Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
cele leny WORKER, ey _YORK, eo eenen MARCH 1, 1930 Page Three MARCH SIXTHIS | [Pte nin ‘sODALST ATTY ———— e| DAY FOR MASSES | _ March 1, 1912—1,000,000 British | oal miners began strike for vere | increases. 1919 — General strike | called by German Spartacans and Employed to to $ Strike and) Join Jobless at Noon | Independent Specialists against | Bhert government; General Assem- | | bly at Weimar isolated. (Continued from Page One) | would be no wage reductions, but} Police Fail to Break Women’s Day Meet; on the contrary, wage slashes are taking place day by day, and the| members of Whalen’s Arrest 4 at Another Six husky conditions of the workers are becom-| "¢Wly organized “radical squad,” ing worse. Billions of dollars’ go|four uniformed patrolmen, stool tito the pockets of manufacturers| Pigeons, and intimidation methods and bankers of Wall Street, wai'e| used by the manager of the plant, the bread lines all over the country | failed to stop a noon day meeting become longer and the lines of men| held at the Gotham Hosiery Co., lo- standing at the factories looking for | ated at 33rd St. and Ist Ave. This ark grow: Waiher: | meeting was called by the Women’s Adel caeolonaas Department, New Yqrk District of i fi : : ; the Communist Party, in connection The American Federation of La-| with ‘International Women’s Day, bor, which is working Land in haad| March g. : with the Hoover administration, has ey At the after-work factory gate to admit today, that a large ~-~220t " Mitre of the organized workers are out|™eeting at the National Handker- dt a! fob. “tn'the. city. of New Yo ou Co., east mee: St. and Willow a0 poh canbe ullateontecl Ave., arranged by the women’s de- Saoneing toctie. AB’ of Ti partment of the Communist Party, = | District 2, two detectives appeared, struggled with several workers, and finally arrested three men and one | woman. Placards were displayed are jobless, and yet the American Fe eration of Labor ‘continues to ~ hand in hand with the Hoove gime. least 500,000 wor New *’o:': can find no job, and inj face of this misery and starvation | Mayor Walker raises the salary 0° himself end other officials by tens of thousunds of dollars. The answer of the bosses and the city adminis- tratic to the demands of the unei- ployed for relief are clubbings. “The socialist party trusts for the good wishes of Hoover and the plans that the bosses have of generally Women’s Day. 'Finishers Join Rayon (Continued from Page One) tion in which Isadore Rheinhard is president and buyer, Alex Rhein- hard is vice-president; D, Rheinhard is treasurer. dri* ing down the conditisns of the workers. The Veterans of Foreign Tt runs 500 knitting machines and Wars, the American Legion and 800 winders, and manufactures ra- other fascist organizations, which | yon underwear. ar inst the, working class are 8 all their forces in order wn the rising revolt of the unemployed in this city. These are anti-labor organizations working hand in hand with the socia] fascist socielist party and the A. F. of L. U. Again Betrays. NAZARETH, Pa., Feb. 28.—The United Textile Workers hosiery sec- tion, the Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers, has called off picketing at the Kraemer mill here, under the mobil tox together with the bosses and the | oders of the police and deputy American government. sheriffs. The U. T. W. gang, with War Plot Against U.S.S.R. its Muste group leadership, has “While conducting this of been mismanaging this strike fo against the workers the American weeks, Now, when 15 deputy imperialist government together | | iffs are around the mill, mass with the other imperialist gov-| eting is officially prevented ernments, whose representatives are {direct order of Organizer Louis in London, have organized an of-| Budenz, and the strike is being fensive against the: Soviet Union! sacrificed to “law and order.” It with the intention of overthrowing | was the U. T. W. which told Marion the Soviet government. They have | pickets to go on the line with “bibles drawn into their united front all of! and hynin books instead of weap- their reserves, the last being the! ons,” and thus left them to be church, both Catholic, Protestant | shot down defensel: by Sheriff and Jewish, in a frontal attack upon | Adkins and his deputies. the Soviet government. —-=-- “Unemployed workers! You must Yaise the slogan of work or wages, | Women, Children in we will not starve, but fight! | Protest At City Hall “Employed workers! You must against the rotten conditions, test against the imperialist attacks “Workers of New York! On| 0M the Soviet Union. March 6, at Union Square, there will | be a mass Le Pe iaaniea of the, | Dist., Communist Party through its workers, both employed and unem- | Women’s Department and the ployed, white and colored, adult and | | Young Pioneers declares in part: young. Employed workers! Down | “Today the women workers and tools at 12 o’clock on Thursday and | the working class children must give Labor ‘and Fraternal march in solid ranks to Union| their answer to the savage attacks Square! Unemployed workers! Or-| of the Tammany police on the dem- ganize your unemployed councils and | onstration of unemployed workers| wopners Oneal They must give their come in tens of thousands to Union | Thursday. Square on March 6. janswer not only to the Tammany Daily Worker costume ball. to. be | | police, but to their masters, the One iau “and thei: fel- | 5 rien hosses, and to the A. F. of L, and) tov Pethe drone tereente Communist Activities ‘socialist’ flunkeys of the bosses |‘ gg agers who are actively aiding in the na-| Workers Esperanto Club Festival, | larch 1 o” EB, 81st St., play, danc- tion-wide attacks the militant working class. “Women workers! on nnish Thousands of * , Open Forum. i400 Boston Ra. Admissio free. fe. * Upper Bronx 1, emcee 8 p.m. on, Unemployment, 3 to find jobs. Your husbands are thrown out of jobs; you and your children face starvation. Employed ou | and unemployed, Negro and white, . Open Forum, 2 138th St., Lower Bronx Y, Sunday, 8 p. m., Unemployment. Y.0.L, Nepate Tradex Fraction, Report at district, today, 3 p. bysorder of District Committee. a surance at City Hall today.” m. March 18, at Central Opera House, Sith St. and Third Ave, 8 p. m. Speak- ers: Engdah! and others. | Paris Commune Mase Meeting. | a Worker Correspondent. WRITE about your conditions | Strike, Picketing On) | and leaflets distributed advertising WORKS FOR COPS Asks Jail For Workers; | Pickets Defy Police Millers’ market was picketed again | today by the Food Clerks’ Industrial | Union, although it was a regular armed camp of police who were strung out all around the block. The | pickets were assaulted and two ar- rested. When they came to court | the judge couldn’t find grounds on} which to hold them, and they were | released, much to the disgust -of | Mrs, Miller, the boss’ wite, who snarled insults at the union attorney and members in court. Marcus Misses. The socialist party lawyer, Mar- | attorney for the United Hebrew | Trades. ich provides the scats at | Millers, appeared yesterday in cu for the police department, asking jail for Organizer Feitelbaum of ae F.C.1.U. and another worker, rested some blocks from Miller’ | market. This was a case pressed by the police, not by the scab union | or even the employer. Marcus, the | socialist, put his best argument for the murderers of Katovis, but he couldn’t make a case, and the two} defendants were freed. The union organization drive goes | on with two new victories yester day. The fruit market at 100 Feath- | Second Ave., Manhattan. Union | conditions were obtained in both. Will Hold Ruthenberg | Memorial Meet March’ 5, Central Opera House On Wednesday, March 5th, thou- sands of workers will pay honor to | Comrade Ruthenberg, the organizer | and leader of the Communist Party | of the U. S. A. The memorial meet- | ing will be held at the Central! Opera House, 67th St. and Third Ave., and leading comrades of the| Party will be the speakers. ! The role of Comrade Ruthenberg | in the last world war and the fight that he made for the organization of the Communist Party out of the | socialist party is known to the! pi by| Workers throughout the. country. At | the present time with the struggle | of the workers against unemploy-} ment, wage cuts, speed-up and the general offensive of the bosses, and} with the -acute danger of war against the Soviet Union being launched by the united imperialist powers, makes the memory, of Com-)| rade Ruthenberg ever dearer to the | American masses. The call issued by the New York, | you are walking the streets unable| ish of {demand work or unemployment inet treune for the Daily Worker. Become | Unem The renegade Lovestoneites who have been expelled from the Com- munist International of which Com- | rade Ruthenberg was an honored member, and a member of the Executive Committee of the Com- munist International, have dared to announce a meeting, thus desecrat- ing his memory. They who have! deserted the revolutionary -labor | movement and are now the faithful allies of Hoover imperialism. Organizations nizations! Attention! | Order blocks of tickets now for the | exposition sceeds T.L.D. * * x Lost. turday night at Jew- ub, on 4th floor, 2! Please turn over to ¥.C.L Number Ww Union Sq office. " « resnive Club. 1492 Madison Ave. fhe*Background 1 Conference and | eligious!| Issue, Brony eee Kkersx Organization | C | Sunday Wilkins Ave | y Needle Workers | Muss Meeting. March 4, 131 W Tuesday, 2sth st. | International Costume Ball For the Defense of All Class War Prisoners- I.L.D. Annual Bazaar Every Land TONIGHT - Tilpakew 5 NEW STAR CASINO, 107th St. & Park Av. Dancing! Restaurant! Music! Exhibitions! Concerts! International Labor Defense NEW YORK DISTRICT—799 BROADWAY JOIN AND SUPPOR™ THE INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE: F * | | | | | Costumes from jfore the shops of Tall 'Shoe Workers ‘Union Women Hold Shop Meets; Dance Tonite Hundreds of workers yesterday attended the. meetings arranged by the women’s department of the In- dependent Shoe Workers’ Union be- & Gordon, and J. Grossman, in Brooklyn. These meetings came as a surprise to the bosses, and their workers flocked to | hear the speeches explaining the de- {amanda of the union for better con- ing Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. ditions, and the minimum wage. | | Leaflets were distributed calling on | all.to join the union and fight for | the demands. There is a special meeting of all shop delegates, council members and shop chairmen at 1 p. m. today, at union headquarters, 21st St. Free admission, good music, ised all shoe workers tonight at 8) Struggles and having firm roots in | p. m. at the union headquarters. AN Tailors Come At "| Noon Today; Ben Gold Exposes Hillman The Trade Union Unity League, | Clothing Workers | Amalgamated section, calls all employed and job- less tailors to a mass meeting today | at 12:30 p. m. at 28 Union Square. Ben Gold, secretary of the Needle | Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, ay will ; bed Lane, Bronx, was settled by the | expose the conspiracy between Hill- union, and the dairy store at 1450 | man of the Amalgamated and the) | will be a main speaker. He bosses. Hillman promised at | bosses banquet in December that he would “stabilize” the industry at the | is “reorganization” after another going through, with unem- xpense of the tailors, and he doing it, one ployment in their wake. WORKERS SCHOOL BANQUET. The students’ body of the Work- through the Student | Council, is artanging a banquet on| !ers School, | Sunday, March 9, at 8 p.m. PHOTOGRAPHS AT THE STUDIO OR YOUR HOME Bertin Photo Studio 454 THIRD AVENUE Nenr 31%t St. New York City CALEDONIA 6766 Rates for Organizations Special TUDOR INN Restaura nt 113 East 14th Street For good and wholesome food. don’t fail to visit us We serve special luncheon plates from 11:30-3 p. m. Reasonable Prices TRY OUR SUNDAY SPECIAL DENNER ! COMRADES MEET aT— CAFE INTRO 249 East 13th Street Near Second Avenue A QUIET EATING PLACE Regular Meals. Reasonable Prices. FOR THE BEST DAIRY visIT ADELE CAFETERIA Seventh Cor. Second Avenue “=a IS A CLEAN PLACE Service and Self-Service “Specini for Organizations” C. M, FOX 32 UNION SQUARE Stationary and Printing Stencils, mimeo; paper, office si 10% Reduction fo: Worker Readers, S. GOTTLIEB 776 Allerton Avenue GENERAL BARGAIN sTORE Silks, Remn: Dry Goods Hosiery, Infants’ Wear TELEPHONE. OLINVILLE 10062 Airy. Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO AIRE Suitable for ! ctings. Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 ——SSSS=S=—=—=—S———_ We Meet at the— 16 West sttuggles of the workers in the re- freshments and dancing are prom- | union COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty '“Throw of the Dice” at TUL CONVENTION MEETS AT 2:30 Beginning Monday, and continu- ing on Tuesday and Wednesday, the Second Avenue Playhouse, has book coat aay ed and will show an Indian Film Unemployed Big Issue; crow of the Dice.’ ‘The picture Conferences Today is a spectacular and dramatic tal = of a phase of life in India. The Today at 2 Pp. the conven- tion of the Metropolitan Area Trade Union Unity League opens in Irv- m, actors are all Hindus, of the most talented in India. , and continu- the Second will show a some Beginning Thursda ing to Sunday inelusiv Avenue Playhouse Several hundred delegates, repre- Gna tih spine eae kena i Russian comedy, “When Moscow senting thousands of worker's In 8/Taughs.” The talented Soviet art large number of industries in Great- iste, Anna Sten, plays the leading | |er New York and New, Jersey, will role. gather to plan a program of action > gram of Special Philharmonic The Philharmonic Symphony Or- chestra, under Arturo Toscanini, ap- pears tomorrow afternoon at Metropolitan Opera House, in a pro- Mozart’s Symphony in D, 0, the Ven- Pizzeti’s Rondo Vene: usberg Scene from and the Polovetzkian Dances “Prince Igor.” annhause from A special concert for the pension fund will be given on Friday eve-| ning at Carnegie Hall. The pro-! gram will consist of Rossini’s Over- ture to “Italian in Algiers,” Franck’s Les Eolid Ravel’s Bolero, and| Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3. Next Sunday afternoon at Car- that will coordinate all the economic Metropolitan Area and establish the TUUL as a real revolutionary trade | center, leading all these | the shops and factories cf every in- dusi First before the convention will be the fight against unemployment and against the new imperialist war that is now about to break loose- the war to crush the Workers’ public of the Soviet Union. Today the convention will be oc- cupied with conferences of the var- ious industrial groups. Chief among these will be the metal workers’ conference to be held tonight. The convention will continue tomorrow ‘ith reports and di: ions of the tasks of the TUUL, with the dele- gates participating in all the dis- S. N. BEHRMA Re- SHIRLEY GUILD O'MARA THEATRE, TINEES WEST THU Theatre Guild | METE Productions N’S NEW PLAY Rk” LYNN FONTANNE EDWARD EMERY .AWRENCE LESLIE 2, EVENINGS A SATURDAY cussions and in the formation of the program of action. The report on unemployment will deal with the arrangements for the March 6 demonstration; that the national office of the T. U. U. L will outline the decisions of the last plenary session of its executive board; and George Siskind, secre- The APP Bernard Shaw’s Po s filled with character writer for the English : ARTHUR RUHL, MARTIN BECK It tary of the Metropolitan T. U. U. L. will report on its progress. Workers, Patronize RELIABLE TH LE CAR litical Extravazanza Shavianisms . the speaking stage.” HERALD TRIBUNE 1ST. W. OF urs. and MUSIC COMPANY | | |] Majestic, Victor and other Radios | also ‘| PIANOS and VICTROLAS “REBOUND’— Expert Repairing “THIS IS THE BEST LIGHT COMEDY full line of WRITT BY ANYBODY HEREABOUTS IN VN OR TWENTY YEARS, AND IT’S NOT || Spanish and Russian | Records '] 1808 Third Ave, near 101st St. |} 1393 Fifth Ave., near 115th St. H EW YORK CITY Tel. Atwater 0402 SO DAMNED LIGHT, A Comédy by Dor REDUCTION 25% AND UNION WORKERS | TO CITY Reeninll ow Wisconsin gy Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under personal supervision of DR. M. HARRISO Optometrist 215 SECOND Corner 13th NEW YORK Opposite New Yerk far Infirmary Taiepuene Stuyvesant izd ST. & BUSWAY All Talking, Singing & Dark Red. Roses, With am oh a Brilliant British Cast MUSIC AND CONCERTS. Symphony Conductor Philharmonic 5 TOSCANINI, Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5074 All kinds of CUTLERY ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES MAZDA Bulbs Our Specialty. Phone Tillinghast 9089 JOHN C. SMITH’S Harlemites Orchestra Local 802 A. F. of M. Office: 2297 SE NTH AVENUE me NEW YORK CITy Tell the Advertiser—“I Saw Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” ARTHUR JUDSON. Mg Gs teinway) EITHER.” Heywood Broun, New York Telegram. nald Ogden Stewart with HOPE WILLIAMS PLYMOUTH THEATRE West 45th Mats, Th Street, Evenings sday & Saturday | negie Hall Toscanini will conduct an | all-Beethoven program consisting of Second Ave. Playhouse Concert Friday Night | Symphonies No. 7 and 3. Next Saturday morning at Car- negie Hall the fourth Children’s Concerts will be given. the | , SEEKING THE NON-EXISTENT LONDON.—A joker in the Unem- ployment Insurance Bill provides that unemployed workers “mu genuinely seek work” before getting | the benefits of the miserable dole. “CITY OF HOMES” PHILA, Pa. (By Mail).—More than 7,000 unsanitary hot the ported unfit working class districts we ; by Housing Association for human habitation. “For All Kind of Insurance” *AMUSEMENTS> (CARL BRODSKY ephone: Murray Hill 5556 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. = Ss Comrades Meet at PARK RESTAURANT 698 Alerton Avenue Corner White Plains Ave. PLACE TO EAT Ladies Invited. A GOOD Find Ui | Always i Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx omrades (near 174th St. PRONE: Station) INTERVALB 9149 | RATIO ONAL | Vegetarian || RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarizn Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 || John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: {ITALIAN DISHES A_place with atmosphere | where all radicals meet ic. IC REPERTORY 1th st |} 302 E.12th St. New York Eves. 8:30. ae Sat. 2:30 — bbc. $ > we Fe gad All Comrades Meet at mem wart BRONSTEIN’S Ethel Barrimore Theatre West of Broadway Mats. Wed. & Sat. | A comedy about life, with PHILIP MERIVAL! JOLSONS’ 5th St. & 7th Mats. Thurs. | By FRANZ | With Roy Cr, | and Mai LEHAR + Florenz Ames, Ia Powers, 2:30 [Death | Takes a Holiday| 8:30 and Sat.) “The Count of Luxembourg” Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any ‘NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES other office —7 — PARADISE Grand Concourse Bronx Pitkin Avenue Brooklyn ON BOTH SUREENS ORMA TALMADGE TALKS IN “NEW YORK NIGHTS” Stage Shows—Both ‘Theatres tron CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWA W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families, SsHOW ets SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKEKS: ODAY AND TON Phone: International Barber Shop W. SALA, Prop, 2016 Second ‘Avenue, New York (bet, 108rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor LEHIGH 6382 SOVKINO nings in Scene il Midnite. Depictin ROW—MARCH 1 “PETTY seaNoaL at play ME n outh in. Soviet Produced he Communist couna or" PROGRAM: JOURNAL different parts of the Soviet Union ealing with the Religious Issue, Prices and 350. WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP | Moved to 30 Union Square BUILD STRONGER FREIHEIT BLUG.—Main Floor MAR 350 E. to receive ESPERANTO AFFAIR BONDS BETWEEN THE REVOLUTIONARY PROLETARIAT CH 1st 81st St. si © greetings from the world over, pases A Play. cael of Posters and Correspondence. erat the door, Ge ©, 799 Bway, Nist SG: Workers Room 422 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York | DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY one for appointment me: Lehigh 6022 Tele} 141 SECOND AVE Phone, Oreha se of (rouble w to see your f experience, a you of careful ho has 3yénaa Jleveduuua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 East 14th St. Cor. Tel. Algonaui || Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Branch of Workers, Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at 8 p. Kducational Monday of Board o | Hotel & Restaurant Morne | meetings—the ¢ Union! Join and mon Enemy! a.m. to 6 p.m One industry! 0: Fight te © Office pen from AMALUAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets Ist Sati tender Ww the month at $86 rd Avenue, N.Y. rons, i Qs ROOM with board for ck for both, 209 E, 14th