The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 31, 1929, Page 2

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DANY WORKER, NEW YORE, THU DAY, OCTOSER 31, 1929 Vote for Your Class Interests! F ight Wage Cuts! Vote Communist! VINE COMMUNIST Communist Activities WORKERS HEAR’ Central Brooklyn Election Rally. tion rally will be held Fr > at the Tivoli 1 com WEETS LEAD 10 sss: x Thursday, & 1 St. Diseu 30 nd district plenum, speaker, * * As Final Drive for Election Campaign (Continued from Page One) ng will be in Tivoli Hall, 20 Myrtle Ave., and will be addressed by Otto | », for compt candidate for aldermen, * Section 6, president of the board and Fred Biedenkapp, general man- 1S, Section 3. Unit ager of the Independent Shoe Work-| pauca mbating Thunage$. 1080 ’ Union and candidate for i- |p. m., a Broadway mt of tl> borough of Broo | ia chon: The goverment e against the| Org Friday, 8 p.m nilitant shoe workers will be dealt |&*. LH RRO | lad with at this meeting in the light of | tion or An he Communist election The two Manhattan meetings will be at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E.| Fourth St., and at Central Palace, 83 Forsyth St. Manha: Lyceum | b | imp ‘Red Mant. ng will be speakérs wi!l be Samuel Darcy, can- cidate for alderman in the Eighth District; Alexander Trachtenberg, candidate for assembly in the Sixth District, and Vern Smith, candidate for district attorney of New York | County. The Centrcl Palace meeting will ve addressed by M. J, Olgin, editor of the Freik. 1 candidate fc> as- bly in Plumbers Helpers’ Gastonia Meet. ces of the America lum bers eaite 3 the Fourth District, | Bronx, and Da-cy and Trachtenberg. \ The three open air meeti Ss; morrow night will be at Browns ville, Stone and Pitkins. Speake Lena Chernenko, Alfred Wagen- necht, Otto Huiswood, Hyman Lev- |p. ing, a needle trades speaker and Ape speaker in Yiddish. Harlem, 137th St. and Seventh | * Ave. Speakers: Otto Hall, Richard |1 (WL B. Moore, Fanny Austin, Juliet Stuart Poyntz, A. Markoff, Albert | Moreau, Manya Reiss. Harlem, 116th St. and Second Ave, Speak- ers: Fred Biedenkapp, Joseph Mag- | jiacano, Hyman Levine, S. Nesin, Otto Hall, Gordon, Lena Chernenko. | Bronx, Prospect and Longwood. | Speakers: W. W. Weinstone, J. S. Th 1 Prog Poyntz, M. J. Olgin, Rebecca Grecht, | i!) give its 18th dance @ HM Gell, ‘Rose | Wortis, G. Primotf,| tye! tan ertedne avantnes Otto Hall, R, B. Moore. Downtown, 10th St. and Second | Ave. Speakers: Alexander Trach-| ATIN WORKE “RS tenberg, Samuel Darcy, H. Sazar, J. Louis Engdahl, Vern Smith, Rose Rubin, John Di Santo, Louis A. Bas-| sen, Reactionaries Couldn’t Lure Them to Havana All o'clock. WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 30.— Further details of the calling off of FLIERS TODAY iT \through the camouflage thrown over . 5 |this action by the A. F. L. general 25,000 Toilers in Huge council Detroit Welcome | (Continued from Page One) ganizations, in addition to thousands of individual workers, will be on) hand at the field demonstration, fol- lowing which the fliers will be es- corted by a caravan of autos to City Hall, where they will receive an of- ficial welcome at 1 p. m. A mes- sage from Osoaviakhim, the Soviet air society sponsoring the Moscow to New York tour, will then be de- livered to the workers of New York by the representatives of the Soviet workers and peasants. The Friends of the Soviet Union have taken the Polo Grounds for the mass reception of Nov. 9th, at which a bronze plaque symbolizing the solidarity of the Soviet and Amer- ican working masses will be present- ed to the airmen, to be cemented on to the wall of the Osoaviakhim building in Moscow as a lasting) satisfactory an effect on Latin memorial of the flight. American workers as the recent ad- Twenty busses filled with workers ditional proof that Cuba has a Wall are coming to this reception from| street government. Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, | Connecticut and New Jersey. Half of the tickets available have already) been sold, and the F. 8, U, urges workers not wishing to miss the event to secure tickets immediately | at 175 Fifth Ave, | . DETROIT, Mich, Oct, 29 (De-) layed).—At the astounding reception | given to the four Soviet fliers to- night, Danceland Auditorium, the largest hall in the city, was packed to the doors, with thousands stand- ing in the lobby and two extra halls, pressed into service for the overflow crowd, likewise jammed, Even so, ten thousand workers) thronged the streets around the/ auditorium, and, unable to gain ad-) mittance to the halls, listened to loud speakers broadcasting the reception program. At least 25,000 workers turned out to welcome to fliers, breaking into tremendous cheers when they arrived at the auditorium. The police riot squad was out in force, but merely stood by, flabber-| | rally at Madison Square Garden gasted by the size of the crowd. The! | are also ready today. enthusiasm of the workers over the All sections of the Party must latest achievement of the Soviet) | call for the distribution of the Union has astounded the capitalist) | literaturc. Those units that have press, not arranged for their supply through their sections must call at the district office of the Com- munist Party at 26-28 Union Square. Another leaflet is available which exposes the fascist terror now raging through the country and which describes clearly the role o fthe strike-breaking capi- talist parties, Brownsville. n St. Mer trades workers in up scheduled to t file appl than Nov Fraction. g at the Agitprop representative present e. * eco-Vanzetti Branch, I. L. D. ant meeting Monday, 8:00 n m., at 1472 Boston Road. Chaba is fe Harlem Youth Dance. Harlem Progressive Youth Club the season Ma Com Workers will meetings will start at Two months ago Secretary Igle- sias, arriving in Washington from Porto Rico, consulted with President | Green as to whether the Congress should be moved from Havana to some other place where police espionage upon the debate would be less strict than under the Machado dictatorship. Iglesias is as conserv- the Latin American workers. It was then announced that no change would be made. The executive coun- cil of the A. F. of L. voted to at- tend the Havana Congress. However, underlings in the A. F. L. offices here now admit that “re- turns to invitations sent to the labor organizations in South America, have been very unsatisfactory,” that the action of the U. S. banker Moneado government in Nicaragua which simply exiled all known labor leaders, is producing almost as un- Vote Commun- For Your Ch int 50,000 Leaflets Announcing “12th” Meet Ready Today Fifty thousand leaflets an- nouncing the celebration of the Twelfth Anniversary of the Rus- sian Revolution and the Commun- ist election campaign rally in Madison Square Garden Sunday are ready for distribution today, the election campaign committee of the Communist Party an- nounced. Twenty-five thousand issues of the special election edition of the Daily Worker will be ready to- morrow at midnight for distribu- tion Friday. The committee also announces that 25,000 stickers for Sunday’s SEWING MACHINE WORKERS ‘ STRIKE, ORANGE, Mass. (By Mail.)— Workers of the New Home Sewin, Machine Company here, 200 number, went out on strike agains’ | wage cuts of from 15 to 20 per cent | made on piece work operations, stole Terror! Vote Com- orkers who | @ ion | ative as they make ’em but he knew} and | | Unit Section 2. meeting today. Important L All must attend rigs ae Youth Office Workers a Meeting Monday, 7 p. m., 26 }Union Sq. Important, ak unit w | n Monday | Section 2 t Fuactionarien, c. and D. wc ¥ Cpt at L119 Broad: —— |sentenced to long prison terms in| 1 OAS or a seer een ke pues Up (Continued from Page One) —_| North Carolina, it is interesting to ‘Greene Broax Erection Banquet. |the election campaign will be an-|see how e is dispensed “in the | Lower Bronx Election Banauet- . \alyzed and the workers of New York|land of the free and the home of lidate on the ballot and the/called to cast their vote for the only ‘the brave.” p of the campaign, Party and | : | Units of the Lower Bronx |Party that is facing them—the Com-| In the play, we view a murder! Scene from “Scandal?” the latest | will give. a banquet at 718 E. 188th | munist Party. |trial in a small New Jersey town importation from the Soviet studios, ood talent, prominent speakers, Ad-| The socialist achievements of the|Where a Frenchwoman appears be-|showing at the Film Guild Cinema mission 50 cents. 9 ‘great Five Year Plan, which is|fote her peers charged with killing | this week. | €. P. Building ‘Tradex Workers, strengthening the Soviet Union|her husband. Of course, she is not j Workers in the building trades who | 3: var e i rialist| of the working class row or | ary, members of the Parse are in (Aeminse | the: war the imperialist, ¢ ‘pag tate ig class nor was her ‘ i | structed to attend the fraction meet- | powers are preparing against it, will | dea usband, Nevertheless the| America, Mrs. Fiske gives an un- | p. m, Saturday in the Work-|he hailed as the flaming symbol of|Methods of “justice” are laid bare/usually superior p Com, Jack Johnstone will 73.45, ir 9° | for ll te ” M the building of socialism in the|for all to see. Mr. Ballard, the! The rest of the cast Workers’ Republic and of the revo- playwright, has done a good job markably good. Wilton | jutionary struggle against capital-|@nd should be congratulated. portrays the part of the judge eal oklyn. | Splendid program; following the banquet; Party lates will speak Fraternal Organization erman’s jazz band secured for ae Vee C. W. W. Membership Meet. M. Olgin will speak at a gen- | gral membership "meeting of the. U. C, W. W._on Friday, 8 p, m, at the Workers Center, 4th’ floor. Meeting alled to discuss the present situation future tasks of the councils. Svery member must be present U. Cc, W. Me. env are Wale: he members must meet at um, 66 E. 4th St. m. for special work. ae Coop. Blection Rally. | Blection rally Monday, § p. m., in the auditorium of the’ Cooperative | Colony, J. Poyntz, B. Gold, R. Wor- tis, and other ‘speakers, * Volunteers Waslea: . T. W, U, 104 bth Ave, Apply j room 1 eo joe los Theatrical and Art Workers, Monday, 8 p. m., at 26] first floor. Committee: Maurice, Bavin, Wolf, Landy, Segall, Greenblat, Balinoff. naniede. sect Important meeting tod: 8.30. p. m, at 26 Union Sq. T. U. U. L, strike, election to be discussed. Jail Communist for | Giving Out Election Leaflets at Hearns | workers on the run all week for long hours and low wages, is deter- | mined that its rebellious exploited | shall not receive the message of the | Communist Party for the coming | elections. So police obligingly arrested two | other charges pending,” the union | members of the Communist Party who distributed election appeals out- | side the Hearn store last night. The yare Harry Breslaw and Ida Lederman. THE STREET SINGER ~ Lederman faces trial at Second pelq an enthusiastic membership | Ave. and Second St. court today or disorderly conduct charges, He was released after arrest on $500 bail |furnished by the New York local of | |the International Labor Defense. | Fearing the effect of 700 leaflets | | eagerly taken when Breslaw gave them out Wednesday, a Hearn boss had a store detective and police in readiness as the distribution com- menced at 5.30 last night. Special police began a fight as | ‘soon as Breslaw appeared. “I told | you I’d take you to jail if I caught | you here again,” a Tammany aide said as he pushed him. “What the hell are you doing here now?” When the vorker ir .':ted on his right to distribute the leaflets he |was taken to Mercer St. station. By 1927-29 the U. 8. S, R, had sur- passed the pre-war economic level and had started on the road of basic reconstruction. At the end of the Five Year Plan in 1933 the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics will surpass in production the greatest of the capitalist countries, Hear how this will be done at the 12th Anniversary Celebration of the Russian Revolution Jand Communist Blection Rally at | Madison Square Garden, Sunday, No- vember 3, at 2 p. the | "= leading the C, P, CANDIDATES” AT "12TH" RALLY “Class Against Class’ | Is “Garden” Slogan ism and imperialist wars through-| jout the world. Efforts are being made to secure sufficient funds to bail out the seven Gastonia defendants so that they ‘ean appear at the Madison Square |Garden celebration. |tional Labor workers who want to see and hear |fighters for their class to rush funds at once to 80 East 11th St. The musical program is arousing great interest. Mass singing of| revolutionary songs will be its out- standing feature, with the Freiheit Gesangs Verein and a 50-piece or- ‘chestra, directed by Jacob Shaeffer, way. The Freiheit Gesangs Verein will sing in English for the first time in its history. Get your tickets before it is too late. They are 50 and 75 cents and are on sale at the New York dis-| trict office of the Communist Party, 26 Union Square; Freiheit, 30 Union Squ Needle Trades Workers’ In-| dustrial Union, 131 W. 28th St.; and Workers Bookshop, 30 Union Square. Framed Food Clerks Stand Trial Today; Union Plans Strike The judge at New Jersey Ave., rooklyn, court is expected today to give his verdict on framed charges |against Max Teitelbaum and A. Til- len of the Food Clerks’ Industrial Hearns, the ath § St. department | | store which keeps thousands of its | Union, brought by C. Heller of the right wing A. F. of L. Butchers’ Union. The right winger’s story to the court is expected to be about an |“attack” Teitelbaum and Tillen made jon him. “We are ready to face these and declared yesterday. We are deter- mined to go ahead with our task \of organizing a strong union of New York food clerks.” To push that objective the union |meeting at 16 W. 2ist St. Tuesday night to discuss the coming strike. Fifteen militant members “were elected to the strike committee, The will .im especially at organ- izing the bigger grocer and chain stores. Mark Placing Party Candidates in Bronx at Banquet Saturday Party and League units of the Lower Bronx will celebrate the plac- jing of Communist Party candidates on the ballot in that section, and the wind-up of the present cam- paign, at a banquet at 715 E. 138th St. this Saturday night. This is the first time in the his- tory of the Party that its candidates are running for election in the Lower Bronx and the arrangements committee promises New York work- ers that the banquet will be worthy of the occasion. There will be good food, good talent and prominent speakers. Tickets are 50 cents, Don't postpone buying your Reception for Soviet Fliers Saturday, November 9, at 6:30 P.M. POLO GROUNDS 155th Street and Eighth Avenue ALL FOUR FLIERS WILL SPEAK Tickets 75c, $1,00 and $1.50 at office of FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION 175 Fifth Avenue, Room 511 Half of the available tickets sold aut, Que Hundred Musicians Great Parade with Banners Excellent Program ) tickets—you may be too late. » | week: The Interna-} Defense calls on all) Fred Beal and the other six brave; |The Exalted Papitalaede Jury Syst System i ina Play | ° | FROM NE\ NEW SOVIET FILM. _ The exalted capitalist jury system | is made to look ridiculous in “Ladies | lof the Jury” by Fred Ballard, now | | jat Erlanger’s Theatre, where un- | | doubedty it will stay for many a pening! the eanelgae aie eed! E. Beal and his feliow workers were gives him a realistic touch. Others in the large cast include Al Roberts, Germaine Giouz, Vincent James, Elsie Keene and rdis Lawrence. The play is presented by A. L. Er- langer and George C. Tyler. For an enjoyable evenni: theatre, “Ladies of the Jury heartily recommended. The opening scene is the court jroom and here we watch the evi- dence being given to the jury. We then switch to the jury room where noly one of the 12 jurors, half of which are women, favors a verdict of “not guilty.” at the can be The 12 jurors are supposed to be la cross section of any small town | jin North Carolina or New Jersey. | |In this case it includes a candy mer- | |chant, a grocer, an ex-chorus girl, Mass Strike Picketing a so-called reformer and other mem- | bers of the petty-bourgeoisie, In| _ (Continued from Page One) their moralistic interpretation of changed to one of disorderly con- things, they all favor the conviction 4uct of the defendant. Paul Doyle and William O’Brien If the woman on trial would have |Were found guilty by Magistrate been a strike leader, such as Vera Brodsky yesterday. Doyle got three| Bush, Sophie Melvin or Amy | days for “throwing stones” at a boss| Schechter, there would have been automobile. O’Brien was fined $3 no way of changnig their opinions, after a boss told the court he had |But it happens she is a member of |Made threats against him. their own class, so finally the house-| Postponed yesterday, cases against wife who stood for acquittal wins |two union leaders, Peter Darck, them to her point of view, one by | former secretary, and Peter Lahow- one, until at last a verdict of “not it, business agent of the union, guilty” is agreed upon by ‘the 12| whom the boss association is trying | good men (and women) and true.” to frame because of their active| The leading role, that of the leadership in this and previous country woman, who convinces the strikes, will be heard Nov. 7. rest of the jury, is in the capable; Both were arrested when police |hands of that peerless actress, Mrs, invaded a strike mecting after a Fiske, who was seen here last seasofi’ strikebreaker picked out five men at as Mrs. Bumstead-Leigh, One of |random and charged them with “as- the finest and leading actresses in’ sault.” ——y “AMUSEMENTS Dp RAMA | YES — THE THREE POST-WAR PERIODS 1918 1923 Deep revolutionary struggles of workers, deep crises of capi- talism in many countries, De- feat of attempt of interven- tion by imperalist powers in Soviet Russia. Consolidation of Soviet power. 923 1927 Partial stabilization of capi- talism. Recovery of Soviet economy. Growth and influ- ence of the Comintern over broad masses. 3 1928 1929 Decay of capitalist stabiliza- tion. Success socialist recon- struction, five year plan, in Soviet Union. Sharpening class battles in imperialist coun- tries and colonial revolutions. AND YOU ARE IN THE THIRD AND THE DAILY WORKER IS IN THE THIRD NOVEMBER 16TH Mass Mobilization Of All Militants To the Radicalized Msases With Our OFFICIAL ORGAN QBRPPA LA The Theatre Guild Presents CASINO 20th St. & Bway. Evs, 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 FRITZ = VICTOR “MLE. x; SCHEFF in HERBERT'S — MODISTE” D Evenings and Saturday Mat. $1 to $3 Wednesday Matinee $1 to $2 62. Evs, 8:60 ‘Th.&Sat, 2:40 GUILD ®- Mats. SHUBERT Thea. 4itn st, way, Evs, $:3 Wedneaday ond’ Saturday : Ww QUEENIB SMITH BHINO in the Musical Comedy Sensation Wisconsin . & BW. abt ; 75 2 Dynamic—Powerfal | Most "Mysterious Figure of Modern Times RASPUTIN ANDREW TOMBES ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 4ith St. W. of B'way, Bee eas ae te ee oN PRINCE OF SINNERS JOHN Comedy B bi | DRI s Bl | Bi NKWATER'S RD be HAND pA. H. WOODS PRESENTS—., FULTON W. 46th st. mvgs. 4:50) MOROSCO THEATRE | Wed. & Sat. 2:30/ 45th St, West of Broadway Evgs, 8:50. Mats, Wed, & Sat. 2:5) Bae OMAN A IELSIE FERGUSON | | GAMBLING. \barame SCARLET PAGES| The Talk of the Town! | | (AIVIC REPERTORY 141%, WIN UNION SHOP, FAIRMOUNT, N. Y. (By Mail.) Ww 9180. Hate, 9d: sat 35] hundred building workers on EVA Le eatutainins rector | the Stae School Building defeated Tonight—“THE SEA GULL” an attempt to use non-union plumb- | Uv Tom. Night—“MLLE, BOURRAT” ers and helpers after 4 strike. | LAST 2 DAYS: NOW PLAYING! ~ WELCOME TO THE SOVIET FLIERS! see pictures of the great Red air-conquerors leaving Moscow on their history-making flight ... vivid views —and on the same program— “SCANDAL?” A Tragicomedy of Modern Youth in Russia at work—in play—in LOVE illustrating the new SOVIET MORALITY FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. Sth St. (Bet. 5th and Gth Aves.) Continuous Daily—Noon to Midi Direction: Symon Gould SPRING 6005—5000 Special Forenoon Prices: Weekdays 12-2—a5cr Sat, & Sun. 12-2—50e For Any Kind of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY Telephone; Murray Bil, S55¢ New York ————— — Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER. Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave New York Between 110th and it!th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House 7 Kast 42nd Street, Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGHON DENTIST 249 FAST 115th STREET Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST *657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N, ¥. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 + VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Vive at Oar Pinee. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., (near 174th 8t. PHONE :— Bronx Station) INTERVALE 9149. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNlversity 5865 — TO Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHER 4, ine? with Aimesonare radicals meet 302 by 12th St, New York | havens your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept, 26-28 Union Sq,, New York City Cor. Second Ave. New York DAILY BXCEPT FRIDAY, 26-28 UNION SQUARE Plea tor tment (1 tight up) "hel i 2700 BRONX PF. K BAST (corner Allerton Ave.) DR. J. MINDEL |},,, FURNISHED R00 LJ + [] 193 East 110th st, NOMS fa SURGECN DENTIST ‘ways smal all tmpeos reverent near eub- 1 UNION SQUARE Room 80s~—-Phone; at Nise ne esa Not sonnected with an ~ BOARDERS WANTED Vigne ‘atrytrest reams) all. improve- Xe nintpwon Bt Bee Sta, snes As c i 5 a, Ste wt WB, Call! Hote) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 198 W, Slot St, Phone Cirele Tad0 BUSINESS MEETING aa 98, (esis Mondag of Ay \ WHO Are Preparing WAR Against the SOVIET UNION ? WHY Were the Gastonia Defendants Sentenced to a Living death in jail WHAT Is the reason for The capitalist Terror in Chicago, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, New York ? The Gastonia Defendants Themselves And the Communist Candidates Will tell you the Answers at the 12TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION and COMMUNIST ELECTION RALLY at MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 49th Street and Eighth Avenue SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 at 2PM. isgee | seine ei I ai Nia a

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