Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
fage two ——— FILIPINOS PUSH FIGHT | AGAINST HOOVER PICK FOR ViCE-GOVERNOR Grows Against Wall Street sd Exploitation Mass Resent ry to Gloss Over Roosevelt Prepare Demonstrations t the Filipino people, sea by an enraged pinoes. jalists here fear that the f Roosevelt will be the oc- militant mess demonstra- gainst American imperialism. ily Tribune in an to gloss over : es in the Roosevelt ent. Of course the Tribune r Quezon, Roxas and Co., ot the Filipino people. It tries ake it appear that the Roose- anders are a racial matter ‘ot political. This is the purest y. Roosevelt expresses the of Wall Street, which is not y for racial suppression but im- list domination in the Philip- Filipino | pines and a more thorough exploita- tion of this colony of the U. S. The workers and ,easants will an- swer Roosevelt, and his Wall Street masters, not by phrases and tripe about “dignity” but by forging their r utionary forces for driving out erican imperialism. a MANILA, P. I resentment is be at the apy Roosevelt. book on the P Sentenced for Or The release of these fighters o, and throughout the country. demanded at the August 1st demonstrations in the cities of Califor ganizing Workers Organizers of bitterly exploited Imperial Valley agricultural workers who were sente years for their part in the or ganization of the Negro, F’ panese and white farm workers. From left to right: Frank Spector, Carl, Sklar and T. Horiuchi. f the agricultural workers DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1930 (CALL FURRIERS TO COOPER UNI Jobless Needle Toile Teday in Bryant Hall | . NEW YORK—At the Coo ers) and the-fur manufacturers. You must stop The fur finishers t St., at Z to emonstration Friday t of a world-w for thi movement to d for unemp! ce. The ng will be Louis Hyman ¢ tomorrow night demic through strikes mobil; nd of the govern- hat all war funds be turned nent relief and bees er at) NEW YORK—On Monday, at| | Aftermath of “Peace” | Pacts __ Ys per oe the es- * Again the guns of imperialis war will roar even while the in! is not yet dry on the countles r| peace pacts and “disarmament of| treaties. Workers! -Demonstrat your will to turn the bosses wa into a revolutionary war agains the bosses to overthrow the mur | stem and establish the rule of the workers that will guaran bread, peace and happiness to the masses. ize at ide |PRINTERS’ JOBLESS T0 MEET TODAY AT NOON 7 aay 0, a meeting of unemployed A LOCAL 1 HELPS BOSS FIRE MEN in AY Food Workers Lead Struggle in j yy | Bakeries; 8 Pickets Released SS | NEW ° YORK. — The bakery Group of Candidates strikes go on in the Bronx, and the aes ss = picket lines remain. The situation Urges Joining NT WIU |is tavorable for the strikers. ~ | Saturday evening, one was ar- NEW YORK A ‘| vested at the Glenmore on Allerton Cluthing Workers take Ave., case postponed, picket released place today. ‘The Hill: | on parole. | man union admi 80 Six pickets arrested at the Me-| pe™ cent unem 7 Clelland Bakery last week were | tailors, and that part of cent working are © art t dismissed in court Monday. the Hillman outfit helps the bo the 40 per Sut Demonstrate. An open air demonstration ar- “reorganize” their shops and fire| ranged by the Food Workers Indus. dezens more all the time. Just dur- | trig] Union at the Roseland | ing the last few wee ar | | Cafeteria, 138th St. and Cypress, | PS helped the boss to make overtures | tions have taken place in such as S. D. Jaffe, Gohen and Lang, B. : ; Cohen, Litt ‘shd Chinitz, J. Fried-| 70%, ® Settlement. | The plektte re man, Miller, Wolf Bros., Rubin and settles. Picketing continues at 5317! Levin, Wm."F: Goldman, Goldman church Ave, Brooklyn, where the | Brand Clothing and many others. racketeer Fagen hung out the The amalgamated has been trans-| 4. PF, L, sign. formed into.a machine which keeps} "The bureaucrats of Local 1) the workers disunited and helpless! (waiters) have conceded 25 points in the face of the organized bosses, | tg the bosses, on any one of which and helps the bosses speed up and! they can fire waiters. The Food reduce the working for | Workers Industrial Union calls | For a Struggle. | these workers to repudiate such A leaflet has been issued by a_ leadership, and to join the fighting group of candidates urging union industrial union. with the Needle Trades Workers In-| There will be a general member- dustrial Union for a general strike|ship meeting of all food workers, | struggle for the following demands: | organized and unorganized from the Seven-hour, 5-day week. | Bronx, Brooklyn and down-town Minimum wage scale and an in-! section tomorrow, at Irving Plaza crease in wages. Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, at Reinstatement of all those thrown 8 p. m. All food workers are urged out of their shops. to come and participate in the final Control of Labor Bureau by the mobilization for the August first delegates from shops and unemploy-| anti-war demonstration. Mina ployment insurance to be JAILED MILITANTS SAY | MINOR IS VERY SICK paid by the bosses and by the gov: ernment and controlled by the work- | ers. Social insurance for ployed workers. — NEW YORK—The International i Rereet overtime, Labor Defense has received the fol- iece-work. lowing letter from Peter Darck and Signing this leaflet are the fol-| Peter Labowit, both militant lead- ee candidate : ase ers of the window cleaners’ strike - Lapaw, for secretary and treas-| which lasted 6 weeks, and in which urer ws joint case : ;many workers were beaten and ar- ae ae ‘or business agent of| rested by the hired thugs of the t vee Gen fs . rae 1 | bosses. These two were framed Pegi iekstein, Cnairman of ‘Local and are now serving the remainder . 19. } es _|of the term which is 4 months in For executive of Local No. 19:/+h. workhouse. The International Max Rosenstock, A. Leibman, Jennie | Tabor Defense has tak hei Leiberman, Grill, Shortland, Abram-|sopea1, “The letter ‘ie wriven ny Darck and says: “I am informing you that Peter |Lahowit and I are both locating |under the above address for the bal- owitz, Greenberg. Membership Meet of ance of our term. Pete’s number |is 103951, Cell 106. Both of us are Shoe Workers July 30 alright but very eager to know what A special, general membership meeting of the Independent Shoe lis going on now on the other side jof the bars. We are anxious to Workers’ Union will take place Wednesday evening, July 30, at 3)i ow the outcome of July 4th in Chicago. p. m. sharp at the union headquar- We are both very glad to meet the unem- speed-up and ters, 16 W. 21st St., New York. Special problems concerning all} the shoe workers of Greater New} York will be discussed and plans adopted for a wide organization campaign. Matters concerning the coming shoe and leather workers’ pienie, which will take ace Sun- day, August 24, at Pleasant Bay Park, will also be taken up. All members, regard) of their dues’ standing, are invited to be present. p Preparations will be made for the participation in'the August Ist dem- onstration. District Training School Meets Sat. NEW YORK-—A meeting applicants to the District tionaries Training School will b held Saturday, August 2, at 3 p. m. at the Workers Cente of all Fune- Union Square, Room 10, fifth floor. At this meeting the selection of students fromthe ist of applicants to the school will be made. therefore essential for ev cant to be present. Every comrade should bring a pen or pencil with him in order to fill out a questionaire that will be presented to the applicansts, our camrade Bob Minor on our sec- ond day in prison. We left him jthere. His spirit is wonderful as ever but physically he sinks pretty | low. Something must be done to |save him for the workers’ move- ‘ment. Please write to any one of |us and let us know what is the pro- ‘gram of our Union at large.” i oe “EX-SERVICEMEN FIGHT FOR USSR. DEFENSE NEW YORK—Pointing out the growing army of unemployed in the U. S., as the bosses prepare for war, |the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Lea- |gue at a meeting held Tuesday pass-| \ed a resolution pledging “whole- earted support to the valiant} hters of the Union of Socialist oviet Republics.” The Ex-Servicemen’s League is mobilizing its members and other worker ex-servicemen to participate the August 1st demonstrations. TUUL ORGANIZER Jackson Feared to Be Lynched | BIRMINGHAM, July 29.—Harry | Jackson, Trade Union Unity League | organizer arrested here last Friday with Carr and Braxton at a meet-| ing of the National Miners Union | was released Saturday night and kidnaped at the jail gate by Ku} Kluxers who hai evidently been} notified by the police of the hour! of his release. Every effort to find) him has failed and it-is feared he} has been lynched by the southern} bosses and their thugs. Carr and Braxton are still in jail, although no charges have been filed against them. The fascist terror in this section) is continuing full blast with thef police and courts in the most open| co-operation with the bosses in the} drive to force the workers into meek acceptance of the bosses’ pro- gram of v~ge cuts and unemploy- ment. The terror is directed against the Communist Party and the revo- lutionary unions which are organ- izing the workers, black and white alike, for the revolutionary struggle against their exploiters. The south- ern workers are answering the ter- ror with a grim determination to carry on the struggle and to par- ticipate in the nation-wide demon- | strations on August First against imperialist war and for the defense | of the Soviet Union. WORKERS BOO WHEN BOSS TALKS BOYCOTT, An unsuccessful attempt was} made by a laundry boss to break | up a shop gate meeting which was held yesterday afternoon in front | of the Independent Laundry, corner of Livonia and Herzel St., Brook- | lyn, under the auspices of the} American Negro Labor Congress. | The meeting which was organized | by the new city committee which now has direction of all A. N. L. C. activities in Brooklyn, was no sooner under way than the laundry boss rushed to the street to threaten | the workers with arrest and boycott if they remained to listen to the A.N.L.C. speakers expose the rotten | capitalist system with its lynch | terror, jim-crowism and special op- pression of Negro workers. Both | Negro and white workers booed him. The Independent Laundry is known as one of the worst slave pens in Brooklyn, paying the girls an average of twelve dollars a week with a system of rationalization which calls for frequent firing of | help and piling up of work on the | new girls. Remember SACCO and VANZETTI Demnostrate UNION SQUARE Fri., August 22, 4 p. m. SAVE ATLANTA SIX from the ELECTRIC CHAIR Protest! Demonstrate! Rush Funds to INTERNATIONAL KAST 110TH ST. LARGE, SMALL furnished rooms, convenient, near subway. Lehigh 1890, CANDY STORE, GOOD LOCATION. Will sell cheap on account of ilnens. 422 East A7th Street, City, LABOR DEFENSE New York District 799 Broadway, Rm. 410 | Connelly, set. It will open at the Wilbur The- atre, Boston, for a two weeks’ en- gagement on August 11. From Boston it comes directly to the Roy- ale Theatre for its premiere per- formance August 25, This edition of “The Little Show,’ the second, sponsored by William A. Brady, Jr., and Dwight Deere Wi man, associated with Tom Wea therly, will feature Al Trahan, Ruth Tester, Joe Lewis, Helen G Kathryn Hamill and Davey Jones The play includes material by Mar Newman Levy, Morric Ryskind, Robert Emmet Sherwood Corey Ford and Howard Dietz. Words and music have been sup- plied mostly by Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz. The current attraction at the Lit- tle Carnegie Playhouse includes as its chief feature Edmund Lowe in Donald Henderson Clarck’s melo- drama, “Born Reckless.” On Wed- |nesday the Playhouse will feature| | “Safety In Numbers,” with Charles Rogers and Kathryn Crawford in the leading roles, Edmund Lowe will be seen and heard in his latest characterization as the featured player in “Good, In- tentions,” a new Fox drama of the ALA. KKK KIDNAP |The Little Show” Set for Aususi ai Royal Theaive “The Second Little Show” is all) | RICHARD DIX | In “Shooting Straight,” | Radio film now Globe Theatre. a | Theatre. | ard, new showing at the | | underworld, this week at the Roxy | The story was directed |and authored by William K. How- St. Leaflets tor this meeting were distributed at employment agenceis and the day rooms of the A. F. L. local unions. About 65 workers attended, most of them being members of “Big Six” and other locals of the A. F. L. Many of the workers present spc’ of the necessity for building the council and also exposed the gyping methods of the various em- ployment agencies. One worker re- ated how an agency sent him to a job where he had to pay $8 and 2 per cent of his salary for the ‘irst four weeks. At this job he was only kept 2 days and his $8 were gone. The meeting voted to constitute tself into an unemployed council of the printing industry. AMKINO PRES | ADDED Labor and Fraternal Workers Ux-Servicemen. Open air meeting tonight at 114th t, and Lenox Ave, at 8 p. m. ak: wit st Side Workers Club Will have an open air meet night at 8 p. m of Clinton and * Workers Ex-Servicemen Meet tonight on the corner of 132nd St. and Lenox Ave. ai. oie t Office Workers , Open air meeting today at 12.30 in front of the MacFadden Bldg., at corner 6 P si Attention! 64th St. and Broadway, All members of the W.LR. will ‘ . " meet at 10 17th St. on Frid _ Counell 17, ULC. WW. August Ist, at 4 p.m. to march in Will have a lecture on the “Sit- body to the Anti-War Demonstration. Communist Activities ion in India” tonight at 8.30 p. 208 Otis Pl, Brooklyn « i ae Saceo-Vanzetti LL.D. Will have a meeting on 180th and Daly Ave. tonight at 8.30 p. (es aa Williamsburg LL.D. Membership meeting tonight 8.30 p. m. at 68 Whipple St. Biggest and Best Workers’ Outing of the Season! Our Build the Baily 24 Worker Picnic—Car: ival Held in Co-operation with —All Revolutionar; Workers’ Organiz ‘y and Sympathetic ations; ATTRACTION R GOL ‘CAME Broadway|Daily from LOB & 46th = [10:30 A.M. RICHARD DIX in “SHOOTING STRAIGHT” and Clark & McCullough Comedy © m. | St. m. at ' 1 | | | ernment, the war preparations of | “A TENSE RUSSIAN DRAMA”—N. Y. Times. AMERICAN PREMIERE “THE LAW oF te SIBERIAN TAIGA”’ The newest Soviet drama. Tungus Tribe in the frozen wastes of Siberia . . . Desperately battling for life ... Fighting for food PRODUCED IN U, 8, 8, R. BY KIN LATEST SOVKINO NEWSREEL 42ND STREET and Broadway WIS. 1789 |printers was held, at 13 West 17th | Union Square, to protest against the WORKING WOMEN OUT ON AUGUST 1 Issue Leaflets On War Danger to Thousands “In their feverish war prepara-| tions, the bosses are centering their main attack on the Soviet Union,” declares a leaflet distributed to tens of thousands of women workers by the New York District of the Com- munist Party. { The call is issued for all working |} women to come out on August 1)) and demonstrate in Union Square at || 5 p. m., against the imperialist war | preparations. “Almost three billion dollars has yeen set aside by the United States |! zovernment for war expenditures ‘or the coning year. Billions of dol- ‘ars for war, but not a cent for the ,000,000 jobless in the U. S. A,,| who are walking the streets and starving. Billions for war, while nundreds of thousands of mothers must listen to the cries of their starving children. It is we, women workers, who are paying these bil- lions for war by slaving 50 and 60 hours a week for miserably low wages, which barely buy the neces- sities of life, It is the workers who lose their lives in war, so that the bosses can make bigger and better profits. “Negro and white women work- ers must join their forces in the mass anti-war demonstration on brutal lynching policy of the gov-/| the bosses and to demand higher wages and social insurance instead of battleships. “In the next war, every man will be conscripted,” says Herbert Hoo- ver, This means that women and | children will have to take the places of men in the shops and factories to produce all the war materials, to produce food, make more profits for the bosses while their husbands and brothers are being killed in the trenches. Already millions of women have been forced into industry at very low wages, and, in many cases, | are the only breadwinners in the} family. This will make it easier | for the bosses to turn the factories into war plants overnight, when the | war breaks out.” hb | A chronicle of the }-SIBIR ‘A Theatre Guild Production™ | THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES EIGHTH ANNUAL MORNING FREIHEIT PICNIC & CARNIVAL Saturday, August 2nd AT ULMER PARK 25th Avenue, Bath Beach, Brooklyn Over Fifty Workingclass Revolutionary Organizations Participating —All Party Communist Papers; —All Daily Worker Readers; —All Workers from the Shops That We Can Reach. REMEMBER THE DATE SUNDAY, AUG. 17 PLEASANT BAY PARK i | INTERNATIONAL WORKERS ORDER CALLS FOR THE FORMATION OF FIRST ENGLISH SPEAKING BRANCH A meeting will be held to organize the first English speak- ing branch of the International Workers’ Order on Thursday, July 31st, 7:30 p. m. sharp, at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union Square, New York City. The International Workers Order is based on mutual aid, fraternal and cultural benefits including insurance and sick benefit for workers regardless of race, color or sex. , We call upon all English speaking workers to come to this first meeting held for the purpose of organizing an English speaking branch. ia : t ‘“ $1.25 Come where you are weleomedt 118 FIFTH AVENUE, COR We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM U. S. S. R. CANDIES———CIGARETTES Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty SPORTS, GAMES, DANCING AND OTHER ENTERTAINMENTS LARGE JAZZ BAND DIRECTIONS :—B,-M.T, West End Line Trains to 256th Avenue EVERY DA fresh ROYALTON wTH COMRADES, WE ARE SERVING DINNER FOR Vegetables Used Only YuA Mm TOUR. M 50c Banquets and Parties Arranged RESTAURANT sT. NEW YORK CITY \ ) “For Alt Kinds of Insurance’ ([ARL BRODSKY Yelephone: Murray Hil) sss 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: JE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food _— a —MELROSE—, VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1 Always Bind ft Pleasant <o Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (a 174th St. S eHOND INTBRVALD. e149, HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 eA NMR | Phone: Stuyvesant 3916 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where -all radicals meet 12K. 12th St. New York Siz, Za Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round. 4 WES1 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 221 WESI 36TH STREET ee Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF N NTIST SURGE in 249 BAST 115th STREBL Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPI FRIDAY Vlease telephone for a) Cor, ppointmen Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. L. KESSLER SURGBON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL| SURCECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE com 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office 3y6uaa Jlevedunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 Bast 14th St., Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 Phone: LEHIGH 6382 {nternational Barber Shop M. W SALA, Prop, 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 108rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Cooperators! SERO Patronise 2 CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. 2ist St. Chelsea 2274 Bronx Headduarters, 2994 Third Avenue, Melrose 0138; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 The Shop Delegates Council meets the first Tuesday of every month at 8 P. M, at 16 West 2ist St. The Shop Is the Basic Unit. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sx.. New York City [gen mercer ar ron eemermmerare arin oncogene IBUTCHERS’ UNION Loca} 174, A.M.C.& B.W. of NAA, Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple 243 10. S4tb Bt. Regular meetings every first and Bg Ni a, bes) ry da: Pe a 10— $18. Swimming and Vishing, M. OBERKIRCH Kon Box 78 KINGSTON NY el. = N=