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

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W YORE, FRIDAY, MAY 23, 19: 30 _D! AILY Wi ORKER, N 600 HINDU WORKERS IN HIT IMMIGRATION | No Bag Limit at All CALIFORNIA CHEER THE CALL OF COMMUNI ren OF BOSS urpose Is to reak| Page Two TALK WAR A Tl Eisenstein’s “Ten Days That ~ BUILD. “DAILY” N SENATEHEARINGS 9/2208 the World” on Screen DETROIT -CHICAGO In honor of the Pancas Soviet sae a ER ee Compe- PHILIP MERIVALE. | rector Eisenstein, who is now visit- 8-Inch | ing America for the first time, the | Admirals Gay : rs Tawanelcn An : Second Avenue Playhouse has se- : V. 72ome Greetings From Labor Defense and) Workers’ Solidarity Guns Murder Best | cired for » special showing one of tition Spurs Drive } Agricultural Ww orkers Industrial League sede, boss Representative Albert | The hearings before the Senate Ten Days Geet chaos Werte DETROIT, May 22. —A_ per- —_— —_——— boomin tare, Ai Re taeaL oh Lae on the | and will show this at their theatre manent Daily Worker Conference ; poy aie ondon Naval “Treaty” are still in on second Avenue, beginning today which grew out of the May Day united front conference here will Each day a new Admiral ‘ a arty Oj s 7 Saturday night, in a speech at a} | process. F aawiinn @ " @ 3 Communist Party i ita Out That Indian dinner of the American Eugenics | fof the navy adds his voice in eriti.|4n4 continuing Saturday and Sun- take up the emergency situation Masses Can Win By Revolution Only Society and the Eugenic Research jeism of the treaty on the ground Te tt tne tense and and the circulation campaign of the t ; “Daily” this Sunday ‘that its acceptance would allow a {billion dollar naval building program {all right, but that the type of war- Association that the house will ac- cept the vicious senate bill for the restriction of Mexican immigration: dramatic events of the Russian Rev- olution and is based on John Reed’s well known book. John Reed was The militant workers of Detroit realize that the Daily Worker is Cal FRANCISCO, At the mass California, the Hin attended by ine and for ind lutionary strug- 600 Hindus, Only agricultural workers, gle can the workers nd peasants of India free themselves from Bri- tish impe The Communist International er of the revolu- which | in ’ Industrial League, welcomed enthusiastically. Kenmotsu, held for deportation. greeted the meeting in the name oi A pacifist policy of non- the American Anti - leis ce exposes the masses to Bri- League, to which the tish bullets. British imperialism Gardar Party is affiliated, hav ng will not surrender its pow It sent a delegate to the Frankfort) must be overthrown by the workers Congress last year of the World d peasants of India, with the sup- League against Imperialism. The port of the revolutionary workers Party | thruout the world. “In our opinion, all enemies British imperialism, all fighters for the independence of India must join with the anti-imperialist forces throughout the world. We welcome the participation of the Hindustan Gardar Party in the Frankfort Con- | gress of the World League against Imperialism. Organize Here Too. “At the same time, we call the at- greetings of the Communist stated in part: “The Communist Pa District greets you in the name of revo- jonary workers the United States and hopes that from your gathering will result a more inten- sified struggle against world imper- ialism. “At present, in India, the masses are in motion. The workers and peasants are organizing their forces tention of the members of your or- for the building of revolutionary unions, for the organization of a) ganization, that as workers, they strong Communist Party, for throw- can improve their conditions in the of of ing off the shackles of British im-| United States, only by joining the perialism. The Chinese Revolution Trade Union Unity League, the has taught us that the bourgeoisie | revolutionary trade union center. The Hindu textile workers of Pater- son, New Jersey, are active in Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union. The Hindu agricultural workers in Cali- fornia should join their brothers in the Agricultural Workers’ Industrial uses the independence movement to compromise with imperialism for its own material interest. In the In- dian situation, we have seen many so-called anti-imperialist elements who do not demand immediate and unconditional independence for In- Union, which is organizing the dia, but are satisfied with dominion workers especially in Imperial Val- status. This is betrayal of the In-/ ley. “We call to your attention also the need of combatting the discrim- ination against the foreign born, the laws directed against them, the dependence movement. We have seen that only the workers and peasants movement can carry through a successful fight against British imperialism. vieration restrictions, the race Don’t Follow Gandhi. riots instigated by the master The British Labor Government is | class.” Congress Votes to Investigate Us WASHINGTON, May 22.—Late today the House of Representatives voted 210 to 18, to approve the resolution proposed by Congressman Snell of the Rules Committee, to appeint a committee of five to “in- vestigate’ Communist gctivities in the United States. The vote was taken after a sham battle in which an Iowa republican, Ramseyer, tried to play the role of defender of the unemployed, with Fish, the fascist republican from New York howling that every Communist must be de- ported, if not to the Soviet Union, then to some desert island. Snell recently said he introduced his resolution at the request of Matthew Woll and Ralph M. Easley, who had the Whalen forgeries before Whalen. MacDonald Government in a Mess The anti-Mexican immigration law is generally regarded as a forerun- ner of restricting immigration from all other countries, Johnson gave the reason that the bill will be accepted because “Amer- icans” have “undergone some disil- lusionment” because they found that immigrants cannot “emerge from the melting pot homogeneous with “and as radically perfect as them- selves.” Class-conscious American work- ers, of course, will not fall for this kind of rot which is spilled for the; purpose of misleading and fooling! the workers and sowing seeds of | discord between American workers | and workers of other nationalities. | Class-conscious American workers | are not to be fooled, because they understand that the emancipation of the American workers can only be achieved by overthrowing the capi-/ talist system which enslaves them. The immigration laws are instra- ments in the hands of the capital- ist class which serves the purpose of a stumbling block in the solidar- | ity of the world proletariat and are, | in the last analysis, greatly detri- mental to the lasting interests of the working class. (INDICT NO REAL _ | ; LYNCH LEADERS) { 1 16 Lesser Murderers Held By Grand Jury for Burning in Sherman. Old Judge Lynch is out on the | blood stained trail this year as he never was before. The necessity | of the Southern bosses to keep Ne- | gro and white workers divided and te exercise white terror in an ag- gravated form because of the growing misery and consequent radicalization of the workers, has caused more lynching in the first five months of this year than in several previous years. 'Gandhi’s Group Yields) to Force; Won’t Resist! (Continued from Page One) rests, with three Indians severely injured by police. ‘" ® Indians Clubbed. Capitalist press reports, held up for over 24 hours by the British censors, describe the extreme bru- tality with which the native police in the ranks of British imperial- ism smashed the non-violent raid on the Dharsana salt piles, near Bombay. Four hundred police armed mostly with long bamboo clubs but some with rifles, simply clubbed down |the non-resistants as they advanced 2,500 strong, and threw them into the muddy canals to live or die as they could. Many very severe in- SHERMAN, Texas, May 22.— Fourteen of the lesser leaders of the gang that burned down the court house here to roast to death George | Hughes, a Negro worker on trial! at the time, have been indicted by | roamed through them, jabbing them | the grand jury for murder, arson and riot. Care was taken by the| jury not to include any of the prom- inent culprits, neither the governor |who ordered no shots fired at the lynchers, nor the police and militia fea practically handed him over to his murderers, nor any of the prom- |inent townspeople who did the kill- ing. It is believed here that nothing serious will happen to those indicted, The charges are made merely to give an impression to the world at large that something is being done. Labor and Fraternal Organizations Finnish Workers Club Picnic, SE ate 5 2p. 5 at 2 Point, L. |Gacht. “Adinission 50 cents. | eo # Brighton Beach Lecture. "Present, Situation in In- | m., College | Speaker, Max Be-| juries were inflicted. Many had in- [ternal injuries because after the |first rush had failed, the Satyagra- |his sat down near the fence around | jthe piles of salt. The police then} lin the stomachs with their trunch- | |eons until they fainted, and kicking them in the sides. Riflemen finally cleared the space before the piles. Mrs. Saropjain Naidu, their leader, was arrested. After the volunteers had been driven from the scene, they were followed \up and soundly thrashed by the po- \lice. Many were arrested. | Gandhi has issued a statement saying he is very happy in prison, and the British government even gives him a servant. Workers Not So Tame. It is significant that in the de- Gujerat. lish. |the task of Wall Street’s navy is to |vision No. 4, stated before the Sen- layed report of the struggle at} Dharsana, the United Press corre- . , ae Socndent characterizes the Ghandi| Meeting with Serio is held on $200| volunteers as mostly college stu- dents or clerks from all parts of Many of them spoke Eng- Factory workers, when they come into conflict with the govern- ships it allows the U. S. Navy to build will give the British imperial- | ists an advantage over their Ame! ican imperialist rivals. pute of the workers for con- ro | In view of the fact, however, that} ~ |” ues . | Eisenstein is also responsible for two other masterpieces of the screen, “Potemkin,” and his latest, “The Old and the New.” In revi ing “Ten Days” one of the stated: “The picture is impressive, sweeping, and is significant because of the power of its technique and unusual dramatic heights, It is an epic in them.” the best weapon in their struggle to build up a powerful revolution- ary trade union center of the Trade Union Unity League, in the success- ful mobilization for the big Unem- ployment Convention to be held July in Russia at the height of the fight- ing and took active part in the In “Death Takes a Holiday, from the Italian of Alberto Ca’ 4th and 5th in Chicago now in its sixth month at the Ethel| ‘The Detroit district of the Com- | Barrymore Theatre, | munist Party has mobilized all of | its units, section committees, Party o a of fractions in all mass organizations, Communist Activities and all departments in answer to |the challenge of the Chicago dis- | trict to revolutignary competition. , prepare for the coming war, the Ad- mirals consider it a serious and fa- tal blunder to allow a “treaty” to prescribe the kind of boats they of to build for this war. For this reason, Admiral F. H.| Scoeld, commander of battleship di- ate Foreign Relations Committee | | that he considers “a recession from | Ridua and Southern Boulevard, | the heavier class of cruisers, even a| “THE FALL GUY” pi Friday, 18srd and Prospect Ave../ “For Alt Kinds of Insurance” * Bronx Section x Saturday, Ma Ave, Admission Spring Concert and Dance. Saturday, May 24, Peoples Auditor- ium. Ad ion 60 cents. Auspices | | Jewish Buro. * * L. Spring Dai Movies, partial recession, disadvantageous to GL B/ on |the United States, The Admiral in- Ses eee | sists that the government continue! One of Broadway’s stage comedy its present building program and hits is currently on the screen of reject the treaty and its 6-inch gun the Globe Theatre with the first cruiser provisions, since 8-inch guns | Showing of “The Fall Guy,” a new kill better. | talking picture adaptation by Radio War is war, and pacifist phrases | Pictures of the original play. Forty intended to deceive the masses can- | tW° weeks on Broadway and a three | jnot take the place of real material | | years’ run is the record of this play, instruments of war. As technicians | by George Abbott and James Glea- of war, therefore, these servants of | 5°? finance capital talk “business” and| The cast is headed by Jack Mul-| ERIE, Pa., May 22.—At a mi leave the task of concealing the hall and includes Mae Clarke, Ned | meeting held to protest agai real purpose of a war navy | Sparks, Pat O’Malley, Tom Jackson, | growing police terror and the ar | rest and holding for deportation of ARL BRODSKY New York 7 Kast 42nd Street. Dr, ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York ‘Erie Workers Protest Police Terror Cor. DAILY BEXCEPI FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment Cr Telephone: Lehigh Wynne Gibson and Ann Brody. 2 ¥ SERIO HELD ON See, |Guido Serio, a resolution was |j Te! ORChara s7ss Forward to Mass Conference | adopted demanding the immediate DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN LE=NTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin $188 Not connected with any other office BAIL OF $25, 000: ein asm pions Chicago ' release of Serio, and other work- ly 4th. ers arrested at recent meetings, City and Federal Authorities Try to Send Communist to Death. ERIE, Pa., May 22.—About 200 workers gathered in a protest mect- ing here Sunday, against the at- tempt to send Guido Serio to his | death in Fascist Itely. Serio is held on $25,000 bail, on a deportation warrant and on fiv: | | sedition charges, for speaking agains fascism and the church at a Communist meeting in the Italian section of the city May 11. Boss Fears Organization. With the activization of the Com- munist Party membership here, and the beginning of the drive to build SHUBERT | the revolutionary unions of the} - : | ‘Thea. 45th, W. of | Trade Union Unity League and or- | ganize the unemployed, the capital- MUS IC BO X swag. Bees, ane | ists and their agents, the city and| 66 TOPAZE ” federal government officials have become much aroused. They are en- Comedy Hit from the French gaging in open provocation and at-! with FRANK MORGAN, Phoebe Foster, Clarence Derwent tempts at terrorism of the workers. | EAST SIDE THEATRES 3 T@ND. AVENU PLAYHOUS| CORNER 1TH STREET A Theatre Guild Production HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY MARTIN BECK 43t® Street W. of S Av. Eves. 8:50. Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:50 “The FALL GUY” With JACK MULHALL | Ned Sparks—Pat O’Malley | “THREE LITTLE GIRLS” Great Singing and Dancing Cast Revolving Stage THEA. 44th St. W. of By Evs. 5:30. Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:30. | Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUB at 86th Street Subway Station NEW YORK CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers ‘ ) ¥ 14th St! IVIC REPERTORY 14th, st Eves. 8:30. Mats, Thur. Sat. 2:30 50c, $1 50 | | BVA Le GALLIENND, Director ht—“ROMEO and» JULIET” —"ROMEO and JULIET? ht—*THE OPEN DOOR” and WOMEN HAVE THEW WAY" in MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, 'CE! Theory and all other instrum: T Ti To! All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Support the Daily Worker Drive! | | | Get Donations! Get Subs! | bail charged with “resisting an of-| ficer and “disorderly conduct.” L./ Callow, secretary of the T.U.U..L, J, Orlando, Julius Woolhandler and | A. Pergani were arrested the next | day and held on open charges. \ RATIONAL #& & LONDON, May 22.—The fate of!from the Cabinet. The MacDonald | | pst ie os ake we tac at td ti do not practice non. the MacDonald government is again gang is certainly in a hell of a sit Brightan Beach Ave. by Brighton | ment despotism, do ni CP BONS Satin th & member of the Central a hanging in the balance. The Lib- uation. And why is this? Now| \Vorkers Club. All welcome Tesistanoe, Committee of the Communist Party | ° Days Snanedidies: Saturday, Sunday, May 23, 24, 25 Vegetarian , eral, with whose support ihe Mac-;that MacDonald and his crew by Office Workers Annual Dance. @ of U.S.As To honor the arrival of EISENSTEIN, the famous film | RESTAURANT Donald government has been able their every action have set their |,,Jume 1§,,,at the Heckscher Roof) A. F. L. APPROVES BIG BOSS director of “POTEMKIN” and N DAYS THAT SHOOK | 199 SECOND AVEI.UE to have a majority in parliament, 'seal of approval on every imper-| mission 80 cente, Bi WASHINGTON, D. C.—The A. F. THE WORLD,” the Second Avenue Playhouse presents | Bet. 12th and 13th Ste. have delivered an ultimatum in Par- ialist policy of the British bandits, Dit kite ‘Weeklies Gleb: of L. misleaders quote with approval 66 THAT SHOOK99 | Strictly Vegetariun Food liament, threatening to withdraw the Conservatives find they can con-| Sports froup meet Mond ¥;,May ay | the policy of hoodwinking the work- THE WORLD | oo ee the support. The big navy group|tinue to carry out this policy by |Mrondwam *¢ Clue Feoms, “**/ ers announced by William C Butter- 8 5 rT Dnan the Conservatives, disagree-| more “experienced” hands and with-| a tonccte on vase | Worth, president of the U.S. Cham. eps lon Aig sherna eay '—MELROSE—, ing with MacDonald on the best out any serious opposition from the “mbar Mat Ss atthe Unity co- | ber of Coommerce, at the annual da S —~SOVKINO JOURNAL — Dai VEGETARIAN means of making war, are dissatis- “Labor” party. MacDonald as an 9herative, 1800 Seventh Ave, § p.m: session of the bosses’ organization. y SSENT DAY EVENTS IN SOVIET RUSSIA | Peng rine a fied with the Lon Treaty opposition, has had the ground cut Witt chilaren’s camp.” Ade! f ' || C’riensnot to vine at Our Place. and have opened fire on the fake | out from under his feet by setting |"!*!0m 60 cgnts. . es eft: 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx m ‘ (near 174th St, Station) PHONE: INTERVALB 9149, the pace of murder and rapine for the impe overlords, while a new period of fake “opposition” is! Labor Defender. Phote Group. Tonight § pm. 7B. 14th § “labor” government. At the same * Spanish Workers Center. time, Sir Oswald Mosley, holding a different opinion from MacDonald 1 Sports Club. Workers Sch: . hike Sunday, 10 Joins the N.T.V in India” at 3 p. en what constitutes the best way of | becoming necessary to restore some /a.'m. at Dyckman St. ferry. We hike * fooling the jobless, has resigned lost confidence of the masses, eo iotearGiy Es Harlem Prog. Youth Club May, Es te) Steve Katovis LL.D, Branch. Saturday, May 246, 1492 Madison Ave. Friday, Workers Center, 5th floor./at 8.45 p. m.. orchestra, British Cold to Young Plan Loan Paris dispatches state that Young Plan of juggling debts into assets has struck a sil snay a! |than the sum England is to receive | first base, with bankers of ten from the loan. That is bad enough, | countries in Paris unable to settle | but the bankers hint that Snowden’s the final terms of the $300,000,000 | “coolness” reflects the low tempera- ! lean, which is to discount the Ger- |ture of England generally to the! man debt payments for benefit of | whole business of the loan, due to the Allied bandits. the fact that France gets the weed The snag lies in that Snowden of! of it. the | England resoluteiy refused to sub-! seribe to more of the loan bonds ONLY ONCE IN 25 YEARS “Proletpen” (Jewish Lit.-Cult.-Front) John Reed Club (Eng. Lit.-Cult.-Front) CELEBRATE Swiss Preparing to Boycott U. S. Goods As American capitalists are plan-'against American products, It is| : ning through the pending tariff bill 'eported that important importers oishe adir’s of American products, especially | to keep Swiss watches and some other Swiss products from the American market, the Swiss bourgeoisie are preparing some kind of a boycott, automobiles and typewriters, are already curtailing their normal or-| ders. The tariff war has already started. | 25th Anniversary on the literary front form “Tint un Feder” to ‘Pen un Bix” Tomorrow Night CARNEGIE HALL 57th Street and Seventh Avenue Soviet-British Trade Doubles WASHINGYON, May 21.-—The U, | about $44,000,000. If the A F. of Trade (ciomissioner in London | L, fascist Matthew Woll and his pal, | in a message to the Department of Ralph Easley, have their way (who | Commerce has given American ex- knows but what they worked with : : ‘ porters something to think about by |*te British agent, Sir Henry Deter- is ding) all the $150,000,000 worth of cabling that orders placed by the orders which gave work for Amer- Soviet trade organizations in Eng-|ican workers on Soviet orders last land have doubled during the last! year, will be sent to British work- six months, the total sum being |shops in the future. s. Extraordinary International Program RESERVED SEATS. Tickets can be obtained in the Office of the “MORNING FREIHEIT,” 30 Union Square, New York City 26 W, 115th St. Lecture by Leonardo | Sanchez “The Revolutionary Situation m, Everybody Will Be at ULMER PARK May 31 Big Celebration of the FIVE-YEAR PLAN HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 A Great Film Record of a Great Soviet Achieve- ment! The Building of the Turkestan Siberian Railroad! Phone: Stuyvesant. 3816 John’s Restaurant ST RT TTLA ITALIAN DISHES “Pride of Soviet cinematogr: —IZVESTIA 52 W. Bighth St. Bet, Sth & 6th Av TH STREET LAYHOUSE aaa Mdseging Daeeates SPRing 5 0 9 5 |] 302 12th St. New York Balalaika Orchestra Cooperators! Patroni Dancing ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE rs Entertainment Saturday Evening, May 24 S E R O Y BRONX TENANTS LEAGUE i Movies will be taken! 4041 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Estabrook 3215 Music by John C. Smith Band ADMISSION 50 CENTS Bronx, N. ¥. W. 1. R, CLOTHING STORE Telephone. Ludlow 068 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done eens Called for and Delivered. Drofits go towards strik and their familie: bi show YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! Admission 50 Cents Auspices: Friends of the Soviet Union Workers International Relief FINNISH WORKERS CLUB NEW YORK DISTRICT Sunday, May 25th, at 2 P. M. Excellent Program —— Dancing Speakers: MAX BEDACHT and others ADMISSION 50 CENTS DIRECTIONS:—From Grand Central take Flushing, L. L, subway to end of line and then take College Point trolley to end of line. ———— Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City WORKERS, ATTENTION? REAL BARGAINS at 236 FB, 23d St., Bet. 34 & 24 Ava. Ladies, Gents and Children’s Furnishings Czech Red Factory List Ahead PRAGUE, Uzecho-Slovakia (I. P. | FOR BETTER VALUES IN 1 with 1,840 votes last year. | pared wi 40 votes last year. MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S S.).—The workers’ council election | Unorganized workers and national SULTS took place recently in the Skod {socialist workers stood for election , eset Ton the Red list. The social demo- go to works in Pilsen, the most important armament undertaking in Central Czech national socialists 3,748 votes. Europe. The list of the Red trade |The procentuzl socialist voie ha umions received 2,648 votes, as com fallen in comparison with Jast year. rats received 9,031 votes and the PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. Extra discount to D. W. readers! Food fara) Industrial ion 16 bad 21st St. New York City ecyeet crime it te eeu We Mast at thie appa a thestings—the Ried i A ly COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA BARBER SHOP 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty Moved to 30 Union Square FREINEIT BLDG——Maip Floor Ong, indunte7! One Union! sin naa | Oftice u eer ray erry ae

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