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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1934 Steel Union U SHOP DEL EGATES STRESSED IN CALL BY N.Y. ORGANIZER Discussion of Danger ¢ of War and Fascism Is Needed at All Meetings, Declares Union Executive—Two Shops Contribute By James Lustig (District Organizer of the Steel ani As a result of the ant capitalist countries on the one ist world and the Soviet Uni te acu mation exists to a great: with Ninety- her connection t radical labor movement i per cen m were eit Conseque! was formed b. the radio. other means of the hureh, propa- Explain Causes of War Since the metal workers, even the ‘kers engaged in the light sec- tion of the ir try, are occupying so. important a ition in the war industry, it is important that these workers should see the causes of war and realize that the worke have nothing to gain from bosses war and everything to lose. It is ng to note that many of ‘oducts produced now in the light meial shops have the exact form of a bullet (lipstick cases, etc.) It is also significant that this work is being done mostly by women workers and young workers. It was | therefore necessary that the leader- ship of our union raise the question of war before the membership. When the appeal of the Second U. S. Congress Against wv inion. of the workers asked the following Holloware local of our u some questions: Three Questions Asked (1) Why should not the United States arm itself when all other | countries are doing the same thing? Why do we raise the question of war and fascism at union meetings, where we are sup- posed to speak only about wages and hours? Which country is the one which fights for peace? workers @ @ s declared that they a they were ready to go to war again and send their children too. Others expressed the opinion that the United States will not enter into another war. These statements show the dan- gerous effects of the agitation car- ried on by the bourgeoisie which systematically of the workers and which, if not counteracted soon and in a proper | way will be paid for dearly by the| workers. In the discussion which followed the reading of the appeal, all. these questions were answered with the result that the anti-war was endorsed by a great Workers Raise Money Workers in two shops, members of the Silver and Holloware local who during the past few days re- ceived a wage increase as a result of their organized efforts aided by the union, decided to give half of their first week’s wage increase towards financing the sending of delegates to the Second U. S. Con- gress Against War and Fascism. The local elected two delegates, No doubt there are similar under- estimation and confusion in the minds of workers of other unions. No doubt there is conscious oppo- sition in other unions too against raising such questions at meetings. Some workers might draw the con- clusion from this that in order to maintain unity and avoid friction at union meetings the best thing is not to raise the question. This is @ pure and simple opportunist at- titude that will prove fatal to the trade union movement. The proof of the danger of not raising the question of war and fascism in our trade unions was manifested at the recent anti-war demonstrations mmediate danger of war. workers who underestimate thi _ Metal Workers Industrial Union) onisms existing between the hand, and betw: the capital- on on the other, there is an In spite of this there s danger. This where our membe ous by their absence. Such a situation has to be reme- died without delay by boldly, 1 systemat keepir question alive, and by explain- ing and convineing our membership of the necess war and fascism in order to main- tain and improve our working con- ditions and in order to make it possible to build our unions, Urges More Committees We are to see to it that func- tioning anti-war committees set up on a local an? shop basi directing by a responsible leading member. The New York District of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, as result of an intensified campaign that has been carried on for the past few weeks in connec- tion with the U.S. Congress Against War and Fascism, will send from eight to ten delegates from its local and shops. All the other unions should do their utmost to send similar dele- | gations in proportion to their mem- rship, so that the preparations for this congress shall be used to convince the workers of the neces- si of fighting against fascism, and that the shell give new inspiration and stim- ulus to the delegates to carry on the work after the congress and | bring about an increasing mass | movement, rooted in the shops and factories, that will be a stumbling block to both fascism and war. CP: Anniversary Hailed By Chicago Workers; Vote Strike Solidarity CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 12.—The | workers of Chicago Saturday night | jammed the Ashland Auditorium to were conspicu- ity of fighting against | hods that really make a ose the mills tight, that force the demands. to break e strike, in an effort to ers back the mills under the vation. ya rst job of the textile work: worksii vicious, strikebr Federal office: the people ag: st them and their her words, farmer: be n in to defend the workers’ A arousing mass support for the spreading of the strike, for the defense of the organizations class the respor test, carry tions, and organizing sympathetic strikes ike effective, knowing the effectiveness of these rt to terror and violence in an effort ers, i | the criminal violence of the bosses, to show uv their | ing hirelings in local, st | and to arouse the broad masses of | instead of following the vacil- crawling policies of Mr. Gorman, re- g in the face of the terror, the workers must areuse greater masses against the terror. intellectuals, middle class people, must all this moment ail efforts should be devoted to | should react to every instance of hoss , Sending resolutions and telegrams to le authorities, holding meetings of pro- ing through gigantie protest demonstra- How To End Bisidiiiod in Strike (Continued from Page 1) general strikes, The example A. F. of L. local that bosses to grant drive the work- same old s ’ rig ing of | right to strike a In the textile ns, and of the is to expose and murderous acts. be but non- Workers, rights. | in the marches. All workers’ | Co. on the road nds. Close Never return including should be followed in hundreds of citi continues, to establish once be the work: textile the mass marches, igser and more powerful. Where there was a hundred on the line yesterday, there must thousand on the line to: 5,000. 10,000; and 15,000! y tile workers should be drawn in. Promi- nent local people, small business people, profes- sional people, intellectuals and farme drawn into the active fight on the picket lines and bly to defeet. rons and mass picket lines. rges Locals to Prepare for Anti-War Parley against the terror. of the militant workers and the unions in Hazeltown, Pa., where a protest strike was carried through local general s a national gen ht to organize, strike answer to the Workers nd picket areas the job is to make the fly- and the mass and picket. ling and who exercise their And workers, Not only text should be The Communist Party urges the textile workers to go forward. Refuse to follow Gorman, Peel & at, the road that will lead Continue the fight for your every mill with your flying squad- of ret to the mills under the miserable, starvation conditions you left! Strikers Battle | Troops at Mill | By CARL REEVE | (Continued from Page 1) hours to clear the Cemetery. -Hun- |dreds of gas bombs were set off} | during the night. Seven known Na- |tional Guardsmen are in the hos- | pital and at least 30 more suffered | enough injury to go off duty. The strikers tore up cobblestones from the streets, used bricks and |stones and sticks. | Strikers hurled the vomit gas/ bombs time after time back into the ranks of the guardsmen. The troops clubbed viciously. They soon | attached bayonets and advanced on |the strikers with bayonets ready to Strike. The hands of a number of |strikers were severely burned from the gas bombs which they hurled back at the troops. | Many Strikers Wounded | James Dolan, a striker, received a} |fractured. skull from a trooper’s | club, Included among those shot |were a 78-year old woman, Mrs. Leonie Gussart, shot in both legs. | Deputy sheriffs used both shot guns and riot guns in the early evening | firing, wounding many. | The Guardsmen rode into the greet the Communist Party on the) strike area on their artillery cais- vere in the last war and that | n of its Fifteenth Anniver- sar] Workers from the yards, | sons. This morning trucks brought them rifle ammunition, They has fed the minds} from the steel mills of South Chi- | used barbed wire for entangie- cago, from the metal shops, from all} ments around the mill and last other industries, the unemployed,| night sent up many illuminating Negro, women and youth, came to| flares trying to search out the greet and hail the Communist Party | strikers in the darkness. They for the splendid revolutionary lead-| also used anti-aircraft search- ership that it has given to these | lights. ‘This afternoon an air- workers in their daily struggles. | plane was hovering over the pick- A ets. With tremendous enthusiasm the | The published list of injured, set workers assembled in the hall voted ¥ at 50, is undoubtedly far too low. |to sead a telegram of greetings and/a; many injured were not treated pledge of solidarity to the textile| at hospitals, Although it is re- strikers. The telegram was for-| ported in the press that the troops |warded to the National Textile | jwere told not to fire, it is a con- Workers Union and the United Tex-| firmed fact that the troopers fired tile Workers Union. | several volleys from their rifles in The Central Committee sent a the heavy fighting in the cemetery. special message to the celebration Strikers Taunt Troopers of the 15th Anniversary of the Com- This afternoon the strikers were munist Party, pointing out that the | Standing several thousand strong at | Convention to organize the Commu- | the deadline set by the troopers and nist Party took place in the city of | taunting the National Guards for Chicago. The message of the Cen- their attack on the workers. | tral Committee, in part, stated: ‘Do you want us to work for |two dollars a week?” I heard one “The Central Committee of the striker ask the guardsmen, who C.P.U.S.A. warmly greets not alone | stood club in hand, in a heavy line |the workers who are now members across Lonsdale Ave. Another de- |of the Communist Party, but also|clared, “You wouldn’t shoot that those who are members of the So- | gun at us, would you?” “When are cialist Party and the Y.P.S.L. and|they going to call out the Boy non-Party workers, whose true pro- | Scouts?” was a frequent slogan. Jetarian class instinct has led them| Undoubtedly many of the young to join in celebrating the birth of |suardsmen, who are themselves mill the revolutionary party of their | workers, do not relish their job and | class. |look actually sick. They are very | young boys from Providence, from “At the moment of the biggest | = ,_| Workers’ homes. The strikers were |strike in American history, follow appealing to them not to do the |ing an ever-mounting strike move- |work of the mill owners. “You |ment in many industries, and On| nave to come out here and shoot |a new high plane, urgent needs Of | us down so that Sayles can make our class demand a united front money,” one striker told the without delay, and in spite of all qin oor who can oppose united struggle only ‘a out of interests opposed to those of| ay, Suda peathny feeees é Se ee solidly ‘behind the strikers, and | Enjoy Indian Camp Nit BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK THIS IS NEEDLE TRADES WEEK! @ Rates are lower. @ comfort. @ showers, etc. Bungalows. Mt. Beacon Countryside Is Loveliest Now! Leaves Are Turnin Register at Union Office, 181 W. 28th $8 for four days; $6.50 for three; $4.50 Special Busses. CAMP Wingdale, Is Open All Through September! PHIL BARD DIRECTS PROGRAMS MORE ROOM @ MORE FUN $14 a week; Cars leave 10:30 A. M. daily (Allerton Ave, subway on White 4 1 “At gngtaeanenerne rogue Steam-heated hotel. there is great indignation at the use of the troops to break the strike and keep the mill running The Sayles Company claimed 1700 in- side the mill yesterday. They claim 500 inside today. The Sayles mill | workers are virtual prisoners in the Summer at gedaiget 10 o'clock last night the | strikers counter-attacked from three different sides, as tombstones were scattered in the cemetery. The Programs more interesting. Every |troops were beaten back. Finest foods. Modern At midnight the guardsmen | again charged down Lonsdale Ave- |nue. A rain of rocks halted them, It was not until 7 o'clock this |morning that the strikers were finally forced back and the dead- lines set up, U. T. W. Heads Aid Terror ig Red and Gold! St., for lowered rates: $18 a week; for two, and $2.50 for one full day. Mahon had conferred with Green| before the guard was called and McMahon said he had no objection to calling of the Guard. Thus U. T. W. heads are furthering the terror against strikers and are helping the efforts to open the mills, at the same time they at- tack Communists. Another Strike Danger Another danger the strikers must yuard against came forward to- day in evidences that U. T. W. leaders are trying to effect sepa- rate settlements which would weaken the national strike front. For example, the U. T. W. an- nounced it had cancelled a strike erder at the Roxbury Carpet Co., mills in Saxonville. The rail} has now reopened. It was said they had signed an agreement and ended the strike in the plant. The U. T. W. leaders announced in the New Bedford mass mect- ing this morning that one mill which they did not name would be allowed to reopen because it has signed an agreement. It is also reported that at Danville, Va, a similar U, T. W. order called off the strike there. The strikers must not allow the U. T. W. leaders to break their ranks with individual settlements. The U. T. W. leaders continue to Tefuse to call local union meetings or union membership meetings to strengthen the strike organization. For example, in New where I was this morning there were no union meetings called since the strike. The strikers demand union meetings to better organize the strike apparatus and the pick- eting. But the U, T. W. leaders by refusing to call union meetings prevent the rank and file from participating in strike leadership. 12,000 Troops Czlled Ont The strikebreaking terror of the state armed forces increased in New England not only at the Saylesville Mills but at many other points in} New England. Twelve thousand ! troops were called out by gov- ernors in all. And in Massachusetts the guard has been mobilized and equipped and ordered to be ready to be called out at a moment's notice, The National Guard is out at Lewiston and Augusta, Maine; in Connecticut two National Guard companies are patrolling mills at Putnam. They are patrolling in Danielson, Conn. In Norton, Mass., the sheriff of Bristol County has called the Guard out to transport scab goods for the Defiance Bleach- ery. National Guards are on patrol in Bristol, Rhode Island. A strike of 2,000 wool sorters was voted to take place there Friday morning. In Woonsocket 2,000 mass pickets were forced to retreat only after a tear gas barrage. Severe fighting took place also at Woonsocket in front of the Woonsocket Rayon Company. Thomas Kelly, U. T. W. leader, made a vicious attack on Commu- nists in a statement today. Ann Burlak speaks tonight at a mass meeting at Ashley Park, New Bedford. Fred Biedenkapp, well- known as an organizer in the 1928 New Bedford strike, will speak in New Bedford on Thursday at 3 o'clock, in Hazlewood Park, South End, and at 7 o'clock at Brooklawn Park, Norh End. Terror Troops Concentrate Fred Biedenkapp will speak in Fall River Friday evening at Lib- erty lot. There will be a mass meet- ing at the Common tomorrow in Boston in support of the textile strike. Ann Burlak will speak. Other evidences of increased ter- ror against strikers are seen in the orders of Worcester police forbid- ding picketing at the Worcester Knitting Co.; the concentration of over 100 police in Fitchburg against Bedford, 10,000 Hosiery Workers Strike | (Continued from Page 1) enumerated wage and loomage dif- ferential minimums formulated by the U.T.W. convention. Generalized, Gorman’s rehash of the U. T. W. convention demands called for abolition of the stretch- out, recognition of the U.T.W., the six-hour day and the 30-hour week, “with the same earning power that the workers received under the 40- hour week; establishment of a max- imum work load for operations in various divisions of the textile .in- dustry; and “the establishament of an arbitration tribunal mutually agreeable to both parties to settle all disputes that the parties are un- eble to adjust themselves, The deci- sion of said arbitration board to be final and binding upon both par- ties.” Later, Gorman chucked this rehash overboard and proposed that both sides pledge acceptance of whatever decision the Winant board should hand down, Will Approve Agreement For the first time since the Sep- tember 1 strike call was flashed from Washington, Gorman admitted to- day that the wage demands of yes- terday’s New Bedford agreement are the same as those announced in the U.T.W. convention. “Undoubtedly, from the sentiment I've heard expressed by the mem- bers of the strike committee, this New Bedford agreement will be ap- proved,” Gorman told the press af- ter Batty had concluded his report. However, though he volunteered that the New Bedford rayon agree- ment “meets with all our demands,” he declared that “it has no effect on our dealing with the industry as a ; whole.” The minimum wage demands won in New Bedford, as read off by Bat- ty, are: Unskilled, $13 per 30-hour week; semi-skilled, $18 per 30-hour week; skilled, $22.50 per 30-hour week; and highly skilled, $30 per 30-hour week. New Strike Developments Other strike developments today were: 1, The employer-dominated Win- ant board announced that Peter Van Horn, president of the Owners’ Silk Institute and head of the N. R.A. Code Authority, is expected for @ conference this afternoon. George Sloan and Arthur Besse, Cotton and Wool Institute and NRA Code Authority heads, respectively, are also expected to confer with the three members of the board. Denies Calling Off Strike 2. When asked about the con- firmed report that Mrs. Roxie Dod- son, local U. T. W. leader, had called off the strike in Danville, Virginia, with the consent of na- tional headquarters, Gorman de- clared: “That's wrong. We've wired her about that. The strike applies to Danville and every other textile mill.” The Riverside and Dan River Mills, of Danville, are key plants employing between 6,000 and 8,000 workers. Mrs. Dodson, it is understood, called off the strike “to stop the growth of militancy among the strikers.” 3. Gorman telegraphed Roose- velt at Hyde Park asking the Presi- dent to send “a word of advice .., urging fairness” to the various goy- ernors who have called out the fa- miliar strike-breaking National Guard. “The use of troops where used at all in a strictly impartial manner would be helpful,” Gorman wired Roosevelt, despite his added reminder to Roosevelt that “there is no need whatever in any case for State troops and we protest most vigorously their use as aids to a picket line there; the concentra— tion of over 500 private deputies at North Dighton; the heavy police attacks in Maine, Connecticut and Joseph Sylvia, U. T. W. leader, arrived on the scene at ten last night. He went inside the guards- men’s lines and conferred with the head of the troops, General Dean, |for an hour. Sylvia refused to state what had been said. The guardsmen all had steel helmets, riot guns, rifles, gas bombs, gren- ades, and clubs. Their headquar- jters are inside the mill gates. Horace Riviere, in a statement to Governor Green, blamed the | trouble on “a gang of hoodlums.” | This is the U. T. V7. leader's char- acterization of heroic strikers. Riviere said there was no obje€tion to militia. It was reported in the Boston UNITY New York @ CRISP WEATHER $2.65 a day 2700 Bronx Park East ALgonquin 4-1148 ' from Plains line). Rhode Island, where troops are out. More Mills Closed New mills which were shut down today include Three Rivers and Bondsville, Mass., mills, which em- ployed 900 workers; Chicopee Man- ufacturing Co., Mass. with 1,000 workers closed yesterday when only a dozen reported for work; nine Rhode Island Mills employing a total of 1,100 workers, the biggest being the Lebanon Mills, The strike definitely continues to spread, and remains solid and effective through- out New England. Mass picketing throughout the whole textile area was good today. Mass picketing took place at many press that U, T. W. President Mc- points, strike-breakers.” 4. “Proposals for settlement now must come from the employers. They must come from each division of the industry as a whole. I ex- pect they will come and I expect that we shall have peace proposals from some divisions of the industry long before a month has expired,” Gorman declared early today. Use Negroes Against Whites A U.T.W. telegram from the town of Ninety-Six, S. C., revealed that the southern mill owners are trying to play their well-known anti- working class game of playing of Negro against white worker. The wire declared: “Management put- ting in Negro help in picker room. Over 100 deputies who will not let pickets within 100 feet of gates. Turn hose on them to drive back. Non-union workers brought in from other mills.” Lip ‘Strikers Flay UTW ‘Leader in Danville (Continued from Page 1) ng to inject them- 5 s into the affairs of the local group of the United Textile Work- ers and to dominete the situation.” There was not a voie taken on the cailing off of the strike; the ac- tion was taken over t sts of the majority commit- tee, 2 numbe: were former ef the National Textile Union who joined in a 1 front with the U.T.77. Dodson’s Action Protested Immediately afier the edi issued to call off the str Cruze, secretary-treasurer strike committee, s ing telegram to Francis J. Gorm: national strike chairman in Wash- ington: “This is to inform you that Pres- ident Rosie Dodson, Local 2057, called off strike here today withcut vote of local strike committee. | ent Dodson advises thet this | done with sanction of national of FOOD PRICES RISE TO HIGHEST POINT IN LAST 3 YEARS Every Basic Food Rose Sharply, Department of Labor Reveals—3.2 Per Cent Increase Shown in Two Weeks Ending Aug. 28 WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 12.—The prices of all foods | continued their sharp upward rise during the two weeks ending Aug. 28 to a point 27.5 per cent above the avdgrage prices of April 15, 1933, the Department of Labor anno yesterday. ed in the Labor De @ment survey increased in | With meats, esvecially pork le Every important foodstuff list the lists, such basic foods in’ working class diets as all dairy U. 8. Acts To Blame | . . ° | ucts, bread, macaroni, rice, butter, B P, in Ship Fire jcheese, bacon, lard, potatoes, cone j tea and canned goods, rose sharply, Meats, for instance, were 21 per headauarters. We protest this ille- action of local president in r ing serious breech in national strike front. Reouest that steps be taken at once authorizing continua- tion of strike at Danville.” Work: Call Flying Squadrons Rank and file members of the strike commitiee told the press today that they will take every step possible to restrike the Dan- ville mills. They issucd a call to othep towns to send in flying squadrons and called on the work- ers to repudiate the betrayal and to set up mass picket lines. Mrs. Dodson fought against the strike from the very beginning. And once the strike vote was taken over her protests, she fought against mass picketing and refused to unite forces with the Danville local of the National Textile Work- ers Union, which was the strong- est local in the town. cent higher then a year ago. Although the reports issued in the past by the Department of La- bor have stated that prices on a certain dete were highest since a comparable past date, the present report does not do so. However, a compsrison with the last report, is- sued Aug. 30, shows how prices have sky-rocketed. On Aug. 30 the re- port said: “During the two weeks ending Aug. 14, retail food prices took the largest leap upward of the present year—3.2 per cent. While the Midwest drought has been an important factor in raising the prices of food to the consumers, the criminal A.A.A. crop reduction program, the slaughter of millions of hogs and cattle by the A. A. A. and the Roosevelt's monetary policy in pegging the price of gold and silver are among the most im- portant contributing factors in the price rises. (Continued from Page 1) slightest evidence for their charges. It is highly significant that the two officers making the “incen- diary” charges did so only after private conferences with the Ward Officials and lawyers, and their stories have a highly suspicious similarity, Former Oiler Testifies Highly significant is the stetement made yesterday to the Daily Worker by a former oiler on the Morro Castle, who asked that his name be withheld unless needed in an offi- cial investigation. “The Ward Liner, Morro Castie,” he said, “that burned last Saturday, cight miles off Asbury Park, with a total of 130 dead and missing, recalls to my mind a trip that I made on the Morro Castle as an oiler, The engine was badly Unity of the two unions was es- tablished. However, mass picketing was carried on. The strike was be- coming a success. But the strike was too successful for Mrs. Dodson and the mill own- ers. She called it off and received considerable praise for her action in the local mill owners’ press, the “Danville Bec.” Strike Gains Elsewhere Meanwhile the strike is gaining strength in other sections of the South. Flying squadrons visited High Point last night and this morning. It is estimated that more than 1,500 hosiery workers have joined the strike. Additional troops took to the field today in the key North Carolina mill centers. In Gastonia, where there were no guardsmen until to- day, special guard companies, equipped and trained for strike| duty, patrolled the property of the Manville-Jenks Mill, scene of the bitter struggle in 1929, but no, Strikers returned to the looms. Skeleton crews of strikebreakers were taken in closely-guarded cars into the. Hanover, Pinckney and Rankin Mills. More Troops in Burlington Additional troops were also dis- SUPERFLUOUS HAIR ON FACE PERMANENTLY REMOVED Results Guaranteed — Personal Servirs MY_METHOD ENDORSED BY PROMINENT PHYSICIANS Will give treatments to unemployed free every Friday from One to Four 171W. 71st St.at Bway C.H. Landis .iine: ENdicott 2-9150 in need of repair, in fact we had. to tie it down witn rope to keep it from vibrating to pieces. With the exception of the pas- sengers quarters, the ship was gen- erally dirty. The wood work was | dry, one of the boys remarked at that time that the ship was a tinder box, The shipping master, at that | time was a short stocky man of Spanish decent by the name of | Angelio. If he is still living and with the company, a good drill- | ing on the witness stand would be | interesting, he knows plenty.” The Marine Workers Industrial | Union, from its headquarters at 130 Broad St., yesterday announced the WEST END TIRE SHOP Battery Service -Tires-All Makes 140 West End Avenue Cor, 66th St. Joe Litt Preparations for a public Inquiry Commission in the attempt to get DR. EMIL EICHEL at the real story of the Morro DENTIST Castle disaster. jat Irving Hall, where members of the Morro Castle crew will speak. Your Strugg! Circulation, The Commission will hold a mass meeting on Monday night, 8 p. m., 150 E. 93rd St.. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Hours: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m. Sun, 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund The Daily Worker can Better Aid les if You Build its patched to the Burlington area where the strikers are active on the picket lines and in flying squads. A flying squad visited the hosiery mills at Alamac County today. An- other squadron from Spindale rode through Asheville, where they were harassed by rural police and state patrolmen in front of the large plants in the Asheville-Black Moun- tain Highway. In Winston Salem, N. C., heavy detachments of guards are in all sections of the city and workers must show passes in order to go} in or out of the mill area. Homes Searched for Leaflets | Workers’ homes in Concord were searched for Communist leaflets. | Even the highway traffic in Reids- | aan WHERE Our Comrades EAT i} Chinese Dishes — %e i} American Dishes — cra 848 Broadway vet. 13th « 14th st. —— RAPOPORT'’S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN | RESTAURANT ;-WILLIAM BELL———, Optometrist 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. ¥. C. Telephone ALgonquin 4-5752 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 795 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. DEcatur 2-0695 Brooklyn, N. ¥. ville, N. C., is under the direction of National Guardsmen. | The strike is stronger today than it was yesterday, despite the Dan- | ville betrayal and despite orders of | John Peel, Southern U.T.W. leader, | Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 34 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT to call off all militant activities. Strike in Hazelton Cheers Allentown By CHARLES SPENCER (Continued from Page 1) ers are kept in the dark as to all developments. To questions from the workers on what to do despite this attempt to demoralize the strike the rank and file militants are beginning to call shop meetings and are clecting mill committees, | This “do nothing” policy of the | U. T. W. leaders was exposed ait a mass meeting last night at the Labor Temple by A. W. Mills, dis- trict organizer of the Communist Party. TYPEWRITERS Underwoods, Remingtons, Royals, L. C. Smiths and all other makes sold, rented, bought, repaired, exchanged. Rebuilt and refinished. Guaranteed for one year, the same as new machines. Also Russian and Yiddish machines. J. E. ALBRIGHT & CO. 825 Broadway, N.Y.C. Bet 12 & 13 Sts, Established 1896 ALgonquin 4-4828 MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining || Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. ¥. Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Buite 703—GR. 17-0135 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn Classified Club | ALLERTON AVENUE WANTED large, unfurnished room, downe town. Box 8 Daily Worker. | Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices WANTED furnished room, girl comrade, between 14th and 23rd St. Box Q Daily Worker, In Bethlehem, although — the Twentieth Century mill is closed tight Mayor Pfeifle asserts that “there is no strike in Bethlehem.” | Conrad Reinder and Irving Jen-| nings were arrested after speaking to a strike meeting. They were charged with inciting to riot and a ventriloquist dummy which was|/- seized from Reinder’s car is being held as evidence. The terror in this stel town is growing hourly, Teday the main activity will be to close the ribbon mills in Allen- town and the silk mills of Emaus. A mass meeting is being called by the Communist Party for Friday evening at Center Square with Official Opticians to the I.W.0O. COOPERATIVE OPTICIANS 114 W. 14th St., near 6th Avenue. SUPPORT COOPERATIVE ACTION. Tel.: Chelsea 3-9806 ALL MEMBERS OF UNIONS, ORGANIZATIONS, CLUBS, WOMEN'S COUNCILS ARE INVITED TO MAKE USE OF THIS SERVICE. PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. — 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 Israel Amter as the main speaker. x SANDWICH SOL \ LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 RADIO S&S 19-10 THIRTEENTH AVENUE, ‘WINDSOR WEGO AN BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW @_ SPECIAL DIS. COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” SQUARE RADIO CO. ERVICE R-0289 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK YWHERE