The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 18, 1934, Page 2

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1934 Two Detroit Conferences Launch A yy tte Y , Ban on Strike $4000 Needed Every Week Soviet Union Joins B RK ally 5 . . uth *In Paterson As Daily Worker Drive Lags [eagueToFightWar Form City Section nit by Negroes) In All But Two Districts Ts | Page Two nti-War Congress Drive igCapital Organizes | To Speed NRA Policy ' (Continued from Page 1) ey “page E |is the only state indeed consistently Of Anti- W ar League vigorous pot sins Vie ‘chan- | Only Boston and Denver Contribute to $60,000 | d2tenaine the caus Hk Toward Super-Trusts denying the zight of Paterson t Fund at Rapid Pace, New Tables Reveal reads a resolution issued last week. “The Pittsburgh district began the tile workers to strike or even | F: cuss the question of joining the gen-| Needed—$4,375 every week! | Demands New Wage Cuts and Warns Roosevelt Received from Sept. 6 to Sept. 13 National Guardsman, in Speech at Youth Parley, | x . * wr o : eral tex ke was sent to him! " S aes Tells of Growing Anti-War Sentiment Among [last wee! Local No. 699 of the | —S1,661.80! campaign by accepting its policy of t | That Masses May Demand Fulfillment International Hod Carriers’ Build-| 7 the picture that now pre-/ $1,200 to be raised in the has led to the situation wh’ | oi ‘Dangerous’ Promises Troops—Canadian Delegates Attend ing and Common Laborers’ Union |Snts itself in the Daily Worker| possible time. Up to now Talons ot Page SEE SS CRE eee of America. | drive tor 960,000. aa oe eens only about $65 of our sume. League of Na made a pro- es Blips oy eae 3 By A. B. Magil | Ninety-five per cent of the mem-| ,O8 many days the Daily Worker! We have not been able to averse? |posal for the USSR. to join the WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 17.—A concerted attempt : |bership of the local are Negroes. | 20°5 NOt receive Be | Ore ae ae ee. On this basis |League. The capitalist world is now/to clast the wages of the American working class to eve DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 17—Adults and youth, work- |The protest reads: table shows, North Dakota, South| we will not be able to fill our quota | divided into two groups: powers who £ . See ies |lover levels than the starvation “minimums” of the Rooge- is| velt codes, and an effort to intensify the monopoly-strength.. ening objectives cf the N. R. R. has been revealed here as ——fa group of Wall Street indu: ists convened |Dakota and Birmingham have not jin the necessary time. In the Daily yet contributed at all. Some dis- Worker column we see that our di trict is lagging behind. This situa- tion must and can be overcome by |every unit and mass organization, | getting on the job and raising the ers, intellectuals and professionals, men and women, joined |, owe, the I. H. C. B.C. L, U. A. hereby go on vecord as protesting here Saturday afternoon in two significant conferences |against your vicious injunction | eons week no gains since the that launched a militant movement against war and fas- |@gainst the rights of workers to|Pr°v" . ‘i Denver and Boston Lead m 4 7 a strike for a living standard for their | sd * prseLg cism. Both conferences were held in the A. B. C. Hall. One | famines and themselves. | Towering above all, however, are at their given historical s not striving for war be war threatens the loss of th quests, and powers who are a fied with their present situation and are ready for adventurous attempts hy at Hot Springs to the Denver and Boston districis, | ve accepted. Sales of Arms | ee ee . a aa é quotas they h: ek TAY r outline elk titeeel Be Ae wat, mad sati-Tes- 7 aye Re ARE —ee which have completed 28.2 and 20.9| “... Some of the units have al- a nhs A Wey Ob mee zongs 2 seat DeShOsaIs OF CIE BSING, forees Ro oe a eD | and ‘ogee fn 28 ka oo Dway. that per cent of their quotas, respec- | ready filled their quotas, but are not vintee edi ners Gatun ay aaa < mn eerie that cae or | ee Ww ae isi eee u 0 ocaiS 0 jthe con i onal rights of the | tively Denver has more than| taking the question seriously, and 3 ve costae 3 ates ae ens | inked to Strikes Wall Street ‘industrialists, peas fee es er ae eco an Ons Se Cece | doubled its contribution of the week| feel that their $3 is the end of the | J@pen—le Ps eee oe | VL Sige: te ck aes Meneses ago on Sept. 28-30, and set up 2 Par} in Ch | | “We demand an immediate re-| netore campaign. But the comrades can| 1" order to free themselves from the | way ie ee heat spaaetry section Detroit section of the American q y d scinding of this injunction, and ee = Cia ae ae di | obligations binding them by the na- eS R yhich has failed to show any sige League Against War and Fascism e evelan that no further attempts be-made| a; Nar ag coe) cone hae ey rer tas ett of | tong .oonatitititn: the Teague. “Bus (Continued from Page 1) nifican; improvent in production, The other was a Michigan State Youth Conference Against War and Fascism. One hundred and sixty-four dele- gates, representing seventy-two organizations, were present at the adult conference, which was the largest of its kind ever held in this (Continued from Page 1) occurred when Arthur Greer of De- troit who split the union in De- troit and is regarded by the auto workers as a company union agent, led 25 delegates from his various | by you, or your colleagues, to violate the constitutional rights of Amez- ican worke: Pickets at Mills | $2,172.51. $1,062.04 to $1,860.93. But in its So- cialist competition with the rest of| the country, New York is lagsing.| The other 25 districts stand at In the Pittsburgh district, the| seriousness of the situation has been | recognized. | to exceed this amount and assist all the mass organizations to raise their quotas, “. .. Instead of $20 a week, let | us raise our amount to $200 a week. | . ..We urge that small effairs be arranged by every Party unit and mass organization for the Daily powers interested in the mainten- ance of peace understand the whole futility of their struggle for peace without the participation of the Soviet Union in the League of Na- tions. War Danger |rates of profit. developed these facts and proceeded | to show some of the factors in the| company’s getting these fabulous! They were sum-| marized by a letter from Albert A. | Kennett, self-identified as “a work- | man” for Pratt and Whitney. The is wary of the demagogic methods of Roosevelt for restoring capitalist profits at the expense of the work- ing class, the report of the 150 in- Custrialists who met calls for an end to all such “social planning” as. is contained in Roosevelt's promises on unemployment insurance. t ‘i . | Pittsburgh Urges Increase Worker.” “A League of Nations in which ; s ; : ‘ 4 locals, includ: the Det = 2 | is rg: cs é - corporation officials fumed at the ot oat si lus: elty. ah ical. an eadl Seeune i et | Read the ‘Daily | “It is necessary to increase our | Following is the table on the | the main champion of the cause of | introduction a eaters piled Pree eee uot Foe me Many Aston Represented seated and affiliate this conference | jactivities in the financial drive,” | $60,000 drvie: eet eee eae aca but it was admitted anyway and|even if Roosevelt never intends to mong the organizations repre- | spli y Lape ¥ us ge Vaahee sh, SE As the co: 2 = , is t oe Be ee Pett. locale TU. | Wave, oes ae By HARRY RAYMOND | f Aacaatmecared Percent | The Soviet Union is fully aware of | Gitey nics Fore Die tee eerie | Gangteg aatees Suey vie pied U. L. unions, notably the Auto/three to one yote decided not to | es fae co baer of Quota jal the shortcomings of the League| point made by Kennett. He wrote|the “danger” that the masses may Workers’ Union, the Mechanic’s| seat the Greer delegates after a (Continued from Page 1) 2 New York City 30,000 1860.93 63 | of Nations, which reflect on the so-/+, Chairman Black of another|demand the fulfillment of these Méucational Society of America (in- | sub-committee had met separately | 4.5 tne road there were’a thou-| -) Somaeoss 3.500 eo 122 /Clal character of the governments / Senate Committee that recently| Promises. dependent), the Women’s Auxiliary é across the road there were a thou-| ~ 4 Buffalo i 2 .7_ | represented therein. knows thet | ; ; Hides ue, 5 i ie ena. Gna awk ie on the a! & [sand pickets. Only four strike- 5 Pittsburgh ie ame os $3 the League of Nations was, in the peer alee iapea ts meoeited Breed eeniteaat is the du- Unemployment Councils, the Inter- | pte, reer people distributed lit- | breakers entered the mill. | T beret 3500 13780 as. | Dash, inno. position to take any | tet ws. ecet (Gein Petertcn (BY. Geotee HOU Tne ine arin national Labor Defense, the Com-|(Tture_ which, despite a radical) at 7 o'clock, when a car drove| & Chicago 6.500 234.76 a/c | serlous: measures for, guarding AHe| \ caso anc gas yo iv or mois | DooHIOLYe, Wore Vice: @ oe munist Party, pacifist groups, fra- | C°Vetins, actually furthers General |yp carrying a scab, the pickets| 9 Minneapolis 800 50.38 14 cause of peace, but simultaneously,|,. MY Wages were low in these good | Week dain Geek! and cutural orsanlegdane Johnson’s conception of vertical | moved across the road. Two squads | 19 Omaha qi 350 1.00 - it sees that a part of the powers| times... Pratt and Whitney Wage aaa agree ot hu be S: | unions. . = dared é | 11 North Dakota aren an uiHne sns|2re as low as 40 cents an hour,|SUPer-monopolies created in thm and others. de’ |of soldiers were ordered to advance.| 12 geatti 1,000 9.00 9 constituting the League of Nations : oh ‘he youth conference brought to-| cq mma", Of Collins’ National |They charged the pickets in skir-| 13 Oallfornia 2,000 26.00 13 | wishes to defend the cause of peace.| TBeY take a profit at both ends.” #¥¢ Ob te) eioneen carrelgy ice ey : ren | Council was present as an observer. | wish formation and wounded one 14 Newark 750 10.77 a4 ee f aes Evidence introduced to c fidumees hinating entire gether forty-five delegates from | william Green sent a letter urging | striker with a bayonet. But the| 5 New Haven 750 36.60 43 Therefore the government of the|roborate this astonishing worker's|*dustries and allied industries mo, aero pone trade | that the locals consult him con-| soldiers were TR RatR cea, aac | Ht reste 18 5! a ded ore dese Loa tute fe Guty | document included official publica- under central capitalist control. inions, church groups, one of them | cerning their wishes. However de-| rounded by strikers and isolated| 18 Milwaukee 1,000 53.94 s9 | '0 respond to these powers in order tions and’ correspondence of the| , Following through the tremen- Negr _ Social clubs, and others. spite all this pressure the confe: from the main body. It took three 19 Denver 400 113.02 28.2 | to utilize also this international in- | yayy Department which explained | 2045 monopoly tendencies of the National Guardsman _ Speaks ence proceeded about its business.! more squads to rescue them. Pl seca 4 on ie stitution which, after the with-| how the Navy Department “eo. | Roosevelt N.R.A., the industrialists in of the sou con-| The Lovestoneite Lifschitz from Troops Charge 3 Times | 23 West Virginia 200 "35 —_ | Grewal of the powers who repre-’ overated” in the development of thc |“¢manded even more monopoly ference was the speech of a Na-/ Detroit came as a fraternal dele-| ‘The troops charged three times,| 28 Kentucky 200 100 5 sented the most decided tendencies | pratt ang Whitney motor; how vir. | Profits than the present codes pro- tional Guardsman who told of the | gate claiming to represent a local! but each time the strikers out. | 2 Louisiana 200 2135 ut for war, may, according to Stalin,| tuany the entire technical staf or Vide This indicates there are grow- growth of anti-war sentiment | union. He tried to confuse the | maneuvered them and maintained| 33 Pues 200 cae 25 | our leader, become, to a certain ex-! pratt and Whitney was recruited | 58 Conflicts even among the mo- among the guardsmen. Greetings i South Dakota tent, tumbling block in order t y was recruited | nopolists th ly see ay re conference presenting a dual pro- | their stand in front of the mill. — — ——- | nh & woumbling block in order 40) tom the Wright Company, which | ancercide ee nee the: in were brought by a representative | gram also distributing same, de-| “You're going to start a revolu-| 6 Districts $60,000 Ula Ld Gelay or hinder the outbreak of war. previously had received hundreds of Suntrlalists ate” attempting toi-tron of the Canadian League Against | nouncing the Auto Workers’ Union tion,” a striker shouted at the sol- Sst gy eT ele Regi ea ___ | +:,* May become an impediment on | thousands of dollars from the pe hy cartels. The attempt to con- EL and rdiggrrgace 5 ae and the Mechanics’ Educational So- | diers as he grasped a bayonet with | the road, capable of hindering war,| neoartment in “contracts” in ane |e Production through cartels Vv. John H. Bollens, chairman | ciety and giving general support to |his bare hand and shoved it away refused the local Party organiza-| they will be responsible for wha’ | however little cause there is for it, nection with the develo ane coe roke down in Europe wherever. it ie a local Speen Civil yas the A. F. of L, without any at- from him, tion the right to hold the meeting.| happens, They've put forth all|and thus to some degree facilitate | roy oi. Cooled motors fe eee ee was tried. adult conference, with LA, Fabian | tempt to distinguish between the| About this time an automobile | “This action of the County Com-| their forces this morning and failed | the cause of peace. 4,.| Commander BE, E. Wilson, who had| mr remains, to statements that tack) $7, Brotherhood of Palit- leadership and whole rank and file. moved slowly down the road. It | missioners in denying the Commu-| miserably. State militia and depu- ‘While consenting to the invita- worked in the Navy in Mie aro tant they were attacking the Roosevelt 64 3 wal es a Deonaiaee| Must Broaden Conference stopped every twenty feet. The | nist party the right to hold the| ties began an effort to establish a| tion of the majority of the mem- laf agid. ecara hescet wy ie New Deal, Houston declared that Cn’ Pot L) and William Bader |_2¢ is the opinion of your corre-| driver was handing out small | meeting is an open and direct|Teign of terror this morning, but| bers of the League of Nations, the/ 7 Oly. one eabanl with /all such talk was “bunk,” since it Of the MESA, vice-chairman and |SPondent that the conference is still | bundles to the pickets. They ‘icistion of the constitutional | reports from every section show the | Soviet Government nevertheless does| Tate Wives, 2 subsidiary | of|is clear that all of these industrial “ed Nichamin of the John Reed |HOt. Tepresentative enough seized be epebstoenr tore om \vights of free speech and free as-| Strike more successful than ever.” net forget that sos an Hse of} son a Bratt Aas Whitney, eae ae Pig hpi ROE OnAY needs the energetic work of the, open an mos' ‘¢ magic the ” “ i i ‘ose powers comprising the League ss ad ie oseev] few Deal, mo- Club, secretary, |rank and file of all locals, the pop- | Daily Worker appeared every- semblage,” Crouch declared. sory aca es casuet ri of Nations, apart from those who | ceived from them tremendous sums |nopoly profits having increased by Maurice Sugar, noted labor at- ularizing of the program and de-| Where. Where I was standing the | The County Commssioners fear a napa id weadees any 1) withdsew from the League, camity in salaries and bonuses; and how,|/50 to 400 per cent in the last year, torney, and Ida Vonick, member of | velopment of a struggle against the ‘strikers were pushing each other | the mass protests of the working almost by the hundreds,’ ‘orman | towards the country which is build- | finally, the Navy Department then| Nevertheless, Roosevelt's support the Auto Workers’ Union and del-| manufacturers and the company, out of the way to get copies of class and they wish to stifle every | Amnounced, thereby revealing part] ing Socialism may prove stronger | Pald Pratt and Whitney big money|¢rs are using this inner criticism egate to the rparaeneny Wom- | sinions as a pre-requisite to the the paper, voice raised against the military of the fruit of his recent ‘Red’ Boare than the fear of war. for Produciixg the air-cooled en-|0f the codes by Wall Street indus- en's Congress Against, War and success of the November conference. | A striker, one of the picket capt-|rule established by the mill own-| Outbursis, “In Georgia we have an| “white public opinion in the Sov- | 8ines for Navy planes. trialists to try to prove to the leaner among the spea ery | It is also necessary to make clear “is in the 1929 Gastonia strike,|ers and their rubber stamp, Goy-| Organizer in jail on a charge of in-| iet Union therefore wholeheartedly| Donald L. Brown, president, and| Masses that this shows “the N.R.A. ae bone were ae |the role of the Greer-Byrd move- {Called on the pickets to sing and|ernor J. C. B, Ehringhaus. citing to riot. Bail has been fixed | welcomes the readiness of the Soviet | ©. W. Deeds, treasurer of Pratt and|'® be on the side of the masses and | oe a pe pues solidarity per |ment, while exposing Green and eee genes spirit.” “Hold the} “The Communist Party has re-| at $75,000, Union to enter the League of Na-| Whitney, and Francis H. Love, | *eainst PA llgee Street. A | the eating textile workers and | Collins but at the same time work- lGustonle ates tater rerio big ceived assurances of suppert from| “That is a sample of tacizes that | tions, it for no single moment for-| President of United Export Com-| dustrialists oe saa) “ ee ine protesting against the government- |i08 for @ united front of all unions |; ane Setine au 0 rom |the American Civil Liberties Union| will be used by employers and mill|8ets that the cause of peace de-|Pany, subsidiary to United Aircraft | Tit, tne purposes arte is ue employer terror, demanding the re- | 1" the industry, struggling around Pickets Insist on Staying and the International Labor De-| county authorities this week. Well,|Pends primarily on two factors:/and Transport Corporation, heard| New Deal cor ving to its toate’ Jease of Ernst’ Thaelmann, Tom | the basic issues confronting the | poowing the sing! y fense in establishing the right of|/a charge is not a conviction, as|UPon the will of the masses in ell|this evidence and bitterly com-| conclusion to 5 roaes pay Mooney, the Scottsboro Boys, An- | uto workers. loon’ Eaton tha daratatioccea, of ae workers to meet, not only on the|many a strutting factotum knows |COUntries towards peace, and also|Plained against it, but offered noth-| profits at the penance enone gelo Herndon and other working-| = = |pickets that they could go home, |COUrt House steps but in the Court) well enough. We shall file protests|Upon the strength of the Soviet/ ing to show it was inaccurate. | ers, and to develop fascist terrorism class fighters, and protesting} SECTION 6 MEETS TONIGHT | ~The mill won't open today,” he | HOU: all along the line and we shali do | Union. : ; They conceded too that their| against the working class. against the Bulgarian fascist ter-|_ NEW YORK.—Carl Brodsky, told them. ‘ | ——___-—- our best to provide counsel for our), “The stronger is the Soviet Tinton, | 7anes 08 students” and helpers are |; ————______._~ Yor which is trying to put to death |State election campaign manager,, “That's what they've been tellin’ |men and women who are thrown|the stronger will be its frontiers. pateaiters 40 cents per hour. | WILLIAM BEL 150 soldiers arrested for anti-war | Will report tonight on “Why Com- us all the time,” » striker replied D @ Ra on Plants | into jail as one way of getting them | 78 independence will be guarded by| From this object lesson in how | Opt i activities. munists Participate in the Elec-| “wel stay here and keep an ove ’ aie cPLaeeaake > the Red Army. That much more /OWNers of industry pile up profits ptometrist tions” at a special membership/on the plant,” another retorted. | a Goran's tote orc adcings to will imperialist adventurers fear to ae the products of workers whom | Classified ae a eet ae Dy f be Not a picket left the line, And | Due for Strike Call what illusions the strikers still have Sees Vn ek Saeeon sa ee ree dette t al wae ___________ | munist Party in isve Hall, the mill did not operate. | can only end in the complete an- Bt ment subsidizes the in- ROOM wanted furnished or unfurnished.|Ten Eyck Street, Brooklyn. The) In Gastonia the Lo: ill, whi jin Roosevelt (who has never re- | nihilation.” dustry, the committee turned to | ‘Woman, $6 to $10 month. B. Rothen-| meeting will begin at 8 p. m. lthaciopar SE WEDEDEEE CHIT aa By SEYMOUR WALDMAN _| Pudiated any of Johnson's rabid methods by which the government berg, 364 F. 10th St. rake ec Se dp OR Se lopened, was still close ‘d series ne y fascist pronouncements) is put into 700 Alab: C _|aids the same corporations to ex- 106 EAST 14th STREET 125 FOLDING CHAIRS |) Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome the strike, The three Hanover niilly (Gontiecued from Hage) fetes relief by the fact that he avoids ama Croppers {pare war equipment to foreign na- melunador kigbageie be aos, D . =. ‘| ions, | + De Luxe Cafeteria were, operating with skeleton crews. past a2 seuante) sed Scab On Strike Defy K.K.K. | bi é 24 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. e entire area from Charlotte to |have refused to feed strikers’ fam- on the strikers. Jol leas A | — = a Cc EVERY BITE A DELIGHT Gaffney, S. C., was struck prac- |ilies except in isolated instances. CRRA Stee e A.| And Landlord Terror | Be ge aie nica — | tically 100 per cent today. Many thousands of strikers, espe- | F- of . whipping boy and Johnson a D Si ss | DR. EMIL EICHEL John Kalmus Co. “ttr'y mitt 4-5447 | In the High Point, Burlington |cially in the South where the |80es on blithely with his employer) Casgp pity, Ala., Sept. 17, — In r. imon rie | DENTIST - || WHERE Our Comrades EAT || 8nd Greensboro region the strikers |Roosevelt political machine is| Program, every plank of which is|+.° of the mobilization of the Ku i | 4150 E. 93rd St, New York City fs held their lines in face of increased strongest, are suffering from hun-| known to Roosevelt, Dentist t ig > 7 | ¥ Klux Klan and the threats of land-| | | Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-82838 TYPEWRITERS RAPOPORT $ | numbers of troops. |ger. Asked for comment on this sit- | lords to move all croppers off the 2300 - 86th Street | § Hours: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1 NEW and , ||. A large crowd of pickets gathered | uation, Gorman replied: | land as soon as the cotton season | | Member Workmen's Sick and Death REBUILT, DAIRY and VEGETARIAN || in front of the Gibson Mill in Con-| “Yes, that’s true. And not only ° MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N, Y. |! Benet Fund PRICES, Ea sa held in jail in this town, charged |on the relief rolls have been taken oye mands of $1 per hundred ounds | QUICKEST 3 Second Ave. N.Y. City || with inciting to riot. ‘They are |Off. The authorities told them to Militar Law penae oh a) ae pounds — WORKERS WELCOME — Dr Maximilian’ Cob hag [Arthur Foriner, ‘Steve "Murry, | 6, ack to work” y Ot Athoued al ofthe ah | NEW CHINA [0° poe cones peels —— -———— | union organizer from Kannapolis;| “Are you going to take up this r poll - iy Ne Dr eeaaee| Dental Surgeon Underwoods, Remingtons, Royals, L. C. WEST END |Robbie Dixon, W. H. Combs, Jack | matter with Federal Relief Admim- (Continued from Page 1) BES RST OSs, He WOles SUBESGrOD: | CAFETERIA 4 Smiths and all other’ makes’ sold, | Bullard and Leonard Hopkins, istrator Hopkins?” a reporter asked een penne ste areca ioe Chinese Dishes 200 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C rented, bought, repaired, exchanged. | At a number of points the strike | Gorman. der an armed guard as Goins ad- | American Dishes — 35 ‘Alter “6-5 Wh Use Night Matranee 04, Hine igre gaitibetbenieepers ino TIRE SHOP |has made considerable gains. The |__"I'm not going to take it up with | mits “we aie ia Werke siob th | estore tn thelr DENY ton 8 Une ae Broadway bet. 19m « alia gi Pieper Th Also Rus Yiddish machines. Battery Service .:-: Tires-All Makes || ranks of the strikers have been in- | Hopkins. That’s the function of the | gq on strike.” A mass delegation bed Ni mee F | e Lede heath te iag tle ced A ee 140 West End Avenue |ereased at the large Cannon Mills | Government. a erste isd to Re from Florence will come to the case se a efile NES : Gaeduned 30 Atgecquin 2-enss ||| Cor. een one, yoe uitt ||22 Kannapolis. In South Carolina the government pos ‘it en let! meeting scheduled for next Sunday | ®7tested in Lee County on suspicion Fi si no |the United Textile Workers’ Union |them take the responsibility for it.”| at Russellville, defying the ban on | °% distributing leaflets, One cropper|] A Congenial Place to Eat D H M k: t = See [reports that 3,000 new members |Gorman answered, repeating the| tivine picket squadrons. ‘The Mayor | W&S reported shot by a landlord in Yr. Marry Musikan |have entered the union in Chester, [posthine: De took on relief early in| was forced to arrest six thugs and peewee ean A eeiio tutiecatt EDEN ROCK Dentist |Seneca and other points since the charge them with disorderly con- Sethe ite RL Ae Uses bl | DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT ff strice began. fee wee tah bares oes duct and drunken driving after Shs: Jeti Sa at possible | CAFETERIA || 795 EASTERN PARKWAY S | Flying Squadrons Active protests. The Communist Party is- | United action by striking croppers Ba | Corner Kingston Ave. YOUNG WORKER A flying squadron travelled omGne pease, euler ie Lai sued a leaflet addressed to the jand textile workers. There are|{ 102 West 14th St., N. ¥.C. 1) orcatur 2-095 Brooklyn, N. Y. through lower Spartanburg and/|thusiastic strike sentiment of the|Ames Bag Mill workers of Selma, about 2,000 sharecroppe:s in Lee, | Greenville Counties and exhorted | workers couldn’t be organized into | WhO are mostly Nogroes, to join the [Pa relaere ee pees Counties me | = | the strikers to stay out. A mass a strike. The Communist Party unit | where le strike is in progress. { | picket line faced a company of | monstrations to demand relief. | t0 the mill is asking white Wwork- {More sharecroppers are joining the| une eee DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY troops at the Tily Thread Mill at| Obviously, Gorman is extremely |€TS of Sunset Textile Mill, now | strike every day. GENERAL FUNERAL | if . Shelby, N. C., this morning and |yeluctant to embarrass either Roose- | Striking, to help the Ames workers’ 5 —————— DIRECTORS 1| OMice Fours: 8-10 A.M.. 1-2, 6-3 P.M stopped the plant from operating. | yelt or President Green of the A.| Strike. The Ames workers were Our Readers Must Spread the |} 2.9 surreR AVE. BROOKLYN PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Three thousand soldiers, accord- |. of L., who is determined to snuff |locked in all day, but protests Daily Worker Among the Members Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 107 BRISTOL STREET ing to official reports, were sta-| out the strikers’ militancy grad- forced the company to allow them jof All Mass and Fraternal Organ- Foc talatnoiisnal Warsena Glas Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Avos., Brooklyn Frida Saturday Sund: tioned at the mills in North Caro- | yally. Gorman, in fact, would have | to leave for lunch. isstions As s Political Task of First e Ys y 7 ERY lina. There are 4,000 out in Georgia |the workers believe that Roose-| Two Negro miners belied Pegi ee Importance! |and 5,000 in South Carolina. But | velt’s policies are divorced from the| by mine deputes in Walker County oe TT October 19 20 pall |despite this tremendous mobiliza-|actions of his cabinet, yesterday are Ed Wollin, 38 of Pow- PAUL LU foe pda M. D. tion of the armed forces of the| Even minor Government officials | hattan, who was in the heat State, the strikers are holding their |are well aware of the arbitration | and died instantly and Harrison Col- DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. at the newly and compl etely rebuilt | own in the South, and strike-delaying tactics being |lins, 35, who was shot in the heart. TO THE I. W. 0. 2 ’ used by the A. F. of L, leadership.| Four Negro iris white Lae ree Are Now Located at } C. P. To Meet Despite Threats (“If the textile strikers had Ann/known to have been wounded an ‘Special to the Daily Worker) Burlak (secretary of the National;many hurt in the organization COOPERATIVE 5 h fous uate ah Ue cae eel NEW Boles orry i. f CE CHARLOTTE, N, C., Sept. 17—/Textile Workers’ Union) at their| march of 3,000 strikers from Walker OPTICIANS Ag ib pili ratis ila mitiok lira dors hs 4 poe Heese a baer bye ae head fers would as pepe dy and Jefferson County locals follow- j 3 part of ie local police depart-| one o: em remar @ corres-|ing a meeting at Porter, Ala. 69 West 66th Street (Near Broadway) ment, Paul Crouch, organizer of|pondent here yesterday. The shooting was done by dep- 114 wy i pabiy Stest 3 ea | the Communist Party, announced Goes Easy on Troops uties who are rumored to have a ; Pprmenetint wagetisey Meranda veges tines all that the Communist Party will hold) In discussing the concentration| machine gun. Tel.: Chelsea 3-9806 | BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW © SPECIAL Dit iy 4 t is a meeting tonight on the steps of | of armed forces facing the unarmed | appeet: Covperative Action: AN iném- COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THR “DAILY” 5 names and ads for the bazaar journal. the Charlotte Court House to pro- | strikers, Gozman took a Ghandi at- A Red Builder on every busy |] pers of Unions. Okensiee ions: Clubs, SQUARE RADIO CO i Bazaar headquarters, 50 E. 13th St., 6th floor—Algonquin 4-9481 eae the use of troops against the | titude, his usual “folded arms”) street corner in the country means || Women's Councils, are invited to make 49-10 THIRTEENTH AYONUE, WINDSOR 8-0280 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 4 | Southern textile strikers. | policy. He said: “If the Rhode Is-| a tremendous step toward the aie ot tha Geevion: r s amu The County Commissioners had land owners try to open their mills,! dictatorship of the proletariat! { é WE GO ANYWHERE Votes for Republicans or Democrats Are Votes to Murder Pickets, for Hunger and Police Terror ” \ a

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