The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 2, 1929, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

|GANDIDATES AT ) the Nighth District, will be assistant) ¥ Of fhe gampaign. Party and | coffee to the strikers. The practice chairman. a banquet at 715 I, 138th | will continue every day. | The mass characte eeneehinent speakers, Ad: | ‘The strike will continue, the union | celebration will be a 6 cents. | declares, against all firms refusing the musical program. | ey ts {the mens’ demands. These include of revu.utionary songs together with) Hag! Keene reeks the 40-hour, five-day week, an in- | the Fieilicit Gesanes Verein and a) y of the Paryt are in-|erease in the minimum wage from | 50-piece band, unde rection of eee gna ithe traction inet $45 to $49.50, proper safety devices | Jacob Shaeffer, will make every| ors Center Com, Jack Johnstone will|and adequate compensation insur- | program: For the first time in its) [uidins trades section of the 1 | Wapestnas | laguncmdech tiem is , ae J hin Pee Ne CHT e Te eae ) e eation wiaeid: Jemploying about 125 men, have al- cannes urday, 8 p, m. a 28th | ready been compelled by the determ- 2 AILE WORKER, DEW ye ORK, BATT DAY, MBER 2, 1929 MORE WORKERS 500 Volunteers Needed for Big Election Rally! In expectation for a monster | turn-out for the 12th anniversary celebration of the Soviet Union and Election ampaign Rally at | Madison Square Garden, the | Party, this year, is organizing | the meeting to maintain Com- munist order and discipline and | | for obtaining the maximum or-| | | ganizational results for the Party. To achieve the best results 500 comrades are needed for various committees. All MARSHALLS, | CAPTAINS and USHERS select- ed by the Units, as well as those who can assist, are instructed to report on SATURDAY, NOVEM- BER 2d, at 2 p. m. sharp, at the Workers’ Center, 4th floor.r HEAR COMMUNIST | “GARDEN” RALLY Push., Fight on Boss, Terror Drive WASHERS STRIKE : 43 Firms Fall As AFL Bosses Plan Sellout (Continyed from Page One) portange’.6f the burning issues) raised by the Communist program. | The speakers will be William W. Weinstone, Communist candidate for mayor;‘Max.Bedacht, member of | | the Seeretariat of the Communist Party; Otto Hall, Negro candidate for comptroller; Ben Gold, secre- tary-treasurer of the Needle Trades Seventy non-union workers yes- terday joined the strike of more than {2,000 window cleaners, Harry Fein- stein, secretary of |Cleaners Protective Union, which is |leading the fight, announced yester: |day. Encouraged by the militan ‘of their fellow workers, who have consisently defied police and gang Workers’ Industrial Union and can-| | DISTRICT EXECUTIVE COM- | Oct. 16, the men applied immediately didate for alderman in the 2:)th Dis-| ‘ _METTRE for union membership} triet, Bronx; Rebecca Grecht, candi-| | Communist Party, New York Sloteg:800. workers formerly osm | date for assembly in the Fifth Dis- District. rict, Bronx; and Gilbert Green,; New York district organizer of the} Young Communist League. Robert Minor, editor of the Daily Worker, will be chairman, and Sam| Darcy, candidate for alderman in’ p. ‘ yet \Protective” since the strike started, | Communist Activities (The new recruits have almost eee re reports. The local workers Inter- to velebrate the, placing of the c. Rational Relief, 799 Broadway, yes- candidate on the ballot and the |terday distributed sandwiches and worker present a participant in this| report on the problem of FREE # lance. Tickéts are selling fast and an. immense crowd is -expected. To, make’ sure of getting in, buy your °° tickets in advance. They are 50 and 75 cents and are on-sale at the New York District office of the Commu- Ue uber party | lination of the strikers to accept | these terms. Meanwhile, officials of ‘he Build- | g Service Employees International Union, of which the striking union Monday, 6: Subject, the ; speaker, Com. nist Party, 26-Union Square; Frei- ‘°° ee Se | local No. 8, have in true A. F. of | heit, 80 Union » Square; Needle 4, Ol Mets Traden Fraction, diplomatic’ style been holding Trades Workers’ Industrial’ Union,| workers‘centers on) Me 8t = pecet negotiations with represent- jatives of the Manhattan Window the Window | |terror since the strike was declared | | ployed in scab shops have joined the | |doubled the membership, Feinstein | JOIN IN WINDOW |The characterization of Werner micre commencing this | Krausg as the fate-ridden track- Jetai | walker is in a class with his perfor- detail of the trip is visual /. 28th St., and Workers Book-| | abor and Fraternal Union Square, |Cleaning Employers Protective As- | Organizations | sociation. * . I. L. D. Issues Call. A ecall-to New York workers to demonstrate for. the-defense of the Soviet Union by attending en masse | the great eelebration of the 12th an- Waite Youth Dithes: ary. of the Russian Revolution| ‘rhe Harlem Progressive Youth Club Madisom Square Garflen tomorrow | will give its 13th dancesof the season . , Give Way for Walker’s S, M $ 3, vas issued: yesterday by. the New) Ave. . Abe evening: Gemtaae | Tammany police last night at- York district of the Internatjonal | Ler ~ band secured for the tacked and broke up a Communist Labor Defense through Rose Baron, |“ te * * |Party election campaign meeting at etary. The call says in part: ‘oop. Election Rally, , | 188th and Second Ave. for the bene- * Tammany Police Break ‘Communist Meeting to pes er ai Sacce-Vanzetti Braneh, I. Important meeting Monda m., at 1472 Boston Road, * Blectio y 8b. m. merican capitalism, as the capi-/ ine coud aly UF the’ Coaperative |fit of the democratic party. talist elass of other countries, is| Colony. J. Poyntz, B. Gold, R. Wo The Communist speaking stand ‘ | tis, and other speakers prepaying a war to destroy the onl, * \was erected and about 200 workers Ww ‘orkers Republic. The increase s on. tie working class, as evi- ed in. Gastonia, Chicago, Los, Yotuntegrn Phas bal gathered around to listen when a 4 "|Tammany speaking van drove up,| and their leader told the police of- Apply room 1707, bth Ave eats eae | ‘Theatrical and Art Workers, Angeles, Pittsburgh and New York} Meeting Monday, 8 p.-m., at 26 | ficer, “Get those damn Reds out of City, are part-of these war prepara- wget any: war pits here.” Police came down in force, tions,: Phe Madison Square Garden cublat, Balivoff. "9% | dragged N. Garcia and A. Garcia,} celebration must therefore be a! tighty demonstration for the de-| fense of the Soviet Union, a mighty | challange to the war plots of the, imparialigts,” speakers, from the platform, drove) |the erowd by force over in front of the Tammany speaker, and drove the Communist speakers and com- mittee down the street, Down with the *Laber” Imperial~ ism of the baler gay B Government, ‘ory prepara~ catane the USSR— s imperialist colonial Down | polieyt Hail the Five Year, Plan ot Socialist Construciton ! Demonstrate tor Derense of the Soviet Union / AT THE 12th Anniversary of the U. S. S. R. Communist Election Rally Lr] Defeat the Capitalist Terror Campaign! Demand the Release of the Convicted Gas- tonia Stvike Leaders! Rally Around the Communist Party — Leader of the Work- ing Class he All their STRUGGLES! MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Forty-ninth Street and Eighth Avenue Sunday, November 3, at 2 P. M. DOORS OPEN AT 1 P, M. SPEAKERS: WM: W. WEINSTONE OTTO HALL ROBERT MINOR Candidate for Mayor Editor Daily Worker MAX BEDACHT, BEN GOLD, GILBERT GREEN, REBECC A GRECHT UNUSUAL MUSICAL PROGRAM Freiheit Singing Society, for the first time in English Revolu- tionary Songe—-with Maas Singing by the Audience Candidate fey Comptroller Tickets in Advance at 26-28 Unton Sq. ADMISSION: 50 and 75c, ARTHUR JUDSON, Mgr. “SHATTERED? _ i nmencing today, the Film Guild sena will present a double bill consisting .of Werner Krauss in AL eat "a tragedy in five acts Mayer, the author of “The a ane and Oscar Wilde’s sa- tire, “Lady Windermere’s Fan.” “Shattered,” which was first pre- sented in this country in 1922, was the first film to tell its complete story without titles. It is consider- ed one of the . most naturalistic dramas the screen has ever produced. Ukrainian Shook the World, hi led as the equal of Potem- “Around t pelin,” a tal the Hugo gers and a shown at the Cameo Theatre for its world ble, fram the start at Lake- the Atlantic to ; England, to Friedrich- shafen, over Siberia and Russia, mances ‘in “Caligari” and “Secrets ° of a Soul.” The National Board of Review certified it as an exceptional pholeplny 4 ; ss the vast Pacific, and then _ “Lady Windermere’s Fan” is be- over the Golden Gate, San Francisco, ing revived in answer to many re-|fos Angeles, Chicago, Cleveland quests received by the Film Guild. | , : . In this picture, Ernst Lubitsch, with a cast headed by Irene Rich, convey to the sereen the essence and sub- stance of Oscar Wilde’s sardonic criticism of society. Due to censorship difficult: ces of the voyage of the Graf obtsined by Robert Hartman, raman who act dirigible on i s the Atiantic to Lake- rman e across LECTURES AND FORL THE PEOPLES ale OF NEW YORK 5 = THIRTY-SECOND SEASON OPENS At COOPER UNION, 8th Street and Astar Place. Friday, November 8th, at 8 a’clock, with the first lectures in a year's course. ' The Psychology of Progvess A Course of Lectures on the Piace of Mind in the Evolution of Society = By Everett Dean Martin. Lectures on Ethics and Soc: = = Sc e | On Sunday Evenings, starts November 10th with al Lecture on Fashions and Philosophy. BY PROFESSOR FREDERICK J, E. WoopsripcE. x | Lectures on Natural Science On Tuesday Evenings, start: a Lecture on The Senses We I BY Dr. C. R. Stockarp. All lectures at Cooper Union at 8 o’clock— Admission Free The School of the People’s Iustitute i Opens at the MUHLENBERG BRANCH Liprary, 209 November arn With. 12th, with = = West 23rd Street—Monday, November 11th. Mondays—The Autobiography of America. BY MARK VAN DorEN. Wednesdays—Problems in the Psycholog: BY E. Boyp BARRETT. The Industrial Discipline BY RexrorD Guy TUGWELL. Thursdays—The Development of Fundamental Prob- lems in Philosophy and Science, BY E, G, SPAULDING. Saturdays—Types of Character. BY HOUSTON PETERSON. All Lectures at 8:30 | header 's Round Table I, Art and the Machine— DouGias HASKELL—Nov. 12, 19, 26, Dee. 3, 10, 135 Street Branch Library—8:30 P. M. OAKLEY JOHNSON—Novy. 14 Dec. 5, a 19.| 115th Street Branch Library—8:30 P, M HUGER ELLIOTT—Nov. 22, 29, Dec. 6, 13, a THOMAS MuNnROE—Jan. 2, 9, 16, 23, 30. Thompkins Square Branch Library—8:30 P, M.| BARRETT CLARKE—Jan. 7, 14, 21, 28, Feb. 4. Riverside Branch Library—8:30 P. M II. Development of Western Thought— | RicHarD McKron—Weekly Starting Nov. 13, Muhlenberg Branch Library—8:30 P. M. RAYMOND WEAVER—Weekly Starting November + | Muhlenberg Branch Library—8:30 P. M, | SS EAST SIDE OPEN FORUM CHURCH OF ALL NATIONS (9 Second Ave, N, ¥, G.) LABOR TEMPLE lth Stand Second SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 5:00 p. mi — DR. G. F, BECK ROPEAN IMPRESSIONS: T: LY” (given as a travelogue) Sunday, Nov. 3, 7:45 P. M. POLITICAL SYMPOSIUM Republican Irwin Kurtz Demoeratic Morris H. Panger||| Socialist Algernon Lee]|) Communist H. M, Wicks Admission Free—Eyeryone Invited AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL CHURCH AND FORUM EDMUND B. CHAFFEE ON AND MATERIALISTIC TION OF HISTORY” DR. HANNAH STONE RTH CONTROL? LL WELCOME— | SOVIET TRACTOR UNIT GROWS, Additieal foress for the eco-oper- ative tractor manufacturing colony INGERSOLL FORUM raene Clg at oJ “Kroy ‘sin are leaving in Novem- SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 ber, Comrs "> Goebel of Chieago DR. WOLF ADLER states. The colony is operated’ by the Soviet /»-eriean Tractor Co-op- “Psychological Aspects of Sex" ADMISSION 25 CENTS erative Association, and assembles and repaivs machines. It is located near Armarusa, in the Caucasus. MUSIC AND CONCERTS | Philharmonic - Symphony TOSCANINI, Conductor METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE 'Thia Sunday Aft. Nov. 3 at 4:00 BERLIOZ—FRANCK—RESPIGHE Wednexd PIANO REY Winijred Wachride Concert Met. Dan Maver, Inc. (StoinWay' Piano) CARNEGIB HALT. Fa ‘Thursday Kve, Nev, 7, at si45 Build Up the United Front of Fri, Aft, Nov. 8 nt 2it0) , | Ni Nunday Afternoon, Nov, 10, mt 400, ud ‘Unat the From the Bot, BEBTHOVEN—HAYDN—STRAUSS | Attend Mndixo (Steinway) | November Sat 2 vy the S — THE THREE POST-WAR PERIODS Triple-Feature Prog Special S 1918 dust Arrived from Moscow VIVID VIEWS OF THE SOV! ERS ‘i 1923 Now in New Yo v —_— ALSO REMARKABLE MAN VERS OF THE RED ARMY Deep re truggles WERNER KRAUSS oon ean talism in many countries. De- es ation since “DR. CALIGARI” and feat of attempt of interven- OF A SOUL” tion by imperalist powers in Soviet Russia. Consolidation of Soviet power. 2 basi My on Author of —and on the same progran OSCAR WILDE'S liant Satir ADY WINI _ Directed by LUBITSCH Partial of 52 W. Sth st. 1 Gth Aves.) talism. of Continuous D: Midnight economy and influ- ence of the Comintern over broad masse Starting t That Shook the. World”— 3 —— The Theatre Guild Presents — 1928 1929 Decay of capitalist stabilizae By LEONHARD FRANK tion. Success socialist recon- i struction, five year plan, in | Soviet Union. Sharpening class THEATR a REBT, EV GS 8:50 battles in imperialist coun- GUILD MAT AY and SATURDAY 2:40 tries and colonial revolutions. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY, | AND YOU ARE IN THE THIRD |CASINO FRITZI SCHEFF io Ae A) THE STREET SINGER AND THE | DAILY WORKER | IS IN THE THIRD NOVEMBER 16TH Mass Mobilization Of All Militants To the Radicalized VICTOR ANDREW TOMBES ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE y of Religion | DRINKWATER’S SO De cls elie ail pie REPERTORY 11th, 8t Hamilton Fish Park Branch Library—8:30 P.M. h Kast 42nd Street, New York a ce RNR Msases With Our | OFFICIAL ORGAN ‘7th §t., W. of Biway. Chick, 9944, | Evgs, $:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 JOHN Comedy BIRD & HAND 1 WADING : 0: = . CAME Arsttigan 9O* Now SULTON trots Wed Sat to | Cooperators! Patronize EORGE M, COHAN in Gara 2 ee |l rae The Talk of the Town! 657 Allerton Avenue IR / GRAF Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. ZEPPELIN” re- —— d Hear our Gay : INE, Director St ers ‘ Spital- Comrade ‘ MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N, ¥. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 ity Co-operaters Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Dairy i im Next to Unity Co-operative House omrades | | Plensant to ‘Diss "ce Our Place, For Any Kind of insurance’ ARL BRODSKY Velephone; Murray Hil, S536 RESTAURANT 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALB 9149, Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1. flight up) 2700 BRONX P. “KK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF aasy 34 th $ pe 5 iJ Tf New Yark DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment || Telephone: Lehigh 022 Vegetarian (DR. J. MINDEL||\; RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop | M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803-—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not connected with any other office All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Dr. M. Wolfson] Surgeon Denti: UB, C Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for ! -ctings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc, 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 vth St HEALTH FOOD te Vegetarian RESTAURANT * 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone; UNIversity 5865 come to see long experie: you of WORKERS “CHORUS ENGLISH LANGUAGE Now Being Organized Register at Workers International Relief. New Address: 949 BROADWAY Room 612, Telephone Algonquin 5048 Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 | John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphe: where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York AMALGAMATED Foon ORR Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City TUDOR INN Light alvytront roamny xcellent meals, won St. Sta, 100? Apt. 4B. Restaurant vem 113 Kast 14th Street —— Ee rE HOME ase Ail Amigravementes ene ab “SLAUGHTERED IN SPEED-UP. Twenty men will have been killed Hotel and Restaurant wreokeny food, don't fa We serve special luncheon plates from 11;30-3 p. m. to visit M4 Food Workers 133 W. Slat St, Phone Circle "ha onthe ie ee Neaso @ Prices when the Hudson River bridge from Na on the # first Monday of TRY OUR SPROIAL Manhatton to New Jersey is com- SUNDAY DINNER! | pleted, if deaths occur at the same j vate as in the past two years, shit's

Other pages from this issue: