The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 31, 1934, Page 2

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} f % Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1934 j Rallies Tonight Prepare for Youth Day March Tomorrow DEMONSTRATIONS Mass Meeting Seamen to Plan Fig For Union Conditions At Baltimore Parley AND PARADES ARE SET IN MANY CITIES Mobilization Points Announced for New York March—Four Out-Door Meetings To Be Held in Preparation Tonight 4 NEW YORK.—Four open-air rallies tonight will climax the preparations for International Youth ay, which will be celebrated a central city-wide demonstration to be held| tomorrow at 1 P. M. at Madison Square Park, 23rd Street | and M on Ave., from where the youth will march to! Tompkins Square, Seventh St. and s— — = * eect Ay i Sor : ; speaker at the rally to|| Hoan Ready To Give Seventh St. and Avenue ° ‘Amter, Communist can-|| Reception to Band ction campaign. The or- _—— zations expected to e part |j MILWAUKEE, Aug. 30.—Pre- 2 demon: tion and parade|| parations for a city reception ll line up in the following man-|} to the band of the Platz Pos' American Legion, who will return here Saturday after a tour ot Of A. F.L. Men Seores Green NEW YORK.—More than 800 workers attending & mass meeting held Thursday night at Webster Hall under the auspices of the A. F. of L. Committee for Unemplo; ment Insurance and Relief de- nounced William Green's plan to expel Communists and militant members from the A. F. L. unions, | and characterized it as a drive to| behead the militant leadership that | is developing among the rank and file. The main resolution of the meet- ing, which was adopted unani- mously, resolved to rally the forces “in support of the rank and file movement and to intensify efforts % to win unemployment insurance, to| ‘Wo days, to work out a plan of eliminate gangsterism and racket- | action for the Atlantic seaports and eering in the unions, to establish | Prepare for a strike for union con- trade union democracy and to win/ ditions in the marine industry on improved working conditions| the East Coast. through militant struggle.” Other resolutions pledged to fight for the right of A, F. L. members to be- long to any political party they| seamen and longshoremen, regard- wish. There was also a resolution| less of union affiliation, around a Sought at Convention Opening Saturday By HARRY RAYMOND NEW YORK—A North Atlantic Marine Workers Conference, with delegates from the ships and docks from several unions, in Baltimore, Md., Sept. 1, and will be in session for Industrial Union, the conference Unity of Rank and File will_convene | on Saturday, | Initiated by the Marine Workers | will aim to unite the rank and file| Steady Rise In Joblessness (Daily Worker Wa! WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 30.— ‘We have made no headway what- ever this year in putting the un- jemployed to work in industry,” William Green, President of the |American Federation of Labor, Roosevelt administration booster |and leading member of the N. R. |A. Labor Advisory Board, nounced today in his regular state- {ment on unemployment. Unem- |ployment,” he said, “increased from 10,248,000 in May of this year, to Auditorium, Twelfth Ave. and || 10,310,000 in June, to 10,772,000 for Third St. South, on Monday, ||July. In August, although the Labor Day, at 8 p.m. He will ;|Government figures are not yet bring a first hand account ot || available, our trade union reports the San Francisco general strike. show that in the first part of the The subject he will speak on ||month unemployment increased is: “The Lesson of the Minnea- |again,” he added. polis Truck Drivers and the San || Francisco General Strike.” He |) will deal with the activity of his || On the basis of government fig- brothers Vincent, Miles and |/ures, the Labor Research Associa- Grant Dunne in the Minneapolis ||tion estimated the number of un- Truck drivers strike. Truck ||employed in November, 1933, at drivers are especially invited. | 15,835,000. ington Bureau) —<————— Bill Dunne To Speak in Minneapolis on Lessons of Strikes MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 29. —Bill Dunne will speak at a mass meeting at the South Side an-| |L. R. A, Puts Unemployment Higher | { Green Admits UNITED FRONT BODY CARRIES ON WORK OF YOUTH CONGRESS Symposium on the Congress and Next Tasks Or ganized by Student Review—Text of Reso- lutions Reproduced and Mailed Out |the plans drawn up at the First American Youth Congress j 3 now getting under way. The full text of the resolutions ‘ the Congress have been mimeographed and will be sent » all delegates as well as for more general distribution. Th —®was the first task before the Execy' tive Board of fifteen, which include both a representative of the Y. C: L. and Y. P. S. L., elected to lead continuation work. Food Prices “The First American Youth Con- . Now Highest |gress—and After” will be the topic Since 193] tee temic: iin Sena "ond Ave. Speakers will be Gil Green, na NEW YORK.—The work of transforming into actiow,, against the use of injunctions, program of struggle against the | On Madison Ave. from 23rd to 25th St. the Y. C. L. and Commu- nist Party will line up side by side, with the Y. C. L. nearest the park. On 24th St. between Madison and Fourth Ave., the Labor Sports Union, all independent unions, such troops and terror against strikers. Irving Redler, president of Paint- |ers Local 121, acted as chairman of |the meeting, Other speakers were Ben Gerjoy, national secretary of |the I, L. G. W. U. Rank and File Center; Martha Teichman, who was Europe, were completed this week | at the office of Socialist Mayor Hoan. A Citizens’ Committee, composed of a number of loca: “leaders” of official and business life, is in charge of the recep- shipowners. Supporting the unity move is the Rank and File Action {Committee of the International | Longshoremen’s Association, headed | by Howard Farmer, and the Radio | Telegraphis Association, a union of ship’s radio operators. Proposals and resolutions, pre- | pared by various groups to be pre- as the United Radio Workers, the |] tion. |expelled from the Executive Board United and the A triumphal parade down Wis- || of the Neckwear Makers Union for Amalgamated Fo: uloid, Tele- || consin Ave, and a reception at graph Messenger: ., and on 24th || Milwaukee Auditorium is plan- St. between Fourth Ave. and Lex-|/ ned. Only in Berlin was thi ||Bag Makers Union, Local 107, and | imgton, the I. W. O. Youth and|| band given a similar welcome, || Louis Weinstock, member of Paint- | Adult, the Young Pioneers, and|j when it marched down Unter |/ers Local 499 and national secre- | Ciiy Clubs Council will line up. On|} der Linden and was hailed by ||tary of the A. F. of L, Committee; 25th St. between Madison and|| Hitler’s henchmen. for Unemployment Insurance, Such as the I. L. G. W. U., Dr Knitgoods, N ar, Painters, etc., will be follo’ by the Interna- tional Labor Defense, and between | Fourth Ave. and Lexington Ave. the National Student League, will be followed by the F. S. U., the Lan- guage clubs, and the Office Work ers Union. On 26th St., between Twenty-second and Ri and Ridge. ge to Wiley Rally in Baltimore Steel Area BALTIMORE, Aug. 30.—Intense efforts are being made here to mobilize young workers in Sparrow Points Steel Mill, Green Martin Air- | militant activities; David Gordon, | sented, discussed and used as bases organizer of the Paper Plate and|for the unity program, include a plan of struggle for the 1929 wage scale for seamen, firemen, cooks and stewards, for the abolition of the two watch (12 hour a day) system, for $1 an hour wage scale on ali A call for solidarity with the | docks and $1.50 for overtime. truck drivers who are preparing for | Seamen delegates, elected by strike action was enthusiastically | crews on the ships, will also urge cheered by the workers, that the proposition of carrying on a fight in all ports for a centralized | abigping bureau controlled by the Paper Tells of Pact. rank and file seamen shall be in- corporated into the program Dele- ‘Textile Strike Is | | | | Recent trends do not warant any reduction in these figures for last November. During the Spring of 1934, industry, according to the L. R. A, took on a few thousand Set for Tomorrow workers. This is more than offset |by the last report of the National —- |Industrial Conference Board which (Continued from Page 1) stated that 675,000 men lost their WASHINGTON, Aug. 30—White | textile workers were preparing to | strike against decreasing earnings, | ranging for many from $7 to $9 aj week and including a tendency for | higher wages to drop to the mini- | mum, the U. S. Department of La- bor this week reported record jumps in the steadily increasing cost of tional secretary of the Young Come munist’ League, Alfred Bingham, editor of Common Sense magazine end Farmer-Labor son of former Senator Bingham of Connecticut, Monroe Sweetland, field organizer of the League for Industrial Demo- cracy, and Theodore Draper, editor of Student Review for the National Student Review. James Wechsler, ident of the Employers Cotton Textile Institute. Thus there is the distinct pos- | sibility of an attempt to either halt the textile strike before Saturday night or shortly thereafter. President Roosevelt is reported in Washington to be watching devel- opments. However, there is no doubt that Garrison is executing his instructions. The employers continue to set up their machine guns, seemingly determined to risk a test of strength with the broad mass of workers if substantial jobs in July. “Unemployment has been in- eveasing steadily since May, ac- \cording to estimates of the Amer- |ican Federation of Labor based en- |tirely on monthly employment fig- | ures from the U. S. Government,” | Green declared in his opening state- jment. The N. R, A.-A. F. of L. | chief, nevertheless, is “grateful” for jthe 2300000 “re-employment” claimed by the recently issued first | Richberg report. Does Not Mention Wage Drop It is significant that nowhere in living. During the two weeks end- ing Aug. 14, retail food prices ad- | vanced to the highest level since | Dec. 15, 1931, according to Com- | missioner Lubin of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. They were more | pected. than 23% per cent higher than on | ing is under the auspi April 15, 1933, the low point since | o¢ tre “sitdent’ Review mnths pre-war days, | publication of the National Student “The bureau’s index number | League. It promises to he the first recorded the largest increase over |step following the Congress to any two weeks’ period in the pres- | C@try forward the solid united front ent year with a rise of 1.2 per | achieved there. cent,” Lubin said: “The current advance places the retail food price level at 111.8 per cent of the editor of the Columbia Spectator, will be chairman. A speaker from the Young Peop- le’s Socialist League is also ex- A Red Builder on every busy street corner in the country means s gates from the docks will demand | strikebreaking concessions in the Mis Teport does Green attack the Against the USSR that all hiring shall be done/|form of an “investigation” board or |false conclusion of the “net in- waterfront for the International through union halis and that a|some such formula are not sur-| crease” in purchasing power drawn Youth Day demonstration to be z | rotary system of hiring shall be es-| rendered to them by the U. T. w.| by Donald R. Richberg, chairman held Saturday evening at 7 o'clock (Continued from Page 1) | tablished. Larger gangs, smaller | leadership. |of the National Emergency Council at Broadway and Bank Street. Aj Ceeaoeeeas Sep | loads, abolition of the speed-up and of the N. R. A., from the latter's Madison and Fourth, the T. U. U. L. unions will line up in the order of the Fur Shipping Clerks, the Furriers Union, Bathrobe Workers, Knitgoods and Metal, while between plane plant, C. C. C. and on the 1913 average. The current index | shows an accumulated rise of | slightly more than four per cent since April ’4, when the present | increase began. The index on a tremendous step toward the dictatorship of the proletariat! Fourth and Lexington, the Marine, Laund Food Clerks, Cafeteria Workers, Hotel and Restaurant Workers, Furniture Workers, Paint- ers, etc., will line up. parade to the rallying point will| assumes particular importance. Al-| union recognition will be among begin from Broadway and Thames / though the search was without re- Street at 6.30, sults, the club was closed and pad- Gil Green, national secretary of | jocked. the major points proposed for the fighting program by the longshore | delegates. A number of the dele- Tonight's Rallies Large gathering of workers, youth nd adult are expected at the pre- liminary rallies tonight in Harlem, | at 126th St. and Lenox Ave. at 8 p.m.; Downtown, to parade from| 75th St. and Avenue A to Houston | St. and Avenue © beginning at 8 p.m.; Red Hook, at Columbia Pl. and State St. at 8 p.m.; and Crown Heights, Throop Ave. and Quincy St. at 7 pm. On the night of Youth Day a Youth Frolic to be held at the Workers Center, 50 E. 13th St., 8 p.m., which will be full International of fun and entertainment and will! feature “Sniper.” an anti-war film, the Detroit Demonstration Satarday DETROIT, Aug. 30.—The Com- Munist Party and Young Commu- issued a nist League here have joint call urging all White workers to join w young workers and students Int ational Youth Day Stration to be held here Sati at 6.30 p. m. at Perri and Warren Streets. ‘The central slogans of the rally Will be a protest againt war prep- frations under the N.R.A. and a call to defend the Soviet Union against the aggressive provocations of Japanese imperialism. After the demonstration there will be an indoor anti-war rally at the Finnish Hall, 5969 14th Street. Philadelphia Permit Refused PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 30—Two International Youth Day demon-| organizer for the Young Commu-_| very start.” Strations will be held here Satur- day. The main demonstration will| the Young Communist League, will| be the main peaker. Other speak- | ers will include a West Coast striker | and a C.C.C. worker. | In the evening there will be a| dance at the Workers Center at | 209 South Bond Street, | 12 Groups in New Haven Rally | NEW HAVEN, Conn., Aug. 30. Twelve organizations representing several hundred young and adult workers of various affiliations, are arranging the Internationa! Youil: | Day demonstration that will be held | here Saturday evening at 7.30 p. m. on the Central Green. | Following the rally on the Green, the workers will parade to Mon-} towese Hall, where an anti-war and| anti-fascist program will be pre-| sented. Dancing will follow. Minneapolis Demonstration | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 30.— The Young Communist League has called an International Youth Day demonstration on Bridge Square, | Saturday at 7 p.m. Preparatory | street: meetings have been held and| thousands of leaflets issued to rally | the youth for the demonstration. | | Wicks in Wilkes-Barre | Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Aug. 30— | | WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Aug. 30.—} | Harry M. Wicks, Communist can- didate for U. S. Senate, will be the | principal speaker at the Interna- tional Youth Day demonstration to |be held in Huber Park Saturday | afternoon at 5 o'clock. | Among other speakers will be Dominick Pachick, candidate for| | State Legislature, and Jesse Ficld |nist League. | be at 8 p. m. in McPherson Square,| Two Demonstrations in Hartford | Kensington. The other demon-| HARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 30.— z Stration will be held at 2 o’clock| Two demonstrations against war | > that same day at 22nd Sv:eet and|and fascism will be held here Sat- | Ridge Avenue in the heart of the|urday, International Youth Day.| = Negro section, where thé recent |The first will be held at Park and ‘Mass protest against discrimination | Lawrence Sts, at 7 pm, At 7:30) took place. another will be held at Funnel Park. Police officials are refusing to| After the demonstrations an in- grant a permit for the 2 o'clock | door rally will be held where there demonstration, but plans are being | will be speakers, entertainment and formed to have a parade from/| dancing. — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp— CAMP KINDERLAND | HOPEWELL JUNCTION NEW YORK Vacation Rates for Adults $14.00 per Week (Tax Included) Special Program for Labor Day Week-End Bungalows, Tents, Warm and Cold Showers, Healthy Foods Swimming and Rowing in the Beautiful Sylvan Lake Cultural and Sport Activities Every Day 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. Branches of the I. W. 0. should elect delegates to the week-end outing Register now for the I.W.0. Outing to Camp Kinderland Four Days — Sept. 7th to 11th Meke your reservation ®m advance for 1, 2, 3, or 4 days Adnits Child-en up to 6 $2.43 9 4.98 6.00 3.35 7.50 5.00 Round trip transportation $2.25 (Transportation is arranged through the “World Tourist,” 175 Fifth Ave.) Register at I. W. O., 80 Fifth Ave., 15th Floor | Delegates of Branches must also _recister_at_the office. | 2.65 2 | strikebreaking policy of the government and the employers. Competent foreign circles in Har-| gates have indicated that they have bin express the opinion that the| been instructed to support the persistent provocative activities of| Workers Unemployment Insurance the aggressive and extremist Jap-| Bill. anese-Manchurian elements are| Thirty-two delegates will leave centered against the Soviet con-| New York this morning and will | sulate at Pogranichnaya station as/|arrvie at Baltimore tonight where preparation for direct action against | they will be greeted at the head- causing a new and serious conflict | dustrial Union, 720 South Broadway, between Japan and the Soviet| by a mass reception committee from Union. the ships and docks in the Chesa- peake Bay region. Delegates are also on their way to the conference from (Special to the Daily Worker) | Boston, Philadelphia and Norfolk. PEIPING, China, Aug. 30 (By| Among the delegates from the Wiveless)—Japanese-financed news-| Port of New York, twenty are sea- papers in Manchuria openly state |™en, eighteen of whom will repre- that it is necessary now to mass| Sent the crews of forty ships. One troops in Manchuria for war against | thousand unemployed seamen will the Soviet Union, and to strike a | Send two delegates. The radio oper- swift blow in order to gain the | tors will be represented by two greatest advantage. | delegates, Ten longshoremen, rep- They call for seizure of the; Tesenting 3,000 dock workers, will Chinese Eastern Railway and the | ring the proposals of ihe New York doubling of Japanese military forces | 40ck workers to the conference. in Manchuria. |. “The eyes of the seamen in ports Frequently they say too much| throughout the world are on this and expese the inner meaning of | conference,” said Roy Hudson, na- the arrests of Soviet employes of| tional secretary of the Marine the Chinese Eastern Railway and Workers Industrial Union, who will the vile charges made against them, | leave for Baltimore today as a dele- completely confirming the estimate | gate. “It aims to establish that unity given by the Soviet press and the} in struggle that the men on the greater part of the world press. | ships have been fighting for for For example, the Harbin “Sim-| years. The longshoremen consider bun,” frantic over the publication| the conference as the greatest step by the Soviet Telegraph Agency of | ever made on the east coast to unite details of the Tokyo negotiations| all maritime trades in a solid, fight- writes: “The question of the Chin-|ing front against the shipowners ese Eastern Railway should be li-| and against the agents of the ship- uidated by force, and any other| owners, Mr. Joseph P. Ryan and his Soviet proposals rejected from the| understrappers, who helped to be- tray the great West Coast strike.” Newspapers Urge War Textile Workers! Defeat Bossses and A.F.L. Leaders! AN EDITORIAL (Continued from Page 1) red scare, as in the San Francisco strike, is used against the most militant, honest and aggressive fighters, against the best union members. The terroristic measures of the employers come down first and mest heavily on the most active, loyal and s2lf-sacrificing strikers, foremost among whom are Communists, under cover of the cry, “throw out the reds.” ‘The red scare is a strikebreaking device used in every strike of the present period. Green, Gorman and MacMahon are lined up with this While Gorman denounced the Communists, he heaped praise on George Sloan, head of the employers Cotton Textile Institute, under whose direction the machine guns are now being placed into position against the strikers, calling him a “fine man personally.” MacMahon has given fuel to the employers press in New England, by endorsing the lies of the Hearst and other papers that the Communists are not fighting for the workers demands. But it is precisely the Communists who have been the best fighters for the economic demands of the workers. It was those militants who | have been most active in the fight against the stretch-out, for shorter hours and higher wages and for union recognition, who have been dubbed “reds and trouble-makers” by the employers and now by Mac- Mahon, Gorman and Green. The textile workers can win their strike only if they take it into their own hands, into the hands of the rank and file, and out of the hands of the strikebreaking Green-Gormen leadership. The road of acceptance of the Green, Gorman, MacMahon policy of dis-unity, of splitting the ranks of the workers, of failure to ag- gressively unite all workers to support the strike—this is the road of defeat. The broad unity of all the textile strikers will lead to victory for the strikers demands. In order to win the strike, the red scare tactics of the employers and Green-Gorman leadership must be rejected and defeated. he tex strikers must at once set up their united front mill strike committees and r: ms and all workers organiza- tions to support their st The Communist Party will throw all of its forces and all of its energies into support of the textile workers’ strike. The Communists in every unit and every dis‘rict must take part in every phose of the strike activ ond work with every available resource for the winning of the strike, ere | that consulate with the objective of | quarters of the Marine Workers In- | Reading the strike call to a large eee Sea | Dr. Maximilian Cohen group of A. F. of L. officials headed | own figures admitting a drop of 1.1 by Secretary Frank Morrison, news-| per cent in the workers real wages papermen, photographers and the|in the period from June, 1933 to strike committee members, Gorman, | June, 1934. There has been in the last two} weeks, the bureau's figures indicate, | Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C | before handing the dispatch to the operator installed in strike head- | quarters, prophesied: “Every man and woman will rally to the strike lines and the great cotton textile industry will not move a whee! or a thread after the hour set to stop the mills.” McMahon declared that a new flood of messages from the ranks of the workers throughout the | country is pouring into strike head- quarters’ expressing eagerness to begin the “struggle.” “We were able to do but little business because we were being snowed under by a flood of tele- grams from local unions reporting to us that they are standing at attention awaiting the strike call, eager to have the struggle begin, now that the die is cast. There were congratulatory telegrams and telegrams pledging us all possible support, I have never in all my somewhat long experience wit- nessed such a demonstration of sclidarity and of support .. ..” MacMahon anncunced after the meeting of his executive council. Conference Door Opened The conference door was left open by Gorman in the message announc- ing the strike. “We have exhausted every resource in the direction of peaceful settlement. We have been met, I am sorry to say, by an arro- gance on the part of the employers that is amazing in this day and year. There are, we know, many employers who disagree with the policy of the Cotton Textile Insti- tute almost as much as we do, but they are powerless for the present.” Gorman also repeated the song he has sung throughout the nearly Green concludes that “unemploy- ment is our greatest national prob- lem at the present time... Clearly business men have no solution to offer, The situation is a challenge to the Government, to give us a plan which will finish the task so well begun last Summer and put the rest of the unemployed back to work.” Green attacks the business exe- cutives’ U. S. Chamber of Com- merce for attempting to “sidestep” the unemployment “issue,” despite | his own pointed sidestepping of the Workers Unemployment and Social |Insurance Bill, which was the only measure introduced during the last jsession of Congress which provides genuine unemployment insurance \for those now unemployed for the |duration of their period of unem- | ployment. Classified SXCELLENT 1-2-3-8 studios. Furnished or unfurnished. (Vicinity Union Square). |Reesonable. Iodern (elevator). 145 Second | Ave., Apt. 20. Fi | | COMFORTABLE ROOM, strictly private, for couple or single. Kitchen privileges. Berger, 175 Schenectady Ave., Brooklyn, near Utica Ave. subway. Call all week. ja tiene cbr ln ass eel Abhay MEN WANTED—Energetic, with some sales experience. Knowledge of newsstand con- tact and distribution desirable. Must have @ appearance and personality. Write briefly, giving experience and references, both political and commercial. Box 11, care of Daily Worker. MAN OR WOMAN WANTED—Sales experi- ence, preferably advertising. Good ap- pearance; pleasant personality. Small drawing account against commission. Write briefly, giving experience and references. two weeks’ endeavors to find a sult- | Box 70, care of Daily Worker. an 86 per cent rise in the average | price of eggs, a 5.6 per cent advance | in butter and lard, a 3.2 per cent | increase in pork chops, and a one per cent or more increase in the price of sliced ham, bacon, flour and cornmeal, | While the drought has been a factor in causing the skyrocketing of food prices, the main reason has been, observers here say, the A.A.A, Policy of acreage-limitation, hog- killing and other live-stock butch- ery. After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 17-0135 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11 - 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. Tompkins Square 6-7697 — AND: DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Hours: 1 - 2 and 6-8 P.M. Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2091 We Sell or Rent ® © @ OUTDOOR AMPLIFIERS, HORNS AND MICROPHONES We also repair and convert radios at reasonable prices Special to comrades! A $5 Mike that works from your own radio for $1 and up Five-Day Money Back Guarantee If Not Satisfied MILES REPRODUCERS CO., Inc. 114 W. 14th st., New York city CHelsea 2-9838 GALA LABOR DAY WEEK-END AT CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, NEW YORK A NIGHT IN THE SOVIET UNION Dancing, New Songs, Color! First Presentation of Sam Ornitz’ able formula for the smothering of the strike either before or shortly | after the strike begins. He chanted: “I emphasize to you that we are striking against the management of the industry. The Cotton Textile Institute can find nothing better to say in answer to our demands than to accuse us of striking against the government. Surely the government does not own the mills... . If the mills supported the government’s policy there would be no need for a strike. “They have defeated the govern- ment’s purpose in the textile in- dustry. We are striking against management and our purpose is to correct the unbearable practices of IN OLD KENTUCKY Berenberg and Jacobson Present the Cream of the Season’s Work BEST RED VODVIL SKITS Experiments in Choral Work Sounds by Alex Solomon and a Chorus of 75 Voices (Also Chinese, Russian, German and American Songs) HANS EISLER TRIO (Razin, Twerdowsky and Solomon) In Program of Arensky, Popper and Ivanoff ELECTION CAMPAIGN BANQUET Sunday Night, With Surprise Progran AND DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M.. 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn MEET YOUR COMRADES, AT THE 1 th STREET CAFETERIA 3 East 14th Street, N.Y.C. Near 5th Avenue management.” Unfortunately for Mr. Gorman, the facts are that the mill man- agements constitute the Govern- ment Code Authority, that the Cot- ton Textile Code against which he insists he “is not striking,” was drawn up by the employers and Mc- Mahon, and that the Cotton Tex- tile Institute dominates the entire industry. German's appeal to good employ- ers a la Theodore Roosevelt, under- lines the probability that both the U. T. W. scrike leadership and the Governmen‘ will attempt to act shortly on Garrison’s plan to “in- vestigate” the strike out of exist- ence, WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activitics for Adults, Youth and Children, Direction: “exington Ave., White Plains || Trains, Stop at Allerton Ave. station | Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Telephone; Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Reduced Prices on AVANTA FARM Ulster Park, N. ¥. Workers resting place. The same good food and care. $9.50 per_week—$18.00 for two. 10 A.M. boat to Poughkeepsie. 10, Ferry to Highland; 3:20 p.m. train to Ulster Park. Round trip $2.71. Workers’ Laboratory Theatre Shock Troupe of 16 Present Newsboy—LaGuardia’s Got the Baloney, etc. Sports—On land and water! Best Food, Quarters $14 a week — $2.65 a day Cars leave 10:30 a.m. daily from 2700 Bronx Park Bast. Fridays and Saturdays, 3 and 7.p.m. Algonquin 4-1148 CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK Presents the Season’s Events . THE NITGEDAIGET FOLLIES atto by Jack Shapiro — Lyrics Composed by Herb Howe It's New! It’s Colorful! It’s Funny! It’s Political! Skits — Chorus — Dancing — New Songs NEW DANCE GROUP In Satirical and Serious Revolutionary Dances HY SLONAN, Violinist, in a program of popular selections Dance to the Jazz of eB Pierre Degeyter Trio Five Piece Orchestra Poles Play Your Favorites DON’T MISS THE FUN! WE'VE ROOM FOR ALL OF YOU! And, of course, fine sports program and facilities include Tennis, Swimming, and all Ball Games * 10:30 a.m. daily from 2700 Bron» Park East. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 a.m., 3 and 7 p.m $14 a week, Cars leave BStabrook #1400

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