Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DA{LY WORKER, NEW YORK, ¢ ATURD! AY, AUGUST 16, 1930 Satine o WAGE CUTS IN STEEL ié IR, esi met YOUTH ORGANIZE “YONKERS TIAL GIVE FALSE DATAT esy, INDUSTKY AIDED BY, | soe | A. F. OF L. LEADERSHIP FOR STRUNG CLE ene wag ON N, Ys JOBLESS) SEA SHORE is mitting that the charges on which “ a ? ki being tried for y ~ ¥ oun, Liberators to Byes cers are being nee te a a t Figures Try ee igh ression day testified that the only’ reason lade seriousness Fitch, Boss Statistician, Says That A. F. of L. ght Oppr on | Invites Wage Cuts and Speedup | the speakers were arrested that : : One iGndsed eh Negro and white | they were Communists. Those on} WASHINGTON, hag, 15.—With young workers attended the Youth | trial for holding an August 1st,} more than 800,000 unemployed in} Conference of the American Negro | anti-war demonstration are Lilian | New York City, the cenus bureau} S Labor Congress, called by its youth | Perlman, Harry Shaw, Charlotte To-| issues the statement that only 234,-| CASA D ‘AMOR HALL committee and held last night, at j}dis, Alvin Roberts, Tony Valley,| 854 are jobless, or 3.4 per cent of | Mermaid Ave, at W. Bist St. Outlook For Steel Industry Is Very Gloomy, States Leading Organ of Steel Bosses 308 Lenox Avenue. | Gertrude Werble and John P. Bar-| the population. t The ANH heard a report | rett. a tterly faked th iach CONEY ISLAND > roing he bosses to cu ages t 4 3 — Hon Be | , ‘ow utterly faked the census bu-| : 7 bh Bl wolng) on] oe basses acre ae tama from Herbert Newton, National! “The only reason we won't give|reau’s figures are was exposed in|| Balalaka Orchestra and pane The vee oa ig iheneteel industry Organizer of the A.N.L.C. on the | them a permitt to hold meetings,”|the Daily Worker several days ago. Other Entertainment + the ta; |[%,2towing., There will be more st! PAMPERED) GRAFTER IN |ASTORIA ‘DEFEND CHINA’ | workcrs, an decised to orgatite «| the Commnngts ao sete polldeal |te caus teen, teen anes Saturday youth organization of young work-| party. We will let any other party | with the New York World, admitted cea. Recent publications! MINOR’S HOSPITAL BED MEETING WELL ATTENDED crs or ait races: to mobilize the | Speak. We do let any others hold| that the figures’ were’ worthless working youth in the fight against | meetings, but not the Communists.” |—except in that Hoover used them| fae i int icture ar : lands Off Revolutionary China | !ynching and Negro oppression. | He admitted traffic was not being|to cover up the real extent of the| steel bosses, paints a black picture] NEW YORK—The big sewer) A Hands Off Revolutionary China TAR oganteaHonewill be Wubi ae é 3 : , The jority of | e 4 A blocked, nor were there any “disor-| unemployment. majority 10 per cent | for > future of the steel indus-| r, s 2 resident ng Id last ev ge at . ; 3 = < @10fper cent | tee tee ee Fre er ee ORT ee ene | the anton ut Ditmar Road and See- | the “Young Liberators.” Its aim;|ders” until the police attacked the| unemployed workers were not a : ae of ts ‘Nothing swithin the present vision pies tah ee “ 9 ans al at Wel an Aeiseian Tet according to a resolution adopted by meeting and arrested the speakers. | counted at all. In the counting, the|} Tickets in Advance 75 Cents to 10 per cent of the steel industry indicates im-| fare Island. He was transferred meeting was attended by ae etc a be AS ow eee sgeleds as S| At the coca 00 There are | Provement of the colorless market.| there today in a ceremony inv s workers and was one of vied Ab a ae hee Kees | | ae ae He ee atta | Auspices: Sule rn, . fn» @ y| omic and so B Ee , . . . in all steel In fact, such adverse factors as|/Commissioner of Corrections Pat-| the best meetings held for a long eran waist all ste A slugginhFetasli marwesl ccs wecien sebanen aude prises | Gite ia tere AUC | roes and for the right of self-deter such a large figure of 234,854 was} Friends of Soviet Union smobiles, surplus railroad The workers listened very atten-|™ination for the Negro ma finally arrived at. The fact is, ac-| ee t ae dechintng foreign une A rie ead Taegae speak- | the south and for organized militant | | cording to the state commissioner | NEW YORK DISTRICT ae ade are perhays more accentu- jommally ee ee a : sed the necessity of| Struggle against lynching, jim-| jorte of labor, Frances Perkins, that never | 799 BROADWAY i cones in |S TEE eheae oH Wie heats allianee between American and crowism and all forms of discrimi- |jeact 50 cops and 10 or 15 plain-|Defore in the history of New York : | A her boss organ, which advo-| ~~ = ig 2 a6 eRe nation against Negro workers. diothed aed The police officers has unemployment been as great as “For All Ki k SHOE Deon eS UNC ne police tried to break up the The Conference received greet- | testified that about 200 people gath- it is today. + ‘inds of Insurance” n K. Fitch, president cates. wage-cuts for all wo oi mete ; jhesrteaetovars iy ng, but seeing the determina-| ings from Joe Carr, one of the At-|ered when the meeting opened and Se ese of the workers they thought it | lanta defendants, and from the| that many were coming from all Rally Sept, 1, Unemployment | between place in 3 ,| Age, the leading mouthpiece of the Lieut. Ford, gumshoe chief in | Yonkers, also testified. He lied | about the number of cops present. | He said there were only 20 uni- formed gunmen and six plainclothes | thugs. There were, according to re- of all workers present, at Fitch Publishing Co., statis-|SPeaking of the steel industry, s ‘ eo cteee . (Journal of Commerce, Aug. 14): ee nad y ee eee | tt Seat Rea ae Bais best not to inter Young Communist League, the | sides when they rushed the meeting! Day. — Trade Union Unity League, and the | peer that the A. F..of L. pital and isolated him on Rikers | te wage-cuts. In a| “Reviews of the steel situation , quoted in the New|this week are tinged with a g island bosatiaa the Intetimtiohal Las Telephone: Murray Hil} S55 ast 14, he says: | deal of pessimism. One commen-| a Cea uad aig Labor Sports Union. Sam Brown | : - 7 Kast 42nd Street, New Y ations (A. tator on market conditions states| bot Defense exposed the graft on | J, W. .0.B Branch Affair ois Dc alia Ce eon t, ork chown 2 disposition | bluntly that there are few develop- Saturday ence. | | = All. Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Welfare and told of Connolly being |given a special apartment with Teld This four servants there. Now Connolly, cuts and to with.|ments of an encouraging character, pe Echt e ek rary and wasteful regu-|that price weakness has broken out) i." they have to make . fake s fre" INDUSTRIAL ORG. on production afresh in a number of products.” move to do away with his servants, tions ‘The Perfect Talking Drama! swered by the bo: admits that Green and Woll| “Price weakness” Bete cae gets a hospital bed, though ne suf- who are actively participating in the MEET SA ATURDAY 2 poo. : veuts, but urge ed bs sses by |fers from nothing but overeating, election campaign are helping 1 > CameO sses’ profits | ON Wages. Jon the special fare allowed him. raising funds for the Communist} A series of meetings of the unit | EL’ In the steel in-| The workers must have only one a Election Campaign. and section industrial organizers are | BASED ON PHILIP BARRY’S STAGE PLAX wage- remendous speed-up answer, “Organize ond stic| HARLEM WORKERS’ FORUM. | Numerous affairs are being or- being organized by the District | AND BROADWAY “Holiday”, is, without doubt, one of the || ents and dea‘! r ainst Wage Cuts.” is can on ss eae * ss ase care je Uni 3} ittee. | VIS. 171 smartest things ever done for the screen.” . ents and death for | Ag: C4 v “Self-determination for the ganized for the next couple of | Trade Union Committee | , WIS. 1789 ie ava Wonte. RATIONAL With their strength|be done under the leadership of the to the maximuin, we| Metal Workers’ Industrial League e A. F. of L. actually urging | and the Trade Union Unity League. —with a superlative cast— MARY ASTOR, ROBERT AMES, RETT HORTON, HEDDA HOPPER gro Masses” will be discussed this} months to raise funds for the elec- The first meeting of the industrial | Sunday, August 17, at the Harlem/tion campaign, the first of which | organizers of Sections 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 | —— ———- Workers’ Educational Forum, 308| is being run by the Pinskee Branch | and 9, together with the fraction | i Lenox Ave. at 3 o'clock. The! of the International Workers Order | secreta: and the leading comrades | T.W.LU. FIGHTS | LABOR SPORTS speaker will be Comrade 3. D.| for election campaign, this Saturday of the various unions belonging to| HILLMAN TRICK) MEET AUG. 24th|Amis. all workers are invited to| evening, August 16th, All workers) those sections has been arranged for | August 16 at 2 p.m. at/ Makes Company Union Retreat; sees \attend and participate in the dis-| should attend this affair and really | Saturd | kers Center, 26 Union Sq. | Calls Meeting For Monday | —— Eastern District Field Meet. | cussion. are mobi | This meeting is of the utmost im- NEW YORK.—On Sunday, Au- | mene Labor and Fraterna!| | Vegetarian RESTAURANT * 3rd and Last Week § 3), APY | 199 SECOND AVE: JB A Theatre Guild Productio THE NFW GARRICK GAIETIES Bet. 12th and 18th Sts, j see to it that workers to make it a success, a portance and we expect you to be NEW YORK.—Facing mass re-/| gust 24, the Eastern District »f the present without fail. bellion roused by the exposure of /Tabor Sports Union will hold the Communist vie tivities ‘ oi ai caw a : Attention! }at 5.30 p. m. and Sunday, 9 a. m. for | Tremendously clever, sparkli y feri their fake strike plans by the In. opening part of its third anntal re cline and yy pirates anive: Boehm . ve i par! ing, witty and bright, of ering: 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons rial’ Union, the chiefs of the | 1 ‘ ; m ent that is just about as moat as anything now rr 1% nion, the chiefs has been | * current in these heated months . .. It should be seen.” ear 17th ree Eastern District championship track | PHONE IN’ Amalgamated Clothing - Workers at ao usu Fe Bronx Section cea ENING JOURNAL. VALB 9149, ' ” i e y 0) | 4 unit o come to have given up the general fake/and field meet at Galley Be tion executive ing, GUILD TMEATRe; WEST Sind STREET, EVENINGS AT $130 strike, and are locking out the| Park. The second part of this meet Guedataaise | odes aie ee Aug. 16, 4 p. m. at 569 Prospi MATINEES THURSDAY AND SATURDAY AT 2:30 workers in 25 shops a day. will be held on Saturday, Septem- China Ex- | Must. report toy eeotien Heeduuarsd Sor ee = GOOD SEATS—$1.00 TO $2.00 The following facts speak for|ber 13, in the afternoon at Ulmer ers, 68 W S turday | themselves Park in Brooklyn, as a part of In- & * 15th St. the tailors were stopped Many srectacular events, such as | School No. A s i and a reduction of $2 and $3 was hurd i dashi s, long dis ance runs, Melanipat Pertornannc forced upon each and every worker.| weights, jumps, special women’s} “The End of St. Peters In Jurick’s shop Brownsville, the | events and special children’s events, bi teek movie, 8 atur tay, | 235% REDUCTION ‘TO CITY | AND UNION WORKERS | (Midnight Performance! Saturday Night, August 16th, 1930 RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5868 Workers Cooperative | ST. PLAYHOUSE 52 W. STH STREET 8 company union made a “present” | will feature in the program. | hous 278 Brighton Be C n , : ‘ P : Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 to the boss of 8 weeks’ wages| I. Prim, 1older of the world’s rec-| Qc" fmsyices of Wome olo y. Have Your Eyes Examined John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: [ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 02 E.12th St. New York CHINAEXPRESS SOVKINO FILM On the Same Program—Soviet Newsreel Auspices: NON-PARTISAN WORKERS SCHOOL OF BROWNSVILLE AD) ON 75e—Tickets at Hox Office from 11 P. M. which was coming to the tailo: ords in long distance running in| “In Fenzick’s shop, Long Island, | t Amateur Athletic Union in 4 there was a cut of five per cent 1 24, will participate in this |9t 8 p. in the wages of the workers. |meet. Comrade Prim, although | 4® | holding these world’s | Freibeit Gesane Farein, Attention! alized that the A. | ; be ures bosses’ athletic organization, and, 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUA! La Bo gah OPTICN CO. | | | | The company union trembles be- fore the attempts of the Industrial Union to help the tailors turn the i i bag therefore, gave up his rights to take Lesington Ave. White Plate DR.M._HARR i ‘ fake strikes into a real strike for » & ‘ ents duswan nen nee o ‘eae | a, t coe aeike® she: present “polly of |these chamnionship titles and ‘sined | oracr or’ th Sey a ages Optometrist | Phone Tillinghast cose LOBE ®'gsa2y'Paity from oulevar eteria s. Th s 3 t $ : * 4 the clique is to make a general at-| the Labor Sports Union a few, years Special Monttixetion Youne Werke PEL ESTABROOK 1400 JOHN C. SMITH’S SECOND FUN WERK! 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. ago. " hes down on he | Cor. 149th Street tack upon the conditions of the tailors by attacking individual shops. | The Ni 2 Trades Workers’ In- 200 INS PARIS WAST Harlemites Orchestra Local S02 A. FB. of M. Office: 2297 SEVENTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY JOE COOK “RAIN or SHINE” ANEW VOWK CrPY is open from 9 a om Opposite New Yark Eye and daily and from tf |i tar tofirmary yom oom Sundays |) L Pelephone Stuyvesant asae The Eastern District of the Labor|*° '° Daily 3 devil” Sports Union is opening on Sevtem- ‘ ber 15 at Camp Kinderland a full- dustrial Union calls all locked out time five weeks! athelttic training | and unemployed tailors to a m school. Besides athletic activity and | meeting Monday, at 1 p. m., at working-class problems, the stu- Irving Plaza Hall. Irving Potash,| dents will be tatight erodkete® staff executive secretary of the) defense activity and how to organize N.T-W.LU., and the Sam Liptin will workers’ defense corps. All trade Where you eat and feel at home. iving a beach r 16 at $8 p.m. Oce Complete and program, Sy6nan JleveGunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 East 14th St., Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 * Demonstrate at the Daily Worker Picnic-Carnival ! , Biggest and Best Workers OUTING of the Season! This EVERY WORKER MUST COME TO cue Sunday “= Pleasant Bay Park Champion Soccer Football Games Tel. ORChard 3783 DR. L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST Not connected with any other office feetins Rooms and Ho" cone 108 well {| Daily Worker and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 K. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 5097 | 4 Held in Co-operation with Gottlieb’s Hardware | . —All Revolutionary and Sympathetic Workers’ Organizations; Baseball Races peteeienh ARRANGED BY LABOR SPORTS UNION S E R O y CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 — Bronx, N. ¥. address the meeting on methods of unions and working-class organiza-| z organizing shop committees and/| tions should send students to this |™ ALL ALLERTON INHABI- and sell out. course is $50. For entry blanks,| ATIVE HOUSES At 1 p. m,, Saturday, August 23,| write to the Eastern District L. S. know! bak hich & stric a mass rank and file conference of | usion show atti Se icerith ihe * ‘The bi bread. roll me tended program to fight the lowj industry. fresh tour fnoce Nee slant treer a nlce light do sanitary bakery open for inspection to everybods. 691 Allerton Avenue, Bronx Opens At Plymouth Aug. 27 tion of the season, “The Torch| “eng,” a new play by Kenyon Nich-| olson, has been set for Wednesday | evening at the Plymouth Theatre. | Methot, Dennis Moore, Henriette! Kay, June Clayworth, ~Aphie) Brown, Jr. Before coming to Broad- | the play will be given for one/ Great Neck, on Saturday evening, Aug. 23. Hopkins staged the play he settings. | Rehearsals are now being held of | fighting the cuts and unemployment | school. The tuitian fee for the whole'f§¥ TANTS AND CO-OPER- at Manhattan Lyceum, there will be|U., 2 W. 15th St, New York City. || Buy your, bakeries tm the well: cloak makers to work out an ex-| wages and unemployment in that |) F00d Workers Industrial Union. va on the oven. thing is boked in Kenyon Nicholson’s New: Play y Ww ay Wendrow’s Bakery Arthur Hopkins’ initial pan es MAYO METHOT The cast is headed by Mayo James, Pearl Hight and Reed} performance at Fox’s Playhouse,' and Cleon Throckmorton designed Jan Fabrieius’s drama, “Insult,” | FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. Zist St. Chelsea 2274 119 THIRD AVENUE D. A. Clarke-Smith directin, | 7. ry . avving ill puke ih leading | Who will have the principal role | pa bebe ee AND —All Communist Party Papers; Avenue, Mele 2 t1i8;" Brooklyn vole. The play opens in Asbury in the new Arthur Hopkins play, | CUTLERY —All Daily Worker Readers; Headquar' pele Gr Park, September 1, coming here! ane Torch Song,” due here in two |! er BOTRICAL SUPPLIES || —All Workers from the Shops That We Shop _D Fates Cou et] meets hortly afterward, bbs RE RCE Pee Ae MAZDA Bulbs Our Specialty. Can Reach. the. first Tue oe ot every, month Anthony Blair, Harry Wilson,| been played some 2,500 times. Sereno — a ats PM. at eriweet ait Bt Sam Levene, Roy LeMay, Mabel| Elmer Harris's comedy, “Young || b The Shop fs the Baste Unit. fa and Lou Eckels are the | Sinners,” will reopen next Monday | POM Ss KAT eee ni ; lread df he Shi f - : tings ns ae (gned for |at the hubert Theatre. Dorothy | terneFonal Barber Shon BASERALL — FOOTBALL — GAMES FOR GROWN UPS AND CHILDREN — BONFIRE — DANCING Peon es preiaon EB i Kay Flint comedy now | Harringion will again head the cast.|I 91g gtond saute Ne Yor? SINGING — REFRESHMENTS ADMISSION 35 CENTS ONLY FOOD, BARBECUE, ETC. here Fos information write to yehea an ere shortly. (bet 03rd & 104th Stet Hel Pagnol’s comedy, “To. MIDNIGHT PERFORMANCE, || adie tate “one 'Spctiaity ONE BY THE. GERMAN PROLETBUHNE The DAILY WORKER , ’ will veopen at the Ethel B: Th bes ‘gh eis oy: et =P m “mare “Theatre ex Mons, Ae ‘wit plas acaagred | Heeslhiben Private Beauty Parlor ee <trasse frei 26-28 Unies Sn. 3, with Frank Morgan featured in| night, August 16, at the Eighth S| === ey I } = he title role. The cast includes | Playhouse, el ae Be Barer cSt uiee| Playhouse, 62 West Eighth Street. | oop eee CENTER Make this picnic a huge mass demanstration tor the Communist Party and its bres. | wd, Hubert Druce, Harry Daven-|No worker can afford to miss this | BARBER SHOP . z 0 | ROOMS 2 port, E Dane, Nicholas Joy,| sp oF ER at RT Paral gyre. pono Se ee ee ee ee ee aes 133 BAST 110TH ST. LARGE, SMALL furnished — rooms, femt, menr subway, Lehigh 1890, “gs has been very pop-|Non - Partisan Children's School || “##IHEIT BIOG——Male Flam |) lar in Soviet Rusia, where it has|No. 2 Pha