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— Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YO! RK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1930 TAMMANY POLICE MAKE ZELGREEN CAFETERIA INTO AN ARMED CAMP Elections Are Over, and Whole Force of Bosses Government Will Be Used to Smother Strikes Greater Mobilization, Better Preparation for Mass Violation Imperative; Fight Goes On > WORKERS PLAY AT. 7 ] if WOMEN S CONCERT |= number of sluggers to save the | employers of New York from strikes. | In defense of the 12-hour day in this little cafeteria, now a focal point in the battle between the city gov- ernment, the bosses, the police, the A. F, L—all on the side of injunc- tions and strikebreaking—and the militant workers and jobless on the other, these police came out. The emergency wagon with its tear gas| was there. The patrol wagon was there. The mounted cops were there. | | And there was one policeman every | few feet along 34th St. between Sev-| enth and Eighth Av with a half | dozen clustered directly in front of NEW YORK —An_ unprecedented exhibition of police force yesterday in front of Zelgreen’s Cafeteria drove home th elesson that within two] days after the election was out of Celebrate 7th Amer. United Council NEW YORK._Emphasizing the need of workers’ wives understanding and sympathizing with the struggles | of their husbands, is the message brought home; in the little one act Play to be presented at the Seventh Anniversary cele ion of the United Council of Working Class Women. The celebration will take the form of @ gala concert, with new numbers by the Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra as the drawing card, Friday, Nov. 21/ elgreen’s, and the joint was full of at 8 p. m. Manhattan Lyceum, 66) A. F. L. thugs and detectives. E. Fourth St. | Workers Must Rally. | The wife of a striking window; The Smash-The-Injunctions Com- cleaner, who does not understand the | mittee of the Trade Union Unity meaning of struggle and blames her | Council considered a greater mob- husband for the privations they suf- | ilization of workers necessary than fer, is shown to develop into an ac- | was obtained yesterday, and that it| tive partner once she understands | was better tactics to get more forces| the role of the working class women. | together before mass violation dem- Fresh efforts to mobilize mass vio- lation of the injunctions are being made. Better and much more exten- sive methods of reaching the masses | with the appeal to mobilize, and more complete preparations for jarge demonstrations must be worked out by the committee. Tickets are ready for purchase and | onstrations, and confined yesterday's | may be gotten at any of the councils | action to a distribution of leaflets, in New York. | The fight is just beginning and a oe ae a reer | will go on. It is absolutely necessary |to smash the injunction evil in New REDS BOMB ARD York. At present injunctions are Es | granted in every strike, and if al-| 9 |lowed to stand, permit arrest of all MELLON’S TOWN pickets, with double or triple sen- | tences, usually one for disorderly} — | conduct, one for contempt of court, | and another for violation of Para-| Shower of L ea f ] e t Ss | graph 600 of the penal code, which/ Eludes Guards provides a trial without jury and| RSE |prison for those who violate injunc-| PITTSBURGH, Nov. 5.— Andrew | tions. Mellon's fortified town, Alquippa, | A. F. L. Aids Bosses. where Mellon’s largest steel mill is} In the Zelgreen cafeteria case, as located and closely guarded fromjin most such cases, the A. F. L. di- Communist influence not only by the | rectly aids the bosses. The Zelgreen| usual methods of the steel companies | cafeteria broke its contract with the through their coal and iron police, | Food Workers’ Industrial Union, and but also by a special squad of stool-/|in return for the 12-hour day and| Pigeons who are purposely planted/an injunction, together with the as “workers” in the mills, was show- | promise of plenty of A. F. L. sluggers, ered by Communist leaflets on Mon- | signed up with Local 302, the A. F. L.| day afternoon by an aeroplane | organization. Business Agent Ep-| Passing over the town. stein of Local 302 not only points out In Aliquippa no one who looks like | to the police what pickets he wants| @ worker, is permitted to enter unless | arrested but appears in court to he has a job at the mill. Recently a | prosecute them. Over 20 are held comrade that dated to enter this| for trial on Paragraph 600 for pick-| town by bus was ordered by the/eting Zelgreen at present. company police to immediately board| “The workers must learn the les- ‘an outgoing bus. son, that this is a serious matter,” Three comrades are now serving a| stated Fred Biedenkapp, chairman 5-year sentence in penintentiary | of the Smash-The-Injunctions Com-| under trumped up charges of “sedi- |mittee of the T.U.U.C. yesterday. tion” for merely celebrating the 13th | “Unless they come out in large anniversary of the Soviet Revolution | masses to picket, and make large| in this Mellon town. | demonstrations in violation of the| The dropping of thousands of Com- | iNjunctions, the right to strike is lost munist election campaign leaflets was / With the loss of the right to picket joyously greeted by the workers and|!n New York.” ® shock to the company. To the bosses it seemed that an enemy airplane attack was taking place and sure enough they were not mistaken. The steel companies of Monessen and McKeesport are having their own | troubles. Wherever they turn they see | red and it makes them wild, as the red on the walls contains Communist slogans and Vote Communist. Crowds of workers gathered watch- ing the company police working di- ligently, scraping off the terrible hand-writing on the wall. Some of | this writing has been done so well that they have to employ stonecutters Garage Workers Put in 105 Hours for $20 NEW YORK.—Unorganized Broo- lyn garage workers work 105 hours a week for 20. Twenty per cent are un- employed and of these 90 per cent to chip it off from the rocks. are Negroes. | One Negro family man who has hn | been employed as a car washer for P; rty Activities, 115 years was discharged and replaced by the boss’ unemployed brother-in- All notices for this column can jaw who agreed to work for $10 less. be run only for three days includ- | fing the date of the affair, due to the enormous amount of notices | handed in. Unit D. W. Reps. Section 5 Meet Saturday, 2 p. m., at Section | Daily Worker Jamboree for Red Army Builders. Food. Informal fun. } If you've sold Dailies you get in free. 9th floor. 35 East 12th St. | once more over the strenuous pro- THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER THE EXPLOI TERS SATIN THEUSA. Two Systems. By RYAN WALKER. TN USSR. THERE ARE V0 Be OF wes AND THE WERKERS, JUDGE DENIES YOUNG WORKER AN ATTORNEY] “ing. “W.Va, ‘Today, | |The District Organizer of the} the case five times within 24 hours Young Communist League, Comrade and ordering the International Labor | Tom Scott goes to trial in Wheeling, | Defense lawyer out of court so she| west Virginia, on November 6th. could not be defended by an attor-j| The charge against him is “sedi- ney, Jeannette Rubin, member of the} tion” which if executed means a seri- Young Communist League, was sen-| tence of ten to twenty years. The tenced to two days in jail for dis- | trial takes place in a town which is tributing pamphlets, in front of the! nationally known as a seat of black armory on 52nd St. reaction. Jennette Rubin, young girl work-| Comrade Scott was arrested on er, was arrested on a complaint made August First at the demonstration by Lieutenant Hahn for handing out against imperialist war and for the the “Rebel Guard,” a Young Com-| defense of the Soviet Union. The munist League pamphlet, in front of charge of “sedition” against him is the 212th Coast Artillery. When she} another indication of the growing appeared Wednesday in court with! campaign of persecution against the the I. L. D. attorney before Judge YX ditiniiae © F Hulon Capshaw, the judge ooking! pictriet Com: ist League in this over the pamphlet immediately post- poned the case for later in the morn-| The District Committee calls upon all young and adult workers to save ing. When the case was called he postponed it for the afternoon and} Comrade Scott from a long jail term. then in the afternoon he postponed | This we can do only through organiz- it once more for yesterday. When| ‘8 @ Powerful movement against the the young worker appeared in court | eee ae and or We aE ot te 7 workers to free spe and assem! . yesterday the trial was postponed ide’ tie. taper (Of Cha. fi To the defense of Comrade Scott and other class war prisoners! TUUL AFFAIR TO GREET RL LU. DELEGATES CHICAGO, Nov. 5. — The Trade Union Unity League of Chicago has arranged an affair to greet the re- turned delegates from the fifth Con- ress of the RILU to be held on Sat- urday, November 15th, at the People’s Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. Comrade Sam Weisman, of the food delegation, who is now on # na- tional tour, as well as Comrade Rob- erts, a Negro stockyards worker and Communist vote was 155 in this city, |COmrades Cain and Wiliams of the a gain of 50 per cent over the 1926 {railroad delegation will be present at election. The socialists got 566, a gain | ‘he affair. of six and a half per cent. An interesting program is being ar- 2—280 RED VOTES |ranged. Food will be served by the | Food Workers Group of the T. U. U. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Nov. 5.—| Incomplete returns from Hamilton a: Bate Ss ae eagence: $d) County, Tenn., give Bell, Negro can- | 35¢ at the door. Unemployed workers a | Will be admitted free upon presenta- didate for senator on the Communist | ticket, 280 votes, and Borenstein, jtion of Unemployed Council cards. Communist candidate for governor All workers are invited to attend. 81. The highest Communist vote in |1928 was 111 in the whole state, for Foster. The Communist ticket is illegally kept off the ballot in many counties. |The total vote cast is about 150,000. NEW YORK —After postponing test of her attorney. At six o'clock in the evening when the court was| empty Judge Capshaw suddenly called the case, and when the I. L. dD. attorney protested once more the en- tire procedure, the judge called out, “You shut up or you will be thrown out of court.” And as the worker's attorney insisted upon the right of} the I. L. D. to be heard, Judge Cap- shaw ordered him out, and convicted the defendant. 50 PER CENT GAIN IN NEW HAVEN RED VOTE NEW HAVEN, Conn., Noy. 5.—The Daily Worker Jamboree for Red. Army Builders. Food. Informal fun. If you’ve sold Dailies you get in free. 9th floor. 35 East 12th St. Saturday Night, at 8 o'clock. | Greetings to the Revolutionary Paper DAILY WORKER on the 13th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution BIRCH, Section 5 New York City Harlem Section Anti-Fascist | _ Alliance of North America Greets the 13th Anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution New York City CUT PAY OF SILK WORKERS WINCHESTER, Va. (FP). — The boss cut wages 10 per cent and find- ing the Flamingo silk mill workers still on the job, decided that another little 8 per cent cut wouldn’t do any harm. That was too much for the | Weavers, though, who went on strike, | tying up the mill. The boss promised to reconsider and the weavers, unor- ganized, went back, WORKERS CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to NEW WORKERS CENTER 50 E. 13th St. (1 fl. up) LAYOFF ORLEANS WORKERS NEW ORLEANS.—(FP)—Sixty-five more employes of the New Orleans municipal repair plant have been headquarters, 569 Prospect Ave. Bronx. Plans will be made for a suc: | Saturday Night, at 8 o'clock. laid off. cessful Daily Worker circulation campaign in the section. Labor and Fraternal | All notices for this column can be run only for three days includ- | ing the date of the affair, due to | the enormous amount of notices | handed in. e264 e “Young Defenders” will hold an open forum on “Russia Today” which will mark the first in a series of educational forums. Sunday, Nov. 9, at 4 p. m., at 1400 Boston Road. Dancing afterwards. * 8 Dance Under Auxpices of Anti-F: cist Allinnce of N. A, | Harlem Section will be held Sat. 8 DP. m. at 2011 Third Ave. bet. 116th | and 111th St. Admission’ 5c. | Jersey City Workers | Will celebrate 13th Anniversary of Russian Revolution Friday, Nov. 7. | with a huge mass meeting at the Workers’ Center, 387 Henderson 8t., with prominent speakers. All work- ers invited, Pie | Lecture Auspices Women's Council 16 | Sunday at 7 p. m. at Columbia Hall, Lake and Stone Ave., Brooklyn. comrade just returned from the U.S. &R. will speak. - ‘Brownsville Workers Open Forum ‘This Sunday, 8 p. m, at Brownsville Workers Center, 105 Thatford Ave.. rooklyn. Subject — “Results and jons of the Elections.” | songs. shown. EAST 177TH STREET xht Performance in the Bronx | Saturday night, 11.30 p. m. at the | Boston Rd. Theatre, Wilkins Ave and | Freeman St. Showing “China Ex- press.” Complete program, nti-Fancist Alliance Will March iday in a body to the Bronx 01 Iiseum at 7 p. ‘m. from 2011 Third . MANHATTAN Communtat Party District Office 35 East 12th Street (5th floor) Workers Bookshop, 50 East 13th St. ©. P-Section 1, 27 KE, Fourth st. C, Pe-Section 2, 1179 Broadway ve, Members note, Thirteenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution Will be celebrated this year with more enthusiasm than ever! Remarkable Program :- 1.—“TURN THE GUNS.” A colorful mass pageant directed by the W. I, R. Workers Laboratory Theatre with chorus and ensemble of Red Dancers. 2.—Freiheit Singing Society to present a number of new revolutionary 3.—“Fighting Workers of New York.” First showing of revolutionary film portraying the fights of the New York workers. March 6 and other demonstrations and the Katovis funeral demontsration will be WILLIAM Z. FOSTER MAIN SPEAKER COLISEUM, TONIGHT Tickets in advance 25c—At the doors 35c TICKETS ARE SOLD AT THE FOLLOWING STATIONS: Directions: Lexington Ave., 180th St., Subway to East 177th Street HARLEM Park East ©, P.—Seetion 4, 808 Lenox Avenue Bronx Coop, Store«, Allerton & Barkin Int. Work Order Schools, 143 E. 103 St. BROOKLYN BRONX ©. P.—Section 6, 6% Whipple Street ©, P—BSection 5, 569 Prospect Ave, ©. P.—Section 7, 186 15th Street Bronx Coop, Restaurant, 2700 Bronx ©. P.—Section &, 108 Thatford Avenue Sedition Trial of | Scott Opens in Wheel- 50. RICH LADIES SEEKING THRILLS ‘atest Issue of Labor |2 COMMUNISTS WIN Defender Meets HOLD FAKE ANTI-LYNCH CONFERENCE, reat Popularity, IN SCOTTISH VOTE NEW YORE. (FP) — Labor De-| tonDON, Nov. 6—The Scittish fender, monthly magazine of the In-| municipal elections ended. Forty ternational Labor Defense, celebrates | Communist candidates, running on |the 13th anniversary of the Soviet | the platform of the Workers’ Char- | Revolution in a beautifully illustrat- | ter, secured 11,400 vites, one being | vis in Port ed number, probably the finest spec- elected in Prestwick and one in 3 ine | Glascow. |imen of a labor pictorial magazine | Limit Call to Society Women—Refuse Ad- mission to I. L. D. Representative and Daily Worker Reporter Same Group Used to Hold Conferences Against “Cruelty to Animals” But Stopped Getting Thrill By JENNIE COOPER ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 5—The bour- geois ladies of this city and vicinity, having got tired of the “Cruelty to} Animals” conference and seeking now | thrills to while their idle hours away, decided that a conference “to com-| rot lynching” (by empty phrases) | v vId ‘e just the thing. ‘The call was sent out by Mrs.| Jennie Daniel Ames, head of the| local fake Commission on Inter-Ra- | cial Cooperation. The conference was | called for November 1 at 10 a. m. Particular pains were exercised not to, send invitations to the class struggle | organizations, like the International Labor Defense, American Negro La- bor Congress, etc., since it was known that these stand fgr a real fight on lynching. The I. L. D. sent its representative anyway. The representative was told | “yes, we know of your organization, but we are indeed sorry we cannot let you in.” This conference, they told the representative, is called of prominent southern women who want to talk matters over—just talk mat- ters over! They do not wish to have outsiders present. The same information was given a Daily Worker reporter who tried to attend to report the proceedings. The rich ladies who just wanted to get a few thrills out of the brutal lynchings of Negroes by their class, refused to let the reporter in. “they had their own press representative,” they say. The I. L. D. calls upon all workers to support a real anti-lynching con- ference—that called by the American | Negro Labor Congress for November | 9 at Chattanooga. ARTEF Proletpen | Mordolin Orchestra || Fretheit Singing Society In a speciall program cel- ebrating the joining of the International Workers Order with the Jewish Workers Schools “mmday, Nov. at 2P.M. CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE 67th St. and Third Ave. Unusual Program The Whole Revolutionary : | Movement Will Be Represented Tickets can be obtained at the Schools and Branches of the Int'l Workers Order and at the Central Office, 143 East 103rd St, and 32 Union Square Tickets in Advance 35c at At the Door 50c s Out of That = Hocus-Pocus But No Bread New determination of the bosses to get shut of the crisis is visible in their desperate move in deciding to use the net proceeds, if any, of the Fordham - Naval Academy football game to give jobs to jobless and bring back pros- perity P.D.Q. The bosses are playing a trickier game than football. Everything to be held between now and Xmas will be under the auspices of jobless relief whether it is a bridge tea, a flea circus or a dog race. Smash boss dilly-dallying. Demand unemployment insur- ance. Wring out concessions with a mass circulation for the Daily Worker. Hasten capitalist destruction. Swing into the 60,000 campaign. Turn to page 3 for late drive bulletins. “A. F, OF L. OK’S HUNGER CREW WASHINGTON (FP). — President Hoover’s unemployment committee is “along lines suggested by the A. F. of L. convention at Boston,” states the official A. F. of L. news service. ever published in the United States. | Everything from the 5-Year Plan, WISCONSIN INDIANS Russian movies and Chinese revolt to lynching in the south, unemploy- Iced and the Fish committee is in- cluded in the November issue, | Just how the war department and the big American industrialists are | | preparing for the next war—against | | Britain, the Soviet Union, Japan —| is shown in a two page diagram of the steps taken to mobilize industry. Sender Garlin, editor, explains the | HARD HIT BY CRISIS MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 6.—The eco- nomic crisis in Wisconsin which has affected the workers and poor farm- ers has also hit doubly hard the thousands of Indians in this state. It is already admitted that the In- dians who are engaged in farming preparedness scheme which includes | or guiding tourists or working in the 14,623 manufacturing concerns and | ‘hooks up the owners of industry and | their war machine in an intimate re- | lationship. VIOLENCE INCREASES... AS WORKERS STARVE) MILWAUKEE, Nov. 6.—The condi- tions of the workers in Milwaukee are, becoming so desperate that arrests! for “crimes against property” rapidly increasing. Today’s boss press reports two rob- beries by unemployed workers. One committed by two young workers, Stanley Ryan and James Allen, who held up a filling station but were caught. When arrested the boys ad- mitted they hadn’t eaten for days| and that the gun they carried was not loaded. Another robbery was staged by a jobless worker at the | Legion lunchroom. As economic con- ditions worsen and the bosses fight against genuine relief, the unem- ployed are forced to resort to crime. are) Biway | GLOBE [AMUSEMENTS Continuous Shows and 46th Street Daily from 10:30 A, M JOHN WILLARD’S MYSTERY DRAMA "THE CAT CREEPS” with HELEN TWELVETREES RAYMOND HACKETT and NEUL HAMILTON CAMEO | “THE GIRL From Dram: With ANN HARDING, " Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD W. 52d. Ev 8:40 Mats. Th.&: 2:40 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK THEA. 45th St. West of Broadway Evs. 8:50, Mts. Th. & Sat. 2:40 THE 42nd Street and BY’ OF GOLDEN WEST” a by DAVID BELASCO dames Rennie and Harry Bannister THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOP AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B’y Eventnj HIPPODROME 43rd St. and 6th Avenue Ernest Torrence BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK SCOTLAND YARD RKO with Edmund Lowe, | | ACTS Joan Bennett, and | IVIC REPERTORY ‘th &*- oth J 800, $1, $1.60. Mtn. Th. & Sat., EVA LE GALLIENNE. Directo Tonight ‘ROMEO AND JULIET” Tom. Mat. . Tom. Night Awks.adv.atBoxOft.@T’nHall,113W.43 EDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY ON THE SPOT with CRANE WILBUR and ANNA MAY WONG EDGAR WALLACL'S FORREST THEA. 49 W. of B'y, Eva. 8:50, Mts. W. & S. 2:30 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THE HIT YOU HEAR ABOUT 44TH STRE ETH i ieay Even, 8:40, — Mats, Wed. @ Sat, 2:40 300 Balcony Seats, All rformances “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St."iets,,%7, of, Bar Mate, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 l/- Ave A, FOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S Suits and Overcoats — go to we PARK CLOTHING CO. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO_ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! JEFFERION RKO ACTS Anatole Fried- land’s 12 o'clock Revue with Marty May Marion Sunshine Dainty Marie and Co, La Marr and Boyce Frank Chapman Crystal Trio FRANKLIN Prospects ioist. RKO ACTS Osenr Stang and Orchestra Syd Moore House Schwartz and Clifford 4 Pepper Shikers Maker&Redford Gwynne & Co. Sat.+ Tues. 7, SILVER HORDE Nov.8*11, with EVELYN BRENT 22 Cor. Sixth 8t. lumber camps face the most severe winter in their history. Charles E. Brown of the State Historical Mu- seum (to the capitalist parasites the Indian masses are only an historical curiosity to be studied) admits that “many Wisconsin Indians this year face a hard winter. They are prac- tically without warm clothing, food or money. Many Indians are ask- ing assistance.” Here in the state of Wisconsin which the La Follettes and the socialists say is so “progressive” - the doubly oppressed Indians are not | allowed in the regular schools, are isolated and allowed to starve. The Daily Worker swings the angry masses into the red ranks. Join the 60,000 drive. Send subs! Bundle orders! “For AU Kinds of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hil) S55: 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N Y. DEWEY 9914 | Oftice Hours: A M.-9 PLM, Sunday: 10 A, M.-1 P M. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta,, B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N, Y¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not eonnected with any other office —MELROSE— VEG! RE! 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons (near 114th St. Station) PHONE: INTERVALD 9146. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT Bet. 12th und 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian Food / 199 SECOND AVE, JB HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 ‘hone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPRCIALTY: (ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals rmeet 102 KE. 12th St. New York Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information iorite to . The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 50 East 13th St, New York City a