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ae _ ¢ East 42nd Street, New York | Page Two” — DAILY _WORKER, NEW _ YORK, | WED AY, MARCH 5, 1 980 RUTHENBERG MEET TONIGHT MOBILIZES FOR UNION SQ. TOMORROW REESE ener A | Today in History of PREPARE FOR | Today in Histor Reese tn | wat cee berg, German revolutionary so- The Communist Party Calls Jobless and Employed for Mass Action! M p cialist and leader in Spartacus Hid ty | group, born in Samost, Poland. | ical x “| 1907—Second Russian Duma | (Continued from Page One) sale opened in St. Petersburg, with | struggle against war, and a struggle for defense of the Soviet Union socialist delegates. 1917— | from the capitalist attacks now under way. Ryan Joins Police Cry, ‘ a Trial of 74 I.W.W. members begun Against the Workers _ in Seattle on charges of ‘“‘murder” in connection with free speech, Fight against the imperialist war now being prepared! Defend the Soviet Union, stronghold of the world revolution! (Continucd from Pace Ore) fight. 1919—75,000 Cuban work- Last lesson: It is the leadership of the Communist International, wil be packed with tens of tho | ers began gen ral strike for eight- | the World Party of the working class, supported by the Red Interna- a keket “Atabratratts hour day and wage increases. tional of Labor Unions, which has made it possible to organize this peo protect at the capitalist, cve,| 1921—American Federation of La- | tremendous world-wide movement and raise our demand for Work or Roa hich. is starving “7.900.000; bor withdrew from Amsterdam Wages as the dominant issue in the whole capitalist world. It is, further, only the leadership of our World Party which can guarantee the further progress of the struggle, for our immediate demands and for the coming struggle for power, which shall abolish capitalism and establish a revolu- tionary workers’ government. International Federation of Trade . Unions on ground that latter was “too radical.” Elizabethton American we ir fam with unemployment those at work with speed u cut wages and long how demonstration called under the au Communist Party, he Communist In- and Long live the Communist International, the leader of the toiling masses of the world! a See Pi k t S h WORKERS! Men and women, young and old, white and Negro! ternatjona j m Strike against wage cuts, speed-up and mass layoffs! Demonstrate for Employed workers strike- UC. e S as work or wages, unemployment insurance! Don’t starve, fight! Make mocking off work at noon, downing | is in solidar with the unem- Scab Inroads ved, and together with them join- | i in the Union e demonstra- | el Gon, saiita d in protest with tens of} ELIZ ABETHTON, Tenn., Mar. 4. millions of workers the world over |—Militant picketing by strikers who | who are king and demonstrat-|stopped buses loaded with scabs on ing at the same hour in every great }4 bridge three miles from here re- | » of the world on International | sulted in a fight there in which the | Day unemploy- | buses had their windshields and win- 4 dows broken by stones, | Three deputy sheriffs reported | that they were unable to cow the|$ Comrades and a mass pickets, and Sheriff J. M.| |Moreland is spending today swear- ing in as deputies a large force of _— jake pemiaed by ads pepe es (Continued trom Page One) | (Continued from Page One) Glanzstoff and American Bemberg | quarters, hindquarters and flanks also voted down by Burkhard’s or- with” the Unemployment Demon- | companies. of the city government. |ders. Four delegates on the execu- stration Thursday, another violent) ‘he rank and file workers forced| Massed in serrfed ranks—more |tive board walked out in disgust defender of capitalism, Joseph P-|the hands of the United Textile |rank than ever—they rushed wildly | and protest against Burkhard’s ar- Ryan, of the Central Trades and La-| Workers last week, and declared ajacross the whole City Hall Park, | bitrary actions. bor Council, and along with Mat-| strike against the arbitrary dismis-|clearing the astounded populace | The main reason for the bureau- thew Woll, one of the leading fas- sa) from the union of hundreds of|from the vast square, and blocking ,cratie action against the suspended cists of the A. F. of L., declared his employees, particular those who all entrance lest the sight of one |locals is that the majority of the fascist program against the unem- ployment movement yesterday. The Communists, says Ryan, so disturbed the A. F. of L. in the Fur- riers and the LL.G.W.U., that it “cost business men millions of dol- lars.” Ryan said that all local) unions have been instructed not to allow the rank and file to strike on March 6. the March 6th demonstration the starting point of a mass political fight of the workers against the capitalists! Demand full equality and self-determination for the Negro masses! Organize Councils of Uenmployed! Build Committees of Action of employed and unemployed workers! Organize in the Trade Union Unity League! Join the Communist Party! Fight against capitalism and for a revolutionary Workers’ Government. CENTRAL COMMITTEE, COMMUNIST PARTY OF U. Fighting against S. A. ment. Coincident with the return from his nice winter vacation at Miami, Florida, of Police Commissioner Whalen with a coat of tan and a lust for workers’ blood, as an- nounced in his readiness to “deal |Burkhard Wants Split as docile. Over a thousand went on | Walker into complete sobriety. strike yesterday. For an hour they held the fort, | ‘while the wondering New Yorkers | tion with the T. U. U, L., and voted for it in the last referendum, only |to be counted out by the officials, |to what the police were up to. But Organizations |the police never laugh at anything, | Attention: | though the whole world may laugh | They knew their busi-| routed by Burkhard at the four |hard, Local 164, of which Burk- |hard is a member, voted to nomi-! nate Obermeier. The last word Workers Organizations! Order blocks of tickets now for the |at the police. ily Worker costume ball, to be ! Falting’ | pt 0 “The so-called international un-|hed) March 15. Distribute them | joo they did! They were awaiting | delegates leaving the board meeting ie b0-Ca. , * aniong your members and their fel-|‘red rumors.” But no marchers | yo.” «Qbermeier doesn’t rill employment day mass meetings re- } workers. Tickets in advance | marched, ya go on the at the door, 75 cents. ballot! ferred to by the Communists is a i 2 : direct challenge to the power of or- dmecpiane’ Mans SMeetinn: So looking around their coat tails, | 1 labor as represented by the |, , at auditorium, 2700 Bronx |they discovered something. A City | pe . ganized labor as rep’ Park Easte Council meeting was due, and three, Picket Millers American Feder tion of Labor in| * * * this country,” Ryan squeals, “It| ,,Jurders Womens Counll. [count ‘em: One, two, three unem- Market Again will be met as such.” click on Religious Questions in the |Ployed workers had evidently thought — Joni what the, "power? of. the: A. a ie attain ae ce what a a (Lontinued from Page One) Williamsburg 1. een denied. ree comrades had dering them to stop picketing. The injunction will be tried Monday. Soviet Union. * F. of L. is worth to the rank and 4 | i e é . 5, 1, | Wednesday, 688 Broadway, entrance | 1- file of workers organized in Ryan's | ss Whipple | Be Brooklyn. rance |actually gotten into the public gal fascist “unions” is shown in the | same edition of the N. Y. Sun where | it tells of a “Bread Line Opens in|, Brooklyn” in the following words: “One man who said he was a plas- terer making $60 to $80 a week in| ts ‘Sneco-Vanzett Tp, good times, said he belonged to the lnins" Aver AN must’ bee br are 50 cents, * lery of the Council Chamber, and they really had some leaflets. The iserants probably intended to hrow them in paper wads at the be- | diamond wardheelers that go under |the alias of city councilmen, _Wi-] Ab, hat All To Demonstrate. Today in the 161st St. Court two | strikers will go on trial, two more Thursday, and ten Monday, with | frame-up charges against them. They were seized! They | The Food Clerks’ Industrial Union Building and at pataeaeee Mialon saturday, Mar an Lyceum, 66 B, 4th letics, dancing. Admission 50 cent nefit class war prisoners, plasterers’ union, which has 1,250] jwere questioned! Where was the | calls on all its members to stop | union members. Only about 100 of} || W.LR. Executive Tonight. army? Who had concealed the So-| work tomorrow and join the great) the union members are working} 729 P. ™. 799 Broadway, room 22!./viets?_ Who is that guy named | unemployment demonstration on) now. A plumber who earned $70 to | , Wamens Council, | Pravda? Union Square, at 1 p.m. A mem- $80 a week said that less than a/, cents, prospective ‘sneakers worl | | But, alas, there was no Soviets |bership meeting was held last night | third of his fellow plumbers in the |ers correspondents, Wednesday, 8.30) at union offices, 16 West 21st St., n union of 1,500 members were em-|?- ™» 80 B. 1ith St, room 535. | marching that day, in spite.of the! .¢ chich enthusiasm was expressed ployed now.” wveanwament Connell” No 7. <, {ti Siven by Mattie Woll, though | for the successful organization drive | Z Vednesday, 8 p. tol * These workers, victims of the so-|Brookivn, “Lecture on International |e Three Comrades told them all |of the union, now going on, and the | cial fascists such as Ryan, Woll and | Womens Day, about the big demonstration at | second nominations made for execu- Shoe W At Ce iI No. 32. -| Uni _| tive board and officials. Tonieht, 8 p.m, 1565 Se. Marks Union Square, at 4 p,m... on Thure Green, are reduced from the “aris- tocracy” of labor to accepting slop- | ,\/.' Brooklyn Louis A. Baum on |day, and invited all the “gentle, good- alization, fr pitalis ° ;. ‘ piecaren esi natured police” to strike that day. py charity, and there are millions | ‘Rat |So the Three Comrades ran along] Worker. Sell him a copy every more who will give these pot-bellied |S°cialism.” fascist agents of the bosses an an- . FON Communist Activities home and the show was over. day for a week. Then ask him to al of the interests of the workers. a swer that fits their criminal betray- Ryan pretended an alarm that if| Paris Commune Mass Meeting. the A. F. of L. workers strike it is | San hie AVE ee Ae THIRD ANNUAL BALL given by “violation of agreement” with the fedahi and-othiengs” ™ Sea! CLOAK AND DRESS CUTTERS of the N. T. W. 1. U. dahl ana qothiers. employers, as if the fraud of agree- ments was worth a damn to “unions” | Students’ body March 9, 8 p.m. Saturday Evening, March 8, 1930 AT PARK .PALACE such as those of the plasterer and | (535° Aamlssion a cents, 110th Street and Fifth Avenue plumber noted above as in the} | Brooklyn breadline. It is obvious | Section 1, Morning Branch. | | LARGE BRASS BAND WILL ENTERTAIN Tickets 50 Cents. Hat-check 25 Cents * * -T'ALK to your fellow worker in your shop about the Daily Workers’ School, that the 100 employed plasterers in| 4,y°*'s ##ain as usual at center to- the union of 1,250 have an interest in class solidarity in seeing that the 1,150 jobless brother workers get more in the way of relief than a rotten charity handout, and they also know that the employers are forcing them to take lower wages than the allegedly “sacred agree- ment” calls for, so what have they | to lose? _—————— WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIHEIT BLVG—Main Floor Phone: LEHIGH 6382 lnternational Barber Shop W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Mobilize for Tomorrow’s Demonstration! W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3008 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Deliverea All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS RUTHENBERG MEMORIAL MEETING Tonight, at 8 o’clock CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE 67th St. and Third Ave. - 3 ?UTCHERS’ U) ‘UNIO ‘For All Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Murray Hil) 5550 z Regular meetings every firat ane! third Sunday, “10 Pi rag bdelasn'T Bureau open aM Telephone AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets Ist Saturday “CE R oY inthe month at SM | | Eel S + CHEMIST i Z. FOSTER 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronz, N. ¥ — ROBERT MINOR M, J. OLGIN GEORGE SISKIND SAM DARCY OTTO HALL “Special for Organizations” C. M, FOX UNION SQUARE Stationary and Printing Stencils, mimeozraph paper, upp Business meetings held Ne iti H Monday of the month at 8 m. | Haucational “mestings—the. vhird Monday of the month. Hxecutive|! Board meetings—every ‘Tuesdas afternoon at 6 o'clock. { ry! One Union! Join ana]) | the Common Enemy! were not regarded by the employers | unemployed worker horrify Jimmie | membership is in favor of affilia- | | dea” by | On the inesadling pi Fail Organization of the jobless demand unemployment insurance, under supervision of the workers, fought for on March 6. Whole Police Force|i jin Amalgamated Union! National Textile Union| World Jobless | ‘Calls All to Strike and} ‘Protest in Union Sq.' All textile workers in the New | York district are called upon by the | National Textile Workers Union to |strike tomorrow and come to the | mass-unemployment demonstration | in Union Square. The decision to {support the unemployed workers in | their protest was made at a meeting | of the District Executive Board of | Also there is a powerful movi t | the N.T.W. Laber and Fraternal (collected in thousands speculating as page hs 7a Bede cavalaeaic? re: | general membership meeting of all members of the union, to which all textile workers are invited, at 16 West 21st St., at 8 p.m. The pur- pose of the meeting is to plan fur- ther organization in this district, and to hear the report of the district convention, which was held Febru- ‘ary 16. The newly elected executive com- mittee of the district will be in- stalled at a special gathering of | union members and sympathizers at _ Community House, 1800 Seventh Ave., Saturday evening. Tell the Advertiser—“I Saw Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” PHOTOGRAPHS AT THE STUDIO OR YOUR HOME Bertin Photo Studio 454 THIRD AVENUB Near 3ist St. New York City CALEDONIA 6766 Special Rates for Organizations —__— Support Class War Prisoners ENTERTAINMENT and DANCE given by the BUILDING MAINTEN NCE] WORKERS UNION Saturday, March 8 at 8 p. m. MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 East Fourth Street ADMISSION 50c All Proceeds to go to Build the Unton PROGRAM: | 1A play—“Solidarity” in one act, rade Kriwokulska, played by the Young Pioneers. 2—A Balalaika Orchestra, led by | Kerkera, $—Ukrainian Singing Duet. 4—Athleties. 5—Dance Orchestra, led by Kert | Dancing ‘till late’ in t Have Your Eyes Examined | and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under personal supervision of DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist avn SECOND AVENUE rner 13th Street WV YORK CITY New York Eye and Ear Infirmary Telephone Stuyvesant 3836 Circle 1699 bgokd mitt) te he 18, Suite RED HOT MUSIC by DAN BAKER “THE CHEF OF HOT TUNES” and his ORCHESTRA Entertainers for 1658 Broadway Every 0 Hoseland Bldg. Spe Rates to Daily Worker Readers, 200 FE. 14th St. Apt. 10 Room and Jent meals. Agencies Jobless Get a Dirty Deal | To-morrow evening there will be a | hoard for 2 comrades, $20.00, tact | WORKERS RELIEF CALLS FOR FIGHT “Grim Starvation Calls All to Demonstrate” ‘3’ Inter! at Shark Tiplariaant | Sovkino’s “China Express” Due At | Cameo Saturday the World with Mr. and Martin Johnson” now in its i week at the Cameo The , will stay not longer than that, | Sevkino production ii heduled for presentation following the engage- ment of the talking travel film. The Wor ational Relief, “China Express,” which is scheduled | 949 Beoadway, New York City, yes- to begin a showing on Satur terday called on all its members and ch 8, is probably the most ex-| a1 other workers to join with the aordinary of all the unusual film overs throughout the world in products which have been importe! from Soviet Russia’s studios. This picture has a predominatingly Oriental and the entire action takes place aboard a speeding train. | VICTOR HERBERT'S, “THE | SERENADE,” OPENS demonstrating against ment tomorrow, March 6. York demonstration is Square, at 1 p. m. The call of the W.LR. states: vation is not a bugboo; it is e reality in this. country. no longer a question of unemploy- | TONIGHT. Lites Popa cae isolated eases, but of hundreds of Vic or Herbert’s “The Serenade, thousands of wo’ SF who cannot which was first presented here by Ba tac eee HaweORay the Bostonians in 1897, will open tonight at Jolson’s Theatre. The Jol- sons Company will use a new ver- sion newly prepared by Smith. ZELAYA, PIANIST, AT PIT- KIN THEATRE. Zelaya, well-known concert. pian- ist, appears this week at Loew’s Pit- kin Theatre with “Venetian Carni- | in Councils of the Unemployed to val,” a revue from the Capitol The- | and free employment agencies atre. | will be some of the demands | Norma Talmadge is appearing in | , ‘ her first talkie “New York Nights” on the Pitkin sereen this week, | iwo alternativ either to lie down meekly and starve or to unite with their fellow workers everywhere, both employed and unemployed, in a merciless fight against starvation.” VALK to your tallee worker in your shop about the Daily Worker. Sell him a copy every day for a week. Then ask him to become a regular subscriber. TURGENEV PLAY NEXT THEATRE GUILD PRODUCTION. “Meteor,” at the Guild Theatre, is in its final two weeks and closes Saturday evening, March 15. It will be followed at the Guild by Tur- | genev’s “A Month in the Country.” by and starve. | All the capitalist papers in Eur- lope admit that the unemployed are growing militant. The ’ are uniting with the po- | ge the unemployed work- | | on Streets March 6, | (Continued from Page One) tempt to prevent the demonstration. In Germany, the social-fascist and boss press is shrieking against the organization of the unemployed to demand work or wages. The| will not be able to squelch the 17,- Munich police have forbidden the} 000,000 world unemjfoyed from | jobless demorwirations in that city,| coming out into the streets to de- but it will avail them nought, as|mand adequate unemployment in-! the number of unemployed is grow-!surance for their 170,000,000 de-| | ing so rapidly, they will not stand pendents. } COMRADES MEET AT— CAFE INTRO 249 Enst 18th Street Near Second Avenue A QUIET EATING PLACE Regular Meals. Reasonable Prices. The mobilization of the bosses ; Comrades Meet at PARK RESTAURANT 698 Alerton Avenue Corner White Plains Ave, A GOOD PLACE TO EAT i Open All Night. Ladies Inyited. -MELROSE— |sAMUSEMENTS-| Beginning This Friday! R.K. 0, 42nd St. & Bway Phone Wisconsin i : VEGETANIAN CAMEO (S2"]][ ose aus \ omrades Always Find tt Pleasnot to Dine at Our Pleee. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONBs»- INTERVALB Amkino Presents—American Premiere CHINA ta it” EXPRESS 91489 RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food fi Fa, 37 A Realistic Episode of the Revolution in China PRODUCED BY SOVKINO OF MOSCOW Enacted by an Eminent Cast of Soviet and Chinese Players | —and on the same program— Latest Sovkino Newsreel (ag HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. 1 Phone: UNIversity 5865 DAyst | with Mr. & Mrs. MARTIN JOHNSON Phoget Stapresant 3814 { John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 202 KE, 12th St. New York atre Guild Productions “" elas REPERTORY }4th st) LAST TWO WEEKS wrreat Byes, §:20. Mats, Thur. Ser, 280 “METEOR” Bc. $1 By 5. N. BEHRMAN EVA Le GALLIE: ides Director z a : VING CORPSE” GUILD: ¢ “THE APPLE CART” |) HAVE THEIR Way” Tom. Nah HE BDA GABLER” By Bernard Shaw MARTIN BECK 4% Street ]| of 8 Av. Eves, 8:20, Mats. “ihuraday | and Saturday at 2:30 ‘Tonight— ‘Tom. = All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | Loew’s “Big 2” | PITKIN || PARADISE Pitkin Avenue Grand Concourse Brooklyn 3 rons | DR. J. MINDEL SURCECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 ‘at connected with any St. & 7th Av. Evs. 8: LJOLSONS’ #913 4.6 zu Ax. Bos. 0 VICTOR HERBERT'S ‘The SERENADE with ROY CROPPER and ON BOTH SCREENS | Olga Steck and Greek Evans NORMA eS other office REBOUND. TALMADGE Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor, Seeund Ave, New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Vlease telephone oppointment Telephone: Leh 02s Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon entist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 9th St Phone, Orchard’ 2333, Arthur Hopkins presents a new | medy by Donald Ogden Stewart | “NEW YORK NIGHTS” Stage Shows—Roth Thentres trom CAPITOL THBATRE, BROADWAY with HOPE WILLIAMS PLYMOUTH Th, 45th St. W. of Byway 8:50, Mats. Thure, and §; ND. AVENU PLAYH OL Sic 138 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER E! Er LAST DAY! LAST DAY! “A THROW of DICE” | The spectacular Indian story of ure with a east ef S000 natives; 1,000 horses, camels, tigers and other wild a SOVKINO JOURNAL—Pev! Alxo Special Scene Dealing with the Religious 1 Continuous Noon till Midnite, Prives 25e and 3y6nan Jleve6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist differ~ nion 301 Hast 14th St, Cor, Second Ave, Tel, Algonquin 7248 We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty | Advertise your Union Meetings | here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER i Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City |