The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 1, 1930, Page 2

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~~ 2 Agents of Wall St. | Arrested in Peru; | Washington ‘Protests’ Page Two 30VIET UNION EXPELS| AMERICAN MECHANICS| EX-SERVICE MEN — = ee x Y Unable to Find Work True Fact Forms Basis of Girls Attempt Sulide Story of ‘Storm Over Asta’) carcaccconiviou 1 we crowds who surged by the loop, Miss Marjorie Valle, 22, of Dallas, Tex., PATERSON AGAIN. GUILTY OF CHAUVINISM Workers, Newspapers Brand Race Prejudice) BARS COMMITTEE Workers Can Not See Jobless Leaders | WASHINGTON, Aug. 81.—The i} State Department is making a lot of fuss over the arrest and possible punishment of two agents of U. 8. imperialism by the new Peruvian government, Another Revolution DEFY ALL ATTACK’ Grandson of 1776 For the uprising in Mongolia a decade| is based on an authentic episode of | ago. One of the rebels taken captive, The story of “Storm Over Asia”| | MARY NOLAN tried to end her life by taking poi- son. Dropping to the sidewalk at Wabash Ave. and Randolph St. she was rushed to the Iroquois Hospital, where it is said she will recovers As “Wholly Alien to Communist System NEW YORK—Full proof that! ne is Conimander Grow, an offi- | NEW YORK—Two out of more | Proved to cae ait arse of | lrishger and ldesnondeney over shee i the refusal of Commissioner of | Cet of the United States naval re-|ihan a hundred street meetings | ‘¢ famous Tartar chieftain, Ghon-| inability to secure work were the a Res 7 dyed x * ps | Correstion Paterson to allow a| Se?Vé who acted as ditector of Per) planned by t' rkers’ Ex-Serv. | 812-Kehn. His lineeige aid disclosed reasons she gave for attempting to * “4 . di P Fa luni R win 5 Lequia. Commander Grow occupies | ciy week: Saturday nigh et WHICh Was 1 cs ve. 1 in Consideration of Defendant’s Background| unity. Council to see William Z.|bequia. Commande six weeks we Saturday night. | ‘A> sttembt w Ae dar Lae fooooee in Consideration tf Defendant <. Foutat, Ratext Mince Teracl Amtar | & position quite similar to the Amet- | One was at St and Second {42 attempt was made to set up the a unsuspecting rebel as the puppet ican adventurer, Hall, who is acting Strike against wage-cuts; de- and Harold Raymond is part of hi Ave,, and the other at Seventh S ireless b corr) against the Jews which were part 4 . i s Chi Kai-shek’s 4 a o a {ruler of the land, counting on the) 4 ig ellie ey the}and parcel of the overthrown | Policy to deprive the working cla oauce, papal a enen of Jand Ave, B. The chairman, open- | influence his high lineage would have | mand social insurance! STALINGRAD, A tin aS | eaaviay eating jand the unemployed of their advise | fyiation, and is by ing the meeting, invited all who felt| on the natives. But the rebel fled|* eS wo Americ Lewis Brown, |""The case provoked the greatest | °F leadership, is afforded by Patter-| “General Chang. they might run away at the sight of | ang took his amulet with him. “For Alt Kinds of Insuranee* ound ace prejudice in ega feeling throughout the Soviet Union, hundreds of thousands of Soviet n mass meetings demand- | son’s latest letter. After a demand from the T.U. U.C., the militant trade union The other agent of Wall Strect under arrest in Peru is a certain Charles W. Sutton, director of irri- a Tammany disturber to leave im- | mediately, as no cowards should hang around a workers’ meeting. Now the amulet reposes in the Irkutsk museum, while its owner is (CARL BRODSKY veeueal tee ae ee oe : an officer in the Red Army. treated here, were firs tenced | worker 1 c Aaah it. | ation in the Lequit government. | aq) present voted to brook tere 9 a sik vhite | ter in New York, to let a commit- : eel ? All present voted to brook no inter-| jo) | bn Se Seed bee 2k ing the expulsion of the white | tte UF five consult with the jailed | H¢ 38 charged with mishandling of | ferenee from cops or fascists, and| “Storm Over Asia,” which opens : | Mvetennone: murray ein ss he Workers’ and Americans who had dared to bring 4 « | funds. both meetings were entirely suc- |2¢ the Cameo Theatre on Friday was ; ei .. | Hast 42nd Street, New York leaders of the unemployed on de- Who plays the chief feminine role a es sale as com- f 4 It is clear that one of the pur- Y 2 a A com- ; * 1 ernment at Soviet Ru ia ha eae Workers’ Republic. Unions and | tails of a campaign to force imme- poser dor Making model Mad ae cessful, and well penne A a seur, Vsevolod Pudovkin, director of in “Outside the Law,” the new|j~<“— eee etn viet Russia |Mewspapers made it quite plain that | diate relief for the jobless to be| ti os rcst of these two “American bined audience of 3,000 listened and the unforgettable “End of St. Peters-| screen drama now current at the|{ Al Comrages Meet at se ipteee Soe rgge : the Soviets would not tolerate the | granted from the city treasury, Pat-s ctions” is that, under favoralle | ppeauced until the last speaker |)1¢™ and “Mother,” met with un-| Globe Theatre. BRONSTEIN: mitigating the p se the = : 5 erson denied the committee the | Zens 1s that, under favora’ te | left the platforms. : Bs fs a5 F doings of bourgeois society in the | ¢TS0! ir st “protecti f the : ; precedented success in Berlin, and | volitical background < - ig inet j Circumstances, protection of those! One of the speakers, J. Geary Vegetarian Health frecétwas acca Soviet Union which, they empha- | Tight to enter. A citizens” can very well provide al Foulk, 62 years old, and a great | i#te—throughout Germany. Y|tinuing for four weeks the Acme gai laa ized, is the fatherland of all work- Refuses to Allow Visit good excuse for U. S. military! grandson of the American Revolu- | 2¢¥SPapers reported the fir Theatre on Union Square. will fea- Restaurant fe atag @neuaection including the Negro worker Another letter from the T.U.U.C. | intervention in Peru. ' ing at the Marble Palace. A month] ture Russian pictures, specializing || °°8 Claremont Parkway, Bronx capitalist race prejudice into the| Metal Trades Union has} The forced Fatterson to make it plain | {tion of 1776, told of the collapse directed by the Soviet master-regis- after the premiere at the Marble | last t the a, i | _—__ 7 ic 2 fr he | : . © |in the films released by Amkino. = ih al hs branded Lewis and Brown “victims | that the representatives of the class OE she ears Republic front the | Palate, the picture was showing sim-| Three of the films were made in oh 3: of national chauvinism” in a res-|union and unemployed councils thing his grandparents fought for’ ultaneously in 52 neighborhood thea- lthe U. S. S. R., the fourth, which || RATI ONA L NEW YORK.—The trial, which on in which it deplores the ig-|could not interview these leaders = edad eae ar coe oe tres while continuing its initial run| deals with the life of the terrible || V tari: bi vegan several d By LS nce prevailing among foreign} even as individuals, except in ac- | if y: soe a oben | at the Marble Palace (3 months). | faker, Rasputin, was made in Ger egetarian acted much attention, with Soviet |‘ & ra ; a ake ee great response from the crowd when : ; - : a. : , mail wiphpert Acac bing the attack on er ands enee. i Ree a the, seeplauons whey WASH LYNCHING {ha éalled for a Tight toifcee Foster, | gine vero ba dreary ea ee fapesea on the book of |} RESTAURANT é aero worker as racial hatred Minor, Amter and Raymond and all | 5. ig z +0 | is, 7 Fi 199 SECOND AVE..UE He Nes ¥ oe as racia’ aairee’| pose and character of the Bolshe-| weeks apart. | | other class war prisoners in Amer-| ‘ited that after “Storm Over Asia”| The Soviet pictures, in the order { Bot, 19th ano isth sts, wholly alien to Communism. ist movement. The resolution rec-| The commissioner’s latest letter | pee : no Soviet film would again find favor | booked, are as follows: “Old and Strictly Vegetarian Food The public prosecutor insisted on] 9™mmends that steps be taken to] states: | : i a Mo | with the German audiences. When |New,” which begins a week’s run having the case tried under the| educate American technical special- “Your letter of August 22nd is Fear Other Marion Ne- Pudovkin, during his sojourn in Ber- | on Saturday; “China Express,” that charge of national chauvinism and | ists in the Soviet Union to prevent = eS aes | ro Wi rker i ched lin, was told of this prediction by |tense story of the China Revolu- M LR ra a es 7 lt nN on. acknowledged. | 2: WO. yn thistowed Sichasi pastes . : . ree | not battery and assault as peti-|yecurrences of such incidents. The “y : ¥ ft re peel the town’s sooth-sayers, he remarked tion, will be shown beginning Sept. | tioned by the defendants. Punish-| resolution urges Russian workers Seren a 31—A | in his own sly manner, that similar }13, and “Cain and Artem,” Gorky’s 5 ROME ARIAN ment for the latter crime is much less severe The case was tried under an ordi- nance passed for the protection of Jewish and other national minori- ties in the Soviet Union, ending for all time the brutal progroms to learn the language of foreign workers in the Soviet Union in or- der to explain things to them. It also says the foreign workers should be taught Russian so that they can understand what is hap- i pening in Russia today. } RAID COMMUNIST CAMP IN DETROIT Detroit C.P. Candidate Speaks to 5,000 DETROIT, Aug. —Following the filing of 20,000 petitions for the Communist candidate for mayor, Philip Raymond, the sheriff of Oak- | s land county, a group of deputi LD, REPORTS 493 ARRESTS IN AUG. 4 Lynched, 8 Face De- | portation The seventh monthly report of |the International Labor Defense, |made public today, gives the ap-| palling total of 493 arrests in the| month of July alone, and a total and stool pigeons raided the Com-|for the seven month period preced- munist camp near Farmington, Sun-|ing of 4,688 arrests for participa-| day, arrested ten workers on the| tion in demonstrations, open air and charge of “criminal syndicalism,”| factory gate meetings, distribution and published a forged letter pur- porting to come from Moscow and written to Raymond, the Communist candidate. Among those arrested were Woods, secretary of the Auto Work- ers’ Union. The warrant was sworn out by Jack Wise, a stool pigeon, working for the state prosecutor. He was in the camp for a few days posing as a “worker.” Prosecutor Wilson stated his intention charging the arrested workers with Raymond Speaks to 5,000. Philip Raymond, Communist can- didate for mayor, spoke to 5,000 workers in Detroit on Saturday night at a meeting arranged by the Polish socialists and other Polish organizations for the bosses’ candi- dates. big park, loud speakers making it possible for thousands of others to hear. A mass demand was made that Raymond speak, though he was not invited. Those invited were Mayor Bowles, who was heckled by ihe cal, ses és ee t the hands of Muséolini’s agents, for } h vork at 70 | iN criminal syndicalism. The specific) 4 result of their activity in the class | y rérk vit a. m. sharp oe i ae OF THE SEASON! | THE NEW charges of the warrant refer to| war, while thirty-two have been re- = Bie Hb ee tatty ae Workers of Paterson! Demon-|¢ents per hour instead of the In-\ J 4 4. woops (ay Arrangement with Hi GARRICK GAIETIES DR. A. BROWN teaching children —_ revolutionary | eased on bail with trials set for es a af setae er needay, | strate on Sept. 1st with the work-| ternational Longshoremen’ Associ- SM. Eesenta lil | 4% Dentist songs, ete. | the tall ‘and ‘winter’ series of the | p. m. mong those part ‘cl! ers all over the country. Demand|@tion rate of 85. This is an old |G@REATES Vg co) || | entis | | of | The meeting was held in a} | of literature, and strikes. | Lynchings for this single month | resulted in the brutal murder of | four Negroes, and five white work- ers were murdered in protests against capitalist exploitation and persecution of the working class. Ninety-seven trials were held throughout the country in cases of | political prisoners in July out of which 26 resulted in convictions that total more than 17 years of prison | sentences. Eight workers face deportation as i capitalist courts. “The monthly report of the de- 'fense organization, with its statis- tical record and factual picture of | the sharp growth of political per- |secution in this country, constitutes a stronger indictment of the courts of the country than anything the) |International Labor Defense canj| add,” says a statement issued by the International Labor Defense. | “Every reader of this bulletin sees graphically befo-2 him the increas- | ing solidarity of the forces of the/ {use ust 2lst letter is correct in that your committee of five will not be allowed to see inmates Foster, body. “We cannot grant your organiza- tion special privileges. The rules demand that these inmates be treated the same as all other pris- oners, Yours very truly, (Signed) R. C. PATERSON, Commissioner.” Foster, Minor, Amter and Ray- mond are serving sentences of three years, which may or may not be reduced to six months and ten months as proposed by the Parole Board. They were elected, with Lesten, an employed worker, by 110,- 000 Union Square demonstrators, on March 6th, as a committee of five te carry the demands of the masses of starving unemployed to tha city hall. Lesten was sentenced to 30 days and has served his sen- ence. The masses who accepted these imprisoned men as their leaders will reiterate their demands for so- cial insurance and unemployment relief at the mass demonstration today at noon on Union Square. Protest Deportation of Serio, Wednesday NEW YORK.—Protesting against the deportation of G. Serio to fas- cist Italy, and almost certain death pating at the call of the Interna- tional Labor Defense will be the Communist Party and the revolu- tionary unions of the Trade Union Unity League. All are invited. Serio was arrested because of his pointing out in a speech how the catholic church helps the bosses here and in Italy. All the witnesses the immigration authorities seek to against him repudiate the translations made of their speeches, ut on the basis of these transla- tions the deportation is being at- | | | { | MARION, Ind, Aug. fake grand jury meeting to “invest- igate” the brutal lynching of two Amter, Minor and Raymond in a, Negro workers here on August 7th, will meet here Tuesday. William Berneque, a Negro work- er who was beaten by a boss mob and regulation> of this department | at the time the other two workers were lynchced, has not been located. It is feared that he, too, was lynched. The International Labor Defense has distributed 1,500 leaflets call- | ing on Negro and white workers to organize a militant fight against lynching which is being instigated by the bosses. RALLY SEPT. 1 IN PATERSON TUUL to Lead Fight For Jobless Bill PATERSON, N. J., Aug. 29.—The Trade Union Unity League and the National Textile Workers Union are calling on all the workers of Pater- son to rally around the T, U. U. L. and demonstrate Sept. 1st at the (City Hall, 12 noon, for work or wages and for the adoption of the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill pro- posed by the Communist Party. All members of the T. U. U. L. and N. T. W. U. are asked to rer port at the mobilization point, Union Hall, 205 Paterson St., at 10 the adoption of the Social Insurance Bill! Not a cent for armaments, all money to the unemployed! LL.A. CONSPIRING FOR CUT IN LONGSHORE PAY NEW YORK.—The suspicious mysteriousness about the Interna- tional Longshoremen’s Association conference on wages, to take place October 1, indicates that some sec- BE DEPORTED U.S. Try Rush Worker to Fascist Death Guido Serio is to be deported, ac- cording to a telegram received today | by the National Office of the Inter-| national Labor Defense. In spite of the fact that all the | testimony used by the state against Serio was repudiated by the three} witnesses used by the local Immi-} | gration Inspector Powers, a rehear- \ing of the case of Serio was denied by the Washington authorities, who not only have ordered the deporta- | tion of Serio, but deny him volun- | taty * ~art“e. | This means that Serio goes to al death sentence in fascist Italy!| The International Labor Defense) attorney, Shorr, is taking steps im-| mediately to secure a writ of habeas | corpus, staying the execution of this, outrageous sentence against a class conscious worker whose crime was | his participation in an unemploy- ment protest meetin; EMPLOYERS AND LLL.A. TRY TO START RACE WAR NEW YORK.—Taking advantage of the unemployment situation, the employers on the Brooklyn water | front have hired Negroes in some trick to disguise and put over a wage-cut to the accompaniment of race war. The I.L.A. is playing the bosses’ game by leading a crusade | to “throw the Negroes off the} water front.” The Marine Werk- ers’ Industrial Union proposal is to unite both Negroes and whites in a single strong industrial union, | and to raise the already iow wage | of 85 cents for all of them. The Communist Party fights lynching—vote Communist! predictions had been made after the | dramatic masterpiece, for the week | success of “Potemkin.” The latter | of Sept. 27. film is the masterpiece of the other! Each program will contain a sec- leading Soviet regisseur, S. Eisen- | ond European feature film in con- stein. | nection with the Russian pictures, |and a group of short subjects on Beginning this Saturday and con- ‘current items of the day. LATEST ISSUE OF LABOR DEFENDER OUT TODAY at sporeximately sity milion The latest issue of the Labor De-| in China, is one of the startling facs fender, monthly organ of the Inter- | revealed in R. Doonping’s account of national Labor Defense, is on sale | the progress of the Chinese revolu- today, ready for distribution at} tion and the other articles, to- the Unemployment Demonstrations | gether with photographs collected throughout the country. from countries over the entire world, | The Labor Defender gives in pic- | make this issue of genuine interest tures and in articles the stirring | and importance to all workers. progress of the militant struggle of workers of the world against capi- talist exploitation and persecution. Among the articles is J. Loui: Engdahl’s account of the infamous | | facts piled on facts that carry an impressive message to the workers under the old social order. | DEPRESSION CRUMPLES CUBAN INDUSTRIES | HAVANA, Aug. 31.—Unemploy- | Gastonia verdict, and Caroline) ment throughout the Cuban indus- Drew's biographical sketch of Ella tries has been rife during the re- | May, whose memory will be vividly | cent months. Employes in the sugar | brought before the workers during | mills and on the railroads have been the Ella May Mev.orial Week—Sept. | laid off in great numbers. The 14 to 22—now being organized by | knitting mills, fishing, tobacco and the International Labor Defense. | agricultural industries have thrown Moissaye Olgin has written a de-| many workers out of jobs and there | seription of the new social order!is great unrest among the employed | growing in the Soviet Union, with and unemployed workers here. A Theatre Gaild Production’ — THE FIRST BIG SMASH 1U W, 624, Hive. 8:3 GUT eth eet Bat Kxtra Matinee Labor Day THES" GUEST BY OWEN DAVIS witt ALLAN DINEHART AND AN ALL-STAR ©. ELTINGE THEA. Wocrsy ves, 8:30; Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EXTRA MAT LABOR DAY Biway and 42nd Street (AMEO [NOW JOE COOK | “RAIN or SHINE” Presents | LOBE o'er’ inagd Ak ARTHUR HOPK TORCH SONG RESTAURANT 1) Alware Find ft" at Our Pleee. THERN BLVD., Breax (near 174th St. Station) @ HONE: INTERVALB Sl4e. HEALTH FOOD _ Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 6806 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES, A piace with atmosphere where al) radicale meet 02 6.12th St. New York’ Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor. 140th Street Where you eat and feel at home. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom $03—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Sy6uan Jleve6HHua $01 Bast 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. jm 7248 Vel. Algom Tel. ORChara 378% DR. L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK the workers, also Representatives ruling class lined against the mili-| tempted. ret wage-cutting proposition is New drama by Reayon Ntckelson “ |} Cooperstors! Patronise Murphy and Jeffries. " |tant labor movement, and the role ce being worked out. It is evidently | Plymouth ead ly OUTSIDE THE LAW Raymond was cheered. Many | of the courts as servants of that Labor and Fraternal the intention of the bureaucrats in Byes, 8:50. Mats, Thurs, and Sat. with MARY NOLAN workers left the meeting after Ray- | ruling class. : the LL.A. to suddenly spring a EXTRA MATINEE LABOR DAY] OWEN MOORE—EDWARD G.ROBINSON CHEMIST mond spoke, and a large group | “The solidarity of the workers Labor Defense Agents wage-cut on the workers, catch marched to the Party headquarters at Grandy Hall for a meeting. EASLEY URGING WAR ON USSR Wants AFL. to Join j “ i bad " LABOR SPORTS MEET AND y ? FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL in Move to Boycott | Liberation Drives" cs Cleaners and Laundry Workers, CLOSES DOWN |] the unemployed delegation, ||] ivrenvatiovan yourn wank PronrcUlmer P’k, Sept. 13 ty UNION OF NOW YORK " — ts ” | es oni 'Y | Monday, 8 i ae 3 Ww. EB | setter eetetancn Aten cca m NEW YORK.—Beating the War-| Report may be secured by writing We will then thaten in a body to the NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—The Gee Seen Tee ee Ee Bront Headduarters, 2994 hiro drums of old, Ralph M. Easley,|to the National Office, Room 430, | ¢™onstration at Union Sa Fisk Tire Fabric Mill here has |} Come to the Venue, Melrose U8; Brooklyn secretary of the National Civic Fed- | §9 East 11th St., New York City. = i score ae so an “indefinite Headquarters, aereaie. Avenue. eration and crony of Matthew Woll, | a muni: ivi | period.” This includes all depart- : summons his red-hating cohorts to] ___————SSSS—S—S—SS Com ist Activities ments as well as the entire offi a 4 Biggest Event of the Year! hop e$ Council meets a renewed war on the Soviet Union. | United States,” and pins a red label LY.D. Committee Attention! force. Four hundred day worke i | IgE Rees OF ayesy, apes This is not to be a military war,—| also on its president, “called by nw members ‘of LY.D. committees | are thrown out of jobs, which is | e ° | Medinet at least {this rather regretfully) | unregenerate folk ‘Dr. Nicholas Monday Sept. ist at 20 Union sq in: | Ne-halé the number employed, Oll arity DAIL Y WORKER | not ye ough “if” the so-called! Miraculous Butler,’ Whalen documents are found gen- uine by the Fish committee, “true | Americans” (Easley style) will de- mand that whole staff of the Amtorg Trading Corp. be “taken out and shot.” But before this repe- tition of St. Bartholomew’s Day, |must grow until it matches and ex- jceeds the forces against it. | “With the great Unemployment | Demonstrations on September ist, | the International Labor Defense be- | gins a new winter campaign to push | onward the awakening of the work- | ing class which this winter will face | one of the worst periods of unem- | ployment and hardships known. All | workers’ forces must line up solidly | behind the ‘shield of the working |class’ in its September-November Class War Prisoners Defense and | Easley’s plan is set forth in a | circular letter to all the big labor- | hating corporations and to the A. F. of L. bureaucrats who make up the National Civic Federation. He proposes a joint international con- Are to report to the 1.L.D, office to get the New Labor Defender and to get literature for the Sept. 1 dem- onstration, ._ * U.C.W.W. Attention! All members and sympathizers of the U.C.W.W, are to come down to 80 H. llth St. on Monday morning at 11 a, m. to march to the demon. stration. * * «& Medical Workers All workers will assemble at 13 W. 17th St, Monday, at 10 a. m, and march to Union Square in a body, Final instructions will be issued at 10.30 a. m. All members must attend and bring a worker. x 8 mediately after the demonstration. Ce Unit 14, Section 5. Meets Monday, 8p m. * Unit 8, Section 6, Williamsburg Will meet Tuesday, Whipple St., Brooklyn. All comrades, must be on time, * ‘Unit 2, Section 4 p.m. at 68 | Discussion, | them unprepared, and jam the thing through. ILL.A. officials al- ways give the impression that the wages of 85 cents per hour will be continued. A few “in the know” have let it sut, however, that some: | thing like 70 cents will be agreed to by the officials. The answ-r of the longshoromen | niust be to join the Marine Work- ers’ Industrial Union, and to strike agsinst all wage-cuts, FISK TIRE FABRIC MILL when the mill is running full blast. ie Stuyvesant 0580 THE | ference of corporations, American Meets Monday, Sept. 7.30 i Easley hopes to have launched a | Legion, A. F. of L., National Civie | at usual place. at se I trade boycott of Soviet Russia| Federation and white guard orgah- ES aoe which will be far more deadly in its Unit 2, Section 5, Rally to Release the Communist Candidate for Governor Wm. Z, Foster and the other members of PICNIC Supt. 7 SUNDAY 16th Internat. Youth Day Demonstration FRIDAY, SEPT. 13, at 8 P. M. Central Opera House, 67th Street and 3rd Ave. Play; Tableaux; Musical Program — Admission 35 Cents Mass Demonstrations Monday, September 8— Boro Hall, 5 p. m. Battery Park, 7 p. m. 120th St. and Lenox Ave. 138th St. & Southern Blvd. Harlem, 7 p. m. the Bronx, 5 p. m, MORNING FREIHEIT BAZAAR 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. international Barber Shop M, W. SALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108ra & 104th Ste.) Ladies Bobs Our Spécialty Private Béaoty Parlor Adyertwe your Unton Meetings in For information torite to The DAILY WORKER Adverts Dept. 26-28 Union &>., Now York City izations to start th a Meets Monday, Sept. 1, 8 . we, test ves ir net ridaey terrane Ay yy” PLAZA ||} Pleasant Bay Park oe To make this proposal look re-| in China in defense of the Chiang Section 4, Unit 1 sd 3—Friday spectable, Easley resorts to his| Kai-shek government, murderer of | ,iMeGt2i} MyMato Ws 126th St. Fine HALLS FOR BANQUETS, Do Your Workin “ oe He pare os ee tens of thousands of workers, be- mee} haa: ‘ * RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS Class Dut | 4— Saturday rather reddening—the characters of | cause he sees Chiang’s regime is it 3 ve. 3) a all those who favor maintaining and| now threatened by a worker-peasant Monesy, OEE imieese ee et | MEETING ROOMS FoR beeen ae ara " 5 Sunday | Sty Gneriomovaky. extending trade relations between| revolt led by Communists, He tries Ps itm ‘a S CLUBS AND LODGES Organizations! Attention! secret ain tao Ge he two seitbiete, re puts a redj to rouse the old Christian crusading Meet at 308 Lenox Ave., Monday, | # a 3 , 112th Street, 218 West shirt on Ivy Lee, the “poison Ivy”| spirit as an ally by referring to |*t §?.™ | . KO OHUNTT ‘ON—50 iy tere publicity agent of John D, Rocke-| Russia as a greater menace than . Speeint “Memberabip Meet | 17 IRVING PLACE OCTOBER 22 Madison Square Garden fo Hes inept Ld dir doubles tall... He puts red coat of | imperial Germany in 1914, and Rus. | 7 hURAaw | § pom. tn which new Corner 16th Stréet reserved for very im- elevator, Jolumbia University, one of the “intellectual red centers of the | sia’s “potential allies, the hordes of sneak at 308 Lenox Ave i Tslam.” i | ployed , workers twust report at 10 a.m, Monday at 308 Lenox Ave, ATL wnem. | NEW YORK portant event. ey Don’t Buy Anything Now, You'll Get It at the Bazaar! y ‘ ste HELEN wants to get in toach wi VER TUCKER. Box 25, “Dal Worker.” nyt

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