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DAILY WORKER, VOTE COMMUNIST ‘W YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930 NOV. 4! For Unemployment Insurance Paid for Out of the War Funds and Administered by the Workers and Jobless! Vote Communist Against the Injunctions. MASS MEETING | IN BUFFALO Rally to Make Foster| Meet Great Protest | | BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 26.—Black- jacks and arrests, charging police breaking up all groups of workers who assembled, were the answers of the Buffalo city government to the masses who assembled here yester-| day on Lafayette Square to protest | evictions of unemployed workers, to} demand unemployment relief from the city government and to hear speakers explain why all workers and | jobless should vote Communist and} thereby vote for the Workers Unem-| ploy Insurance Bill. The bill de- mands that the billions of war funds and enormous income of the masters of industry should be used to pay/ each jobless $25 a week and $5 more Against the Ly nch Terror— BIC BUSINESS LIT The BUSIESS for each depend | ; at ahr nse on tne: workers /ALP-L, SCABS ON STRIKE and jobless who were assembling, the police occupied Lafayette Square. OF BUILDING EMPLOYES PASSAIC RED RALLY SUNDAY Fish Exposes Own Lynching Program at Harlem Meeting — No Foolin’ — RED RALLY OCT. 30) PIONEERS PROTEST = "AT COOPER UNION, TERROR IN ScHoOLs By RYAN WALKER. TNO FOOLIN' WHAT LL WE USE NEW TURN IN BRAZIL “REVOLT” IRKS WALL ST. More Evidence of Mass Discontent Following the reports that the Luis government stepped out of power in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the capitalist dispatches report a whole series of conflicts, showing a sharp |struggle within the various class groupings in Brazil. The clique which took over pow- er in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro appear to be former supporters of the Luis regime. The pressure of mass uprising forced Luis to re~ \sign, but he placed control in the {hands of his supporters. These supporters are now bargaining with the “revolutionary” forces in the | North and South, to obtain the best | terms possible, and to defeat the mass uprising which all the capi- talist papers report is growing, and which they term as “mob rioting,” }and “anarchist” depradations. Getulio Vargas, leading.the in- surgent armies of the important Pioneer graduate and member df the Young Communist League, for activities supporting the struggles of the working class, the Pioneers held a meeting of the girls in the school at which sharp protest was made against the effort to terror- ize Jessie and force her to give up The police launched an immediate attack on them, arresting Harris, Trade Union Unity League Organi- ver, Bogdan and Murphy. Many workers were beaten up. The police also raided the Com- munist Party headquarters, smashed Arrest Speakers NEW YORK.—Local 71 of the states of Rio Grande do Sul, Minas alte oey gene 8) Building Service Employees Inter- | | tion of The iver Eatenulte Mat | Geraes and Parahyba, where the p. m. and began to address workers | national A. F. A eaabe Eee < J ‘ 7D 4 T * mK he s ities isi fost t ¥ B, mand beean to adcrem Wortnin| Rational A. of L. scabe on the! Foster Will Speak to|Negro Worker Whose Question Penetrated|Foster, Trachtenberg,| Walton High Schoo Brons, i ous, Be eee a remit Ga. reach of their voices Unie auibe ab 1608 Nelion' Ave,| Textile workers | Bluff Beaten Up by Police; Audience Indignant| pending Jessie Taft, 16-year-old | sit demanding he be made president. Other Speakers The hypocritical “friendship’ of fact that he fully endorsed that in-} NEW YORK, N. Y.—On Thurs- Congressman Hamilton Fish, notor-|sult to the Negro masses, Fish re-| 30, C ‘liam | ious Red-baiter, for the Negro|plying that he had been appointed | o° SRGSE Uh COutEaaes NETL masses was thoroughly exposed at|to investigate the matter and found|% Foster, Communist candidate for | a meeting in the Metropolitan Bap-|nothing wrong about it, that the| governor of New York State, will tist Church, 128th St. and Seventh| women were given the same accom-| return from his flying trip up- The possibility of further clashes between these groups is not elim- inated. The Vargas forces are marching towards the state of Sao Paulo, the stronghold of the Luis group. i The rapid change in Brazil “has Bronx, N. Y. C. The superintendent was Tuesday, Oct. 14, by Mr. Kline, agent of the Selfred Realty Cor- poration, that his wages would be cut from $150 per month to $100. On Wednesday the secretary of PASSAIC, N. J., Oct. 26.—The tex- tile workers of Passaic are busy as bees preparing to give William Z. Foster an overwhelmingly crowd which will greet him in no uncertain notified all the furniture and scattered and the Building Maintenance Workers’ Toahae ee ee ot Ree Ave, at which the: Negro petty |fodations, ete: All’ the usual Né# | athte’te Addreed a ble Yall in the | Hex Activities fon tHe workers” chil. | eer the imperialist: powses into & carried away the office supplies, and) Union presented counter demands | ;° ) ¥ night, Novem” bourgeosie, intent upon again de-| with which the bosses seek to con-| Fourteenth congressional district at | dren whitl: of antagonisms. Hoover: snd made many arrests, The number of! t) Mr. Kline and they were re-| ber 2 at 630 p.m and Kanters Ab- |i cing the Negro masses into the |done jim-crowism. Cooper Union. Together with Co Th rity | Bolten ate. argaing: that she new workers arrested in the police attack | jected. ditorium at 261 Monroe St. will be /iands of their enemies, introduced ae Foster, Al HA any m-| The young comrade, together with| government is really @ continuation on the mass meeting and raid on!” Gsganiy, ne decoratedin real Red fashion for the | Pun® JY la’ Went fiend of the| After this questions came thick] [300 (ote eae eancom| net father, bluntly told the school | of the Luis regime, and does not Gbnimriunist headquarters is'23, ‘Their Sullivan, business agent of Lo-| occasion. Z e gre riend 0! e that a th a : «| berg, Communist candidate for con-| officials that no amount of terror- cad ae en nist hea s 23. cal 71 of the Building Service Em- Negro. sind fast, and the police were again| Fcc, in. the 14th ~district, Rose| ization will atop the activities of | Deed Tecomnition, while the British In addition to Foster the Passaic workers will be able to hear John Porter who served two years in jail for his activities in the New Bedford Textile Strike, Alfred Magenknecht, known to the Passaic workers for his help during their strike troubles, will also speak and the program for the “Big Night” will be tapped off with ‘At 12:80 p., im. noon the eeares| SA" Walker of the Dally Worker tary of the B. M. W. union was| Staff drawing cartoons and a special | ever Negroes are in the majority arrested on framed up charges and} dance number by Edith api sang |should control the government, but booked at 44th Police Precinct. He| tor of the Red Dancers of New York. | when a Negro worker in the audi- names are not all known at present. called in to throw out Negro work- ers who would not swallow Mr. Fish’s peculiar “friendship.” Fish was introduced by Fred R. 1 sed 7 Moore, editor of the servile “New| ot’ A Surfalo tomorton| ” who di t | ome Age, who did the honors for | (Sunday). After his stop in Bing-| e misleaders of the Negro masses,| hamton on Monday, Foster introducing Fish as “a loyal Amer- | : bn aa ican,” and “not like the Communists who are trying to raise one class at the expense of the other.” In both respects Mr. Moore was cor- | rect. Fish is loyal to American) fhe Bioneers and (he Vout Chat) pene, sunce tele auto ies) League. _ lon the Wall Street government be- Final action against Jessie will | cause of its arms embargo to the be taken this week by the district | rebels, and because of the big deal superintendent. The Young Pioneers jit made with the Luis regime just and the Young Communist League | before it stepped out of the picture. call on all workers and their chil- There are undoubtedly many | mass battles, under the leadership : r +. | of working class revolutionary the terror being used against mili |forces, which are not reported in tant workers’ children. | the capitalist newspapers. On Sat- urday a German steamer ‘was ployees International, agreed to unite with the agent to supply scabs « the strike. , Oct. 16, at 10 p. m., business agent of Local 71, O'Sullivan, together with the police; ani the agent, evicted the family of the striker, and brought a mem- ber of Local 71 to scab. Fish’s main object in speaking in | Harlem was to support the cam- ,paign of Rivers and Hawkins, two | Negro misleaders who help to fur- |nish a Negro face to cover up the treacheries of the republican party. Fish, in trying to show what a |friend of the oppressed Negro jmasses he was, declared that he | supported the principle that where- Wortis and H. Sazar, assembly can- didates on the Communist ticket, will address the meeting. Protest Meeting Thousands of leaflets are being distributed. calling a huge protest demonsi.ation against police terror, and the city government's attempt to prevent a big Communist vote. The workers and jobless go on to organize Unemployed Councils, to campaign for the Communist Party, and to| build the militant unions of the) Trade Union Unity League. m Z. Foster, general secre- | the will | address a huge rally in the biggest | dren to support the fight for better | | hall of Rochester, N. Y. Syracuse} conditions in the schools and against | will be visited by Comrade Foster | on Wednesday. was refused the right to call a law-| yer and immediately taken to Mag-/| istrate’s Court at 161st St. and Brook Ave. He was tried, found guilty, released at 3 p. m. Leaflets were issued to all the; superintendents and janitors work-) ing in the neighborhood exposing/ the role of the A. F. of L. | The same night Local 71 was hav-; ing a meeting at the Ambassador Hall. The strike committee entered | the meeting and distributed leaflets | exposing the fakers. They de-| manded the floor and were thrown ‘y of the Trade Union Unity} League, Communist candidate for| governor of New York, and recently | released from a six months’ term in prison for leading the jobless in New York in the March 6 demonstration, speaks here today at the combined protest meeting and Communist elec- tion Campaign rally. AFL MEMBERS JOIN IN | WAR ON SYNDICAL LAW NEW YORK.—At the city confer- ence, called by the Northwest Dis- trict of the International Labor De-| fense, Oct. 19, for the purpose of | formulating plans for the campaign to repeal the criminal syndicalist law, two members of Carpenters Local, 131, the largest A. F. of L. 3RONX WORKERS ea in he cows were aed «| WRL.COME, AMTER Plans to get the 30,000 signatures | necessary to present the petition for | ¢« . M. W. Union will con- tinue the strike till the boss meets| the demands of the union. Socialists” Try to Dis-| | ence wanted to know if he supported | the right of Negro majorities in the | South to have their own government }as a guarantee against the lynching | terror of the bosses, Mr. Fish was \silent. And his gangsters in the |audience taking their cue from his | silence answered the Negro worker FAKE “RELIEF” Jobless Leader Renews Police was immediately called in to Demand on City Gov’t/ throw out the worker who dared to jeall the bluff of the Red-baiting NEW YORK. — “Election cam-| Congressman was seized by the paign promises will not feed the) police and beaten up. starving jobless millions, no matter) But there were other workers who whether they are made by Repub-| asked questions. One worker wanted licans, Democrats, or Socialists, no|to know how Mr. Fish excused the matter whether they come from|jim-crowism of the Negro Gold President Herbert Hoover or| Star Mothes by a republican admin- from Heywood Broun, congressional | istration. His answer exposed the ENGDAHL SCORES principles of lynching, -jim-crowism, | ete. The Communists fight against those “fine” American principles! Fish is loyal to his class, the exploit- ing class, and, of course, neither, nor Fred Moore, who also has some | stakes in the system of oppression, | wants to see the working-class in} power at the expense of the exploit- | ing privileges of the bosses. The | Communists, on the other hand, are | strenuously working to mobilize the | oppressed of all races for the over- | throw of their oppressors and for} the establishment of a workers and peasants government in the United States which, like the government | of the Soviet Union, will abolish all} racial and economic oppression, | lynching, pim-crowism, ete. hope of the socialist party, speak- | ing to boiled shirt, evening dress} ¢¢ audiences in New York City,” de- clared J. Louis Engdahl, Commu- | nist candidate for Lieutenant Gov-| ernor, and leader of the Delegation | of New York’s Unemployed Coun- cils who goes to.trial Tuesday as Roar China” Premiere at Martin Beck Theatre Tonite 2nd Big Week! American Premiere! A PICTURE POEM FROM THE EARTH OF RUSSIA SOIL Dovzhenko's Cinematic Triw TH ST. 52 WEST 8TH 8T., Amkino Release mph!—Banned—and Cheered\ in Berlin! PLAYHOUSE Between Fifth and Sixth Ave—Spring 5095 CONTINUOUS NOON TO MIDNIGHT Weekday Prices: Evenings 50c and 750 Sat., Holiday Prices: M ‘and 500 2 to 6P. Eveniugs 50e and 75e We and $1.00 ‘A Theatre Gulla Production Roar China a 1 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES | LYSISTRATA 44TH STREE THAT shelled and 27 Spanish immigrants on their way to Argentina were killed. | The Vargas note to Rio de Janeiro | declares that the new government will not undertake any of the obli- gations of the Luis regime, point- ing to a reshuffling of the imper- ialist alliances, with its sharpening of the antagonism between Great Britain and the United States. Vel. ORChara 378% DR, L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST | Strictly by Appointment | 48-50 DELANCEY STREET r. Eldridge St. NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not eonnected with any other office repeal to the state legislature, will | a result of the October 16th Un- “Roar China!” by 8. Treitakow| Helen Twelvetrees, Marjorie Rarm- puck THEA. || W. of B'way Br ceriiblated aad the work mapped) rupt Meet |mployed Demonstration at the! will be produced by The Theatre beau and Ricardo Cortez, Wednes- MARTIN (On W. of tay. [| siete, “c,dintss Wed. & Baty 9:40 | | Guild this evening at the Martin day, Thursday and Friday—Vaude- & Sat. 2:40 = Eve, 8:40 Mts, City Hall. “Police registration of the job- out. Wherever the representatives of | BRO) Last week Bronx Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor. 149th Street Where you ent and tee! at home. | Beck Theatre Monday. The play! ville—-Moran and Mack; Chester) the International Labor Defense | workers witnessed one of the most Jess will not feed them, nor supply | ¥8S first produced by Meierhold in| Fredericks; and others. Screen — | have been able to reach the work- | enthusiastic meetings ever held in| them with relief or jobs, any more/ Moscow and the production for the Eddie Quillan, in “Night Work. ers in the A. F. of L, locals, the re- | this section, when Ambassador Hall) than the Municipal Employment Guild, made by Herbert Biberman, 18) 7 nae rinian Roth. On the! BL. sponse has been very favorable. | was filled to-capacity by workers | Agency registration that has al-| based, but does not follow, that of| oo wer Man", with Helén| Tues Eve. | who came to greet Israel Amter! ready taken place,” declared Eng-| Meierhold. The setting is by Lee yo tice ana Phi Hotmea in| Wee,” jand Si Nessin, © unist can-!dahl. “Yet this is all Mayor James | Simonson and the cast employs 20 ‘ P | Thurs, Mf 1 ee lS oe iaibal’ Gl | the leading roles. Other acts to be | Thurs. Eve. | didates in the Bronx district. J. Walker and his Tammany Hall | Occidental and 60 Oriental players. ade of the Mags ible ib alll Fri. Eve... Israel Amter is Communist can-| administration has to offer as it) Among those having important roles) oo are: bie leh, me fob 7 Rat. Mae didate for Congress from the 23rd) continues to plunder the city treas-| are Edward Cooper, Eric Blore, Rey-| ahr ont Se rf - | “GREEN COCKATOO. and é sakes 1 r " «eh | nolds Denniston, Eva Condon, Wini- | ments”; Marion Wilkins and Revue;| rRoM ALFAQUEQUE Congressional District (Bronx) and|ury with pay increases for high | nolds 2 » and Johhnie Berk d Vesta Wal-, Extra Mat. ROMEO and JULIET Sam Nessin is Communist candi-| salaried oficials as one of the more | fred Hanley, Erskine Sanford, Wil- taok 4k eto he ik O6te, WAl" | cinction Da 40 an date for State Senator from the 17th respectable forms of graft. liam Gargan, Don Su, Grace Chee iQ - wid ‘Seatsiwks.adv.atBoxOff.@T’nHall,113W.43 Senatorial District (Bronx). “It is clear that only the demands | ®4 Sam Kim. SCENE FROM “SOIL” Nesin Gets Ovation lof the Delegation of the Unem- ens When the chairman of the meet-| ployed Councils of Greater New HIPPODROME — Vaudeville: Ma- VIC REPERTORY "42 5%; 60 47, Hvenings J boc, $1, $1.59. EVA LE GALLEN Op “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR | | MASQUE 45th St. "42% 2 B07 Mats. Wednesday and Sati 2:30 NINA ROS. New Musical Romance, with Y ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY, ARMIDA, LEONARD CEELBY, Others MAJESTIC THEA,, 44 ‘of Broadway Eve, 8:30. Sai 130, Chi 2600 THE GREEKS HAD ARTHUR HOPKINS *Presents | TORCH SONG _ A.WORD FOR IT) { New drama by Kenyon Nicholson | SAM H. HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B'y |! Starving Ex-Soldier Not Allowed to Work | for 35c Meal, Jailed) NEW YORK. — Sam Goldberg, | starving unemployed worker who} served in the army throughout the) world war, was jailed for five days VEUE'TARIAN RESTAURANT 1) Alwayn @ind It at ¢o tine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons (pear 174th St. Statto; eHOND INTERVALD. ores. ‘itoMKo 4 & Mon. Be. Nov. RATIONAL _ here for having gone into the Mon-| ing announced that Sam Nessin who| York, placed before the Board of | tion Sunshine; Dainty Marie; Galla- | e P My roe Cafeteria on Delancey St. where | was present in the hall, was not in| Baticaates, properly meet the tre-| Rini & Sister; Bob Anderson & | Plymouth Iie Rebied Evening 8:50, Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30)/ Vegetarian he ate a 35 cent meal and begged/ a position to speak (much as he|mendous problem growing out of | “Dixie”; Earl Faber & Company; ei Shenae pect a i | RESTAURANT to be allowed to work it out wash- | would like to) due to the severe and|the increasing misery now facing| George Niblo & Funsters; Cole I uae Scaeane (0) 4 a |! ing dishes. He did not have a cent, | brutal beating that he received last | the working masses of the world’s| Brothers, and Matsumoto Japs. GLOBE {/*8, 8, pany from renee Ie SECOND Mico | Screen:Bert Wheeler and Robert | Woolsey in “Half Shot at Sunrise” | | with Dorothy Lee. i the whole audience | and was willing to work all day for the meal. The manager refused, and had him arrested. week in the city hall (by order of Mayor Walker) when he with, other, delegates dared to present the de- mands of the unemployed workers, richest city.” WHEELER & WOOLSEY m4 Strictly Vegetarian Food Half Shot at Sunrise ee et | Rex Beach's Great Drama The SILVER HORDE with EVELYN BRENT rade Amter, AG, i "| arose and cheered for five minutes, EIGHTY-SIXTH STREET — To V | doct McCrea, Toute Wolheim, 30 A.M: Y All Gomroaes Meet at Party Activities, ae ene mimes, | singing the International. i ee mpeg eset dean Arthur, maymond Hatton | Shoo 7 BRONSTEIN’S bg oe y at ; mi an 2d St. | Socialists Try Disruption On the appeal from the chairman | Pat Henning, aha coe air CAMEO 24,%,, [NOW Vegetarian Health ALL TALK AND SOUND “AFRICA SPEAKS” the workers contributed liberally to| others. Screen, the election campaign fund of the} Communist Party. The chairman) also announced that Wm. Z. Foster, Communist candidate for governor, would speak in the same hall on Oct. 31. One of the chief players in the} new Soviet film “Soil,” now in its | |second week at the 8th Street Play- house, Strangest Pleture Ever Viimed NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES UNION SQUARE RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! NOW PLAYING! The socialist party, which suc-/ ceeded last Saturday, with the aid) of their co-workers, the Tammany | police, in preventing the holding of | a Communist Party ratification | meeting in Hunt's Point Palace, tried again vainly to cause a dis- turbance by talking among them- An Electiog Campaign Rally and Ba tor the benefit of the “Vida Qbrera”. Spanish, Weekly Organ of the Com. munist Party, will be held Bat. Nov. 1, at the Harlem Casino, 116th St. and A@eission Bic in ir. Restaurant Phone: LEHIGH 6382 558 Cler-mont Parkway, Bronx ‘nternational Barber Shop M, W. SALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 103rd & 104th Stes.) Ladies Bobe Our Specialty HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian ican tas aad Latin American Ci gether with other features Will mark pleasant evening. Please keep this aan Ae | selves. Private Beaaty Parlor Dynamic, Dramatic Thunderbolt! RESTAURANT ora.) ant te Work—pld Enat ya bod Amter Cheered ‘ RKO ACTS The Mightiest Picture to Come Out of Russia! 1600 MADISON 4 1 Hiection Rally of the Young Com-| When the chairman introduced the Sy6naa Nleve6unua Bobby Jarvis \ Phone: UNI versity munist League, Tues., Oct. 28. 8 p. m.. ry 0 at the Manhattan | Lyceutn. Ali| last speaker of the evening, Com- - and Co. young workers are invited. ~ WN Bobe Hope os casbeoae ‘ sae tR Bal ton 2 “For All Kinds of Insurance” DR. A. BROW! ine oe y “hone: Stuyvesant 3916 meets . om 6. ly Green Dentist aby John’s Restaurant 01 Bast 14 Cor. Second Ave. berincregh id SPHCIALTY: (TALIAN DisHES 1 . Cor. Bolleclaire Bros, ‘A place with at: ory Labor and Fraternal Qa. wnay wi we tees OVER ASIA sph fnatanat Velephone: Murray ti ° ag K, 22th St. New York Clothing Badly Needed Scientific Examination of eye PRODUCED BY MBJRABPOMFTLM OF MOSCOW —— .|1 Kast 42nd Street. New York Be eee cree tetas conte: suits rer — slasses—Carefully adjusted by Prospect ieist bilby yal PUDOVKIN Director, ot cane, eet ; And shoes. ees a 10 E. 17th PO swer oi¢ otties Hours Cooperators! Patronise expert eink, an hed Rusela's Foremost etna b Peotnen” | Auvertoe vd eel Mootiuns Sunday! 10 a 4 Nn | here. Por information write waa, Chamalore’ Commaden snd? | SEROY aun 4 Rein weno LAUREL AND HARDY COMEDY aoventone [J “7 7 HMO a” | Report WLR, local, 10 8. 17th St. DR. J. LEVIN | CHEMIST Lee Gal | UNION SQUARE |. popular | ie ‘ heli AG hearsnl ‘Turn the Girne” SURGEON DENTIST | n ’ a Ensemble | ACME THEA Ave. et Vath St NA Woon tS |] 150: AVENUE U Ave, U Bta., B.M.T. wdit: pranee 1650 EX AVE eames $1 | Wheeler & Mortor] JAMES GLEASON | | 0 eed Broad Aye Prices | 60 Bast 13th St. New York City fp, M,_no experience neces- |] At East 15th St BROOKLYN, N_ Y- tstabrook 3215 Bronx, NY. ote hath RIGARDO CORTEZ. em Be FRO Serer ieee , somin SENS * i ho \ ‘