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ORGANIZE IN SHOPS FOR MASS | VIOLATION OF THE INJUNCTIONS Smash the Injunctions Committee of Trade Union Unity Council Leads Fight | Needle Workers Especially Must Prepare to} Fight at Zelgreen’s; Their Turn Next | NEW YORK —Shop organization for huge demonstrations in mass vio- lation of the injunctions is the slogan of the Smash the Injunctions Com- mittee of the Trade Union Unity Council just now. A meeting of the committee yesterday took immediate steps to carry the preparations down into the masses, to rally shock forces, to explain to the workers and jobless of New York the desperate need for & fight now, a prepared, organized determined and skillful fight for the right to strike. Every shop meeting during the next few days especially (and if there are none they must be called) should organize for the next mass demon- stration at Zelgreen Cafeteria at the moment called for by the Smash the Injunction Committee. The shop or- ganizations must have their leader register them with the Smash the Injunctions Ci ttee, at 16 West 2ist St. They must organize at once! There will be mobilization meetings preceding the next mass demonstra- tion. Labor Defense n it ne LL.D. is rais- r the defense of these fight every case to | back of the arrested ses not only in t outside. < Released. s been won in the case | of si pickets who have al- | ready served terms for “disorderly conduct,” and have been held in jail waiting trial on Paragrph 600. The | boss at Zi en's told so many dif- rent and conflicting lies in the] {hearing in court yesterday that the | case had to be thrown out. The| | workers thus released are: J. Brucher, |A. Blanca, Paul Deza, Louis Tucker, | |K. Pincof and Morris Modin. Nine | jothers who have not served any time | lyet in this case will be tried before | Special Sessions on Paragraph 600 charges Dec. 1 and t funds workers, and w the end, picket New York Av | they were in every way discriminated jagainst and abused. While being led 'to trial today, Blanca and Modin | Communists Must Act. | were beaten up severely. All were re- Communist Party units have a seri- |peatedly told that if they made any ous task, to rally their own-forces for |complaints they would be beaten. the organization of the shop forces | They were placed six in a small cell, to violate the injunction. Every Com- |left without blankets, and the win- munist has the task of co-operating |dows (which they could not reach } with the unions and the Smash the | Were opened. Wheh they shouted for | Injunction Committee plan to or-|blankets during the freezing night, ganize the forces in the shops, for | they were threatened with a slugging. THE ADVENTURES DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1930 — PROVE OHIO MINE BLAST IS MURDER Have Prevented Risk MILLSFIELD, Ohio, Nov. 7.—As a result of the speed-up in the Sun- day Creek ‘Coal Co. Mine No. 6, 79 miners are dead following a blast. More deaths are expected. There is a discrepancy in the figures. The company admits 148 were trapped underground and only 21 rescued alive. Reports from miners here 'TO STUDY LATIN | | AMER. REVOLTS, The workers who were in jail say| Experts Say Boss Could) Workers School Offers! Course | NEW YORK.—The Workers School | Worker, the fighting organ of the} is taking a great step forward in creating a class for Party and non- Party workers to study the revolu- tionary movements in Latin Am- erica. The Latin American problem is} right at our door and the present | uprisings in those countries are but | OF BILL WORKER To Geoace tray FOR Feeney BN. Tee LAND BELONGS Te Tee WORKERS RYAN WALKER. USSRL by {ls (; g Food Shop Delegates Meet Monday at 7:30 NEW YORK —A shop delegates conference of food workers is called yy the Food Workers’ Industrial Union to meet Monday, at 7:30 p. m. at 16 West 21st St. The purpose is to discuss ways and means to put on @ permanent financial basis the Food And Negro Oppression in Pittsburgh Meet PTTSBURGH, Nov. 7.—At the CONSULATE ON ! While in Western Ukraine the} F.W.LU. | Ann Harding in “The Western Pennsylvania Conference for the Protection of the Foreign Born, held last Sunday at Walton Hall, Pittsburgh, delegates of 41 organiza- tions were present, representing 12,- 000 members. Polish fascist forces of Marshal Pil- sudski go on murdering and plunder- ing 4in their punitive expeditions | against the Ukrainian workers and | peasants, the courts of fascist Poland jare doing their part, manufacturing death and long term hard-labor sen- RAP ATTACKS ON | HOLD MASS DEMONSTRATION THIS FOREIGN BORN) NOON IN FRONT OF THE POLISH EAST 67TH STREET Affair Sunday to Help Raise Funds to Send YD, Gonzalez to USSR NEW YORK.—As a part of the W.LR. campaign to raise a $300.00 fund to send Comrade Dolores Gon- ne | Girl of the Golden 4 39 The conference was called to order WwW est at th i Cameo by Delegate Spoljarich, of the Local A talking version of “The Girl} provisional Committee. Delegate Ho- | tences. In Biala Podlaska three mili- zalez to the Soviet Union, the Har- j tant workers, Kagan, Sosnowies and jem Branch of the W.LR. has ar immediate response to the call for | When they tried to send out messages Show that despite the fact the mine mass demonstration whenever it shall }or buy cigarettes as the other pris- | W@S gaseous and in an extremely | between rival imperialists and the day at the Cameo Theatre. In its’ pate summers secretary. Delegate be sent out by the Smash the Injunc- |onrs were allowed to do, they were dangerous condition, open flame} working class for control. |new medium the story harks back | Gostrell reported for the National tions Committee. |denied these privileges and their lamps were permitted as the com-| 47... many of our own comrades | to the original drama by David Be- | Provisional Committee. Delegate Bo- > tek was interested in pushing its | , money taken. a Rata pigec ee ae pea! know what is the Monroe Doctrine? lasco. As sen and heard on the! rich (from the Mine, Oil and Mmel- | Niebieski were sentenced recently to| ranged an affair for Sunday, Novem- ideath. Only the mighty protest of per 9, at 8:30 p. m., with an elaborate the international working class can’ program of entertainment. save them from the bloody grip of fascist hangmen. a beginning of the gigantic struggle of the Golden West,” will open to- | vat was elected chairman and dele- Oe N y Must Rally. i Tr ip Nehesab crn ace a | i How many realize the tremendous| talking screen, follows the Belasco | ter workers Union), Cush (from the , Comrade T. | Zarski, Communist Airy. Large here is to be a special conference | An “investigation” is bein, meee i ‘i A i | 2 deputy to the Polish Diet, was sen- | n “investigation” is & under~ | penetration of Latin America by Am-| text very closely in dialogue and) yetai workers Industrial League) t © of the organizers of the Needle | D | taken under the supervision of the |.4 ; 7 | i F \3 "/tenced to 8 years of hard labor for |] Manting Trades Workers’ Industrial Union| WERUE [ wie ey ee ° |erican capital? How many know any | Conrusion. Ann Harding is rye | Chandler (Young Communist Lea-|ieaqing the demonstration of unem 2290! 9oms an at Saas | ~ ae | U. S. Bureau of Mines. | thing of the conditions of the toiling | Girl—the role created twenty-five | gue), stal and others» spoke on the hetiac j =f 5 weh the Smash the Injunction Com- | The speed-up system in Millsfield,| workers and peasants in these coun-| Years ago by Blanche Bates. James | °’ Bloyed. The jails of fascist Poland TO AIR mittee to plan the organization and | mobilization of the needle workers | back of the mass violation campaign. | Of all workers, the dressmakers, soon | to face a terrific struggle in the vic- | inity of the Zelgreen cafeteria, cen- | tral point of the struggle just now, | should take a leading part in the de- | fense against injunctions. Injunc- tions will descend on the dress strike | in a torrent. Every strike now is the | Scene of an attempt by bosses and AFL. to smother it in injunctions, | to arrest all active strikers and pick- | ets and send them up under the in- | famous “Paragraph 600.” All Are Invalued. | >-ery militant union and every | i ial worker {s concerned and i get into the fight. | ne Zelgreen cafeteria strike is a typical case. In order to bring back the 12-hour day, the boss broke with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union and made a contract with the AFL. | union, and the business agent of local ON STRIKE PLANS Many Dressmaker Del- egates Meet NEW YORK.—The report given by Uotash to the shop conference on the dress strike, Thursday, brought out facts and figures of the tremen- dous profits made by those who have {a controlling interest in the dress trade, at the expense of the misery of the workers, unemployment and speed-up. It showed how the manu- facturers were enabled with the aid |of the company unions to bring about tremendous increases in pro- { ductions with a decreased number of workers. It proposed in behalf of the Industrial Union, plans for the complete mobilization of every sec- tion of the dress trade for the strike. 100 Rank and Filers Lead. 502 of the A.F.L. union got the boss an netion. Every picket demon- st theie srnce then has been attac.ed by police. Thursday the Police were out in large numbers, blocking off the whole area, equipped with patrol wagon and emergency wagon, and kept everybody moving. Pile Up Bail. The tactics of the bosses’ courts now is to pile up bail on the arrested Pickets to a point where the unions Party Activities, | The proposals to elect a rank and | file committee of 100, to organize an | unemployed and colonizers council, to conduct work in the residential | sections, particularly in the Negro} and Spanish sections, to organize de-| fense corps, were enthusiastically greeted and accepted. Many rank and file workers of the hundreds present, open shops, com- | pany union and industrial union which resulted in 79 deaths, is being followed throughout the country. NEW YORK. — A release from Washington, D. C. by the Science Service, Friday, says that the blast which occurred at Millsfield would never have taken place “if every mine were to use precautionary measures such as rock dusting.” The Service goes on to say: “The safety division of the Bu- reau of Mines has found that al- though rock dusting would cost less than one per cent per ton of coal, only a small percentage of the mines in this country are thor- oughly rock dusted. The Millfield mine was not even partly rock dusted.” Rather than lose a few cents in profits, the bosses infinitely prefer: to have the workers blown to bits. The same is true in every other industry |in the United States, where rational- ization is being pushed to the limit to keep up profits during the present crisis. They Admit It. Several days ago Secretary of Com- merce Lamont admitted that in 1929, at least 23,000 workers lost their lives in industry, and 3,000,000 were in- jured. The speed-up will be pushed more drastically in the months to come, shops, took the floor and related the} bringing up the death rate in indus- | |misery conditions in the open and try all along the lines. The workers | company union shops. |must prepare to fight against this | | Particularly interesting was a Ne-/ vicious speed-up and negligence of | tries? Of the real facts in the Anglo- | American rivalries in the Caribbean area? | Last year the export of this coun- | try to other countries amounted to the huge sum of $5,135,000,000, and | imports $4,095,000,000, and with South | America alone the imports amounted to $570,000,000 and exports to $480,- 000,000. Cuban sugar is bought by the Uni- | ted States bosses at between 1.40 and | 1.70 per pound, which simply means ; one penny and a half. Yet the| | Workers in the United States have to | Pay 5 and 6 cents a pound and often |more. Coffee is picked up at between |5.40 and 5.75, which means 5% cents | per pound, and how much the Am-| |erican workers have to pay for ‘it? | | Anywhere from 35 to 50 cents a |pound. This shows how terrifically | the toiling masses of Latin America | are exploited. To be able to attack the plans of | the imperialists and rally the work-| ing class to support of the Latin! |American masses we must educate | | ourselves on conditions in Latin Am- erica. Every class-conscious worker should register for this class at the Workers School. | Anti-Imperialist | Meet in Los Angeles Sunday, November 16 LOS ANGELES, Nov. 7.—At a 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. ' ee Section 4, Harlem Workers Forum Subject: Russian Revolution, at 308 Lenox Avenue, Sunday 3 p: m ea ea Unit D. W. Reps. Section 5 Meet Saturday, 2 headquarters, 509 ‘ Bronx. Plans will be m - cessful Daily Worker circulation campaign in the section. Labor and Fraterral 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. Spe ee “Young Defenders” will an open forum on “Russia Tod which will mark the first in a series of educational forums. Sunday, Nov. 9, at t 4p. m., 1400 Boston Road. Dancing afterwards, “ae Dance Under Auxpices of Anti-Fas- cint Allinnce of N. A. Harlem Section will be held Sat. 8 Pp. m, at 2011 Third Ave. bet. 110th and 111th St. Admission 35c, Lecture Auspices Women's Council 16 Sunday at 7 p. m. at Columbia Hall Lake and Stone Ave., Brooklyn. A comrade just returned from the U.S. §.R, will speak. ri Brownsville Workers Open Forum This Sunday, § p. m. at Brownsville Workers Center, 105 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn. Subject — “Results and Lessons of the Elections.” Midnight Performance in the Bronx Saturday night, 11.30 p. m. at the Boston R . Wilkins Ave and Freeman § jubway Station. Show- ing “Chin 8.” Complete pro- gram. CEE | Conference of Food Workers Monday, 8 p. m.. at 16 W. 21 St after which a general fraction meet- ing will be held. All party mem- bers must attend. * eo # Conference Food Workers Monday. 8 p. m., at 16 W. 21 St., after which there will be a general fraction meeting. All patry members must attend. TR The Young Defenders Celebrate the 12th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution, Sunday, 4 DP. m., at 1400 Boston Road, Com- plete program: An open forum con- ducted by a member of the F.S.U, and a flelegate recently returned from the Soviet Union: then dancing to the tune of the Melody Musketeers, and finally a movie depicting the Sirusmles of revolutionary workers in Europe and in the U. 8 All work- ers are invited. % ‘~~ gro worker, a dressmaker, Anna Mor- | ris, who called upon the white work- | \ers to unite with the Negro workers jin a struggle to improve their con- |ditions. The speech of the Negro | worker was greeted with tremendous | enthusiasm. | | Cloak Meeting Nov. 12. | On Wednesday at 6 p. m. at Coop- jer Union, the United Front Cloak | Committee is calling a mass meet- |ing of cloakmakers, to mobilize the cloakmakers in a struggle against the attempt to introduce piece work, and generally worsen the conditions. | ; A leaflet issued by the N. T. W. I. | U. endorses the United Front mass meeting at Cooper Union and calls on all cloakmakers to come to this | meeting. | Open Forums Tomorrow. *On Sunday, the following open) forums will take place in the resi- dential sections of the city, for the | preparation of the dress strike. | Co-operative Auditorium, 2700) | Bronx Park East, 7 p. m. | Williamsburg Workers Club, 68 Whipple Street, Brooklyn, 12 noon. onx Workers Club, 1622 Bath Gate Ave., Bronx, 6 p. m. | Coney Island Workers’ Club, Neptune Ave., C. 1, 6 p. m. | 140 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. I" | Scientific Examination of eye | glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. 9. Goldin. § * OPTOMETRISTS-OPTICIANS 1690 LEX AVE, the bosses. ALL ALLERTON INHABI- TANTS AND CO-OPER- ATIVE HOUSES Buy your bakeries in the well- known bakery which is a strict union shop affiliated Food Workers I fresh four times a day right from the ov Everything ix baked in a nice light and xnnitary bakery open for Inspection to everybody Wendrow’s Bakery 691 Allerton Avenue, Bronx 29 EAST 14TH STREET "NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations | 25% ‘REDUCTION TO CITY ra Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by | WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. ander personal snpervision of AND UNION WORKERS DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SKCOND AVENUE Corner isth Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Bye and far tn ry sicomsels.s! ‘oerew Vouk ww \ Telephone Stuyvesant 3830 ——— meeting of Anti-Imperialists and sympathizers of the oppressed peoples ot the various colonial countries, held here a branch of the Anti-Imperial- ist League was formed. | The presence of great numbers of people from the colonies of United | States on the Pacific Coast and es- , pecially in Southern California gives |this branch a good opportunity to |rally them together to oppose Amer- ican Imperialism and to help them |liberate themselves from this oppres- sion. WORKERS CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to NEW WORKERS CENTER 50 E. 13th St. (1 fl. up) ' . nternational Barber Shop M W SALA Prop 2016 Second Avenue. New York (bet 103rd & 104th Sted Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh ‘ % | issue affecting the working class and Rennie plays Dick Johnson, the road | the foreign aang particularly. | arent, while Harry Bannister essays)“ ¢ was unanimously decided that the the part of the sheriff, Jack Rance, delegates upon their return to their which was acted by Frank Keenan) joanizations should teke up the rg io as Te yoke HeEsOR | question of raising funds for the del- | Dillon. | egation to the national conference to | ; be held in aWshington, D. C. on Dec. | 30, the day before the opening of | the Congress. | The estern Pennsylvania Confer- ence elected a committee of 15 to carry on the work. Delegates Note, : A | Korenich and Chapa were elected Sire a nee delegates to the national conference. eae eee aaa cae | Denounce Oppression of Negroes and Richard Strauss, “Dance of the Seven|, A Tesolution denouncing the at- Veils,” from the Opera “Salome,” Op. | tacks on the foreign born and Ne- 54; Schubert, Symphony No. 3, in D od workers was unanimously adopt- | major; & . | ed. pa Eine Ge eae The Jim Crowing and the blood- | Klange,” Op. 235. thirsty lynching of Negroes, and the Saturday morning, under the direc- | bills proposed by Senators Blease and { tion of Ernest Schelling, the orches- | Heflin and Congressmen Cable eat tra will give their second Children’s | Ashwell calling for registration, pho- | concert at Carnegie Hall. tographing and fingerprinting of for- | ¥e eign born as if they were criminals | | besides providing for their deporta- PHILHARMONIC The Philharmonic Orchestra under | the direction of Erich Kleiber, will! give their next concerts this evening and tomorrow afternoon at Carnegie MIDNITE PERFORMANCE | ‘tus masts: ‘eee 2 Uf cw are crowded with over 10,000 poli- tical prisoners. In 76 cities and in- dustrial towns of Poland the mass demonstrations of unemployed were clubbed, shot at and gassed by Pil- sudski’s police and military forces during this year. 1H] Trying to suppress the rising revo- lutionary tide within the country with bloody terror, the fascist gov- ernment of Poland at the same time, feverishly prepares a new war against | the fatherland of the workers, the| Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. | Workers! Demonstrate against the | bloody fascist dictatorship in Poland | this Saturday, 1:30 p. m., in front of | the Polish Consulate, 151 East Sixty- Seventh St., near Lexington Ave.| Protest the fascist terror! Defend | the Soviet Union! fel. ORChara 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 45-50 DELANCEY STREET Vor Eldridze st W YORK Continue to Celebrate the 13th Jubilee of the Soviet Union TONIGHT at 11:30 Sharp Boston Road, Cor. Wilkins Av.| KI GLOBE ssh, St. [Pally trom Bway fto:30 A.M. | THE CAT CREEPS with Helen Twelvetrees, Raymond Hackett and Ty Neil Hamilton CAMEO 2 ay [NOW THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST | with Ann Harding, 3 Rennie & Harry Bani THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT. A COMEDY BY ZOE AKINS SAM H, HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B'y | Evening 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 BOSTON ROAD THEATRE Freeman St. Subway Sta. CHINA EXPRESS SOVIET MOVIE Latest Soviet Newsreel CHINESE PROGRAM (in Chinese) Freiheit Gezangs Farein IN NEW NUMBERS Tickets 55 Cents Auspices: Frethelt Gezangs Farein of Bronx, and Bronx Workers Club IDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY _ON THE SPOT with CRANE WILBUR and ANNA MAY Wt We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat EDGAR WALLACE’S FORREST THEA, 49 W. of Bly, Evs, 8:50, Mts. W. & S. 2:30 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THY HIT YOU HEAR ABOUT 44TH STREE THU AtHE W. of Btway Eves. 8:40. — Mate, Wed. & Sat., 2:40 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances AMUSEMENTS Suitable for tings. Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 KE. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 —— 3y6uaa Jleyebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 Bast 14th St.. Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 “For Alu Kinds of Insurance (CARL: BRODSKY | felephone: Murray G1I) 555: | 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Theatre Guild Productions =" ELIZABETH, ° ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK. TEA. 5th St. Bys. 8:50. Mts. Th. & Sat, —on the seree LOWELL SHERMAN in THE PAY OFF with Marion Nixon Oth. AVE. ¢ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts, ve ee ee A Genuine Comedy Ait with ROGER PRYOR MUSIC AND CONCERTS Philharmonic Symphony KLEIBER, conductor METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE Carnegio Hall This ‘Sun, Aft. at 3:00 KRiNEK—STRAUSS—SCHUBERT MOZART—JOSEPH STRAUSS TOSCANINI, conductor Boulevard Cateteria 841 SOUTHERN BLVD. vegetables are served all year round 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 36TH STREET BRONSTEIN'S |i] mae mr iy tas Vegetarian Health bgpeomapsay 12 jesahi gh geed Restaurant ARTHUR JUDSON, M (Steinway) Cler-mont Parkway. Bronx IVIC REPERTORY Vien at, oth a 17 FOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S ) 600, $1, $1.5 EVA LE G: & Orchestra Lewis & Ames Billy Dooley&Co. Alexander and Santos O'Neil & Manners BRENT LOUIS WOLHEIM Joel McCrea Prospects 101 st. Jean ur RKo acts | in. REX BEACH'S Primrose Semon | 1h i Matt Shelv JIL ' Dance Parade Edgar Bergen and Co, Tempest and Dickinson Sentsiwke.adv atBox( ft.’ nHall.113W.43 Suits —_ Overcoats 2)= Comrades, Patronize PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A. Cor. Sixth St. Clean Wholesome Food. CAFE EUROPA 317 EAST 13TH STREET, (Near 2nd Ave.) “F. W. I. U. Place.” RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD sHoW! | Cooperators! 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N ¥ DEWEY 9914 — Office Hours: ’ a A. M.-9 P.M. Sunday: 10 A, M1 Po M. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1301 AVENUE U Ave. U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. Y. |S Re |DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE | Reom 808—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not eonnected with any . VEGE'LAHIAN Dairy RESTAURANT comrades ‘Will Always Find ft le, it to Dine Oar Place 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons (near 114th St. Station) Bi INTERVALB e@HON RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, UB Bet. 12th and 18th Sta, | Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6868 “hone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant |] SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere | where all radicals Mmect 02 E. 12th St. New York | || Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. , 50 East 13th St, New York City |