The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 10, 1930, Page 4

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Page| Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, my iy as (LAN. ORGANIZES | ATLANTA TERROR BU LLE 2 ATLANTA, Ga., May 9.—The lynch threats being worked up here by the bosses and the K. K. K. will be met by a great mass meeting of all Negro and white workers Sunday at 3 p.m. The LL.D. is calling the meeting with leaflets widely spread throughout the working class quarters par- ticularly mill villages. Thousands of copies of the Liberator, mili- tant Negro paper, the Powers and Carr edition of the Daily Worker, and the Labor Defender are being distributed also. —Ku but in full had be H. Powers + organ- postponed of the po Klan w ion w tised through ation of leaflets other char livve: ‘village in ployed at the Ful- Corpor m, where shown considerable The Klansmen made the leous blowing the sirens automobiles, and the Advertiser—“I Saw Tell Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” TUDOR INN Restaurant 113 East 14th Street using | he Worl orkers | May 10, 1791—Carpenters of Philadelphia called first known strike in American building trades. 1853—Pope prohibited circulation of “Uncle Cabin,” American novel against Negro slave 1905 —Third convention of Russian So- cial Democratic Labor Party (Bol- sheviki) opened in London. 1920— Twenty members of Communist La- bor Party put on trial in Chicago on charge of violating criminal syn- dicalism law. 1923—Vaslav Vorov- sky, Soviet Russian representative to Lousanne conference, shot by Swiss fascist. 1926—Giacint Me- notti Serrati, Italian yleader and editor of Avanti, died. Tom’s W.LR. OPENS DOWNTOWN CENTER. Tonight at 8 o'clock ers International Relief brate the opening of the new Center at 10 E. 17th St. The celebration includes a_ban- quet and a concert by the Cultural Department and dancing. Admis- is 50 cents. the Work- will cele- WIR sion Organizations Brighton Bench Concert and Dance. No. 17, Sunday, n Beach Ave. Dally v r Conference in Brooklyn nizatons and Daily le, East sh, this Sunday, 5 Thatford Ave., wi oie Ne * t City Island, s and sandwiches. Sports * * * or Defender Photo Group. Sunday, 11 a. m. entrance Bot al Gardens, Flatbush Ave, and BI Take 'T Brighton Prospect Park tion. * * Harlem Prog. Youth Concert and Danee, Saturday, at 1492 Madison Ave Proceeds Workers, School * Festival. Sunday, 7.30 p. m., 2901 Mermaid Ave. tances Womeris Couneil No. §. 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 SPECIAL DINNER ! im Ly Li Ln Li Help Build THE Baily Hs Worker Volunteer for the Daily Worker TAG DAY which will be held on Saturday and Sunday, and 18 Friday, May 16, 17 Tag Day we must mobilize the Party and Y. C. ut also unions and fraternal , women organizations, coopera league organizations, ete. May First and March Sixth showed us that masses of workers are ready to follow our call and | participate in our activities. They | will help the Daily Worker in the | present circulation and financial | campaign. Many organizations have | shown their willingness and desire | Tag Day. Section Committees and Daily orker representatives must mob- ilize all sympathizers and their or- ganizations to make this Tag Day a success. Remember: Help build and main- | tain the Daily Worker by partici-| pating in its Tag Day Friday, Sat-| urday and Sunday, May 16, 17, 18.) ——— Airy, Large Meetine Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for ) etings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 BE. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 5097 Phone: LEHIGH 6382 tnternational Barber Shop W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 108rd & 104th Sta.) Ledies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor FURNISHED ROOMS, elevator, beautiful, ny, also delicious home cooking. With or without Very board. radely atmosphere, Fourteenth Street, Apartment 1. reasonable. Com- 318 Kaxt L| Young Needle Tradex W. orkers. | Hike, this Sunday, ham Bay Park near subway station to City Island * * Workers School. comrades and orgahizations still have collection lists, should immediately turn them in with money Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUE at 86th Street Subway Station NEWYORK: CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers in MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIAN ‘CEL! Theory and all other ii W. 1. 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. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round. || 4 West 28th Street | 37 West 32nd Street Communist } Labor and ‘Fraternal \ 9.30 a. m. at Pel-| fa gjenth Ave. | too, the sailor is just so much slave power and so much cannon fodder. |S | equipment, 1 THE U. S, FLEET (Continued from Page One) arate even a-warrant officer from the lowest commissioned officer. The officer has better food, better pay and a better time, all the time, than the sailor. He gives the are | ders aboard ship, and the sailor jumps to carry them out. Off duty, the officer associates with the up- per ranks of society, with the para- sites and blood-suckers and idle loafers of wealth, while he amuses his friends with jeers at the sailor|the mud, the blood, the hopeless| Amalgamated Bank are at all times | |as producing director haunting the beaneries and seeking | companionship in the parks. | To him, and to-the rich men who | own the navy, and the government, | In the Soviet Union. | Where the workers rule, in the | Soviet Union, there is strict equal- | ity between commanders and men. Any sailor can become the co:n- mander of the ship or of the fleet) if he has the stuff, and he is given} every chance to show whether he} has. The officer eats the same | food, has the same quarters, and, off duty, is on the same terms ex-| actly as the men he commands on| Communist Activities C.L. District Hike. | Sland. Sunday, from Pel- ham Bay Line last station at 9.30 m. Come in uniforms, all youth clubs urged to come, bring sport baseball game, Brooklyn- * . Daily Worker Conference in Brooklyn Of workers organizations and Daily Worker readers in Brownsvile, Hast | New York and Flatbush, this Sunday, | 10.30 m. at 105 Thatford Ave., Brook! | To Ci Bronx. | * cnt 13, Section Saturday, 8 p. m., 0} at 149th St. between Bergen and 3rd Aves, Speaker Louis A. Baum. oe 5. en air meeting Section 4 Red Sunday. | All comrades. assigned for this | work report at 10 a, m. at 1800 Sev- ee * Plumbers and Helpers Fration. All, plumbers ORR and sup; men in Y,C.L. and Party, today, p. m. at Genter. af Phone Tillinghast 9089 JOHN C. SMITH’S Harlemites Orchestra Local 802 A. F. of M. Office: 2207 SEVENTH AVENUB NEW YORK CITY 25% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS 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 3836 221 West 36th Street | || TONIGHT at 8:15 | “cor” Concert to participate in the Daily Worker | | CARNEGIE HALL MAX ROSEN Brilliant Violinist and recog- nized Artist of the World. TICKETS: 75 cents, $1.00, §: the farm. | | | Phone: Windsor 6700 For the Benefit of Jewish Colonization | 57TH STREET AND SEVENTH | PROGRAM & BENJAMIN ZEMACH Great Jewish Dancer in a Special Program. 50 and 799 Brondway and Saturday all day at the Carnegie Hall Box Office. Drink the Best Milk DIRECT FROM THE FARM The best certified grade ‘A and B milk delivered to your house. Bottled right on Give us a trial and you will see that the milk is good and fresh and con- tains the correct percentage of cream. McKAY MILK PRODUCTS INCORPORATED 1535 SIXTIETH STREET TONIGHT at 8:15 in Biro-Bidjan (U.S. AVENUE ISIDORE BELARSKY Great Soviet Basso in a gram of new compot For sale at “ICOR” Office, BROOKLYN, N. Y. jthe cruise. jcoming the sailors of the United {of their countries? ldo what the sailors of the Russian | conditions. [knock out both the bosses ashore| sands of workers in the men’s cloth- VWVVV VX The enlisted man has] every privilege on shore or afloat) that the commander has. EN are no class distinctions. only- possible in a society nate has | thrown out the useless, idle millign- | jaires that rule America. It is to| | prevent that kind of workers’ 50- | ciety that the officers of the fleet (Continued from Page One) and their masters, the rich employ-| ering of agents of the bosses whe | ers of labor ashore, demand that) have betrayed and sold you time and sailors always stand ready to kill/again. At this convention they will | workers on strike. cover up their plans of betrayal of | War Picture. the interests of the workers with Thousands of sailors ashore in! fake progressive resolutions, but New York right now go to see the | they will continue to work hand in great moving picture, “All Quiet) glove with the bosses against the On the Western Front,” which is | interests of the workers. The Hill- one of the only ones ever permitted | man- Rissman - Beckerman fascist |that shows the real nature of war, company union and the funds of the killing and being killed for the |profit of the owners of industry. The sailor is not afraid of fight- ing. The Communist Party, wel- at the service of the bosses. | “The fight within the Beckerman- | Hillman-Rissman clique, led by Beck- erman, is certainly not in the inter- ests of the workers, the whole cliqu is responsible for the speed-up, piece | | work, the slugging and expulsion of | |workers from the A.C.W. Becker- man, Hillman and Rissman is one | clique, one agency for the bosses. “Fellow workers! You must real-| lize that only by taking matters into your own hands, by organizing your shop committees, organizing for |struggle for the establishment of |the 40-hour 5-day week, for the |abolishment of piece work, for a| | struggle against the speed-up, for a | struggle against the company union- Jism, can you improve your working You must make an end} 'to the company union which is ruin- jing the lives of hundreds and thou- they should be. Who to Fight? The only question is: Who toy fight? Should any sensible man, forced by lack of opportunity the peace-time industries to go in \for that kind of slavery called en-| listment, willingly kill other men just like him, forced into the navy for the same reasons, because there is a quarrel between the gangs of robbers who own everything in each Or should the sailors of the United States fleet fleet did, lead the struggle to make it a workers’ government and | and the officer caste in the navy? jing trade. Only under the leader- ship of the Needle Trades Workers |Industrial Union, the only militant | organization of needle trade work- ers which is really organizing the workers for struggle against the bosses, can you achieve your de- | mands. “Men’s clothing workers! The Needle Trades Workers Industrial | Union calls upon you to organize | committees in your shops. Elect | delegates to the Needle Trades | Workers Shop Delegate Council | which is the leader of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union.” TELEGRAPHERS STRIKE. CHICAGO.—About fifty telegraph operators of the C. F. Childs & Co., |brokers, struck in protest against; jthe installation of automatic ma- chinery. Get Donations! Get Subs! Support the Daily Worker Drive! Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5074 All kinda of CUTLERY ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES MAZDA Bulbs Our Specialty. Forward to Mass Conference Against Unemployment, Chicago | July 4th. | Answer Whalen’s Forgeries | HAIL PROGRESS OF FIVE-YEAR PLAN AT THE BIG SOVIET UNION CELEBRATION Saturday, May 31 at ULMER PARK, BROOKLYN Auspices: FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF Tickets 50 cents. On sale at F. S. U. Local Office, 799 Brondway, +« 421; W. I. R. Local Office, 10 East Seventeenth Street. ITALIAN WORKERS CLUB DANCE TONIGHT 2011 Third Ave. (Bet. 110th and 11th Sts.) | ADMISSION 25 CENTS | Sunday—Banquet and Dance Banquet at 2:30 P. M. Dancing will follow at 6 P. M. Admission to Banquet $1.35. Dance Only 35 Cents | Benefit: CLUB and IL LAVORATORE Workers, Patronize | RELIABLE MUSIC COMPANY Majestic, Victor and other Radios FULL LINE OF PIANOS and VICTROLAS ALSO EXPERT REPAIRING SPANISH AND RUSSIAN RECORDS 1808 Third Ave., near 101st St. | 1393 Fifth Ave., Near 115th St. Telephone Atwater 0402 | ae W Vv We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty CONCERT AND DANCE > >, at UNITY COOPERATIVE, 1800 Seventh Avenue Benefit INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE . | GOOD MUSIC COME ALL Ausapices: International Labor Defense, Gastonia Branch { FOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S SUITS go to PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. q q q BROWNSVILLE, EAST NEW YORK, FULTON SEC. DAILY WORKER READERS and WORKERS ORGANIZATIONS DAILY WORKER CONFERENCE will be held This Sunday Morning at 10:30 WORKERS CENTER 105 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn Plans will be made for the Circulation Drive of the Daily Worker for 60,000 new readers. Come to the Conference! Help build the Daily Wroker into a powerful mass organ! who will come here on short visi MEN'S CLOTHING heave ‘Cuild to Present New Sitton Play Next Season The Theatre “Guild has acquired a new play tentatively called “In the Meantime” and written by Paul and Claire Sifton. Sifton wrote “The Belt.” For certain of its productions next season the Guild will import two well-known foreign dire¢tors In addition, Herbert Biberman, who staged “Red Rust” during the past season, has been added to the regu- uild. Philip Moeller will continue and assume his usual quota of productions. Gilbert Miller announces that he has secured for American production next season a French play by Jac- | ques Deval, “Etienne,” which is now running in Paris. Paul Moss will soon enter the ranks of independent producers with “Just A Pal,” a new comedy |AT ICOR CONCERT TONIGHT. Isidor Belarsky, who will sing | lar production staff of the Theatre | group of new Soviet songs at the | ICOR benefit concert at Carnegie | Hall tonight. by Vivian Cosby and Shirley Warde. | Leonard Mudie is now playing in| \“A Month In the Country,” re-/ | placing Elliot Cabot, who is ill. | Marcel Pagnol’s comedy, “To- |paze,” will register its 100th per- formance at the Music Box tonight. By PHILI As the capacity of the ence, seats are availab! [ MARTIN BECK THE. Eves, By Ivan “Singular alive... distinction .. . interesting.” GUILD ALVIN Theatre Guild Productions HOTEL UNIVERSE larger than required by our subscription audi- ATRE, 45TH ST., W. MONTH #:. COUNTRY theme is developed with subtlety and frequent found it always absorbing , . THEATRE, WEST 52nd STREET, EV MATINEES THURSDAY The APPLECART Bernard Shaw’s Political Extravaganza [ Closes Sat., May 10 ] THEATRE, WEST 52nd STREET. E MATINEES WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY P BARRY Martin Beck Theatre 4s | OF 8TH AVE. 8:50, Mats. Thurs. and Sat. at 2:50 le for all performances. Turgenev + extraordinarily » SUN. —RICHARD LOCKRIDG SAT AT 30 AND SATURDAY INGS AT AT 1928 “POTEMKIN” and THE LATEST Read the Reviews:— “Hollywood should lie down and —Th “S, M. Eisenstein, the young Rus: “‘OLD AND NEW’ “The film is propaga alleged Soviet efficien: interesting I can assure That it ou.” “For photographic beauty, as an artist would on canvas—via can beat S. M. Hisenstein, the R goers, “Have to bow to the skill of Ei can do.” CAMEO POPULAR PRICES , “THE CUCKOOS” with BERT WHEELER and ROBERT WOOLSEY THIRD WEEK—BIG LAFF RIOT \“THREE LITTLE GIRLS” Great Singing and Dancing Cast Revolving Stage THEA, 44th St., W. of By by aah. Mats, Wed. and SHUBERT {: IVIC REPERTORY lath st 6th Ave. Eves. 8:30. Mats. 50c. ‘Thur. Sat. 2:30 $1.50 EVA Le GALLIENNE. Director Today Mat—“PETER PAN” Tonight—“THE SEA GULL” AMERICAN PREMIERE! force. delightful and artistic way. _.SOVKINO ONCE AGAIN EISENSTEIN AMAZES THE WORLD WITH A NEW FILM “OLD »= NEW” whom Douglas Fairbanks hopes to engage to direct his next picture, is responsible for an enlightening cinematic study called —F. is a saga of the soil . in nature, it purposes to be a lesson in for the knack of painting true character “A fine achigvement and something not to be missed by adult cinema- and workers who do finer and truer acting than any in Hollywood EAST SIDE THEATRES Now Playing! 2nd Ave. Playhouse 18% SECOND AVENUE, CORNER EIGHTH STREET JEWISH LUCK ‘Lhe greatest comedy of SHOLOM ALEICHEM, Picture full of dynamic The life and customs of the Jews are presented in the most A picture that can never be forgotten —ON THE SAME PROGRAM— 1929 “TEN DAYS THAT now SHOOK THE WORLD” SOVKINO FILM let Mr. Wisenstein walk over ft.” ornton Delehanty, Evening Post. sian who produced ‘Potemkin’ and ‘OLD and W. Mordaunt Hall, N. Y. Times. A notable achievement.” —William Boehnel, Telegram. is not for this reason a whit less —Quinn Martin, The World. the camera lens, there one who ussian directorial geni —Irene Thirer, Daily News. —Howard Barnes, Tribune, fisenstein and the rugged peasants —Daily Worker. 42nd Street gecons ig Broadway Week ! REBOUND Arthur Hopkins presents a new comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart with HOPE WILLIAMS PLYMOUTH Th, 45th St. .W, of Bway 8:50, Mats. Thurs. and Sat. 2:40 ‘Thea. 45th, W. of MUSIC BOX sirens, fevgs. at’asi0 Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 “TOPAZE” Comedy Hit from the French with FRANK MORGAN, Phoebe Foster, Clarence Derwent Demand the release of Fos- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. LATEST SOVIET PRODUCTION: JOURNAL | ter, Minor, Amter and Ray-| (aL BRODSKY “For All Kinds of Insurance” ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5556 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥, WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIHEIT BLDG.——Main Floor WORKERS, ATTENTION! REAL BARGAINS 236 EB, 24d St., cA 3d & 2d Aves, Ladies, Gents and Children’s Furnishings Extra disgount to D. W. readers, (Dr. M. Wolfson. Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUB, Cor, 91 Phone, Orchard 2333. ee in case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure you of careful treatmen’ 3y6uaa Jleyedunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 ast 14th St., Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointme: ‘Telephone: Lehigh G0z2— Cor. Tel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET » Eldridge St. NEW YORK (DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST ' 1 UNION SQUARE com 803—Phone: Al 1 Not connected with any vel other office ; Eat where the best dairy foods -—MELROSE—, are served. Where one customer recommends another, TRIANGLE DAIRY RESTAURANT 1379 INTERVALE AVENUE Cor. Jennings St. BRONX All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx R A TIO N AL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food D: VEGETARIAN airy RESTAURANT jomrades Will Alwnys Find ft Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONDE:— INTERVALD 9149, HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write ta The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Union Label Breed! Food Workers Industrial Union St., New York City ¢ Chelsen 2274 Business meetings held Monday. of the month at" HKducational meetings—th: Monday of the month, Bx Bonrd | meetings every Tuesday afternoon at 6 o'clock. One industry! One Unton! Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office cpen from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m 16 W. 2 eee ey pro sch ern ton pro iali rad not

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