The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 30, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two TINICH IS STILL IN DANGER OF DEATH INJUCO-SLAVIA ® ny Still on Ellis Island; Says “Keep Fighting” In cold, priso’ a little distan of Liberty,” Ste The g io of the working » returning to former sle per, Rad s tional Ri f kite Whether he goes to nother raid was made on the death, or whether led to scare the st rs, who America will force the kers Union. Forty-seven to allow him to remain at kitchen Police Fail to Intimidate orkers were arrested. Shoe Strikers | New York 94 Hi .. Broo hen Tuesday, and again the polic are led by the Independent Shoe Above, strikers the aga growing use of deportations as an as part of the fight emplo; weapon against militant foreign born workers. “Whatever happens to me,” he told a representative of the Inter- national Labor Defense who visited him, “Keep on with the fight; mob- ilize the masses. HIT MEXICO-US. | SOVIET BREAK (Continued from Page One) j The writ of habeas son his| | case has not yet been heard. It |editor of the F Jorge, may come up within the next week. |™member of the revolutionary Iz Zinich’s fate depends on the out-| Secretariat for the Latin Amer on and on the pro- | countries elected at the last cot ng class to save|in Montevideo; Beatrice ing squad or tor- | Secreta the lo Anti-Imperialist Leagt Si him from the fi ture in Jugo-Sla ade! lan, of the editorial of the Daily Worker, Anton Moreau, n tional s 'y of the All Amex Anti-Imp: League. John V | liamson, m er of the District Committee of the Comm nist Party, New York District will be chairman. It has been learned through the j tematically the American govern- International Labor Defense that;ment has betrayed the mass of the two militant Japanese workers, both | Mexican workers. First, through its active labor agitators among the | alliance wtih the Catholic church Pacific Coast Japanese work are | promoted by the Wall Street match-| now facing deportation. Their cases maker, Morrow, it created the basis are serious in so far as the black \for the reactionary-landlord-nation- hands of Japanese ruling class which | alist-imperialist clique which has is now terrorizing Japan is seer |since been jailing and murdering working behind the arrests. | workers, breaking up labor organ-| Kenmotsu was arrested last Dec. | izations and in various ways trying in San Francisco in connection with |to undermine the Mexican revolu- the Communist protest meetine tionary labor movement. Now this} against American imperialism in puppet iean government which is | Haiti and against Stimson’s note to h ne power against the will of Soviet Russia. Although he was not! t masses of Mexican work- | an illegal entry to this couftry Ken. ers and peasants has obeyed the | motsu is held for deportation be- | orcers | Street and | cause he is a member of the Com- broken relations with the only munist Party and because he defend- | fatherland of the workers, the Union ed the Party banner at the meeting |of Socialist Soviet Republics. The from the hands of the police. | United States government was in-| rested in the break in order toy 8. T. Horiutchi, who used to be in | te nstrate before the delegates New York City until a year ago and | de’ : was very active among Japanese and | gathered at the London Naval Con- American circles is now in El Cen- | ference that it has power enough to tro jail in Southern California. He mobilize all the reactionary forces had been arrested early this year|on the North and South American together with several others when he | Continents against the Soviet Union | went out as one of the TUUL or-|and thereby to be in a better posi- | ganizers to Imperial Valley region | tion to dictate its terms to the other | to help the giant struggle of the | countries for the alliance of the im- | 8,000 Mexican and Filipino agricul- | perialists against the U.S.S.R. The | tural workers. unity of the workers of the United _t The LLD., through Japanese States with the masses of oppressed branches, is now conducting a na-/| colonial and semi-colonial toilers of ; tion-wide campaign to free these Latin-America was never a more} two workers. \erying need than today. The break As has been reported thru the ‘of relations by Mexico with the So- Daily Worker and the Labor Unity,|viet Union is directed not only | in Japan there now rules one of the |against the Soviet Union but also m terroristic regime under “lib- | against the revolutionary masses of eral” Minseito government. . The Latin-America. gree of the ruthlessness of the reign| “At the demonstration on Monday can easily be realized by reading evening at the Central Opera House the following remark made by a of New York will show British bourgeois press in K: y with the revolution- “Never before, even in war s of Latin-America and has there been more brutal suppres-| particular Mexico, in defense of the | * Sion of news than under present | Soviet Union, for the development Minseito Cabinet.” Yet this govern- | of revolutionary activity throughout tent walks around as “liberai” andthe Ame s 8 now in London is participating in | cially for the increase of revolution- the Naval Arma Conference | ary activities in Mexico, Haiti, Nica- With all the peace gestures. jonial peoples ragua and now in open revol Give Forty Subjects At Workers School In announcing the approaching termination of the registration period for the new Spring Term, ; " the Workers’ School finds it neces- Sophie Melvin, one of the sary to emphasize that workers | tonia defendants charged with mu must enroll within the next few days | der in the first trial, now national | in order to be sure of getting into | youth organizer of the National | the classes they desire to study.| Textile Workers’ Union, will speak The classes are rapidly being filled. | at the general membership meeting | The wide curriculm embraces 40 | of the New York district of the No subjects which run from a great|T. W. U., at 16 West 21st St., to- number of Marxian-Leninist sub- | night at 8 p.m. jects, History, Problems of the La-, A report w il be made on the bor Movement down to English, Lit- | membership drive during the last erature, ete. few weeks, during which many have joined the union. The Vanity Sport Wear Mill at 136 West 2ist St. is! organized 100 per cent, and has a) op committee. Mill gate distributions of leaflets} are on important part of the mem- bership drive, and will continue un- “The U. S. department of labor | til the New York district convention i issued the warrant for my deporta-| of the union, at 16 West 21st St. ys tion on Nov. 15, 1929. They held) 10 a. m., on Sunday, Feb. 16. it up, hoping that I would be rail-| * 7s eased to prison in the case of “in- BANQUET TO WELCOME | citing Negroes to revolt” brought) EISEMAN. A banquet to welcome Harry against me. IJ was acquitted and they served the warrant.” | Eiseman with 400 present was held The I. L.D. has put $1,000 at Unity Cooperative last night. bail for Graham. Eiseman told of his experiences in| ae SR the reformatory, denounced the po- A CORRECTION, lice for attacking yesterday’s dem- The Daily Worker yesterday, in| onstration, and denounced the/| giving the account of the demonstra- | Coughlin militarization bill. | tion at Union Square, referred to} Other speakers were: Jessie Taft Otto Hall, member of the Central) of the National Committee of the Committee of the Communist Party | Pioneers; Ruth Yukelson, Pioneer of the United States as “director of district organizer; representative Negro organization” in the Commu- | of the Communist Party, and I. L. nist Party. This might lead to a|P., and a Negro worker, Paterson, misunderstanding. The Communist | representing the Young Communist "Party maintains a “Negro Depart-|o._S_E ment” for special attention to the |jzation” in the Communist Party. enlistment of Negro workers as |The Communist Party is the revolu- “members of the Communist Party | tionary Party of the Negro workers and to give special attention to the | equally with the white workers, _ fight on behalf of Negro workers, | struggling,for the fyll political and inst discrimination, for hts in trade unions, etc. Melvin Speaks Tonight At NTW Meeting; One Ga TRY DEPORT GRAHAM. (Continued from Page One) by him and his sort, that I was op-| shi posed to all forms of organized | government, which of course is a) lie. up But | listing all workers alike in the ranks n continents and espe-|5 equal | social equality of all races, and en- | CONFERENCE FOR STRIKERS The workers of Williamsburg are called to attend the conference of} the Workers International Relief, | called for the purpose of organiz- ing an active support for the strik-| ing shoe workers of New York and} ;\the miners who are struggling for months against the bosses and against the Lewis machine who sold out to the employ The call for this conference has sent out by the local office of} the W. I. R. and by Section 6 of the Communist Party of America, to a number of working class organiza- tions, of Party units, unions, work-| men’s ¢ branches, women’s cle councils, workers clubs, cultural so- cieties and all other organizations, to see to it that their delegates should attend this conference. | The conference will take place this Sunday, February 2nd, at 10 a. m. at the Workers Center, 688 Broadway, Brooklyn. Amter to Speak On Unemployment, Crisis 9 On February 2, I. Amter, District Organizer of the Communist Party, will speak on “Unemployment and the Developing Crisis,” at the Work- ers’ School Forum, 26 Union Square. This is of special important in view of the international demonstra- tion to fight against unemployment being undertaken by all the Com- munist Parties in the tvorld, to culminate in a monster demonstra- tion to take place February 26. Communist Activities District Agitprop, Diseussion—Outlines. Leninism. and ger ready patie bler Unit 2, Section 4. Meeting postponed to Thursday, Jan. 40, 8 p m., 143 B. 103 St, Room 6, oe ge ® Eve bass: sd m., . 3875 Third Ave., near vital interest all worke Auspices, Section 5 unist Party and Left Wing 1n . of L. local. * 8 * ¢ GF, Section 1. Uni y, Jan, 20, same place. Metal Fraction, y night, 8 p, m., 26 Union Sq. ne as South Brooklyn Anti-War Liebkneeht Meet. 8 p.m, Dance st 136 15th St., Industrial Organizer terature ois0t) and Unit Li y, January Unic Section 4. wnox Ave, Knecht Anti-War Meeting, nd Brownsville near A Oe SS Pitkin Ave., m, speakers, shments. Ad! Bronx bknecht Memorial. Saturé February 1, 7 p, m,, 1330 Wilkins Ave. Labor and Fraternal Organizations All income affairs, such as bazaars, @ances, concerts, ete, for which or- ganizations desire publicity in this must be paid for at the rate of $1.00 for a xinge Insertion, $2.00 for three insertions. The space al. Jowed at this rate is a maximum of 7 at five lines with five words to each Ine. A total of 25 words, cata ares Mass Meeting. Friday, Jan. 31, 8.30 p_m., 237 Brighton Beach ‘Ave. Prominent §} Auspices Communist Party i nd Brighton Workers Club. + 28 Painters Mass Meeting. r all unorganized painters, Fri. January 21, 8 p. m.. at. McKinley Square Garden, Boston Road. Nig Tae Fo: Young Workers’ Dance. Saturday, February 1, at Westmins- ter Hall, 78 Lenox Ave., near 114th St. Auaplees, Hartém Progressive Youth Club, R Chorus, , at 33 East 15th St. Ww. Tonight, 8 p. ED ROOMS, large , 18% Hast 110th Street. Opening for Three Children ‘ANOTHER BATT IN GAB STRIKE ing to force back to slavery on the DAILY WORKER, N “ ease z tn BSE EW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1930 LE’ Soviet Director FP, M. Ermler, director of “A Fragment of an Empire.” the new Soviet film now showing at the Cameo Theatre, has made use of every advance in the Soviet cinema- tography in order to create some- |thing quite his own, TIn_ his treatment 29.—/ scenes and episodes e | realistic, both ,/and character OF PITTSBURGH Deputy, Seab, Injured; Striker, 2 Girls, Jail PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan. After several days of compar quietness, fighting drivers and strike breakers wa ; and “wllogavibat newed late today when a pitched tones, His is the method of telling battle on Baum Boulevard sent two an apparently simple story with a men to a hospital and another to a | rand meaning. police station. There is no lack of fantastic, ar- R. A. Newman, 31, a strike-break-|Ditrary sequences in “A Fragment * ‘ % i of an Empire.” Ermler is quite at ing driver, and Robert Kubn, 27, 8! home with the new einema idiom of deputy sheriff, who was guarding! symbols and allegories. His answer Newman's cab, were treated for/to Sergeant Filimonov’s outery:: wounds. Louis Briskey, 22, striker, | “Who is master?” isa most stirring was arrested. bit of symbol screening. But the good old traditions of realistic artistry are not thrown overboard by t ing master-of the Soviet cinema. On the contrary, | Ermler makes subtle use of realistic things and appearances. An empty cigarette box assumes an eloquence and a meaning that only an imagi- |native artist could impart it by \shrewd handling. Ermler knows how to tell a gripping story, and he also knows how to grip his audience to take the strike into their own) by means of deft little touches preg- hands, continue the militant picket-) pant with big meaning. ing, smash the injunction forbidding | picketing and win. of separate he is mostly s to environment ation; but his real- at all its stages has between i re- Agnes Suerr and Pearlmann, fac- tory workers were held without bail 24 hours and fined $10 for distribut- ing Trade Union Unity leaflets to cab strikers. The leaflets are ad- dressed to the 1,600 strikers that the A.F.L., the U. S. labor depart- ment and the county sheriff are try terms of the Parmalee Co. The T.U.U.L. calls on the strikers * * CONDUCTORLESS SYM- PHONY AT CARNEGIE FEBRUARY 21 Conductorless Symphony which will give the fourth iption concert on February 21 Our own age. the dourgeols age, is distingnished by this—that It han simplifica class antagonisms. More and more. society is splitting up into ¢ ent hostile camps, into tw and directly conten. pored ol bourgeoisie and pro- letarint—Marx. The Practical Suggestions fer Building the I. FACTORY DISTRIBUTION AND SALES: Very valuable contacts have been made for the Party in the larger cities and smaller factory towns where a concerted effort has been made at factory distribution. Spasmodic distribuitions, that is, making a distribution at a factory gate one day and forgetting about the factory for the next month bring no concrete results, ; To win Daily Worker readers in a factory, to establish contacts we must (a) distribute and sell the Daily Worker to all workers in the factory every day for at least one week; (b) talk to the workers as you hand them the Daily Worker in order to ascertain which are most sympathetic and secure the names and addresses of such workers: (c) hold factory. gate meetings at which reading of the Daily Worker must be strongly emphasized; (d) at the end of the week’s dis- tribution, call the workers of the factory who have read the paper during the week to a Daily Worker Readers meeting. During the course of the meeting allow them to express their opinions about the Daily Worker. Organize the factory workers who come to the meeting into 2 Daily Worker Read- ers, Builders and Supporters Group; (e) after the first week’s free distribution, announce to the workers, by enclosing a leaflet in each paper distributed, that the following week the paper will be sold at three cents a copy and invite all workers to continue to read it. Station comrades or news- boys at advantageous points who will call out the leading class struggle story of the day and promote sale: (f) secure a small store keeper in the immediate vicinity of the factory to sell the Daily Worker and announce this to the workers, or erect a stand near the factory where the Daily Worker and other Party literature and publications will be sold. During the week in which the factory distribution takes place at least one story about the working conditions in the factory, speed-up, unemployment, must appear in the Daily Worker, inclusive of the issues before the working class and connected with an earnest and strong request that the work- ers in the factory read the Daily Worker and accept its leadership. Once a factory distribution of the Waily Worker is organ- ized, it must not be discontinued until definite contacts are established among a number of workers in the factory, until a maximum number of workers are won as daily readers. Contacts secured must at once be given to the Party for further development. For the larger factories, containing thousands of workers, the Party must mobilize and centralize at the factory gates the greatest number of Party members possible. Very often only two or three comrades are sent out to cover a factory containing a thousand or more workers, with results that are inadequate and discouraging. For instance, a city like Pittsburgh should mobilize fifty Party members for a mass distribution for one week at the steel mills and should continue this task until actual and satisfactory contacts have been made among the exploited steel workers. If, ut the same time, additional comrades can be mobilized for a solid week’s distribution at another factory, this should be done. If the membership does not sufficiently respond for simultaneous distributions at several large industries, then tackle one industry at a time. It is immediately necessary to develop Party forces that Ages 14 to 36 months ’ at Our Nursery School 338 EAST 19TH ST. (near Stuyvesant Park) Group training for children \gfrom9 a.m. to 5 p. m., freeing | 3 mothers for work or activity in the mozement, (interested parents should apply in 2437 i is no separate “Negro organ-' of the Party, without distinction. verson, or phone Gramercy « will understand this kind of Party work to be among the most important tasks comrades should carry on. Lenin said we must establish contacts with the aid of the Party press and that the mere functions of distributing our paper will help to establish real contacts. 26-28 Union Square, New York Idea in Cinema Ma ae THE FRENCH adie: = NAVY SCABS f Mischa Levitzki. ISLE DE | Creates Neu RRS Forces Sailors Abroad LE HAVRE, France, The whole crew of the I steamer Isle de France struck today, prevented the y of The line immed 29. \3 neh line i s the and boat. Cherbourg to scab the ship to | New York. She is expected to sail late tomorrow. | When it is a case of a fight he- | perialist bosses help ea | French line is transferring all of its first class passengers who are in a big rush to the Aquitania, which held up its departure from 6 p. m., the hour set, to midnight, { to receive cita is Sunday . them. erecta ea RM Other Similar Strikes. Strikes on the Isle de F 3 ~~ f other French Line boat at Carnegie Hall has found it neces-| frequent. The French government sary to postpone its modernistic| usually sends naval sailors to tal: program until a later concert. Mr.|their places, threaten them witt Antheil has had to return to Eu- | court martial if they refuse to strike rope before completing the Prelude |break. The Marine Workers’ I Dance Movement that he was writ-| has in the past received th ing for Tamiris and the Conductor- | in New York with a di less Orchestra. leaflets in French, point The program to he played on Feb-|duty to show solidarity ruaty 21 will consist of Mozart’s| workers on strike, and es “Magic Flute” Overture, Mendels- | making a considerable demonstration sohn’s Violin Concerto with Benno) when the ship comes in, to call Rabinoff as soloist, Adolph Weiss’; tention of all other seamen to t Scherzo, “American Life” and Bee-|strike breaking role of the govern thoven’s Eighth Symphony. ment. se bution of out their with st [-AMUSEMENTS- a St. & BY Wiscons, “It's a fine picture, realistic use Movie Wins 3 Star of Rip Van Winkle theme and \f] vivid wcenes of present day —Daily News. |B] Russia. —Dally Worker. | i “One of the most pictures y Viet Russ! AMKINO PRESENTS The American Premiere “A Fragment of an Empire” PRODUCED BY SOVKINO OF Moscow The Rebirth of a Shell-Shocked Men TREMENDOUS, MIGHTY, CONSTRUCTIVE C Theatre Guild Productions "|! “METEOR” By S. N, BEHRMAN | GUILD %: 6%. evs. 8:60 Mats, ‘Th.&Sat, 2:40 IVIC REPERTORY ae v Eves. 8:30, Mat 50c, $1 8. Thur., Sat. + $1.50 LAST WEEK! “RED RUST’ By Kireh | MARTIN BECK | ELTINGE ‘thee. Mats. Wednesday and § . H. WOODS Presents “RECAPTUR | A.Love Story by Preston Stufges Author of “Stricily Dishonorable” MUSIC AND CONCERTS CARNEGIE HALL Sunday Afternoon, Feb. 2 LEVITZK Ouspensky Uves. 8:40. Mats, and Saturday at | | | | | | Ethel Barrimore Theatre 47th Street, West of Broadway Eves, 8:50, Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 ‘ : “Death Takes ‘a Holiday” PIANIST with PHILIP MERIVALE Concert Met. caged he CELI Ste no | A comedy about lite. | Loew’s “Big 2” | PITKIN || PARADISE Pitkin Avenue Grand Concourse Brooklyn Brower 50th St. & 7th Av. Evs. 8:30 JOLSON’s Mats. Thurs. and Sat. ‘The Chocolate Soldier’ OSCAR STRAUS OPERETTA Charles Purcell, Allee MacKenzie VIVIAN HART, ROY CROPPER | mvenvencen amen amie | BRONX THEATRE GUILD Sidney Stayro, Director i} ‘Tremont Theatre, ster Av “THE KILLER” A PLAY ON A SOCIAL PROBLEM S:20: Mats. Wed. & Sat. Tel. ‘Tremont 5685. ives. 500 good orchestra seats—50e | Mats. 500 good orchestra seats—35c | ON BOTH SCREENS 25 STARS—CHORUS OF 200 “HOLLYWOOD REVUE” ALL TALKING G AND ANCING M-G-M Picture Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY SIN Eves, rab enimnenianrenvenvenves ran: ance | EAST SIDE THEATRES | ___ 133 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER EIGHTH STREET Continuous Noon to Midnight. Popular Prices, Four Days Ouly—Jan. 30, 31, Feb. 1 and 2 THRILLING SOVKINO DRAMA “Village of Sin” with EMMA CESSARSKAYA Added Attractions—SOVKINO NEWS Containing Celebration of 12th Anniversary of the October Revolution 2nd Ave. Playhouse) Big Ship Struck: Gov’t ° tween capital and labor, even im- : other. The dent of the | — $$$ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES i terson Bosses, AFL, Church, State, Unite Ss (Continued from Page One) action \ because of the growing the N.T.W., 1g a great silk mnference in P: on, February 9, tatives 0: other the union will be from Paterson The article et Com- formation Council are J. Fitz- here to ¢ nent move John ested in tcliffe, Workers s Union; ocie joining the movement.” intention 0 “on, All Kind of Insurance” RL BRODSEY Murray Hill 5550 Yew York ' NP Telephone 7 Kast In Cooperators! Vatronize SEROY Allerton Avenue | 3215, Bronx, N. ¥. 657 Estabroc WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP W. 1. R, CLOTHID ssing, Repairing Work Done and Delivered s strikers Class d for ro te High Goods ¢ rotits [POM EPOREO NO PODSORIORIOONOOODE ORTANT FOR: CLUBS AND§ ZATIONS Place. BLVD., Bronx St Station) INTERVALE 1787 SOUTHERD (near 174th PHONE: 9149 RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 189 SECOND AVE, UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetariun Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian 1 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 ere ege ra Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A plece with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant | 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL| SURGEON DENTIST — |, | | 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom $03—Phone: Algonquin 8183]! Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY phone for oppointment lephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor. Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers ness meetings held the first the month at 8 p, m. u meetings—the Monday of the month. Wb: ard’ meetings—every — ‘Tues afternoon at 5 o'clock, One Industry! Qne Uniont Vight the Common Maemy! Office cpen from 9 a. m, to 6 p,m,

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