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Senate—14 Dist.. Rose Wortir. rd Dist. Davir Gor- ™Man;, 4th ist. He Sager; 5th Dist, Harold Harvey: 6th Dist. H. Silverman; 7th Dist., Carl Brodsky. HARLEM Con 19th Dist.. Max Bedacht: 20th Dis bert Minor; 21st Dist, James W. Ford Senate—iSth_ Dist., T. De Fazio. Assembly—i7th Dist Sanches; 18th. Dis| Dist, L. Paterson “BRONX Congress—23rd Amter. JESD/ AY, OCTOBER 14, 1930 PLACE ‘COMMUN ST CANDIDATES ON NEW YORK BALLOT, Support the Communist} | Election Campaign! NEW YORK.—Robert Minor, Israel Amter, Max Bedacht, Earl Browder, Clarrence Hathaway, M. J. Olgin, James W. Ford, Fred Biedenkapp, Verrn Smith and Alex- ander Trachtenberg, are the Com- munist candidates in the Congres- sional Districts of Manhattan, Bronx, and _ Broool officially placed on ballot yesterday. In most of the working class dis- tricts of Greater New Yorrk, Com- munist ¢andidates for the Assembly | and State Senate werer placed on} the ballot as well. The revolution- aty workers of si districts must | now mobilize for an intensive Red campaign and for canvassing the working voters in their homes in order to n for the Com- munist ti of the Com- munist c tes must be immed- jately di throrugh signs, posters and other means of adver- tising so that the workers should know who their candidates are. The following is the full Commu- nist ticket in Greater New York. Governor, Wm. Z. Foster: Lieut Governor, J. L hz Attorney General, Ric B. , Controller, Franklin P. 12th Dist., Vern Smith: A. Trachtenberg Senate—22nd Di as eA 4th Dist. S. A. Sultan; éth bist) ao traeead ress—Srd Dist. F. Biedénkapp; ath Bie jack Johnstone; 6th Dist., Barl Browder; 7th Dist.. C, Hatha: way: 10th Senate— Assembly—7th 18th Dist William Weiner; kind; 23rd Dist., FIGHT TODAY TO REINSTATE TEN Food Union in Demand on Zel Green’s NEW YORK.—The Food Work- erss Industrial Union will demand the reinstatement of ten union workers formerly employed by the Pennsylvania Cafeteria, 257 W. 34th St., when it opens as the Zel-Green Cafeteria today. The former Penn- sylvania cafeteria was a union shop over which the Food Workers’ Union had job control. “ Two months ago the Pennsylvania changed hands and soon closed for alterations throwing the workers out of jobs. When the cafeteria an- nounced its reopening the former erew applied for their old jobs but the new management refused to recognize the union or reemploy these workers. The A. F. of L. had already offered the management a lower wage and longer hours for the workers and has agreed to ex- clude the unskilled workers from the union. In this scab role the A. F. of L. not only destroys the work- ing standards achieved by the Food Workers’ Industrial Union after bitter struggle but betrays the un- skilled workers who are the most exploited in the industry. This will undoubtedly mean a struggle against the joint enemy, boss and company union, resulting in the usual procedure of an injune- tion against the workers. Workers everywhere must be prepared to support the Food Workers’ Indus- trial Union an dto violate the in- junetion en masse when the time comes. a “Borochow: ita. f. J. Olgin. , George Primoff. Dist, Gil Green; Va: 14th Dist. CAN’T DO WITHOUT IT. “I am enclosing a dollar because I just cannot do without the Daily Worker.” A. A. Bodway, St. Louis, Micsouri. PAID SUBS BUILD FIFTEEN THOUSAND LINE UP FOR JOBS IN CLEVELAND. THREE HUNDRED GET SLIPS OF PAPER. — _ VOTE COMMUNIST! fo THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER | WIN THE % i EymMarl uy GET THA HE 1S SPREADING Bis THAT Boy! Commury ae SAIONG ZOUNG | HERE HE 15 Iv : UNEMPLOYED EM ONS in Yon, naalia Stuft Pi aa pe Made peso fi SENTENCE OU To FRISON YOU ARE 2/ FoR FREAKING YouR TRUANCY DAN AND FoR. BEING 'A baeteote MEMBER. OF SOCIETY. ONTIL By RYAN WALKER. SPIRIT. hanes Ry RUSHING 12 T0 | DEPORTATION AT PORTLAND Immigration Director Is Judge and Jury PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 9 (By Mail).—Twelve Portland workers are up before R. P. Bonham, direc- tor of immigration, in a case where Bonham is judge, jury and _prose- cuting attorney, and will in all probability recommend their depor- tation. Some are slated for fascist countries where they will be exe- Enlarged TUUC Council Vote|(LEANERS W! Mass Violation Injunctions 246 Delegates From Shops, Unions, Jobless Councils Endorse Communist Party Elec- tion Campaign, Support Red Rally NEW YORK. — The | enlarged | meeting of the Trade Union Unity | Council held Friday night at the | Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th Street unanimously accepted a program of | struggle outlined by Jock Johnstone | for New York district bureau, against injunctions. The conference, consisting of 246 delegates from shops, shop delegate councils of Industrial Unions and Leagues and delegates from Unem- ployed Councils together with exec tive committees of the respective organizations, went on record en- ;|dorsing and calling upon their mem *Thership to actively support the Com- munist Party platform and its can- | didates in the present election cam- | paign as the only working class party that fights against injunctions | and for unemployment insurance. Rally at Madison Square. A motion that every shop elect! one delegate to a committee of 500 to greet Foster, Minor and Amter upon their release Oct. 21, was un- animously carried and called upon the workers to rally at the Madison Square Garden Demonstration, Oct. 21st. A decision of the Bureu of the Un- employed Council to send a commit- tee of the unemployed to City Hall, to demand immediate relief from the city government and to wage an aggressive fight against - evictions was enthusiastically endorsed and the conference called upon the dele- gates present to mobilize their mem- bership in support of the demon+ stration of the unemployed at City Hall when the committee presents their demands. Mass Violation. A resolution demanding the im mediate release of Raymond was car- ried, also the sending of a telegram JA. F. to Minor in the hospital and Foster and Amter in Prison. The report of Comrade Johnstone reviewed the history of injunctions in the struggles of the American} working class, the role of the A. F. of L., and the socialist party as ag-! ents of the bosses. He dealt speci-| fically with the racketeering of the of L. and their practice of placing union labels on injunctions as in the strikes of the food workers |in New York and the role of Solo-| mon, the socialist lawyer who se-} jeured the injunction responsible for |the death of Steve Katovis in the | Bronx, He called for mass viola- tion of these injunctions and the | need for the building of the TUUC| shop committees and the Council of | the Unemployed in this fight: History of Injunctions, The delegates present were steeled | in their determination to fight in- junctions when Michael Obermeier | of the Food Workers, Fred Bieden-| kapp of the Shoe and Rose Wortis and Weisburg of the Needle Trades, related the experiences of their re- spective unions in the struggles against injunctions. They describe | the wholesale arrests, the draining | of the union funds, and the raiding of strikers relief stations. All the speakers greeted the plan of the T. U. U. C. to mobilize all forces to} defeat injunctions. Alexander Trachtenberg, one of | the congressional candidates of the Communist Party, greeted the con-} ference in the name of the Commun- ist Party as the only wérking class political party fighting against | wage cuts, speed-up, unemployment} and for unemployment insurance, and fully supporting the Trade Union Unity League in its fight against injunctions. 2 CLASSES IN €. 1. PROGRAM. Many oWrkers’ School Courses Week of 15th NEW YORK.—In line with the central aim and purpose of the] Workers School, which is to meet the needs of the revolutionary movement by developing new func-| tionaries for the revolutionary movement, and by equipping mili- tant workers with the sharp weapon of the theory and practice of Marx- ism-Leninism, the course in: the Program of hte Communist Inter- national, constitutes one of the poli- tically most important and basic of the many courses given by the Workers School this year. The course will analyze the theo- retical and tactical experiences of the world Communist movement, and will pay close attention to ap- plying the strategical line of the THE DAILY! Party Activities, lection Dance. ance will be held iy 14 Cet. 18, in the ‘orium of the Co-operative Col- ony, AW Bronx Perk East. Arranged 6. Proceeds for Unit and a. ‘Heagguarters i $s 8 An Election izm Rally for the benefit Pot the “ the jptare:, ish Weekly ean an ot Fi junist Pa: be eld & siete Casino. h § x Ave. Admission. 50c in ee The at the door. American Amefiean Dances to- er Sei ar features will mark contd ovenih i. Please keep this Labor and Fraternal Perth Amboy ‘The Esdapal local branches of the nal Labor efense are hold. meen enti-lyneh meeting in thé 08 Elm St. at 7 p. vicemen'’s League. meet today at 125th St ra | Wednesdays at 8 o’clock in the eve- | Classes in English, Fundamentals jof Communism, | American Labor Movement, Public Comintern, for the winning of the majority of the working class in this period of deepening world crisis of capitalism, successful socialist construction in the Soviet Union, and rising tide of revolutionary mass struggles against imperialism, to the conerete economic political situation in the U. S. A. today, and the problems and tasks of the Com- munist Party and the revolutionary unions, This term two classes have been organized in this course; one on Mondays ‘at 7, and the other |ning. Comrade Sam Darcey, who has given the course successfully in the past, will be the instructor, History of the Speaking, Marxian Economics and Organization Principles of Lenin- ism, will begin the week of Oct. 15, at the Jewish Workers University, 108 Bast 14th St., temporarily, un- til the new, sel ‘building is finally prepared. Registration will bel ts and to use the millions of hun+ Socialists Meet a Big Flop Despite Aid of Boss Press, Y.W.C.A. (By a Worker Correspondent) PITTSBURGH, Oct. 13.—The so- cialists held a meeting Friday night in Wilkinsburg, a suburb of Pitts- burgh, which turned out to be the biggest flop they ever staged around here. The meeting appropriately |was held in the religious dope-dis- pensing institute, the Young Wo- men’s Christian Association head- | quarters. The capitalist press gave. the| meeting reams of publicity, and their big cheese, Dr. Van Essen, candidate for U. S. Senator, was billed to speak. I counted 83 peo- ple. Three of them were Commu- nists and several were Communist sympathizers who came to expose the fakers. Van Esse ntalked about Reading, but didn’t mention the scabbing of the socialist city administration, and he yelped about Milwaukee, but didn’t mention teh clubbing and jail- ing of the thousands of unemployed, He praised the Y. W. C. A. areen-Woll Insurance Racket Additional Reason for His Stand BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 18.—It is admitted by certain of the AvP. of L. convention delegates here, talk- ing among themselves, that one reason A. F. of L. President Green and his official family are so much opposed to workers’ unemployed in- surance paid for by the government is because of their own insurance racket, the so-called “Labor Insur- ance Co.” This organization, run by Vice-President Woll, sells un- employment insurance to the work+ ers. Aside from this direct personal interest in starving the workers, Green of course agrees with Hoo- ver’s capitalist plan to throw the burden of the crisis on the work- | of the Cleaners’ and Laundry Work- | higher paid | bosses, this resistance through the | Word] Congress of the Red Inter- THROUGH LEAGUE Force Bonifide Boss to| Take All Back NEW YORK.—The workers of | the Bonifide Cleaners and Dyers, Astoria, L. I., struck when the boss cut their wages as much as 25 per cent and fired some workers alto- gether. A meeting of the shop was held Saturday night in the office ers League, 16 West 21st St. at which it was decided that all must | be taken back, and that the wage cuts be returned. A committee was | elected to present the demands to! | the boss. | Yesterday morning the committee | went in with the demands to the} boss, while the rest of the workers, | 80 in all, were outside. The bosses had to agree to take everybody back, not to cut the wages of the lower paid workers, those getting $30 or less, to reduce the cut of the| orkers and to recog- ize the shof committee. At this time when all the bosses are putting over wage cut after wage ~1t, when the American Fed- eration of Labor chiefs help the Trade Union Unity League is im- portant, It shows that organization of shop committees is the only way to unite all the workers to fight against wage cuts, long hours and bad conditions, World Prize Winner in The Fish committee raves about “cestruction of civilization in Rus- sia,” Hoover beats the war drums for an onslaught against Commu- nism as a war of civilization against slavery and barbarism, and his un- derstudy, Secertary of the Interior Wilbur, talks of “an inevitable con- flict in which “we,” the capitalist civilizations, will have to fight “an- other system” evidently not civil- ized. All capitalist forces during the period of war preparation against the Soviet Union echo and add to these slanders and all the more so as millions of American unemployed workers face starvation and millions of workers’ children find they can- not even go to elementary school because the factories and mills must b fed with the child slaves of men displaced by rationalization. Now comes Rabindranath Tagore, not interested in politics but Nobel Prize winner in literature, and rec- METAL DELEGATES TO | REPORT RLU. MEET NEW YORK.—Metal workers of New York and vicinity will be given an opportunity to hear the returned metal worker delegates to the Fifth national of Labor Unions, Friday, October 17, at 16 West 21st St. at p. m Wm. Brown, Negro auto worker of Detroit; A. Murphy, steel work- er of Pittsburgh; Edith Brisker, young tin mill worker, and John Medlon, national organizer of the Metal Trades Industrial League, will speak. Besides a report of the RILU Congress and decisions in regards to the metal trades, the delegates will describe the work and achieve- ments of the Soviet metal workers in the Five Year Plam E FOR B TICKETS. All comrades are urged to settle for bazaar tickets at once. Secretaries of or ganization should immediately get in touch with their members who still have tickets outstanding. The only one week longer, at the rie “ottiee, og 12th St. 9th gry jobless to cut wagese Vote Communist! Daily Worker and Freiheit are urgently in need of the thou- bands of dollats due on tickets, RALLY GEORGIA WORKERS FOR 6 Death Trial | Soon for Atlanta Organizers ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 13.—With the approaching of the trial of six workers in this city, charged with “inciting to insurrection,” the au- thorities prepare in every way to make them pay a very heavy price for daring to organize the Negro| and white workers into the fighting | militant sections of the Communist | Party, Trade Union Unity League |and American Negro Labor Con- gress, the Southern District of the I, L. D. hag begun to speed up the campaign of bringting this case to the attention of every worker of this city and teh entire South. 5,000 Southern Workers Given. The October 11 issue of the South- ern Worker, which carries a picture of the Cartersville, Ga., lynching, and story about it, has been dis- tributed by the I. L. D, membership of this city in the working-class sections, Mary Dalton and J. Cooper will speak at a mass mecting in Chat- tanooga, Tenn. on Thursday eve- ning, Oct. 16. Alsa, Cooper is to make a tour through the district mobilizing the workers for the im- mediate release of the Atlanta or- ganizers. ‘Tagore Smashes Hoover’s Propaganda Against USSR Literature Finds Soviet Union Labor Gains Culture; Against This Capitalist Starvation System Plans War ognized authority in education. Ta- gore, interviewed in quarantine on his arrival here Thursday on the liner Bremen, said hevhad just gone to the Soviet Union after ten years’ ahsence. He found that the work- ers were happy, industrious and that, free of the blight of capit ism, they were reaching out for a full life of culture and education. Racial conflicts, encouraged by thg British in India and formerly pre- valent in Russia, had disappeared in the Soviet Union, “That should be a lesson to In- dia,” Tagore declared. “I went to Russia with prejudices, but found that the situation had changed miracutously. It is a mistaken idea that Rus: is turning out only factory hands. The theatres and operas ate beginning to grow again and for the first time the lower classes are able to enhance their lives with these things.” OLGIN SPEAKS ON FISH COMM. FRI, IN NEWARK NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 13—M. J. Olgin, editor of the Morning Frei- heit, Yiddish language Communist organ, will speak here Friday at 8 p. m, at 93 Mercer St. Olgin will tell of his tilt with the Fish Com- mission and will expose teh threat. ered attacks against all workers be- ing prepared by this outfit. He will also take up the growing war dan- ger against the Soviet Union, which the Fish Commission is intensify- ing by its anti-working-class activi- ties. VOTE COMMUNIST! BRASS BAND JOIN THE WORKERS’ BRASS BAND! Meets Every Tuesday t 7:30 P. M. Come to the Next Rehearsal classes bgp oo! te! Pe Instruments. WORKERS. “INTERNATIONAL RELIEF, LOCAL NEW YORK Pat ace flat Maabactan Need Broun in That’s His Appeal to NEW YORK.—You may not know it, but the radio world missed something very important last week, Heywood Broun, money maker de- luxe and a night club hound, who \is hired to crack some of his jokes |on the radio once a week, failed to station Tuesday, Instead, he sent Mr. Russell Owen, correspondent for the New York Times with the Byrd Antartic Expedition, to take his| place. “Heywood Broun said the night he wanted to know s about that poker game which we had in the Antartic, a game which pasted four months,” Mr. Owen in- troduced himself over the radio, and that was the reason for his appear- ance. The “socialist” candidate, Heywood Broun, simply couldn’t have a story about the four months’ poker game hidden from the suffer- ing world, including the eight mil- lion of unemployed in the United States. Associate Tells On Him. This fully bears out one of the facts Frank P. Adams, of the New York World, one of Mr. Broun’s colleagues, has stated in an article in the Nation of October Ist. “We, of the Thanatopsis Lit- erary and Inside Straight Club,” | Play Poker, Says Friend Socialist Clown Foregoes His Round of Jokes to Hear of 4-Month Game appear at the WABC broadcasting! Congress to Starving Unemployed;, Mr. Adams said in the Nation, “have seen Comrade Broun too often take his enormous chair at the table and say that the last run was to be played at one o'clock and at six in the morning, say that we might as well play an hour longer. And that’s how it would be in Congress with | Broun.” | And that’s why the poker play- jing, bridge playing voters of the| |silk stocking 17th Congressional | District ought to elect him. And | that’s why no worker can vote for clownish poker-players or for any other candidates of the “socialist’ party. It is class against class. phe workers, employed and unem- ployed, must fight against all para- sites including such parasites cover- ing themselves up with “socialist” phrases. Vote Communist on No- vember 4th. Vote for your Party, the party of the working class, the Communist Party! Best For Workers. “I did receive the Daily Work- er regularly every day and this is the best paper for the working class, I did read for some time the I.W.W. papers, but I did not get any education.” Pete Tyron, Seattle, Washington, READERS! ORDER DAILIES! 1 CENT A coPY! | ARTHUR HOPKINS Presents TORCH SON New drama by Kenyon Nicholson THBA, 45th Street Plymouth Wa evous Eves. 8:40, — Mats, Thurs. & Sat. 30 Extra Mat, Columbus Day (Monday) “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR Thea., W. of Bway | MASQUE 45th St. Evenings at 8:50 | Mats. Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 Extra Mat, Columbus Day (Monday) THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA 44TH STREE THe of Bway | Eves. 8:40. — Mats, Wed. & Sat., 2:40°! 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances AT POPULAR <n ey PRICES ALL QUIET 3: WESTERN FRONT; AND RKO VAUDEVILLE HIPPODROME © SIXTH AVENUE 7 i A | JOE COOK nusical in his newest maddes: ERLANGER’S Theatre, W. 44 St. Pen. 1063 Eves. 8:30. Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:30 IVIC REPERTORY #4 5. i Se, $1, $1.50. Mt, Th. EVA LE GALLIENNE, D ‘Tonight—“ROMEO AND JU vu iin Tom. Night—“THE CRADI “THE 9TH GUEST” | 2ND_MONTH—OWEN DAVIS’ SENSATIONAL MYSTERY THRILLER ELTINGE THEA. 42nd St, W. of Bway Eves. 8:60. — Mats, Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 “GIVE ’EM ’L!": “Comrades. That editorial in today’s paper, ‘Who Does Rule America,’ was a dandy. The old workers are pricking up their ears. Give ‘em TWO BIG FEATURES! A SOVKINO Soviet 5-Year Plan! CONRAD VEIDT in and 43rd Street “PINE AND “eal *L.” Chas. T. Watkins, Los An- geles. READERS! SELL DAIL- | TES! 1 CENT A_ A copy. “TURKSIB” The Picture deals with the bullding of the Tuthestan-Siber- ian Railway. One of the most st plays the year has yet offered! An important phase of the ~AND ON THE SAME PROGRAM Based on Pirandello’s Famous Play “Henry IV” ACME THEA. NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with Gey ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY, , LEONARD CEELEY, Others iAsESTIG THEA. 44th, W. of Broadway be 0. Mate. ‘Wea &Bat. 2:39. Chi 2600 NOW PLAYING! LAST 3 DAYS! | STORM over ASIA Continiots Nooh to Midnight ‘GLOBE a “ALE SHOT AT SUNRISE CAMEO “"wis San" | NOW “AFRICA SPEAKS” Gthe Mightiest, Picture to come An Amkino Release, Dir. by Pudovkin SPR. 5005." Popular, Fries WHEELER and WOOLSEY ‘2nd St. ALL TALK AND SOUND! Produced by Pi Hoefler THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOB AKINS SAM H, HARRIS Then., 42d St. W. of B'y Brening: 8:50, _ Math. _Wed. & Sat. 2:30 NOW PLAYING! PRODUCTION rring and inspiring photo- “THE LIVING MASK” | hearings are in the county jail, and cuted shortly after landing. worked Bonham deliberately case, in cooper tment stool pigeons, as ved by testimony before the Fish nmittee hearings in this city. workers are defended by Irvin Goedman, attorney for the In- ternational Labor Defense. The even relatives of the victims were not allowed in until after vigorous demands from Goodman. Then Bonham announced that he con- sented as “an act of largesse.” Those facing the federal charges include Lambo Mitseff, secretary of a Portland unit of the Communist Party, and a hard working citizen of the community for more than twelve yeurs; Claus Strune, Sadik Jafer, Peter Males, Tom Evanoff, Mior Lacs, George Johnson, Ungle- bret Nilsson, Mike Gensheff, Steve Otocich, George Tunkkanen, il Gosheff. The district organizer, Ed Levitt, is one of another group of about waiting hearing on state syndicalism charges. ALL WORGERS NEED DAILY: “I had the pleasure of reading your very interesting and helpful paper several days ago, the Daily Worker, which every working per- son should have in his home,” William A, Davis, Denver. BUILD HOUSE TO HOUSE ROUTES! “For All Kinds of Insurance” ({ARL BRODSKY Velephone: Murray Ail) 555 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N ¥ DEWEY 9914 Office Hours: M.-9 P.M, 9 A. Sunday: 10 A. M.-1 PL DR. J. LEVIN » SURGEON DENTIST 7 U Ave, U Sta., M. BMT. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Heom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not eonnected urith any other office Advertiwe your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 50 East 13th St. New York City —MELROSE—, Dairy HESTAUILANT omrades 1) Alwayy Find It Pleasatt (o Vine at Oar Pines. 1787 SUUTHERN BLVD,, rons (near 174th St Station) INTERVAL] PHONE te 9149. | RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT ; 199 SECOND AVEi UB | Bet. 13th and 13th Ste. 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