The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 10, 1931, Page 2

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ADVE \EITES SPREAD POISON THE NTURE NS) a DAILY WORKER, NEV YORK, SATURDAY. JANUARY 10. 1931 OF BILL WORKER — Throw Them Off — ee “STHE RED CRosy LIES AMONG NEGRO MASSES | Eg Bcae7, —— FACILITIES To Liberator, in $3,000 Drive, Calls for Relentless TAKE CARE OF 7) } THOSE IN | DISTRESS | Struggle Against the Renegades By HERBERT NEWT( Miss Grage Lamb and Mr lies i the Negro The vicious “Mrs, Lillian she as discrin p (Camp N children were frequer niggers” and finally returned to her before the official closing of the camp a most orable condition.” Furthermore: “when Rotchild Fr: two independe: d ta lynching, Negroes to ms in PRaise GoD and} WoRK Ten sours, [cd AN SA AR ARIES ad cer” Geary &) D You Can __ (eas A ee wigan SALA SEE WHAT “THIS GREAT ary S ie Sone Tel "anen We tnuesticare ‘Your TMATORICE SE AND FIND % = } WoRTHY- We wil Les ns [oJ allowed to’ do so but suspended. | Daw T Yoy m the party The rer Winter Season Now | On at Unity Camp; | Feature’ Sports WINGDALE, N. Y.—Getting under eason the Unity lowed onary ti Liberat page } with screami $3,000 lines, and it was written up editorials viciously denouncing revolutionary movement The Negro World, organ of the ee way for its winter Garvey movement, comments on the Co-operative Camp has announced @ statement thu: ull pre m of winter sports for “and what are the methods the worke mpers. With the lake frozen communists are in to olid ice-skating and skiing may now manner of politicians to ‘abolish 4 M2 The restful winter atmosphere otf lynching bring about ‘social the Unity Camp is ideal for those equality.’ has ex- workers who feel the need for a mid- Put $3 a Week Partisan in His Place | e Salvation Army ship Br a had on it © along with a lot of id unem- ployed, forced to do four hours’ work a day for their slop and bunk, a set of scabs who have becc and vinter cation. Weekly rates have been lowered con- siderably to enable more workers to take a“vantage of our camp. ‘n- formation and rates may be obtained at the no-tip barber shops. Or bet- ter take the train and come right out Our machine will wait you at\ the Ou~ machine will wait for you at the posed all this cor we are glad to learn that ligent, independent Ne serting the comm cammunist is not intere: pressing lynching but in s| NEW YORK. “The much heralded friend | the communist party towar ace received a setback last when two were denied r ognition and seats at an anti-lynch- ing conferenc> held here Following the adoption of segregated policies many of our race lost interest in the anti-working class prop- aganda by the renegades is not at an ’nd, may be gathered from the Wash- fogton Sentinel which states “Plans are on foot to give this case faborate publicity over the country so as to expose those who preach one doctrine and practice another.” men of the Sallies’ capt A barge of coal pulled alongside could not unload then, and was tied up. On the barge was a caretaker or “barge captain,” whose $85 a month the Sallies’ would have to pay. So these “curers of unemployment’ laid off the barge captain, and put one of their $3 a week men on it! ‘That's their cure for unemployment. Recently a sailor, ordered to work overtime, refused, and a bully for Captain Nelson twice his size started to beat him up. The jobless worker ordered him off and waved a knife in self defense. Then Nelson got a he hench- | | other one of you ever pulls a knife | on one of my men, I'll see that you go from here to an undertakers’ slab.” | 1931 CALENDAR FREE! Paid in advance? Pay for six months more and get a 1931 Calendar Free! This attack of the Lovestone rene-| big gang together, seized the sailor wades is a challenge to the entire rev- beat him half to death, and made a clutionary movement. The whole left speech to the rest’on board: “If an- wing movement must defend itseli against this attack and prove to the} 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations “NEW. BABYLON” Ar. Epic of the Paris Commune JUST ONE DAY at Czechoslovak Workers Home 357 East 72nd St. SUNDAY, JANUARY liTH Continuous 2 to 6 p. m. Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. 2S Sue. ‘9 OPTOMETRIS) eee ye 1690 LEX. AVE]609 W184 106 om ‘er “ee corseecs Seat) cw guoes DEWEY 9914 Sunday: 10 A.) DR. J. LEVI SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U, Ave. U Sta, B.M.T. At Fast 15th St., BROOKLYN, N. ¥: DR. J. MINDEL Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 2 Sy6nas JlevebHnya” DR. JA. BROWN Dentist 801 EAST 147M STREET (Corner Second Avenue) ‘Tel, Algonguin 7248 Cooperators! Patronize SEROY . CHEMIST 657;Allerton Avenue Estabrook 2215 BRONX, N. Y. Advertise Your ‘Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Department 50 East 13th St. New York City Tel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANOEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK BUS LINES 111W. 3ist (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs.) Tel. Chickering 1600 PHICADELPHIA HOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Chicago /:.-.... Los Angeles .. Pittsburgh || Washington || Baltimore . || Cleveland . || Boston if Detroit | St. Louis -. | | Lowest. Rates Everywhere Return Trips at Greatly Reduced Rates “MAINE TO. CALIFORNIA” Compliments of SOLLINS’ DINING ROOM 216 EAST 14th STREET New-York City Compliments of Stuyvesant Casino 140 Second Avenue New York City Telephone; Stuyvesant 6617 NEVIN | OPENS TODAY New Dining Room & Restaurant at the | CENTRAL HOTEL 149 EAST 14th STREET (off Third Avenue) GOOD MEALS REASONABLE PRICES MASS MEETID SUNDAY, JAN. 11, 2 P.M. of the EMPLOYED AND WORKERS "UNION HALL 28th Street Comrade K. Keosaian Fred Biedenkapp ALL WELCOME AT SPEAKERS: NO-TIP ‘KowextvE BARBER SHOP | 433 E. 9th Street, New York City | | FO"'S FOB WAR Woll and Co. Propose to Outlaw Communists NEW YORK.—In a meeting sched- uled to present a resolution to out- law all the most militant workers or- ganizations, and especially the Com- munist Party, to start another “de- portation orgy and to establish a federal secret police over labor, a! whole host of ,ingo organizations met last night at Tarnegie Hall. Admittance was strictly by invita- tion—the gang didn’t want any work- er to slip im and expose the liars, who included Fish, Woll, representatives of Cardinal Hayes, of the Bowery/| Mission (for whom Communism would | mean an end of the flop house and | slop line graft), of the Merchants As- sociation, and she whole professional patriotic orders. Tear Gas There were almost as many police | and dicks as audience, and the riot —+- Comrade M. OLGIN will speak in English on Why Proletarian Literature? SUNDAY, JANUARY 1, 7 P. M. in Auditorium of the Workers’ Cooperative Colony, 2700 Bronx Park East ADMISSION 15 CENTS Phone: LEHIGH 6382 ‘nternational Barber Shop ‘M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Compliments of ADELE CAFETERIA CORNER OF SEC’ ND AVENUE AND SEVENTH STREET New York City Compliments of LEWIS FOX 123 E. BURNSIDE AVE. Bronx, N. Y. Compliments of Dr. M. WOLFSON SUNGEON DENTIST 141 Second Avenue Telephor>: Orchard 2333 Compliments 0; HAMMER’S DAIRY RESTAURANT 243 EAST 14th STREET (Near Second Avenue) New York City Revolutionary Greetings from DER HAMMER JEWISH MONTHLY 50 EAST 13th STREET New York City Compliments of COOPER-TISHKOFF TYPEWRITING BUREAU SPECIALIZING IN MIMEOGRAPH—MULTIGRAPH WORK ALL LANGUAGES 32 Union Square—Room 1002—Stuyvesant 9—9507 Ed wagon with its tear gas JINCO MEETING | as there. | Even the silk hat crowd had to pass | close inspection. | The speeches were even more di- | rected toward war on the Soviet Union than they were against Com- munism in U. S: Fish was speaking | as the Daily Worker went to press | A], JO Uo parteaATEP pey TOM Aye | those speeches in which he froths at | the th a v] 5 Ee (geass acta at the success| ew YORK. —Former Governot Woll and the speaxer preceding him | 4! Smith got himself a took the attitude that Communism is | Prominent place in the net yet a menace in America—the| World to tell the jobless that, “there first speaker thought it might become |js little or nothing the governrnent one, and Woll said it couldn’t. But|can do,” that “we have always had they agreed on Russia. “ALWAYS BRFAD J INES”. STH) Wants Jobless to Just Be Patient all Soviet Union goods. The priest| was made before embarking upon| prayed to god for the A.F.L. what was believed at the time of its jadoption to be a revolutionary ex- | CHILDREN VICTIMS OF CRISIS | periment, the compensation for death, | NEW YORK.—There has ben a 50/ accident and disease by industrial per cent reduction in the number of | occupation.” | jobs available for children in New| In other words, Smith, big demo- York, as reported by the National | cratic party politician and one-time) Child Labor Committee. This also | candidate for president, owner of the brings with it an increase in hours | Empire State Building, whose erec- | and a lowering of wages when there | tion has set a high record for work- | is a job available. These children|ers slaughtered during construction, who crowd the employment offices | big chief in the busted Bank of U. S. are hungry and they come from fam- | scandal, thinks the jobless should ilies in which the parents are out of | just wait—nothing will be done for jobs. them, but if they die, their deaths MELLA MEMORIAL Sunday, January 11, 1931, at 3 P. M. NEW HARLEM CASINO, 100 WEST 116TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY SPEAKERS: ROBERT W. DUNN, Chairman, Anti-Imperialist League J. LOUIS ENGDAHL, Secretary, International Labor Defense THE FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA Will Play Auspices of the: ANTI-IMPERIALIST LEAGUE OF U. S. Admission Free X Compliments of the CRUSADER RESTAURANT (Self-Service) Where YOUR FOOD will do you more good because you eat under conditions of QUIET Where there is Comfort and Protection in CLEANLINESS Where you eat with people who have the wit to know that FOOD AND HEALTH ARE RELATED Harry Haywood, Negro work direc- uss bread lines,” and that the question of | ‘or of District 2, will speak at the OFish and a minister asked for the | jobless insurance should be “given| Harlem Workers’ Forum, 308 Lenox audience to support an embargo on |the same careful investigation that | Ave., tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. Haywood’s Struggle for Negro Rights, in which | these jobless will want to know why | they have to starve | Haywood Speaks on New york} Negro Struggles Sun. at | will form part of interesting statistics ) t 2 |during the leisurely investigation of Farewell Banquet « | insurance possibilities. Jan. 10 to Workers The jobless think differently. They . don’t want to starve, and while Smith Leaving for US.S.R. and’ others like him are living on n banks which don’t have money for}, NEW YORK.—A farewell banquet depositors when they come for it, to a group of carpenters and shoe- \ makers leaving for the Soviet Union to help build Socialism, will be given by the Workers International Relief Saturday, January 10th, 7:30 p. m at the Hungarian Workers Home, 350 East 81st St. Every class conscious worker is invited to attend and send personal greetings to the Soviet Union. A real Hungarian meal will be served. Tickets in advance are $1, at the door, $1.25. Harlem Forum he will deal with self-determination and other questions now agitating the masses, will be The subject The “EMPROS,” Greek Communist Weekly Dancing until 2 a. m. The CONCERT AND DANCE given by TTT, RR a Sunday Evening, January 11, at 8:30 p, m. PARK PALACE, 5th Avenue and 110th St. An Extraordinary Program: in new numbers and special selections. Argentinian Professional Dancers. A. SIMON, Tenor hip of E. SIEGAL. Admission 75 cents EMPROS, ‘the only Greek Communist Weekly in the country. = eee Greetings from the COOPERATIVE COLONY *'0-TIP BARBER SHOP 641 ALLERTON AVENUE BRONX, NEW YORK 113 EAST FOURTEENTH STREET NEAR IRVING PLACE THE IRVING PLAZA HALLS FOR Banquets, Receptions, Weddings, Meeting Rooms, Clubs and Lodges 17 IRVING PLACE, CORNER 15TH STREET NEW YORK CITY Telephone Stuyvesant 0580 REVOLUTIONARY GREETINGS from the COPART PRESS Inc.| * 50 EAST 13TH STREET NEWYORK CITY Complete Job and Newspaper Printing Service

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