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eee Four BRITISH IMPERIALISTS — PLOT MARTIAL LAW AGAINST ARAB MASSES “2 Inquiry Commission Report Shows Unity of Imperialism Arrest Communist Leader for Leading A Demonstration for Release Palestine dispatches state that Jerusalem is again under martial law “io prevent riots on the eve of the inquiry report” concerning the events last August. Evidently *he British imperialists expect their report to be provocative of trouble rather’ than “settling” anything. Reports also state that a Com- munist leader has been arrested at Hoover Gives Grafter WASHINGTON, March silence of his grafting friend, Cl Republican National Committee, in the Senate. Huston got -a little present t Union Carbide Co. for helping them get their paws on Shoals project. :.023 Live in Rotten Houses on East Side East Side Chamber of Com- report yesterday, ad- 023 persons live in (dark all around), foreign born workers and | ployed. Many of them have t ime diseased from their living vedi ions. It estimates the value ase furniture owned by each on the East Side at $25 na m that 10, houses” Whalen Distributes Gro not he departing for the maker job of driving girl clerks with new and more drastic speed- up, making the usual midnight appointments of his machine among the police. Wanna- - How to Hide Tammany’s Big Graft ALBANY, N. Y., March 31.—The legislature is discussing whom they shall appoint to lead the investiga- tion of New York City graft, mag- istrate court rackets, and the Roth- stein case, when, and if, they de- cide to make the investigation. The'and not to make a general scandal. Ss Mellon’s Aluminum Trust Case to Close Soon WASHINGTON, March 31.— Final arguments begin Wednesday before the Federal Trade Commis- sion after a five-year investiga- tion of the Mellon-controlled Alwm- inum Co. of America, asa gigantic Walker Offers Job Agencies—With: No Jobs: Mayor Walker has insulted the) jobless workers by introducing a bill in the municipal assembly yesterday, authorizing the creating of city em-| ployment agencies. He did not do one thing to make any jobs for the jobless workers, and the employment agencies will not find them any jobs | O'Shea, Sup’t Schools, Dr. William J. tendent of schools who had work- jailed their children demeastrated with their O’Shea, superin- ers because together Fur Bosses Indicted for Arson Four fur bosses were indicted for | arson in the second degree yester- day by the New York County Grand Jury, A professional firebug ad- Stop Jobless“*R Berlin dispatches state that the new Bruening cabinet, making the fascist agrarian leader Schiele, Minister of Agriculture, means to 31.—Hoover's ie embarrassing his yer Whalen, who may or may | A lot of his predeces- | ief to Help Capitalists Led Strikes 20 Ye Yours (ai With Zionists Gaza, Palestine, for leading a dem- onstration demanding release of imprisoned Arab independence fighters on hunger strike. Fred Beal led the Gastonia London dispatches state that the strike, as Southern organi Inquiry Commission has issued a the National Textile Workers report blaming all last August's Uni events on the Arabs, “attacking the Jews,” and attemp' ing to deny that there was a rising against | British rule. ion. “We want Beal,” shouted e Gastonia Gazette, when the ar- rests were being ‘made after the attack by Aderholt and his men on the strikers’ picket line, and its repulse. BEAT THEM UP AT SCHWEINLER’S Regular Way to Fire Man; Low Wages Huston His Protection persistent by adius H. Huston, chairman of the fellow-imperial- protection o the amount of $ from the past Muscle 35,000 the g A worker was attacked by t average. Hundreds of thousands || i AFI co he more live in little better surround-|2°SS°S and A.F.L. gangsters at ings. Schweinler's Press, 405 Hudson St., The owners of these houses of |Saturday, and had to fight for his misery are the leaders in the social | life. The regular way of firing a register: the Benjamin F. Winthrop | man in this shop, when the foreman | most ‘Astor, Maria C. Cadwalder, Hamil-|erable for him until he has to quit. ton Fish, Robert Goelet, Elbridge T.|They had it in for this particular largest holders, icipating in the Union Square | tion. Fat Jobs to Cossacks si that prints the Christian Herald, the Literary Digest, and various jobs with good graft have been Other ultra-conservative slaughtered, politically, and already ligious organs. It works a day and into their places; 85 more have been °'Sanized in the A.F.L., except about given a few crumbs in the shape of | 7° binders. Gerry, Louis Gunther, are the worker because he w: recognized The Schweinler Press is the out- sor’s appointees to the fat salaried 9 e and re- 19 of Whalen's pets have stepped | night shift, departments are slighter promotion. | The workers are beginning to see | through this A, F.-of L. “union” stuff that is no union for them. eee are down to $20 for bindery} ‘They demand an increase in protection from the gang, ven- | discussion is to give plenty of time | 9 to have the legislators bought off. 'tilation in the building and a locker The chief name proposed is that of /for everyone. (The gang prowls the |U. S. Attorney C. H. Tuttle, who workers’ clothing while they are at jcan be relied on to expose only a work.) |few political enemies of his backers | ocialists for Cut In Cleaner Drivers Wage (Continued from Page One) also binds the drivers to keep the | price up to 40 cents for a garment if the bosses’ association decides for it. One of the arguments of this Forward clique was that the driy- ers will not suffer so much from the agreement. “The bosses real- ly want to cut the wages of the ders, and they will leave the drivers alone.” It is quite in keeping with socialist party pol- icy to pit one group of workers against the other, to divide them so that the bosses can attack one | Section at a time. | trust “in restraint of trade.” | There is little doubt that the | Federal Trade Commission, a Hoo- | ver tool, will find in favor of Andrew Mellon and his Aluminum Go: of Anne | ynow either. He did not provide any} relief for the starving, and the land- lords can go right on evicting work- ers who can’t pay rent. There is not even any assurance that the employment agencies will actually |be established, the bill merely pro- vides they can be set up. The workers in the shops are | na raging mad against the open sell, Grows Cannon Fodder cut or the clique. The Cleaners parents against unemployment on on ee ee Sa cua March 6, has come out for the es- League is organizing the workers in shop committees to resist the | tablishment of a government-sup- ported military training course at| the eut of 4 holi- wage cuts and ee jdays. A mass meeting will be Jamaica High School. lealled shortly. All workers are aT urged to join the Cleaners and |Laundry Workers’ Industrial League, 13 West 17th St. mitted that the bosses had hired eee Si him to set fire to their lofts. The furriers are Lerner & Greenberg and the Dachis Brothers. Inciting War on (Continued from Page One) saddened” by catholic opposition to spend $100,000,000 to aid the agri- |fascist institutions. The fascist sec- cultural bourgeoisie, while plan- ning to cut down unemployment relief. ment, at the pope’s request, asked all | \the laity to support the heirarchy. With the pope’s campaign against | Communist Activities District Ball. April 12, sth St. 30. p, and Lenox m, orkers Book- sh Work- tion Four. All Units have I March 6 this w sion on 236 L F; Unit Al this i Saturday, 4.30 p.m. at Center, Labor and Fraternal) (Organizations anhattan rth § peakers: Wer, eBal, Mar’ Black- White’ solidarity Dance, Negro folk songs. — Avispices, National | Textile Workers Union, Negro Devt.., TUL. | Tickets, 75 cents per plate. Farle, Movie Dance Tha Genuert Baturdey, Anril 5, 1800 Seventh Ave. Gia ulture and chess | Club Fooin open every evening. * National Textile Workers Union. on enamiployed members of i. tional dances |‘ the Soviet Union in the foreground | ict report, today between jof action, the anti-Soviet nature of | Meanwhile the workers of the world are rallying to defend the So- |viet Union, and from the Gollnow | | Fortress, where many of the best of quarters, pecial work, | oS LL.D. Hae i Secretariat. Moved from Ch to New York, ) BE. 11th St, room 430. ; Siar aaa 2 h 43, LL.D. st bosses’ ter- Temple, Snglish and German Br: Demons ithe “socialist” government, contribu- tions have come from these prisoners to aid the tractor and truck cam- * paign of the Workers’ International Relief. 8p. m. min speakers * Worker Musicians, Tuesday, 8.30 p. m., rehearsal of music _ se Downtown Workers 134 KE. 7th St, All that can an instrument invited. * operation with the Friends of the; Soviet Union, is carrying on a cam- paign to buy 25 tractors and trucks ‘Commine. ookly». | for the Soviet workers and farmers, * to be sent to the big collective near etch ALD, | Alex- |Moseow, called “Solidarity Farms.” rosperity and Un-| Lists to gather contributions for this fund may be obtained from the W.LR., 949 Broadway, Room 6512, New York City. Womens © Tonight, 247 G. Gorelik on Par * mnetl Nos 16. | employ ment ens { A “ight ‘te Land, ot Soviets, entertainment, Satur- Workers School, 26 Auspices Work- Club. Benefit | Worker Drive. * Painters 'T.U.U.L, ‘al membership meeting, Wed- 8 p.m. 13 W. 17th St. Every- | Bos iy welcome, | Gen Bookkeeper Wanted! THE JEWISH MORNING FREIHEIT wants an earnest comrade and good bookkeeper for its office. Must read Yid- dish. Report immediately to | | Tel. SACramento 2: The Szabo Conservatory of Musie 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUE at 86th Street Subway Station NEW YORK CITY Instruction given (to Beginners and Advancers 30 Union Square, New York, In | MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, 'CBLLO Estate, the estates of William V.|has no pretext, is to make life mis- | Soviet by Churches, |retary of state has, for the govern- | German workers are imprisoned, by | In the U.S.A. the W.LR., in os| aV & ‘ALL ARE DEAD IN KENTUCKY MINE National “Miners ‘Meet in Two States KETTLE ISLAND, Ky., Mar —Bodies ‘of five miners were found today by rescue crews in the Pioneer Coal Co. workings. There is abso- lutely no hope held out for the other |11 entombed bya gas explosion S urday. The men are under tons of stone and coal a mile and a half underground. The explosion was caused by the criminal practice of the company in sending the employes to work in a gas filled mine. Miners’ Convention. WEST FRANKFORT, IIl., Maret 31.—Sub-district conferences to the National Miners Union are going on in Illinois, preparatory to the Illi- nois state convention of the N.M.U. in Zeigler, April 5. PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 31. The National Miners Union held dis- trict conferen for western Penn- sylvania yesterday. These conferences, as well as Illi nois and other state conventions be held soon, are preparatory to the national convention of the N. in June, at which 1,000 dele- to worked out for a national strike in both hard and soft coal this autumn WAR CRIPPLE IS FOR REVOLUTION Fofrich, Porter Téll What Army Is for Two ex-soldiers spoke last night to an enthusiastic mass largely com- posed of young workers. Joseph F. Fofrich, crippled world-war veteran, who went to Europe to fight for “democracy and because god wanted America to win,” got a taste of this |democracy when the officers stood back as they sent the men into the {firing line and when he came back wounded, his family without support and he getting a “pension” of 80 lcents a day. “We will follow the call to join the army in the next war, but not to fight for the capi- talist class, we will turn imperialist war into civil war for the establish- ment of a Soviet Republic in this country,” is his conclusion. Just Frem Pari John Porter, just released from army prison where he served a sen- jtence of 18 months for participating in the New Bedford strike told how he joined the army, thinking he went into a fairyland, but quickly realized the role of the army as the bosses, instrument. He joined the workers’ struggle against capitalist suppression and exploitation to fight till the end for the establishment of the rule of the working class, in which all workers, in factories as well as in uniform must par WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIHEIT BLDG.—Main Floor pecial for Organizations” C. M. FOX 32 UNION SQUARE Stationary and Printing Stencils, mimeograph paper, office supplies. 10%Reduction for Daily Worker Readers, are expected and plans will be | | Memorating t Jat 4th St., at 7 p. m. cy Needle Trades Workers Ind ‘ial Union, Independent Shoe Wo: ers Union, Council of Working Class | Women, Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe. | oppressing race. Thugs nia Her |¢ | This is Ella Mavi organizer ie , and writer of songs jor striking workers. She was a mill yorker from Bessemer City, comedy, which is being presented by the New | York Theatre Assembly, and is now | playing in Baltimore, will have its |New York premiere Monday evening, April 7, at the Masque Theatre. musical comedy, DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, ‘APRIT T, 1930 yar sce ——— ‘Dear Old England” wig an _ Amusing Satire at the Ritz XEPORT BIG DROP | “THEY NEVER GROW UP” AT! MASQUE tate “They Never Grow by Hump ae The Shuberts will bring Pp,” a new ” Pearson, | Included in the cast are Otto Kruger, Mary Fowler, Kathryn March, Anne Sutherland, Claude Cooper, Edwin Maynard and Flor- ence Auer. their new Three Little Girls,” into the Shubert Theatre Monday N.C. The hirelings of the Man- | evening, April 7. Fritz Leiber and ille-Jenckes Co. kilied her with Shakespearean repertcire com- rifle fire in vroad daylight on the y, now at the Shubert, may con- road from, Gastoni® to Bessemer. | tinue. thelr engagement at another ; 3 theatre City, with dozens of witnesses, and oh & The title settled upon by the « r mill 0 owners’ jury aequ witted them Be heatre Guild for Maxwell Ander- son’s play on Queen Elizabeth and < is “Elizabeth. # Queen.” It will be produced during the the first week of October with Al- BANQUET TONIGHT Unions Rally; Foster | Defendants, ‘Speak Many be repre: fi workers Reeerteatent will nted at the banquet com anniversary of the to be held tonight Lyceum, 66 Among them are stonia strike, the Manhattan teria Workers Union, ete. There will be motion pictures o the Gastonia strike. There will be! music, dancing and a good dinner. Edith Segal and Allison Burroughs will dani “solidarity dance.” th ~ Speakers will be: Foster, J. W.)¥2 Ford, Fred Beal, Clarence Miller, | Will Dewey Martin and others. | The banquet is to “spread -organ- ization in the South,” and is under the au of the National Textile Workers Union and the Negro Department of the T. JL. pens th “Vida Obrera” Runs | Dance for Funds to Become Weekly Paper “Vida Obrera,” Spanish language paper of the Communist Party is | starting a campaign to become a} weekly paper, and as the first step has arranged for a huge dance to collect funds. This dance will take place at Harlem Czsino, 116th St.! and Lenox Ave., on Saturday even- | ing, at 8:30 p. m | s are now on sale at el Worke okshop, 26 Union Square, and the Spanish Workers’ Club, 26 | West 115th St. W. 1. R. CLOTHING STORE BROOK AVENUR ‘elephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families. YOUR SOLIPARITY WITH THE WORKERS! sHOW Saxophone Taught Suite 413 RED HOT MUSIC DAN BAKER “THE CHER OF HOT TUNES” and his ORCHESTRA Circle | 1 an jmportant role helping to break down the natural | distrust on the part of the Negro workers towards the workers of the|Club, Chicago; Group It is helping the dent Workers Circle;~mass meeti | Negro workers to differentiate he- lot 630 f | |tween the white ruling class and/| and | HUDSON vst produe “The Liberator’ in the e labor fakers of the the militant, “The Liberator” must jthousand dollars immediately 799 Broadway, Room 338, N Please find enclosed. Jationa! |to help The Liberator in its tas jof organizing the Negro workers for e struggle against impe: Address ...... is today playing South in American Federation of Labor, on one hand, class-conscious white workers in the revolutionary }unions on the other hand. be forced to suspend, raise one it or ¥.G; -dolla rialist op- A new comedy, “Dear Old Eng- land,” by H, F. Maltby, arrived in this town week and te sion of Theatre. * inf » th 3 has enjoye Jong run in * don is a burlesque post-war living conditi We a Built on the Old roades Theatre. sion, of many moments amusing bu lesque, move appreciable and unt | standable. no doubt, if one has b in England and knows the Britisie fred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in the | in their native haunts. leading roles and will be the Guild’s m of the new season. The chief players are Gladys } son, Kitty Bingham, Reginald Ca rington, Violet Besson and LIBERATOR" IS A FORGE IN SOUTH PROTESTS GROW ON JOBLESS CASE y UA (Continued from Page Onc) Indepe Philadelphia; workers in Turner protest meeting in Chester, Pa.; Needle Trades Workers In dustrial Union, Philadelphia, with 700 members; American Jugo Slav | Association, McKeesport, Pa., with 75 members; I.L.D. branch Weirton, W. Va, read the Daily Worker? them every day -nd Party members. Sell it to new make WRITE about your Peneni cone. conditinas for the Daily Worker. _Become | a Worker Correspondent. hea., 44th Evs. Sat, at LAURA D. 0 St. E. af By | Mats. Wed. & WILCK presents “TROYKA” By Lula Vollmer from the Hungarian of Imre Fazekas story of the Russian y~ Theatre Guild Productions A MONTH IN THE COUNTRY By IVAN TURG “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard S| MARTIN BECK 43* Eves. 3:30, Mats, IVIC REPERTOR Eves. 8:30. Mats. Thur., Sat 2:30 6c, $1, $1.50 ‘onis and Saturday at 2 Revolution haw h Street fs Av. ae St ¥ h Ave. E, Director 2 OPEN DOOR” THEIR V and GULL |UNTON Ss Sensational with JENNY J A vividly dramatic portrayal German seaport Hamburg. VAM. to5 P.M. 256 Music : Dancing St Now Playing! = THE DOCKS OF HAMBURG !—Thrilling! and WILLY —Added Attraction— THE CULT OF “The Way to Strength and Beauty ‘The new way to health and longevity through nakedness which is now sweeping Europe Acme Theatre :: Continuous Verformances Daily 9 A. M, to Midnight. After 5 P. M. 35; GASTONIA STRIKE ANNIVERSARY | BIG BANQUET CELEBRATION TONIGHT At7 P.M. MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 FE. 4th ST. SPEAKER: WM, Z. FOSTER, J. W. FORD, FRED E. BEAL, CLARENCE) MILLER, DEWEY MARTIN AND OTHERS “WHITE TRASH” One Act Play of Gastonin Strike by the Workers Laboratory Theatre Movies of Strike SOLIDARITY DANCE: Edith Segal and Allison Burroughs. SONGS: Chas, Burroughs. te AUSPICES: National Textile Workers Negro Department T, U. U L. “SPREAD ORGANIZATION IN WHE SOUTH” on underworld of the of the famous NAKEDNESS ON, sau: ARE ‘East 14th St. Between Broadway and 4th Ave. Prices: from Sat. and Sun, 35¢ Pe all day SEE SSE a 75¢ Per Plate ‘on and National 541) D-i ty fou CONTINUOUS SHOWS pt 35) “FRAME LYN BRE rid” and “Alibi” Co Popular Prices—10:k0-1 Write About Your Conditions | for The Daily Worker. Worker Correspendent. We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty D”. NT and Regis fore thrills than “Under. mbined. Pm, Be Become a YOU AND YOUR FRIEN MUST COME TO THE BAZAAR i] A, H. WOODS presents ALICE BRADY i" esis HONOR and BETRAY A Satirien! Comedy A THUNDERBOLT of DEFIANT DRAMA Arnold 4 Novel HERBERT e) BRENONS Radio Picture A1Gth Street Seventh Ave REBOUND Arthur Hopkins presents a comedy by Donald Og wim HOPE WILLIAMS | PLYMOUTH Bvs. given by the NEEDLE TRADES INDUSTRIAL UNION | and NON-PARTISAN JEWISH SCHOOLS | THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY APRIL 3, 4,5 and 6 NEW STAR CASINO HUNDREDS OF ARTICLES AT VERY LOW PR Music and Dancing Every Night! CASE OF } | Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. BASIC INDUSTRIES Crisis Worsens Admits Wall St: Bank in the first ear dropped n 500,000 below the last year. The auto- es once announced that n during 1930 would not than 1,000,000 cars belo The first three ar has already ac- unted for more than 50 per cent of the drop. Indications are that he drop in auto cutput in 1980 be- 1929 will be much: closer to 000,000. The Gu in it output Automobi H hs of thi: e mo. rop more he 1929 ¢ utput. months of ~ anty Trust Company release dated March 31, 1930: “The impetus given te the au- tomobile and steel industries early a the y has lost some of its force, and falling prices in the, commodity markets have had a de- pressing effect upon business gen- crally. Unemployment has con- tinued to a distressing extent, and the construction programs outlined previously. have not yet been un- dertaken in any great volume.” In short, they say, every indica-' n she that the_cri worsen- ig and that Mr. Hooyer’s mountain { lies is barely exposed by obstinate facts. Holmes and Peltz Go to Trial Today PHILADELPHIA, March 31.~— For distributing leaflets to hundreds of unemployed workers of Chester, Ray Peltz and _Holmes will go on trial tomor: fedia court room ed ion. The bosses ster are openly boasting that ill send away these “two reds for a long rest,” because they helped organize their workers for better conditions. “For All Kinds of Insurance” = BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Bast 42nd Street, New York |{ Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST. 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor. IDR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office —MELROSE—, 2 VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades ‘ Il Always Find It 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx oenear 14th Ge Station) ” PHONE:— IRVALB 9149, Vegetarian RESTAURANT I 199 SECOND AVEl1.UE | Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food © HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian Moe MADISON AT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity. 5865” Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: YTALIAN DIsHEs | A_ place with atmosph where all radi Nneet icals meet 2 E.12th St. ~ New York 5 | All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Clcremont Parkway, Hotel & Restaurant Workers Braneh ef ¢ Workers. 1 We Sit eethe Yee Phone Chelsea 2274 Business meett; Monday of theNeronte aaa pet Mducational meetings—the Bae, a month, Executive afternoaneat 6 ovlocke One industry! 0: Fight the one, Unto Jain ama Office cpen from 9 a, m. to 6 p. m, || Adverttse your Union Meetings || here, For information write to | _ The DAILY WORKER sing Dept. 26-28 Union |. New York City URNISHED _ROOMS | gun na eget 14th Si, ‘Apt. 10, Sin; ble, convenk bo Board optional, Nad Sas oe ina