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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 106, 1934 Page Threa Schenectady Legion Posts Back Workers’ Insurance Bill Poor For ‘Charity’ in’ Philadelphia $9 A Wk. Scrubwomen) Forced to Contribute | To “Relief” Fund | SCHENECTADY, N. Y., Aug. 9.— All three posts of the American Legion here recently endorsed the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill, The Workers’ Bill was introduced Into the posts by Ben Coppolla, president of the Schenectady Coun- ty Unemployed and Relief Workers Union, who is also a member of post 1005 of the American Legion. Copolla, before introducing the bill into the posts, applied to the state office of the Legion where he was told that although the state office of the Legion does not en- dorse the bill, it was not opposed to ‘ts being introduced into the posts. The Schenectady County Unem- ployed and Relief Workers Union, @ group not affiliated to any other unemployment organization, also endorsed the Workers’ Bill at a re- cent meeting. Scrubwomen Assessed for “Charity” PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 9. —- With relief funds running out and the state administration putting off legislative action for voting funds, the charity racketeers and the bosses here are co-operating to thrust the relief burden squarely upon the shoulders of the employed and part- time workers. At the Drake Hotel, where scrub- women clean fourteen apartments daily for a nine-dollar a week wage, all employes were lined up Tuesday and forced to contributed to the “United Charities Campaign.” Whereas former drives were wide- ly publicized, the charity heads do not dare to work openly, but now resort to underhanded methods to victimize the workers. Workers’ Candidates Stachel to Discuss ‘Daily’ and Strikes At Detroit Parley DETROIT, Mich. Aug. 9.— Jack Stachel, acting secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, will address the Daily Worker conference on Sunday, Aug. 12, 10 a. m., at 5969 Fourteenth St. He will speak on the Daily Worker and the strike struggles, particularly in the San Fran- cisco district. This meeting will be attended by Daily Worker agents and Red Builders and is part of the cam- paign to raise the circulation by 1,000 in the Michigan district. Aside from the regular delegates at the conference, others have been invited. Al units of the Communist Party have been urged to send their Daily Worker representa- tives so as to have a full at- tendance at this meeting. Will- iam Weinstone, secretary of the Michigan district of the Com- munist Party, will preside at the meeting. Trial Tonight To Probe Race Discrimination NEW YORK —A mass meeting and trial to protest discrimination against Puerto Rican children by the Federation of Protestant Wel- fare Agencies and the Edwin Gould Foundation will be held tonight at 8:30 o'clock at the Park Palace, 3 W. 110th St., under the auspices of the United Frent Committee Against Discrimination of Puerto Ricans. At the meeting evidence will be presented to show how high offi- cials of the welfare agencies have refused to aid Puerto Rican chil- Brigades Push| ‘Daily’ Drive In St. Louis Four Shock Groups Act) For 200 Weekly Gain | In Circulation } 8T. LOUIS, Aug. 9.—Four Shock Brigades, comprising six to twelve volunteers in each, have launched a decisive program to increase the circulation of the “Daily” by 200 mew readers during the current week. “One sub a day” is the goal and slogan of each pair of com- rades in the Shock Brigades, they | have announced. The Terminal Railroad Yard, In- | dependent Packing House, Chevro- | let and the garment districts are the main industrial points where, | beginning his week, 150 copies of | the Daily Worker are to be sold by selected Brigaders. Trade union workers, Socialists and their friends are among the scores of indivi- dually picked workers to be won over to reading and subscribing to the “Daily.” The District Committee is con- fident_ of complete success of the special “Daily Worker Week” drive. New Shock Brigades will be organ- ized in Kansas City, Kansas, Jop- jin and the Arkansas sections. These will be given complete re- ports of the work accomplished here, to be used as a guide. While district bundles are creasing, the tempo is much too slow. Sections, Units and Fractions must follow the examples set by the New York Red Builders and organize for a broader and per- manent distribution of our “Daily.” in- Nitgedaiget Cleveland, DAYTON, Ohio, Aug. 9. Party in this area has been fil they have done their part in placing Communist candidates on the State and Montgomery County ballots in the Noy, 6 elections. Despite such heartening news, John Williamson, organizer for} District Six, reported today that) there is still no assurance that the| necessary 50,000 signatures would be | on hand in time to submit them to the Secretary of State. He stressed the need for continued intensive effort if the required signatures are to be collected. Indications of a highly effective | campaign were seen here in the first election mass meeting held on Wednesday, at which I. O. Ford, candidate for Governor, outlined to | Park the Communist way out of the | crisis. Cleveland Overfulfills Quota CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 9.—Sec- tion 2 of the Communist Party, District 6, will hold a victory ban- quet on Saturday night to celebrate its fulfillment of the 4,000 nominat- ing signatures quota assigned to it by the election campaign committee. Responding to the call of Party officials for intensified work on sig- 500 workers in the Dayton Library | Dayton Fulfill Their Quotas Chicago Still Behind—Pennsylvania Ratification Conference Sunday—6,000 Signatures Are Needed in Connecticut .—The quota of 1,600 nom- jinating signatures set for the section of the Communist led. Aware of the emergency which faces the Party’s election campaign, Communists and sympathetic workers have pledged to collect 500 more by Aug. 15 to make doubly sure that ¢——— is seriously handicapped by lack of funds, Election campaign activities were going forward this week fairly rapidly. A students’ election rally, called by the National Students League, will August 11, to support Sam Lissitz, candidate for trustee of the Uni- versity of Illinois on the Communist ticket. The meeting will start at 8 pm. at 12th and Turner. Five hundred leafiets have been distrib- uted by the N. 8, L. endorsing Lis- sits. This young worker was formerly executive secretary of the N. S, L. in Chicago, and was well known for his militant fight for student | rights. Special Mobilization A bicycle and roller skate parade will be held in Albany Park soon, | Riders and skaters will carry ban- ners calling for support of the Com- munist ticket. Special mobilization of Party members are instructed to report at 6 p.m. before their unit meetings to their neighborhood campaign head- quarters, for an hour or two's in- tensive signature collection, which be held Saturday,| 7, Guardsmen At Ill. Workers |Troops In Maneuvers | m | | Practice for An | “Emergency” (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) | CHICAGO, Aug. 9.—Mass move- ments of troops through the north- ern part of Illinois on a scale un-} known since the war are to take| place this month. Ten thousand) National Guardsmen will march . pic) es || Program Saturday Aim W ar Show At Freiheit Picnic Music and Sports NEW YORK.~— Israel Amter, national secretary of the Unem- ployment Councils, will report on the latest developments in the nation-wide struggle for relief and unemployment insurance at the thirteenth annual picnic of the Morning Freiheit which wi be held in Ulmer Park, Brooklyn. on Saturday. An extensive cultural and sports program has been ar- ranged for the occasion. There will be brief plays by the Work- ers Laboratory Theater in Eng- lish and presentations by the from Rockford to Chicago, engaging |in military maneuvers on the way. | | Plans include such militaristic | | demonstrations as the “capture” of | towns, establishment of martial law, sham battles, etc, Practically jevery branch of the army service | Will be represented, infantry, cav- alry, artillery, tanks, aircraft and ne gun groups being included in the demonstrations, The march will end in Chicago, where an encampment will be made in and around Soldiers’ Field in Grant Park. Every effort is being mace by the National Guard commanders to {Make the march a demonstration of how the guard can operate in an emergency. By concentrating several columns | deliver a warning to the workers of Chicago, by showing off the power of the guard. ing to note that the soldiers will camp in Soldiers’ Field, the spot which is marked in the National Guard plans to crush the workers, as a concentration point for the military force. | Scottsboro-Herndon Artef in Yiddish. Music will be provided by the Freiheit Man- dolin Orchestra and the Freiheit Gesangs Verein. Ulmer Park may be reached by taking the West End B.M.T. line to the 25th Avenue Station. Ad- mittance is 35 cents. Anti-Fascists | Fight Verdict On Popovich NEW YORK. — Queens anti-fas- cists will assemble tonight at the | Workers Center, 104-31 150th St., j and sentencing of Otto Popovich for jleading a picket line protesting of Ernst vittims _ of freedom all manding the Thaelmann and Hitler fascism. | Popovich was clubbed, arrested and framed. He was given the savage sentence of 200 days at hard jlabor in the workhouse and a $60 \fine by Magistrate Alfred J. Hof- |mann, an appointee of La Guardia. Gouge’, P, DISTRICTS PRESS SIGNATURE DRIVES@olice stack ‘Furniture Men ‘In Cambridge Communist Party Urges Support of Y.C.L. Full |Time Training School CAMBRIDGE, Mase., Aug. 9—By an attack on strikers at the Mase sachusetts Parlor Frame Company |led by Lieutenant Douglas, the po- jlice have laid the basis for new | brutalities against the workers and a feverish attempt to break a strike which promises to develop into a general strike of the Furniture | Workers Industrial Union in ; Massachusetts. |, Attacking from the rear while jthe pickets were moving to their meeting hall, police thugs assaulted |L. Lapin, William Card and Arvid | Nilson, ting to incite a riot. Nilson s brutally slugged and Lapin had his shirt torn from his | back. No arrests were made. ‘oristic methods, and in its sec men are on a there are three scabs, |The number on strike has “been | swelled by sympathetic workers. | The scab leader Max Kornetsky, |is a member of the Jewish Work | man’s Circle, and he is a Socialist. |The three scabs have stayed. on | the job despite workers’ delegations from the members of the union, | The workers have raised the de= jmands of reinstatement of union jmembers without the thirty per cent wage cut which is the cause of the strike. Because of the tet of troop, the commanders expect. to| Jamaica, to protest the frame-up/ mination of the agreement with |the company, the demands of the | strikers will change on Thursday to It is interest-| Hitler terror in Germany and de-| include a new agreeemnt. y, A protest meeting called by the Communist Party will be held at Rogers and First Streets, Friday, at 4.30 p. m, Hundreds of sympathetic workers will hear Jack McCarthy ak in support of the strike. | Protest Conditions at Win Places on Ballot | aren. A ietter from a Supervisor, nature collections, Section 2 has|'* then checked up at the unit. Special Conference Is Buffalo Flop House Popovich is organizer of the Un-| ’ In Big Mining Center FAIRMONT, W. Va., Aug. 9. — This community and its environs, a stronghold of coal mine-operators rule, is also apparently becoming a stronghold of political organiza- tion of the workers. The Commu- nist Party here has just filed a nominating petition here with more than 400 names which will assure local candidates ‘The candidates placed in nomina- tion by the petition are: Isador Nester of Osage, for State Senator; Lowell Watkins of Fairmont, Ed- werd C. Willis of Millersville, An- Donfrio of Fairmont, for House of Delegates; Robert T. Mor- rison of Fairmont for County Com- missioner. In Monongalia, the neighboring county, the endidates are: Andrew Winemiller of Osage, and William Beal, a Negro worker. of Cassville for House of Delegates; Charles Novak of Osege for County Commissioner and Luther Ice of Osage for Sheriff. The candidates have made pub- lic as their platform the seven chief planks listed in the election plat- form adopted by the Central Com- mittee of the Communist Party. Daily Worker “Builder” Jailed in Atlantie City By a Worker Correspondent ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 8.-— Adam Johnson, a Red Builder sell- ing the Daily Worker, was arrested Monday morning for the second time within a week. His brother, George Johnston, also a Daily Worker agent, was arrested last ‘Thursday and released the next day. In all three arrests, their stock of papers was confiscated by the police. Adam Johnston was at first held under $1,000 bond, but the Inter- national Labor Defense attorney Isador Sacks obtained his release in his custody. It is evident that a mass fight must be started here to keep our “Daily” on the streets. Keep this date open! SUNDAY AUGUST 26 DAILY WORKER DAY H dq the Agricultural Adjustment sc aise pet leave Saturday, 3 Cuts Production minimum of nutrition require- Daniiuistration have camibines to For Producers a p.m., from 93 Stanniford St., West — ments,” as the consumers’ counsel|reduce the production of milk. On eee ane | AVANTA FARM nd ond. 22 Wiebonel Sb ckoxbury. ae er a rere, explains. For this emergency diet,| June 1, 1934, total milk production on the land. th ANNUAL Ulster Park, N. Y. Workers resting place. Good food. Bathing; $12 per week; $2 per day; 10 A. M. Boat to Poughkeepsie. Ferry to Highland; 3:20 P. M. Train to Ulster Park. Round Trip $2.71. TRIAL SUB OFFER. DAILY WORKER 50 E. 13th St., New York City Send me the Daily Worker every day for two months. or money order) I enclose $1 (check city . Btate Note: This offer does not apply to re- newals, nor does it hold good for Man- hhattan and Bronx. Miss Edith May Holmes of the Protestant Federation, recently stated: “I am under the impression that most of your children’ are Puerto Rican, and, for this reason, feel that the Gould Camps will not be able to take care of them, as we have been requested not to send any Puerto Rican children.” Officials of A. F. of L. Union, in Philadelphia Plan Strike Sell-Out PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 9.— Officials of the Suitcase, Bag and Portfolio Makers’ Union (A. F. of L.) have maneuvered control of the general strike in the leather goods industry out of the hands of the strike committee and given the Executive Committee full power to negotiate and settle with any of the seventeen struck shops, This is only one of a long list of maneuvers that have gradually dissipated the power of the union, won by a general strike last sum- mer. The union officials proposed a speed-up method by which the bosses were able to cut wage costs 20 percent, and failed to take ac- tion when earnings fell from the $25 a week guaranteed by the set- tlement to $12 and $18. | Previously the bosses were per-| mitted to cut wages 10 percent *by | cutting down the working week} from 44 to 40 hours without a wage increase, To stifie opposition from workers, union meetings were cut from two to one a month. ‘When the old contract expired on August 1, the workers demanded a 35-hour week and a 30 percent wage increase. The bosses de- manded a 40-hour week and a 10 percent cut. The strike was voted and worke:s walked out a hun- dred percent. New England Workers To Hear Earl Browder At Picnic Tomorrow BOSTON, Aug. 9.—Workers from all over New England will rally to hear Earl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party, speak at the annual, Daily Worker outing which will be held at Camp Nitge- daiget, Franklin, Mass., tomorrow and Sunday. There will be a baseball game be- tween the Young Communist League and the Communist Party teams to break the- 7—7 tie in the last con- test, rowing, swimming and enter- tainment. Round trip is seventy-five cents. Sends Word To Herndon NEW YORK—Fraternal greetings and an offer ‘of its facilities to help him recuperate his prison-shattered health have been telegraphed to Angelo Herndon by the manage- ment of Camp Nitgedaiget, Beacon, N.Y. The telegram, addressed to the national office of the International Labor Defense, declares: “We send warm fraternal greet- ings to Angelo Herndon upon his release from Fulton Tower Prison and to the I. L. D. whose fight made this victory possible. We pledge to work ceaselessly until this courage- ous fighter is completely freed. Since Comrade Herndon is ill, we offer all facilities of Camp Nitge- daiget to help win him back to health, “What betier function can work- ers co-operative camp serve than to help wounded soldiers of class battle back to health and the strug- gle? We hope that Comrade Hern- don will be able to accept our eager- ly proffered invitation and join us as our guest, (Signed) “JOSEPH GALSTUCK, Manager.” Dr. Franz Hoellering | Will Speak at German Anti-Fascist Pienic NEW YORK.—Dr. Franz Hoeller- ing, noted German journalist, will speak on “After Hindenberg What?” at a picnic Sunday in North Beach Park, Astoria, given by the Anti-Fascist Action. Louis Gibarti, international sec- retary of the Lord Marley Commit- tee to Aid Victims of German Fas- cism, will also speak. The Anti-Fascist action has de- signated Sunday as German Anti- Fascist Day. German working class songs, dancing, swimming and gym- nastic exhibitions, mass singing and anti-fascist plays will complete the program for the day. Admission is twenty-five cents. Earn Expenses Selling the “Daily” turned in almost 1,000 additional names. The banquet will be held at the Lithuanian Workers’ Hall, 920 E. 79th St., near St. Clair Ave. John Schmies will be one of the speakers at the celebration. Pennsylvania Ratification Sunday PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Aug. 9— Workers’ organizations from every part of the State are expected to send delegates to the Pennsylvania State ratification convention of the Communist Party to be held in Harrisburg on Sunday. The con- vention will indorse Communist candidates and the State platform of the Communist Party in the fall elections. Arrangenients have been made to transport by bus a large contingent of delegates who are to meet at the election campaign headquarters at 46 North Eighth St. on Saturday. Sympathetic individuals and or- ganizations were also called on to- day to report to election campaign headquarters to get blanks for the collection of nominating petition signatures. Ten thousand names will be required throughout the State to place the names of the major candidates on the ballot. The deadline for all nominating signature collections is Sept. 1. Chicago Campaign Still Behind CHICAGO, August 8—Slight im- |provement was reported this week lin the drive to place Communist candidates cn the ballot in Mlinois in the fall elections. The im- provement, however, was too slight to permit assurance that the signa- ture quota will be filled, and cam- paign leaders stated that the drive must be speeded up much more. Two hundred signatures were turned in to the State Campaign Committee office at 101 S. Wells Street Monday as compared with 500 for the whole week previous A. Guss, campaign manager for the Communist Party, however, stated that even the rate of 200 per day would not get all the candidates on the ballot. Mcre than 90,000 signers of petitions are still needed, and there is less than four weeks in which to get them. Students to Hold Rally Guss also appealed to the holders of 2,000 collection lists to turn their money in at once, as the campaign Meantime, Party and non-Party workers are urged to report daily to their nearest headquarters for lists and material. The final deadline for fhe turn- ing in of signature lists will be at the affair to be held in Peoples Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave., |Sept. 1. This does not apply to Districts 5 and 8, which must have their lists in earlier. Need 6,000 Signatures in Connecticut NEW HAVEN, Conn., Aug. 9—A total of 6,000 signatures are needed to place Communist Party candi- dates in the fall elections on the ticket in this State, campaign offi- | Clals here have announced. Special election campaign committees have been set up in every large city to speed the signature drive. “The Communist Party,” said I Wofsy, candidate for Governor, “is trying in this campaign to pene- trate industrial territory which has never been reached effectively be- fore. To this end speaking tours and large indoor rallies are being planned for September and Oc- tober.” Besides Wofsy, the major candi- dates in this State are Richard Farber, formerly an outstanding member of the Socialist Party, who is running for Attorney General; J. | Simon Scott of Stamford, Negro, in |the United States Postal Service; Clara Scala Clevenger, of Stamford, for Secretary of State, and Michael Russo, of Bridgeport, for Treasurer. Other candidates are Olaf Ellison, of Hartford, for Compiroller; Ron- ald Loomis, of New Britain, for United States Senator, and Robert Kling, New Haven, man-at-Large. ROCKFORD ANTI-WAR MEETING ROCKFORD, Ill.— Four hundred workers assembled at the County Court House, August 1, to hear speakers from the American League Against War and Fascism, the Com- munist Party and the International Labor Defense denounce imperialist war and fascism. A group of sol- diers from Camp Grant listened to the speaking. Three workers joined the American League, and two others joined the Communist Party. Join the Unemployed? Red Builders! for Congress- | Called In Detroit) DETROIT, Aug. 9.—Warning of the danger to the health and lives | of the Scottsboro Boys held in soli- | tary confinement for over two) months now, the Scottsboro-Hem- | don-Thaelmann Defense Committee | has issued a call for an emergency | conference on Friday, Aug. 17, at | the Danish Brotherhood Temple, 1775 W. Forest Ave. | The call for the conference cites the magnificent victory won by | mass pressure in smashing the} frame-up against James Victory, Detroit Negro worker; the partial victory in securing the release of Angelo Herndon on bail pending appeal, and calls for an intensifica- tion of the mass fight against Ne- gro persecution and frame-up of militant workers, black and white. | It links the fight for Thaelmann | with the campaign for the Scotts- | boro Boys and Herndon. | The conference will be addressed | by Richard B. Moore, National | Field Organizer of the I. L. D., who! will report on the latest develop- ments in the campaigns. Detroit to Celebrate Release of Herndon) DETROIT, Aug. 9—The partial | victory won by the working class in the Herndon case will be celeb- rated at the annual picnic of the Michigan District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, Sunday, Aug. 19,,at the Workers Camp on 12) Mile Road West and Halstead | Road. | Richard B. Moore, noted Negro speaker and National Field Organ- izer of the I. L. D., will outline the next steps in the mass fight for the freedom of Angelo Herndon and the Scottsboro Boys. CAMPERS ASSAIL IVES BILL WINDALE, N. Y., Aug. 9. — A meeting of 725 campers in Camp Unity protested Tuesday against the Ives Loyalty Oath Bill which will be used to punish those teach- ers who dare to express any opin- tons contrary to those of the au- thorities. A delegation left from camp to Albany later to support the Jocabi Anti-Multiple Job Bill. | Minimum As A.A.A. Busses leave Sunday, 10 a.m., from the same places and f:0m 113 Dud- Jey St., Roxbury; 1029 Tremont St., South End; 74 Wildwood St., Dor- chester; 88 Hawthorne St., Chelsea; and 451 Cross St., Malden. Workers In Court Force Release of 3 Jobless PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 9.—Two hundred workers packed the magis- trate’s room of No, 2 police station Saturday morning to force the re- lease of three unemployed workers who had been arrested the day be- fore when police raided a demon- stration at the Locust Street wel-— fare station. Shouting militant slogans at the worried magistrate, the workers made any kind of a hearing prac- tically impossible. He released the Children of miners and other workers in West Virginia are get- ting less than a third as much milk as they need for “an adequate diet at minimum cost,” according to the National Milk Survey of the Agricultural Adjustment Adminis- tration’s consumers’ counsel, In Charleston, Wheeling and Clarks- burg, all coal mining areas, school children’s families purchased on the average only half a pint of milk or less per person per day, while an “adequate diet” means from 1% pints to a qua:t. In the National Milk Survey, an “adequate diet at moderate cost,” defined as a safe diet from the standpoint of health, calls for 305 quarts of milk per person per year, or almost @ qua:t a day. For a margin of safety in health, or an “adequate diet at minimum. cost” Get One-Third of Safe} j—“A level even lower than the lor restricted diet level. But these families purchased less than the amount required even for the “emergency, or restricted diet” unsafe for anything but a limited period, at least 155 quarts of milk a year are required or about 8-10 of a pint per person per day. Purchases Far Below Standard In Charleston, average purchases of fresh and evaporated milk by the families studied are 64 per cent be- low the requirements of an ade- quate diet at moderate cost; 58 per cent below the requirements of an adequate diet at minimum cost; and 30 per cent below the emergency In Wheeling, average purchases were 63 per cent below the adequate diet at moderate cost; 56 per cent below the adequate diet at minimum cost, and 27 per cent below the emergency dict level. In Clarks- burg, the purchases were 62 per cent below the first, 55 per cent below the second, and 25 per cent below the restricted, emergency diet. Miners’ Children Are Starved for Milk seven million children are under- nourished and in need of milk, pro- duction of milk is falling. Drought was 5 per cent to 6 per cent below June 1, 1933, according to the De- partment of Agriculture’s summary, and there is “uncertainty regarding probable consumption later in the year.” Program for Producers With one hand the A. A. A. points out in its national survey the need of more milk in workers’ fami- lies, and with the other it proposes to reduce milk production by 10 per cent These contradictions are well stated in a new pamphlet called The Way Out for Milk Pro- ducers by Leif Dahl, just issued by the Farmers’ National Committee for Action (price, 5c.). Any solution for the produce:s’ problems must accomplish three things, the author declares, summarized as follows: 1, Cut down the huge profits and stranglehold of the milk companies. 2. Restore purchasing power to > | Farmers’ Committee of | Action Gives Program | { | | Examining the present situation in relation to milk production, the author finds the “New Deal” has accomplished none of these things. Milk marketing agreements pro- moted under the Agricultural Ad- justment Administration have not given the farmer a higher price for his milk. In fact, in some cases they have lowered prices, as in Chicago, where price per hundred weight for Class I milk went down from $2.10 to $1.75; in the Twin Cities, where the price went down from $1.70 to 1.60; in Des Moines, where the old price of $1.95 became| 1.60 under the A. A, A. Dr. Tolley, assistant A. A. A. di- rector, is authority for the state-| ment that “To get all the milk we| would need to put everyone on an adequate diet at moderate cost, we would need 15 million more cows than we now have.” In other || CARS & BUSSES LEAVE employment Council of Jamaica and) Communist candidate for Assembly in the fourth district. Because of |his militant leadership of numerous! sanitary struggles for relief, against evictions, | and against discrimination against Negroes and foreign born, he has} long been hated by the bosses. In addition, to the brutal jail sentence, he is threatened with deportation. Tonight’s protest meeting will be addressed by Lieut. Paul P. Crosby, American Expeditionary Force, and now a member of the International Labor Defense, Williana Burroughs, head of the Harlem Workers School; Irving Schwab, and Solomon Jack- owitz, I. L. D. attorneys, with Charles Ward as chairman. Build a Daily Worker Route BUFFALO, N. Y., Aug. 9—De- manding three meals a day and conditions, unemployed workers living in the Erie County Lodging House here met with the Board of Supervisors and asked the immediate removal of the men in charge of the institution. Four police were stationed in the offices of the Board when the spokesmen for the men, who were organized under the Unem |ment Council, placed the w demands before the supervisors. While the:board promised an “in- vestigation” Of the conditions in the |flop house, the delegation reported |back to the men and outlined or- ganizational steps for the winning of their demands. — CHICAGO, 1, RED PRESS PICNI Daily Worker Cc of the Morning Freiheit Sunday, August 19th WHITE HOUSE GROVE Irving Park Boulevard and River Drive Program: DIRECTIONS: Take Irvin; our buses Games, Gates Open 10 A. M, Refreshments Admission 15c Dancing, @ Park Blvd. car to end of line where will take you direct to grove, NEW ENGLAND COME TO THE ANNUAL OUTING OF THE Saturday 3 P. M. 93 Staniford, West End 42 Wenonah St., Rox. Sunday, 10 A. M. 93 Staniford, West End 42 Wenonah St., Rox. 113 Dudley St., Rox. 1029 Tremont, So. End 74 Wildwood, Dorchester 88 Hawthorne, Chelsea 451 Cross St., Malden ROUND TRIP 75 CEN DAILY WORKER Saturday, August 11th. Sunday, August 12th EARL BROWDER National Seéretary, C. P., wiil be the main speaker BASEBALL Y. C. L. vs. C. P. SWIMMING AND ROWING GAMES and SAT. CAMPFIRE ° CAMP NITGEDAIGET FRANKLIN, MASS. Take U.S. Route 1—Turn off rt Wrentham ADMISSION FREE! Get A Return Trip to the U.S.S.R. B PIC¢ Sat., Aug. 11 -- Ulmer Park | West End Line to 25th When you buy a ticket save the cou- pon, you may be the one to get a free round-trip to the U. S. S. R. Refreshments of all kinds at city for dancing—Workers Laboratory Theatre in a new performance _ Admission at the gate . Tickets in advance . With organization ticket er Tickets om sale now at Morning Freiheit office, 35 E. 12th St., 6th floor, and in all Ly atin pagal Allen, devices oes pee a [there must be 260 quarts of milk} Yet with such a situation as this employed and unemployed city words, as Leif Dahl points out, in- Come to the Biggest rm |e e - | per \ i 5 i | _L-Roost “DAILY” DRIV Ny mano a feeble rep-|per person per year, approximately!in many areas, and with the U. 8.| workers. stead of a decrease of 10 per cent, 4% pints per day. ‘Children’s Bureau estimating that 3. Guarantee the farmer security we need an increase of 70 per cent. MORNING FREIHEIT NIC Ave. Station, Brooklyn prices—First class Jazz Orchestra -.35 cents . -25 cents +15 cents ae Workers’ Centers Affair of the Season | a