The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 16, 1934, Page 1

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)

| Only $2,413 has been contributed to date te the $15,000 defense fund for the appeals of Angelo Herndon and the Scottsbore boys. Only 16 days are left. See bi issue. Rush contrib Labor Defense, 80 E. Vol. XI, No. 196 <&> lank on page four of this mations to International llth St., New York City. Entered as second-class matter at the Daily,QWorker CENTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL) Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the Act of March 8, 1879. TEXTILE CONVENTION NEW YORK, THURSDAY, BACKS W WEATHER: Clo. AUGUST 16, 1934 showers. Build Your District’s Circulation NEW ORDERS YESTERDAY Worcester Chicopee Joplin Rochester ” Wilmington x Pages) Price 3 Cenis ORKERS BILL erman Communists Proclaim “Thaelmann for President!” ‘Campaign Launched Posters and Leaflets | Flood Cities in Election Drive BERLIN, Aug. 15.— With true Bolshevik boldness, the Communist Party of Germany by putting up Ernst Thael- mann, imprisoned Communist leader, as the candidate to op- pose Hitler in the August 19 elections for President of Germany. The candidacy of Thaelmann is being broadcast through the length and breadth of Germany by the epic heroism of German Communists, who hourly defy tor- ture and execution in the distri- bution of pamphlets, leaflets, post- ers and handbills. Socialist workers by the thou- sands all over Germany are work- ing hand-in-hand with their class brothers in fighting for the candi- dacy of Thaelmann and the smashing of the tremendous elec- tion propaganda which the Nazis have let loose in the last week. Berlin thas been covered with stickers, signs and posters by Com- munist and Socialist workers, whose ingenuity eludes all the ef- forts of the Nazi police to stop them. Thousands of these Socialist workers voted for the militarist- fascist Von Hindenburg against Thaelmann on the advice of the leaders of the German Socialist Party in the elections of 1932. To- day they know better, The last 15 months have taught them much. Everywhere sidewalks are paint- ed with red paint: “The Red Front lives! Vote against Hitler!” Letter-boxes are stuffed with Communist leaflets in all parts of the city. Defy Nazi Terrorism Wherever the Nazis have posted huge ballots in the streets to in- dicate which way the people ought to vote, the workers manage fo write a huge “No” and the “Yes” is torn off. In preparation for the Aug. 19 election in which Hitler asks for “approval’ of his taking the Pres- idency, the Nazis are intensifying (Continved on Page 2) New Haas Plan Lets Company Unions In MINNEAPOLIS, Miss., Aug. 15,— The strike committee of 100 in last night's meeting reiterated its rejec- tion of the new Haas-Dunnigan proposal for the settlement of the truckdrivers’ strike, which is even more strikebreaking in character than the original proposal. It leaves militant pickets open to discrim- ination, takes all rights away from the union in negotiation with em- ployers and provides security for the establishment of a company union. It rejects even the wage minimum e@ Vast Ilegal | GANGS, COURTS KEEP UP CO Weinstone to Debate Republican Leader In Detroit Sept. 22 DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 15.— The debate between U. 8. Hegg- blom of the Republican Party and William Weinstone of the Communist Party on “Resolved, That Proletarian Dictatorship Should Supplant the Republican Form of Government,” has been | postponed until Sept. 22. The place will be announced later. The debate was originally scheduled for August 18. It had to be postponed because the Mechanics Educational Society of America, under whose aus- pices the debate was supposed to have been held, has called it off on the grounds that they had other arrangements and that Matthew Smith, president, had agreed that the M. E. S. A. “was not authorized to make any such arrangement.” S. I. Advance Is Picketed By Reporters NEW YORK.—New York news- papermen, members of the News- paper Guild, were on the picket line again yesterday, demanding the re- jinstatement of Alexander Crosby, ship in the Guild. He was the only Guild. member’ on the Adyance. The Guild's emergency committee went into action after a meeting of the Guild’s Representative Assem- bly Tuesday night rejected a pro- |Posal to submit the question to ar- bitration. The publisher had called for arbitration after a meeting Mon- day with representatives of the Guild in the office of Mayor La Guardia, The Staten Island Advocate is owned by S. I. Newhouse, publisher |of the Long Island Press, who was forced to recognize the Guild after a picketing campaign early in July. Immediately after signing an agree- ment in. the Mayor's office, New- 1 timidating members of his staff in an effort to force them to resign from the Guild. A special issue of the Guild Re- porter, organ of the Guild, reciting the facts on the Crosby case, was already on the streets late yester- day, and was distributed by pickets at both terminals of the Staten Is- land ferry. At Tuesday night’s Representative Assembly meeting, Carl Randau, president of the New York Guild, reported that Roy Howard, pub- lisher of the World-Telegram and the other papers of the Scripps- Howard chain, had declared himself willing to negotiate with the Guild for an agreement for the World- Telegram unit, and had said he would not hold out for a company union, Negotiations are not yet completed, however. The Daily Worker unit of the Guild, at a regular meeting, adopted a resolution to support the World- | Telegram unit in every way in its | stand against a company union form news editor of the Staten Island Ad- | ! vance, fired because of his member- | Unity all over Austria. The Revo-| | house began to go back on it, in- | of 52% cents an hour and eS | fe . Mig tices |of agreement, and in another reso- to leave wages at the present stand- ard. While the strikers feel indignant at this outrageous proposal, the Trotskyite leadership, with Gold- man as its spokesman, attempts to make the workers believe that this proposal shows that the bosses’ lines are cracking up due to the effective stand of the union. A Communist Party leaflet, dis- tributed at last night’s union meet- ing. proposes the following points on how to win the strike: 1. to re- unite all forces of Local 574, call- ing drivers who were sent back to work to ecme ont and re-establish mass picketing; 2, to make effective epnee's to all union locals, shops and factories to join the drivers, and 3, to call a united labor con- ference to decide the question of a general strike in support of the drivers and for the rights of work- ers. This leaflet places before the drivers the example of the San Francisco longshore strike under the leadership of Harry Bridges. It de- scribes the treacherous role of the Dunne brothers in Minneapolis, and points out the way in which a real Communist leadership would fight | and win the strike. | VOLUNTEERS ARE CALLED | Volunteer neat typists are wanted | to address special letters for the Daily Worker circulation drive. Lunch money and fare will be paid. Call at Daily Worker Business Of- fice, eighth floor, 50 East Thirteenth Street. Ask for Benice, lution undertook to take an active part in the fight for the reinstate- ment of Crosby on the Staten Island Advance. Relief Bureau Heads Attempt to Frame-Up White Collar Leaders NEW YORK. — Efforts by the Emergency Home Relief Bureau heads, to help C.W.A. and Works Division officials prepare a frame- up against two organizers of white collar relief workers was revealed yesterday, The Daily Worker learn- ed that written instructions were S.P.Group_ To Red Aid Socialists.in Austria Unite on Aid To Terror Victims | LINZ, Austria, Aug. 15.—United | action in the relief of working |class victim of the Dolifuss ter- | rorism has been achieved with the decision of the National Commit- |tee of Revolutionary Socialists of | Upper Austria to affiliate with the | Moscow world headquarters of the | International Red Aid, This action confirms those of |many individual members of the Socialist relief agency which has been aiding the relatives of vic- tims in the Dollfuss murders. The revolutionary Socialists and | the Red Aid of Upper Austria have jissued a joint appeal, calling upon | all workers’ organizations, ali rey- olutionary Socialists, to follow | their example. This means that unity of solidarity has been estab- lished in a very important part of the country, the province in which the armed uprisings of Feb- | ruary commenced, and therewith a very considerable advance made towards the establishment of this |lutionary Socialists of Upper Aus- tria._ call upon their Central Com- mittse to take up negotiations with the Central Committee of the Red Aid, with the object of col- lective affiliation. This important political success of the unity strivings of the Red Aid will have an influence far be- yond the confines of Upper Aus- tria. It is the first time that the urge of the masses for unity has gained the upper hand, and |mumber of provincial Socialist or- | ganizations have taken a stand | against the attitude maintained so long by the Second International and the leaders of Upper Austrian Social Democracy, and have in- isted on the recognition of the super-party unity organization of | the Red Aid. | tory not only for the Red Aid of | Austria, it signifies the victory of the splitters, over the attempts to abuse the solidarity of the masses abuse the soljdarity of the masses for collaboration with fascism. Indianapolis Police Arrest Ten Workers in New Terror Drive INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Aug. 15.— Police here have attacked the last three shop-gate meetings held at Kingan and company, large inde- pendent packing house, arresting ten workers. Two of these meet- ings were under the auspices of the Communist Party, while the third was an open-air American Federa- tion of Labor union rally. All of the workers are out on bail ranging from $100 to $1,000. When protest delegations came to Chief of Police Morrisey, demanding ex- planations, he declared: sent these men down. I'm going to break up every Red meeting I can.” The police raided the August 1 anti-war rally held at Military Park, and arrested two speakers, Wilbur Wilson, 30-year-old Negro, and Sol Larks, section organizer of the Com- munist Party. In the police car, and in the Ber- tillon room at police headquarters the two workers, and when Larks badly beaten. The hearings are to come up on August 17, The Linz appeal signifies a vic- | Canvassers | Election Manager Acqui Gr Meeting Broken U p,| Affiliates 11) Head Convicted, Hall Still Closed—Mass Meeting | Called in Los Angeles | Painters To Rally In | Big Parade Will March Against Boss Association, Corrupt District Leaders NEW YORK.—Painters of t city, on strike for over four wee Indicted itted—Marine Workers’ (Special to the SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. dispersed a meeting of worke completely. | legal apparatus of the State is mo- © | bilized against workers and working | class leaders jailed during the wide- spread raids and attacks. Elaine Black, secretary of the In- ternational Labor Defense, has been convicted by the jury of vagrancy. She defended herself in court. The first victory in combating cooked-up vagrancy charges was won when Louise Todd, Communist election campaign manager, and Ida Rothstein, were acquitted. Leo Gallagher, candidate for governor of California, defended their cases. The Grand Jury has indicted six workers for »collecting signatures. This was denounced here as a.con- | tinuation of thé State drive to keep | the Communist Party off the baliot. The police continue to keep the hall of the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union at 65 Jackson Street closed, although they do not arrest the marine workers. Despite all of these suppressive measures, the Western Worker con- night as the coast terror campaign against workers’ organ- | izations continues unabated. Papers here ignored the event square Park, on the north side, at While overt and illegal attacks are continuing, the entire | employers’ ozganization, 2 2 ik will march tomorrow in a demon- Rely Weer) |stration against the Master Paint- 15.—Vigilantes attacked and jers Association and against the il- rs in a local hall on Monday | legally elected District Council of the painters union. The men will line up at Madison 25th Street at 1:30 p.m., and will march to the headquart _ jAvenue. From theré they will pro- tinues to appear without interrup- Hie Petia Sa cathe gee relied Hy a i aah *TUP-| the District Council, 14th Siree The State convention of the |°74 8th Benes American Legion, in progress here,|_ Rank and file painters are par- is witnessing definite struggles | ticularly bitter over the fact within its own organization, mainly |Philip Zausner, secretary of the among rank and file veterans, over | District Council by virtue of fraudu- labor questions. lent election, concluded a secret agreement with the master painters LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15. — A{S0me time last winter. The agree- county-wide mass demonstration Ment, which Grover Whalen, then will be held at the Plaza here Sat- | N-R.A. chairman in the city, helped urday noon, Aug. 18, to protest the | to draw up, agrees to an 8-hour day. railroading of June 1 demonstra- The men are now fighting for a tion defendants to maximum prison |7-hour, $9 day. terms, Witdge.of this agreement Sponsoring organizations are the reached the attention of the m?> Relief Workers’ Protective Union, of | be-s! gh a letter issued to which ali the framed workers are the painte: the employers’ 4s- members, and the International La- | sociation calling upon them to suv- bor Defense, which is now appealing port the Zausner-Whalen-Master the case. Workers throughout the | painters’ pact. Zausner is attemp:- country are urged to flood Judge | Crum with telegrams and letters of protest. conditions, in flat contradiction to | the expressed purpose of the strike. ‘Herndon Rally Pushed for Bronx Coliseum NEW YORK.—Following the spirited mass welcome meeting for | Angelo Herndon at Rockland Pal- | ace, 155th St. and Eighth Ave., last night, preparations immediately moved forward for a mighty city- wide outpouring of white and Negro workers and intellectuals at the Bronx Coliseum, East 177th St. This central meeting to welcome Herndon will be held next Wednes- day evening, Aug. 22, Sacco and Vanzetti Day, commemorated by the International Labor Defense as Ne~ | tional Scottsboro Day in the mass fight for the safety and freedom of the nine Scottsboro boys. Herndon, who has been tempo- rarily rescued from the Georgia chain gang by the protests and sac- rifices of the working class in rais- ing the $15,000 bail bond, will be the principal speaker at this meet- ing. Outstanding leaders of the revolutionary movement who will! greet Herndon at this meeting in- clude: Clarence Hathaway, editor | of the Daily Worker; Harry Hay- wood, national secreatry of the ; Ben Da | ready have elected mass delegations | cents per member demanded by the Zausner machine are being waged in every local of the Brotherhood. In Locals 892, 848, 490 and 499 the tax has been ‘overwhelmingly de- feaied, In 848 the vote was 16 13. Jin Local. 892 the machine not dare to take a vote. Answering the cha:ge that the rank and file were sabotaging the strike by fighting the work tax, N. Arrangements | i Rights; Ben Gold, Robert Minor, editor of the Negro Lib- erator and Herndon’s defense at- ecetetey ee on bs “Rube Schnurman, one of the leaders of Bates, key witness in the Scotts-|the opposition to Zausner in Local boro case. Nat Stevens, district | 892, stated: secretary of the I. L. D. will act as| “The rank and file is not op- chairman. The meeting is under| posed to a work tax in principle, the joint auspices of the L. S.N.R.| We are, however, emphatically and the I, L. D, opposed toa work tax gouged out Several mass organizations al-| of the membership by Zausner to pay off the hugh loans contracted to the meeting. All organizations| hy him, particularly when thos> are urged to ge lh sc aaprege Ft loans went for the stealing of and to vote contributions, to le- | i ity Bs livered by their delegations at the | pei ind ibe Hoh ae Coliseum meeting, for the $15,000) Brotherhood at Appeals Fund needed by the I. L. D. | fe . to carry the Herndon and Scotts- | ‘We will certainly support a boro appeals to the U. S, Supreme| work tax administered by rank Court. and file painters for the purpose Organizations are also urged to| of carrying on a vigorous strike to adopt resolutions demanding re-| Win union conditions on every versal of the death sentences | Job in New York. against the Scottsboro boys, and the | Spence chain gang sentence of 18 to 20 Bronx Taxi Drivers Hit years against Herndon, and the im- ek | Company Union Scheme mediate, safe and unconditional re- lease of these ten Negro victims of Battles over the work tax of 50| AST TERROR Organizations Back Scottsboro-Herndon Tag Days,Aug. 18-22 ! | NEW YORK.—Support of the || Scottsboro - Herndon Emergency |} Fund tag days conducted by the New York District of the Inter- national Labor Defense has been promised by all branches of the International Workers’ Order, Women’s Cour . ny Eng- 1 king and Jewish clubs, from the United Front Sup- The five tag days are Satur- day, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Aug. 18 to 22, A mass meeting to commemorate the anniversary of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti on Aug. 22 in the Bronx Coliseum will con- clude the drive. Almost 2,000 collection boxes are ready. They may be ob- tained from the offices of the | I. L. D., 780 Broadway. Ask Delegates For Banquet ‘To Bob Minor NEW YORK. — The New York | District Committee and the Central | Committee of the Communist Party | have called on all organizations to | elect two delegates from e: | ganization to the banauet | to celebrate the fiftieth’ birthde: i Bob” Minor. T ban- will be Beld On” Aug. 30 at | Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Ir | Place. The Communist Party will cele- |brate during the month cf Septem- qi |in the working class struggles of | America. Close upon this celebra- tion comes the birthday of Robert Minor, who has had a leading role in many of the most important working class struggles in the United States. rested for anti-w n r relief in New in 1930 and has partici- pated in the growth and building | of the Communist Party. | A number of prominent speakers will be present at this banquet. The John Reed Club artists are prepar- ing a program. Admission will be 75 cents. Reservations are to be made with the Robert Minor Ban- | quet Committee, 50 East 13th Strec! | Room 501, New York City. Furriers’ Union Stops Shops of 40 Bosses; Urge Morning Pickets | | NEW YORK—Shops of forty lining contractors were stopped by strikes today when it was discov- | ered that they were working on | piece-work, with wages below the j union scale. The Fur Workers’ In- dustrial Union, which stopped the | forty shops, is proceeding to stop all the other contracting shops in the | | trade. “Sure I) - the police attempted to intimidate | refused to answer questions, he was | [League of Struggle for Negro, | capitalist justice. . * 0 | The Socialist letter was sent in | Detroit Functionaries | reply to the Communist proposal Meet to Discuss Reply |for joint action on August 1 agains’ of Socialists on Unity imperialist war and fascism and |for any subsequent action. ‘The DETROIT, Mich, Aug. 15—The | Socialist Party’s answer to the Com- | (munis Party’s proposals for a) united front will be discussed at a ,|Communist Party functionaries the Communist Party should take | toward the letter. | Other points on the order of business is the election camnaign | and the Daily Wozker circulation | meeting to be held Thursday eve- | drive. ning at 5969 Fourteenth St. ‘Worker manager will speak. NEW YORK—Jamming the Pr pect Mansion to the rafter: drivers of the Radio fleet y pledged to fizht the company union in their plant and elected a dele- | gation to Mayor LaGuardia to de- mand that he guarantee that there _be no discrimination against men who do not join the union. 3 am., grew out of the demand of the operators of the fleet that ull hackmen join the Association of Fleet Drivers, a company union, Another meeting of all Bzonx drivers will be held at the Prospec’ Street at 3 a.m. tomorrow morning read on Monday to investigators in at least two Manhattan precincts asking them to submit any informa- ; tion in their possession concerning Alexander Taylor and Isidore Needleman. Both are officials of the Association of Office and Pro- fessional Emergency Employes. Despite the fact that the names of the officials who read the instruc- tions are known and that the time and place of the reading is known, various Relief Bureau officials yes- terday denied any knowledge of the matter. Needleman, however, was | not in the least mystified. “This is obviously an attempt to/ get something, anything on Taylor and me to justify my dismissal for organizing activities and to em- barrass Taylor in his activities as Fort Worth Passes Quota, Taking Lead in Campaign ING from 86.6 to 120.0 per cent in one week, Fort Worth topped its circulation quota by 15 new Daily Worker readers and took first place in the 20,000 drive. In y | of Unemployed fur workers have been asked to coms to the offices the union, 131 W. 28th St., to aid in the fight az contracting. All furriers urged to come to the union offices at 7 a.m. to help in morning picketing of fur shops jmow being struck. | The last meeting of the objec- meeting will decide what attitude| The meeting, which was held at | tions and elections commit‘ee of the } union will be held at 6:30 tonight | at the office, room 1. | objections committee if they have | mot appeared as yet. Workers wish- | jing to register objections to any of George Wishnak, Daily/|Mansion, Prespect Avenue and 156th | the nominees are asked to Go so be- fore this committee. | Five Jailed When Police ‘Raid Shop Gate Meeting | ANDERSON, Ind, Aug. 15.—Five rrested workers were a here on Tuesday in a police attempt to Quota of Quota | break up a Communist Party shop- gate meeting at the big Delco- Remy (General Motors) plant. Over | 1,500 workers were listening to the All nominees | | have been urged to come before the | U.T. W. Vote On Measure Unanimous Delegates Insiructed to Press for Measure at A.F.L. Convention By CARL REEVE NEW YORK.—The Work ers Unemployment and Socia¥ Insurance Bill was unani« mously endorsed by the Na- tional Convention of the United Textile Workers Union Ss at its last si | structs the U.T.W. delega coming national convention of the A. F. of L. to bring the bill before that convention and work for its adoption | This is third international American Federation dorse the Worke the union of the Min and the of Iron, Steel an addition the Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers Federation endorsed the Workers. Bill. | In the debate before the passage of the Workers Unemployment In- | surance Bill Delegate Batty, of New | Bedford, representing the conserva | tive element at the convention, con- |demned the bill as “A Communist jonsored by the Communist Unanimows Endorsement John Powers, chairman of the Legislative Committee, his report. |for the committee, recommended | the adoption of two almost identical ing to settle the strike on these | ber its fifteenth year of leadership | resolutions for the endorsement of | the Workers’ Bill. Following Batty’s | attack, a delegate from Ravenna, Ohio, made an amendment that | the convention endorse unemploy- ment insurance, but name no speci= fic bill. This amendment was de- feated an overwhelming yote and the original motion of the legisias ive committee to endorse the 1 on Page 2) 2,000 In Rally IF lay Knitgoods Sellout Policy NEW YORK.—Anticipating a sell- out of their hard-fought strike, 2,000 goods workers yesterday dem- rated before the offices of the N.R.A. Regional Labor Board, at 45 Broadway, where David Dubinsky, president of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, was con- ferring with knit goods manufac~ turers and N.R.A. officials. | The demonstration, led by the militant Knitgoods Workers Indus- | trial Union, was composed of meme bers of the I-L.G.W.U. and the Ins dustrial Union. A committee of workers, elected by the demonstrators, demanded the right to participate in the con’ ence. When this was rejected, they left; not, ho ithout warning the N.R.A. offici and the LLG, W.U. leaders that they would not accept any sellout compromise on the major demands of the strikers, the 35-hour week and the minimum wage scales. Dubinsky, after the conference, made two proposals for settling the strike, both of which the Industrial Union urged upon the strikers to reject. One proposal is the 35-hour week be abandoned, a 36-hour wee accepted, and the 35-hour week be considered a year later. The other (Co |arbitration all demands. The wage scale for every craft has already been discarded by Dubinsky. | A very impressive united front | demonstration was staged in the | Bronx around the Globe Knitting | Mills. This shop, formerly an In- | ternational shop, is now a company union shop. The demonstration was arranged jointly by workers of the |International and the Industrial Union. A police squad was called, Several workers were arrested. ~~ Thirty-eight pickets were seized addition, Fort Worth took an impressive lead over North Carolina in the District Socialist Competition, although the latter gained 12.0 per cent on its quota during the past seven | days. \ Impressive activity was also displayed by West Vir- ginia. Florida and Buffalo, these Districts gaining 50.6, 27.5 and 21.9 per cent respectively. full tme official for the organiza- tion,” Needleman said, _ : New York again took a serious loss for the week, drop- ping 452 daily readers. Where are the New York Units? ¥ Percent Percent District Quota of Quota District to Date to Date 2 New York 10.000 185 vs. 8 Chicago 2,000 29.4 6 Cleveland 900 35.4 vs. 7 Detroit 1,000 21.7 3 Philadelphia 1,000 46.1 vs. 5 Pittsburgh 300 53.0 1 Boston 600 79.6 vs. 14 Newark 600 54.8 4 Buffalo 320 53.1 vs. 9 Minnesota 300 63.6 15 Connecticut 225 104.4 vs. 19 Denver 200. 107.0 10 Omaha 150 — vs. 11'N, Dakota 150 13 | 12 Seattle 550 — vs. 13 California 600 ae 16 N. Carolina 100 63.0 vs. 20 Ft. Worth 75 120.0 , 17 Birminghau 200 —— vs. 23 Kentucky 5 es 22 W. Virginia a) 62.6 ps. 25 Florida 80 41.2 24 Louisiana 5 42.6 vs. 26 S. Dakota 75 26.6 21 St. Louis 150 546 ys. 18 Milwaukee 200 66.0 Quota: 20,000. New Readers to Date: 5,178. Per Cent of Quota: 25.8 {speakers behead eae when police smashed a@ picket line Those arrested included Miles/Of over 100 knit goods strikers in | Blansett, candidate for Congress in| front of the Star Sportswear, 564 |the Eleventh District; Jim Woods, | Brozdway. Most ef the pickets were candidate for Mayor of Anderson; | mem) of the GWU. Helen Layton, organizer of the In-| The strike comm of the Ine ternational Labor Defense, and Mrs. | dustrial Union began to make sets Woods and Mrs. Blansett. All were tlements with those manufaciurevt released on $100 bond. The hear- who grant all the demands; 18 im+ ) ings come uv tomorrow. | portant shops, among thom thret \former open shops, have already signed agreements with the Indus trial Union, | Earn Expenses Seliing the “Daily” Get Daily Worker Subscribers: t

Other pages from this issue: