The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 23, 1930, Page 2

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poe fK0 DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, WEDNESDA Y, APRIL 23, 193) Serio = 1,300 KOBE TRAMWAY > WORKERS JOIN 12,000 ON STRIKE IN TOKIO Osaka Transport Workers Ready to Come Out; Fight Started in Tokio Against Wage Cut “Gravest Labor Situation in Japanese History Admitted by Capitalists; Struggle Grows nd three hundred mo-| “climax” to “what is admitted to f the Kobe One th he the gravest labor situation in} who are preparing to take zart in the nw ut on Si Workers Union in the South s political strike on May 1st. the National Textile ers Members of Japanese history.” “The gravest tra tem struck Scans oe 4 4 ; sheik otal labor situation in Japanese history’ support of their striking | ig certainly on the order of the day, in Tokio. Workers of the! but there is every indication that nsit System are also pre- a sympathetic stories the climax has not yet been reached. The crisis in Japan is becoming deeper and militant labor struggles re still spreading. Resistance Grows. The present strike movement in| yo, an represents a militant resist-| y, e on the part of the Japanese nst the attempt of the to press workers Sunday sev- nsport last Crews of ikes, broke the record of strik gles in Japanese history. Japanese officials admit that this year will certainly s eaders arrested. Labor Struggle. to the New York Is Greates| Cable « = New York Haagen wi! fair. : __ |week are now offered $20 and $25, = Re eee eae _ Mass demonstrations were held in and after making the rounds of the Pees vere North Cal te po teeiordert shops they are forced to accept this i ; , rohibiting such meeti 6 p0slwaoa. Mouk ob the aniladawarkers|| Whalen to Quit at Bosses Blowou DD : wage. Most of the skilled workers | alen to Qui B t lice did not dare to interfere. are out of jobs, while the bosses | d for! which resulted in the jailing of F ter, Minor, Amter and Raymond for three years, and Lesten for 30 days. | Who will replace Whalen as head 6 di n by the leading Wall Street f the Amer- and exploite is to be a testimonial | slugger of the working class has ger of the work-|not been announced. Whalen’s res- his career as /ignation does not change matters a © York City, | great deal for the work ements. York. The bosses, to, 2 ign on their Tammany grafters, will pick May 7, months after he led/out another enemy of the workers the attack on the m unemployed |to direct the 19,000 police in th demonstration in ion Squa' attacks on workers’ meetings. Vote-Catchers Reject Yellow-Dog Parker WASHINGTON, 1 April 22.—The!senate, with indications that as a senators on the jud: y vote-catching measure he will be re. senate at Chittagong they police stat on 2-man ¢ Elect Organization Committee to Build TUUL; Hit Boss-AFL Plot. India Fighters Surrounded April 22.—British CALCUTTA, authorities announced to-} A v at their troops have sur- | Cleane: yers was held Mon- the Indian revolutionists day at Cen Opera House. J. W. ided the armor: » and that xpected murders and captures ho successfully Union Unity League, spoke on the le of the T. U. U. L. in the or- r 's or peasants on sight aiming them to be the revolution- ts involved in the Chittagong af- with the A. F. of L. officials not to pay above a certain sum. Work: ers who used to get $50 and Sd In Madras the masses stormed a are allowed to pay $15 and $20 for ion. They were dispersed! 19 or 12-hour day. y the police, but immediately at- cked another police station. May Day | DEMAND JOBLESS LEADERSRELERSE Mass Meet Plans May, Central Opera House yesterday in a ;mass demonstration to demand the rd, Negro organizer of the Trade | kio is now 12,000, I rde: f the i ‘i ae aie have | bosses to shift the burden of the! would follow soon. nization of the unorganized work- | ¥ 2 T io. present economic crisis on the shoul- There is little doubt that the seared te tee a woes by wage-cuts British bloodhounds, MacDonald's) Workers from shops brought out | SEs ee troops, will shoot at any group of that the bosses have an agreement Oe | meeting. An organization committee of 15 | was elected to direct the further| vithout at the same tin lvelease of the unemployed delega- jtion, sentenced to three year m- | prisonment by the bos ntrolled Tammany court. Tremendous en- thusiasm greeted the call for wide mobilization for a mass political MDONALD FOR THE] CLEANERS MEET strike on May Day to demand the | MURDER OF REBELS) FIGHT SELL OUT Amter, push freedom of Foster, Minor, Raymond and Lesten, and to |the fight for “Work or Wages The meeting was opened by Sam Nessin, chairman, and was held un- | der the auspices of the Communist | tie meeting of | party, Trade Union Unity League |and International Labor Defense. | When William Shifrin, recently | acquitted on the charge of killing |a@ company thug, was introduced to the assembled worker® he was |given an enthusiastic ovation. “The workers have to fight for jthe liberation of their delegation,” | |said Fred Beal, one of the to- _|nia defendants, who spoke at the Only the mass demand of will free our leaders, \be a fight for their Jagainst unemployment organization the workers This must release and capital- and and ism, which breeds it. “Do not have any illusions about |the boss judges in Gastonia. They are planning to jail the seven of us but they want to bury us in prison Gandhi is frantic because he has | “3s is ase | avousir ot been arrested. ‘The “labor” gov- /ctivity of the cleaners and to build the working class. This we will mien dinde hina, mare Heletal stele cere cee |not let them do. May Day will be h imperialism while at liberty,| Several meetings of shop com-|a tremendous demonstration for the the worke: CAR STRIKERS STICK Vote For Wage Rise. PITTSBURGH, Pa., April y a vote of 1,819 to 112 the street are ng pat on y a 5-cent increase and a 15-cent boost unemployed was adopted, Day Conference w the worke sta strikers ¢ demand were held right after the| release of all cl: where steps were taken to and for the present so that | pi thrown out from the| test resolution against the | working cla ution of the leaders of the|the Communist Party and of the The May |7,000,000 unemployed in this coun- endorsed and | try,” said J. Louis Engdahl of the present were urged to | International Labor Defense. from their shops, in| mass mobilization jition to those representing the |class will free them -war prisoners slogans of the Commr- Par “The New York ruling clas ‘put in prison the spokesmen of the —the spokesmen of has “Only of the working committee, facing elections in ite of this, Hoover p: vember, rejected Hoover's nomina- nomination. Hoover for 1-man r operators on the © rs and Laundry Workers’; ©, Hope, Negro member of the tion of the yellow-dog contract ng advised to withdraw the yel- Pittsburgh Ra’ The in- League. |Labor Jury, said that Whalen and e Parker, enemy of Negro and|low-dog contract judge and put in I san howt On Thursday, April 24, at 8 p. m./his cossacks were guilty of t white wor for the eme | his place one equally as vie there will be a meeting of the Clean-| crime of beating the unemplc court yesterday by a vote of 10 to 6.|whose record can be more succes The matter now comes before the | fully hid. Religious Dopester Protects Murderer The Right Rev. James Matthew!Maxon, a booze-hound, brutally Maxon, Episcopal bishop coadjutor murdered an aged printer when he of Tennessee who on more than one Rees ee shesvoune ee ane site who had been nutured on the 5 * spouted slimy filth| best brand of religious opium from against the Soviet Union, under the |attacking a woman in her bed. guise of religion, arrived in New | Maxon’s excuse is that he partook |" York yesterday to save his son from|t20 much of liquor instead of his jail on a murder charge. Young/usual dict of religious opium. MacDonald Bars U.S.S.R. Football Team LONDON, April 22.—The social-| eration. fascist “‘Iabor” government of Eng-! to take place in South Wales, York- land has refused to grant visas to shire, Tyneside and Glasgow. a Soviet workers’ football team.| Monster demonstrations through- Members of the team applied for out the country, protesting agai visas to go to England to take|this outrageous act of the social- part in games which were arranged | fascist government, are arranged by by the British Workers’ Sport Fed-| the British Communist Party. 75,000 LEAVE MICHIGAN! CHANCES TO GET A JOB IS occasion has BECAUSE OF NO WORK ROTTEN IN WARREN MILLS ” DETROIT, Mich, April 22.— WARREN, Ohi April 22,— | That further unemployment is due | Chances to get work are “rotten” for Michigan workers is rather cer-| in Warren, important steel town of tain now with the publication of|the Mahoning Valley, any worker | Governor Green’s proclamation ask- | down in the ugly wo: ing for “citizens” to provide “odd | tricts will tell you. “Lucky if I jobs” for the unemployed. |get in two or three days a week,” | The governor said: “At a con-|Says one steel worker, while others | ference in Lansing recently a num-|look admiringly at him. They ber of business men put the date haven't had work for weeks. of May 1 as the dead line, explain- | ing that after that they would not continue their pears |Needle Shop Delegates Throughout the state the present Tonite at Irving Plaza depression has hit hard. Seventy- aia five thousand have already left the} ‘There will be a Needle @Trades state, according to the labor de-| Workers’ Industrial Union shop partment. The same authority gives delegate meeting at Irving Plaza at least 10,000 unemployed in Flint | Hall at 7:30 tonight to take up the and several thousand in Grand Rup- | question of how to best participate ids. The business situation in the |in the May 1 strike and demonstra- state has become continually worse.| tion. The meeting will also con- and no relief is in sight, |sider the membership drive of the , union, and the campaign for discus- sion in the shops of the Red Inter- STRENGTHEN BA N national of Labor Unions, and the ON REBEL BOOKS ocomination of delegates to the Fifth dis | World Congress of the R. I. L. U. Courts to Say What Can Come In. !mportant trade problems will also be taken up. WASHINGTON, April 22.—The | right to stop working class litera- ture from~ other countries entering Hoover Issues Hurry | the United States is given to the, Call for Morgan Man | Federal courts under the revised wording of the tariff bill on obscene and seditious literature. ee ey This strengthens the provision in|. WASHINGTON, April 22.—When the tariff bill against working class | Dwight W. Morrow, of the firm of revolutionary literature. The courts Morgan & Co. returns from the have the final word on any docx. 2™ms race in London he will im- | ment, newspaper or other publica- mediately go to the senate as sen tion sent to this country, and the|#tor from New Jersey. Morrow is tariff act gives them the widest lati- One of the leading spokesmen of tude in keeping out working class; Wall Street and with the growing literature which exposes capitalism Ctisis Hoover sent out a hurry-up and calls for international unity of |C#!! for this Wall Street boss to the working class. \ecome to Washington. RESCUED BY WORKERS | Send-Off for Delegates BURLINGTON, N. C. — Lucien! to M. W. L. Convention ®rnes, Negro worker, who was bur-| | ied under several tons of coal he} PHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 22. | Was unloading from a car, was res- | —A house-warming and send-off | ened by fellow workers and may live, | to the delegates from the port ‘| Philadelphia: to the Marine Work-| i ufaateankea National ers’ Convention in New| York will be given in the headquar- | v | ap into two erent hostile camps. ters of the Marine Workers’ League,) tnt wreat and directly conten. | dked clauses: hourgevis' dd pree 117 WSinut St, Friday evening. _ fefmgintraeMura, Labor “and Fraternal The games were planned *uspi ng-class dis- |, Morrow as Senator ' he smaller. They are al x days’ work with seven days’ International of Labor Unions, All workers are urged to attend, Organizations | Mouse Deles Topolezanyi Case ers and Laundry Workers’ League | but the jobless leaders were sent V. List St, to nominate @ | to jail. delegate to the Congress of the Red ! worke «Is a Blow to All the Foreign-Born Workers int Swimany you ean ta a how many nights. Comm ng on the revoking of cr TLD. AnticLyneh Meet. Topalezanyi’s citizenship pa- April . Lenox pers by the U. ust report in @ aflet distributio * : May 1. ; ; badd Je acrl ational Labor Defense says: is of utmost importance to the wor ft cc ne with the attemp ing for rap! Gastonia LL.D. Wednesday, ¢ , 1179 the most militant. the efforts of t he Negro wor of ¢ ‘ALD BOSSES. ate A Thursda IRE, Brownsvi tem, effect: tion of about 200 artif WLR. ¢ Communist Activities ker Campaign Da ty, May 10, 26 W.LR, City ‘Thursday, 19 BE. Building and Construction 'T.U.UL. |” Ball. Se sal Saturday, 26 Union Sq., 8 p. m., 50 ihe aes Fraction king comrad ein Ger Downtown Workers ie S. Circuit Court of Appeals, because of his membership |in the Communist Party, the Inter- The decision against Topolezanyi y. It is fully in : to pass laws lo» May Day. finger-printing and | : ing of all the foreign-| sieht for Union Squa ers, and the deportation of It is in line with bosses to terrorize | of the working class with the cos- Fight against | cack,’ Whalen. England.—Local | & labor fakers are holding back strike | Workers International Ri i ainst the recent introduc-|city will take place this Thu ‘| R Union Sa. and, international dance musie Meeting. | “This is a blow against ali | Pat Devine, secretary of the Na- |tional Bureau of the Councils of | Unemployed, called on a wide or- lganization of the unemployed for \the July 4 Convention in Chicago as an answer to the jailing of the leaders of the unemployed move- | “May Day will show that the workers are not cowed by ¢ jarrest of their leaders; they w [carry on the fight against unem- ployment and for ‘Work or Wages’ with more fire, demanding the re- Hease of their leade | Herbert Benjamin, represen fof the District Committee of th {Communist Pa ed mol tion among the workers in He p victory won by the woi str despite the unity of social-fasciggs, the Love- stone renega and ail the en MEMBERSHIP MEET OF WIR. A membership meeting of th ef in 14th St. April 24th, at 108 Eas will The Executive Committee present a report on the growth of the organization. Recommendations and plans for the Children’s Camp for this summer will be taken up las well as questions of May F the organization of branches opening of new schools. Mem»; c Wriday, i m. 134 E. ¥| April 25, at 8580 p. m, 26 Union. Ba: | Cooperators! Patronize Day. Pi 6th flo Reports of Buro and C, C,j i © Lecture gears ' Womens ata = rhe it 6F, Section 2 | Thursday, $7 26 Union, Sa, Py ednesday, instead | Mammunism, 25 "cents, procee ee re aad CHEMIST Workers School Camp Section 7. | 657 Allerton Avenue * oro} and iterature agents, | oP Foe ne Whe) 1dth st !f Estabrook 8215 Bronx, NY ty 4 . Tonight, ;| District rep. will be present, aie Oe ronx, Low SN * < Unit 3, Section 4, Tonight, 8 p. m., 336 Lenox Ave, De Leon Lecture, Prospect Workers © chester Ave., Bronx, 30 p,m. \Comrad. 25% REDUCTION TO CITY cture on “The A. F. de Union Unity League.” Ane eee ‘kers should attend. ees aE All Worker School Benefit. Grand concert and dance given by Unity Cooperative, 1800 7th Ave., Sun- day, April 27, at § p,m. for the hene- fit ‘of the Workers School. Admis sion 25 cents. a 2 * Women Council Meet. The central body delezates of the United Council of Working Class women, and the chairman of the May Day Committee of the local council will meet on Friday night, April 25, t the Workers Center, 26 Union &q., 8.30 p. m, sharp. * Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under personal supervision of DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215. SECOND AVENUE Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Eye and Ear Infirmary Telephone Stuyvesant 8826 * Markoff Lecture, The United Council of Working Class Women will hae a lecture with Comrade Markoff, on the topic, So- cialism, Anarchism, Communism, on Thursday nicht, April 24, at the Workers Center, 26 Union Sa, at & », m. All the proceeds to the Workers hool drive. for funds. Tell the Advertiser—“I Saw Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” Greetings on the occasion of the moving of the office of the Millinery Branch to the headquarters of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. We pledge our continued support and solidarity for the building of ONE BIG INDUSTRIAL UNION. THE GIRLS OF BERG AND ARONOFF. W. L. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone low 3098 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! Phone: LEHIGH 6382 {nternotional Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, Ne' (bet. 108d & 104th Si Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor NOW PLAYING DIE HOSE (OR A ROYAL SCANDAL) with WERNER KRAUSE and JENNY JUGO “Mr. Werner uxe does excel- lent work, Well filmed. Jugo's perform —ADDED ATTRACTION— i! AFTER DARK’ with GRITA LEY A picture that revenls the inner- mont secret workings of t famous detective burenu of the Berlin Police Department. AcmeTheatre 56 KAST FOURTEENTH STREET DROOKLYN SHOR SCHOOL, bee teaches nll ve UNION SQUARE 1084 traden Monday, Friday Evenings Life Cust the Sha B of the remote regions of Africa along olate ter- , ina d Day Demonstration | ritory, have come to and 4 Sia ane my are now one of the chief features| eve ra tnousand workers jaune | with the great Ringling Brothers and] on arnum & Bailey Circus at Madi TI > of men Garden. 1 from their an shores, ttention than ure that has been brought to this continent in the I ni | D a e resent century. The Ut tribes are, in ative ha dwellers of a small ngular region of land neh Congo. The people of this tribe have the lips heretofore seen only in i The lips pro- hes and the great- ance of lips boasted n of the tribe the fe | trude r th by a yo ng won’ greater is her beauty—at least so do the Ubangi reckon it. With their own native habits and customs. in- tact, these people will be seen at Brothers Cir Ringling Bailey ‘ormance of the and Ba m & MAY FIRST MOBILIZATION, The sig nee of I 1, 1930, 1 be di ed at the Downtown ing, y, at 134 Club me udquarter kers h Admission free. oms of Native Tribe ot Atricans at Garden their in the “For All Kinds of Insurance” . (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Marray HIM 5556 7 East 42nd Street, New York PHILIP MERIVALE Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music INGTON AVENUB treet Subway Station ww YORK CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers 1275 LU at 86th in MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, ‘CELLO Theory and all other instruments WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREINEIT BLDG—Main Floor es & Holiday rom the Italian of Casella,| ithel Barrymore Theatre. | “DIE HOSE” | At the Acme Theatre Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 9 BAST 115th STREET The stor from the Rabelaisian econd Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 022 Cor. comedy, “Die Hose,” and centers around the wife of the third under- secretary to the fifth consular, when the entire male populace of the vil-| lage attempts to be her lover, but only one makes the grade and after a great many amusing sequences. On the same program is now play- ing “Berlin After Dark” with Grita Ley, a picture that reveals the in- (DR. J. MINDEL| Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not connected with any other office | ve bureau of the Berliz Police rtment. At the Acme Theatre, Tel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK Thentre Guild Productions HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY MARTIN Bi A MONTH IN THE COUNTRY By IVAN TURGENEV GUILD W. & Mt ALVIN W. y at 2:30 cpp Eka By cS REPERTORY lt h St n Ave. Eves. 8:30. Mats. ta: Bic, $1 Le GALL CONDUCTORLESS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA canna mau Saturday Even April RGE KOTLARS MITYA STILLMA Bach — Cowell — Brahms t Box Of 5th DAYS! LAST DAYS! erformance this § nday night | Sy6uaa Jlevebumua DR. A. BROWN Dentist Forcizn Features incl, Tribe of | UBANGI SAVAGES 301 East 14th St., Cor, Second Ave. Admissio incl. tax. Every a Box Offi Tel. Algonquin 7248 Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 14] SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 8tk 8t Phone, Orchard 2333. in case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who ha» long experience, and can assure lorious Musteal REE LITTLE GIRLS SHUBERT THEA. 44m St. W. of Dy Mats, Wed, and REBOUND Arthur Hopkins presents a new| ‘you of careful treatment. comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart | with HOPE WILLIAMS PLYMOUTH 7 a7| bo ceig OSE— wt :. VEGETARIAN Dairy aesravranr omrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Oar Place. 41787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) PHONE: INTERVALE 9149 iLL SHERMAN ‘He Knew Women” |, Joyee—Sparkling Comedy | ne ptain of the Guard” |+ Plant | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun lood with Laura 1 MUSIC BOX “TOPAZE Vegetarian | { | Al Comrades Meet at the Adve Ad in The I Tell Your | BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Comedy Bit from th | with PRANK MORGAN, Pho { Clarence Derwent i Bronz AC EAST SIDE THEATRES SECOND 2na Ave AMERICAN PREMIERES (MOTEL help win the war and ist xoverni IIEVEMENTS OF 1929—1930 First Presentation of ER-WAVE CHAMBER ORCHESTRA OF TEN SEATS 50c to $2.50 133 SECOND AVENUE, CO: “The Simple Tailer’’ dous tragedy of a Jewish x ent of the J THE SAME PROGRAM— SOVKINO JOURNAL NO. 22 THE LATEST NEWS FROM THE SovinT 3 Where one nends anoth 1379 INT Cor. Jenn HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 — Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES BiG WEE! Piayhouse TH STREET A place with atmosphere where all 302 E, 12th St. radicals meet New York LATEST SOVIET PRODUCTION! Was Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising (Dept. | 26-28 Union Sq., New York City wy dier cnrried away by patriotic er realization of the oppression SH) | | | | 1 | his tx UNION tel & Restaurant Workers We Meet at the— Daily Worker Campaign ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE Saturday Evening, April 26 at HUNGARIAN WORKERS HOME, 250 East 81st St. JAZZ BAND Auspices: UNIT 14F, SECTION THREE, COMMUNIST PARTY COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA Labor haga Map S4th St, 26-28 UNION SQUARE neta Sunday, Io AT Be ee Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty ||||®™>oymgnt Bureau open avers Hol 8 cf the Amalgamated Food ah W, 21 at Mt N.Y. OC hone Chelnen 2274 Business meetings held the Monday of the month at kducational meeting: Monday of the month. Board meetings—every Tuesday afternoon at 6 o'clock. - One industry! One Union! Join and Fight the Common Knemy! Oftice upen from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m eh AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets 1 ta int gles f in the month at Third Bronx, N.Y. Ask ter re Loca) 166 |. Jerome 7Ov6 Union Label Bread! BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174. AM.C.&B.W, of NA, Office and Headquarters: tl

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