The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 11, 1930, Page 2

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Wit the ‘Soviet At- For said R Ohinese Ee ments under | lism en- | The gle for indep of “democracy vicean and F PRED f N D POOR i sg MPRP KITT RIV | IW YORK Hi sth St. two in the mic noon and sent fiy eight stories beiow and mortar on the the dead men the roof of an e of the build were on thedsyir Planking, n the tenth eleventh when it Speed up orders had heavy brick load to be Planking. The men as high as they could reach, and when they started to raise r plat- form, it broke in two in the middle Eight men managed to catch the | ropes and other support and’ were saved. \ r broke. ed an extra ced on the worked up | ue five who did not are: _ + Otto Herman, 23 years old) ‘of 227 East 83rd Street. Koerner, Henry, 28, of 174 Pioneer Street, Irvington, N. J. Maser, Alfred, 35, of 508 Hast 85th . Street. Flynn. Thomas, 45, of 882 Ninth Avenue. Olsen, Michael, of 226 Union street, Brooklyn. The usual fake investigation is being made by police and district attorney's office, but the verdict Whitewasaing the company is already written. s,|now in | bers est A FL I 1 land F maintai Protest I and sy organi fend the S nd with ne t Bright Defend th Your Given by Saturday ey or t sion 25 cents. All Wo: Downt ates to aturda or ebry Orch The Wor! House lebr St. Ist foo! in addition to entertain- 1 freshments and dancing, a oviet film, “In Old Siberia.” Pi boil aches ‘Tea and Pancake Party. D invited to_the ‘Tea and body P, murders of Hands Off China” pe mperialist League of U.S. Labor and Fraternal 14, 2 2011 3rd Ave. Attendange of Officials American im-| press lackeys| lly of the “horrors”| dit Com- | t Chi ne real fascist tools Mexico and| countries, | loody rulers | League pro- national ag- nst the Soviet Union and It c ls upon all anti-} it the workers | to rally in demonstrate | sh preparedness Soviet Union. | | ze to fight i and na the Soviet jalists. The ers, all s, to organize Union” committees | committees. immediate and com- dence of the Philippines | an ‘colonies eand | of Wall Street h the organized struggle | we smash the ef-| S iaperianite and prevent | Join and build the Anti-| League. mpa LL.v, at Urban -# and 15 cf the Bronx © Youth Ciuh d 8.30 p.m. good Ad- lustrial League 30 p. m. at comrade should 1. meets on 0p. m. 80 me place. on Beach Workers Schoo] Friday. Dee. 12. t of Daily Worker he Soviet Union Meets y. 130th and Lex- speakers ect Workers uthern Blyd. o n= Worker the ¥.C.1., tons Unt 4, € I at. & f Youn orker Adis - rkers Orgo own are uy a Dally Wor! 30D. om. 5 © send Confer- a at 27 Hast . walt 40 Neptune Ave and chop suey All Brighton Beach most beautiful, costumes, by the fam estra. e Friend benefit o of the ist Commu mm at thelr h between 110 A rich ménu, good my- cente, DM. kers Film and Photo at AY veining” Party, Dem. a On’ the of Unit 5. Sec. 8. Sat- m. at Workers Center, Enst N. ¥. Bklyn, nd vefreshments free p.m. at the Great eri’ Palace. 96 Clinton St. Workere Congress, floor will fo! ized and un unemployed, Repost on the 5: 24 atrial hed discussion. hem ‘the llow. All bakers, organ- organized. employed and are urged to attend. Boro Han Unit 5 “attensioy. ery comrade tg im 79 Daily Worker Red | Bunge 1¥. at 10 am to report to unit Myrtle Ave. for Workers, 4 Attention! Dee. m. siaea, in is ‘of Communisin: a 289 . Passaic) Workers! Forum, Auspices pcammuntat Payiy, "eve; Sunde Ope Bring your dule for Su UD the work ys 6:30 bea. 3 Sunday, b sGuRnle—V. discussion. ‘at ission ised cba p.m, at, 280 Monroe fellow. work v8. inday. Dec. aoviee Chin if Rt) ite CHINESE WORKEI , | few of the many foreign born work- |the United States, | York University, and has been active nw EAA, DOULIMDEEE LU, L950 a . ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER BY The. This 16 & Conpiion) TAL OULD BE 4 -~-A News Item and its Consequences— meses BREADLIVES IH! Mend WOR Conreiure > SG Master. MinsOF Who Ruge America. oe By ‘US. PLANS DEPORT UMBRELLA TOILERS MEET p TODAY TO PLAN FIGHT NEW YORK.—' The men must not wait and say: ‘Let the girls join first.’ The girls must not wait and say: ‘We are always with the union,! let the men join first’ All of us,; together, men, women, young and adult, must join the union new, We are all suffering of the same evils, we are all brothers and sisters, we ye all one enemy, the robber Tee Hsuan Li, Active In Workers Movement NEW YORK, Dec. 10.—The immi- gration officials arrested Tae Hsuan Li, militant Chinese student worker, after raiding his room and lodged |him on Ellis Island. He is charged | with “being a member of an organ- | ization advocating the overthrow of the government by force and vio- | —” ace rf tence” and is being held in leu of | Tuades Workers’ Tadustrial Union, $3,000 ball, a ball so unusually ‘high | eA ee eee eens that the International Labor. De- | at 131 W. 28th St., second floor. states, “This is the beginning-of the | H OLD MEET AT FAKE JOB AGENCY | threatened and intensified drive | Jobless Vote Support against all foreign born workers who show the least resistance to the. boss | class.” of Eagle Strikers doch, who is serving a sentence inj NEW YORK. — The Downtown Virginia for exposing A. F. of L. of- Unemployed Council held a meeting ficials, Stephen Graham, are only a/| Yesterday in front of the fake city employment agency where thousands ers who are persecuted by the im-|0f Workers are daily turned away migration officials. without a job after being made to Li has been a number of years in | Stand hours in line, day after day. attending New When the meeting opened, about 2,500 workers rallied around the speakérs stand and remained there from’ 10 to 12 o'clock. Thus speaks the Umbrella Work- ers’ Trade Committee of the Needle The drive against foreign born | workers has taken on speed during | the last month and many have been | arrested as part of the drive carried on by the Department of Labor. Eduardo Machado, Venezuelan work- er, Geo. Paz, Argentinian, Wm. Mur- | in the militant movement of Amer- | ica, closely connected with Chinese workers, The question of support for the The International Labor Defense | Eagle Pencil Company strikers was will carry on a drive for the freeing | taken up and the open air meeting ot Li who is being persecuted not | passed a@ resolution that the unem- “for any of the obvious lying charges | ployed workers should support the brought against him, but, because he | strike and that no worker should was militapt and effective in his, scab on the strikers. work for the working class in the | In spite of Mustyite efforts te hold United States and One Shiga 4 a meeting, the workers marched employed Council, The Negro work- ‘ers in particular, who are the worst | sufferers in the crisis, showing their Work Bureau fools the jobless work- | Milton Stone of the Oct. 16 del- ers who they promised part time | egation. work for the starvation wages of $15| The Downton Council is actively Thousands of jobless workers form | : 3 long lines there as early as 4 o'clock Don’t miss full circula- in the morning and wait until 9 a. tion tables each Wednes- j devices, a carpenter eat 2 street meeting I was charged | through the streets to 27 Hast 4th | Street, where an organization meet- NY WORK BUREAU HAS HUNGER JOBS determination to fight against the hunger policy of the bosses and for | for a three day week was told to the supporting the strike at the Eagle Daily Worker by a worker who had | Penci] Company, when the offices open at 297 Fourth | Ave. near 22nd St. Some wait prac- | ing was held, many joining the Un- | NEW YORK.—How the Emergency | real relief. The main speaker was applied there for work. tically all day and night for a chance }, day in the Daily Worker, to get some work, street cleaning or NOW PLAYING! AMERICAN PREMIERE! park work. ; Dynamic! Revolutionary! Gribbing! Lost Former Job, s This worker had lost his job as doorman in-a theatre after an oper- ation. He has a wife and four chil- dren to support. After applying for several days he was finally told that he would receive a postcard when to call. “The day following his receipt of the postcard he got into the line early enough to get into the office. He was anxious to get work for his | family was in dire straits and was | Slightly out of line. The policeman seeing this brutally shoved him back. A TENSE TALE OF THE 5: Sth Ave.—Alx. 7661 "RAZLOM’ (THE BREAK-UP) “Here is a pleture In the tradition of ‘Potemkin’ dard of photography in Soviet fillm ularly are tremendously effective.'—Vera Smitl PRODUCED BY MESBABPOFILM IN Ui H AVE. PLAYHOUSE Conceal Death of ‘Carpenter in Al Smith’s New Building NEW YORK, — Another worker's | life yesterday went inte the Empire State Building, owned by Al Smith, Tammany boss and democratic can | didate for president, when as a- speed-up and total lack of safety fell fifteen floors to his death, ‘Yet not a word appears in the capitalist press of New York regard- ing this or any of the dozens of | other workers practically murdered by the construction companies’ de- sire to make an extra profit by, speeding the men to finish the building by May 1, Among the workers, of whom there were 3,000 when the inside work began, the story goes that over 39 or 40 workers haye heen sacrificed | to the Tammany boss’ building, the | enstruction companies’ speed-up and! the conspiracy with the bosses. of the A. F. of L, union officials. These A. F. of L. bureaucrats don’t give a whop in hell about the lives of the workers, Moreover, they have | undoubtedly been “rewarded” by the | bosses for allowing the bosses to Bi over Hoover's “stagger” plan. bosses could not do it without bind consent of the A. F. of L. bureau- | erats, as the workers are naturally oppesed to it. But the workers are not consulted | by either the “union” of’cials or the bosses. Anyone who has already | worked six months, 3s peing laid off. | Then the four-day week is being put over as a part of the “stagger” plan of making the workers bear the en- tire burden of the unemployment | TRY TO BUY OFF WORKER. (By 2 Worker Correspondent.) | NEW YORK.—Upon being arrested | with vagrancy. Taken before the judge he said “Why did you turn red?” Sa I told him that I was unemployed. He gave me 50 cents | and told me never to be caught at a red meeting any more, So you can see that he is trying to change any ideas with a half dollar. | | Hot Dog Jamboree of Red | Builders News Olub, 27 East = | 4th St. Sunday night, 8:30. + FURNISHED ROOMS, large, front and | singles, Moderate prices. All improve- | ments. 210 E. 188th St. Grand Concourse and Fordham, | | WANT KD—One unfurnished, Improved | room with privacy for girl comrade—une of kitchen. Downtown vicinity, moderate rent. Write a, M. c/o Dally Worker. + Usual high OCTOBER REVOLUTION B, POPULAR PRICES Cont. 2 MAS stidaleht - Direction; Joseph B, Ellesler The worker demanded to know why he was so treated. For an answer the policeman hit him severely on the shoulder, The worker struck back and then the cop assaulted him with wanton brutality. 3 DAY JOINT BAZAAR Workers International Relief United Council of Workingclass Women January 2-3-4 BENEFIT: Needle Trades Strike Fund Unemployed Hunger Marches Children’s Camps of W.LR. STAR CASINO 107th St, and Park Aye. Collect articles, ads and Honor Rolls for Souvenir Journal and get tekets at WLR, 131 W. 288t. ! published on this occassion The Harlemite Negro THE AFFAIR OF THE YEAR PROLETPEN MASQUE BALL at the ROCKLAND PALACE 155TH STREET AND 8TH AVENUE Saturday Evening, December 13th ELABORATE PROGRAM Artef Players Jazz Band (A novelty feature) “THE RED ROOSTER"—A humerous satirical journal specially AUSPICES: PROLETPEN (PROLBTARIAN WRITERS) Ft 4 Maas Pr OH He Br and distributed to visitors. jthe A. F. of L. “union,” ‘hope of defending their conditions \the Building Trades Workers’ prevailing in the building trades. ifespeed-fif az'00,10H ‘ae The building trades workers, who have previously thought of them- selves as aristocrats, are completely terrorized and endure all sorts of abuses in working conditions, Where ordinarily a special gang of workers would be used to go over the building putting up guards and safety arrangements, today there is no such gang, and if the worker on a | job wants any safety arrangements, he is supposed to fix it himself—but rarely dees so,t as he is speeded to death by the “pushers” and has no time. The worker killed Tuesday is not | the first by any means to fallto death as @ result of lack of safety ar- yangements. Five mgpths ago a carpenter fell 32 stories, crushing his head “as flat as a pie.” Besides the other deaths, said to run as high as forty men, over a hundred have been seriously injured, crippled for life. | Carpenters, iron workers, laborers and men of nearly all trades have | been killed, As is seen, while it is a “union” job, the workers are 10t protected by Their only lies in their getting in touch with In- dustrial League of the T, U, U. L. at 16 West 2ist St. JOBLESS COMMITTEE ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY NEW YORK.—The Unemployed Council of Greater New York is ar- ranging a solidarity entertainment jand dance for Friday, December 12 ‘at Manhattan Lyceum. A very interesting program of en- tertainment and a good jazz band | Jnas been engaged to make the eve- ning a real evening of solidarity between the employed and unem- ployed workers. Cartoons will be drawn by Ryan Walker, and a play produced by the Workers Laboratory Theater dealing with unemployment also many other interesting features. Employed workers in particular are asked to be present at this affair and show their solidarity with the unemployed workers. The proceeds of this affair will go to finance the campaign of the Unemployed Coun- cil and the Hunger March to Albany. All fraternal organizations, unions, Housewives’ Councils and all other mass organizations are called upon to give their fullest support to the , Solidarity dance of the Unemployed | Council. 1931 CALENDAR FREE! Unpublished photos of the class struggle in the Daily Worker 1931 Calendar. »Free with six months subseription or renewal. NEWEST SOVIET SUCCESS | CONQUERED = IGDENBU (The Siberian Hunter) The story of Love—of Struggle—of Conquest among Nomad tribes of Northern Borders of Soviet Union ““Igdenbu’ is interesting ... A tense story against the hackground of sacial conflict . . . Proletarian reconstruction reflected on the snow of the Taiga.” —BUCHWALD, Morning Freiheit. PRODUCED IN USSR BY VOSTOKKINO sCAMEO | AMUSEMENTS Superstition! Hunger! The Mighty Elements!~ 42ND STREET |POPULAR and BROADWAY, WIS. 1789 PRICES Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD pbc eat. 20 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK THEA sith gt. West of Broadwa Bye, 8:00. Mt Th, & Sat. 2360 Dally trom 10:30 A, M. “SEE AMERICA THIRST” | With Merry Langdon, Stim Summerville | ( ! LOBE | 46th st, & Bway and Betile Love NINA ROSA Yew Musica! Komance, with Guy ROBERTSON, ELIND TERRY ABMIDA, iis ABD CEELEY, Others SE 41th. W. of Brondway vo an Seale ‘Wed. & But. . Chi, 2600 AK WALLACE’S PLAY ON tHE SPOT ith CRANE WILBUR and ANNA MAY WONG EDGAR WALLACE’S FORREST THEA. iW, or 8 Mis W, @ 8. 2:20 Bre deus We Orchestra will play Announcing the Big Event! “AILY WOPRFR 7TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION at the ST. NICHOLAS RINK 69 West 66th Street ‘ All Workers’ Organizations Are Espeolally Requested to Keep This Date Open and Not to Arrange eny Conflloting Affairs. WORKERS! SUPPORT THE PAPER THAT SUPPORTS YOU! HVIC BRPARTORY as + 6th Av. venings 8:30 ABLER ON'S HOU .... THE CRADLE SO! | Seatstwks.adv.atBoxOff.@T'nHall.113W.43 “UP POPS THE DEVIL” & Genuine Comedy Ait with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St. Tens, of Bimas Mats, Wednesday antl Satarany 2:30 ARTHUR HOPKINS presents “THIS IS NEW YORK” | A new comedy by Honert B. Sherwood Plymouth Eves. 8:40 — Mats THE QUEEN OF Commies LYSISTRATA | THY HIT Vou WEAR anout | [sate STREETA IN, | fiven, #40, = tint, Sat, 21 90 iiateony Seats, $1, erformances ‘Wed, all ry" saa ct ie RYAN WALKER BKLYN WORKERS IN USSR DEFENSE Amter at Grand Manor Meet Friday BROOKLYN, N, Y.-—-A complete mobilization of the members of the Williamsbureh Workers Club has been made io participate in the De- fend the Soviet Union mass meeting which will be held this Friday eve- ning at 8 p. m. at the Grand Manor, 318 Grand Street, Brooklyn, In a statement issued to all mem- bers of the club it is stated that “now more than ever must the work- ers rally in the defense of the work- ers’ fatherland—the Soviet Union, and to smash the war plans of the Hoovers, Poincares, Briands and Co. All members of the club are urged to report to the headquarters at 7 p. m. and from there will march in a body to the Grand Manor. Mem- bers of the International Workers Order are all urged to join in the demonstration by reporting early at the Grand Manor. Section Six of the Communist Party in a statement today said that “for the relief of the 250,000 unem- ployed workers in Brooklyn Friday's mass meeting will be a rallying point for the continuation of the struggle for the Unemployment Insurance Bill.” “For All Kinds of Insuranes” ({ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone; Murray Git) Sar 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenne Estabrook 8215 Bron, N ¥ . DEWEY 9914 » aise Hong aundey ‘0A Mia Bow, DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENT; 1501 AVENUE U Ave. U @ir,, BW.T. At East 15th St, BROOKLYN, N, ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room Soe-Bhoge: VEGH1 aL an RESTAU! me 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bross ona Lud ai evaien? PHONE LE 9148. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, UB Set. 12th and 18th Ste, Spratly Vegetarien Weed een Hy KALTH FOOD Vegetarian PESTAURANT 1400 MADISON AV Phone: UNIversity 6865 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY; NPATIAN DH Sere tal alee tee ‘08H. 12th St, New York Fa ae, Advertise yur Untor, Meetings — here For information orite e The WAIN WORKER Atyerttine Nene 50 Gast tctn Ct, Naw York City For 4 Good Ment and Proleterian. Prine Rat at the UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA. Cor, 11th St. and University Plage | (Spectat Room tor Cemsevencea)

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