The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 12, 1930, Page 2

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Pace Two ae SAiLORS; HOLD THEM IN REEKING PRISON tmprisoned Men Slip Out Letter Telling of Immigration Authorities Treatment ! ick Men Get “Smile” From Jail or As Treatment Doct The bosses here think it is somebady is tryin , that haven't seen the dish-! her yet. Clothing for bed con- s of dirty and smelling rags that are full of every kind of insects and r In answer one of the pris was thrown into ment for seven days itary conf samy FONTAN WIR, APPEAL FOR LUMBER STRIKERS Struck Against Wage Cut; Militant NEW YORK.— An appeal to the throughout tt working try to come to the immediate aid f of the militant lw strikers 0: Wash., Mar Workers’ was issued yester- 1 Scherer, national secretary, International made it necess given to the worke the strikers had a “Terrorism is being used in an attempt to drive the work back. Deputy sheriffs with sawed off guns are patroling t WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1930 Workers! Fight Lynchings! -|MOORE TO SPEAK IN TROY TODAY ‘Is C.P. Candidate For 1 Att’y General Richard B, Moore, candidate for Attorney Genera) on the Communist ticket, will sneak today in Troy, New York, in Young’s Hall at 8:20 m, The workers of Troy have n mobilized to make this mesting |a tremendous success. The workers jof Troy, who are today suffering p. dates on the ballot by the week of | September Ist. Every assurance is being made |man Thomas in the Sixth Congres- sional Distriet, Brooklyn. In accordance with the schedule for signature collection, 5,000 sig- | | | | | | | F.S.U. SEASHORE DANCE at CASA D’AMOR HALL Mermaid Ave., at W. 31st St. CONEY ISLAND 799 BROADWAY Vetephone (CARL BRODSKY Murray HUI 555, The others were told that if they | arc never cleaned. There is only|gion, according to rer n natures are to he collected this| / M#aSt 42nd Street, New York don’t shut up they will receive 14) ane wash basin, and both the sick |Moclips. The bosses have shut off | ee ee eae fe days in ‘solitary.’ smd well use the same. The man/the lights and water from the | “Paul Veber has been sick for two | who enters as a well person is sure months already and uses crutches;to leave (if he is lucky enough) | in moving around, but the authori | as a sitk man. ties refuse to send him to the hos- “The only persons that are al- When the ‘doctor’ comes, he | lowed to visit us are the preachers smiles to the sick comrades and|from the Salvation Army, with| that’s all for the ‘treatment.’ Even! their age-old talks about religion, | this ‘treatment’ is given only once| and that we are not interested in. | a week. “Our slogans as workers are: “Galveston County Jail for crim-|‘Down with terror,’ ‘Freedom to the inals, where we have been kept, is| innocent sufferers in the jails.’ the dirtiest and rottenest place on| “ONE OF THE PRISONERS.” pital. - | Mitions Jobless; C onvict Labor Used ULFPORT, Miss.—While thou-{cargoes for this courtry are loaded} re unemployed, the governor /by convict labor while throughout | State has authorized the use the United States, where workers of convict labor for work on the/encourter Czarist police brutality if State Hospital for the Insane which they voice the sentiments of their is being built in Ranklin County. |class, convict labor is an ever-pre- The bosses’ government, feverish- | sent reality. Even the fact that mil- ly preparing for a war against the}lions of workers are hungry and job- Soviet Union, is quick to raise the/less makes no difference to the lying cry that Russian ships with | bosses! WORKERS’ GROUPS BACK 3ALDWIN AND RENEGADE DATLY WORKER CARNIVAL ‘HITEWASH POLICE DEPT) NEW YORK.—Many workers’ or-| NEW YORK.—Following publi-} ganizations are urging their mem-' cation of the Labor Jury’s unani- bers to attend the Daily Worker; mous decision Saturday, that the Pienic and Carnival Sunday at|New York police department delib- i} | i workers’ homes; evicting those who live in company homes. They are preparing to attempt to run the strikers and their families out of town hoping in this way to break | the strike. This is the first large movement of Pacific Coast workers since the Imperial Valley strike in| California. Its signifiagce to the | entire American working class can- | {not be over-estimated. The work- | ers must continue on strike, the picket lines must be maintained. Food and shelter must be provided They can’t do that in the Soviet Union. Workers Listen Eagerly to Bpepkers | GARAGE OWNERS “Sooner wet IN NEW RACKET The Food Workers’ Unemployed ar Council of the Trade Union Unity Toilers Mnst Oreanize League held a very successful open | that haye been designated for signa- ture eollection are open every night \and efforts must be made to mob- | ilize the widest section of the work- jers to go out and aequaint the workers in the neighborhood with |the platform of the Communist |Party and to get them to sign the | petitions of the Communist Party | and vote Communist in the coming | elections. By BURCK. MEET PROTESTS "STHONIA TERROR a Pledge Soliderity to INSTITUTE THUGS HURL | | { Workers Cooperative Colony 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS We tnve a these apy: necensary ‘The Park Avail ye portunity to {jmited number of ents. No investment ‘ooms face Bronx rstef of the op- in a comradels atmosphere! h pe. air meeting on 11th St. and 4th| \] Fake Lexington Ave. White Plat for the strikers, their wives and Into T.U.U.L | Ave. in front of employment agen- icti Subway and get off at Allerton children. I appeal to all workers to lcies, Avetyd ef gevecal hatte Worker Victims SEAMAN DOWN STAIRS Ave stifion rush funds from your organizations | and in the form of private contribu- | tions to the Workers International | Relief, 949 Broadway, N. Y. From here we will send the money to the strike region.” SOUTH WORKER COMES OUT TODAY First Workers’ Paper Published in South BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Aug, 11.— (By a Worker Correspondent) | workers gathered around the plat- | BRONX, N. Y.—The formation of | form and listened ren inter- nati if est to the talks of Wm. Baele or- | eee Ve ee OE Tc anizer of the Food Workers’ In-| eee aie, with offtees | dustrial Union and Sam Nesin| at 275 Lenox Ave. by the Garage| secretary of the New York Councils | Owners Association of the Bronx,|of the Unemployed. At the close forcing the workers to join that) of the meeting all the pamphlets | “union” and throwing out the work-| and literature were brought up ers who have rejected this racket, quickly and members of the audi-| nroyes that it is against the work- ence paid for pamphlets that were | distributed to the unemployed who | had no money to pay for them. | Several applications were secured for membership in the unempicyed council. Jack Geller sn unemployed food worker presided. These meetings will be held regularly at that curner | The leader, an adventurer, is a personal friend of the hig guys of the Garage Owners Association of the Bronx. The garage workers in the Bronx} work 12 hours daily, with a day off! every two weeks. NEW YORK.—The solidarity of Fsthonian workers in United States to the revolutiorary movement in Esthonia, was shown by the num-/threw Al Travers, member of the ber of workers that gathered here | Marine Workers’ Industrial Union, on August 9 to protest against the down the stairs upon the pretext white terror in Esthonia. |that the worker was drunk. Speakers pointed out the fact) Travers sustained a possible frac- that the white guard government | ture of the skull when hurled down of Esthonia is continuing it’s af-| the stairs. Examined by a doctor forts to suppress the revolutionary he was exonerated of the charge of movement in Esthonia. “It’s clear,” | being drunk, and found instead to said Comrade A. Mackie in his|be suffering from an attack of the speech, “that the suppression of | flu, causing weakness in his legs working class is connected with the and a spell of light-headedness. war preparations to attack the| A fellow seamen who witnessed Soviet Union. It is our duty to be the brutal act of the Institute vu the guard, and send our sym- | policemen volunteered to testify as | brutality, special policemen at the NEW YORK.—With typical thug | Seamens’ Institute, 25 South St.,| Pleasant Bay Park. The committee erately ambushed a number of | Tomorrow, the workers of the South vathy to class war prisoners in Es- every Monday noon, besides the 3 thonia, and demand their immediate | These workers are disgusted and to the behavior of the thugs, an | TEL ESTABROOK 1400 3800 BRONS PARK WAST Our Office tx open from ¥ a. m to 6:30 p.m. daily and from 11 a. m. te 2 p.m on Sundays | 4 Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN ' Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT k to an unknown boss, A cai wal, wag | under the most miserable conditions | | f ay ate 949 Broadway, New York ‘ NitGneéa ages them br’ Ghucth anal eae ‘ ee “the (ahi | es FOR THEN | Peabody and Co, and the other mill Saturday In int > placed together in the umber workers of Coclips,”| CLASS RIGH owners of Troy, will use this mect- | 5 room with the thieves and out, went on| ‘ | ing as a means of voicing their de of typical criminals the M. R termination to fight against the 5 room about 8 cubic meters the worke | boss-imposed conditions. The Com- ; a! rded by 154-inch r wage |munist Party is the only Party| e & There is ten si 100 per ¢ | fighting for the needs of the work- | i ail ry men are put in ever hip of . ut | ing class in the state of New York. Tiskets in Advance 75 Cents P of them. Some of the me eague. Soon a the strike Real determination is being shown At the Door $1.00 re e been kept here more than five! started secretary jor of the |by the various seetions of the Com: | 3 e W.LR. arrived on the scene and or- | |munist Party, Young Communist Auspices: fe zanized f machinery | |League and the yarious working- | . . 5 : seen such con-| strikers and. their | [class organizations in the city -o|) Friends of Soviet Union | anywhere. The weap of the se place the Communist Party candi- NEW YORK DISTRICT ; so low when they On th is rottén, and even thi thrown x yi that the signatures will be com- i n official, we; to you, accompanied with fou!| and are depending for th 4 pleted before that date. Special | e ‘beautiful’ | language. Also, the same food is|for food so they ean continue oer jemphasis is being put to place a| “For AU Kinds of Insurance" en printed ‘served’ every day and in the same| Militant struggle. | candidate in the field against Nor- in charge states that building the! workers on their way home from| 2° bg set <a unhappy and if they protest. and| ther meetings in different sections | : impertinence the Seamen fakers 199 SECOND AVE, JE Communist press is an effective re-!the August 1 demonstration and| Will read the Hist WAL “Ses8 lose the job they know they have| 0 the city where food workers release by the white government ef | could not stomach, and he was told Pcetia Beidlleand tort to the Fish Committee's plans/|plackjacked them, two groups pos- | ReWsPaper ever publis to starve. : | gather. Teens tp our daty to rally) to clear out. trictly Vegetarian Food the labor movement.) ; i : 4 eee sedi to throttle the labo ing as friends of labor rushed to The first issue of the Southern) My husband works only extras] against the imperialist war prepar | working class in the prosecution of The picnic committee states. “This picnic will be a real mass | international affair. The Interna- tional Workers Order issued a call to every one of its members to par- ticipate in this mass demonstration | for the Daily Worker. The Work- | ers’ Clubs likewise decided to bring | every one of its members and sym- pathizers to the Daily Worker Pic- | nie Carnival. The Hungarian Work- | ers’ Clubs are buying blocks of | tickets for their members; the} Greek and Armenian comrades will | be there in full force. | “The program for entertainment! at this picnic will be the best ever | arranged. The German Proletbuhne! is going to produce a one-act play | entitled ‘Strasse frei.’ Various| Workers Singing Organizations will be there. Workers playing any in- struments are requested to bring along their instruments for this af-} fair. | “Every worker must come to the} Daily Worker Picnic Carnival in Pleasant Bay Park, Sunday, Aug. 17th. The price of admission is only 35 cents.” Low Rate At Wocolona For T.U.U.L. Members |: All membes of the Trade Union Unity League who have paid uy the defense of the police depart-| ment. Roger Baldwin, head of the Civil Liberties Union, said: \ “We must praise Inspector Botan for the very fair manner in which he conducted his in- vestigation into the riot on Aug- ust 1. It is clear that the police department is not guilty in this case. It is also clear, however, that Captain Day in charge of the reserves is solely responsible for the attack which resulted in six injured.” The New York American this morning quotes Jay Lovestone, a renegade from the Communist Party some months ago, as stating: | “The American Communist Party in its eagerness to show its Moscow masters that the revolu- tion in the United States is just | around the corner, must whip up the enthusiasm of its adherents to the point where the workers and police clash.” Vabor and Fretorna’ Open Air Meeting vill be held by the harlem Pro- ve Youth Club at 106th St. and * * | Attention! i All workers’ clubs and fraternal or. membership books will be admitted | to Camp Wocolona at the special | rate of $17 a week instead of the| regular rate of $21 weekly, it was} announced yesterday. This reduc- | tion was made to allow militant workers to have the advantage of visiting this modern working class camp at Walton Lake, Monroe, N.Y. | It is located 50 miles from New| York City. | The educational activities of the | camp are under the supervision of | Ray Ragozin. It has an up-to-date | athletic field, swimming, boating racine, dancing, musical and othe | featrres. An excellent orchestra | furn'shes music, | There is elevtricity and runnin: water in the bungelows, making ii | one of the most comfortable vacation | resorts in the vicinity of New York | Reservations should be made at the New York office, 10 Bast 17th Street, N.Y.C. CHARITY-DEMANDS LEAP AHEAD IN DETROIT DETROIT.—The applications for | aid placed by hungry and jobless | workers at charitable instit here has leaped from 65 a day 1065 a day. y to sanizations are asked to take tickets for the Daily Worker picnie which will be held in Pleasant Bay Park | on August 17. | Organize and wage-cuts! strike against Worker, published at Birmingham, Ala, by the Communist Party of the U. S. A., will be off the press | tomorrow, and distributed in the leading industrial centers of the Southland. It will be the first paper in the ‘outh that the workers and farm- ers—Negro and§white—will really be able to claim as their own. As a four-page weekly publica tion it 1s to serve as the agitational and news organ of the revolution- ary movement of the South, faith- fully reporting conditions in the mills and mines, on the job lines and farms as the workers and farm- ers find them. It will carry the fight for full social, economic and political equality for the Negro: workers, for social insurance, for better working conditions, against | Jim-Crowism and lynching, into the | very part of the country where the | j workers are most in need of it, In Mills and Mines, The first issue is to serve as an| introduction, acquainting the south- ern workers with its aims and pro- gram, and will be distributed widely among the textile workers of the Carolinas and Georgia, among the mill and mine workers of Alabama among the metal and textile work- ers of Tennessee, to the marine workers of New Orleans, where a strike is now in progress. The sec- ond issue of the Southern Worker to come off the press two weeks later, is to be the first regular num- | ber of the paper and it will appear regularly every week after that. *AMUSEMENTS- | A Cheatre ‘Gane Production — i] THE NEW | GARRICK G*ETIES Pan LD W. 820 By. 8:3: | 7Un D Mts Th @Sat 2:36 2nd BIG WEEK! Support the aity Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subst The Perfect Talking Drama! —with ANN HARDING, MARY ASTOR. ROUHRI A. EDWARD FVERETT HORTOD j » Came : 2ND STREET Ph AND BROADWAY j oliday' is, without doubt, one of the WIs. 1789 smartest things ever done for the screen.” WORLD. a superiative HeEDDA HOY AUGH SENSATION THE SEASON! JOE COOK IN THE COLUMBIA PICTURE RAIN or SHINE Globe BROADWAY NOW THE L or CHE. 8500 and does not belong to the racket. I am sure you will make an in- quiry to help. the terrible situation of these workers, through the Daily Worker, the only defender of the working class, big| Vote Communist! Communist Activities * Unit 14, Meets tonight a ters. —HELEN. ations and to the Defense of Soviet! Comrade Paul Bauman, accusing Union.” | him as the killer of General Unt, The fact that the Esthonian gov-| was brought forth by the other ernment has been using acts of ter. | Speakers. ror against the workers in Esthonia After the speeches Comrade J. ever since the foundation of the| Bergman, as chairman, read the| country, and is now cooking up the | resolution, which was unanimously most brutal attack against the| adopted, Biggest and Best Workers’ OUTING of the Season ! EVERY WORKER MUST COME TO CUR BUILD THE Daily Worker PICNIC BASEPATL — FOOTBALI. — GAMES FOR GROWN SINGING — REVRESHMENTS ONE ACT PLAY ee ——————————— 1 & 40TH ST. CONTINUOUS sHOWS Demonstrate at the Daily Worker Picnic-Carnival ! ADMISSION 35 CENTS ONLY ®99 BY THE GERMAN PROLETBUHNE trasse frei? ——— Make this picnic a huge mass demanstration tor the Communist Party and its press DIRECTIONS :—Bronx Park Subway to E. 177th St., Unionport car to end of line. SUNDAY | AUGUST 17 Pleasant Bay Park 2 Held in Co-operation with —All Revolutionary and Sympathetic Workers’ Organizations; —All Communist Party Papers; —All Daily Worker Revders; —All Workers trom the Shops That We Can Reach. UPS AND CHILDREN — BONFIRE — DANCING FOOD, BARBECUE, ETC. Bus will meet you there. | Beom 803 Phone™Algonauin 61#8 | ench, bouting, fixhing, re! rant, Tappe Hotel, North’ Long Beach, els 0 4 Long Beach’ 1934, Fine —MELROSE— Dairy eros ley} jen ii] LVD. Bronx: (near 174th St. Station) PHONE: INTERVALE 9149 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals meet 02 KE. 12th St. = New York D R. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Not sonnectea with any other office Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronz, N ¥ FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. 2ist St. Chelsea 2279 Bronx Hesdauarters, 2994° Thiro Avenue, Melrose 0128, Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue Pulasky 0634 parte Lt Pale | Counct] meets Tuesday of every month 16 Weat zist St e Hnsic Unit. rhe Shop the first 8P Advertise ur Union Meetings here For information orite to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Wept 26-28 Union S>.. New York City wiorsentn 16 BAST MOTH ST, LARGE, SMALL furnished rooms, convenient, near subway. Lehigh 1890, | FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET LONG ISLAND LONG BEACH: Rooms, Hotel service, 15 a week and up. Private, facin:

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