Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Two Union Delegations to Attend C. P. Convention and Rally tate Slate Marine Workers ToBe Named Flect Strike Group Tomorrow (Continued from Page 1) ers in the problems facing them in DAILY WORKER M.W.I. U. Insists on Voice In Marine Demands Parley NEW YORK.—A delegation of|Oct. 8. We are determined that seamen and longshoremen, headed | our demands shall be granted. Fail- by Roy Hudson, national secretaty jure of the shipowners to meet with y YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1 the United Front An Editorial ——_—_—_—! | Thomas on |ClecelandS.M.W.LU. And M.E.S.A. Unite { Workers Enemies | Exposed Tom Carskadon, of Oolumbus, Ohio, has been expelled from the ° Pas : the preparation of the strike, was| of the M. W. I. U., will presen: io-|our elected representatives and | (Continued from Page 1) n tion Pro ram Communist Party as one who orkers to Ratify the TyGai Gharacteriged by the discussion dey the following statement, | grant our demands before the strike |_| § § ————————__ A rb heals all thé Adrmatks of an 2463- Ticket at Rally that followed the report. One after adopted by the mass meeting at |date can and will result in strike | decision. ‘Thomas calls him- nig bneerne vs J the other seamen took the floor in| wanhattan Lyceum on Wednesday, | action on that date. |self a militant. Yet in the _ . ial On Sunday ps . fe na cream aa oe to the N. R. A. Administration in| “From the daily press, we learn question of united front (Special to the Daily Worker) jot fascism, and against capitalist| He has advocated-the raiding of Washi gton: that the Shipping Section of the leas i ‘ Sag er i ‘ |war preparations, This unity is|8rocery stores to members of the —— | way to a victorious strike. az ec aees i against betrayers, it is not| CLEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 27.—| ¥ tase head . é NEW YORK.—Large delegations} «we are in the sam aid Statement of the Marine Workers’ |N- ®. A. is considering meetings se Gerber who accepts Thomas’ | The Cleveland District Board of the | Bighly Seiicene in view of the | local unemployed council. He has of furr‘ers, dressmakers, clothing) an 1, s. U member, “I've been| Industrial Union to the National | ‘he shipowners and represen‘atives | Gerbe ~q|Steel and Metal Workers Industria}| Present attacks on workers and the| urged the killing of traitors, for werkers and knitgoods workers,| waiting for this fight a long time.| Recovery Administration, jot ge abe aad ae eel left” proposal, but Thomas | Fen ame in joint session with the | Cicago Coneress. which he proposed signed pletiges. members Of ihe Needle Trades/Tt is war against the shipowners Shipping Division: ie ain as ee ‘A. agen. | WA0 aligns himself with the| Mechanics Educational Society City| Tonight's joint session elected a! Gy another Pivasinns He beled ce be | and let's all put on the same uni- among the many trade union dele-| form.” “Sept. 26, 1934. a year the N. cies are di: ing the pending sea- | “For over Gerbers, Cahans, Waldmans, O’Neals, to carry on the poii- Committee, representing the Cleve- | Smaller committee of three members land locals last night, and agreed|0f each organization to work out |get some members to join him in pketnhy ag ttend tt RBs tents chet some labor repre- . oe Hs i |the blackmailing of landlords thru gations which will attend h the} “pm qr erican, I vote Tam- 23 : : ;, | men’s strike with some labor repre- | 5 “ARB E oe i details, and action, which includes| = Stat inating convention of the| many,” another worker stated. “I'm | M&s failed to bring forward a code’| sentatives and that these agencles|cy of supporting the corrupt |" ® ve-point program of action, | Gstails, and action, convening agile rere Ete gt Cor t Party tomorrow and/a steward. Wheze are we in this|{0" the marine workers. This in| are considering arranging confer-| officialdom of the A. F. of L,| This program is for acti | 3 ty, the mass ratification rally on Sun- ke? I belong to the Cook and spite of many promises and thre cote hearings where representatives ences between the shipowners and | | But, we are sure, the mem- A 1 against | mass conference of all trade unions company unions, for the right to|and other workers’ organizations in when any particular task has been) i: , 4 4 + iven to him, nothing substantia’ day. Stewards. We were left out in the workers. | * aa ke | organize, for a workers’ code against | support of this five-point pr: ram, | 8. a The ratification rally will be held |egid in 1921, but I think thet this Of the seamen and longshoremen| “Swe wish to serve notice that | bership of the Socialist Party | te NRA. code, for support of the |The joint committee mil meet eerig | W25 done. ie Se in ir arena of the Bronx | united sirike effort will submitted demands which have | such negotiations, conferences or|does not wish to support the| Workers Unemployment and Social| on Oct, 4 in the SM.W.LU. head-|, H® claims to be earning his liv. Coli: , 177th Street and Boston|again. But you have not ir| been ignored. Conditions and wages meetings will settle nothing tunless| A, F. of L. officialdom. They | Insurance Bill, against the menace’ quarters, bed by repairing daly) machines, Road and will begin at 2 pm. Sun-| problems and demands listed. See|have not been improved, and dic-| tHe Marine Workers’ Industtiel| “and the textile aoe eae th ee ee daz. jour Officials and tell them to get in| asters such as the Morro Castle Union, which has in its ranks thou- | 8 ——————_——-. such earnings. e has been geen’ The nominating convention will| this united front. Give us demands in the New Star Casino,/and we will come out.” oe nny aerate eid “Don't be fooled by any promises to sm. . of anybody,” a West Coast striker mass ratification rally OM | said. : “Do like Brother Hudson il mark the formal open-| says, ‘They can intervene and stop broadest and most ener-| the strike only by granting our de- saign ever conducted by |mands.’ I am in Seattle. I am still unist Party in this State, | waiting to see what arbitration will to Carl Brodsky, State/ qs for ine. It is supposed to decide campaign manager. if I get a wage increase. the candidates who will’ «{ Worked on the Lickenbach both the nominating and! and they cut our wages to $35 a) ras.Sceiion meetings will be Will-| month from $87.50. In Seattle, the continue to occur because of under- manning. “The seamen are now determined ‘hat only through using the strike can they force the shipowners to grant the demands which they put | forward. The International Sea- sands of marine workers and whose influence entends far beyond its | organization, is represented at all such meetings. In the name of its own membership, the thousands | |who have indorsed its strike call, | jthe Marine Workers’ Industrial | men’s Union was compelled by the | Union demands the right to be rep- | pressure of the rank and file sea-|resented a‘ all or any meetings men to call a strike for Oct. 8, 1934. | where the demands of the seamen | |The Marine Workers’ Industrial | are being discussed. ) | Union has simultaneously issued a “Yours truly, | strike call to all its thousands of | “R. B. HUDSON, !members and to all seamen and | “National Secretary Marine Work-. | mill owners and their agents want a united front not with the leaders of the U.T.W., but a united front against the in the ranks of labor, the Gor- mans, Rieves and McMahons. For such a united front we will continue to fight. Only such a united front is in the interests of the tex- tile workers and Inbor as a DELEGATES ON VISIT TO PERKINS DEMAND END OF BLACKLISTS WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 27. district strike committees, from the | driving to the post office, and get- |ting a check from another man | Who also drove up in a car. Cars- | kadon tried to explain this by say ing thet the other man was. a’ | lawyer, who gave him a check for | his having acted as a witness in an | accident case, but he did not sub- stantiate th 3 Description: Carskadon isa whites | haired elderly man, with pleasant | round face, bright blue eyes, ruddy, | complexion and high pitched voice: |he is about 5 ft. 7 inches tall and jana, Burroughs, candidate for/r. §. U, officials told us to let the n n whole. There is where “the |—Placing the responsibility for the | first day of the strike protested} weighs about 160 pounds. Lieutenant-Governor; Fred Briehl,| Alaskan boats sail. They said the | 0neshoremen to strike on or before | ers’ Industrial Union, largest influence and use- blacklisting of textile strikers and/against the use of armed forces, Boston Dyla (Dalley), also of candidate for Attorney-General; |mayor promised he would not use| 5 ERIS ey eotintes the reign of terror in the strike| military and mercenary, : Rose Wortis, nominee for State/ermed forces if we did this. Whet Comptroller, and Isidore Begun, | happened? We let them go and ruhning fer City Comptroller, }all the police in Seattle were sent The Crean Lge a ears |to ae aor leaving civilian special iged the tical urgency 0: | Police uptown. Steedaknes not only ‘foth of Party | workers” and non-Party members, sympa-| The discussion lasted for three thetic workers and members of/hours. Treméndous ovations shook unions, but also of Socialist | the hall When a Negro docker, rep- Party members and sympathizers. resenting the rank and file of the F |I. L. A. Jim Crow local took the floor. He reminded the men of No promises, fellow | ‘Baltimore Seamen Hasten _ To Sign Strike Pledge Cards | BALTIMORE, Md., Sept. 27. ~-|Seamen as a real rank and file pro- |More than three hundred seamen | gram that will be the basis of a |came to the union hall and signed | militant struggle for the victory of | strike pledge cards within two hours | all seamen’s and longshozemen'’s de- fulness” lie. Thomas Rebuffs United Front Bid (Continued from Page 1) of regulations which the Labor against areas on the shoulders of the | strikers who were exstchting tists Roosevelt administration, a trade | constitutional rights — the rights union delegation headed by the! to organize, strike and Picket. International Labor Defense today| “We propose for your immediate pesented a series of demands to} attention and action the following Secretary of Labor Perkins to pro-| demands which we feel are in the tect the rights of the textile Strik-| interests of the textile strikers: ets. “1, That your department imme- The delegation, consisting of | diately take steps to end the black- Manning Johnson, of the Trade| listing and discrimination on the Union Unity League, and Sasha| basis of union membetship against Small, of the International Labor Columbus, Ohio, a former member | of the Communist Party, has been }exposed as an agent-provocateur and a disrupter of the unemployed workers. | He is known as “Rey. Boston Dyla.” and has expressed intention. of going back to “street preaching.” He has advocated individual vio- have been a member of the secret. service, |lence and has admitted himself to militant textile strikers who were exercising their legal right to or- ganize, strike, and picket. “2. Complete withdrawal of all Committee of the S. P. was in- structed to lay down. “I am bound to say that‘I do not think that a genuine united |the losses in the pfst, because of | ‘ a ands. | | . e Wi ‘S | mi i tal diviaibi, t | after the Marine Workers Industri iH| | had! the M. W. I. U. issued a leaflet | t | Union, 720 South Broadway, that the bosses can’t be defeated} r 5 1 | sued them on Tuesday night. | calling on all seamen organized and \unless this weapon of theirs, Jim|* _ § P’s Rejection All workers and workers’ organ- |izations are warned against these | despicable traitors and enemies of it | Defense, represents several hun- dred thousand workers organized in the Trade Union Unty League, vism, is smashed by the marine orkers jointly. Everyone was quiet jand realized the | talk. |. He concluded with “I have a brother who is @ steward. I Negro Jongshorerr Of Unity Scored (Continued from Page 1) City Executive Commiittee. : “The City Executive Commit- tee deeided to inform you that the re importance of his I k| United Action Conference, includ- | Baliimore seamen are rallying | around the strike call of the M. Ww. |I. U. and ready to hit the picket | |ine to fight for the demands that | Weré drawn up at the Baltimore | unorganized rogardless of union af- filiations to attend the union meet- ing last night and take part in set- ting up a strike apparatus and the election of a rank and file strike ing a cefitralized shipping bureau | Prebarations Comttnittes. | Carolina comrades front in North Carolina or Geor- gia or elsewhere has been served by the Communist policy of open attacks on the U T. W. when the Strike was at its height and I should not advise the North to sacrifice ;and the International Labor De-| Needle Tradés Workers Industrial Union, United Shoe and Leather Workers Uniewt, Food ‘Workers Industrial Union, Marine Wofwers | Industrial Union, National Stu- dents League, Taxi Drivers’ Union | armed forces, police, special dépu- tics, thugs, uSed against textile workers, “3. Provision made for the un- restricted right of textile workers to organize into unions of their own choosing. | the working class. A group of workers in a C. C. C. camp send $i—a sailor on a U. 8. | battleship sends $1—a worker in | Duluth sends a quarter! All cry | that the $69,000 campaign must ; S it i y rt | Sieceed! It will suceted if every men as well, when I say, show us| controlled by elected committees of| A meeting was held yesterday| their lergést influence and use- | fense. “4. Arrest and ish: | Sascet ‘i Socinitat Party Is workitty bain! the | that you are ready to umite agai seamen. |Morting in front of the I. L. A.) fulness by the kind of united Their spokesmen are Manning | those responsible Mate eas | aa rg aig cra Na United Textile Unicn, locally a4 |i. jim-crowism of the bo and| The program of a united strike of | locals at Locus: Point and members| front you seem to want. Johnson for the Trad? Union|ders during the three weeks of| we kes! = well as nationally, We are coOp- | we are ready to strike with you, in| all seamen under the leadership of | of the M. W. I. U. pointed out to “You will understand that I * | Worker! erating with the union and that is the best help we can render (hail again rocksd with applause. te them.’ | A representative of the Trade “The City Executive Committee of| Board of the Fur Workers Indus- Spite of anycody or anything.” The | one strike committee, elected by the | the members of the I, L. A. the| members of the various unions and| necessity of setting up rank and file | | the unorganized, is hailed by the' strike committees. fully appreciate how much is | wrong in the Southern situation and am much ypposed to the action of the Charlotte author- Unity League and Sasha Small for the International Labor Deéferise. The statement follows: “Madame Secretary: the strike. | including Sylvia Crouch and Belle Weaver in Gastonia, N. C., all those “6. Release of all those arrested, | Sophie Braslow, D. D. S. Wishes to announce that she has the Stcialist Party thus completély/trial Union presented the Joint | ———-————— nT 6 MS Sars ities in denying you the right to peitery Ph Legere Gavan anae aa A ge 46 Union and hes Fesumed ‘ber preetiee sidetracks the issue. In response to| Strike Preparation Committee with Communists or what have you, we | would neve: strike, Some offcial,| SP20K. I am, however, of the | Torker organised into trace | serene Conithitnistes Anna nhac || of dentistry. ths apptal of the Communist Party a contribution of $25 for the strike | agree on our demands. We agree|and you all know this, would “dis. tha iain a te ee ee unions, was brought here by ife|Leathers and Leah Young, Georgia || 725 Allerton Avenue, Bronx for united action on the most bir | fund. The Committee for the Sup-| even with different ideas about appear” with our rich treasury. than helpful to the policy that International Labor Defense, itseif| textile pickets, held under the EStabrook 8-0993 ing, urgent issue confronting a tS Port of the M. W. I. U. likewise unions. We agree as matine work- “We are powerful because we cin| we want to achieve.” representing 200,000 members and) same constitutional slaye law. of |= a tre, ng class, ie. Lebel oe | acto $25. The seamen anders, I want to state for my union | hold back the labor power from thé “Fraternally yours, affiliates, to protest against the | 1861, used against Angelo Herndon, the force textile strike, le unl Present, capressed | that we are ready to go in with | ship owners to rin their ships. Hay-| (Signed) "NORMAN THOMAS.” |Mholesale discrimination and/ahd the Atlanta Six and catrying|| D)R J. SAMOSTIE 2 al Ld ey SALI ° naib iain lain Be nasicehenes tthe eg ORT other union on the basis of | onets and machine guns won't take | ares | blackisting practised against over| the déath penalty for ‘inciting’ to | Pa strike! the New York Socialist| part of the entire working class. lentes resort to subterfuge, to aN/The support the west coast strike ¥ ’ holds to these decisions. But we will/ it, then it is possible that our + i South. The strike was called off| all those murdered, wounded, and Conditions Seer oh the ernst Sere ie Wiis TSHRAIMALiCiis WAN OE Coe ruthlessly sug anyone who pred brothers of our class will respond Mass Meeting Tonight on the basis of the Winant Board | injured. ‘Adequate Telief for all|| Lady Physicians in Attendance en | “|to live up to these as our enemy. Eyre rt, - i i for united action to rally the broad) The greetings atid pledge of Bibs we- do ak aes Where this’ tatla 10 to our need and tie the city up jh NEW YORK—The Emergency Re which was hailed by your-| those biacklisted and locked out, for Women masses in support of the textile| port by the Daily Worker was strike. The reply that the Socialist| greeted with applause. The men Party was cooperating with the| showed their realization of the fact union is an evasion of the issue.’ that the Daily Worker is the only is reply is also significant for | paper that headlines their strike another reason. | Preparations. “The union the Socialist execu-| Harry Alexande:, chairman of the tive zofers to is the United Textile | paitimore Centralized Shipping Bu- | But don’t let anybody tell you that | same problem some of us are. Of-|" 4 delegation will call on peg poeeaicts cna iu Daa the International Labor Defense”; | 223 Second Ave., ses Unity. All throtgh the strike the yeau, reported on need of setting up | this strike can’t be won because of | ficials who negotiate and arbitrate] oorsi to demand that the als-| nine gut, inte th s, tote ara SMANNING> JOHNSON; (|| O77 e Re em oe s: t leaders have been working] such bureaus in evecy port and to | “Reds.” We agreed on demands.|when strike is the Innguage the | miscals and transfers be stopped | a Cues, @ Soa eer “Trade Union Unity League.” | Tompkins Square 6-7697 hand in hard with Gotman, Mc-| make it one of the main demands |The sirike will end when those de- | shipping bosses understand. We will at once and to press the fignt| “Clence ever seen in this country. eee = Mshon and Green. th: the mn. In fact, uDON) of the strike. own admission in this letter,! In answering questions raised and share responsibility for the) summing up the discussion Roy consuct of the strike and its settle-| Hudson deal at length with a num-| | ber of important problems. . “Why has thére not been a | “By coming here tonight,” he single protest from the Socialist | stated, “in such significant num- Jeadérs against the shameful (ber, fellow workers, we have shown ‘treacherous betrayal of Gorman, | “Green and Co.? What have the | 0F not to strike, but to organize the ‘Socialist leaders done to expose | srongest means of conducting our and fight against the betrayal of | strike. There is only one way for this magnificent strtiggle that had | the shipowners to stop this strike. the textile industry tied up ma- | Not by N. R. A., or any ‘talking it ‘tionally, that had victory practi- ‘eally assured? If this is not done, then we can wih “The situation is clear. The So-| our demands as we have shown Ciglist leaders used subterfuge, eva-| here tonight. sion and delay to reject the call for; “We have shown that whether or a united front within the méasses| not we are Democrats, Republicans, behind the textile strike, and choose instead a united front with the Gormans, Greens and Wolls, the) Vile ctrikebreaking agents of the] Wh A “The Communist Party will not) allow this subterfuge and doub} Gealings to discourage the strug for united action. The Commi Party will not give up the fight fo-| the united front of Socialist and} Corhmunist workers. The Commu- | hist Party knows that you, Socialist | ment. | Workers Are Honest But | Deceived by Leaders’ Social-Fascism your decisions here tonight. We) our place. | 2 (Applause). We are | will stop criticism of anyone who | powerful if the occasion calls for CME Hignprat chad Munibricts a general strike. (Loud applause), cata. Wy Megan Bite. bp ica “We hope the longshoremen strike recruit independently. jon Monday, Oct. 1, then we will “A word about division. I am a strike. If not, then on Oct. 8 and Communist. I hope in time that|we hope that we will be able to pull | many of you will become convinced | the dockers with us. They want) to my way of thinking. (Applause).|to go. “They are up against the | get togethér. We must. | “Go back, each of you, to organ- | mands are granted. We did not talk about our politics. But the bosses | will try to split our ranks by raising a “red” scare. Just as we decided | by yourselves. We are fighting for | with codes, that we will write them our self-respect, for decent living not in Washington but in the picket | conditions and that is all. Anyone line, so with our politics. ‘who says otherwise is our enemy. “How to finance the strike. Some | We will build our union by convic- that the question was not whether! fellow-workers raise this question. | tion. We will prevent scabbing by | They say we have not the money | mass picket lines and action. Wé | to strike with. First I say, we will {are responsible to you, the rank and | fight to force the federal govern-| file of seamen. Without your vote ;ment to give us relief (applause).|not a decision of importance can Second, we are members of the|be made. With the scabs you will over,’ but by granting our demands| working class, not just seamen. For| throw out those who think trat | 84 days our brothers on the Pacific | there is any other way to end the | Coast held out. It wasn’s easy but| strike. Tonight we have created they got by, aided by their class | strength. It is the strength to win brothers. If we waited until we/all we want and need. ‘had enough money to strike,’ we now is up to you.” | ize the action outlined Lere tonight|was fired from Precinet 85, 268 Victory | 12, because of the Anti-War Con- Investigators Will Hold Home Relief Bureau Employes As- sociation yesterday called on all investigators and clerks to mass before the office of Director Corsi at 20 E. 2ist St., tonight, in pro- 60,000 textile strikers all over the! country and especially in the insurrection. “6. Indemnity to the families of self and President Roosevelt as a ‘sweepng victory’ for the textile workers. This ‘victory’ in reality has been the most complete be- trayal and defeat of the textile strikers who face starvation, un- “7. Immetiate withdrawal of all immigration agents from the strike areas and orders to them to cease terrorizing all foreign born with the threat of deportation. “Respectfully yours, test against unjust dismissals and punitive transfers. | for the reinstatement of Miss Elsie | Woods, Negro investigator, who South Fourth St. six weeks ago. She has not been reinstated al- though the grounds for her dis- missal have beén admitted by the’ administration to be false. C. P. CELEBRATION POSTPONED NEW YORK.—The fifteenth anni- versary celebration of the Commu- nist Party and the grand opening exhibition of the work of the Com- munist Party among Negroes, scheduled at the New Harlem Work- ers’ Center, 415 Lennox Avenue, for tonight, has been postponed to Oct. gress. | The first question that has to be answered is this: Does the Com- |munist Party berate the rank and |file workers of reforinist organiza- jons as social fascists? The an- gle, the s‘ruggle for socialism. Thus We see that a united front with the Socialist Party, for which |the Communist Party is fighting, becomes possible only to the extent Social Fascists? ae worksts, are for unity of action in defense of the interests of thé work- ing ¢élass. The Communist Party) does not withdraw its proposal for | swer is: No. Communist propa- |ganda and agitation clearly distin- guishes between the ideology of By ALEX BITTELMAN There is still considerable lack of understanding of the purpose and |-ocial fascism, i. @, its theories, its | that the workers in the Socialist Party are becoming disillusioned with the reformist and social fas- cist policies and programs. If that | Breaking Down Ilusions Creaies Basis for United Front misguided workers to the correct munists who do not exhibit the employment after thirteen weeks of “SASHA SMALL, “Sixteen murderéd, the last v.c- tim, 18-year-old Leo Rouetie, died in Woonsocket, R. I., last Monday. Over a hundred were driven into a concentration camp in Georgia. Hundreds were arrested. Nine states had the National Guard out against the textile strikers. Fifteen thousand troops were on active duty, arrayed in Federal U. S. Army equipment, against the tex- tile strikers who demanded living wages, decent hours, an end to the brutal stretchout system and recogiiition of their union. “The International Labor De- fense, which offered defense of all arrested textile strikers to the na- tional strike committee in Wash- ington as well as to all local and Classified COUPLE want permanent .1-2 rooms (kit- chen privileges) or small apartment on farm or village in New Jersey. Write full information as to facilities, rates, ete. Box 101, Daily Worker. YOUNG MAN desires room with small gongenial family. Reasonable, Write Box 43, care of Daily Worker. ROOM OR APARTMENT TO LET. suit- Beas Call evenings, 70 E. 118th St., pt. 54. KANSAS CITY, MO. Anyone tra’ from West to New York City in car. Pick TBog tO, comrades. Notify Lewis Hurst, 1308 Crystal Ave, Kansas City, Mo. Personal ling PRANK McGURK. Please let me know your Putas Letter will be held confidential. ice. C. P. at Wilkes Barre |= Will Hold Banquet For Election Campaign WILKES BARRE, Pa., Sept. 27. —The Communist Party of this anthracite section will hold an election campaign banquet Satur- day, Oct. 6, at the Workers Cen- ter here, 325 E. Market St. PY ea MORRIS, Inc, GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS BROOKLYN 296 SUTTER AVE. Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5360 For International Workers Order 125 FOLDING CHAIRS revolutionary position. Those Comt- | An elaborate progam has been arranged, including singing by the Lithuanian Aide Chorus, recita- tions by the Young Pioncers, and 60c at 220 East 12th Street Skin, Urinary and Blood Hours 9 to 2—4 to 8—Sunday 9 to 1 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. PHONE: DICK! 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn 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 fit. Simon Brief? Dentist 2300 - 86th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. MAyflower 9-7035 Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 705 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. John Kalmus Co. ups mninus 2 Brooklyn, N. ¥. list Party | D2ture of the united front struggle | programs, policies and tactics, and |was not the case, if the workers in| necessary patience and persistence | Ukrainian folk songs by two + MUr'y Hill 4-5447 | DEcatur 2-0505 ireekizn, N: %: croc Mective Galea abiion fhe | the Communist Party. This ap- the rank and file members, working |the reformist organizations wete|in dealing with workers who still | Ukrainian artists, ears very clearly from a letter ad- | 9: i ist i i -|follow the social fascist leaders, Z izati unemployment insurance and relief, nei rod ia whiohiwe: GubLiet IN class members, of the social fascist | not becoming radicalized, the strug. St ler: All workers’ organizations are PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. against the growing menace of fas- |organizations. Our position is that gle of the Communis: arty for the whether in the trade unions or in asked to support this banquet and cism and war, for workers’ rights | full below: |the working class members of the| united front with these workers! the cae Party, = Neg a a help make it a success. Admission — AND — : Aitins rns to| August 10, 1934. zt ist organizations “are not | would make little headway, indeed. | service fe cause of the workers, | will be 35 cents. eer ine of and “Dear Comrades:— pe a rinlgguldea workers, | It is, therefore, the partlhe of ways | to the cause of the united front, to DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Socialist Party. You are decisive. “Will you kindly clear this up | honestly desiring socialism and not | of the workers in the reformist or- | the cause of Communism. WORKERS Are Now Located at Wolir. leadsrs are evidently paying | for me. I have been a sympa- | fascism.” In this respect we fully | ganizations from the ideologies and| This does not at all mean that : RS NORTH, NEW YORK CITY lip Service to, but in reality sabotag- ing the united front. Only your} ressure, only your initiative will) id the policy of division of the fanks of the workers. Act. See fhat your honest desire for united Betion is carried out in your branch, fm your union, in all organizations. “At this time in New York City, the bankers and their servant La- Guardia are starving the unem- poved. They declare the unem-| !m and not fascism. |however, whon we discuss the /as social-fascists. Ih the hent of |it must be our aim to devélop iully |! Office pen dehy. icra eeu loved shall not eat: their children} “In my fraternal club we ideology and leadership of the /srgument, meeting resistance fromthe arguments for our complete ; ak iim e sons of the Year! Shall go hungry and perish unless) openiy discuss joining a revoli- | social fascist organizations. This|the reformist workers to agree to| program, remembering always the || e,risrtone’ gietanrook, ne eae Open All Sea a pou pay Higher fare, This situation Gémands united action of all work- ©, of all working class organize-| U. 8. Cémntunist program. We all (of class collasoration wih whe|and hurls at his class brother, the | make among th reformist workers MEET YOUR COTRADES AT THE BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK Ms against the fare tax, against! want to join some party tlint will | capitalists, leads, in the present misguided worker, the epithet of to win them for joint ac ion on h STREET An ideal place to rest and vacaticn. Hotel accomodations with er and ae —_ poet aA be able crentially to unite all eek 2. ee Haag ee aot we see et Reeae ey Hed fp Se sha ay Toaeoatee oc Mera 1 t all modern improvements. Individual attention to diets. en cn relief, for an immediate voi ry stru he | mu 64 nquests, f ! gde*t>‘e rolief appropriation, at the | workers and paving the way jor | pathizers must arm themiselves not | the eventual winning of these work- CAFET ERIA sua < ceoue oes Park East expt" *4 -* the bonkers and the rich. fe . This we must exposo and | enly yih good, cc: cing Arsu- ers to the full, program of the so- || 3 Bast 14th Street, N.Y.C. (Allerton station on East Side subway), Estabrook 8-1109. The hren'ne needs of the masses de- | “Fraternally your-, |comie!. Failure to do so would | mente, but also witha considorsble | cialist revolution and the prole- mandgthe united front,” k \ thizer for a long time and am thinking of joining the Party. jagreé with our correspondent and lit is precisély because we believe Policies of social fascism that cre- ates ihe basis for a successful “I cannot, however, understand | that the workers who follow the re- | struggle, for a united front in joint the idea of forming united fronts with people your members berate as social-fascists. If they are fas- cists, then no united front with them. If you do want a united front against fascism, then they are not fascists, but misguided | workers, honestly desiting social- ticnary movement, but honestly there is too much confusion in the “R. S, SMALL.” 'formists and sotial fascists are mis- |guided by their leaders and hon- jestly desiring socialism—it is pre- | cisely for this reason tha‘ we carry on a struggle for a united front with these workers. The Leaders and the Masses | It is an entirely different :natter, | ideology, as we have shown many |and many times, being an ideolosy imoan abandoning the class ‘strug- action of all workers regardless of political affiliations against the common enemy. Ccthmunist Members’ Mistakes | It is true that here and there a Communist or Communist Pariy | sympathizer would brand the work- ers of the reformist organizations | the position of ‘he Communists, the | latter lores patience, becomes angry patience in order to win over the Communist workers and sympa- thizers should fail to take issue with the reformist workers on all ihe questions of the class struggle. On the contrary, we must always and everywhere approach our shop- mates, neighbors and co-members \Of the unions who follow the social ,fasciss leaders, with our program and policies and proposals for united front actions. In doing so, masses learn from their own oxperi- ences and that @ach gain that we | 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE || COOPERATIVE COLONY Hours: 1 - 2 and 6 - 8 P.M. |. Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2001 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. BY MEN WHO KNOW Cultural Activities fer Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: ‘.exington Ave. White Plains Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave, station 419-10 THIRTEENTH AVENUE, RADIO SERVICE COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR 8-0280 WE GO ANYWHERE HOW @_ SPECIAL DIS- BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Near 5th Avenue tarian dicta‘orship, ==:| CAMP NITGEDAIGET —>