Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1934 Olgin, Back from U.S.S.R., to Address C< P* Coliseum Rally every ready, every Party Drive Brought R. I. Workers every section North Will Report PRESIDENT The Editor member, unit, Paterson Workers ROOSEVELT, Talk and district, to take up this Anti-War Congress Into Cleveland About Writes to campaign seriously and For Daily Worker Meet Despite MR. GORMAN AND quickly. We now need SI,OOO Keller Railway New Our Readers NEW YORK. Joseph North, (Continued Page 1) Shop Walkout per day if we are to carry editors New from By one of the of the BAYONETS L C. A. HATHAWAY’ out our expansion plans. Masses, will report for the Daily strike, and press (Special to the Daily Worker) to the demands of Worker, in day to day dis- silk workers for a membership Candidate for PAWTUCKET. R. 1., Sept. 25. (Continued Page 1) Come to our aid now as you Amt er, 1 AN EDITORIAL from patches, events at the Second meeting for this Saturday spite Scores of workers who were ac- have in the past. in Governor, to Speak at live in the textile United States Congress Against of the announcement of the exec- (Continued Page 1) I strike found telegraphed stories from all War and Fascism, opens from themselves locked out here when which utive board that such a meeting ■ in Chicago on Friday. would not be called until the Bronx Meeting rank and file leadership to continue the strike over the head of these | they tried to return to work yes- strike fronts; we gave most fol- North will be in Chicago lowing week. betrayers, they could see no other way except i terday and today. Many of them detailed organizational and in ) out the return to their Noted Men Speak time to witness the mass parade Resolutions were also NEW YORK M. Olgin. editor of jobs. j were flatly told that they “had political guidance passed stat- Rhe Freiheit and Communist can- , ! no business to be on strike,” or to the strik- of delegates and Chicago wortt- ) ing that no union members could But when they arrived at the mill gates the degree of Gorman's ers which will precede open- be expelled a for Congressman In the 23rd tauntingly were asked, “Why didn’t ers ; we over ) the without membership didate treachery became immediately apparent. In many cases the mills i distributed ing of the i Congressional District in the Bronx, I you come back last week?” Os Fascist Trend Congress with a mass meeting, this as a step against the closed; a was In all cases 10,000 copies of the paper, meeting in the dictatorship who has just returned from a three remained virtual lockout instituted. other Mass resentment against the Coliseum. of Keller; and also thei- months’ tour of the Soviet Union, a few were permitted to begin work; the most militant were ordered United Textile Workers Union mostly free, to the textile an organizer for the broad silk de- ■ (Continued partment by will report at the state election cut; they were blacklisted because they fought for their union and leadership in Pawtucket and Cen- from Page 1) be elected the mem- for i workers. bership, as ratification rally next Sunday in improved conditions. ) tral Falls is sweeping the entire this position has been the Bronx large support among Jewish and vacant since Keller became the open-air stadium of In all the locked-out and blacklisted workers number many thou- ) rank and file in the industry'. The We must be able to do this Workers’Enemies union Negro organization. manager. Coliseum. sands. In the South alone 80,000 are barred from their jobs. In all , best way to get a black eye in I. in the developing strike of, Browder replied that this was The gathering will also greet strike the blacklisted and locked-out one- | these parts is to say something The final resolution | areas workers constitute principally due to lack of intensive condemned Amter, candidate for Governor of third, or possibly even more, of the strikers. j in favor of Francis Gorman or the east and gulf coast maritime Exposed the national strike committee and i York, flying from Chicago work among the latter groups. He the New here ♦ • « United Textile Workers Union. Paterson officials, Eli Keller, i workers, and in all the major said that already Mabel Byrd, a I to make formal acceptance of the Many workers are talking about Mel Werniblad. of Kansas City, William Smith, et al, for their sell- ' fIORMAN'S “sweeping victory” then is this: The best trade unionists, prominent Negro social worker who : nomination. coming out again soon to take up strike struggles now matur- ; Mo., former financial secretary of | out policies in the textile strike. the militant are out i resigned from the N.R.A. in Olgin has embarked on active fighters driven of the mills; those who returned their fight for their original de- protest) District No. 10, has been expelled Silk workers as a group infuriated ing. over the discrimination Ne- work for his candidacy as Con- to the mills do so on the same starvation, stretch-out conditions which mands where were against ! from the Communist Party and is ) by Keller’s recent actions declared they compelled gro workers, was a of gressman and has already been as- they struck against. Every worker, in he face of such evidence, can to The betrayals of re- member the hereby exposed as a stool at this meeting that Keller j leave off by the traitorous lead- the arrangements’ committee the | pigeon. must sured of co-operation on the part clearly see that Gorman’s “sweeping victory” merely a victory ers of I The Party is in possession be kicked out. was of the United Textile Workers formist leaders in struggle Anti-War Congress, and that of let- Os working-class organizations of for the bosses. For the textile workers, the! ters addressed to him, as “No. 15,” Gorman's sweeping victory” j Union. editor of one of the largest ) Today many more workers re- the Bronx. was a miserable after struggle (Toledo, Min- Negro I i from 6059 So. Maplewood Ave.. sell-out, a criminal betrayal. Many workers here have ex- newspapers also a of turned to their mills, although pressed was member Chicago, 111., in This is Roosevelt's “New Deal” in action. This is what grows out regret that they were not neapolis, Milwaukee, San this important which he is asked j there are still several thousand, ac- C. P. Active In Cleveland Shop under leadership committee. to obtain the of "faith in Roosevelt.” These are the results which flow from Roose- | the of Ann Burlak In connection with minority "Butcher Workman” cording to the union, who have not CLEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 25. • and the National Francisco, and now textile), paper and to sign receipts "for ) i velt. Gorman and bayonets. Textile Workers groups. Rabbi Goldstein brought out vet returned to the shops. Some The Communist Party election cam- I Union in the strike and increased I June account,” one for $25. dated I were forced out on strike I It works this way, fellow workers: Roosevelt lets loose a reign of tke fascist the point that the wealthy Jews in) again paign here is being carried into im- June 6, and another for S3O, dated ) when bosses attempted to put terror against the workers a flood of (Special to Daily this country are pursuing the same over portant shops in an energetic and and demagogy (deceptive prem- the Worker) trend of the city, state and June 12. wage cuts, ises) Gorman, MANCHESTER, course that the Jewish bourgeoisie [ and discrimination. thorough manner. ; who pretends to be a labor leader, advises you to h;» ? Conn., Sept. 25. —The of national governments, places followed in Germany. “They turn) Shortly before these proofs were ) In Collinwood, a working-class "faith in the President” and return to work; the Socialist Party leader, workers the Cheney Silk Mill, though back, anxiously to Hitlerism and fascism," he obtained and all Party records| suburb, the campaign is being cen- as well as high U.T.W. official. Emil Rieve, who wins the confidence of are added responsibilities on a were I waiting the official strike report charged, “because they feel that un- ) taken away from Wermblad, huge New York by talking as a “Socialist,” urges the to tered around the workers workers “stand by the tomorrow to verify the paper like the Daily Worker, der a fascist regime they can buy there was an attack upon the Kan- Central shops. The re- to prevalent DR. J. SAMOSTIE Railroad union.” “support Gorman”; and the expelled member of the Com- opinion of the Many say safety for themselves prop- sas City headquarters of the Party sponse of workers in shop sell-out. which takes its stand square- and their the the munist Party, Eli Keller, of Paterson who poses still as a Communist,” the strike ending was erty, whereas they and arrests of Party and 220 East 12th Street is excellent. premature know definitely) non- also, though “criticizing" Gorman’s “victory,” urges workers since nothing gained; they are ac- ly as the spokesman for the that should Communists come into Party workers, which indicated a Skin, Urinary and Blood The campaign started by the to ac- was cept it. way from tually dazed. power, their property fairly Intimate knowledge on the Conditions issues “Red Express,” a All the Roosevelt to Eli Keller, one sees a chain that workers’ movement in the would in- two of the The Communist Party, evitably be part of the police as to who Lady Physicians in Attendance mimeographed paper published by serves only to enslave the workers.
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