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CHANGE ——-THE — WORLD! By SENDER GARLIN HAT with the textile strike, Upton Sinclair’s campaign, and other national events, I didn’t get around to studying all the broad political, economic and social impli- cations involved in Mrs. Edward McLean’s recently publi- eized million-dollar jewel. By this time the 160,000,000 workers and peasants in the Soviet Union have no doubt gotten over their shock at viewing at clese rangé the $1,000,000 Hope diamond which Mrs. McLean sported é | 'Pickets Tell of Low, Wages, Speed-up in Plants By OAKLEY JOHNSON “TABOR” DAY in Néw Bédford found the press extited about |the announced strike, amd uncer- tain about -its. local efféetiveness. “Claims” of the unions were reé- | ferred to with the typical combina- tion of sensationalism atid doubt which is calculated to sell the pa- pers but cause worker readers to The Boston Post déclaréd, DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1934 Impressions of First Days of Textile Strike in New Bedford, Mass. | (Sy he finds work in a wite factory. caiising dissatisfaction among t | orgahizer, comes to town. A strike is called. | Harris an eastern agiiator.) XVI LIFF was stuhned when he got through reading. He ran through the streets to find Harris. He Page Five 1\GOING EAST. a2 QD, Novel of ~~ DANIEL HORWITZ ata opsis: Cliff suiugan, 19-year old unemployed worker, is on his way east to look for 4 job. In 4 siiall town on the way There is a lay-off and wage-cut, he workers. Max Hartis, mion Cliff aiid afiother worker are fired after heading a committee demanding the reecinding of the cut. The local paper raises the “red scare,” calling went down on strike. Well, broth. ers, you ought to know how many. wi down on strike. He says only Is that true? If Barnes is be = persed deer icine pees ‘ 5 | iBtrikes Mar Day for Working- pulléd him out of a meeting of the at counting. . . e estranged wife of the Washington publisher has come back | man” and reported Matthew Woll’s S men laughed. hothe to tell us that “I wore the diamond and my other jewelry to see |Labor Day speech against the wave What hip- t Why does Hé say i what the reaction would be, and while it was a bit blood-curdling, I | of “Communist strikes.” The Bostoti ; “ae j went on. “Because he wants Went through with it.” Evening American had already its ale and fist sc Hes morales us. He knows thak Stich bravery is almost unheard of in the the annals of modern World-tours, but Mrs. McLean apparently félt that she was performing |fourth article about how the Reds, on ordef fréin Moscow, Were plot- ting FéVéliition ih New Bheiand mili they were closeted in a room where nobody could hear them, then he the shop is almost at a standstill’ He w: drive to break the strike and ou men back té thé shop in {& cospicuots public service. “They hated mie, that was obvious,” she | % : e showed Harris the story in ithe hat he Saye ‘sdyS modéstly, “I stéod for all that wotien who Wear jéWels repré- hee Gti Een ag he ae “Sentin€l.” Harris glanced over it peace aa ges deed ag / setited, yet they were fascinated. 1 doh’t think that ever in my life |pights’ in New Bedford. Arrést of Every plait in Fall River, Mass,, was closed by the militancy of sttikers. Police, as wsiial, shove tis |WIcKlv. “Then he raised his eyes “SO Acs? carey that Iyinie ate? / had I so interéstitig ah evening as that ohé, nor Was I evér so élose to | Ann Burlak of Slightest Provosa-| Picket liés atound. Thousands of children, many of whom work in the mills, are actively participating AO Seb amet end EL Why dots the editor refuse to being trampled in the dust. I think I taught them a lésson, ahd that | tioh Is Ofdered.” in the strike, “My God, Cliff, you scared the | print a statement from the strike heneéforth it will be safé for American Woitith to Wear jewelry i | THe New Bedford Morning Mer- Ife out af ime. 2 Fhousht SOOAHESS | Committae? Because the paper is. : 4 beatae vi a ee 3 we se awe i= oon __ |knows what happened. You should MacDermott Russia.” . . ‘ of heroism. First of all, how did word gét atdlind to the Soviet masses that Mrs. McLéan’s stone was Worth @ cool millidi? Was it ctity gushéd in a headline the fol- lowing morning that “Working Man} “Nobody went in!” administratigh at Washington was Wamsetta, thinking aBolit “how Best to glvé at the Kilborn, at the Wamsetta the Nashawena. One hundred per week. But I've worked only two at and we get less for it.” he stretch-out is worse,| PUT when Syivia said, “March ih jan’ a comoonist ‘ot bé surprised to read this kind that the workers, fot thé police arid | of stuff.” you being a red ” CHE siut- a body to the three scab mills, | tered. Ee couldn't pronoiihc? that and. owned by Mr. q to print anything wou want \ How Were the Workers Notified? ie Ms Dag,” spoke sadly of the) “tiie strike’s solid!” days a week for six raonths.” the company thugs, are the au-| “But, Max, the way the paper, ‘8 st his interests ' NUMBER of q é = ctecels #uat..| aie eee that hung over the ihe hundred per cenit!” Le it been better si s of “violence” in str speaks about you causing trouble’. “Brothe don't let anybody. of questidhs arisé in connéction with Mrs. MeLéan's feat | poor man’s horizon, and said the} The same at the Hathaway plant. , Se Lon sORiAkRIN? GHGS yom f sq, break rafiks. Lét’s stick tee | gether and We'll wih,” hé concluded. |The meén cheered and applauded Headlined in the “Pravda” or the “Tévestia”? That I stronely doubt, |Workiigmen everywhere @ applet | cent. Except at thtee factories) ‘“Whai is meant by ‘siretch-out’?”| the Goodyear and the Fiske aiid |stiange word. Hit j fs Soviet. mthods of ji Ji needless to ite diff t from ure wheré automobile tire fabric is! “They give you more looms tol th Fireston a pull th | ae coe tuber OR fhe eee is of journalism, less tO say, aré quite different &S Na r Is 3 3 s Firestorie, atid pull them out oh| «ja Sa tis tholigh he wasn't § s ti those prevailing in capitalist countries, aiid I'm suite that the éditor of ne Halted ee oh eg ate so pea the aie ears’ : Rei lee tee nae = ihe a strike,” they acted at once. At once iia shart inal the strikes sey st K. He slid that ‘Har i: wit the “Pravda” didn’t trolible to Rave a twO-coltiih ctit made of Mrs. /doubt about the effectivenéss of the |moiy. the Devon). ‘These three | ms had the number of they began moving. In little over |cail the reds trouble inakers and | ® arent fellow ani did what, was’ goo ‘or em an that if not ‘or MeLean ahd het diamond, although judging by thé spleidia reproduc- tioh of the lady's visage whith appears in thé current “New Masses,” it might Have had a morbid fascination for thé workers of Mostow. T am also rather curious about the péoplé who “hated” Mrs. Me- Lean so because she carried that million-dollar diamond. From read- ing the capitalist press I learn that the maéssés of the Soviet Union strike. ey had beeh pushed ahéad too hard by thé tréifiendous fiass Surge of the bitterly discon- téhded workérs to have doibt on that score. Thélr chief spokesman, | Scabbiiig, out of 22 plants. Willingly répotting the vast stri William Batty, at. the mass meet-| And the capitalist press was un wave from New England to Georgia. |The press reports were grudgingly adiiitting close to quarter of.a-mil- to 36. The knotters had their | Increased, the spinning and the weaving, have inereased work, extra machints to tend to, more to do in the same jtime, That's speed-up.” work ke Jooms per man increased from 14 | half an hour three thousand work- All the trades, both in year plant. ers were gathered before the Good. | jail birds and I'm surprised Barnes At first there was 4 good-iiatiired, an almost holiday spirit. The pick- et line of sothe 500, which marched | Harris they would have had to ac- cept the ciit. Now thé men had Bathies by the throat and the com- fay would have to gvie inh : Weber and Néison spi | | | % pene f u {hg in Hazelwood Park, had al- strike, while G H joked that Barnes was 4 di | are in factories and can leave their machifiés for a fleeting moiient | ready dilly-dallied too long in his Hee erry fath, $e pred: | © IT went: Women worker: d to the thousands aa ihe a that thé “Sentinel” wasn't Worth, | only by special permission of the conigressés of the Cominunist Party |numeroiis “conferétices” at Wash-| dercy of the Cotton Textile Insti- 9 for the same stretch-out, the alk to join them. When | readifig. becausé there wasn't a~ Of the Soviet Union. Then how as this mass review of Mrs. M¢Léai’s ingtoh dtrting the past months, | tuté, the eiiployers’ organization, | same inhuman speed-up. trol drove up with more | word of truth in it. Valuable dlainond aécomplished? jholding back the strikers and try-|and the chairmanship of the Cot- relief fe a eikt | fies’ F ea The only éxplaiation that séerhs plausible is that the Washington |!9& to arrange a settlement that Code Authority, the | tnatter ‘ge , Heat | time: for ieee white are neal , saa the steiiers atoed ior : sociéty lady placéd hersélf on thé Red Square, her di&mond flashing Aare ecg Be oe an| “impartial” government body ab-| they have to be completely without gave a short spontancous | Harts if thé Miiscovitée sunlight, as the masses of workeis ahd peasants of | tile tadkbriak afd Drea the trike, | Bolted by “our great leader in| income in order to be even con- eer which, however, was half a | oa ‘ the Soviet Union marched in solid formation, htitriedly glanciig at het | tt couldn't be done, and he knew Nab sapere dice was: devlaritig that sitered for relief Bronx cheer. ; | MWR. BARNES seht word to the jewel.. Having taker a hasty look at the diamond the workers pre- | it. The speech he made at Hazel- enna la ae eats A iH ‘They all had the same story. And | Aig ee gan nae strike:s that those who were sumably spat in unison at this vulgar American bourgeoise as their | Wood Park at toon of Labor Day |the strike, sist gals Has gle ate one 1ad i diego USN ier Sree ae not back to work by Monday éyes blazed célleetive hatred. showéd his realization that if he; Tete ene it out. A young Worker who lboked attempt i Dull out the ects ahs | |Wollld be discharged. This threat . . . Wanted—Greater Atrocities! (el it bé that the capitalist press has gone so thoroughly bankrupt 6n atrosity yarns about the Soviet Union that they have to lean Oh such miserable tales as Mrs. McLiéati brihgs from abroad? Shame, and his colleagues in the United | Textile Workers did not lead the striké, sdfficone else would. He, spoké almost as militantly as a| real militant. Hé called oh the workers to strike solidly against the in Lantashire, the English t industry, where he learned wea What the Strikers Were Sayinz | A WORKER-PICKET before the Dartiisiith: 52 years old. bon Sérved 12 years in thé British army, ust nt in had \like a high school boy (he had of _enli States Navy, a hed a peri United le mills), a %.|hair who shetited ers that they were yellow if they | tected and safe. They were let out 1 with reddish hésitent work- hus ‘ months in the| sates, and away from a chance to strikers kept jeered openly. The pt the workers back from the |doesn’t say that I threw a couple bombs aiid killed a hundred people,” Harris smiled. | “But, why does hé spéak about the reds as being dangerotis to the speak to the scabs. was used Every scheiné | to keep the scabs pro- seemed to affect the men. It was Bad to work for 1é8s monéy, bit where could one get a job now, and how long could they stay out?e They had no savings and couldn’é get any credit in the stores. They: You éditors, wire your Riga and Paris éorvéspondents at once for some | bosses, ae the fled the | then in America enlisted in the Ca-|didn’t join the marching pickct |of the factory in little driblcts, to! Workingman?” Cliff pressed on thought that the strike was lost, réd-blooded yarns about forced labor, cannibalism ahd the miass éxé- hehe” against pesdsiip hy ae nadian forces and served a year in|line. a grim lantern-jawed woman | Prevent any moment of high drama, | Poatused ° Harris and Cliff and the whole tition 6f archbishops. Such talés as Mré. McLéan has brought back, wages France in the World War; badly rker hardened by years of mill | to worry down the strikers’ spirit, | “Becausé the reds are leading the stiike committee talked themselves bicod-cirdliig though théy may be, are much, much too tamé! But he algo warhed against the Wounded, given a pension for a few told the same stoty of] But hundreds of the scabbing | workers the fight eat eH rageed, trying to show the itten: F ; rl \Redé (WHY, ih the Textile Worker's |mOnths, which was then discon-| speed-up and lay-off and N.R.A.| Workers looked out of the factory | cuts. ae T'm doing aa t to | that this threat was just another ne War in Textil Voice, aiid’ under the leadershin of | tinued. Has a wife, a son, and|trickery, and all were determined windows at the thousands of their |town—showing you men Row 0) sca-e, | The War in Textile Ann Butlak, hed for months been [Young daughter. Has wotked for|to fight to the end to win the|fellow-workers below. They stood fight agalnst Barnes and the coti-/ si6 guik of skilled workers were calling for strike action and set-|Ye2ts in this mill. His son, aged |sttike. (As they talked. I thought |Iche minutés looking olit. They | pany—is the same thing all the reds tee iney said, and the conta- je ae sidélights on the present textile sttike now raging ovér the ¢ountty are containéd in the following letter from a reader of this column who labors for one of the New York capitalist papérs and who sees just what “embarrassing” items are threwn into the waste- Hee pace by forraulating basic | 22, Ras Worked sincé. he was 14. demands), and he put over a flukey| “How much do you explafiation of his refusal to ac- get when you're working full time?” I asked papers, that the “preponderant \imajority” of the workers did not | of Sloai's statement in the morning | Were thinking. are doing all over the country. That's why the bosses hate us and |call us all kind of names ih order |to scare the mén and break the | HE U.T.W. did very little practi- pany couldn't run the shop without them. - Harris said that relief would soon come and the strikerse 2% the old man, who is. still. straight- | want to strike!) cal organizing of thé actual + at | paper basket: |cept the National Textile Wotkérs| | eg and tou: tae oh rca AB shirred fool «hg ) would get food. A pickét line would: | A : a gh enough to-work | nd strike. There wi bs Pate - “Lye been working about 10 hours a day on a copy desk of a capi-. | Union proposal for united action in| ony years more. i ; Ceo oe raak: foe an CUCL wae elle CORftinddy BuceHe [De emen™: nundun tie. Rete 3 ‘i the strike (such @s had already Pulling Out the Seab Plants no definite instructions for Monday to stop any one frorh get- talict paper handling the textile strike news, and I've noticed there |i 00 “sotesd iloh in Fall River) “{ should make $20 a week, full ae | workers to march in the line in|Khew Max to be a fegular fellow 10 int, the shop. : | fte many interesting features of the strike that should find their way ae aks eae wr’ |time. But tty and do it.” NOTHER mass meeting was] Git jined ranks, no organized/and that you couldn't believe ng into th : op. ii peut | into thé pages of the Daily Worker. ‘The Strike Starts | “How ritich of the time have you, heduled for 10 o'clock Tiies- | not one single slogan was Baines. He femained silent. jew hoa as oe de paras “For example, Hitil Rievé, outstanding member of the Socialist | PUBSDAY morning dawned cloird- | Worked?” Gay. mibraing, Twood. ate. 8, tiot one single placard) “Well, It's go in and meet,” Harris | oo Gd i evaryueny ebuild -be+ Party atid ptesident of the Amérloan Federation of Hoslery Workers, | iy, with rain threatening. The | gach ramon sitogethee for the | Toe Uw, oegemier aid & Reeriite, UC tne: Wve p a wiueicr | ARIE? DG. athe |eleated. Gut of the Macs, Batness {8 Working closely together with Francis J. Gorman, chairman of the | papers carried the announcement) sire, (one oa Prete eer ee. fee “Btate Representative Gh | Sere. oe & disvance fram an win; | ARRIS talked to hith about the} Might eve to give in, The men United Textile Workers Union strike committee, at Washington. |of Federal Relief Admihistrétor|""Gan you make the $13 mini-|the. Deinoctatic ticket. (Attoto- ee cone eee Avett Heit te 2 a ee Sl cpesred up cha began &. prenaes Rieve's special task seems to be to keep the hosiery workers back | Hopkins to textile wotkers that thé | yum” biles going through the cf Nea Arno ‘ Seat atl chron ee Ce pee ee | for pleketing. . were outside. “However, the hosiery workéts have been pushing for a strike, in is something that maxés a Socialist leader uhcomfortable. He issued & statement a few hours later that the order to ‘stand by’ tas given riot to prepare for a strike but to PREVENT one. “Tt looks at présent, however, as if Emil Rieve’s S. P. methods Won't keép the strike from spreading in his direction. “Thcidentally, the matter of the hosiery agreement is sort 6f fishy. At the cotivention of the Hosiery union in Réading a few months ago, Rievé had to use all the power of his eloquence to stop a vote for a definite sttike date. The délegatés insisted the workers they repre- oy rte of the. dastory, ie starve.” \s aie aie age dishonesty and |e neross the sireeh wee oe a 0 e tn ele 7 ods Ny reliability. They wan’ 0 fight, . prt sented demanded a real struggle for a réduction in hours wiin no wage |the electric lights showed the ‘ untellabiy pane wanted to Teh: [factory windews out of which seabs| ST. A GE A ND SCREEN cut. ‘Finally, it was voted to send the manufacturers a notice of ter- tmihation of the agreement, effective, I believe, at the end of August, and to conduct a referendum on “authorizing” the officials to call a strike to gt a better conttact, There has been, as far as I know, no sich referendum. Instead, we now hear of this contract that keéps Day, there was the usual A. F. of L. parade to celebrate the pleasant relations of capital and labor. To maintain these pleasant relations, |grim mén aha womiéri were gath- aré badly mistaken” if they thought | sq the text, F was 618 to lay night's dusk cleared away. nearly two in6ttis Bbéfore the mills were sehédtiled to 6peh. Mote thati 2,000 | “How can you live wages?” ered before the gates of the Dart- on mouth mill, standing on the fat side of-the stréet, looking across, when thé moment for the morning But 1 wouldn't this morning. bosses’ expectation of starting work as usual, looking af the héavy iron bars of the factory gates, at the| police guards stationed there. A ih New Bedford, has worked years in this factory (“I ought firm-jawed women, slim young fel-| smiling ruefully, steps, Watehine the factory gates like hawks: They smiled in tri- been better or worse since tt such | Si “Wa had ofte slice of bfead apiece | back to work in this strike if I NASHAWENA picket: Born here | Have a pétision, instead of havinc to Thin, lanky, overalléd men, lean, | strike for decent wages,” he said, but with plenty There ate only 86 knotters in the city, He says, and they're all otit—a off ‘Are we?” use gréeted oeca- When he spoke of | winning the strike, of pulling out the scab mills. the applause was go | more vigorous, but it was apparent |that _ the workers instinctively er. But he was not leading: mas anger was leading him, and push- ing kim on. : Sylvia even declared that he hoped the bosses would “co-oper- 22 to jread the telegram he had sent to national strike headquarters, saying |tation in ah otderly strike,” about | by the | marching pickcts (after the line | about Harris. d The entire detail Gr | Blained thé theory of class strug- |“I can see now why y | A mééting Was called | to clear up the red Sscate. Harris repeated to the men the same thing he had said to Cliff about the reds. Scowlingly yelled to the wérkers to He also tried to show how Barnes join in, waving his arth. Most of | was lying. them, relying of their bare hatred) “Barfies says that only a few mén ef the bosses, simply looked at him | formed) for perhaps half an , to show that they were in- ceed leading the strik Batty looked at the ¢rowd. HSA aney I interviewed a high official of | « a the Goodyeat company, and he| Lady Jane” Opens Tonight said his men wers hot striking be- | At Plymouth Theatre; Elmer cause they were receiving enough | pj, 1 They didn’t want | eee Play on Wednesday evening at the Plymouth Theatre from joining in the walkout. He claims he has extended a contract administration would not “undet-|"“wrhey gave me the $13 tiniinum strikers carried signs to vote for pbebe omg . Aaoti ; | -The company had expected that | ” y strike tactic had to be devised|gie and what the réds stobd for. pan} pe | With the manittactuvers to Sebt. 1, 1985, covering 50,000 of the 196000 | *Tite thelr strike” by giving “ines | £2, one week, at, Are, althbagy T/Syivie.) Thies thousand’ Wooee | through the spontaneous militancy |” “Gee, you alwaya give me some| tbe pee soe ee workers ih his hion, and the contract is sacred. a “AAA 6 pe hes eathied only $12. ecatise the | hear Aad speech, | of the rank and file workers them-| new dop a * ¢ Monday. Police and troopers were. Would “find otit very soon that they |igcime wore idle, But the next week, | cbout “keeping out peaceful repu- | Siva new dope on things, tr sue massed in front of the gates on | Monday mérning. such clear terms that Rieve couldn't igrioté it. Two days ago he wired | otherwise President Roosevelt: r : 7% a 7 ie Willi tty, strut- | paper talks that way about you.” = Hf . PRAt fisart I didn’t | joining the U.T.W. and “becoming| To be sure, William Batty, stru > a ae, ~ to ail locals to ‘stand by. ‘The United Press naively thought it meant |“our great leeder in Washington.” | were “ine full 40. hours, sé they |a citizen of your tinion,” about the ting in all the elory of his 200. ‘The next day , ihe “Sentinel”| | The strikers gathered halt a ile: a hosiery strike, and flashed thé word around that the hosiery workers |48 the ie W. leaders called him,| qian have to pay me the min-|U.T.W. being “recognized by the| pound, gray-suited, heavy-jowled | called upon the strike:s to chase tie see aoe sane th Hela a. vi 5 4 ae * a i s only $5 k, | tution,” about “standing back of | organizer- Heian, dinan yl- real s oy t 5 eshte cle ene AACA Ria ee ptr ee areriipageetes whlch |in the strsets already befote the | made even If it was only S5 a week, Millon. lender in Washington.” | vie, sircde at the heed of the the strike committee with questions | surely get locked up. They couldn't afford to lose him. Cliff and Nel- son were to lead the line. Harris, ‘gave instructions: “Don’t let your= selves be provoked, but see that no | scabs get into the shop. Keep clo: to the gates.” | (To Be Contifiued) | “olanthe” To Be Offered ~~ | By D’Oyly Carte Opera. Will be the third of- the hoslery workers ‘standing by, to use Emil Rieve's particulat use |iows and girls, workers of all ages|of fighting spirit in the tones of|ate” by closing down the fectories | wages as 1h Nae Ti t |. “Tolanthe” ; of what looked for a few hours like a militant phase. ifoin 16 re 60, stood about smiling | his wolee, is Tene steely eves) He|so the U.T.W. organizers could go AS nee RAGE ce cites be maar ne ice the Sine ae Bulle ) “6 ind. Th 5. 0 Ha Hi ii i tk * er.” | aftef the out-of-the: v towns! He y Wi pode s ‘8 ‘Lady Jan a comedy y «| to presenter y ie note } ‘Other aspects of the strike come to mind. Danville, on Labor | and now afd then strolling a few | is also a skilled worker, a “knotter.” | a t-of-t y could: weather this sttik® Tot a4 Harwood, ‘will be offered this|DGyly Carte — Opéra Dany, epening this evening at the Martin> ( effective “with- | .. . Within 48 hours the workers | ins in essociati j i the police chief gave out an.order that anybody cartying a banner |Umph. Not a worker entered the | key trade. ee ee ia Cm baeicuts: Raa aA Cau “hide of these plinis, it-|@kh belWyn- aid Brankin, ‘The| offered. to and sncliding’ wee that mentioned strike or picketing of anything af all eiicept the name /Sales They smiled in determined) “Mow much do you make, if you, cu MAUn A tion” — subtly Judine the : , and | Seas eae, ,. ; . td satisfaction into each other's éyés.| work full time?” without intimidation” —subtly in- | cluding the Goodyear, were out, and company ificludes Frarices Starr,|day night, Thursday to Satufday,: | Of Hig tihton and the number of his local would be attested immediately. | Not a worker even appronched the| “I thake more than most of ‘em, sulting the workers by indirectly] the strike was 100 per cent solid |rila Lee, Frietia Inescort and| the London troupe will present a” “Down in the South U. T. W. officials aré touring strike afeds | factory gates. it 1 work full time—about §23 a admitting the bourgeois accusation throughout New Bedford. | Reginald Mason. laouble bill, “Trial by Juey” ands telling the men ae the brake’ tied Bde pllagheeenire In South pik a Roce “Tight Breeches,” a play of the es Ses bigest ven Carolina, the U.T.W. state representative there has offered to let the Carolina mountain life, by John, devoted to . ee ee ‘Yeomen of the Guard. a manufacturers conduct 4 vote inside the mills, and if the majority vote favors the management then there will be no picketing. “Phe rayon workets in places like Meadville, Pa., Roanoke, Va., ed in C : 5 . : 3 cn ; A . aes a sis tke Chalten Ud oon te enna pe | ee es. Balduin Saysin ‘Soviet Russia Today Tene on Tussday nient samme Amusements hah has been considering the question all week, Gorman is also stall- ing whether to allow the dyers in Paterson to strike. It séems the question is a. difficult one to decide. A special metting is being held today on it. Yt the dyéfs occupy the Key position iti Paterson. The throwsters also are being held back. _ .. “The dyeing bosses (no pun intended) have sent Gorman an appeal that he Would be ungrateful to let the dyers strike. The bosses should not be too hatd on Gorman. He’s in a tough spot. It séénis to be getting harder and harder to get the workers to ‘stand by’ when they Issue of ‘Communist’ | The Septémber issue of “Tho | Communist,” theortical organ of the Communist Party of the U.S. A. is now out and can bé had in all workers’ bookshops. This isste con- tains special articles on thé history of the Communist Party. The full Cofitents are as follows: in Liberties Union, writing NEW YORK.—‘The Soviet Union) Nazi Press, were manufactur has already created libertis far | “home consumption.” greater than exist elsewhere in the Wwotld,” according to Roger N. Bald- win, ditector of the Americzn Civil | the September issue of Soviet Russia | Teday, under the title, “Freedom in the U. S, A. and the U.S. S. R.”| Anniversary of CP. |USSR Leads World in Civil Liberties, A fer In addition, the magazine carries an article by Listoh Oak, “Wa Threatens Socialist Construction pen ,pictures of the Austrian So- cialists in the Dynamo Electric Plant in Moseow by L. F. Borcss, notes on “Soviet Scene,” and ac- |Taintor Foote and Herbert Hayes, will be presented at the Avon What’s On Monday OUT! “tinited Action for Social * formerly The Hunger Figh' ts Wanted to sell thé paper and ads. Bi-weekly; de per copy. Liberal com sion. See Lou Dou: 11 W. 18th St., 2nd floor, immediat “ROAD to Life,” ou will be shown at Tremont Prog. Club, 866 E. Tremont Ave, tonight, 0:30. Adm. 25¢. REGISTRATION for Fell Term now go- ing on ‘at Workers School, 35 B. 12th St., | Wilton and Frank Camp head thé cast. OWen Davis’ new play, “Too Many Boats,” based on a novel by |Charles L. Clifford, will have its delayéd opening, on Tuésday night at the Playhouse. Marlé Larimore, ety Flint head the large cast. “Judgment Day,” a anding Soviet film new melo- and Hoface Braham | —— RapiIo CITY Music HAL! 50 St. & 6 Ave—Show Place of the » Doors Open 11:30 A.M. | GRACE MOORE in “One Night of Love” withTulllo Catminati-A Oblimbia Picture” || also Walt Disney's “Peculiar Pengiing’’ f_ ples a Misle Hall Revue be marching forward with their brothers. Approaching the Seventh World “ 5 ’ count of a “Day With an American} Room 301, Resister now. Ask for descrip: aig hight on eecinueas “GHORGE LEWI6." Congres ana the Fittsentn An. |, “Workers Democracy,’ write S/ worker in Moscow,” by Pauline|tive catsionue | area BY Hlmét Rice, will be pre- | DSoyLy CARTE sttments : nivetsary of the Founding of the anon De | ee od oBtae Tanchahelt’™ by | VeRBe ceceaber 28° opts) “Bend-on|@enbed By The author oh Wadnet. | It is genuine, and is the nearest lead Ray ea the Work-| Svove invaluable to all who wish ~ ..,; 0 keep informed on the achieve- The September number of Soviet) ments of Socialist construction. Russia Today also features an ar- Dance at Irving Hiisn ot _dtvseeies to! day night at the Belasco Theatre. | = Rank and File A. F. of L. Conference in\he cast of forty is headed by a br we ieee . | y i TOLANTHE = |taries. Fight Wm. Grecn’s “Rea Seare”| Fania Matinoff, Leé Baker and bees A Fi 2 by by suppotting Rank and File. Philip Leigh. MARTIN BECK THEA, 45 St., W. of 8 Av. > SULLIVAN weer kee, SERRAGP RANE Le, neen gee Force the Enactment of the Workers’ Bill! By I. Amter. The Present Situation, perspootives. Gakley Johnson, which should 8:45-WJZ—Broadéast From Schooner Seth Parker Off Panama; Sea Chanteys 9:00-WEAF—Gypsies Orchestra; Frank Parkér, Tenor TUNING IN 1:00 PB. M.-WEAF—Baséball Resume WOR Dorothy Miller and Charles | @m4 Tasks in Cuba. Resolution of ticte py Hays Jones, editot of thi EXECUTIVE Commiies, Film and Photo —Ford Fri " a y! Ss, Nie Popes ey i 5 t = : CEGHEe Gan yngssinges, Songs | the Second Coneréss of the Com-) Missing Workers’ Voices, on “The! Struggle for Power | Taneue mre dation ‘Commanies | mests| AMKINO’S AMERICAN PREMIERE! : : Glean—Sketen WABC—Evan Evans, Baritone munist Party of Cuba. Soviet Seaman.” The new issue} Wedne-day. 7p. Members 6f both | 4 en be rice Marx, Engels, Lenin Stalin on the Subject of Lectiires | cemmiitees pieasc be precent prompily. | DOSTOVEVIKIS . tine also caffies a significant headline the} 9:15-WABC—Lookii it Life—Roy Helt Yr | > q te soh™ WABC—Nick Luces, Sones 9:30-WEAP—Joe Cook, Comedian; Donald), Communist Party. article. by the noted Doctor of bt Bo Vavie ice an Sete rcs [ae : 1:40-WEAF—Arléne Jacksqn, Contralto Novis, Tenor; Frances Langford, |The Leninist Struggle for the Dental Science, Alfred Owre, dean. y Horace FP. Vavis resp. is, et iit Borgen Bt. neat | PETER BU RG iGHT : ; won sats Ertl : mae) ag Mah eo A pati Slogan of Soviet Power in the | of the School of Dentistry in the) Nostrand Avé.. Prospect Park PSU. | i Ce ee ine Present Situation. By A. Marty- | College of Physicians and Sutgeons, “PIERPE Degeyter Club. first regular SOVIET Super Taluing Film CEnglities) Union AF) Loce/306 Crew ‘, WABO—Paul Keast, Baritone; Orch. ‘WJZ—Her Master's Voice—Sketch NEW YORK —How the United ee eet etart 4 TMs-WEAP—Blsters of the Skillet WABO—Gluskin Orchestre; Hentietta| nov. | Columbia Universite “Tt is my be-|ctates js affected by the ctrugele Thne’ Reming of Bhonokowitseh Mist 42 ST. EAST OF Bway 4 TUL IGM. : Re eae gers. Adventites setae cut Sart’ PT | the Tasks of the Communist Sec- | lic,” writes Dr. Owre, “that un- petween fascism and Communism ‘phony after Business Mesting. 4 * ee iivec'! a:aaweeee less outside factot's interfeze, mcd- | ORKERS Esporantisis have a general | ERMATIONAL CiNes p tions Regerding Municipal Policy. Resolution of the Enlarged Pre- sidium of the E. C. C. i. Fieures on the American Economic Crisis. By Labor Research Asso- WABC—Boake Carter, $:00-WEAF—Himber Orchestra WOR—Senator Kean Campaign Talk | wiJz—Jan Garber's Supper Club WABC—Mountaineets Musi¢ 8:15-wOR—Wallenstein Sinfonietta jané Fiomen, fonges 10:00-WEAP—Eastman Crssstra; Lullaby Lady; Male Quartet WOR—Frank and Fis, Sdnes WiZ—Conéert Orchestra; Igor Gorin, Baritoné is the subjeet of a series of 12 lec- tures to bs given this fall at the New Schocl for Social Research. New / York City, by Horace 3B. Davis, au- thor of Labor and Stecl and Feder- foal service in the Sovict Union 2| few years from now will pres¢n: afl unparalleled achievement.” Edwin Seaver contribuies an ar- 7 AMERICAN SHOWING! —2n4a BIG WEEK! “SOVIETS GREET NEW TURKEY” ii sane are invited to at- Classes ers being t ional Language, tond this mesting. formed for besininers | | g WABO—Edwin C. Hill, Commentator WABC—Wayne King Orehos!ra tiélé of how tho Sovict. Union ‘cot 7 ‘ aa ony Oreh@stra; Gladys | 19:13-Wor frant Bvento—H. EB. Read ciation. cle on how tho Sovict Union con-| ated Press special writer. 2 Produced by the Lesingred Cinsma Trust in Cooptfetion with the Turkish Govt.— he wane eae Boren: tM | Sabai coerce chores Me ee jquered, the drousht, stating thet snes en aac Bees | Rockford, Ill. (A ovat Tike with English Titles| —SRE ad BEARS VoROSILOV_KARARHAN Speaks, Soprano; Frank Chapman, WOR—Variety Musieals a E23 ey CET EIS é SiatVvation slandéfs recently A Rod Builder on every busy D. WORKER Ganference in Scandi- || 7BUDENNY—1 s ~The Soviet Navry—STAMBOUL, Si NA, ANGORA, ete. ‘Tenor; Pred Hufsmith, Tenist | 11:00-WEAF—Madrigtera Orchestra aimed against the Soviet Union by) street corner in the doWAley hielsin narih Workers Ci: eee, inte ctura || Music by ths Leningted Phitharmonic Orch. Composed by Zeki Bey & Shostakoviten. ‘WdZ—Kings Guards Quartet ‘WOR—Weather; Trini Orchestra Ewalde Ammence, Secretery of 1 he ‘h. teethendses py ee Ave. at 734 pam. W Also MOSCOW DERBY DAY ®2¢ts in U.S.8.R.—Sovict Children Build step toward the \¥ieuna Aid Committee, and the! dictatorship of the proletariat! — |crca'to suena tho conterence asked to attend this conference gs; dwa ed ce Orchestra WIZ—Best6r Orchestra wass—ssicage Alam & Racé Autos—Native Songs & Dances, ¢te. ACME THEATRE, ilth St. # Netan SainarecAlwave Cool Nell Jr, Baritone; j¢—Sketeh bd bd CR TR a AR “marmalade inn ail