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a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 239, 1934 tig Sendoff Arranged for Delegates to National Congress _RINAL DIRECTIVES Second Year of New Deal Demonstrates SURVEY EMPHASIZES ARE ISSUED TO ALL Steady Trend Toward Fascism and War NEED FOR WORKERS’ REPRESENTATIVES ei ep tasias ote oscate! 6 - CONTROL OF RELIEF Wall Street Monopoly from complete, that it is masked by | with the greatest insistence that Roosevelt Is Preparing New England and New Jersey Delegates Will l new kinds of Roosevelt demagogy| the mere revelation of fascist or- More in the Saddle which still retains all the old trap-| ganization in Wall Street docs To Maintain Profits |Fight for Supervision Over Distribution of Aid 8: | pings of “social reform.” But the not by any manner or means halt et) | ii Address the Mass Meeting Next Friday Night Than Ever Before | trend is unmistakable. this organization for one moment. | ‘Through Terrorism by Workers Is Necessary Part of Struggle siotaaes , 1 SR id oe 4 The fact that the economic con-| This very practical organization Eee ee 3 : 7 at the St. Niholas Palace | By Milton Howard tent of the Roosevelt New Deal is| for fascism continues, and will Tatts than at any time in the his- for Social Insurance It is oie eeetstina eat becoming increasingly fascist, with | intensify as the crisis deepens. tory of the country, Today, the er St SS ae cee a . ik ane see cog cen KP Patioy ey frag tmanl hse Siig | the inevitable development of a| ‘The elections all over the coun-| biggest Wall Street industrialists By Simon W. Gerson NEW YORK.—A conference of all New York delegates rigs peor led 5 se mag ts | politics of fascist terrorism found,| try demonstrated that the masses | convene publicly to prepare prac- ; Ape S : Mei) Congress’ tor Unornplovment tdurines «ill merce emerging Ven | Guring the year, guarded or overt | are looking more eagerly than ever tical directives for Roosevelt and) (This is the third and last article of a series on corruption and graft © the National Congress for Unemployment Insurance will | more clearly. recognition by leading Roosevelt | for a way out of the crisis, and that | Congress. The recent White Sul-| in the New York State relief situation.) be held at Irving Plaza, Fifteenth Street and Irving Place,;, 4nd they reveal themselves as | spokesmen. they still hope that Roosevelt will| Phur Springs conference was just) ELIEF administration in New York State is nothing sho: Bas avening Jan. 8, at 8 o'clock, Thi ti Seecit ne program of the Wall Street | Secretary of Agriculture Wallace, | fulfill his New Deal promises of a| Such an executive committee giving : woe 4 g re day ling, Jan. 0, at clock. is Meeting Will monopolies for the domination of | early in the Spring of 1934, for ex- | fight against the yoke of the “money | Orders to Roosevelt. The similarity) #¥ of scandalous. This we proved in the two previous arti- make final plans for the organized participation of the New | the domestic market and the coun-| ample, wrote in his famous pam-| changers.” The discussions in the| to the mechanism of the advance] cles discussing the little city of Cohoes (N. Y.). ‘ork delegates in the National Con- pare economy, with parallel pee phiet, “America Must Choose:” Daily Worker emphasized that the | of German fascism is obvious. ——_| rt : ig a i ae ais ‘ : ) c (ess for Unemploymer 4 a [prations: tomate: aeteeetts: Relveot “The new types of social con- | election results, far from indicating) Im the past year, one political here we saw that the New York Power and Light Cor- Insurence. All N B asi I E£ 7 q | rene wh ie cet cab | trol that we have now in opera~ | decline in the radicalization of | Proposition of the Communist Party | poration, a subsidiary of the Niagara and Hudson, the or- Mret attend and a Ss Ss al | ae ig chant eae ve tion are here to stay, and to grow | the masses, showed a profound ra-| has been confirmed with extraor- | ization headed by Alfred H. Schoell chain st_atten je As slgae anonee a Mehth Party | OM @ national or world scale... . | dicalization that has thus far ex-| dinary fullness. This is the thesis ganization headed by Alfred H. Schoellkopf, chairman of the t Fi Out l awi n g convention where the Ronsevelt New | AS yet, we have applied in this | pressed itself only in record-break- thet all governmental entrance into “== | State Temporary Relief Administras ; gram of the monopolies that would| Of the sort of social discipline v » Te i sificati vhich a completely determined . sis found strong evidence that collusion a lead to an inteusification of the! f 7 1 vitable that the disillu- e ¥ . u ner I i k > \ weeks’ anteeeer a economic nationalism requires, .. | It is inevitable that rng | eovermment over capitalist pro- existed between local merchants and se ec a tr 1 © | woviers mange a er etl We must be ready to make sacri- | sion of the masses will soon find) duction, but on the contrary, Deal was again exposed as the pro- | tion, had rendered duplicated bills Growing Disillusion | W ni D 1 je within the local relief Ps ‘ raetaenn, t people within the local relief or- fices to a known end.” political expression in increasing’ strengthens the domination ef the in in etrol panbetinn, York Sponsorin: delegates to reg r at o: son at the office of the Room 641, 80 East 11tt country only the barest beginnings | ing strike actions, ae aes ie spanipmule ant ae lad . | the N.R.A, for-example) does no ° . ‘to the local relief bureau. W. rengthen the domination of the {Pe ro gr essives Ee agenda ees sistrat is 25. ce: "oT Fe s - nomic and political life. Re suze inst the whole bourgeois | list cli 8 bite wail be ogen tay Son ioc Anti-Labor Groups Want) Today, it is not difficult to ob- Panett sarigereimccenr iterate. fas ther preeantacce ieee te ge pire im | A ‘TERA. auditor, Karl Hiller, 16 to pm. ‘Those cciegates who have Bill Like England's |the' caning sei reat ° Ene scia clcipline,” the eco: | period, even the smallest economic eonomie rests of the New Deat LOCAL Um TOM seit court, Oceanside, Long 1s sent in credentials by mail must sees What have been the goctoant po- |20mic nationalism,” and the “sac- | struggles rapidly bring the masses | as expressed in enormous increascs | ae Mi rape er eerig) friggin also report in person. Anti-Union Act litical developments in the past |Tifices to a known end’? | face to face with the power of the| in profits for the monopolies, the! ae peabthegs gahguate aN ees fox transportation. fo nd pane S 7 ss ; This was the calculated political | capitalist state, and propels them {ruth of this Communist Party thesis' Rank and File Men Get) entero! bis superiors was prompt- Fees fag transportaiion, food and | Year. Several things stand out. . i Bonsevelt int litical struggle against the | re il false) e e) ly discharged. Despite a fight for lodging must be brought into the| By Labor Research Association | First, is the steady increase in| Prophecy of a leading sevelt | into political struggle against the| has been proved against all false a | spokesman early in the Spring of | government acting as a strike- theories of liberals and Social-Dem-| Four Offices in Ed- erased that has gone all the New York office at onc? open political reaction as expresse for round-trip from New an RN f i in statements by leading adminis- and lodging for the Congress is ‘“‘ormation employers are being | tration spokesmen and simultane- Through innumerable channels of | y to the White House, Hiller has er been put back on the T.E.R.A. this year, Subsequent developments | breaker. | ocracy about the “socialization” of . A bore out the picture he was} The Roosevelt government is er the Capitalist state. ucational Society ; + ‘a 3 i. 25 per delega leg: counselled to acquaint themselves |ous police and military terrorism | P@inting. | ready preparing for this. Its) The last twelve months have wit- Bi . x tier Enns af Satan “food and | with the British sie Disputes and |egainst the workers. | During the past week, the fascist | spokesman, Secretary of Commerce | nessed a slash in the real wages of] DETROIT, Mich. Dec. 28—The| Food spoilage, discovered on a housing in Washington, any a i foe ae Second, is the record-breaking | trend of. the Roosevelt New Deal! Roper, pledged to the biggest in-) the whole American working class.| progressives of the Mechanics Ed- huge scale in New York City, was ffip transportation a is $5.00 If| 2720¢ Unions Act of 1827. Writing | way preparations. | was admitted by at least four capi-| dustrialists at the recent Coneress This cannot but find political ex-| ucational Society of America, in-| also revealed on a proportionate the delegates have o means of for the textile bosses, J.C. Atchison | And third, is the powerful ad- talist or bourgeois-liberal spokes-| of American Industry in New York |pression, The Communist Party faces| dependent union of tool and die- scale in Cohoes, getting to Weshington, y can ob- | of the Daily News Record, employ- | vances which the Wall Street mo-|men, with Prof. Calvin Hoover of| that the New Deal is entering on|the task of bridging the gap between | makers, in elections held in Local! Labor's Attitude Toward Relief tain food at 75 cents for three | ers’ paper, declared: |nopolies have made in their con-|Duke University stating to the| its “second phase,” which his out-| the fighting militancy of the masses|7, succeeded in winning a number | Graft meals, and lodging for cents to 2 axe | trol of the government, the capital- | American Economic Association only | line showed clearly enough to con-| against economic misery and the! of important positions, including a | $1.00, depending on nd of ac-! “My undercover operators advise | ist state machine, three days ago that the New Deal! tain all the necessary measures for | political expression of this militancy | majority of their candidates on the| What shall be the attitude of las reed 3 fe f Taken in their sum, these politi- mak of late there has been great | oa] developments express the fact p transportation demand for copies of the British |that Roosevelt is fulfilling his pur- anged requires | Trade Disputes and Trade Unions | pose —the carrying through of a “is on the same path as fascism! the bolstering up of the monopoly|in class conscious struggle for the| Executive and District Committees. bor and all other fighters for gen and national socialism” of Hitler or | control through political terrorism.| seizure of power. Of the 11 on the Executive Com-/uine unsmployment insurance to- Mussolini, | As evidence of this Roosevelt prep- More and more, the fight for} mittee, nine of the candidates sup- | wards this type of disclosures? Shall In this connection, the recent | aration for increasing fascist meas-| bread, for decent working conditions,| Ported by the progressives were |they merely “deplore” the revela- commodation The roun The New Deal, in short, has, in the past year, made very definite steps toward the “open, terroristic dictatorship of the most reaction- ary, chauvinist elements in finance capital,” toward fascism. One has the political needs of the capitalist | keeps himself: in the backgvound, class demands a united front against | working mainly through his Con- the onrushing forees of proletarian | gressional and police agents. revolution, then the Roosevelt, ma- Monopely Domination chine will merge with the fascist! After two years of the New Deal, forces now getting ready for busi-| the Wall Street monopolies today arena for the re-division of the| the progressives, was defeated by F.! Congress and known there as H.R. world markets. McCracken. The other offices, 7598. This bill, originally drafted Imperialist war and fascism, these | however, were won by the candi-| py the Communist Party, and en« two horrors of capitalist decay are | dates of the progressives, A. P. Neil- dorsed by over 2,000 American Fed now the main enemies of the Amer-|Son being named vice-president, | oration of Labor organizations, will . ican working class which can be|George Mitchell, secretary; ~W.| be a central point in the discussion case confines them to the industry hich the dispute arises and for- ‘sympathetic’ strikes. It for- bids strikes or lockouts intended to coerée the government by inflicting injury upon the public. It defines ' scoring Committee at w per cent of the contents will be turned over to the collecting orzan- Wation. These funds are desperate- ly needed for deposits on lodgings in that ell who wish the low rate shcll act of 1997, New here is an act |‘Uthless redistribution of the na-| revelations of active fascist orgeni-| ures against the masses we may|for relief and unemployment in-|€lected, while two out of three were | tions of graft, wait for the usual Cs leave together on the same train. that in: slepant laapauge die hase tional income in the interests of | zation by leading Wall Street banks/ cite the rapid growth in the police] surance becomes a fight for the rev-|€lected on the District Committee. | type of investigation and then pray s Return tickets, however, are good on | A ee a eee vcaded for (2° Monopolies, giving them a larger and industrialists are, of course,| and military apparatus, and the| clutionary way out of the crisis, To-|Chris Bernert, leading Progressive, | that “good” men will be placed in day coaches only any time up to| rank duke Wehiaticg freon Telative share, and the protection | wholly understandable, The rapid| beginning of a carefully planned] day, the united front becomes of | Who testified at the recent N. R. A. charge of relief administration? x January 11. sand thls bev ih 1a ene” of these monopoly profits, as well rise in fascist organization outside | drive against the Communist Party | decisive importance in defeating the | hearings, won the election for the| ws answer to this question is put All organizations should report at. y- as the whole system of exploitation | the Roosevelt government itself only | with the spearhead in the Congres-| capitalists, . Honing ola to the Inter- | yety clearly and precisely di tthe : ofiee to the New York Spo Then Mr. Atchison goes on to peoeinae they rest, through the] reflects the growing fascist tenden-| sional Committee for the investi-] Roosevelt is “safeguarding thp | State a ee. i Workers’ Unemployment Insurance id Committee on the sale of point out why it is a “humdinger”: Rae sae oo of a teen’, Boverm-| cies of the Roosevelt, government | gation of “un-American activities.”| fear” by growing terrorism, as he Win Four Offices |Bill, the measure introduced by | stamps and tag-day collec Specifically tpeciiaes ya. and terrorism. Policies inside the White House. | Roosevelt, of course, is the chief or- | prepares to launch his record-break-| In the voting for president of the | Representative Lundeen (Farmer- 4 tia ‘cans Be oo specifically the act legalizes Trend to Fascism At a given historic moment, when | ganizer of this drive, though hej ing military machine into the world | local, James Hutchins, candidate of | ;abor, Minn.) in the last session of iW hethe office of a strikes and lockouts, but in such i} 5 H 8 | | We*ninston. Funds should be rushed é 2 ; to emphasize here, of course, that | ness. | stand in positions of more direct finally conquered only by working | Fritts, treasurer, and A. P. Neilson, | 3+ the forthcoming National Con- er crice. the right of workers who wish to this process toward fascism is far| It is necessary to emphasize | control of the government appa-| class revolution, Sergeant-at-arms. ‘gress for Unemployment Insurance, ‘ ‘ continue their jobs during a strike. Thr pg ar tpetat gress e! X: u s New York, New Jersey and New It forbids the use of contributions es x é PUGS ESS Ra a Ac, ee Out 01 © trustees elected | January 5, 6 and 7 at Washington, ; ‘ were progressive candidates, though | 5 Sppgiand-cielegates leave by special by workers to their unions for polit- i ; 5 | The bill, as is fairly well known, the i : %, is j oe . slimax the recruitment drive of the | the progressives secured only one of | 3 2 i “fain for Washington from Pennsyl- ical purposes unless so used by and Canadian Unem OVEN (i we eee foi saan epapesconbel Socialist Will Address . i -| th elegates i: calls for unemployment insurance (a station at midnight on Jan. with the written consent of the Pe) against workers active in organizing , Communist Party here, and is ex: e three. delegates to the coming ‘ 3 | to be paid to every person out of a ike i i ‘ ‘ pe be the largest ever held {national convention of the M. £,| ‘© be pa aie 4 All delegates should attend the worker and an accounting mace) Strike in Relief Camps ana tor the right to organize. Lenin Memorial Rally || Pei. 00 ee arte gport will |S. A, to be held in Cleveland on |49 now or losing his job in the send-off meeting on Jan. 4 at the’ and reported to the government. It F * . ‘4 | a se u pe Petey tutaies ic! a, e t 7 * r Ri h The managers of the ‘orty relief ¥ be given on the extent of the ful . 2 to 5. - i Strest, ¢ i ce ed section as aes mnicisd: theseehes with Zz 4 si eee camps iavaived have srt & a itis tai - oad eR ic ybipeneCaamat aed een baa acne aur some gecreagenn rian aed 7 ie Lion 2 xs ployers hap at | it nal plan. cal aS en the center of | 18) e se been set off for them. this legislative masterpiece.” VANCOUVER, Canada., Dec. 28. consistent policy of evicting and! FROVIDENCE, R. I., Dec. 28.— penonal yy the struggle “against the bureau-|tered democratically, the bill calls i i f FTE RE Hae ‘ | delegates 1 Yash-| The National Industrial Confer- —A strike led by the Camp Workers blacklisting any of the men who Victor Modajewski, a member of CONFERENCE IN DETROIT cratic misleadership of Matthew for control of unemployment insur ee eiiey. Bicgid he ver ae Board au lakh employers’ | Union against the blacklist in the | dated to act for decent conditions, | the Rhode Island State Committee fet 28.—The | Smith, general secretary, and his|ance by committees of workers. Washington Auditorium, 20th and E research agency, in a press release | relief work S of the National | Much sympathy ‘has been aroused | Of the Socialist Party, and Margaret) DETROIT, Mich. Dec. 28—The | clique. It was from this local that | This will make it virtually impos- MGs WW. where eating ‘and| (Mec. 1, 1984); auncinieal'the'te- [2 e National by the strike and a number of CoWl, editor of the Working Woman, | Communist Party has called a con-|Smith expelled John Anderson, | sible for capitalist politicians to sleeping assignments will be made, sults of a survey of “What editors | Defense Department of British Co-| unions have sent their expressions See the main sree at_the | ference Sunday, Jan. 6, at 10 am.|leader of the progressives, for his | build up political machines on the The telephone of the Auditorium in of the Middle Atlantic States be- | !mbia is spreading so rapidly that | of sympathy and financial support vie aoe eae Sun- | to organize the biggest Lenin Mem- | Militant struggle in behalf of the|pasis of the administration of the Washington is Metropolitan 9615. lieve to be the attitude of their com- | 40 camps and almost 1,000 workers | t0 the strikers throug’ the Camp | FO Cain" worcingmens “Hall, $9 |orial Meeting that has ever been Acrive-tetntiateanie Ne ut aotte insurance funds. Mass Sendoff ae pe? peonenine Coa Ber j are already involved, * | Workers Union: Chestnut St. held tere. ‘The-conference will’ be lon, For Workers’ Control of Relief Naess “will bea m ihe taany questions is this one | The strike started when delegates BARGEMEN ON STRIKE —|_ Modajewski, who is known to held in Finnish Workers Hall, 5969| The present national convention| The Communist Party has con= onbantdi ne <-TABNY” QUESHONS: “15 my ee ee Toye: nelaeRHien | Pawtucket textile workers for his | y4¢), * McGraw. All or- |S considered the most critical in sistently fought for the application } tor the New York, “Would public opinion in your com-|0n an unemployed delegation to) SAN FRANCISCO, Calif, Dec. 28. | activity in the General ‘Textile |} Ave, near McGraw. | the history of the M. E. S. A. There of the same principle in the admin- j) New England delegat » Nich’ munity favor making sympathetic | Victoria were blacklisted by the de~ —Four hundred bargemen in this | Strike. returned two weeks ago irom | @20!2ations are asked to send dele- is wide: i ticn with istration of relief. Ever since the olas Palace strikes and lockouts illegal?” And fense department. After a short port who have been on sirike for | a tour of the Soviet Union with the | gates. the bureaucratic, wavering policies | historic demonstrations on March 6, at 8 pm., Fr ved the following replies they re ke in protest egainst this action over four weeks have returned to American Workers’ Delegation sent The Lenin Memorial meeting will|of the Smith leadership. One of /1930, when the Unemployment (in pex ntage of the total number the leaders of the strike were evicted | work, winning a 35 per cant wage over by the Friends of the Soviet |be held Sunday, Jan, 20, at 2:30|the questions that will probably | Councils, actively supported by the replies received): Middle Atlan- from the camp. ‘The workers re- inerease for most of the workers. | Union. Modajewski will speak on|p.m. in Arena Gardens, Woodward |come up is that of affiliation with Communist Party, unfurled the > States: Yes, 75.8 per cent; No, sponded by spreading the strike de- The rate will be 67/2 cents per hour | the topic, “Socialism Today in the | Ave. and Hendrie, Various workers’|the A. .F of L. and the buiding of banner of unemployment insurance & per cent. United States: Yes, manding the abolition of the black- in place of the former 50 cents. The | Soviet Union.” | organizations are cooperating in the | one industrial union in the auto in- | and immediate relief, it simultane- | Standing and } ers will report on progre: ) Jjectives of the Congre | theatrical performance will add sj to the program. All organizations 75.8 per cent; No, 21.6 per cent. list, reinstatement of the blacklisted | rate for overtime will be 85 cents, The Lenin Memorial meeting will | program. dustry . are urgently requested to attend en é € ere y: Rat ponte ela kia o) control of amasse in support of their delegates SRE BARNES ates aise aN 2 ‘* and to march in under the banners | Capitalist politicians, of course, do feof their organizatio1 Delegates not want hide nor hair of this. one" Investigation of Fur Union’s Unemployment Insurance Fund 8x0 232 ™ An admission fee of 25 cents will ‘tion into which they can place ‘he charged to all non-delegates, ex- “their” people. (The Republicans oe Proves Plan Is of Tremendous Value to Workers in the Industry #2" ial low rete th: want—and have set up—a bureau- 3 ee a ‘ |eracy, the inner workings of which Z ie ‘by their unemployed or: —— ‘a $= pot SIS ak Lace eta sits (5, ® ae ms late wer hidden ? 2 t rss M organizati re asked to brini | . a ie, . A ‘' . fe i | are well hidden from the masses o ee aro By Al Steele Establishment of Fund Followed Winning of Strike in 1932 in Which This Issue Was One of Main tions visited Home Relief Bureaus the people, the employed above : “ : f | D ds—Union Memb 0 . p during this period. all, as well as the rest of the tax- ( phe“! uflemployinent ciheaeaeie | emands—Union Members, at Open Meetings, Allocate Money to Each Case as It Comes Up Union Backing Workers | P2Ving population. : Benefit Sunday funds of trade unions, particularly | _ one trae a) When asked about the work done| Forced by the struggles of the 2 Prominent theatrical people are | ‘the fund of the Fur Workers’ In- Ey SRE SP REPRE Se 2 re Og F Sec ATER OAT ET =e v8 | nag ‘ A i by the union in support of the | Unemployed to give some minimum Geniributing their support to the) “ustrial Union, received consider-| when we won the strike and signed | mittee in special files for unemploy- | sky expiained that financial reports; Among the fur dyers and dress- | Workers Unemployment and Social| of relief, they have built in New Wationcl Congress for Unemp eble publicity recently in connec- i eis the heat t the M | the collective agreement with the | ment relief. The committee investi- | @% Made periodically and regularly | ers the system is slightly different. | Insurance Bill and the approaching | York State a bureaucracy controlled “| Ment and Social Ins eeiatetea ‘ Pe nee nese sh "¢ | New York Fur Trimming Manufac- | gates each case and reports its find- to open meetings, that they are re-|Here the manufacturers pay thre | Congress, Winogradsky stated, “We|from the top down by Alfred H. #:| pearing at a benefit vari t | Cormic en \¢ we ; a » leased to the press and are pub-|per cent of the payroll to the fund} must admit, in self-criticism, that | Schoellkopf, the great utilities mag- Committee on “un-American” ac- | turers’ Association.’ ings at another open meeting where ‘, the New School for Socia a ‘ lished in the Needle Worker, the | Which is administered in the same|in spite of the fact that we have | nate. Graft, corruption and in- Pr: 4 1 Sunday afternoon, Dec. 30 at! tivities. | It is important to note that the | each case and the amount recom-| official organ of the union. fashion as among the furriers. participated in all demonstrations | timidation are inevitable in such a 0 o'ciock. Every turn on a gala) The furriers, fur dressers and | question of the fund was one of the | mended by the committee on the| Finance Reports Made Yearly’ |" $64,569.86 from Bosses and conferences in support of the | set-up. = program is a contribut’- to the rs of the Needle Trades Work- | ‘ ‘ 4 1. Bill, insufficient work has been done | i ii e ‘ | outstanding demands in the strike. | basis of its investigation, are either As for the manufacturers who con-| At this point Winogradsky dis- , ‘i | The struggle against graft in the trial Uni Aa ly | 3 it i ebiaie deer by the union to force its enactment. | .4); ini nists in the United Steves It iS the winning of the strike that | approved or rejected by the mem-| tribute to the fund, they ean receive Played an auditor's report on the | 'Y,t Nope Soul wus it In coat ang | Telief administration cannot be A s ef financial reports at any time upon/|furrier’s fund for the period be-| , a “4 ; Separated from the struggle for ® properly organized and | is responsible for the existence of | bers. request. Wheth ft such re-|tween Noy. 15, 1932, and Noy, 30,| Fd when you deal with this ques-| workers’ control of relief, In every tioning unemployment in- the fund | Controtied by Membership iuests ‘are made, semi-annusl, ena (194. For this ‘potiod the statement | {08 In your paper, so that the mem- | tty. 4 town and vill . 3 ms 3 quests are made, semi-annual and | 19°4. For this por! e statement in every town and village Campaign for adequate unemploy-' ers’ Indu: “Ment and social insurance. Among’ trade w .) those who will be on the program = thor of several are Eimer Rice, ST Biltessefll Brcadway plays, J, Ed- > fund, paid by the manu- | isl vas received | P2YS and leaders of our union Will! viene there i i iza! ! ward Bromberg, of the Group Thea- and administered by the ,,“Let no one believe,” he said,| “Is it true, as charged at the @Mnual reports ‘are sent to the Showed that $64,560.86 was received | 21.0 their shortcomings and wy | Where theze is a relief organization, ‘ 3 m . ne : 2 istere , i 4 = ee ‘ ;.| manufacturers. They also have the {70m the manufacturers. Two hun- ety ee aires | workers, farmers and small t2x- Sam Jafice, a leading Broadway through theta dultah, that any manufacturer will agree | hearing in Washington, that any-|™ y al idred seventeen dollars and twenty | ‘0 correct them in the fusure. | ela! ize to demand ‘ fs The Burin and Cutler Pup-| prompted by inquiries of numer- | '° the establisament of this kind of | bedy can got relief at the meeting?” | Tight to question whether or not a = Y| In preparations for the Congress, P@vers should organize to demai 2 i iven rt i iis Was received in voluntary do- control of the administration of re- a fund unless forced into it by the | he was asked. given recipient of relief is a fur- | cent some work has been done, De! strength of organized labor. Any| “This is a contemptible lie,” he | Ter. They heve, however, nothing | 2tlons from individual workers and | patos have been elected from most | lief by elected representatives of all 3 . ‘ ) 7 ve ere | $394.95 in fines paid by workers for 4 these groups. + ‘Femiris dancers will do a satire on . * ‘ , union that wishes to establish an | replied. “Let me prove it Ras to do with the actual distribution Srehene De Hop Union ald imire Are | cece ; ae: : es ae ee tea umemployed fund, and all aupuids aes picked up Be peck Re ae of funds. Se aa a erlinciaecda Gaeta being elected. The money neces-| This should not mean a displece- ee ‘ oy Ghine te Bs bei raais ai; most realize that chis, among other | being connected with a representa-|_. JS it true, as charged at the|+, the unemployment fund. This | 52zy to send the delegation to Wash- | ment of workers within the relief : P! oe | demands of the workers for the im- | tive of the committee, he asked to| Washington hearings, that workers | Wares the total of receipts §65,101.11.| (7St0n, however, is very slow in administration at present employ \ SS | du ian W + a aba: \ ie Jobless on est Coast ae een cghls Provement of their conditions, if be shown an appli¢ation blank. The #89, contribute regularly to the will present an eviction ous workers’ ot of = Viddene” u rganizations, the imeke and His Yiddene” and pity worker arranged for an in- | : coming in, It implies above all supervision, 4 4 « . | tn : es fund.” ‘The statement on distribution He-explai that th ee ec by the masses of the relist a ieee ste | ' si es | y ask ploy » bu tly. © ‘ 940.16 7 ll Biter pec ne are 5 eo ‘ i z og__| Disproves Charges Agazast Fund | Bowes Pay 114 Per. Cent also showed a record of membership | aa dcienen Ae pane eo: leavint a balance as of Noy. 39, es be herd te icone money in This would mean a more ; 105 ANGELES, Cal., Des. 28. During the interview, Winogred. in the union and numerous details | POSE” 8 1984, of $24,240.35 the sops, forcing the union itself | equitable distribution of relief, and The growing success of the unem-| > Conlained many dat ils of the | In the furriers’ find, Winograd- | of personel life. “This shou'd con. | (ves Payments with payments to ace i ip. | 2, teise the funds through the ar-/ would largsly do awey with’ dise ; ployment organizctions in San Ber-| (ation of the fund eh er r- | SV releted, the manufacturers paid | vince anybody that no ont who is|{2e fund. This is charged by the| Space does not permit a descrip-|-ansement of socials, dances and | cr:minati It weukd prevent ee ; Mardino County has arouced the | tee dis roved cna 3 by ‘William | ome per cent of their total pay roll) not a furrier could get relief even Sueeaie ror the union. yn order to Hon Ob the eabaldecable work done} diiise affairs, leocreion of families on relief rolls ke $ workers here to rebuild the strong| Gran Matthew Wor any by iam |to the fund Ist year, and are pay-| if he passes unrecognized thrower | UScredit the union, Oy ne rnin through iis Unom-| Toward the end of the interview jwho do not “voto right.” Tt would, ; pare that was so successful | ‘0h ors at sehr oeaireg Washing. ing one and a half per cent in 1934. | the meetings where his application ie a Pay Two et ca ar ah Reta race partes ni a PERY ae ee Ot this Va) a grea extent an anay wee F iso last year. | cris ~ |. “Whet is the method employed|is made and discussed,” fe further expla e Work, Stepp logradsky’s i ‘ . ton that it is detrimental to the made and case "Ne | sarrie: 3 medium of Home Relicf Bureaus | offic c graft and corruption and make im- A mass meeting has been called | workers whose union eerie by the union in the administration | stated, ‘urriers pay 35 cents a week in dues office. When asked what he ‘bl hay ik 12 t it. The : . A ‘ed. Whel mployed and other social services. We sub- | thought f the possibilities of | Possible such a situation as we have the State Unemployment Com- | Needle Trades Workers’ nd of the fund?” he was asked. “Five dollars.” when employ i unemployed | ey onl Ae eae mas Of send- in New York State, where a utilities mistze, to which the Relief fi eedle Trades Workers’ Industrial i a they are maintained in good stand- | mit only bare figures. ing the complete delegation, com- a ea iter Legabi nag fhe Sabie Union was denied an opportunity to! At an open membership meeting | “what does the committee do in| ing and are exempt from dues pay-| ‘Through this work, between Nov.| posed of between 20 ana 30 workers, | Paton like Schosilkopf can actually ‘ Riis 2nd “Unemployed Lsagiie present documents disproving these | ee oe 2,000 furriers, Pe | the case of shortage of funds when| ments, Back dues are paid by the |1932 and Nov. 1, 1934, 473 workers ; he repdiod: traffic in the misery of the unem- ‘ate affiliated, to take place on Jan.|°h@7s2s before the Washintgon | Tai a Be committee ey tank | new applicants are added to those | fur workers, once again employed, on} were receiving relief from Home “While it is true that it is ditfi- | Ploved. 2°" as 233 South Broadway. hearing, but they were answered by | pain bade by elected. All the | regularly receiving relief?” the basis of schedules issued by the | Relief Bureaus, 7,21 food checks cult to collect money at this time,| This is a problem which will be $°° “ta princival feature of the | ® S2tement of Ben Gold published | ™ Gare ved for the fUnd OS6:| ota stich canea new applicants are | Union before a-seson starts. These | were obtained, 3,514 rent checks for the reascns pointed out by ;¢lcborated on by the Washington % Be in be an enalvate of the |i,the Deily Worker on Dee. 19. piaced in a separate account in the | otated with the old, so that every |Set up a certain small percentage, | peid, 3.118 gas bills paid, 9,112 elec- | Brother Winosredsky, I wans to as-| Congress for Unemployment In- aged Se nae | telephon> calls and | ame of the committee. New com- | (1! gets an esta! opportunity tothe payment of which brings the tric bills paid, 60 clothing chezl:s cure you that we are doing evary- surance. Tt is an issue around ‘ons Winogradsky, Sige ara Desloiceily elected in iechive eomie slat” card up to date. Inability to pay recoived, mediccl attention received | thing in our power to make cer- which messes of wowtcrs and farme = cdg eit es T, to take the plac | | dues at any time during the year|by 14, coal by 5, $115 in cash re- tain thet our delegation gets to) ers throughout the country can 1 Poa PANO ec When asked how the committee /is taken up before the membership | lief for single work2rs was obtained ts 6 oe h *s | Bt ae At open mestings individual fur | accounts for monies recive and) committee of the union and there | from the Jewish Social Service as itionsl “ iter relief such as| “We really established our unem- workers make pplication by filling | paid out in addition to maintain-| settled to the satisfaction of ail|well as relief from other sources , Wood and grccer:es, (ployment insurance fund in 1932, outa special blank kept by the com- | ing bookkeeping records Winograd- | concerned for 110 single workers, 576 delega- Washington. Among other methcds | unite in common struggle. Tt is part used to raise funds for this purpose | and parcel of the ntl fight of is a film showing on Wednesday, | the eri ASSES Jan, 2, at the union auditorium,” to ae sas pala Ne