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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1934 Page Three COLORADO JOBLESS UNITE AT CONVENTION FOR STRUGGLE A.F.L. Council Joins United Front Group On Militant Program State Unity Committee Begins To Function—Del- egates Prepare for Hunger Marches and Broader DENVER, Colo., Aug. 1 all working-class organizations in this state regardless of political affiliation or other differences were adopted here on Sunday by the State Convention of the Unemployed called under the auspices of a joint committee representing the Colorado Unemployment Councils,¢—————______ the Relief Workers Protective Union, the Co-operative Alliance, the Spanish Workers’ League and American Federation of Labor Rank and File Committee. One hundred delegates, represent- ing an almost equal number of or- ganizations with a membership totaling tens of thousands, gave the convention a character truly repre- sentative of the Colorado working class. The report of the credentials committee showed the presence at the convention of delegates from the Denver Building Trades Coun- cil, representing 21 building trades unions of the American Federation of Labor. Other groups represented were the Mothers’ and Daughters’ Club. the Old Age Pension Leagues of El Paso County and Denver, the United Farmers’ League, and Amer- ican Federation of Labor locals of the cement finishers, hod carriers, plasterers and carpenters and mill- men’s unions. Reports of victories in struggles of unemployed and relief workers were heard and an analysis of past work as the basis for future activ- ities was made. Resolve on Unity The draft. resolution on organi- vational unity summed up these re- ports and their analysis by declar- ing: “We... realize that the condi- tions of the jobless and relief work- ers are daily growing worse, first because we have failed to popularize the gains made in the past by struggle and organization; second, because we have failed to consoli- date and strengthen our organiza- tion after having made gains through struggle, and third, we have failed to increase the power of our organizations through uni- fication of our programs.” To remedy these defects the resolution proposed the election of a, State and City Unemployed Unity Committee, the organization of neighborhood committees for city and county-wide marches, demon- strations, strikes and special un- employed committees to be organ- ized in all American Federation of Labor, youth, fraternal and other organizations. Hunger Marches Plans were also proposed in the resolution for simultaneous local united front hunger marches and unemployed conferences on Wed- nesday, September 19, and for a State-wide united front conference and hunger march to the capitol grounds in Denver on Monday, Oc- tober 19. Delegates will also be sent to the National Social Insur- ance Congress in Washington on the opening of the 74th United States Congress. Committee Functioning The State unity committee is al- ready functioning. Each of the or- ganizations represented elected one delegate to the committee right at the convention, save for several who wanted the matter discussed in greater detail by their own member- ships, The program of organization was adopted with a view to fighting for the following demands: The passage of the Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill (H.R. 7598). A thirty-hour week for all relief workers at prevailing trade union wages. The election of all foremen by the workers. Full pay for loss ef time, cash relief, and an end to all evictions, gas, light, water and heat shut-offs. The demands stress the elimina- tion of all red tape and the ending of persecution and discrimination against Negro, Spanish and foreign- born workers. The most important and most general of the demands is expressed in a ery which has become in- creasingly real to the jobless every- where as living costs continue to sky-rocket: “All war funds for the unemployed.” / Back Rank and File The unity of jobless and employed was further expressed at the con- vention by the adoption of a reso- Jution for rank and file policies and control in the American Federation of Labor, presented by the A. F. of L. Rank and File Committee on Unemployment Insurance, Excerpts from the reports of del- egates give sketchy hints of the struggles from which victories have been forged, the difficulties encoun- tered and the spirit of the workers. A. Benavedis, of the Spanish Workers League told how: “Two months ago the admiinistra- tion in Raton, New Mexico, cut the relief orders. We called a big dem- onstration. A committee went to the administration with demands for more relief; if they didn’t get them, they said, the relief workers would strike. In six hours they got their demands.” _~ Pension Group Pledges Aid William Jardine, president of the El Paso County Old Age Pension League said: “The 21 organizations of the Old Age Pension League will stand behind you in everything you fo.” A representative of the Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists ind Technicians, working on a relief lob, told the Zonvention: “We engineers have a lot in com- non with you, although many times ‘ Conferences —Plans for complete unity of Anti-Fascist Forces Unite In Cleveland Three Groups Merge To Establish New Branch of American League CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 15.— Women’s Committee Against War and Fascism, and the Youth Com-| mittee Against War and Fascism have completed plans which will result in the establishment of a functioning branch of the American League Against War and Fascism. This branch will support the na- tional program, aiding in the ex- TOWARD A “DAILY” RED BUILDER ON EV cries of our Red Builders. Phil Palmer, Jack Wein- | stein and Alex Ross, from left to right—and selling ER right ard left! More Red Builde reach those 29,000 readers! Y CORNER af rs are needed to Plot To Crush Militant Union custom tailors’ section of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union has just thoroughly defeated the conspiracy between contractors and the Amalgamated Clothing Work- ers of America misleaders to smash the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union and force custom tail- ors into the clutches of the fakers. Last week contractors refused to | signed up with the Amalgamated. Consolidating their efforts to pre-| AS a result over two hundred work- | When the latter invaded . vent war and fascist terror, iP | ers were locked out. The N. T. W.| Without a warrant. The double | Jury wy ate aig Pe een oe United Anti-Fascist Federation, che | I. U, immediately picketed those| lynching was enacted within 150) Ns! Verdict of |Meat at the merchant tailors who fell in with| feet of the spot where Mason was| }ands of persons unknown. the plan, The Amalgamated tried to break the strike, by issuing labels to all shops being picketed. They caused the arrest of four pickets, and had L. Weiss, N. T. W. I. U. organizer, arrested on a warrant. At a hear- ing before Magistrate Dougherty, posure of war preparations by close observation of the Rayon Indus- It will also take such actions as are | necessary to demonstrate the grow- | ing response and willingness to| combat war and developing tenden- | cies of open fascism, such as were | demonstrated in San Francisco, | Minneapolis, Toledo, etc. On Friday, Aug. 17, at 8 p.m., the | first co-operative meeting is to be! { held at room 407, 737 Prospect Ave. Plans for participation in the sec- | ond National Congress Against War, to be held in Chicago on Sept. 28, 29 and 30, will be formed. benefit by some of the excellent connections established by the original groups. |Election Rally Planned in Chicago District (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Aug. 13—Bicycles, roller skates and automobiles will all be brought into action in a great election campaign parade for | the Communist candidates to be | held on the Northwest side of Chi- Big signs will be carried on four autos, while election slogans will be worn on the backs of skaters and bike riders, at 8:30 p. m. at Lawrence and Christiana Aves. and the parade will move from there along the busiest streets. The main speakers will be Hans Pfieffer, Communist candidate for Assemblyman from the 25th Sena- torial district, and Sam Lissitz, candidate for trustee of the Uni- versity of Illinois. A short play will be presented by the Blue Blouses, Metal Fixture Workers Walk Out in 32 Shops NEW YORK.—Under the leader- ship of the Metal Fixture Local of the Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union, workers of 32 shops, involving 160 workers, went on gen- eral strike. The strike was called Tuesday. The workers are demanding 30 per cent wage increases for the un- skilled and 20 per cent wage in- crease for the skilled workers, rec- ognition of the union and other im- provements in their working con- ditions, “Kameradschaft” To Be Shown at New School NEW YORK.—“Kameradschaft,” | G. W. Pabsi’s brilliant anti-war! film, will be shown at the New School, 66 W. 12th St., tonight at 7 and 9:30 under the auspices of the Film and Photo League and the | New Theatre magazine. The director of this film is now best artists of pre-Hitler Germany. Pabst is now in Hollywood at work on a film. An unusual Soviet “short” and a Chaplin comedy will complete the program, 20,000 New Readers by September 1 means 20,000 Additional Recruits for Organized Class Struggle! we are put in the position of a straw boss. When we lose our jobs We are unemployed as you are.” Most significant of all perhaps, was the statement of a delegate from the Building Trades Council of Denver: “The fact that the Building Trades Council overwhelmingly voted for and elected three dele- gates to this convention shows that at least the rank and file of the Council are beginning to realize that we have a common interest with all other workers. For a long time, because we were skilled, we felt that we were better than the laborers. But now we understand that the interests of all workers are alike and we will back the workers as a whole” ‘ The new organization hopes to| cago Friday. | The meeting will open | | partial the Amalgamated attorney fought | to have Weiss put under a peace trial Corporation plant in this city. }bond to eliminate him from the | fight. Weiss refused, and was held for court in $600 bail, on charges of threatening violence. The case comes up Friday morning, and workers are urged to pack the court room, The picketing of the merchant tailors shops was not eased by the arrests, and the contractors were forced to re-employ N. T. W. L. U. members. A. F. of L. Heads Coach Omaha Mayor To Deny |Permit for a Meeting OMAHA, Neb.;: Aug. 15.—Acting | Mayor Dan B. Butler, candidate for | sheriff of Douglas County, revealed | before the City Commission yester- | day his real reason for denying a meeting on the San Francisco gen- eral strike in Jefferson Park last | week. | Butler, in denying the permit said, “No one can speak on strikes |in Omaha.” He explained to the Commission that following the ap- | plication he consulted with local | American Federation of Labor of- |ficials who advised him against permitting the meeting. One of these officials told him, Acting Mayor Butler said, that he was “out to get something” on William Rey- |nolds, district organizer of the : Communist Party who had made the application. Although he called Reynolds a “damned liar” when the Commu- nist leader confronted him with thees statements, Butler reiterated his refusal to permit meetings at which strikes might be discussed. The City Commission has backed Butler completely in his fascist ruling. West Coast Lawyers Approve of Gallagher as Justice Candidate LOS ANGELES, Calif., Aug. 15.— | Grover Johnson, recently associated with Leo Gallagher in the defense stration on June 1, and a score of other attorneys have endorsed Gal- lJagher's candidacy for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. | Johnson in his statement of en- dorsement declares: ; “The interpretation given to law is that which is required by the dominant economic interests, and |all the resources of intelligence are brought to bear to make the inter- pretation seem the voice of im- reason and disinteresied justice. “Leo Gallagher's interest in and} his unflinching activities for the| suppressed minorities has’ made him | feared all over the world. He has | time after time exposed this ap- in exile along with hundreds of the |P@tent ‘voice of impartial reason | and disinterested justice’ for what it is: bigotry, Toryism and privilege. “He is the only person running who, in my opinion, is fitted to be a judge for a majority rather than jfor a privileged few.” Gallagher's candidacy is also en- dorsed by Theodore Gotisdanker, Hugh E. Macbeth, Carl Minton, Os- car Moss, Moztimer Vogel, Clore Warne, Spencer Austrian, Mary Brownstein, Loren Miller, J. Allan Frankel, James Carter, Harry Pran- sky, Eugene Sax, Max Lewis, S. G. Pandit and other Los Angeles at- torneys. JOIN METAL WORKERS STRIKE MILWAUKEE, Wis. Apg. 14— Engineers and firemen at the Geu- der Paeschke and Frey metal stamping plant joined the strike to- day of 700 workers. The demands of the strikers include union rec- ognition, a 30 per cent wage in- crease, seniority rights and better working conditions. The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its Circulation. take work from all shops not} permit for a Communist Party) | ASHLAND, Miss., Aug. 14.—The, double lynching yesterday of Rob- ei nd Smith Houey was an PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 15.—The | act of brutal vengeance on the part of local white landlords and law officers against two militant Negro farm laborers, it was learned today. The history of the attempt to murder these two Negroes goes back for more than a year. It in-/ volves not only the unsolved slay- | ing of a white landlord, notorious | for his brutal treatment of Negroes, | jbut the militant self-defense of Jones, who shot and fatally) | wounded Deputy Sheriff Mason | shot, their captors bringing the two | | Negro victims from different parts| of the county to Michigan City to} | dramatize their bloody vengeance. | | Jones had been convicted and sentenced to hang, but the Supreme | | Court was forced to reverse the | verdict and order a new trial on |the ground that the officer had no | Gains, Strive | To Win More | PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 15—Hav- jing won one decisive victory, the | Unemployment Councils of North; | Philadelphia took steps to push| |their demands for more relief for | |unemployed workers and repre- | {sentation on the County Relief | |Board made to the city officials | \several days ago, | ; Last week when 70 workers | massed to present the demands im- portant concessions were won im-| mediately when Mrs. Marshall, of | the local station at 17th and Alle- gheny Sts., was forced to grant food | orders at once to 12 needy families | and promised quick investigations |of any cases brought by the coun- | cils. Recognition of the Unemploy- \of workers arrested during a demon- | | ment Councils and representation |on the local supervisors board was also granted. | The Councils won other demands |including no Negro discrimination, | |separate relief for single workers, | |coal for each needy family and | promises to aid the workers in their | struggle against evictions and fore- closures, Lynn ER A Men Compel Relief Heads To Act’ on Restoration of Pay LYNN, Mass., Aug. 15.—A work- ers’ delegation backed by 200 E.R.A. | men yesterday compelled Relief Administrator McArdle to call an |emergency meeting of his Griev- lance Committee to negotiate with | the workers’ action committee. The workers’ demand that the 33 |per cent cut decreed by McArdle and | the relief officials be restored. They | are preparing to take strike action if this is not done. | More than 400 relief workers | whose wages had been slashed from | | $12 to $8 a week crowded into Cut- ters’ Lasters’ Hall Monday evenin |to protest the cut, while 200 mor |were unable to get inside. A broa action committee of 15 was elected. | This committee presented the work- jers’ demands to McArdle today. | Police and Firemen Assault Group In Bread Price Strike housewives, NEW YORK. their — Five hundred husbands and children, picketed the Grossfeld and Korman bakery in the Bronx Mon- day night in a demonstration against the high price of bread. Police and firemen who attacked the demonstration failed to disperse the workers. The people of. the neighborhood, Jed by the 180th Street Neigbor- hood Committee Against the High Cost of Living, are fighting for a reduction in the price of bread sold by the bakery. Mass arrests of the workers have been made. Five of the pickets arrested Monday receive two days each, one getting a suspended sen- tence. Eight more were arrested yesterday. 500 Ohio Shirt Workers | Vote To Continue Strike | as Second Parley Fails, CINCINNATI, Ohio—‘“We will keep on fighting until a satisfactory agreement is reached.” So voted 500 striking employes of the Rauh Shirt Company of Cincinnati when @ conference before the Regional t }Labor Board fell thzcugh. The y Tailors Defeat|White Landlords and Police 50,000 In Mills | Promoted Ashland Lynching Of Mississippi 1 A right to invade Jones’ home with- Talk of Strike out a search warrant. Jones and Houey were delivered over to two gangs of ma nch- JACKSON, M -A § ers by two groups of deputy sher- ,000 Mississippi cotton mill iffs, who were bringing Jones from | ers looms as a result of the refusal Tupelo and Houey from Holly of four large plants to reinstate Springs. In neither case was any | workers fired for union activity. attempt made to defend the pris- oners. A move to whitewash the lynch- ers was begun today by District At- torney Fred Belk, who brought for- ward the uspual post-mortem claim that the victims had “confessed” to The Daily Worker calls on all opponents of lynching to answer this brazen attempt to exonerate the lynchers with a flood of pro- tests to District Attorney Pelk, Ashland, Miss., and Governor Sen- net Couner, Jackson, Miss., demand- | ing an end to the lynch terror and | death to the lynchers, Jobless Force ‘Ohio Workers Cheer Demand To End A.A.A. MANSFIELD, Ohio, Aug. 15.— Demands for the abolition of the Agricultural Adjustment Adminis- tration, and for immediate cash re- lief for poor farmers and unem- ployed workers voiced here by I. O. Ford, Communist candidate for gov- ernor, were applauded vigorously by workers at the first major cam- paign rally of the Communist Party in this state. Speaking with Ford, Janie Lang- ston, candidate for Lieutenant-Gov- ernor, urged complete unity of all workers in making the election campaign a weapon of struggle against the Roosevelt, government’s | “New Deal” attacks on living and | relief standards. Presentation of the Communist Party program on relief and unem- ployment and its demands for s cial insurance were cheered by the | audience, which included a large group of workers on local work re- lief projects. Resolutions were adopted de- manding the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann and protesting against the attacks of police and vigilantes on the West Coast working class or- ganizations. The resolution also de- manded the release of the 31 work- ers held in jail at Sacramento since the end of the General Strike, 'Buffalo Police Press Terror Drive Against Lake Seamen’s Union BUFFALO, N. Y., Aug. 15.—Ar-|€rs at an open-air election rally at | in the | Roosevelt Road and St. Louis Ave. | rests continued yesterday drive of local authorities against working class organizations. An- drew Fetzig, former secretary of |the Marine Workers Industrial Union, was jailed Monday night and held incommunicago. No charges weer made against him. Habeas corpus proceedings were | by Attorney | instituted yesterday Schmiell, of the International La- r Defense, in the cases of Man- ning Johnson, Negro leader and former Communist Party district organizer, and Fetzig. William Mc- Cuiston has been released on $1,000 bail. The I. L. D. is preparing for a mass protest meeting. Cooperative Colony Denounces Eviction of Negro Families NEW YORK.—Jim-Crowism and) racial segregation are denounced | and full support pledged to the} mass fight against the eveiction of | Negro families from 1836-40 Uni- versity Ave., Bronx, in a resolution adopted unanimously by the Board of Directors of the Workers’ Colony | Corporation, 2800 Bronx Park East. | The resolution, which scores the ruling lest week of Magistrate Merian of the 161st St. Court up- holding the eviction orders, thereby legalizing segregation and discrim- imation against Negroes, declares: “We look upon this action as an expression of hatred, of Jim-Crow- ism and persecution of the | pressed Negro people. We pledge | our support to the Negro tenants | of University Ave. in their just struggle against their Negro-hating landlords.” | the middle of June. This was the second conference | to be held. In both meetings the | company officials refused to grant union recognition and a 25 per cent | | e increase, as the workers de- | Bhar | Holt Ross, representative of the | American Federation of Labor, has |appealed to the Regional Labor | | Board at New Orleans in an effort | to prevent strike action, The board | |is known to have wired the Na-| | tional Labor Relations Board to his home| the crimes charged. A coroner’s| learn whether it has authority to intervene in the situation. Meanwhile the workers, irritated by the bosses’ disregard of its de- mands, as well as with the low scale of wages widespread in the State, have begun to feel that they have little to gain from further ar- | bitration. Sentiment for strike is | rapidly spreading. | Philadelphia Police Raise Dynamite Scare in Gulf Oil Strike PHIADELPHIA, Aug. 15—Not isfied with slowly choking the rike at the Girard Point Refinery |of the Gulf Oil Co., Superintendent of Police LeStrange filled the ranks of the strikers, still out, with stool- |pigeons. Last night they searched the home of one striker and said they found enough dynamite to blow up the plant. Several other | strikers were immediately impli- | cated, and the papers carried head- lines of a bomb plot. This morning police announced that California Communists were implicated. “I expected trouble,” said Le- Strange Monday night, “so I had |my men mingle with the strikers. |The men arrested have been under |suspicion and closely watched for ; Some time.” A conference of police inspectors land fire department officers was | highly publicized last night. The |fire chiefs were supposed to deter- mine the source of the dynamite. Yesterday’s implications of Califor- nia Communists is apparently the | result of the conferences. After the fascist terror against | West Coast strikers, Mellon appa- |rently feels he dare not wait until }other Philadelphia workers begin expressing their solidarity with his | striking employes, but is taking the | offensive at a time when the ranks | of.the strikers have been weakened | by desertion and lack of action. | Chicago C.P. Candidate Jailed with Three as Police Charge Meeting (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Aug. 15—Samuel | Lissitz, Communist candidate for | Trustee of the University of Illinois, | was arrested with three other work- | Police charged into the peaceful | meeting without provocation. Im- mediate mass action in the form of | mass delegations to the police sta- j tions forced the release of two of those arrested. __ Lissitz, former secretary of the Chicago National Student League, the effort to frame him on other charges. The two held were bailed out | Sunday, but the bail was again raised in court on Monday. The | two are being held in jail. POE SS ae RED BUILDERS DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT Saturday, August 18 — 8:30 P.M. — United Front Sup- porters’ Hall 11 W. 18th St., 3rd floor “Sniper,” Soviet Movie; “america Today," work- ers’ newsreel; Chalk Talk by “Del,” Daily Worker cartoonist, Admission: 20 cents in advance; 25c at the door Obtainable at Workers 50 E. 13th St.; Daily Wo: - trict Office, 35 E. 12th St. and from Red Builders. Proceeds for Red Builders’ uniforms. CONCERT and MASS MEETING To Celebrate the Opening of MORRIS LANGER LIBRARY as a Memorial to our Martyr Comrade Morris Langer Thursday, Aug. 15, 7 P. M. CLARENCE HATHAWAY Editor “Daily Worker” will speak oa “THE GERMAN SITUATION” Also a Fine Musical Program Irving Pl. IRVING PLAZA nae was forced into a police line-up in} Illinois Committee Gives Danger Signal : On Petition Drive | eos | | Chicago Red Election Rally Sept. 1 Is Final Dead- line—Organizations Urged To Fulfill Financial Pledges Without I | CHICAGO, IIL, Aug. Jelay To Aid Drive —The collection of signatures to place the Communist Party on the ballot in Illinois is still | proceeding very slowly, the Election Campaign Committee declared today. “Despite the congressional districts, the c Partial Gains Won By Strike In Pekin Plant 800 Distillery Workers Return, with Union Recognized PEKIN, Ill, Aug. 15.—In the second strike within three months, 800 men and women workers of the American Distillery Company, after four days of continuous militant picketing, returned to work with partial victory as the reward for a 100 per cent shut-down. The issue in the strike was the \ firing of an active union worker— n: ja firs by the company on the pretens of “inefficiency.” The complete shut-down of the plant | within three hours after this dis- charge was indicative of the grow- ing solidarity of the workers. This second strike of the same workers shows the growing dissatis- faction with the agreement reached in the first strike between the A. F. of L. officials, Governor Horner, and the mayor of Pekin, with the Amer- ican Distillery Company. The cen- tral demands of the workers were recognition of the Distillery Work ers Union, a closed shop and wage increases. With cunning promises of the A F. of L. officials, Schoenberg and Graham, and the threats of Gover- nor Horner that the National Guards would be called out, the slight improvement in certain ollection is still lagging danger- ously behind and we are faced with the danger of not being put on the ballot,” the Committee said Campaign Commit- a all workers in tt of their signatures rest office in their nei for this work. “The Election Campaign Come- | mittee appeals to unemployed work- ers and students to give as much help as possible. In addition to the various headquarters in the neighborhood, workers are asked to report to the Election Office at 101 South Wells Street, Room 702, where they will be supplied with the necessary material for this work. “In view of the bad financial situation in which the Election Committee finds itself, we must ap- peal to all the organizations who have made pledges at the July 28 conference to mail these pledges into this office immediately. We appeal to all other workers and working-class organizations to mail in all contributions for the cam- paign to our office. “Sept. 1 is the date of the city- wide Red Election Rally. On this date, all the petitions must be turned in and made ready for fil- |ing. At the Red Election Rally, the number of signatures and the names of the candidates for whom a sufficient number of signatures were collected will be announced. In addition to the musical numbers arranged for that rally, the Com- munist Alderman from Taylor | Springs will speak, as well as Bob | Minor and other: The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its Circulation, | Workers returned to work with rec-| ognition of the union, and depart- | ment grievance committees, but no closed shop nor wage increases. With such an agre mt the con- ditions of the workers became worse, speed-up more intense, and numerous loopholes in the agree- ment made possible firing and dis- {crimination against the best of union men and women. It was this condition that precipitated the sec- ond strike. Although in the second strike the workers elected their own commit- influence of a lo: itician and attor prevented a complete victory of a closed shop and immediate settlement of the thirty grievances and demands for- | mulated by the workers. With the active participation of the Unem- Ployment Council and members of the Communist Party on the picket |lines, the betrayal of the strike was }made impossible, and a partial vic- |tory was attained. | FRACTION MEETING TONIGHT | Communist Party and the Y. C. L., the Steel and Metal Workers’ In- dustrial Union, A. F. of L., or un- organized, are urged to attend a general fraction meeting tonight at | the Workers’ Center, 35 E. 13th St., |room 202, at 7:30 p.m. Struggle. NEW YORK.—All members of the | | who are metal workers, members of | A Mass Circulation of our “Daily” Means a Quickening Tempo in Class j SUNDAY AUGUST 26th NORTH BEACH PARK Astoria, L. I. RE EES Dancing Games Sports Admission 25c. Directions: I. R. T. or B. M. T. Bubways, Second Ave. “L', to Ditmars Ave. Busses to the park. | | — Philadel phia, Pa. — ie ses > | : = | at Old Berkies Farm } i a Hear! * es ANGELO HERNDON 9 | 3 Heroic young Negro worker just released on bail from res | Atlanta prison ce | ia CLARENCE HATHAWAY ol ie Editor Daily Worker, mein speaker Zz 11 pet Labor Sports Union Freiheit Gesangs Farein S = Music Baseball : Prize & i Campfire and Dancing in the Evening =] DIRECTIONS: RED PRESS PICNIC SUNDAY, AUGUST 19th, 1934 Take car No. 65 or Broad St. Sub. to end of line; pass to No. 6, qmw=aeee tide to Washington Lane and Ogontz Ave.; walk two squares west [eee | — CHICA | | | IPICNI Daily Worker Sunday, August 19th WHITE HOUSE GROVE Irving Park Boulevard and River Drive Program: Gates Open 10 RED PRESS Games, DIRECTIONS: Take Irving Park Blvd. car to end of line where our buses will take yau direct to grove. GO, ILL. — Cc of the Morning Freiheit Dancing, Kefreshments A. M. Admission 15¢