The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 19, 1930, Page 2

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a Page Two MASSES DEMONS i RATE AT BAKERY AGAINST FOOD PICKET ARREST Association in 0 of A.F.L. | Injunction Secured by ae ners’ Collaboration With Local 500 Defenda nts three found pick John Pohl, and Mor-| upon her entrance. . 1 with disor- ssed from f Br lemons the whose sines on activities of and the pol So strong \ sistance call was se “e Ww here Sam ged | 0 Bakers a sym- ing the crowd smashing SHANGHAI (LP.S.).— the rapid growth of the Co st f Glia. of February ther t the country, but by the ¢ p armies in action. A Red a y under ( t le been organized in the north of th , mutinous troops in Western Hupeh. in the Yangste d Ch ang and Hi beginning 4s parts of s than 14 Red has just Hai, 1 - eee r Tells Detai 1S of Lodi Graft | fare 7 BROUPS TO | 2000 MEMBERS Fgh LYNCHING 151 Delegates Defense Conference (Continued from Page One) | were adopted and t to 113 pris- one lestine, ) sentenced to death ov long prison terms in Japan, the Meerut p: ners and other vic: h rule Indi r who ims of Br in ork presentativ es elected at ch 6 demonstration, the Im- activity in Illinois, Harry others, adopted a resolu- error in rcrease of legal legal lynchings of bosses’ tion explain the crisi Negro nd pledging to fight it to to enroll 5,000 new Ne- ers in the I. L. D. by June million later 3 and to distribute the alae resoluti the D: Competition te Revolutionary Fight | r for Needle Union, . are cnet t to come to the | union headquarters, 131 W. 28th St., tonight right after work to hear a port on the condi he membership len ganization campaign each street is conducted by the work- of the | on NEWARK, N. J., May f a gr: me between eet veeek 4 A th ers oF street, in competition 0 boo . I a shew, pa ae: 3 ee n the >i With those on other streets, to see Sette Excavation and Con @ bill, hevsatd he was y who brings in the most member- Co. testified today before Se the. com vz |ship, organizes the most shop com- preme Court C I eee cece es Tonight, right after work, in the Lodi and Commis- Lodi, N. J., were made fisher deliberately as ohn Planz,. Tous oug nt ax-Collection ing of ten men and commanded by n American Marine officer. The ight d when the collectors Haitian Peasants PORT AU PRINCE, May 18.—It! is reported today that 200 pe: armed with machetes and fought with tax collectors were in the process of serving judg- Abricot on May ing ment to a peasant who refused to pay thi fire on t were k the discontent of the peasants ag diers opened Two peasants One ble on account of widesp the tax laws, the tax collect escorted by a Garde force, ¢ were r nsist-| of the killed was le a woman, Anything to Please the Taxi Trust This morning at 10 a. m., workers who have no auto will graduate into those who have a right to get < for violation of traffic rules. As usual, Whalen is responsible, It appears that arbitrary de- cisions that taxis—of those not in the taxi trust—have no right to cut prices, is not enough. So Whalen is going to make it so terribly dif- ficult to get anywhere afoot that the taxi trust will get a lot more fares. Also, any new traffic rule is always handy to make trouble for pickets in a strike. Dreams and ie of Experts LOS ANGELE fell off National ree_ mc opened here today, at that same r ‘ ), instead of $2,500,- beating the drum about the 4G Sill Ravavation’ 20,000,000 ths of 1 Foreign States “going to equal the 19: The council’s offi- record” of foreign trade. L: “To m industries, the United States sold $. ),¢ an outlet for about 000 abroad, it is said, and t x 10 per cent of the n cil shoots the bull by saying it is| tion, repre: the going to equal that in 1930. Yet |tween profit and World Bank of Exploitation Opens Shop The World Bank, officially | on the shoulders of the German known as the Bank of Interna- toilers. The World Bank, in which tional Settlements, began business A finance capitalists play urday, marking the inception the leading role, will help to ex- @f the Young Plan. The German tract ments from the capitalists have agreed to the (German workers, and, at the same Young Plan because it saddlesthe “ime, advance American imperial- | entire burden of the war payments | ist interests. C*ilean Government Proposes Nitrate Merger! SANTIAGO, Chili, May 18.—The world nitrate congress in Paris has fascist Chilean government has been instructed to try and secure drafted a proposition to amalga-|a worl ie pooling agreement. mate the various nitrate companies| It is safe o say that within the at work around Tacna-Arica, with the government as a partner. The for control will develop between Chilean government agent at the!American afd British financiers, Chiang Kai-Shek Beats Whalen for Chinese dispatches, lionth and first time, “China,” charges that the Boviet is “disorder” there. Apparen a very costly affair to convince the starving millions of China that they are hungry, since Chiang declares| the mil- | that lots of money is sent to various places in China, but ae that, he claims that Commu: “kidnap | foreigners and wealthy Chinese” to get ransom money for “the Commn- nist cause.” Aft listening to} Chiang Kai-She! “exposures,” Grover Whalen seems a second-rate “exposer.” meaning € T, waeatel TF ar I, Tiedt . + Norwegian Land Workers Visit Soviet MOSCOW (LP.S.).—A delegation | the Leningrad factories. The ‘ele: of Norwegian land and forestry gation will inspect many facto Workers has arrived in Leningrad. and will then travel to various pa The delegation consists of 13 work- of the Sovict Union to study th ts who were welcomed at the sta- ‘ m by the repr atives of the and fo! workers, 'Th Land, Fove and Fisk gation will take part in the May and by delegations from | Day celebrations in Moscow. ‘ z conditions of the Soviet land work- ty combine thus created a bitter fight | 93 | offices “ot the industrial union, will |take place the first group installa- tion of new members taken in dur- ing the course of the drive so f: These ma initiations will come more frequently as the drive pro- gresses. Tomorrow, at 1 p.m, in Bryant Hall, Boruchowitz of the N. T. W. I. U. will speak at an open forum for needle workers on the meaning of the June 6, 7 and 8 national con- vention here in New York of the industrial union. \Intensify Drive to Organize Jobless : (Continued From Page One.) the coming national unemployment ntion on July 4 in Chicago, and the ional drive to rei 0,000 new members into the T.U.U. build the revolutionary unions into |mass organizations, it is particu- | larly urgent that every unemployed u. organization in red by the tour of Tallen- liate steps to ure a 's meeting of em- ployed and unemployed, so that the meeting may result in a council being set up where there is none, y be nto linked up groups in the les cove e take imr successful mi mass organiza with the unions and T.U and organizing committee industries.” Following are Tallentire’s dates: Cleveland, May May 20; Tolede May Minneapelis, Duluth, 31; Milv 1; St. Louis, June June 3-4; Youngstown, Detroit Chicago, May : ukee, June Kansas City, Chicago district, June 5- 6-6; Pittsburgh, June 8-9; Washing- ton, June 10; Baltimore, June 11; Philadelphia, June 12 (for a district | conference). 21; May 27, eee 300 From Detroit. DETROIT, Mich. May 18—The Detroit District is preparing to send its quota of 300 delegates to the National Unemployed Convention on July 4th in Chicago. A mass meeting will be held on Friday, May 28, at Workers Hall, 3014 Yemans, | Hamtramck. Norman Tallentire, na- | tional organizer of the Unemployed Councils, will be the principal | speaker, \Protest Lynch Terror lin Philadelphia Tues. ‘ MEETINGS TONIGHT : at the ed in the membership drive of the; fa 1 Yn: ATL ¥ WORKER NEW YORK, MONDA AY, MAY 1 I YOUTH SHOE WORKERS CoML WN TULL ORE DEAE W CAMPAIGN Two thousand young workers ae Active Members Plan | lz the 10,000 workers to be recruit- Mass Meetings | | T.U.U.L. is the goal set by the youth | sections of the various units affili- ated to the T.U.U.L. A special effort will be made to The Independent Shoe Worke 9, 19380 "reer ‘Civic Repertory Teae in Final Week ot Season ‘| Vaudeville Theatres | made last night by Eva Le Gallienne | ~~ According to an announcement PALACE at the ic Reper Theatre, the final performance this season will] Alma Rubens, stage and screen take. place on Saturday evening, | - ar; Rin Tin Tin, the wonder dog May 24, instead of the following have a good youth delegation pres-, Union which is now undergoing a | Saturday, May 31, as previously an- °f the screen; Val and Ernie Stan- ent at the next council meeting. period of reorganization of its forces nounced. ton; Derickson and Brown; Dance which will be held Thursday, May had a meeting of all the active work-| Including to Hablesi: Budell and sWanigen;, arid 22, a p.m. where an executiv Fa ae Falls, Reading 2 Boyce. committee and officers will be elect. ¢8 Wednesday at the union head- | ‘peare’s “Rome Bea Sone Pe RRM AE C7 as i ii | quarters, 16 W. 21st St. j teen Barons w ut be given b * during the remainder of this season Dp, The industries employing a large! The general report was given by|in Fourt&enth St. “Romeo and HIPPODROME percentage of workers are to receive J. Magliacano, acting now as gen-| Juliet” will be seen six more times| 0” the screen, Bebe Daniels, in the closest attention. eral organizer of the union. He re- before the season closes. |“Alias French Gertie,” with Ben viewed the past and present situa-| |Lyon and Betty Pierce. On the Big S to Spread the Strike mediately in order to insure t) ules is the five-day week, made! posed to go back to the American mrevstive by the unemployment Federation of Labor, which, in this situation. The officials are opposed case means the scab agncy that go to the rate it, hence the delay. The membership, however. is de-| Needless to say, the workers termined to get the five-day week, branded them as disrupte and and therefore has past sabotaged any militant action to gain the five-day week and will probably attempt to continue these tactic: to the terminedly. lyears. the five-day week such a proposi- tion would play the boss ganized, cards from out-of-town unions. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 18.— | delphia to protest against the bru- | tal murder of George Hughes, Ne- | |gro worker of Sherman, Texas, the |International Labor Defense and the American Negro Labor Congress Calling upon the workers of Phila- | jwill hold a mass protest meeting | (Tuesday, May 20, at 8 p. m. at 928 | -|E, Moyamensing Ave. Prominent , peakers will address the meeting. | Demand the release of Fos- _ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- | mor od, in prison for fighting | for unemployment insurance. tion, and laid out a plan of futur: work, which must be started Six Members Vote cess of the reorganization campaign The plans include the activization of the various committees, such a: the finance, membership, publicity (Continued From Page One.) | Chicago and Boston unions with proposal that they ask for im- In C the scale has been in ance even longer than in New by the Lovestonites such as Zimmer- man and Jonas tried to disrupt the meeting by attacking the policy and the leadership of the union. As 2 remedy to the situation they pro- “Must Have 5-Day Week. The principal demand in these under the name of the Boot and | Shoe, and—bore from within. calling of a strike to inaugu- given the pub- shers the only possible answer, The I. T. U. officials have in the laughed heartily at the proposal of | the two “saviours” of the shoe work- jers. Organizer Gorgan of the T.U.U.L was present and in his short speech but the membership is alive | utlined the policy of the T.U.U.L. ftuation and will fight de» | «msssuminsemiantinenictmnieiiond | The meeting also defeated the re-| proposition to close the books for the next five The membership recognized that in the impending struggle for 25% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS into the hands of s by antagonizing the unor- Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL ||, OPTICAL CO. onder personal supervision DR. M. HARRISON Fight Reactionary Measure. Considerable sentiment was ex- pressed to rescind the recently pas sed motion not to accept transfer | It} is recognized that the non-accep- tance of travelers is a reactionary | | ot Communist Activities Unit bh ber PoetREt | Unit 1809 8.39 Cooperators! Patronize WORKERS?’ CENTER re tae SEROY BARBER SHOP =| — CHEMIST Moved to 30 Unton Square VP eRkHEM BLUG—Main Floor 657 Allerton Avenue Bronx, N Me H W. LR. CLOTHING HALAS ROOK AVE Telephone Ludiow Cleaning, Pressing, Renairing High. Class Work Uone Goods «tied tur and Deliverea All profits go t and their f Your sor wits Estabrook 3215 Phone: LEHIGH 6382 laternational Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor snow Tel SACramento 2592 | The Szabo Conservatory | j of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVANUE at 86th Street Subway Station NEW -YORK CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers in MUSIC COMPOSI'TIOD VOCAl, VIOLIN, PIANO, Theory and alt other Instruments WORKERS, ATTENTION! REAL BARGAINS at 286 B. 28d St, Bet. dd & 2d Ave. Ladies, Gents and Children’s Furnishings w. Extra discount to D. readers! In Support of the Hindu Revolution Against Imperialism and Imperialist War! Wednesday Eve., May 21 at 7:30 LAUREL GARDENS 75 East 116th St., at 116th St. and Madison Avenue Prominent speakers will tell of the struggles for the Hindu Rey- olution nad against the attempts of the British imperialists and of Ghandi to throttle it, Auspices: COMMUNIST PARTY, DIST. 2 Theatre, tention to the mastery of its dir tion showi story. p= EISENSTEIN’S “THREE “Qld and New,” now at the Cameo has attracted > much at. {sta&e, Corinne Tilton; Trini Varela; The Briants; Irvin O’Dunn; Ray- it, mond Baird and the Robbins Trio. 68TH STREET rt Wheeler and Robert Wool- sey in “The Cuckoos,” as the sereen Sergie M. Eisenstein, that been decided to run the at a third week, and revive for r on the same program this an’s equally famous film, “Po- ediate strike sanction from the committees, ete. A wide distr This will serve to cele- ‘| = executive council in order that a/ tion of leaflets dealing with the gen- | brate the director’s arrival in New ure. On the vandeville bill: 1 ; be taken eral situation as well as in the vari- York, 3rems-Fitz and Murphy Brothers; ous shops must be started at once, pas Ee Ae Felovis; Don Lee and Lucille, er scale also shop gate meetings, Mass mee vm wae am raw am/| Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, abeyance for 12 months. /ings are to be held more often in ER WAY OF LOY AT «The Ingenues,” featuring Mina | phical Union; the different sections of the city. 2ND AVE. PLAYHOUSE Smith, violinist; Vvonne Stella, the | ke vote can be taken in| Shop committees are to be built in is ‘ {Teller Sisters and Naughton and | any loca the executive coun- | the open shops. | TODAY | Gold. In the feature picture, “The cil (international) grants strike Speeches from the floor pointed) “Her Way of Love” is one of the | Love Racket,” Dorothy Mackaill and sanction, Although four weeks|out that the objective situation | bes productions from the | Sidney Blackmer play the chief have passed since such sanction was among the shoe workers due to the So Beteee the Rus- | Toles. | asked, Apr nothing has been | wage cut and the worsening of the sian revolution. It is a story of | ~ | heard from the executive council | conditions in general are such that, Russian peasant life. The rural, site, No one should fail to see it, t except ent that it contem-!if the plans of the union are prop- scenes are beaut and those that saw it, will be de- plated action,” after 12 erly carried out it will undoubtedly The y i lighted to see it again at the 2nd —_—— {months of inaction and delay, both | meet with great succes: spirit, impressive, Ave. Playhouse. Another feature is | NEEDLE STREET\” as ional and local officials. A small group of disrupters led and blended with love 8 en 8 ino newsreel from So- The camera wor —TWO GREAT TRIUMPHS! | —HIS FIRST MASTERPIECE POTEMKIN One of the Great Pictures of All Time —AND HIS LATEST OLD and NEW THIRD BIG WEEK! A Saga of the Soil of Soviet Russia. ne, 42nd Street POPULAR ¢ AMEO Broadway | PRICES yA Theatre iid Production HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY 45th Street MARTIN BECK 43*% street Eves. 8:50. Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:50 WHATS WRO v MARRIAGE?2—SEB RUNAWAY BRIDE with LLOYD HUGHES and MARY AST LITTLE GIRLS” ing Cast 1ViC REPERTORY {fim St and injurious measure. Onlametrist Naval iS eine 1 Eves. 8:30. Mats. Thur. Sat, 2:30 SHUBERT 72" ves “ple. $1, $1.60 Sat. ALLIENNB, Director Great Singing 1, W. of ay. Evgs. at 8:40 Mats ‘Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 “TOPAZE” Comedy Hit from the with FRANK a OPEN DOOR” and 5 THEIR WAY” Night— nine O and JULIET” Support the Daily Worker Drive! | Get Donations! Get Subs! french pe Koster EAST SIDE THEATRES Now Playing! 2nd Ave. Playhouse RNER EIGHTH STREET “For All Kinds of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY ‘Pelephone: Murray Mill 5556 7 Wast 42nd Street, New York Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 WAST 115th STREET Second Ave, New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for ap; Telephone: Lehigh Cor. intmenr 2 ‘Tel, ORChard 378% DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST. Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY REET Cor, Eldridge St. NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL SURGECUN LeiNTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 80’—Phone: Algonguin 6182 Not connected with any other office Sy6naa Jlevesunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 Mast 14th St, Cor, Second Ave. Tel, Algonquin 7248 —— [Dr. M. Wolfson| Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor, 9tb St, hone, Orchard 2333, In case Nes trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure you of careful treatment. Greetings from PARK RESTAURANT White Plains and Allerton Where you ent and feel at home. M. & S. ROSEN & 4 4a hr he fs iiideaauls Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round. 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 221 WEST 36TH STREET VvvvVvVvv: All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL # Vegetarian # “Hes Way of Love” One of the very best SOVKINO productions—with | EMMA CESARSKAYA The tragedy of a Russi a duyging the period of war 2nd revo AME —SOVKINO JOURNAL — PRUSE DAY E SOVIET RUSSIA ONLY ONCE IN 25 YEARS Proletpen” (Jewish Lit.-Cult.-Front) Jobu Reed Club (Eng. Lit.-Cult.-Front) CELEBRATE, ; e 9 © ivdcishe Radir’s 25th Anniversary on the literary front form “Tint un Feder” to “Pen un Bix” Saturday Eve., May 24 CARNEGIE HALL 57th Street and Seventh Avenue ne star actress. Extraordinary International Program RESERVED SEATS. Tickets can be obtained in the Office of the “MORNING FREIHEIT,” 30 Union Square, New York City We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE ’ Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty 199 SECOND AVEi.UE | Bet, 12th and 13th Ste. | Strictly Vegetarian Food % RESTAURANT VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT i Always Finé it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALD 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Gtuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER | Advertising Dept |} 26-28 Union Sq., New York City i \ Phone Chelsen 2! Business meetings nee the first Monday of the mont! iducational Monday of th Board meetings: afternoon at Food Workers Industrial One tnduatey? One Union! Join and FI Enemy! Office cpen from 9 a. m. to 6 p. tm cht the Common FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION Meets Ist Saturday in the month at 3861 Third Avenue, Bronx, N, Y. Axk for Baker's Local 164, Tel. Jerome 1096 UNION LABEL BREAD! ne ae ae ae

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