The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 11, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two FACTS SHOW MORE AUTO! WORKERS WILL BE LAID OFF SOON IN ALL SHOP: Workers Lab. Theatre Has Extensive Plans The summer committee of the Workers Laboratory Theat e, which 1eets every Monday, is prepa an extensive program for the com DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1930 LEGIONNAIRES ‘PLACE MEN IN FUR SHOPS AT $18 WK 'Give Jobless Workers t Call For | WIR Beacon Camp} | Several hundred working class children have attended the Workers *) International Relief children’s camp at Beacon, N. Y., so far this season. They have participated in the camp | nder the !eadership of trained | Raid Pioneer Camp KIDNAP GIRLS San Francisco, Cal. ees ig x a weal At) SHIRTMAKERS SEI SLASHING CUTS Strike Struggle Onl; ni ee * eason. Plays are being written ‘ seis . - ii . ae oe i Steel Bosses Get No Orders From Automobile | vi \jare made for a revolutio Tea and Bread = who have instilled a mi-| Spencer, New York | Possible Answer v 2 i Sie ee 5 span oe 4 eG working class education in be | a‘ spe iants; Ford Producing Very Little theatre p 3 NEW YORK.—The latest organ- them. | SPENCER, N. Y., Aug. 10.—-Two| NEW YORK—the underpaic Rete ae seek the coo ion of more work ion to utilize the severe unem- The final group Hf children of the | raids on the camp of the Young! ee i Be hones o Ss. ae & oe eS 4 Norati ardicti J Py) | ers’ or ns than in the past.| ployment to place jobless workers current season will leave for the/Pioneers of America here by the! August First demostrati bE isle ee eee 8. ee rporation Perdiction of Upturn ° . Gincionr var reduced wages is a Jew- camp on August 18. Parents who| American Legion and the Ku Klux | Bmberendare ration @ th? ected to a 10 to 25 per cent wage 1s Out To Be a Dud 8 ration society on Lafayette ir children to attend the!Klan took place Saturday, in one eut in the New Egypt, N. J., plant a D fi St., in establishing an employment v session must register im-| of which the Pioneers put up a hot I ike a 12% per cent cut at Potts. : ihe 3 Uv F cy for fur shops to place work- ately at the local office of the| resistance, and several were injured B AT | Fowny, Pa. Looming ever nearer is be ; Bjaet to dawns % s at $18 a week. located at 10 East 17th St./in the fighting. This was followed | ‘ | a 12% per cent cut for the work 1 mean precisely DN} CEM | Providing the fobless and penni- ae ees by invasion of the camp by Federal NGG Hee ee ee lo above when we state MARL RY fue 8) less workers who come to the so- a aaa marshal yesterday, with the inform- fin Seti’ Go eho Wetodit eerie h eva) will] ooo" ER ENG ws ciety for help with tea and bread on Wwe DD Jation that “The Legion will decide| . WOO ice eas, ae en c - for breakfast, the society promises a Wes q np what to do with this camp today Ney eres eke WOXGER) ete | i : eS ; Paw Weide EEL Henediptn! | The Liebovitz shirt factory at same dispatch goes on to! Tig} tine Wage Cuts: get the workers jobs and sends a su (Sunday), and the further informa- | Salisbury, Ma. is closed’ down la D “Considering the automobile) /@Nting age CUS" them to fur shops, where the high- | | tion that federal warrants are being|Cqompany Union Tries) 8. Lictovite @ Sone : el sideri u i 2 ; ah ts aus diel “ie kK | of | Compan} 1@S| .S. Liebovitz & Sons, Inc., operate 2 generally, a resumption vased} Both Meet Monday «st wage, they are told, is $18 a/f AW OEE nn ARE sought for Mable Hisa and Ileana} i | sweatshops throughout Pennsylva- Dn k na ati AECuIMIAOn AE sarHERE TREE ae “| week, ‘The hours of work for work-|" (Vf WEE’ EA tlt [PEIN | Holmes, Pioneer leaders kidnapped| to Frame Up Two |frestehors, throu Mailer apace HON wot be looked upon aa permanent.’| NEW YORK-AI preparations |¢rs so placed are without defi singel as |and held captive for several hours | : — rio: dete that sia aloe ton tie Reports from the steel industry! are being made by the Needle Jimit, with sanitary conditions of| ‘ : by the Legion Saturday. NEW YORK.—The revolt of the! higher paid workers t n t week or so. show up the statements recently Trades Workers’ Industrial’ Unior the very poorest type. (By a Worker Correspondent) The Legionnaires and K.K.K.’s) furtlers against the Kaufman com-| ‘The official pretext for the cut x “Hidde ‘the financial sec-|made at a meeting of the Roard) for a membership and o = CHICAGO, Ill. — The workers jcame in first and put up an Amer-|Pany-union, against the miserablé| was that it was necessary to meet 0 tien e some | of Directors of the U. S. Steel Corp-| drive in the dre: TRIENDS OF SOVIET down at Moline, Sil East Moline,|ican flag. The workers’ children conditions in the shops and the star- competition of thar Hosen The ¥ start y Worker oration. These exploiters, meeting| Aug. 11. On that d: TERY u aad Rock Island, Illinois and Daven oe down. fee aes and ‘the ges sy Fat snares pore is workers at the Pottstown, Pa., mn expone dispitch to to hand out profits to the parasite | work, there will be a meeting of ali nort, Ia, are out of work by she | K.KK. returned and put it up again, yesterday in the fur! plant, however, resent i 14 the N. Y. Sun a capone peer promised - im-| active dressmakers in Irving Plaza | UNION DANCE AUG. 23 thousand: in the middle of the camp Saturday | Market, when a group of Kaufman Pee ee ee se ; AEF Gehan sine =a 7 9 7 : na 3; | afternoon, and tried to carry away | Strong-arm henchmen attempted to| “For Ali Kinds of Insurance” Steel producers are surprised ate increase in steel production. | Hall. The Silvis Railroad ships at Sil : intimidate’ tha. work that there could be the reported basi redily) happened? vA téle-)) The indoettial. anion dfelared) | NEWi VOR s Workers from wis, Jv laid off a0 men/galy Te|eoe Stee eee le aN TS) eae eee 9 resumption of automobile mana- ram from Pittsburgh to the N. Y.| another dress shop on strike yes-| Greater New York and New Jersey| According to a news item, “There is |% 2nd the children were giving a| Xf Kumlers tuned down these thags,| ‘ " facture with so little steel, and Evening Post (August 9) gives the | terday, the Adele Shop, in the figh< |will attend the shore dance of the, litle hope at present that the shops gg gre het a ety elit te Feel at | ied a conclude that there were stocks answer in no uncertain terms: for union conditions and against | Friends of the Soviet Union, which’ will resume activities on Septem |200 more legionnaires rushed in, A Melephone: Murray Hatt ssn m Nor is the “The U. §. Steel Corporation reduction of prices. of steel and parts. restimption equal to expectations. Ford was to stop for two weeks, but stopped for three instead, and this week resumed on a four-day schedule for the remainder of the jwill be held Saturday, August 28 A revolt is rapidly developing |at Casa D’Amor Hall, Mermaid amongst the cloakmakers against | Ave. and West 31 St., Coney Island. the Schlesinger company union and |It will be the first of a series of af- the cloak manufacturers, who are | f; and meetings that the F.S.U.! together planning to legalize piece 1 hold to mobilize the workers in ber first, unless there is a turn) for the better in business and ship: ping conditions.” People will be losing their homes already half paid for. Some ren few Pioneers were badly hurt, and | As a result of this, the company two kidnapped. | union is again trying to frame-up The legionnaires carried their two | Tepresentatives of the Industrial girl prisoners to their headquarters| Union. Jack Schneider, organizer lin Van Ettler. of the Industrial Union, and Adler, May Fields and Tilly Kelly, tour-| fur wovker, were arrested and are i Kast 42nd Street, New York activities for the week were at 61 per cent of capacity, a reduc- tion of 3 per cent from the previ- ous week, and the average for the industry was below 55 per cent.” All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S F wi p ters are breaking up their homes : : month, subject to downward modi- | Thus again promises are spiked work and force wage reductions. | defense of the Soviet Union and| “hinge never ore co bed in these |ing for the Communnt stare elec. | Reld on serious charges, while the Vegetarian Health a fication and at only 7,000 to 7,500 ‘by facts and accomplishment. | The workers are aroused to fhe against the anti-working class at-| cities before. Big business wili | tion campaign committee, demanded guerillas of Kwufman are at large, Restaurant x - —— : fe highest pitch of indignation against tacks of the Fish Committee. | have the workers on dry bread this|their release at the police head-| ———————————_———_____. |] 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx | | 1" | this new and further betrayal of} For information, communicate, winter. Will the workers ever | quarters, and finally, after the kid-| legion to the city hall, secured their | ba ane eerie with the F.S.U., New York District,| wake up? |napped girls were taken by the release. —— —— Fei | he industria! ca ZX A | FO¢ rn 7 Ni { J EX ~ yp ets jane sn ’ : al | span industrial union is calling a|799 Broadway, New York Citj. AN EX-SERVICEMAN. RATIONAL : | cluakmakers for Monday right after i DAY OF JOBLESS SELF: IS JAILER cvststes. eres ees" ORT OLESHA’S “THREE FAT MEN” Vegetarian 181 W. 28th St. This conference | IS BIG SUCCESS IN MOSCOW | RESTAURANT ( — , —~ C wi. prepare a mass meeting of | ¥ ! 199 SECOND AVE. JE i J ‘, tCounceil '.L.D. Fightin @Se@;|cloakmakers at Bryant Hall for | = | 1, ' f Bet 12th and 13th Ste. U nemploy meny. ) 5 enung | August 13 at 1.80 in the afternoon:| Although the majority of the ALLAN DINEHART. THE PERFECT TALKING DRAMA! | Strictly Vegetarian Foo | ‘ Mobilizes For Sept. 1 | Faces Imprisonment | atco a mass conference of cloak rep-| theatres in Moscow are doing very ee | 66 99 —— - i ; |resentatives for Saturday, Aug. 23 | little at this time of the year; this | j CHICAGO, Aug. 10.—Calling on| NEW YORK.—Because together} gchie: tnger is carrying on a sham) being off-season for the genéral { MELROSE— ‘ all Unemployed Councils to mobilize | with other Negro workers he de-| battle with Klein, head of the cloah| presentation of new material, one | ; ; . my . VEGETARIAN their forces for a determined fight |fended himself against a murderous| manufacturers association, on the| of the institutions of the Russian Fe OE NE Teer Creer cite frie Dairy destacnave ' for the passage of the Workers So- | attack of a gang of white hoodlums) question of legalization of piece | capital, the Moscow Art, is active | Must bo tein te he agprecinteas. grrr eRe cine led ttl cic. Insurance Bill, Steve Nelson. | who resented Negroes living in that) work, In actual fact, Schlesinger |—and has a hit in the new | 3 —DAILY WORKER, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. feces Le secretary of the National Unem | section of the city, and their use of | sas agreed with the manufacturers | by a talented and gifted Soviet hail alt alah ier he™ al | dolten camry “sda ployed Council, issued the follow-|the municipal street shower, David ing instructions to prepare for Sep | Holland, a 22-year-ol. Negro work- tember 1: Jer of 211 Foore Street, Williams- “The National Buro of the Un-|burg, Brooklyn, N. Y., was arrested employed, at its last meeting, had jon charges of assault and faces a decided on the following immediate |long term of imprisonment. tasks: | The Negroes were attacked on 1. The preparation for a real; Tuesday night, August 5, by the demonstration on September 1 in|mob of white gangsters who pre-| every part of the country. T ipitated a race riot of over 300) demonstration st expose, mainly,| Negroes and whites. Attempts to the fascist cl te. of the \. F.!lynch Holland were made and sev- of L. leadership and win large mas | eral times the gangsters shouted, ses of workers for the support of |“get a rope, lynch him.” In the he Workers Social Insurance Bill.|fight two of the white hoodlums “2. Every district is to pr were wounded. The police upon their | ,eaflets on which the Bill also shall arrival carefully abstained from ar-| ve printed. The leaflets are to call! resting any of the white gangsters | upon the workers to come and de (but immediately arrested the Negro monstrate at the demonstrations ar- | worker, Holland, on charges of as- ranged by the Trade Union Unity | sault. d ! ; you would print it immediately. | Roasts that ¢ | ° League and Unemployed Council he International Labor Defense | Ais a few words on unemployment. Toward by euiiery eo one pre | Zune and old. || We Meet at the— | B 1 d Cat t M ‘ains' A. F. o: A joints a ie A ; " | AEE ARE NO Tek SOA ES EES as against that of the A. F. of I. | points out that the attack upon the/” The unemployed army here is pared. A birthday cake tive tt —— - — | ; oulevar' eteria ali efforts must be made to dis.| Negro workers of Williamsburg is| growing bigger and bigger, between| in diameter i¢ in the making. This| termined Fouia, Sunveslents meat | COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA | 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. tribute the leaflets, send Bill and | another link in the whole chain of 45,000 to ‘50,000 people are out| scene is a scream, for it serves the | “URN&?-_Lchiah | 1800 | Cor. 149th Street speakers to A. F, of L. local unions and get the local unions to affiliate to the National Unemployed Coun: ci! on the basis of this concret: issue. “3. We propose that city confer- brutal and murderous attacks and is evidence of the vicious diserimin- ation directed against the Negro} es by the employing class and gents. New York District of the Inter-} ences be held on September 28, sor |national Labor Defense has taken) the support cf the Bill. The cali!up the defense of Holland, and to- | is to be sent out immediately and |gether with the American Negro a real campaigr started for the|Labor Congress is calling a mass/ Bill. All our forces must be drawn | meeting in Williamsburg both to int. this work, particularly the Un-| protest against the attack and ar- employed Councils, must be built rest of Holland, during this campaign, and those that already exist, must play the| Vote Communist! Icading role in this campaign. The | to legalize piece work and has al ready actually done so in a large number of shops. The industrial union will mobilize | the cloakmakers in a mass struggle | against piece work and for union standards. 15,000 FAMILIES EVICTED IN BALTO, (By a Worker Correspondent.) BALTIMORE, Md.—I am send ing you a clipping which I got) out of the capitalist paper and wish of work. All the big industries are | laying off by hundreds. ‘Lhe clipping follows: “Seven hundred families were | ejected from their homes last week in Baltimore for failure to pay rent and the total of such cases since | the first of the year has been 14,877 | far more than for any similar pericd | in the history of Baltimore. | These figures were made public) «day by T. Bayard Williams, chief | magistrate of the People’s Court, | who gave unemployment as the rea- | son. Geo. Kelly. campaign must be carried on main. | i iy ingide the factories, at factory gates, employment agencies, loce!| vnions, and fraterna! organizations. | getting mass endorsements, etc. “4, The conferences on Septem | ber 28, will not end, and must not end on that date. It must be the starting point for more vigorous ac tivities in the Fall. | 5. We are going to set a date fc state conferences about a month or six weeks later. These confer ences shall be held in state capitals. I. is understood that all delegate« are to be elected by the workers organizations. Our further perspec tive is to hold a National Conven acr in Washington. The date for this will also be announced later "hy the National Suro. “The Councils must start their struggle against evictions. This has slowed down lately, but must be revived. Our Industrial Coun Camprife Paper—Writers partici NITGEDAIGET 4&UNITY & KINDERLAND | SPEND YOUR VACATION IN PROLETARIAN CAMPS! It means mental and physical recreation PROGRAM FOR THIS WEEK: MASS PLAY BY “ARTEF” of the “Proletpen” will ipate. | the play. The plot is dream-within- | writer and dramatist, Uri Olesha, whose latest mental child “Three Fat Men” is the talk of the city. The play, according to a dispatch to the local theatrical weekly, Va- riety, is being shown several] times each week to enthusiastic working class audiences. It is jammed full of color and exotic scenic effects, humor and satiric situations. It is done in the usual futuristic style the Moscow Art Theatre is noted for. “Three Fat Men” is—capitalism religion and capitalistic government The three form the satirical side of | 2CAmMEO THE NEW In “The Ninth Guest,” Owen} Davis? new melodrama, which will be seen at the Eltinge the latter part of this month. GUILD W. 520. Bvs. and life-size figures and speaking dolls. Olesha’s play has displaced Mae telinck’s “Blue Bird,” which was given ever so often by the Moscow toys, dream affairs, and is very effective. | One of the scenes is the kitchen of | the three fat men. The entire stage | i. filled by an enormous oven Get Donations! Get Subs! Ann Harding — Mary Astor — Edward Everett Horton Robert Ames — Hedda Hopper 42ND STREET and Broadway | WIS. 1789 pA Theatre Gulld Production} GARRICK GATETIES Mts.Th &Sat.2:30 * Support the Daily Worker Drive! Second Big Week THE LAUGH SENSATION OF THE SEASON! JOE COOK THE COLUMBIA PICTURE RAIN or. SHINE Globe BROADWAY NOW! & 46TH ST. CONTINUOUS SHOWS CHI, 8500 Art Players and was patronized by purpose of showing the overfed| FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET creatures of capitalism. LONG ISLAND Another scene is the nursery | LONG BEACH: Rooms, Hotel service, room of the pampered child of the | beach, “Sonuea Sikiitans sertaweant, three fat men, with plenty of op | shore dinners, dancing every ul; portunity for grotesque, satirical | ‘appe Hotel, North Long Beach, ~ Beach 1934, 26-28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM U. S. S. R. CANDIES. Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty CIGARETTES Biggest and Best Workers’ OUTING of the Season ! EVERY WORKER MUST COME TO © OUR BUILD THE 1 Pleasant Daily Worker Demonstrate at the Daily Worker Picnic-Carnival! SUNDAY AUGUST 7 Bay Park (near 17éth St. Station) @HONE= INTERVALB 9149. 71 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: {[TALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where al] radicals meet 02 E. 12th St. New York Where you eat and feel at home SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not eonnected with any other office Sy6xaa JleveGunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 East 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 Yel, ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barher Shop M, W SALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 108rd & 104th Sts.> Ladies Hobe Onr Specialty Private Beauty Parlor cils must be organized by the in- perenne wien dustrial unions and leagues. The $i mi SEALs. diatetete, Wide sea bs 8 MORNING FREIHEIT EDITORIAL’ Held in Co-operation with Cooperators! Patronize that this is immediately started. General Councils, also, shall be —All Revolutionary and Sympathetic S E R O 7. gained 6 ee es Levin, Manager of the Daily Worker, Olgin, Nadir, “3 Workers’ Organizattons; CHEMIST peer ! Manewich, Yukelson, Buchwald, Castrell, Lifshitz, AND —All Communist Party Papers; 657 Allerton Avenue Laker and Beaterna’ Almazoy and Liptzen, will conduct the cultural pro- —All Daily Worker Recders; Estabrook 8215 Bronx, NY. grams for the three camps. Something new every day. “ asked to take ticket ne Dally Worker pienie which be held in Pleasant Bay Pa will on August 17 * Workers ¥ night at should write t¢ lyn. Something Communist Activities Unit 4, Section 4, Ball & Carnival No tips, no collections, just $1.00 for the Morning Different CARNIVAL BASEBALL — FOOTBALL — GAMES FOR GROWN-UPS AND CHILDREN — SINGING — REFRESHMENTS ADMISSION 35 CENTS ONLY —All Workers from the Shops That We Can Reach. ONE ACT PLAY “SC trasse frei” BY THE GERMAN PROLETBUHNE TT, TTT BONFIRE — DANCING FOOD, BARBECUE, ETC. FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW_ YORK Chelsen 2274 Bronx Hesdfuarters, 2994 Thira Avenue, Melrose 0128; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue. Pulasky 0634 The Shop De! the first T at 8 P.M, 16 W. 2ist St. tes Council meets lay of every month t 16 West 2ist St Whe Shop ts the Baste Onit. TT antes Tashan iene Tnatend of Freiheit, Programs Free! Make this picnic a huge mass demanstration tor the Communist Party and its press Advdettad sue Onion Meatinge 7.30 p.m * * Unit 5, Bronx Meets tonight at 8 p. quarters. m. at head Remember! Pe one Vanlt 2, Section 6. | tonight at 7 p. m. at 68) Meots Whipple 6t. Morning Freiheit Camp Week will last till Thursday, August 14. DIRECTIONS :—Bronx Park Subway to E. 177th St., Unionport car ‘to end of line. Bus will meet you there. here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sa,, New York City

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