe than they are with the vital need for united action and truggle,” the letter continued, “the National Executive Board and our affiliated organizations in your vicinity will continue to lend their |every support to your militant fight for the demands you have raised |in this strike.” | Labor “Group Endorses Gallagher for Supreme ‘Court of California LOS ANGELES, July 26.— The candidacy of Leo Gallagher, noted |labor attorney, for Associate Justice | of the Supreme Court of California, was endorsed today by the Labor Research Association, in the fol- lowing statement: “The campaign of Leo Gallagher for the office of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court should be sup- ported by every factory, office and farm worker in the State. No one else in the State or in any other State has done more as a fighter in the courts on behalf of the ex- vloited. He is, in fact, an interna- tional juridical figure, for he dared | to eppose the Hitler murder regime when it was a lot stronger than it is today. His candidacy should be backed actively by everyone who has the slightest interest in fighting reaction and oppression. If all those who belong to the class that he ‘has long defended so unselfishly, | should cast their ballots for him— and get them counted—he would be lelected by an overwhelming ma- | jority. ” |Bosses Spent $500,000 |For Police Protection | LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 26.— The ship operators and stevedore companies of Los Angeles Harbor spent a sum well in excess of $1,000,000 for police protection dur- ing the first nine weeks of the strike. This sum represents a greater expenditure than the total wages of all the longshoremen on strike would have been had they been working steadily. In addition, there has been a tremendous cost in the hiring of strike-breakers which possibly has amounted to over $5 per head. Bologna Makers Picket When Conference Fails NEWARK, N. J., July 26.—At- members of Locals 422, 174 and 211 of the Amalgamated Bologna Mak- ers, to give up their strike against the Hi-Grade and Stahl and Mey- ers Companies at a Regional Labor Board hearing Wednesday failed. Demands for increased wages and union recognition were presented by, the union. The bosses asked for another hearing. So the work- ers continued their picketing. ceiving $12 a week strike benefit. ROSENFELD TO SPEAK IN DENVER DENVER, Colo., July 26. — Dr. Kurt Rosenfeld and Aneurin Bev- ans, on their “Free Thaelmann” tour, will speak in this city, Mon- day night, July 30, at a mass meet- ing at Fraternal Hall, 1405 Glenaim Pi, ASKS RALLY VOLUNTEERS The committee in charge of the mass banquet and rally at the Bronx Coliseum tonight called yes- terday fcr 300 volunteers, urging them to report at 10 a.m. today to the Coliseum, East 177th St., the Bronx. Volunteers will be admitted to the banquet free of charge, Strike Closes Knoxville Plant KNOXVILLE, Tenn. July 26.— Striking for higher wages and against the stretchout, 600 knitters have closed the Holston Manufac- turing Co. here. Wages have been cut from $4.75 to $3.50 per hundred items—almost 25 per cent—strikers declare, while they were made to take care of 18 machines instead | of the previous 15. The spread of the “Daily” to the mass of workers is a pre- requisite to their successful struggles. tempts to get the bologna makers, | All union men on strike are re-) jon the old twelve-hour shift. Pe ea 85 Strike in Packinghouse MADISON, Tll—a t 2 Madison P strike which | Packing | ugh | Hou Thu 85 members of the amated | Meat Cutters and Butchers Union | out for higher wages and union | recognition. Some of the workers have been earning as little as $6 \a week. The strikers, who are re-| ceiving the support of unemployed workers, are trying to strengthen their mass picketing. They demand for Negro workers the right of|ttade of one of the bakeries has | stration and sentenced to one year | | working in every department of the | fallen off from over $1,000 a week | in | plant, | * 8 « Gunmen Beat Up Hosiery Pickets LOS ANGELES. — Five unarmed | strike pickets were seriously injured |in a vicious attack by gunmen of | the Los Angeles Mission Hosiery |Mill as raids against labor con- tinued in California. The assailants escaped. The workers have been} }on strike for three and a half| months. | ae Me Plant Closes, 1,500 Jobless NEW CASTLE, Pa., (F.P.)—Two weeks after a picnic at which local businessmen and officials went on record “to resist any strike or pick- eting,” the U. S. Steel Corporation closed the New Castle Works of the American Sheet & Tin Plate Co. About 1,500 men were thrown out of work. ee Omaha Trolley Workers Strike OHAHA, Neb., July 26.—Trolley workers on the Omaha & Oouncil Bluffs Street Railway Company struck at 4 a.m. today against “con- tinued discrimination against union members by officials of the com-| pany.” The walkout followed a unanimous strike vote last night. eta Rate Thugs Raid Furniture Union BOSTON, Mass, July 25. — A vicious raid by seven gangsters was | made Monday night on the Boston | local headquarters of the National Furniture Workers Industrial Union, 84 Leverett St. The gangsters at- tacked the four workers present. Two in the office were hit with brass knuckles, and the other two in the outside room were attacked with clubs wrapped in newspapers. They escaped before help could be summoned, | This attack was obviously made with the intention of terrorizing | members of the union, which is now drawing up the new agreements in preparation for a general strike in the industry in September. Pie a ee New Orleans Messengers Strike NEW ORLEANS, July 26.—Sixty- | eight messenger boys of the Postal Telegraph Cable Co. here, almost | the entire force, went on strike in protest against a new zoning sys- tem which resulted in cutting their $4 to $9 a week wages by $2. Unemployed Council Postpones the Tour Of Herbert Ben‘amin| NEW YORK.—Thé National Un- !employment Council has announced | that the tour which was to have been made by Herbert Benjamin, national organizer, has been post- poned, The postponement has been made necessary due to the fact that the unemployed organizations on the Pacific Coast have been unable to carry through the necessary prepa- rations because all forces have been thrown into the great strike strug- gles of the Pacific Coast workers. As soon as word is received from | the coast cities as to their plans, a revised schedule for the tour will ke announced. |W. I. R. CAMP TO REOPEN PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The W. I. R. camp in Lumberville, Pa. will re- open with a special grand outing on Saturday and Sunday. Trucks will leave Saturday from 46 North Eighth Street for the camp. Trucks will meet workers in Doylestown on Sunday at 11 a. m., and transport them to the camp. Further infor- mation may be obtained from the office, 46 N. 8th St., Phone Market 8230, | Bronx workers against the high |cost of bread was attacked by the courts yesterday when 19 persons Gets Bakery Pickets Jailed 19 Bread Strikers Given One and Two-Day | Sentences NEW YORK.—The strike of arrested for picketing Bronx bakeries were sentenced to one to two days in jail. Another picket was given a suspended sentence. | Henry Mayer, attorney for the Bakers Union of the A. F. of L. rep- resented the complainant boss bakers in the attack on the work-| ers. His star witness was one Wil-| liam Bakowitz, who was forced to admit on the stand that he had a criminal record. The Interna- tional Labor Defense attorney, who defended the strikers, also wrung an admission from Bakowitz tk he acts as a strong-arm man for the employers in labor disputes The present fight against the high cost of bread is led by the 174th St. Neighborhood Committee. The work- ers in the neighborhood are solidly | behind the consumers’ strike, which | is now in its third week, and the| to less than $100. | Heat Makes | Death Trap | of Poorhouse’ (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) | CHICAGO, Ill, July 26.—Cook | County's Poor House at Oak Forest | was turned into a deathtrap dur- | ing the hot wave. Twenty-five| inmates of the institution have died | there in the last two days. Weak- ened by months of bad food and forced labor, herded in crowded dormitories, the elderly impover-| Support of Page Three rgh Jobless Groups Unite for Hunger March | A.P.L. Lawyer Overgaard Urges Union Conference To Defend F oreign-Born er Workers’ Enemies Ray Gogan New York | Emergency, Rally Is Called for Next Monday By ANDREW OVERGAARD A new vicious attack has been launched against the foreign-born workers by the government and the employers. New “Red Raids” paral- leling the days of the infamous Palmer of the Wilson government are now being planned by the Roosevelt government. It is of the greatest importance for all our trade unions to protest this vicious terror immediately and mobilize the American and foreign- born workers to unite all forces in Ray Gogan, of Stockton, Cal,,{ resisting these new attacks. The whose picture appe: herewith, | Vicious commander of the American has been expelled and exposed by | Legion in Brooklyn is advocating the California District of the Com-/| that “all agitators be deported io munist Party (about three months % ago) as an unreliable coward and a traitor to the working class, He was organizer for the Can- nery and Agricultural Workers’ Union, was arrested at a demon- jail. Shortly afterward he dropped the appeal, which was started against this sentence, and got out on parole in return for in- formation given to the police. He may be in New York now. All workers and working-class organ- izations should be on guard against this traitor. Description: American of about 19 years of age, height—about 5 ft. 11 in.., weight—about 160 pounds, hair—brown, eyes—blue, com- plexion—light; talks with strong New York accent. London Scottsboro | Committee Sends | $251.87 for Appeal NEW YORK.—The International nder the leadership of Hugh S, Johnson, Frances Perkins and alk the strike-breaking agencies of the government, the most vicious chau< vinist poison is being spread through the capitalist newspapers in order to attempt to divide the working class and arouse fascist violence against the best fighting elements in the revolutionary trade unions and in the trad@ unions in general. These vicious attacks are directed against tha working class in order to smash up trade unions and other fighting ors ganizations resisting the strikes breaking N. R. A. machinery. In the general strikes in Califor< nia the most vicious deportation terror has been let loose. Members of the Marine Workers’ Industriaj nion and the rank and file mems bers of the Longshoremen’s Assoé ciation, and other foreign-born workers participating in the gen= eral strike, are being singled out for deportation. In view of this sit- uation an emergency conference against deportation and discrimina- tion against the foreign-born work~ ished men and women died like) Labor Defense yesterday received|ers has been called in Manhattan flies in the blazing heat. Oak Forest is admitted to hold) 1,400 more people than it handle. Wholesale graft and cor-| ruption have robbed the unem-} Scottsboro Defense Committee. “I | banker’s draft to the value of| $251.87,” writes David Abercrombie, | | the sum of $251.87 from the London | Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., on Mon+ day, July 30, at 8 pm., under the can| have much pleasure in enclosing a| auspices of the Committee for Pro~ tection of Foreign Born. We urge all trade unions affili-+ ployed, who were forced to “go over | Secretary, “being a further contribu- | ated to the T. U. U. C, and all the hill,” of even the meagre|tion towards the expense of the| locals of the A. F. of L, as well rations the Poor House appropria- | @Ppeals of Heywood Patterson and | as independent unions, to appoint tion would have covered. | Charges that residents of the Poor House were forced to work in the sun during the hottest spell Chicago has ever secn, though de- nied by Oak Forest officials, wer¢ widespread throughout the city. Early editions of the capitalist! papers carried dozens of cases of workers, wracked and worn by| speed-up in terrible sweatshops, in| steel mills and stockyards, dying on | the job, However, in a frantic effort to cover the significance of this fact, the capitalist press is playing up) long sob stories about the cattle | dying in the stockyards because the | naughty stock handlers went out on strike, 5.8 Al Demonstration| Tomorrow to Demand Nazis Free Thaelmann. NEW YORK.—An anti-Nazi dem- onstration to demand the release of all political prisoners in Ger- many will be held tomorrow, 10] a.m, at 7th St. and Ave. A, under | the auspices of the Friends of the | Soviet Union. j From 7th St. and Ave. A the dem- | onstrators will march to the Ger- man consulate, 17 Battery PI. where a delegation will present their demands to the consul. ‘The demonstration will specifically | demand the freedom of Ernst | Thaelmann, German Communist | leader, and Dr. Ernst Stoecker, In- ternational Secretary of the F.S.U., and protest the murder of Erich} Baron, editor of the German mag- | azine “Soviet Russia Today,” by Nazis. All workers and workers’ organi- zations are benig urged to support the demonstration. To Drop 15,000 Relief Clients in Louisiana NEW ORLEANS, La., July 26.— Fifteen thousand “unemployables,” | the sick, blind, lame, children and unemployed mothers, will be cut off relief on July 31, H. J. Early, state F, E. R. A. administrator, de- clared, unless Louisiana appropri- ates relief money for the month of August. In the past all relief in Louisiana has been supplied by the Federal | Relief Administration. Relief pay- ments have averaged about six to seven dollars a month for each family. CAMP KIN HOPEWELL JUNCTION $16.00 for 2 Wks.—5 Wks. Cars Leave for Camp Daily at 10 — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp — For Adults and Children Vacation Rates for Adults $14.00 per Week (Tax Included) For Children of I.W.O. Schools and Members of the I.W.O. For Others Additional $2.00 per Week For children over 12 years an additional dollar per week 10:30 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P. M.; from 2700 Bronx Park East. Register Your Child and Spend Your Own Vacation in CAMP KINDERLAND DERLAND ‘ NEW YORK $52.50—10 Wks. $105.00 :30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday Clarence Norris. could be larger.” In addition to collecting funds | this English Scotttsboro Defense | Committee, in cooperation with the | English Left Theatre, put on three performances of John Wexley’s play, “They Shall Not Die,” in London. | Each audience unanimously adopted | a resolution demanding the release of the Scottsboro boys. At other performances of the play | in Greenwich and East Ham the | resolution was proposed by a Mr. | Reeves, Labor candidate, and the | Mayor of East Ham respectively. | A pamphlet, called “We Were Framed,” the first full account pub- | lished in England of the trials of | the nine Scottsboro boys, is being | circulated by the committee. A Gold Coast Scottsboro Defense Committee has been established with Wallace Johnstone as secre- tary. Although this committee is I only wish it forced to work under very difficult conditions, it has already arranged several dances, lecture tours, and other activities for the benefit of the defense fund. | portant conference. delegates to participate in this im+ This fight is one which must particularly be par- ticipated in by the trade unions, as it is a direct attack against theit existence. Particularly is it neces- sary to mobilize the American workers to understand that it if their duty to unite with the for4 eign-born workers and together de+ feat this deportation menace. Send your delegates to the con+ ference which will take place Mons day, July 30, at 8 p.m. in Manhat+ tan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. By educating the workers’ party, Marxism educates the vanguard of the proletariat, thus fitting it to seize power and to lead the whole people towards socialism, to carry on and to organize the new order, to become the teacher, the guide, the leader of all who labor and are exploited—their teacher, guide and leader in the work of organizing their social life without the bourgeoisie and against the bourgeoisie. LENIN The Most Brilliant, Authoritative Analysis of Nazi Germany Today by Willi Muenzenberg MUENZENBERG, for ten ye: editor, now in of the recent general strike “Cops Are Strange P. by ROBERT FORSYTHE; After Hitler -- What? appears in the July 31st issue of NEW MASSES (on the stands today) ars a Communist Deputy in the Reichstag and long a leading German anti-Fascist this country, has written a profound summation of Hitler-Germany and discusses what will happen in Germany after Hitler’s inevitable fall. the Coast by WILLIAM F. DUNNE, gives a picture of the terror now loose on the Pacific Coast and of the background in San Francisco. ‘eople — If At All,” “John Dewey Discovers God,” by CORLISS LAMONT; Book Reviews and Timely Editorials and other features in this week's NEW MASSES 31 East 2ith Street, N. Y. C. 10 Cents a Copy Subscription $3.50 a Year aoeon

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