The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 6, 1930, Page 2

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» ww ee wnu.Y+WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1930 Ms r } Page Two |CableWinders Strike; DRESSMAKERS, : | 15 Arrested; Picket COME TO COOPER Those LockedOut Cheer ‘world. 2 ‘a | Already 15 of the strikers have for Industria] Union /anded in the New York and New (Continued fram Paye One) | Jersey coops, because they picketed they New York and New Jersey cops are having a swell time helping the | United States Steel Corporation break a strike of 175 cable winders |the bridge ends to warn imported have concluded their fake set- workers of the strike. Efficient city and state highway police sensed the affront being offered United States Steel and threw the pickets in jail. The whole job is scab. The cable : winders, also unorganized, struck ct immediately a strike com-| when overtime pay was lopped off in every shop. Form a rank | all Sunday work and reduced on file strike committee of all'regular overtime. All the steel comes nakers who have been locked | from the steel trust, which domi ir shops which together | nates the labor policy of the vari- 1 Union will carry | ous contractors. The New York on strikes against every shop where | Structural Iron Workers Union is rs were either locked out| not interesting itself in the cable n down by company union | winders’ strike. guerilla committee through error! cwesepeneninimemnennsne No Money to Fakers! “Do not pay s single cent to the Harlem Mass Meet Feb. ‘7th to Fight Against Race _ Discrimination t “You must take the situation into | n hands! must take up the struggle | in an organized manner. your ow! mii and the company-union agents! t that you give them will through their be- trayal of you workers! “You must carry on a struggle against you bosses through your A persistent and militant cam- |paign for the abolition of all forms strike committees and force them |of race-discrimination against Ne- to settle on the basis of the de-|gro workers, and police brutality mands and agreement of the Indus-/against Negro and white workers, trial Union! “You must take part in the Cooper |International Labor Defense at Union Mass Meeting tonight, right la mass-protest meeting to be held after work, where a full report on| at St. Luke’s Hall, 125 West 130th the present situation and plans for | St., New York, on Friday, February further struggle will be decided|7, at 8 p. m. Hudson River Bridge} | Honored by Working Youth | | | | | On Feb. 7, at 8 p. m, there’ will be a mass Liebkneoht meeting in New York City, under the aus- pices of the Young Communist League, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. All workers should at- | tend this meeting. There will be a@ fine program and good speakers, German Jobless | | | (Continued trom Page One) wounds a little later and twenty | the attempted assassination by one | workers were seriously wounded. |rectors of the Recenia firm sum- jmoned 180 strikers and the hear- ing was to have taken place today, | but was postponed at the last mo- |ment owing to “room difficulties,’ Help Strikers} For some weeks now the workers as a means of renewing their reign of the Recenia firm have been on|of terror against the Communist | strike against wage reductions. As|Party, Young Communist League will be started in full swing by the |* blow against the strikers the di-| and revolutionary trade unions. RUBIO, TOOL OF WALL ST, SHOT IN JAW Fired on by Salzar, Vasconcelist (Continued from Page One) | president, had announced a_ policy of cooperation with Wall Street, and was returning to hia home after drinking champagne with some of his cohorts when Daniel Salzer fired five or six times hitting Ru®io in the jaw, scraping his wife, and one bullet lodging in the head of the jchauffeur. The bullet went into the left side of Rubio's jaw lodging in | the jaw-bone on the right side. Immediately a rigid censorship was clamped down that lasted for two hours, At the inauguration the streets | were well-lined with armed troops. |A vicious campaign of terror has | been directed against the revolution- | ary workers’ and peasants’ organ- izations, with hundreds of arrests and tortures. The Rubio puppet government will undoubtedly use| | | | i} of the petty-bourgeois Vasconcelists Already the police are going from house to house arresting foreign workers who do not support the Wall Street-controlled Rubio gov- ernment. Waiter Asks for a Job; Local 1 Officials Do a Job on Him with Club Another worker has been assault- ed by the officials of Waiters’ Union ‘Local 1 (A. F. L.) for trying to work at a job that the bureaucracy wanted to use for their friends. L. Friedman, unemployed for seven months, and with a wife and two children, got a working card from the union and went down to the Winter Garden to earn some money Sunday evening. labor chief, of Local 1, came down and ordered him away, as the job was wanted for one of Cohen's fol- lowers. Friedman gave him an ar- gument, and Cohen pulled a black- jack and knocked out three of Fried- man’s teeth, dazed him with a blow severely around the head, There have been many such cases in Local 1, Food Workers ‘Win the Monroe Cafe Strike (Continued from Page One) shop, while still unorganized, stopped work in this cafeteria for five minutes to honor the memory of Comrade Katovis who was mur- dered by the police while active on the picket line. Afterwards, when they made demands on the boss, this militant show of solidarity on their part helped to bring the strike | to a quick victorious end. Mass Meeting Friday. A mass meeting of all cafeteria About ten o'clock, Hymie Cohen, | back of the ear, and beat him up| |tone of the Metropolitan Opera Com- |pany, is principal feature of “The | Rogue Song.” The plot is based upon the operetta, wd |by Franz Lehar, with revised story by Frances Marion and John Colton, In addition to some of the original | jLehar music, Herbert Stothart has | |composed additional numbers. | “The Rogue Song” from first. to | last is a tailored vehicle for ‘:‘pbett. The plct is studio worn and uncon- | vincing at times, but withal, as it supplies a strong romantic interest, | it suffices in that it provides most | hap opportinities for the bari-| tone. Hardly any of the stock-in- | trade situations are omitted. | With the material he has to work with and whenever he sings Law- rence Tibbett is splendid. | “Tho Rogue Song” is epoch-mak ing in that it clearly demonstrates that it will not be long before the classic operas are transformed to | the screen. | Mises IBSEN’S “HEDDA GABLER” AT CIVIC REPERTORY For the first time this season, on | Thursday evening, Henrik Ibsen’s | “Hedda Gabler” will be presented at the Civic Repertory Theatre, The | new double bill, “The Open pase,” | by Sutro, and Quinteros’ “The Wo- | men Have Their Way,” is scheduled for three performances this week; ! Lawvence Tibbett Feature oft ‘The Rogue Song’ at Astor Lawrence Tibbett, a -leading bari- jon Tuesday and Friday evenings and | | Thursday matinee. The week will begin with Tche- kov’s “The Sea Gull,” Balance of |the week will include on Wednesday “Gypsy Love,” | evening, “The Living Corpse”; Sat- urday matinee, “Peter Van,” and Saturday evening, “The Sea Gull.” . . “BLUE GARDEN” AT PITKIN THEATRE * The musical comedy star, Allan | Rogers, appears this week as guest master of ceremonies at Loew’s Pit- kin Theatre. “Blue Garden,” a pic turesque revue from the Capitol Theatre, boasts the talents of Les Ghezzis, Kaye and Sayre, Dodd and Rush and the Chester Hale Girls William Haines in his first all-talk- ing picture, “Navy Blues,” is the sereen feature of the week. TO SHOW “A VISITOR TO SO-| VIET RUSSIA” IN CHARLOTTE | FEB, 8. CHARLOTTE, N. C.—The first Soviet film to be shown in the South will be presented here for the tex- tile workers of this section on Sat- urday, Feb. 8, under the auspices | of the Department of Cultural Ac- | tivities of the Workers International | Relief. | Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. REVUE, Today in History of | the Workers | February 6, 1840—Communist Workers’ Educational Association founded in London. 1878—Gen- eral Trepoff, enemy of Russian popular movement, shot by Vera | Sassulitch. 1919—Seattle, Wash., general strike began in sympathy with shipyard strikers. 1923—172 revolutionary peasants condemned to death at Chanch, India. 1925 Great unemployment demonstra- tion before Parliament at Oslo, Norway. |7 Mast 42nd Street, New York “SER O ‘a 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Brons, N Y¥ W. I. R, CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3008 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered. All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! ! ‘ Yesin, | the real reason being that the un-| The doctors report that Rubio's | workers in chain stores and inde- WORKERS’ CENTER es maraakaysll eonge Gone ee | Naw Ver aRRE ae er jemployed workers organization hud | condition is “satisfactory,” and that | pendent shops is being called for | BARBER SHOP pons. ‘Mobilize and unite your|ard B, Moore, president of the Har- | C@lled a great demonstration in sup- | he will pull out of it if no com-| Friday at 8 p. m. in Irving Plaza, @ e | plications set in, Irving Place and 15th St, LIEBKNECHT MEMORIAL ranks.’ The Schlesinger company-| lem Tenants’ League; Charles Alex- | Port ob ahs a for sys | union agency must be wiped out.| ander, Negro organizer for the I. L, | a pain? spetesiee: PI aie an Now is the proper time. Forward ed and Joe Harrison, of the Gasto- (eee pa reyes rciatied Sait strugg! i y at pO phe Sane | nia defendants, | the factory, strike breakers at work Moved to 30 Unfon Square FREIHEIT BLDG.——Main Floor LAST THREE DAYS! a Seas IMPORTANT FOR CLUBS AND Demonstrate for N.T.W.1U. a : ‘ . | under the protection of armed police R. K. 0. ORGANIZATIONS ake ae ae of the LL, (ne is | Housewives Aid Picket | insuitea and gibed at the marchers. | F e [2nd St. & Bway | OND Typewrbing: Mimeegraphiog a tlat failure. Not only are there . ’ | The latter of course were not slow A ti D t t |Phone Wixconsin |“ BIG Beguony about 4,000 on the street, but most at Millers’ Market |in answering the strike breakers, ntl= ar lemons ration | 1789 WEEK Multigraphing of them are ee a by employ- (contunea F P O40) | whereupon the police attacked the | Translations in and from ers who stopped the machinery,| _ ontinued from Page One) | masses and knocked down everyone | ALL LANGUAGES rang the fire alarms, or simply told | tions, obtained against ese artic |that came their way. Then sud- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7 if] «tes a fine picture, realistic use “Russian Movie Wins 3 Star COOPER-TISHKOFF the workers to go. It is a lock-out. | than the Food Clerks, to which the | denly without warning and without se Vas Winkle hem’ and Prize.” TRE ie Masses of workers in the street at | Present pickets belong. | reason the officer in charge ordered Russia.” Spatiy “Worker ‘ * oe _ae x : x ‘i Telephone Stuyvesant 9507 New Frame-Up. Py his men to- fire. ‘One of the most satisfactory Neary tia | Oe | YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE, DISTRICT 2) 86th and Seventh Ave., during the Rapid fire was ‘ * ., A “Soviet od r vivid ictures yet t f So- REASONABLE RATES noon hour, were being photographed} Millers market is going broke; the | opened and about 500 shots were picture... Impremsive, imagin= Viet Russia) nen se from So and “movie toned” by capitalist | boss, who used to have 8 clerks now | pumped into the masses with the ative.” —N. ¥. Times. —N. Y¥. American, | Fedde piven above. Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. | This aftternoon a tremendous pro- | news agencies for fake strike propa-| has only 3 scabs, and not work ganda. They immediately staged a| enough for them. PHOTOGRAPHS AT THE STUDIO OR YOUR HOME AMKINO eSENTS demonstration for the Industrial} In the Schneider Ave. court yes-|test demonstration took place in Speakers: | ‘ Union, denouncing Schlesinger and! terday the three Food Clerks being |Chemnitz under the leadership of the i The American Premiere : ‘ his company union. | framed by the bosses and the He- | Communist Party. ! I. AMTER, Organizer District Two | Bertin Photo Studio ‘The ILGW has no pickets out, the| brew Butcher Workers (a scab/} ee | a workers refuse to mass picket for | union) had their case postponed un- ‘Im erialist War | HARRY EISMAN | cA Fr a rr e nt f ee vane. ane the ers. A large gang of hired|til Tuesday. One of them, Marks | Dp 2! aM » | CALEDONIA 6766 Fs s, however, visited the shops | Block, was arrested again as hewas; Plots Against Soviet Play—Recitals—Dances—Movies | | ve the N.T.W.LU. has already von union conditions, among others ihe Colony Dress Shop, at 15 West leaving the court room, and is held | on a new frame-up, on $2,000 bail. Special Hates for Organizations | (Continued from Page One) | Union, is totally, unfounded. St., and the Lamjay Dress Shop | . Admission 35c. NG | of an Empire” Build The Daily Worker—Send i ve such executions have occurred. ; \ MELROSE Sides i at 250 West 28th St. The workers ts Your Share of the 15,000 New ees dose Dl able oy a A loch ren ; Dairy JEsETAMIAN ‘ drove the thugs from the place. jubs. | (Wireless By Inprecorr) The birt: a Shell-Shocked IFY RESTAURANT a iar igcteomcavets shops | megenrairae neat ; | PARIS, Feb. 5.—The French gov- | Rebirth of Shorked: Man Cr, attra te Bl and open s , where workers were | ernment is rather openly encourag- I N M P | ii 7 1787 locked out, they came to the Indus- Labor and Fraterna | ing the fascists who continue to E LOYED CONCERT TREMENDOUS, MIG.TY, CONSTRUCTIVE ELIRER BLY Bs: Ki re trial Union and immediately a real Organizations howl for war against the Soviet| Tentative Program: PRONE :—_INTERVALE 9169 strike bezan in those places, with a consideravle number of victories al- ready won. Hakers Meetings Avoided. The I.L.G.W. tried to hold “strike | Union over the cease of General |Koutiepoff, whose disappearance {now turns out to be his own choos- jing. Ignoring this, the fascist pa- | per, “Liberte,” says that the Soviet | Ambassador shall “be held person- | ally responsible,” while the govern- | ment paper craftily kindles the agi- | tation by talk about the Soviet Gov- ernment being “boorish,” ete. Arranged by a group of unemployed jew- | ish workers to help the Morning Freiheit Brass Band of the W. I. R. full strength for the first time. Freiheit Sports Club of the Labor Sports Union in d new pyramids. | | Improvizations and dances Sun ay, February 9, 1 b . ba | by “Arteff.” Gendel Ja- j ch as bnzaars. me ‘or which 0: desire publicity in th column, must he paid for at the rai of $1.00 for a singe insertion, $2. | {or three insertions, ‘The Peake lowed at this rate is a maximum of meeting: yesterday. They claim|five lines with five words to each 1,000 aitended their affairs. At al] |'me 4 total of 25 words, of them the Industrial Union work- «rs penetrated, and distributed cails to the Cooper Union meeting. Most | ete RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, JE Bet. 2th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetarian Food Now Playing! Special Anniversary Triple-Feature Program! VICTCR HUGO’S Immortal Drama of the Proletariat—Oppressed and Triumphant * Workers Dramatic Counet. Thursday, 8.30 p, m., at Center, Ex- ecutive at 6.30 p. m. * Cartoonist Gropper will * ¢ 1 Haywood Branch) ef them, particularly one in Irving | Brighton ILD (Bit "Plaza, where a few dozen |were|,, Thursday, 8.30 p, m,, 227 Brighton 5 ie Beach Ave,’ Executive er «athered, had pi:ifully small sum | ine ss io ea | Leeture at 2700 Bronx Party East. Thursday, $39 p, m. M. Holtman or The work: re willing to strug- | ..; The White Guard general, mean- while, is known to be on his way to South America. The capitalist press brings up the issue of war on the Soviet Government quite easily, giv- draw sketches of unem- ployed. Righthand in a new musical program on the J. 167th St. and Park Ave, ADMISSION 50 CENTS ENACTED BY A L3 MIS ERABLES The Tremendous Tragedy of the French Revolution! CAST OF 10,000 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian “EVOLUTION”? Fil GUILD CINEMA Ey EIGHTH ST th and Sixth A ing 5035—5000 ‘tow Hundred Nationalities Can Liv Vogether in the USSR.” * saw. Comrade Sims of the dra- matic section of the co- operatives in proletarian recitations. but they know that the fake | is not their fight—it is the) fight, They will follow the} 1 ers Industria. | Union and a real victory, | Q N.T.W.LU. workers were! WLR. Tag Day. a committee of the com-|resentatives and get in touch with | o thugs at Broadway and |}ocal W.LR, 789 Broadway, room 221 nd the retreating gangsters No, 17. i ing the opinion of jurists that a raid Womens Council. upon the Soviet embassy, desired by General membership meeting on un- | the fascists, that such raid would be employment Thursday, 8.30 p. m., 26 | sufficient reason for war. Rehearsal Tonight RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 6865 a comprehensive screen exposi- tion of the theory of man's origin by the producers of the ELNSTEIN film. nues Tickets to be obtained at Morning Freiheit | Strikers who will show their strike ecards will pay only 25¢ Extraction from a letter to the Morning Freiheit; Comrades—The Morning Freiheit is very dear to us. The only way we | unemployed, can help you comrades is by arranging an affair and to ask those that work to we and help ithe ita Hirhae | COMMITTEE OF UNEMPLOYED. * * Phone’ Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: PALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere VIC RE Bo. ERTORY. thst fre Gnild ** 6th Ave Mats. fhur. Sat. 2:% $1! $150 “METEOR” ves % Womens Council i votaait , Director | where all radicals meet e police for protection. Friday, 8.30 p.m. 227 Brighton DVOR” | ee PR eae 8 | Beach Ave,” Dr. Mostowitz on birth | i By 8, N. BEHRMAN | tt Was] 02 8.12th St, New York } Lf * ’ * | Gauil D w bs ve Bibb | N DOOR? & some aon - ——- — vb Dancing Class. | at— i * Mats Th & Sat. 24 3 < Of Edith Segal, Thursday, 2700 dtd id Eat pals | Ay | Bronx Park East, adults, 8.30 p. m., Juniors, 4.30 p.m: * COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT 26-28 UNION SQUARE Service—Self-Service (Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health 'JOLSON’S ‘The Chocolat v. Es, urs, and Sa’ e Soldier’ oO! TA * Workers School Sports Club. EPS reaeys 8.30 p. 4 LSU cards ready. “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouxpensky LAST WERK! Chorus 336 East 15th Street (Continued from Page One) h found an organization y is no bar. They see rethelt Gesangyerein Ball, nahn ‘MARTIN BECK 45th streer Restaurant ' Ae Saturday, 133 W. 55th St, John C. ! U.L. is out to-mobilize | seater at chp New Members Wanted! FP"SH VEGETABLES OUR SPECIALTY anne anit candael PTY Y 8 | 558 Clcremont Parkway. Brons ra of all races and of| pesspect Workers Club Lecture, ae and Saturday at 2:40 They come to| Friday, 8 es 830 Westchester e the floor and are| Ave, room 17, corner Prospect. Geo. n Comin- Sone, Maurer on “Right Danger tern,” ant * February 16, at Japanese Workers’ ub, 7 Fast 1th St. Auspices Work- School Sports Club. Admission 86 cents, Part Proceeds Daily Worker, ees, and they nch members y League. vunity Fund, Ethel Barrimore Theatre 47th Street, West of Broad yes, 8:00. Maty. Wed. & Sat (DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE oom 803--Phone. Algonquin 8184 W.I.R. TAG DAYS This £at. and Sun. y 2:8 ca nonve MMMg p>. [Death Takes a Holiday | "'wiuisy'™ || °°asnr™™* | |] "Nat connected anth any ntly —eollecte pes eo p ma at 125 West A comedy about life. [eee Pe er OU See. ns of dollars | 45th St gomsaka FEBRUARY 8th AND 9th with PHULIP Minty ani | ON both “acinENs : <= === 2 as a mother the slogan is ; TALICING BILL Julio Mella Branch LL.D. ntertainment, play “White Trash,” Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF yory § 8:36 p,m, 48 Bay 28th IGE Thea. ama st, w. of hf A i Ye! mm ¢ SURGEON DENTIST Admission 60 cents. BEING Brondway. Eves, at a as a & 240 BAST 118th sTRERT s and posters depicting| Women's Connell Concert and Ban- Mats, Wednesiay and Saturday Cor. Second Ave. New York A. H. WOODS Presents | “R CAPTURE” A Love Story by Preston Sturges Author of "Strictly Dishonorable” IN “NAVY RLUES” | DAILY @XCKET PHIDAY ALL TALKING bata 4) M-G-M_ Picture Stage Shows—foth Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE. BROADWAY quet. Saturday, 8:30 p, m., 26 Union 8q., s of the “worthy poor.” bk fourth floor. “Admission 75 cents. bery of Workers, rye begins the work- ers in factories, mills, shops, depart- ment stores and laundries are in- | Ukey must give a cer- ant to the fund so that the v vil fulfill their quota. This means that from five 8 ta.en from the es of all workers whether they it or not. ns stolen from the the employers are appor- » fo lowing way to Cleve- y. Four millions are do- » (-¢ Boy and Girl Scouts, 1. C. A. and the Y. W. C, A. support * Workers Dance Group. Everybody come to the first Get- Together of the Workers Dance Gron (Red Dancers) on Saturday night, February 5, 1030, at 106 Bast 14th St. Admission 35 cents, Communist Activities Comrades Having Spare Room. To house students of National Training School for #ix weeks, please communicate at once with Workers School, 26 Baiep q., Stuy, 1770, * Agitprop, District Agitprop Committee and section agitprop directors Thure- day, 7.30 p. . at Center. . FIGHTING MINERS They Must Not Starve! SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY! Smash the bosses’ terror campaign! Every penny collected for the W.LR. is a blow against the bosses! | Advertise your Union Meetings here, Far mformation write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Wept. 26-28 Union 8q.. New York City EAST SIDE THEATRES ta tT C@ND. AVE R ta ae t 123 SECOND AVE, CORNER EIGHTH ST. FEBRUARY 6, 7, 8, and 9 lar Pricest wr & -doiel & Restaurant Workers Workers sets mipauentes end Phoue Chel 2274 a meetings a of the Fronth’ ak on i ne oad Firat Time st Por The New Soviet Photoplay |] duettionas | meelinaa—the Bre ned Mond 0 @ mont KOC egregated colored Y's and), Sectton © Menwbarehty Seaets fo LOCAL OFFICE Board | meetings—-every Tueedas mM afternoon One industry! 0: Fight Ag A Workers International Relief BROADWAY, ROOM 221 VOLUNTEER! “A Man from the Restaurant” with the celebrated Russian actors M. CHEKHOV and V. MALINOVSKAYA joc’ mt the Common &y Write About Your Conditions 199 {© ‘he Daily Worker. Become a » orher Correspondent. p Papers, All comrades connected with this work, February 8, 3 p, m, at Center, oERSISED ROOMS, small, 183 East tio St eres 088 ey

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