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J | | | / ee Greet the New York Daily Worker! Sunday Night, October 7! Central Opera House, 67th St. & 3d Av. Vol. XI, No. 238-2 OTR Entered as second-class matter at the New York, N. ¥., Daily .QWorker CENTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL ) Post Office at under the Act of March 8, 1879. EW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1934 WEATHER: Fair. Have You Contributed? Yesterday's Receipts Total to Date Press Run (Six Pages) Yesterday— $ 180.25 . 12,878.05 50,000 KE DEMAND SWEEPS COAST AND GULF LOCAL SOVIETS SET UP, OTHERS BEING FORMED IN CUBA e 24-Hour General Strike on Island Will Begin at Midnight Sunday HAVANA, Cuba, Oct. 3.—Soviets have been established in Realengo, Oriente Province, and others are being formed in Guatanamo and throughout the province. An ap- peal of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba called upon all soldiers, marines and po- lice to organize as part of the So- viets and to fight, together with the oppressed peasants and workers, against the bourgeois-landlord par- ties, against the terrorist Mendieta government and against the impe- trialist masters, On the heels of the appeal comes the news that with the truck-driver™ and omnibus employees of the in- terior joining the transportation strike in Havana and Oriente Proy- inces, a general strike wave is im- minent throughout the island. General Strike Nears The 24-hour general strike, to be- at midnight Sunday, called by National Confederation of La- and the Communist Party of will find some of the key jes and industries of the island oletely at a standstill. @ prociamation of the Central i follows: Teng6, Guatanamo region, landlords, who have for oppressed the peasants, forcing them to labor under the most cifficult conditions in order to change the mountainous lands into rich and, fertile soil, have now attempted to expropriate the peas- for the benefit of the imperial- mpany, “Corralillo,” of the Bank of Canada, Peasants Follow C. P. Line “The peasants of that region, who have understood the role of the bourgeois-landlord parties, have prepared for their struggle against expropriation from their lands. Fol- lowing the revolutionary line of the Communist Party and inspired by the struggles of the proletariat, these peasants haye organized their struggle in order to ward off the attacks aimed at their expropriation and with arms in hand have de- cided to defend their lands, houses and implements, the fruits of long years of hard labor and agony. “The determination of the peas- ants to fight, organizing their armed militia with proletarian dis- cipline and order, securing the sup- port of the workers and peasants of the adjacent lands, fighting with enthusiasm and confidence against their eternal exploiters, has won the first victory. The government and the company have withdrawn their expropriating attacks. Cc. P. Urges Wide Fight “The other workers of the region also need land, as well as the agri- cultural workers: the sugar workers and you soldiers, who need to bet- ter your conditions. The Negro (masses must fight for the same right as the whites. Women are entitled to these same rights, and the children need school. The struggle in Realengo is the struggle of the whole working population of Guantanamo, to win bread and land, to put an end to exploitation and hunger, destroying the bour- geois-landlord regime and creating instead their own local govern- ments, the Councils of workers, peasants and soldiers. “You soldiers, marines, and police you are workers like the brave fighters of Guantanamo, Your post is where your class-brothers are. Join the ranks of the workers’ and peasants’ militia. Whereever you (Continued on Page 2) Chicago YPSL Asks National Body to Join With Anti-War League (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Ill, Oct. 3—The Cook County Committee of the Young People’s Socialist League voted here on Tuesday night to reques: the National Executive Committee of | the organization to affiliate with the Youth Section of the American League Against War and Fascism. There was only one dissenting vote. Enthusiasm among the mem- bership of the Socialist youth or- ganization is already obvious and support of this move is virtually unanimous. The fact that the action of the Cook County Socialist youth follows immediately after the Second United States Congress Against Wer and Fascism is an indication of the influence which the Con- gress has had and will continue to exercise, CUBA C.P. URGES TROOPS, POLICE TO JOIN TOILERS j urday morning at 9 a. m. é Mill Strikers Face Courts In Three Cities : LOWELL, Mass., Oct. 3.— Four militant workers will appear in Lowell District Court on October 6, called “Red Saturday” by the local press, on charges arising out of their efforts to help win the strike. Sam Harzigian, Communist lead- er of the rank and file textile workers, is charged with assault and battery (three charges) and disturbing the peace, as a result of his leading a picket line Sept. 12, at a gate of the Boott Mill. Busi- ness Agent Charette of the Pro- tective Union deliberately sabotaged the mass picketing which Harzi- gian had led with much success. Harzigian was also arrested by police acting on orders of U.T.W. Faker Malloy, who was terror- stricken when Harzigian exposed the Gorman “agreement” on the floor of the U.T.W. mass meeting on Sept. 23. Sam Vaitsis was also arrested at this time and he is fac- ing the same charge. The strikebreaking police arrested two other militant workers, George Phils for distributing leaflets an- nouncing a meeting of the Commu- nist Party, and Timothy Burr, Y.C.L, member, on a trumped-up charge of “crying newspapers”! (shouting headline slogans) in too loud a voice while selling the Daily Worker. Thousands of Lowell workers must | pack the court in Hurd Street, Sat-| The LL.D. which is defending the ac- cused, has urged that protest wires and letters be sent to Judge Fred- erick Fisher, Lowell District Court, Hurd Street, Lowell, Mass., de- manding the release of all four workers. Gastonia Strikers Demand (Special to the Daily Worker) CHARLOTTE, N. C., Oct. 3.—Twe | Gastonia strikers, Otha McMahon) and Fred McMahon, are being held in Gastonia jail without bail fol- lowing an attack on them by a gang of thugs at the Loray Mill gate. Both were blacklisted strikers and active members of the United Textile Workers Union. They were going into the mill to apply for return of their former jobs, when Otha was attacked by thugs armed with blackjacks, guns and knives. Fred rushed to the aid of his brother, and was also beaten. From the reports of eye witnesses, it appears that one of the thugs, Carver, while attempting to strike Fred with a long knife, instead stabbed Davis, another of the thugs, in the back. Davis is now in the hospital, and officials are planning murder charges against the broth- ers in the event of his death. al- though Fred had only a small pen- knife. A significant aspect of the case is that Carver is one of the unpunished murderers of Ella May Wiggins in the 1929 strike, and is believed to be the one who fired the fatal shot. Davis was con- “nected with that murder, and at the beginning of the present strike beat up the president of the Loray Local of the U.T.W. No arrests or charges against them are made in the present case, while the local press openly admits the Manville Jenckes Company is responsible for holding the strik- ers without bond, Otha and Fred McMahon are brothers of Sylvia Crouch, Y.C.L. District Organizer arrested few days in Gastonia. Atlanta Girl Strikers in Court ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 3—‘“I have never known what a good meal was in my life,” declared Leah Young, arrested textile picket, at the hear- (Continued on Page 2) N. Y. Food Clerks Local Meets Tomorrow Night NEW YORK.—A general mem- bership meeting of the Grocery, Dairy and Fruit Clerks Local 104, section of the Food Workers In- dustrial Union, will be held tomor- row at 8 p.m. at Webster Hall, 119- 125 E, 11th St, it was announced yesterday by David Asch, organizer of the local. Important questions concerning the union and the workers in the industry will be taken up and there- fore all members of the local were requested to attend, he stated, |To Disqualify Minority ; Independent Parties alike. New Board Is Elected At Parley Greater United Front Is Forged at Second Anti-War Congress CHICAGO, Oct. 30.—After a day | during which numerous examples of | | |fascist terror in America were de- | |seribed by workers on the platform, the Second U. S. Congress Against War and Fascism closed with the} election of a greatly enlarged na- tional leadership, representing a wider united front. Dr. Harry F. Ward was re-elected chairman with acclaim. The other | officers chosen were Robert Morss Lovett and Lincoln Steffens, vice chairmen; Anna N. Davis, treasurer, | and Ida Dailes, assistant secretary. The new National Bureau members Leroy E. Bow- | Margaret For- | 3 , Henry Shepard and Harrv F. Ward. Due to press of work, Earl Browder re- signed from the N..E. C. Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, was elected in his place. Most glaring of all examples of | Fascist terror in America, revealed at the last session of the Congress, was the condition of Thomas Sharpe, member of the Interna- | tional Seamen’s Union. He hobbled on to the stage, his foot swathed in bandages, and icid how the police and vigilantes had tortured him. “He [a policeman] grabbed me by the arm,” he said, “and walked me across to the police car. As he shoved me into a hallway, holding | my right arm, he hit me on the right shin bone... I fell to the floor and every muscle in my body went limp... He then grabbed my right foot and hit me eight or nine, times, again and again on the same shin bone with his club... Then he twisted the right foot until the | bones he had splintered with his | club cracked and came through the flesh severing an artery... It) started a hemorrhage and the blood | (Continued on Page 2) Old-Line Parties Seek! Slates in Fall Election! (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Oct. 3.—Last minute efforts are being made here by the two old line capitalist parties in control of the local and State gov- ernment machinery to bar from the ballot in the November election all candidates save those of the Demo- cratic and Republican Parties. Trick legalistic protests have been filed by the agents of these two parties against Communist, Socialist, National Progressive and Only a handful of the candidates of these parties have escaped protest. Laura Osby, Negro woman candidate for Congress, is the only Communist who has escaped challenge. The Communist Party here has called for mass protests to the Cook County election officials here and will seek united action with the other parties which are being dis- criminated in a fight to win the Totals « 4 813 2713 2) 56789-RHE St. Louis. 14000-8132 | Detroit 01019-3 85 pain aha Medwick hit homeruns. | Chauffeurs of the American Fed- Cards Win DETROIT, Oct. 3—The St. Louis Cardinals, National League cham- pionship team, defeated the Detroit | Tigers, American League cham- pions, in the first game of the 1934 World Series today at Navin Field before 48,000 baseball fans. The | final score was 8 to 3. Dizzy Dean |opposed Alvin Crowder. Detroit AB.R. H. P.O. | White, C.f.....s0 | Cochrane, c. | Gehringer, 2b, | Greenberg, 1b. .... Goslin, Lf. Rogell, ss. . Owen, 3b. Fox, rf. Crowder, | Doljack Marberry, p. Hogsett, p. | Walker ALE. Pp. COSC OMMHUMNN a, Totals .... Doljack batted for Crowder. Walker batted for Hogsett. St. Louis AB. R.H.P.O. Martin, 3b. Rothroc! k, rf. Frisch, 2b. Medwick, Lf. . Collins, 1b. Delancey, Orsatti, cf. Durocher, J. Dean, p. Fullis, Ge ©. if A ae erates Boo howscse HRoNrt He RONe = ge pea onmortHonorPr ee ela 2 300 Detroit ‘Drivers Strike ‘For Pay Raise (Special to the , Dally Worker) DETROIT, Mich, Oct. 3— Twenty-five hundred truck drivers, |engaged in transporting automo- | biles, went out on strike today in Detroit, Cleveland and Flint, de- manding higher wages. The strike is led by the Truck Drivers’ Union, affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and eration of Labor. The men are demanding a stand- ardized wage rate instead of the old confusing rate, which is based both on mileage and hours. Drivers who own their own trucks and haul on commission have been receiving six cents a mile on the outgoing trip and nothing on the return trip. ‘They now ask for four cents a mile both ways. 11 Bulgarian Soldiers Are Sentenced to Death SOFIA, Oct. 3—Eleven soldiers were sen*enced to death for con- ducting mass struggle in the army in the greatest mass trial in Bul- garian history. During the trial 123 men, all privates, were tried and given prison sentences ranging from one to twleve vears. Telegrams should be sent to the Bulgarian Consulate, 3569 Broad- way, New York, and all avaiable workers should help in picketing the Consulate to save the Bul- | surance Bill wa; int right of all minority parties here to a place on the ballot. garian group from the fascist ex- ecutioners. L-DayStrike FP), R, OFFICIALS SPEED BOARD PLAN TO BLOCK _ SHIP AND DOCK STRIKE Is Urged at AFL Session Rank and’ File Propose Resolution Backing Industrial Unions SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 3.—A res- olution calling for a one-day strike }of all organized labor when Con- gress opens to force consideration of the Workers’ Unemployment In- roduced today at the American Federation of Labor convention. Rank and file delegates introduced a res ion calling for the endorsement of in- dustrial unions. A sharp struggle loomed on the question of abolishing the craft union policy, on which the A. F. of L. is based. A resolution, which was called a compromise, called for the federation of craft uaions in one industry into one central body which would negotiate a single con- tract for all the unions, Leaders Fight Industrial Union Issue Green-Woil The leadership ures to halt the rank and file del- egates from raising the industrial union issue, Jack Geraghty, a delegate from the machinists’ union of Vallejo, Calif., was denied the floor when he arose to speak on what he cxw while studying the trade union movement in the Soviet Union. Larger Executive Council Urged One of the resolutions introduc. today called for the expanding of the executive council from 11 to 28 members. The fight ior this pr posal is headed by John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of Axerica, who has his eys on the president's chair. Lewis found added support in his struggle against Green in the Hotel and Restaurant Employes’ and Beverages Dispensers Union, Green Machine Pra A N.R.A, the N. R, A. as a boon to labor. There were others calling for a “more vigorous enforcement of the provisions of the National Recov- ery Act,” another urging the out- lawing of company unions and one calling for a restatement from the President of the “real wishes and intentions of the administration.” One resolution demanded an in- vestigation of S, Clay Williams, chairman of the board of directors of the Reynolds Tobacco Co., who has been appointed by Roosevelt to head the N.R.A. administrative ap- paratus. The resolution cites Mr. Williams’ discrimination against workers, Among other demands presented to the convention were included unemployment insurance, old age pensions and the establisiment of the five-hour and th six-day week. By Bill Dunne (Daily Worker Special Correspondent) CIVIC AUDITORIUM, San Fran- cisco, Cal., Oct. 3—Announcement of the postponement of the sched- uled address by Walter Citrine, secretary and representative of the British Trade Union Congress to the A. F. of L. convention here un- til next week, probably Tuesday, in (Continued on Page 6) number of resolutions pre-| sented by the Green machine hailed New York Comiianit Party Urges All Members to Give Funds to Aid Marine Strike NEW YORK.—Urging immediate financial support for the forthcom- jing marine stri the New York District Secretariat of the Commu- |peal to all Party sections, units, and |members, and to all trade unions, \fraternal and cultural organizations. The appeal follows “Comrades! “The traitorous A. F. of L. bureau- crats in the marine crafts, Olander of the I. S. U. and R of the I. i rand earth to dam up the fighting spirit of the seamen and longshoremen, to pre- vent strike action on October 8. “Against this threatening betrayal of the marine workers, the Joint Strike Preparations Committee, the Marine Workers Industrial Union, nist Party yesterdsy issued an ap- | t and the Rank and File Action Com- mittee of the I. L. . are mobilizing with all the forces and energy at their command! “It is the highest responsibility of the Communi. unions, and of all wo: tions, to come to imr tance of the militant x ers | “Take all possible measure now to ine work prepare for support Financial day and tom of decisive import B of the strike, for smashing the threatencd betrayal, “Take emergency measures to | raise funds! Rush funds to the headquarters of the Joint Strke Preparations Committee, at 140 Broad Street, N. ¥.” Georgia Militia AttacksPickets iat 4 Foundries ROME, Ga., Oct. 3.—Equipped with 16 machine guns and gas bombs, six infantry companies of the Georgia National Guard and the military “flying squadron,” which broke up picket lines during the textile strike, led by Adjutant General Lindley W. Camp, today dispersed the picket lines of workers of four foundries on strike here. The foundry workers walked out on July 21 in a demand for higher wages. Picket lines operating in eight-hour shifts, 24 hours a day, had not permitted any shipment of freight to enter or leave the plants, according to A. F. Selman, manager of the Rome Stove and Range Company. Not a wheel had turned since the strike had started, he said. Attempts to load freight cars with stoves have been stopped by the strikers, estimated to number be- tween 600 to 1,200 men. The spirit of the strikers in the 12-week old foundry strike is reported solid, in spite of the attempt to drive them from the foundries by armed troop- ers, Y.C.L. MEETING TOMORROW NEW YORK.—The functionaries’ meeting of the Young Communist League, to be held tomorrow eve- ning at 8 o'clock at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 E. Fourth St., has been changed to a general membership meeting, at which the united front question will be taken up. All mem- bers of the Y.P.S.L, are invited to attend. ‘DAILY’ DRIVE MUST BE SPURRED! Statement of Central Committee, Communist Party, U. S. A. WORKERS: ae Central Committee of the Communist Party is today compelled to give a pointed estimate of the progress of the $60,000 drive of the Daily Worker and draw the attention of the Party members and all sympathetic workers to a serious situation. Six weeks have passed ,000 has been received by the Daily since the drive began and only $13. Worker, In the mosi important drive the Daily Worker has ever had, a drive not only to keep the paper bonds of inadequate space, in a drive for $60,000, comparatively about one-third less money has been received than in the drive a year ago which was for $40,000 only. Is the situation less favorable? The revolutionary workers have not been burdened with a Daily Worker finance drive for a full yea: The revolutionary movement is stronger than ever before. The Party is rooting itself more firmly in the masses. The paper is gaining ever-increasing popularity, and its circulation is greater than ever before. In this drive there is an added incentive: Its success wiil make Possible the improved national edition and the two-edition eight-page New York Daily Worker. The new paper will be the answer to thousands of demands for more news, more features, more special articles, more editorials. “Though the masses are impoyerished today there are thousands more workers prepared to support the Daily Worker. running, but to free it from the No! It is more favorable. Tr. Yet, in spite of all favorable opportunities, the party membership, the revolutionary organizations, the readers of the “Daily” have failed to grasp the importance of the campaign to the extent that only $13,000 has been raised after the sixth week. In the light of the needs of the situation and the danger to the Daily Worker the drive thus far can only be characterized as The Party membership has not yet gone into motion! impermissibly weak. The Party fractions in the mass organizations have failed to set the membership of these organizations into motion. The Central Committee must therefore, with the greatest serious- ness, warn the Party, the revolutio. nary movement, that the failure of this campaign, the failure to obtain the full $60,000 would be nothing short of disastrous. Never did the political situati Worker as it does now. The New deeper and deeper into the ground, ion show the need for the Daily Deal is grinding the working class it is giving the finance monopolies more and more power. Strikers are being met with guns and bayonets, betrayed by the A. F. of L. bureaucracy, by Green, Gorman & Co. Preparations for war progress rapidly. Fascism is advancing. Never did the situation demand the Daily Worker as it does now. The Central Committee therefore asks Party members in the units, sections and districts to give the Daily Worker campaign for $60,000 its rightful place in the center of other campaigns. Party members in units and fractions see that a series of affairs is immediately organized to aid thé ie Daily Worker. that coupon books and lists are immedjately set in motion. Workers, send your contributions te the Daily Worker $60,000 drive! Strike the capitalist class a power: Make the Daily Worker the larger, better paper it must be! ‘ful blow, NRA R ushes To Organize Marine Board) By Marguerite Young (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 3.— | High Roosevelt government offi- | Cials, still jittery at the prospect of an effective East Coast marine strike next Monday, worked inten- sively today toward creating a Na- tional Maritime Labor Board or de- veloping some new government agency to break all waterfront walkouts, “We are not at all satisfied that the strike won’t come off,” a source close to the N. R. A. told this re- | porter. “We just h we knew! what will happen on Monday.” Fear of a breakdown in the nego- tiations betwen shipowners and In- ternational Seamen’s Union (A. F. of L.) officials, on the basis of which the I. S. U. leaders with- drew their strike call, was expressed in government circles. Should that happen, the government would like to have the proposed Maritime La- bor Board ready to step in. The following developments have occurred: Day’s Developments 1. President Roosevelt yesterday held a private conference with W. t. Grace, the shipping magnate. 2. The new Roosevelt Industrial Recovery Board, successor to Gen- jeral Hugh Johnson as Adminis- trator of the N. R. A., prepared to meet to discuss general shipping policies, especially shipping labor conditions, 3. Chairman Lloyd K. Garrison,| of the National Labor Relations Board, who yesterday announced |the I, S. U. leaders’ withdrawal of their strike call, met L. H. Peebles, Deputy Administrator of the N. R. A. in charge of shipping, to discuss the situation. 4. The Executive Committee of the National Organization of Mas- ters, Mates and Pilots of America (A, F. of L.) addressed to Secretary of Commerce Roper a formal de- mand for a Maritime Board to handle labor questions. The memo- randum quoted Vice-President James J, Delaney as declaring this is imperative to prevent strikes be- cause, “We now face the brittle tempers and outworn patience of our members.” The N. R. A. Shipping Division said “some announcement” in the maritime situation might be forth- coming tomorrow, but declined to indicate what this might be. Try to Form Shipving Board The Administration is working | hard, at the same time, to ? a shipping board, whether or not | a) code is promulgated. Some o- 1.3 advisors propose the creation of a board under the legislation that set up the National Labor Relations Board, but Chairman Garrison has taken the position, before M. W. I. U. leaders, that he has no jurisdic- tion in shipping labor questions as long as there is no shipping The Masters, Mates and P: Executive Commiitee quoted C2v- tain Delaney, who is also an adviser to the Labor Advisory Board of N. R. A., as believing that “a Maritime Board to supervise labor and other conditions in the shipping industry” is imperative, |Broad Street, jthat meetings will be called in all jup the question of | decisive action amen in Many Ports Reject Olander Deal, Prepare Walkout NEW YORK. At ting on Tuesday night, at ‘th and Whitehall Streets, hub of the New York waterfront, more han 1,000 seamen from the shins port in the a rousing locked in the larges orld pledged to si Monday morning under the Jeadershin of the Joint Strike Preparations Com- mittee, Along the entire Atlantic coast, from Boston to Norfolk, and in the ports of the Gulf of Mexico, in Orleans, Galveston, and Christi, the men who man ng. to over T ide. the no- of Victor Olander, sec= the International S: rion and Lilovd K. G2 1 Labor Rt in Hall in Bo: Tu to hear Roy H , chairs Joint Strike Prepar: speak on strike. Crews Boston Sailors Feneuil dungarees on Di | tions issues of | four the cecal boats in red their readine , ttees fri \ships sent protests. to the shipo' ers against their negotiations ¥ leaders of the, Internationa! S: }men’s Union, who the men cl: do not represent them. The pro- tests stated that onlv the Joint Strike Preparations Committee wes authorized to speak for the rank and file seamen. Crews Preseat Demands A committee of seamen repre- senting the crews of 400 coal boats presented demands for increased wages to the shipowners yesterday. In the headqua: 's of the Joint Strike Preparations Committee, 140 it was announced Atlantic ports on Friday to take “immediate and for the establish- ment of a centralized shipping bu- reau for seamen.” Explaining its position in con- tinuing the strike plans in face of President Roosevelt's request for a “truce” and the retreat trom eyery one of the seamen’s demands by leaders of the I. S. U., the Joint Strike Preparations Committee de- clared that their fight is not a fight against other unions, as the capitalist press is attempting to make it appear, but a fight against the miserable conditions which prevail on the ships at sea. “Our fight is one to improve the conditions of all seamen regard- Jess of union affiliation,” declared H. Baxter, chairman of the New York section of the Joint Strike Committee, A Fight for Demands of All “Almost identical demands for improvement of conditions on the ships came from the men in all seamen’s unions,” Baxter continued, “But now it is plain that only the Joint Strike Preparations’ Commit- tee intends to press for these de~ mands; the A. F. of L. leaders have given up everything. The seamen cannot be nrevented from knowing this and a strike will be the re- sult. Olander Continues Betrayal Victor Olander and other top leaders of the I. S. U. continued to maneuver to complete the bee trayal of the strike. A leaflet gotten out by the I. S. U. officials an- nounced that the question of the agreement would be voted on at & meeting at 2 South Street Tuesday night. The meeting was held and wos attended by about 100 men, but no vote was taken. While Olander was speaking ine (Continued on Page 86) Browder and Hathaway Wiil Address Seamen NEW YORK. — Two important meetings on the coming seamen’s | str*ke will be addressed tonight by Earl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party, and Clare ence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker. The first meeting will be held at 7 o'clock at South and White- hall Streets under the auspices of de.| Section 1 of the Communist Party, '| This me ing will be addressed by Hathaway. Earl Browder will speak at 8 BR m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Fifteenth Street and Irving Place, at a meete ing called by the Committee for the Support of the Marine Works ers Industrial Union, —— Price 3 Cents