The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 16, 1930, Page 2

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Labor and Fraterna! p vase T Two EGYPTIAN CLASH WI H FORCES OF BRITI: H IMPERIALISM 250 Wounded and Again st P i, and | Soldiers strike Disrapard Wafdist ved Real Militancy Masses in G “Advise” Two of the tegica British the strike was called, ould not in any But these , when open revo es which, | These workers all quit because nit a : ke fo The campaign to establish the| the boss a one ot the ano vith the we s -. E way ena g gles with the imper. |™¥Ch needed Party training school | SUES, Tuters show solidar- rship ir \for functionaries in this district is| jj). although the i-day on Tuesday, July 15,/ well on the way. : * » « | cal organiz g uare of Mohamed Ali in Al-| All plans with regard to ew N YORK. — The Needle ran an : : asi beg dail culum, instructors and maintenance | Trades Wor! Industrial Union | 24 pats ne demonstrators, Cf Students have been completed by | ¥ terday ed the following | who were emergency. fired into and the far from being in-| 1, re ned the fight with| r weapon they could get Windows were broken and truck was upset by the| ors and burst into flames le of the square. The cr e rs, vappenings general politic iria on Tuesd all the necessar; and indignant f mass revolts. Th for two hours t egedly to character of the battle is Egyptian me y the fact that 250 per-} ical strugg wounded and 14 killed. Bilbéis. As bugles of an Egyptian in the colonies use | ™ lt have been sounded. Let mass movemen' ining|the British imperialists and their weapon with he| servants, the social fascist Mac- Wafdists were he | Donald and the Egyptian bourgeoisie masses would go too tremble! Trial of German Pastor in Odessa MOSCOW (I. P. trial | lura of the German pastor Koch began | Ode: June 2ist, in Odessa on charges of | | ing eounter-revolutionary activity | | politi Ss.) bands ‘when they entered in 1920. Koch admits hav- ed the church council for 1 activity against the col- against the Soviet power and/lectivization of agriulture and against the collectivization of against the emancipation of peasant culture. The court-room is crowded| women. He openly declares that with German col s from the|he stands by the old imperial Ger- surrounding countryside. Koch ad-|man principle of the three “K’s” mits having taken an active part in|for women, Kirche, Kinder, Kueche the anti-soviet rising in 1919, and| in other words the church, children having publicly welcomed the Pet- ‘and the kitchen. 15 Months Fortress for Communist Editor BERLIN (I. P. S.).—On June 27th the German Supreme Court in Leipzig sentenced the responsible throw of the existing State order must be published as high treason. This is the forty-fourth Communist editor of the Communist organ/ editor sentenced for press offences “Socialist Republic” in Cologne, to, during the last few months. The one year and three months fortress | German authorities are conducting |a systematic offensive against the communist press with a view to crippling it by robbing it of its best journalists and by imposing heavy for preparation for high treason in connection with the publication of | vatious articles. The judge de-| clafed that even the remotest prep- afation for a revolutionary ove Is Anti-Soviet Move “Roumania is a young state wedged nent French journalist Jules Sauer- in between Soviet Russia, Bulgaria wein publishes an article in “Ceske| and Hungary, and it must be Slovo,” the organ of the Czech | strengthened in accordance with the Foreign Minister Benesch in which | demands of its geographical posi- he deals with the tasks facing| tion. It is necessary that its de- Carol and set him by the imperialist | fense capacities should be strength- wire-pullers who permitted his cut) ened and that Bessarabia should be and dried coup. Sauerwein is at/ cleaned of all trace of communist resent in Roumania, and writes, | influence.” Admits Carol Coup PRAGUE (I. P. S.).—-The promi- Nanking Near Collapse; U.S. Sends More Arms PEKING (I. P, S.).—According| forces to Canton. Should this re- to @ report from Nanking the ele- | port be orrect then this means that rents in favor of the closing of| Chiang Kai-shek regards his posi- hostilities are growing more and/| tion on the Yangtse-Kiang as hope- More powerful owing to the des-| less. perate condition of the Nanking | Thirty-six aeroplanes, including forces. It is even reported wat 12 bombing planes, are expected to Chiang Kai-shek is considering the | arrive in Shanghai from the United possibility of retiring with his | States for Chiang Kai-shek’s forces. Mass Arrests of Landworkers in Hungary BUDAPEST (1. P. of landworkers have been going on for over a week at the end of June in the Hungarian plateau. The) and police activity is continuing. police declare that they are on the |The official denial issued by the track of communist organizations | Hungarian government of the re- amongst the landworkers. The| ports of unrest amongst the agri- truth however, is that the land- | cultural population is thus very workers have dared to organize | obviously dishonest. 22,000 Krupp Workers For Dismissal BERLIN (I. P. S.).—Board of| to dismiss the staff of its works in Directors of the Krupp works has/| Essen. 22,000 workers are involved filed an application with the Re-| and the dismissals will come into gierungs President in Duesseldorf | operation about the end of July, S.).—Arrests | themselves in trade unions with a view to improving their lot. About 150 landworkers have been arrested 2,400 American Troops Stationed in China SHANGHAI, July 16.—About]Shanghai, numbers about 1,200. 2,400 troops of American imperialism | 500 marines are stationed at Peking are stationed in China. The 4th|and 700 of the 15th Infantry are Regiment of Marines, stationed at| stationed at Tiensin. Clerks in Solidarity Strike BUTTE, Mont—Members of the| by “es teamsters. rae i Kary in| ing the vigorous complaint . Seas aoe 2 jira a “strike breakers were given inr'l sympathy with the striking machin- quate protection by the police,” the ists and teamsters. They would! bosses retaliated by closing their not stand for the delivery of goods | shops. 8 p. = tonight. Herbert Newton will + ‘. spe q Communist Activities "°°" Nia Sec! > tS 5 Workers Ex-Servicemen Fun mentale cinen” will be hela] Will have an open air meeting to- night at 7 p. m. at Second Ave, Ninth cor. ednesday beginning toni aie Rew comrades must attend, at 96 fs ospect : Pe Ne Sacco. Vanzetti LL.D. Branch will hold an open air meet- jing at 180th St. and Daly Ave, at 8.30 p.m. Ave, : Hidlion 6 Peactionary +. Meeting will be held Thursday, July 17 at 7 p.m. at 569 Prospect Ave. RE ave Williamsburg LL.D. Will have a membership Bete tonight at 8.30 p. m. at 68 Whippl St Organizations aig ees v Womens Anti-War will hela ¥ have ni Aan, open air Myrtle Ave. be Frid br ok { Kill ed in 7 iasernts Fight achery in the M A SSES IN eee Army, Caat | | and Joined Red Army) | |all applications that come in after | thie (Mutinied; Took Arms} | (Wireless By Inprecor: SHANGHAI, July 15 Fifteenth Nanking Arm: which was engaged in suppr: ing Communists at the frontier of Anhwei province, have mutin- ied. Strong detachments have deserted their commanders to join! | the Communists, taking -vith| them large supplies of arms, am- munition, ete. TRAINING CADRES FOR PARTY AND UNIONS: the district Agitprop department. The school is scheduled to open the first week in August. All regi: = tions must be,in the district prop office not later than Jul |In view of the concentrated s course and the consequent necessity of limiting the number of students, the above date will not be sidered. The revolutionary unions are par jticularly urged to greater ‘nterest |and initiative in taking advantage of the offer to the unions to select five students each. The acute lack | of functionaries in the revolutionary | unions constitutes a very serious problem in the development of the revolutionary unions into mass or- ganizations of struggle. The train- ing school offers an opportunity to develop fresh functionaries for the | con- |revolutionary unions. The chief course in the school curriculum will be the course on organization and the trade union course for which a complete and| comprehensive outline has been re- ceived from the Red Trade Union International. Comrade R. Baker. district organizer of the Party, will | lead the class in organization, and | J. W. Johnstone, district secretary of the TUUL, will be the instructor in the trade union course. All working class organizations, revolutionary unions and sympa- D: AILY WOKKE EXPOSE LLGW. MEN'S CLOTHING |“Zie Big House” at Astor RACKET “PROBE” WORKERS RALLY Man Stabbed Was the Head of Gangsters iatecnucifali Uadien Garment Workers called a meet- | ing of the over 200 workers in | 38 of the | the Hattie Carnegie ladies’ tailor- ing shop yesterday and ended the stoppage, threatening to replace with others sent by the “union” any who did not go back to work. i the hypocrisy | ger racketeering ges- e of the e cry y officials of the so-called Int tional Ladies’ Garment Wo Union, is nothing more than the old outery “catch the It is evident that these officials are seeking to divert the attention from the real cause of the assault on David Fruhling, namely a fight for booty. Moreover it is significant that these officials sud- denly discover racketeering now, |when one of their henchmen is | stabbed. I. L. G. W. Right In It. “The fact of the matter is that racketeering in the clothing trades jhas been going on for a long time | and the officials of the International | Ladies Garmet Workers Union were not only aware of its existence but were also the first “partners to the | busines: “It is no secret in the District | Attorney’s office that the gangsters |for whom the I. L. G. W. U. offi- cials are now supposedly looking had been in the latter’s pay roll | for a long time, and especially dur- jing the so-called cloak and dress “strikes” in 1929 and 1930, engin- eered by the “union” officials and the employer’s Association to sell out the workers. “During the so-called dress strike in 1930, David Fruhling, who was Bs NEW ORS Ww EDNESDAY, of racketeering. raised | thizers with the working class edu- | |recently stabbed, was chairman of | cation movement are urged to send | |the so-called organization commit- in their contributions towards the} | tee, consisting exclusively of notor- fund for financing this vitally im- | ious New York and Philadelphia portant school. Send all funds and | contributions to the Agitprop De-| partment, District 2, at 26-28 Union | Square. Senate 0.K.’s Secret Anti-Soviet Plot) (Continued from Page One) sition,” the administration gets the white- wash of an apparent general denial of any secret agreements, since none but the Daily Worker is exposing | this imperialist trickery aimed at war against the Soviet Union. Building for War. With this out of the way, Serator Reed, for the treaty, made a speech for ratification in which he showed that American imperialism won a victory over its imperialist rivals at London, arming itself upward “from one to eighteen heavy cruisers” in preparation for either war to seize markets and colonies from Britain or to prevent Britain from grabbing more than the allotted share of territory in the common war on the Soviet Union secretly agreed on at London. “So great Britain goes down four, Japan stands stock still, and we go from one to eighteen heavy cruisers; yet they say this is an affrontery to our security,” Reed rightly claimed. Yet these eighteen cruisers are being speeded up for war, at a cost of more than a billion dollars, while 8,000,000 jobless workers and their families are starving and the gov- ernment refuses to grant any funds for relief, no social insurance, no unemployed insurance. All Out on August 1. The “opposition” of the American naval officers is patently “fixed.” They are to “oppose” the treaty by demanding still more warships than the treaty does. Then defense of the treaty is made from a “step toward peace” angle and all the simple-minded pacifists are made crazy to support it, though its obvi- ous building of $1,000,000,000 more | cruisers is a move toward war. This whole hypocritical affair stinks to heaven, and the workers, marshaling their forces from the shops when the whistle blows Au- gust 1, should march to the dem-| onstrations called by the Commu- nist Party under the slogan: “Not a cent for warships; all funds for the unemployed!” Anti-Lynching Mass Meeting Next Week NEW YORK.~—The anti-lynching mass meeting called by the Amer- ican Negro Labor Congress for 8 p. m. in Royal Palace, 16 Man- hattan St., Brooklyn is Wednesday next week, instead of today as was mistakenly announced in the Daily Worker yesterday. The main speaker will be Herbert Newton, under a charge of insurrection in Georgia for which he will be elec- trocuted if convicted, Newton’s offense consisted in organizing white and Negro workers for a com- | mon struggle against the bosses ‘hy atl July 18 at 7.00 p+ am, at-26 Union a, ANd against lynching. of war against the Soviet, | gangsters, who freely terrorized and assaulted the workers. | “The partnership of the I. L. G. W. U. officials and the gangsters in the racket got along nicely so long as they succeeded through terror and intimidation in extorting |enough tribute from the workers to divide. “Now, however, the workers are revolting against their miserable sweat shop conditions and the rack- et union, the I. L. G. W. U., that forced these conditions upon them. Naturally the funds are running low in the racket union. There is not enough for both officials and gangsters, and therefore, the fight for the booty is on, and David | Fruhling, the leader of the gang, is the first victim. dustrial Union is leading the work- ers in the fight against the racket- eering I. L. G. W. U. and the vangsters and mobilizing all cloth- ing workers for a mass struggle for union conditions.” Jobless Shoe Worker Is Driven to Suicide NEW YORK.—Thomas W. Law- rence turned on the gas and put up a warning to neighbors to be- ware of danger from it. He was dead when found. He had been un- employed many month sand sick since May, without money for con- tinued treatment. He was a shoe \cutter, a real Yankee, born in Massachusetts. There are many such suicides now among the starving unemployed. The Communist Party calls on them to fight for work or wages, not to die for the comfort of capitalists who do not have any immediate way to exploit them on a job. This Saturday July 19 VvvVvVvVv | LLD. Excursion STEAMER: “MYLES STANDISH” Leaves Pier A South Ferry Saturday 2 P. M. BIG PROGRAM DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENTS ahahaha h GEV TICKETS AT if] LL. D., 799 Broadway, Room, 410 —— Stuy 3752 “The Needle Trades Workers In-| . Hundreds At Cooper | |Union Back N.T.W.L.U. NEW YORK.—Despite the trick of the Hillman clique in advertising the disbursement of employed men’s clothing workers, in an attempt to keep thousands of needle workers from a mass meeting called by the Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union, more than 500 | men clothing workers enthusiastic- ally endorsed the intensive campaign to organize the industry and smash the bosses’ company union, the Am- algamated Clothing Wor! a mass meeting in Cooper Union at 7 p. m. last night. Call for Struggle. Needle trades workers veterans in many bitter with the bosses and their leader: ag gents, | hammered at the need for the orga- | |nization of shop committees, and a |shop delegate conference for gen- uine rank and file control of the | union. A shop delegate conference is to be called in the near future for the purpose of working out a program of shop organization and strike struggle. Worsening Conditions. Describing the worsening condi- |tions the men’s clothing workers are forced to labor under, J. Hertz, chairman of the meeting, toid of the role of thc Amalgamated €loth- ing Workers as the speed-up, w: age- | cutting agents of the bosses. Demand End of Piece Work. Urging the assembled needle workers to organize for fight against the life-sapping piece work, introduced by the Hilman company union, portance of building shop commit- Workers’ Industrial Union, called upon the workers to immediately spur the drive to organize the shops and to prepare for strike in an in- tensive strugg'e to smash the bosses company union and restore condi- tions in the industry. Thousands Jobless. More thousands unemployed than those still in the shops, with wage reductions an almost daily occur- rence, and speed-up pushed to an unbearable point, the men’s clothing workers are again surging forward to bitter struggles against the bosses, Louis Hyman, president of the N. T. W. I. U., declared. NEWSBOYS, BOOTBLACKS ARE TO BE ORGANIZE? NEW YORK.—The Young Pio- neers are starting to organize the many bootblacks and newsboys in New York City. such children who work long hours a day for very little money. families. Police Persecute Kids. of that section, place to place and are in constant fear of being “pulled in” by the burly Tammany thugs. The same is true of the newsboys who work late into the night. are well taken care of by the gov- ernment and have no worries about where their next meal in the U. S. S. R. Biggest and Best Work- ers’ Outing of Season Our Build the Yaily 32s Worker PICNIC ane CARNIVAL vvvvyv Held in Co-operation with —All Revolutionary and Sym. pathetic Workers’ Organiza- tions; JULY 16, 1930 A. Sazru stressed the im-| tees in the Hillman controlled stops. | Greeted by a big ovation, Ben/ Gold, secretary of the Needle Trades | = Tense Film of Prison Lite | One of the more important films | of the season “The Big House,” | be called the epic life. Never before has the day by day activities of the prisoners in any large institution been so well described on the screen. With the exception of several minor episodes a | it is a rather truthful portrayal and for that reason must be given earnest consideration. After describing the various phases of life within the prison, we see the inmates attempt to secure] their liberation by a prison break. This part of the picture follows closely many of the actual prison revolts that have taken place dur- ing the last year. In many ways it equals the fine scenes to be found n “The Last Mile” yet»that play s on the whole the superior of the present film. That does not in the least mean that the film is not a good one. Insofar as its theme is concerned, no othér picture has yet been made that can even be con- sidered as its rival. | One of the greatest faults that can be charged against the picture lis that it had to compromise itself | by forcing in love interest, when |the picture would have been much better off without it. While it does not do the picture any great harm, it seems like an unnecessary growth | that should be cut off. The film has definite characters, | the outstanding one being none |other than the old reliable Wallace Beery. His portrayal of the leader of the jail outbreak is the outstand- ing achievement of his long and varied career. The rest of the cast | s equally good. It includes Chester | Morris, who plays the part of one of the inmates, who when the revolt | takes place, betrays his comrades jand allies himself with the prison authorities. He is not the only traitor, as one of the other leading characters is played by Fletcher Norton who has the role of Oliver, a stool pigeon. Others.in the large cast are Karl Dane, Robert Mont- gomery, Lewis Stone and Leila Hyams. George Hill directed the film and deserves great credit for the mas- terful work on his part. It is a film he can well be proud of. now | at the Astor Theatre, can rightfully | film of prison | pena ee |AT EIGHTH ST. PLAYHOUSE. film of the Soviet-German exp dition into the little known Pamir now showing at the Eighth St. Playhouse. Great Crowd Gathers On Food Picket Lines NEW YORK —Four arrests failed to stop picketing by the} strikers led by the Food Workers’ | Industrial Union at the two baker- ies at Allerton Ave. There were ;2,000 crowded around the picket lines, The riot wagons were called out. Myerson, the business agent jof the A. F. of L. union, Local 500, | got the injunction under which ar- rests were made. The F. W. I. U. is picketing a whole series of other shops. | There will be a meeting of all} Communists in the food industry tomorrow at 7:30 p. m. at 26 Union Square. Unemployed Textile Delegates to Report NEW YORK.—The delegates of| the National Textile Workers’ Union who attended the National Conven- tion of the Unemployed, held in| Chicago July 4 and 5, have returned. | The union has decided to have a| mass meeting, at which time the| delegates will give their report of | the convention. Scene from “Pamir,” the thrilling |) if i! | This meeting will| be held on Thursday, July 17, 7.30} p. m., at the union headquarters, 13 | West 17th street, N. Y. C. WORKER FOUND STARVING TO DEATH NEW YORK.—Nathaniel Greene, a Virginia farmhand, who came to | There are many | Many | of these children are under 10 years of age and have to help support| Many of these bootblacks, who) are not the favorites of -the cops} are chased from! In the Soviet Union the children | is to come | from. There are no child laborers | New York to find a job, was found starving to death by a roadside near here. Greene had lived for some time on leaves, berries and grass, He is now near death in a New York hospital. LAST 2 DAYS! pan erow P Sovjey Sos 0° ris A Se, ale lens, cz iis eee | for chmet M ung I Unite Soviet Union by Perilous Climb to PAMIR: 8: pohpalle Film Guild Cineme Dir. Jos. R. bei Popula. RKO THEATRES LETS GO! LOB Broadway|Daily from & 46th 110:30 A.M. “LAWFUL LARCENY” with Bebe Daniels: Lowell Sherman; Kenneth Thomson —A Radio Pict: , Broadway and AMEO -“tina'sites! “AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WORLD” SENSATIONAL POLAR EXPEDITION New York Premi We Meet at the— .COOPERATIV ~All Party Communist Pap- ers; —All Daily Worker Readers; —All Workers from the Shops That We Can Reach; REMEMBER THE DATE Sun., Aug.17 Pleasant Bay Park FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. 2ist St. Cheinen 227- Bronx Headfuarters, 2994 Phir Avenue, Melrose 0128, Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue Pulasky 0634 The Shop Delegates Council meets 7g first pene Hay, of every month 8 P, M. it 16 West 2ist St The Shop is the the Basie Unit 4) AST 610TH ST rooms; all tnprovements, wear sub Rooms | Furnished $1.25 2 Come where you are ieee Given R PLAYHOUSE 26-28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM U. S. S, R. CANDIES———CIGARETTES | Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty COMRADES, WE ARE SERVING DINNER FOR ee DAY 10 A Mm. TOR re 7 Vegetables ROYALTON RESTAURANT 118 FIFTH AVENUE, COR. 171TH ST. Picnic and Carnival Morning Fretheit (JEWISH DAILY) SATURDAY. AUGUST 2. 1930 ULMER PARK, 25th Avenue (BATH BEACH) Tickets: 40¢ at Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square, New York City The meeting of last week elected delegates to take part in the United | Front Conference to be held in Man-| hattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth street, on Thursday, July 24. All shops were instructed to elect dele- gates from the shops as well. LATEST SOVIET FILM! “THE ROOF OF THE WORLD” m.toMldnite ‘A Theatre Gulla Production" THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD “iim asachi0 ARTISTS AND MODELS Partaediviera Edition of 1930 MAJESTIC ee te St. W of! Even. at 8:30 Mats. Wed. and 8: it THEATRE a TO “Tae E CAFETERIA 50c og Paitign Arranged U Banque: NEW YORK CITY by the ap, eae al DIRECTIONS—Take Pad ‘M. 'T. Weat End Train, stop 25th Avenue “For All Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Velephone: Murray HID 555 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York paeinheheeaaieaner ann tee natn ala 657 Allerton, Avenue Bronx, N. ¥, Estabrook 3215 = Al Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Hrony RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, JE * Bet 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food -—-MELROSE—, VEGETAKIAN RESTAURANT Always Find it or ates at Our Pinece. 1782 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE: INTERVALD 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmospl where al) radicals m¢ 02 KE. 12th St. 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 — New York Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SQUTHERN BLVD. Cor. 149th Street Where you eat and fee! at home. Ur. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 240 WAST 115th bd ro Cor. Second Ave. York DAILY &XCEPI Paayy vlease telephone wneapmen: Telephone: Le! Tel, ORChard 3783 DR, L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strietly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. ABW YORK IDR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803~ Phone: Algonquin 6189 Not eonnected unth any other office 3y6nan Jleye6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 Bast 14th St. Cor. Secong Ave Tel. Algonquin 7249 Dr. M. Wolfson SURGEON DENTIST 141 SECOND AVENUBD, Cor, 9th St, Phone Orchard 333 In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and cay aseqi you of careful treatment. Phone: LEIGH 6382 ‘nterrational Barber Shop M W BALA. Prep. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 108td & 104th Ste.) Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beacty Parlor *UTCHERS’ UNION nent 174, AMC. &B.W of MA Office and See | Leno Temple see su | merunmastggy “78 rth se | beige tt Bu oh Advertire your Union Meetings hore Fot information write ta The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 26-28 Union Sn. New York Olty I

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