The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 3, 1934, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGU: T 3, 1934 Page Three CLEVELAND JOBLESS COUNCILS CALL UNITED FRONT CONFERENCE Third of New Sub || Quota Is Reached; Drive Must Speed All Workers’ Groups Bid to Discuss Relief EARLY 1,300 new poe ate and Social Insurance 20.266 | subscription activity spell a loss of | fourteen readers. This is due to the | fact that expirations and cancella- Bie Se ee ee ae jtions have been greater than the} |number of new subs received, | Meeting Set for Aug. 19 in Prospect Auditorium) Scie BHAA Ela BGS —Small Home Owners’ Association and | 27 subscribers during the past week, | es has 30.7 per cent of its sub quota,| M.W.I.U. Have Endorsed Call yet has a net loss of 16 subscribers Be eee ee | for the drive period. While this loss} CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 2—A call has been issued | GUTTERS OF is not charged against the sub quota, 3 lit is charged against Philadelphia's by the Cleveland Unemployment Councils to all unemployed and relief workers groups, to all trade unions, and to all total quota of 1,000 new readers. Only four Districts, 1, 2, 4 and 15, have gone over the 50 per cent working class organizations to elect delegates to a United Front Conference on Unemployment Insurance, for adequate cash relief, and for cash rent to the jobless. will be held at the Prospect Auditorium, on Sunday, Aug. 19, at 2 p.m.¢—— The militancy and organization of the unemployed in the face of ter- | ror has forced the Cuyahoga County Relief Association to in- crease food and clothing relief from $24.50 per family in July to $27 in August, and to institute cash relief instead of the present grocery orders, “This relief increase shows the | correctness of the policy of mass | action carried forward by the Un- employment Councils. The united | front conference will weld together all possible organizations for a fight for the immediate needs of the unemployed—for the Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill, for a 30-hour week 6n all relief jobs at trade union wages or equal cash relief, for cash payment of rents, mark in their sub quota standings. Thirteen Districts have less than 25 per cent of their sub quotas. While Red Builders, carriers and newsstands press forward toward the goal of 20,000 new readers by September 1, the subscription figures prove that members of the Party, mass, language and fraternal organ- izations, and trade unions, are | shirking their responsibilities. Push the trial sub offer of two months for one dollar. Canvass all friends, relatives and shop- mates, Organize Section and Unit Red Sundays and canvass house to house. Get copies of the new booklet, “How to Sell the Daily Worker,” and learn how to link up the Daily Worker with election campaigns and other political ac- tivity. Give ali of your spare time The conference 2612 Prospect Ave., Bethlehem Steel Co. Announces Lay-offs While Profits Soar BETHLEHEM, Pa., Aug. 2.— Wholesale layoffs and the in- troduction of the stagger sys- tem is the promise that FE. P. Grace, president of the Beth- lehem Steel Company, promises for the steel workers in the lat- est issue of the Bethlehem Re- view, news bulletin of the com- pany. to sub-getting during “Daily “Operations averaged 51.8 per Worker Week,” August 5 to 12! cent for the first quarter” (April, May, June—Ed.), “cur- Subscriptions July 24-30 Tent operations are at 2% per Hizzoner the Mayor to the President of the Amalga- mated Clothing Workers, ‘Sidney, it looks like we'll have to use a different technique to put your scheme over.” 300 Detroit Sausage ‘Men ‘Strike Front Driv -|AWP Leads Anti-Red e at Convention Of Jobless Leagues Unemployment Council Delegates Refused Seate After Muste Caucus Plans Fascist Campaign of Red Baiting at Columbus Parley On the 53-HOUR WEEK UNDER N.R.A, OMAHA, Nebr.Under protec- tion of the emergency clause in the N.R.A. code regulations for working hours in the packing in- dustry, the Armour’s packing plant here has begun working its men | fifty-three hours a week to dis-| pose of extra cattle brought in| paid only the regular rate for the overtime work. The company und the em ttle- e ‘ RRS : ? dutchicccine Reese con di aad | COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug. 2.—A red hunting campaigal eral government. The men are| was decided upon Monday night by A. J. Muste at a caucus |of the American Workers Party, in order to prevent meme ‘ i New Percent Sng against discrimination telah cent,” Grace states, adding that a ee ee gro and foreign-born workers. the ‘stagger system will be in- || Decrease of Rec'd Total Sh Ne Sub cept the otty cential Sere troduced. es | DISTRICT June 19 Subs Week Quota tee the Small Home and Land | ‘The long service men, the 1 Boston 250 «2850.0 | Owners’ Federation and the District || most responsible and the most || 2N. Y. 275 (3666.5 Board of the Steel and Metal Work- |! efficient will receive the first | yn : 400-27 )—-30.7 ers Industrial Union have endorsed || consideration when spreading || 5 Pittsburgh 100 % erie ee er a Pledged support to the | out the work,” he says. “The || 6 Cleveland 35015 23.4 se steel industry is near the end |) 4 3000 IL 26.6 of the government financed |) Hie Joo ol af U P railroad business, and another ie Ear ne 70 5 32.8 month will finish it.” Weeds; 80 1 212 | 12 5 rge rotest Grace announced net profits |) 13 Callt” 220 H iH of $8,738,463 for the first av-~ 14 Newark 8 32.0 ter of 1984, and $3,441,642 for || }5 Connecticut 1 0 | 16 N. Carolina 17 Birmingham 18 Milwaukee | 19 Denver | 20 Ft. Worth 21 St. Louis 22 W. Va. 23 Kentucky 24 Louisiana 25 Florida On Jailing of | Cuban Leader | | Ordoqui Faces Death) the second quarter. Plan Detroit Relief Strike | Win Strike for Wage Raise By NAT GANLEY DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 2.—The strike of over 300 workers in 12 sau- sage factories, which started on July 25, ended on July 27 with a big vic- tory for the workers. The men and women in these factories won wage increases of from 10 per cent in the higher paying factories to 30 per cent in the lower paying factories. In each case we won a bigger in- crease for the women than for the men, because they were getting less to start with. The other demands won are: | Equal pay for equal work; maxi- | mum 48-hour week; time and a| | @ strike call if we were turned down. The solid united front of the workers broke the backbone of the | manufacturers’ association. After |the first rift in their ranks on Thursday there was a stampede to sign the agreement. The throwing of a picket. line around Armour & Co. resulted in a | Committee of workers going into | the office and winning the promise of a raise to equal the raises won in | the other sausage factories. A sim- | ilar promise was won in the Hy- grade Packing Co, Spreading the Victory | workers to work the men a half-day on Sundays in the beef and sheep kills. SOCIAL WORKERS STRIKE OHICAGO, Til. — Five clerical workers, employed at the seamen’s branch of the Federal Transit Bu- tion of work that they were not hired to perform and reinstate- ment of all workers on the same job. The strikers have organized Local No. 7 of the Chicago Federa- tion of Social Service Employees. Not only members of the Federa- tion, but seamen as well, are aid- ing the strikers, the former by picketing and the latter by refus- ing to accept relief from the seabbing clerks. REFUSE SCAB JOBS CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 2—Scab herding attempts of the Illinois Free Employment Office at 417 E. 35th St. yesterday met with com- plete failure. More than 250 workers were in the office when the announcement was made that jobs could be had for butchers and other stock yards workers. Knowing that a strike exists in some plants in the yards, and that a general strike is likely, unanimously refused to take these jobs. RAISE NEW YORK.—Sixty workers of the World Button Works, Inc., 113 Fourth Ave., struck Wednesday | seate Delegation Goes To Canadian Youth Anti-War Congress American League Against War and fascism is en route to Can- ada to represent young workers and students of the United States at the Canadian Con- gress Against War and Fascism. The delegation 1s headed by James Lerner, chairman of the Youth Section, and Frank Myers, American student who studied in England for six years until he was deported last spring following his militant leadership of the British stu- dent movement. They will bring the greetings of American youth to this Con- gress, pledge their firm sup- port of the Canadian struggle against war and fascism and set forth the objectives of the First U. S. Youth Congress to be held in Chicago on September 28, 29 and 30. Two Hillsboro 60 STRIKE FOR WAGE iP’ risoners Are Put in Isolation | (Daily Worke: Midwest Bureau) has already applied for a permit | bers of the National Unemployment Council from «being d at the second national convention of the Unemployed + Leagues. | A caucus of the A. W. P. | bers of the Ohio delegation all the members to vote aga’ seating the Council delegatesy Truax, leader of the A. W. P., care ried on a red baiting campaign in reau in South Chicago, have the same fashion as General John« walked out, demanding a mini- NEW YORK—A _ delegation || Son. Matthew Woll, and Hamiltog mum of $65 a month, no imposi- || from the Youth Section of the || Fish, while Muste was present td direct the campaign. The campaign was led from |chair by Anthony Ramuglia, | | | dent of the Unemployed Leagus Kennedy, a delegate from Wt Virginia stated, “If they want work with us, let them spend 2 cents and join us.” An Ohio de! gate said, “The hall costs us $26. the Communists want to pay O. K., we'll seat them.” Bickering and squabbling foby lowed with the leaders exerting every maneuver to prevent th@ Council delegates from being seatedy The West Virginia delegation de« manded an immediate vote, stande ing on their feet to exert pressure, The vote was overwhelmingly not to seat the delegation. This first victory of the war makers was ime mediately grabbed up by the Cole umbus papers. The final report of the credential committee showed 401 delegates, most of whom were from West Vire ginia and Ohio, and twenty-one fraternal delegates. Among thé fraternal delegates was David Las- ser, a New York Socialist, who claimed to represent 250,000 work- ers. Of Lasser’s group, the Aug. issue of “Labor Action,” organ the A. W. P. says, in commenting on a recent conference, “Their prominence was based on padded figures of the orkers Unemployed Union which has about 2,500 but At Hand of A.B.C. Terrorists NEW YORK—Following the news that Joaquin Ordoqui, Secretary General of the Confederacion Na- cional Obrera of Cuba, is held in jail without bail in Havana, at the mercy of the Mendietta government, and the A. B. C. terrorists who have sworn to murder him, and who have been ‘looking for him for this pur- pose for the last month, the Inter- national Labor Defense and the Trade Union Unity League issued an urgent call today for protests to Cuban officials demanding his safety and release. Ordoqui is charged with “having incited the attacks” on the A. B. C. demonstration on June 17, in which a number were killed. Ordoqui is one of the outstand- | is supposed to be $6.50 a week, but | ing leaders of the struggle against American imperialism and its fas- cist lynch agents in Cuba. Cables, telegrams and protests by every revolutionary organization, to President Mendietta and Colonel Fulgencio Batista, chief of the Cu- ban terrorist army, at Havana, to Secretary of State Hull at Wash- ington, and these same protest ac- tions with protest delegations in addition, to every Cuban Consulate in America, and to the Cuban Am- bassador at Washington, were called for by the ILD. and the T.U.U.L.| Intensified response to the appeal of these organizations, published in the Daily Worker of July 12, for funds to assist the defense struggles In Cuba, and for help to the thou- sands of class war prisoners in Action Today DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 2.—Prep- arations for a county-wide strike against relief cuts will be discussed at a conference of relief workers | tonight at 8 o'clock, at the Danish | Brotherhood Temple, 1775 West Forest Ave. The conference has been called by the Relief Workers Protective Association, which has been leading the struggle for | higher wages and better conditions | on C.E.R.A. projects. | Under the gulse of “increases,” | thousands of workers, both on | government relief work and on | direct relief, were handed a relief |slash on Aug. 1, while a small | number with large families got slight increases. The new minimum | workers report to the Relief Work- ers Protective Association that | they get as little as $4. Workers on the relief projects are called upon to elect delegates |and to attend the conference. | Delegation Defying the Police Wins Relief | Victory for Unemployed | | NEWARK, N. J., Aug. 2—A mass | delegation of unemployed workers, |led by the Third and Fourth Ward Unemployment Councils, demon- strated before the State Relief Ad- ministration here Tuesday, and forced E. R. A. secretary Comp- free clothing and adequate hous. ton to grant their demands for} ing. The workers elected a committee |of six to represent them. Nick Rand, state chairman of the Re- lief Workers Organization, was de- nied admittance, but the firm stand of the workers forced Comp- ton to meet with him. The delega- tion refused to be provoked by 25 police, armed with riot guns, who were mobilized. Cuba, many of whom were on hun- ger strikes and are now in urgent need of medical attention, was urged in the appeal. These funds should be sent to the Daily Worker for transmission to the imprisoned Cuban comrades. Intensify Drive Week August 5 (Continued from Page 1) |For Illinois U. Trustees ‘Three Communists Run) 26 S. Dakota | Gar. | Totals | weocoHonuane 250 200 100 50 5 150 5 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 0 g Negro Patriotic Group | Attacks LSNR Members| ‘In Harlem Job Parade |. NEW YORK.—Acting under the influence of misleaders, several Ne- gro marchers in the Job Protest Pa- rade in Harlem last Saturday at- tacked members of tha Toor of Struggle for Negro Rights who | marched in the parade with hen- | mers calling for a united front | struggle against discrimination in | Jobs and for unemployment relief. An L. S. N. R. placard was torn | from Bonita Williams, Harlem séc- retary of the L. 8, N. R., while a white worker, a member of the L. S. N. R. and a veteran fighter for Negro rights, was ousted from the parade by members of the reform- ist African Patriotic League, who shhouted “This is a Negro fight.” These people made no objections to the banners of the Democratic and Recovery parties, both parties of the white ruling class lynchers. The parade was held under the | auspices of the Citizens’ League for | Fair Play, who, after police refused a permit, tried to call it off, but were forced by the militancy of the Negro workers to go through with it. At Dorrence Square, where a meeting was held, one of the lead- ers of the League, a Mr. Miller, openly praised LaGuardia’s police, declaring: that these thugs who have made frequent brutal attacks m Negro workers and their meet- ings, are “the best friends” of the Negro people. The L. S. N. R. long has been in the forefront of the struggle for jobs and unemployment relief for the Negro masses and against all | forms of discrimination. , 500 Relief Men Sirike On Bear Mountain Jobs NEW YORK—Five hundred relief | workers on the Bear Mountain | relief job struck one hour Mon- |day, in sympathy with striking sively to get new subscribers and renew old ones, circulation grows. The trouble is that our Party, mass, language and fraternal or- ganizations and the trade unions have so far failed to mobilize ih" entire memberships into the - ~ the Summer, every reader meets friends in the park, i veaca, on picnies and af- fairs who can be secured as sub- scribers to the “Daily.” Then why isn’t our subscription list much greater? The economic and political crisis in the United States is strained to the breaking point. While the West Coast arms for the open shop and the destruction of our Party, New York organizes a rifle regiment of police for labor duty. Everywhere, open fascism replaces the fake lib- eralism of democracy. Unless we reach the mass of American workers NOW .. . unless we accept the responsibility for expanding the circulation of the Daily Worker, we are failing ut- terly to carry out our most impor- tant political task. GEORGE WISHNAK, Mgr. } DAILY WORKER, | garage men and foremen, and pre- CHICAGO, July 31.—Three can- | Sented their own demands. didates for trustees of the Univer-| The workers’ demands included: sity of Illinois have been nominated |# Six dolar day, recognition of by the District Committee of Dis- | 8Tievance committees, better train trict 8 of the Communist Party. sevice, against the speed-up, and These are George Lee, Collins- | for decent shelter -during bad ville, Ill., a member of the Progres- | weather. sive Miners of America, Samuel | One of the section foremen took (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) Lissitz, Chicago student, and Peter | it upon himself to present the Industrial factory signed the agreement date. Well Prepared strike was well The prepared ; through a united action conference on July 14. The 13 shops that were present set up a conference com- mittee of 30, which was empowered to negotiate with the Michigan Sausage Manufacturers’ Association and to set a strike date and issue Ohio Workers Gird for Final Petition Drive CLEVELAND, Aug. 8—Commu- nist Party sections throughout the State of Ohio are mobilizing all their forces in the last week of the drive to collect over 50,000 signa- tures to put the Party on the bal- Jot, following the State Ratification Convention held last Saturday. Section 2 of Cleveland has al- ready fulfilled its quota and pledges to obtain an extra thousand sig- natures, Youngstown reports the best membership attendance in its history. Comrades Walker and Vinit received a Little Lenin Li- brary set for cellecting 300 signa- tures each, Trade union locals are investigat- ing the platforms of various can- didates. The Trade Union Unity Council here elected a committee to report on the program of the Com- mnist Party. The Cleveland Fed- eration of Labor is already recom- mending Republican and Democra- tic candidates. The program of the Communist Party is being printed and will be ready in a week. The Cleveland Young Communist League has already fulfilled its quota and pledges 1,500 more signa- tures. The following, however, are behind in the drive: Sections 1, 3, 16, Cleveland; Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron and Canton. Detroit Lovestonite Bars Mass Picketing DETROIT.—“Don't_ picket.” This Greenlimb, also of Chicago, mem-| demands. Tamson, Bear Mountain ber of the Small Home and Land Park superintendent, turned down Owners Federation. i all the demands, sayin, “Take hese three will be added to the| it or leave it; there will be no in- state ticket of the Communist Party ” creases and no return of cuts. shee Area the follow-| “no further organizational activ- Congressmen at Large, Karl| ities, all members of the Relief Lockner and LaVerne Pruitt; State| Workers League and all sym- Treasurer, Sam Hammersmarth; pathtic workers are asked to re- Superintendent of Public Instruc-|P0rt immediately to the Relief tion, Romania Ferguson. . | Workers League headquarters, 29 East 20th Street. Pruitt is a P. M. A. member, Lockner is Secretary of the Cook gpa ee a HIT NEGRO DISCRIMI- NATION County Unemployment Councils, and Hammersmarth is a member of the I. W. O. and manager of the , Workers Book Shop here. Com- OMAHA, Neb.—Protesting against rade Ferguson is a young Negro in-| the flagrant discrimination against structor at the Workers School. Negro workers at the picnic held by the Butcher Workmen’s Union on July 4, rank and file members have levelled a steady attack against the union officials at every meeting | since then, A Red Builder.on every busy street corner in the country means a tremendous step toward the dictatorship of the proletariat. is the slogan of “Red” Miller, leader of the local handful of Lovestoneite renegades from Com- munism, in the strike of about fifty workers of the National Laun- dry, 555 Farnsworth St. which started Monday. Miller is an of- ficial of the A. F. of L. Laundry Drivers’ Union which is leading the Strike. Instead of picketing, the workers, at the instruction of Miller, are standing or sitting in front of the building next door to the laundry. The strike started over the re- fusal of the company to raise the wages of the women workers who were getting eighteen cents an hour for a 38-hour week, which means a weekly wage of $6.84. The women are demanding twenty-five cents an hour, Demands have also been made for increases for washers to fifty cents an hour and for wringers to forty cents. half for overtime over 48 hours; no| Workers Strike Is Victorious! split shifts and recognition of the! other shop committees and the United | workers Sausage Workers’ Union. This local conditions!” the struggle is being is affiliated with the Food Workers’ | spread to the other plants, particu- Union nationally and/| larly the ones controlled by the with the Trade Union Unity Coun- | big packers. cil of Wayne County locally. One| and New York are a distinct help in | to the workers in winning their own order to avoid a strike, making a/| battles. total of 13 signed up agreements to} The A. F. of L. is completely iso- Under the slogan: “Sausage All Sausage and meat plant can now win improved after the shop committee presented primate for |, HILLSBORO, Ill., Aug. 12—Sher- for wage increases twenty-two workers. The demands of the strikers called not only for increases for the original twenty- The strikes in Chicago lated in the Detroit sausage field. They have some organization in the two men but also for a ten per cent | raise for all workers not previously included in the demands. BUTTE, Mont. (FP). “We'll stick until we win,” shouted 3,000 Butte striking miners at a huge Meeting held recently when an of- ficial asked if a delegation selected slaughter houses and among the butchers, The problem now is to} build up an unbreakable united front with these A. F. of L. workers. A. Jacobs is the full time organ- | izer of the United Sausage Workers’ | Union, with offices at 4210 Wood- ward Ave., Room 17. Laundry Local Ousts Corrupt Union Leader NEW YORK.—Members of Local 810 of the Laundry Drivers’ Union, meeting in the Brownsville Labor Lyceum, Sackman St. near Liberty Ave., overwhelmingly overrode a proposal of the union leadership to | accept a temporary wage and com- mission reduction and forced the resignation of Morris 8, Schechter, president of the union. Surrounded by a heavy detach- ment of police, obviously on the scene to intimidate the drivers into accepting the wage-cut scheme, Schechter arose and proposed that the union accept a modification of existing contracts with the union! laundries as an inducement to get contracts with 81 non-union laun- dries. The question was voted on and Mr. Schechter and the laundry bosses lost. Immediately after the voting Schechter resigned his posi- tion as president of the local. It was learned that the bosses’ scheme was proposed to the union leaders by Attorney Bauman of the Laurence Detective Agency, a strike- breaking organization. Demands are being raised by the membership for the resignation of the entire executive board and for the immediate election of a rank and file leadership to save the union, Due to the corrupt practices of the union leadership the union is now $15,000 in arrears. The Joint Council of the International Team- sters, Chauffeurs Union (affiliated with the A. F. L.) is holding up books and is refusing to issue stamps to the local because the workers refuse to take their orders. Militant Ousted from Chicago Federation (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, July 31—At a meeting packed with gangsters, officials of the Chicago Federation of Labor, headed by Brigoll, railroaded thru the expulsion of Charles Kroll, mil- itant rank-and-file member of the Casket Makers Union. Kroll had been leading the fight of the workers in the union for rank and file control of meetings against the leaders’ policy of bringing down to go to Washington should with- draw certain major demands asked by the union. The most significant vote taken ment must be made at Butte, not Washington, and must be made be- fore the miners return to work. General Strike Meet Set for Today to Aid Hudson Tunnel Strike NEW YORK.—A meeting of the Joint Labor Committee on Heavy Construction and Railroad Work will take place today to vote on a general strike on all heavy con- city in support of midtown Hudson tunnel strike. The Hudson tunnel workers struck against the use of unskilled non-union men, who were hired at lower wages by Mason & Han- ger, the contractors. Scabs are now working in the places of the men on strike. Unemployed Councils of Richmond Expel struction projects in progress in th | iff Saatoff has isolated John Adams | and Jan Wittenber, two of the Hills- boro defendants, saying that the neighbors complained there was too much noise at night. This is an attempt to break the morale of the} | prisoners. Judge Jett released Frank Prickett. | Although a bondsman from another |county had placed almost $50,000 |clear property for two men, only |Frank Prickett has been released. | Judge Jett is still “checking up” on property that was posted three weeks ago. by the miners was that the settle- | American Legionnaires and vigi- lantes in Nokomis, Ill., are attempt- jing to terrorize the town’s popula- |tion, They came to the home of |Mrs. Staples, wife of one of the |defendants and threatened to take | “her for a ride” if there were any ;more meetings held in her house, They are also trying to intimidate | the bondspeople of George Reed and have them withdraw their bond. | The Grand Jury hearing will be held on Wednesday, August 8. | Protest wires and letters against claims 8,000.” In the whole convention there were less than a dozen Negroes. The finance committee recom- mended one cent dues to be paid each month to the national office, A woman delegate from West Vir- — | ginia, in objecting, said, “You say After a week's “investigating,” | that you have one million mem- bers. That will mean $10,000 a month. This is altogether too much, One-half cent dues are suf- ficient.” The rank and file were not ale lowed to speak, and Ramuglia made an impassioned plea, saying, “Give us $10,000 a month and we will end unemployment. Anyne who can't pay & penny a month can drop out.” The penny dues were voted, while outside, before the nominating com- mittee had met, the daily papers announced that Ramuglia was to be elected national president. this terror should be rushed t@ Governor Horner, Springfield, Tl, and to Sheriff Saatoff, Hillsboro, Tl. " — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp— CAMP KINDERLAND HOPEWELL JUNCTION NEW YORK 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, Deserter from Ranks RICHMOND, Va., July 29.— The Richmond Unemployment Council, | at its meeting on July 20, expelled | Thomas H. Stone as a deserter and traitor to the workers’ unemploy- | ment movement. | On June 10, Stone sent in his res- | ignation to the Council, and on June 14 an article appeared in the |}| $16.00 for 2 Wks.—5 Wks. $52.50—10 Wks. $105.00 For Others Additional $2.00 per Week For children over 12 years an additional dollar per week Cars Leave for Camp Daily at 10:30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday 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 Richmond News Leader stating that: “City Red Leader Changes His Views,” pointing out that Stone | “hoped to be admitted to the ber | The same paper which formerly at- $. O. 5. COMRADES! tacked Stone as a “leader of the/ unemployed,” now praised him, hop- | ing that “he would make a good | lawyer.” Once before Stone left the Un- | employment Councils in an attempt to get a job as a preacher. He | came back admitting his mistake, | stating that he would never again leava the workers’ movement. The Unemployment Council forward his own career. Unemployed! Men! Women! Boys! Girls! Friends of the Daily Worker: Ina dozen cities new Red Builders have shown that anyone can sell from 25 to 150 copies of the Daily Worker each day on street corners, at factories, trolley junc- tions, in homes—everywhere! Why don’t 'you get into this Parade of Red Builders? Earn expenses and at the same time help the Daily Worker in a a of | and Helpers’ | Richmond feels that it cannot but gain by ridding itself of weaklings | of the Stone type, and warns all| organizations to bar him as one who | will join workers’ groups solely to | N.Y. Red Builder Contest The Red Builder showing greatest Percentage of increase in sales Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Will be given two tickets to the Lewisohn Stadium for Saturday night's performance of “Aida.” Enter Contest Tonight! A second pair of tickets will be given to the Red Builder showing the greatest percentage of sples increase between tonight and Wed- nesday night, in addition to a cash prize of $1.00. See Lichtenstein for details. | top officials from the A. F, of L. | | | Sweaters Aprons 40 Caps 20c; with ord send sizes. postpaid, CHICAGO 2019 West Diysiion St. NEWARK 7 Chariton St, march toward 20,000 new readers! If you live in or near the cities listed below go to the addresses given and say: “I want to help the Daily Worker, give me ty first bundle and assign me a good loca- tion.” (Each new Red Builder gets 25 copies free each day for two weeks!) NEW YORK CITY 35 E. 12th St. BOSTON 919 Washington st. PHILADELPHIA 46 °N. 8th St. BUFFALO 185 Virginia St. CLEVELAND 1522 Prospect Ave. DETROIT 5961 1th St, MILWAUKEE 1110 W. North Ave, If you live in or near any other city write direct to the Circulation Department, 50 E. 13th St., New York City, We'll put you on the | job at once! 4

Other pages from this issue: