The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 14, 1931, Page 2

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ONLY INT CAN'T AFFORD TO LOSE ANY OPPOR- TUNITIES; ONLY Failed to Ask Collective Endorsement of Ir- surance Bill at “Daily” Anniversary Signatures Beginning to Arrive From Small, Towns, From Alaska, From Mining Centers NEW YORK. — “How not to col-) lect signatures was illustrated at the} Seventh Anniversary Celebration of| the Daily Worker in New York City,” | says the National Campaign Com- mittee for Unemployment Insurance. “Five thousand workers came to} elebration. Every one not yet e in signature collection should) ity comrades in charge of the sis- ven a list. The New York | sent two workers to the| celebration with about 100 lists, their aim being to collect signatures at the | celebration instead of passing out lists to the workers | 1 the request that they ctors of sig res. six leading comrades become col: | There were on the plalform at the meeting, and yet all of them failed to remember to secure the colle ement of the bill by a vot meeting These in mistakes act as brakes upon e for mass en- a ment of mployment Insur- e in every We fail to enlist employed w in signature col- mobilize workers for the drive. We! ato service sufficient 0 do not be- | tic organization. ertheless, ‘would collect sked. We fail to march ets with signs reading r Uv loyment Insur- We are not collecting at shop , from house to house.” 250,000 To Get. e New York district reports 35,- matures collected, It set itself i sands of wo! long to any 5 but who nev natures of Pariy Activities, WEDNESDAY— Nt w orkers v mat ui. see cat +e oth Beach Workers of unemployed and 1 at 48 athe Bath Merting anch of the held at & p.m. at the Members t nds along. { on Conferenee s of Brookly Flushing Ave Branches must urged A 8 and 4 be electd A Lecture sian Revolution tah lace at 156! 8 p. m.| . 88, HattieCarnesie LL.D. sat m. at 86 B ith] St DUT presence at this To All Burbers, Attention! Wheeling, Utica, Ontonagon, Mich., [Cc bridge, Ohio, Chicago Heights, New Orleans, Decatur, Ill, Harris- ,|many of them ordered deported to ENSIVE ACTI DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, | VITY WILL ENOUGH SIG ® THE ADVENTURES OF BI LIVE ow WHAT GET OUT OFM Wore —_——— TWO WEEKS LEFT a quota of 250,000. This means that this district must collect -200,000 sig- natures in the two weeks left. Sig- nature lists must reach the national campaign committee by Feb 1. The Detroit districte reports a total | of 25,000 signatures collected. Will this district reach jts quote of 200,- 000 in the two weeks left for colle tions? | Large and smal) shipments of lists have been made to the National Cam- | paign Committee for Unemployment] Insurance, 2 West 15th St., New York City, from many industrial centers burg, Ull., Pougkeepsie, Annapolis, Md., T Some flow CANT 1 yan Chattanooga, Gardner, Mass., Auburn. Me., Brookston, Minn., Daggett, Mich Bovey, Minn., Jonesville, Mieh. and dozens of other places. The mining camps in the Pitts- eh district are busy, and a large shipment of lists have arrived from that city, as well as from the cities in the Cleveland, Seattie, San Fran- cisco districts. Signatures are beginning to arrive from Alaska. John Belitz of New York still holds the record for indi- vidual effort, he having collected 1,- 275 signatures. A week ago the National Campaign Committee reported about 6,000 sig- natures have arrived. Thousands of additional workers will have to be enlisted in signature collection if the Workers Unemployment Insurance Delegation to Congress is to voice a mass demand for our Bill when it demands passage of the Bill in Wash- ington on Feb. 10. LD. CALLS MEET SN DEPORTATIONS NEW YORK.—-Following the arrival | of the first “deportation special” of | LSNR C “MEET FOR JAN. 28 rt on Convention To Be Given Repo City. Committee of the League of | Struggle for Negro Rights will hold a mass meeting Monday evening. January 26, at the St. Luke’s 125 West 130th Street. ‘The meeting is called to rally the | Negro and white masses of this city to~support of The Liberator in the | fight against the bosses lynching ter- |ror which took 38 known victims in 1930, and has opened the new year with. four-lynchings already, and to give a report on the St. Louis national convention of the League. The report on the convention will be given by Herbert Newotn, national secretary of the LSNR. Other speak- ers include Richard B., Moore, 2 vet- jeran in the struggle for Negro liber- ation. All workers are urged to give their | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) m., Jewish Workers Center, 795 Flush- | ing Ave. Pitkin Ave. LL WORKER Alright — —We See CROSS THAT LIVE AND See WHA'T HAP Pens To Joy! == “s LLS MASS UNEMPLOYED MEETINGS ALL OVER | THE CITY LEAD TO HUNGER MARCH ) speakers present. 180 Open Air Meets. Besides the indoor mass meetings, ,eTS and sympathizers to organize a ‘there will be 180 open air mass meet- | Wide movement against the impend- NEW YORK.—The newly organized|__ Brownsville, Friday, Jan. 16, 8 p.m. | ings throughout the city today and| ime imperialist war and against the ; Hoffman's Mansion, 142 Watkins & | tomorrow. There will be 35 in Bronx, |Counter-revolutionary plans of the '25 in Harlem, 50 downtown, 10 in white-guard emigres. All must unite The meetings in Manhattan will! Borough Hall section of Brooklyn, 20 ;for the defense of the Soviet Union. Hall, have Foster as a speaker. He will be in Brownsville, 30 in Williamsburg, | back in New York after a very suc-!anq 40 in Coney Island. cessful tour throughout the East and| In Harlem the mass meeting will Downtown meetings will be held | %t Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th | Middle West. Other prominent speak- | once during this period at Eagle Pen- |Street, An illustrated lecture will be | ers Will be at all of these meetings. |i] Go. factory gates, Western elec- | Siven in the Russian language and tric gates, and at the Ward Line| be held on the night of the 15th! piers. with Amter and other prominent support to ‘this mass meeting, and| to use it to express their solidarity | with the oppressed Negro masses of | the South and with the demands of | the LSNR for the right of the Negro | majorities in the South to decide and) control their own form of govern- | Ment, with confiscation of the land for. the Negro an dwhite poor farm- | ers who work the Jand. the New Yeer with 317 workers, in- | “ cluding 100 women and children, | | | fascist countries, a manifesto calling for militant action against the boss class in their campaign of persecu-| Yemen, the only independent Ar- issued by the Internationa] Labor De- | Wehabis, hes a king called Yahya. portations to be held at the national | tribesmen who carry modern rifles. office of the 1L.D.,.in whieh el] for- | but wear knives instead of bayonets. quested to participate. Al-Yernen at the Cameo Shows Scenes of One! Native State Not Yet Seized by Empire feast. the irrigated terraces where coffee ‘eams, al] day long. Mahommedan bigotry, This special deportation train was | at times, when they are on parade, |the Jews of Yemen, *who live by | made up at Seattle, traveling cross|So far, they have kept the coffee ‘making jewelry and weaying on hand | country it picked up arrested workers Sroves and fisheries of Yemen from looms and sewing garments by hand | | el meeting of the Barbers and their families at appointed | British eapital. In fact, the govern- just as they did in Palestine 2,000 PUL e will Uke piace af $30 pm places. Many of the workers had |™ment hasn't even let the usual Holly- | years ago, Jt is a wonderful picture important matters wi}! be taken up. | been arrested, aceording to the cape | wood travelogues take pictures of the of one last remaining oasis of old egro Problems” |itelist press “workers who had been |Country; the first was taken by Mej- feudalism. Go and see jt, and you'll | se beythe subject of a lecture at engaged in Communist activities.” |‘abpomfilm, of the Soviet Union, and | never fall for G.K. Chesterton. pices Councij 32. THURSDAY— A Special Of the Bil) Hay will be held at 8 p. tune Ave, m, at 140 Nep- A Membership Meeting | Of the Gonzales B h of the ILI} takes place at 143 108rd St. at 8 p,m. f | To paint the walls of the Workers | Schoo]. Please report_at the Work: ers Schoo} office, 35 ©. 12th St. any day from 10 a, m, Voluntecr Painters Wanted 'The Workers Film and P' Meets at 8 p. m. at 181 first floor. fe Joe Hill Br: LLD. A special meet ill be held at} 6.30 p, m. gt 132 E 6th St. } PRIDAY— Printin« Workers Industrial Union At 16 W. 2ist St. at 7.30 p.m. The eiiecutiv, mittee Jan, 15, at the sar dress: o Leagne Sth St., 30 pam. | * | Down Town Workers Club | At 11 Clinton St. Leeture on “Der portation. registration of foreign bern | and the Kysh Committee.” All work- erg: invite | | | ©. 1¢ er Interracin) Ball Given by Section 4 at Finnish Ball room. 15 W. 126th St. at & p,m. Admission 56c, Good prosram, ai Wi y 2 Volunteers Are still needed in the mass scenes of the Lenin Memorial Pageant, Re- hearsals use held Wed. and Fri. at & p.m, All workers are urged to come pnd participate. Exceutive meets on Thursday, # p.m. Membership meets Friday ut 3 p.m, at itl Ww, 28th St. Comrade Amter Speaks At the Bath eBach Jewish Workers Clb, Bandas. 162 Hs Tp. en “The Wor eis ani e War begeer’ at the Jewish Workers Club, 48 Bay yn 28th St Brook! 2% RYDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS | "oi Have Your Eyes Examineo “and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL _ OPTICAL CO. Qader vernova) euperyinion 1 "DR. M, HARRISON {)ptometrist 216 SRC hy Mig Ane td ‘ NEW FORK CITE | Zelephone Stuyvenngs M690 aay. . £ | of unempleyment, | whieh does not include the large mas? ible poverty, of grinding labor at had become “publie charges” or were | Cameo. forced to take some bread from a| Ip spite of the fact that the Iman bakery without paying for it because | yahyva is on friendly relations with n |the Soviet Union, the only friend a ‘These special trains, eecording to/ colonial nation has, the film honest- the ILD. arrive about every five ty exposes the elass oppression in weeks in New York. During the year | yemen. Back and forth, back and 1920, 16,631 workers were deported | forth, you see first a scene of ter- deportations like the ones conducted | fishing, of porters ‘carrying enormous | by the Department of Labor slong ieads on their backs for a trifling | the border of Mexico where 6,500 Un- | wage, of peasants toiling in the cactus | employed Mexicans were deported in /and coffee gardens with short-hand- | August of last year out of El Paso. ied hoes which bend a man double— ‘Texas. z | and you see the prince who rules the | The International Labor Defense | not country talking exports with rich | pi 9) weet to ey sal aie men and merchants at @ gorgeous” requests for an immediate election of delegates from a}) foreign language organizations to the second eonfer- DR. J » MINDEL ence te be held, Friday evening, Tanu- Surgeon Dentist ary 16, at 5 p.m. at the National Of- 1- UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phonet Algonquin $18; Not connected with any other office fice of the I.LD., 80 East jith Street, Room 430. (LR eiaes Is Organive a Worcorr Group in | your city or town. Help organize the workers ip your shop Write | Office Hours: of the conditions there. | sunday 2i0 oa es BUTCHERS’ UNION|| DR, J. LEVIN Tacal 174, A, M 0. & RW. oN OA Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple. 213 Kast Aith Street Room 12 Regular meet third 61 150] AVENUE U, Ave. U Sta. BMD At Kast 15th St. BROOKLYN, N.Y. apa Pel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 44-0 DELANCKEY BIREED Sor. Wldridge Bt, NEW YORK ings every iret jupday, 10 A. M. open avery fay NUT SHOPPE | 128 EAST BURNSIDE AVENUE Tel, Raymonds—0340 One block west of the Concourse We carry « full Hine of Rypelen Condics “Every Fine Nut That Grows” “Sy6nan Jleyebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 BAST TH STREET (Corner Becond Avenue) Tol. Algonquin 7248 Vhone: LWHIGH $682 ‘nternational Barber Shop Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Department Ave, Brooklyn. AUS-| Many others are being deported who | You ean-see the picture now at the) There is also a Russian news reel ? - showing among other things Voro- shilov making a speech from the flag ship of the Black Sea fleet. This ship is named “The Paris Commune.” Let Poincare rage! —V. 8. \ | | | | | Meetings will be held every day at! the breadlines located at: 105 St. Marks Place, Third Ave, }and Second St., Fourth St. and Ave. |C, Holy Name Mission, 11 St. and) Second Ave., Front and Market St. To Ratify Bill. At these meetings as at the indoor meetings, the bill will be ratified, and the delegation to Washington ap- monstrate your international solidar- | proved. Each meeting: will be a cen- 3 ter for collection of signatures to the | °eainst the wreckers, bill. All this is preparation, not only for | \the delegation to Washington, but for |? jthe great hunger march on the New all | York City Hall, which takes place You see the sheiks in their | January 20 at 2pm. In this hunger ."|tion of foreign born militants was abic state that isn’t ruled by the beautiful castles on the crags over march, the jobless will form at meet- | jings held by the over 400 workers’ | section commit- fense Sub-Committee Against Deport-|To the imperialists of the world, his grows, and whiJe beast and man toil organizations which took part in the | ations and a@ call for a second con- |mame sounds more like “Nein, nein.” |for their, profit, these sheiks lounge | United Front Conference Monday, ference for the struggle against de-| Yemen has a voluntary array of jin silken robes through blissful dope and with banners and signs of the | ‘organization, they will march direct- | , though per- |ly from each assembly point to meet | eign language nationalities are re- |and interrupt @ column of squads to| haps not as strict as that in Tbn|in the main- demonstration before |pull off a wild aborigine] war dance, | Saud’s Jand, is equalled by that of |City Hall. Hot Dog Jamboree of Red builders News Club, 27 East 4th St. Sunday. 3 p, m. WorkersSchoolOffice Now on secont floor, 35 E. 12th St. Registrations for the Spring term and information pertaining to the school will be given there. |Darin to Speak on Soviet Union, Jan. 18, at Irving Plaza The Soviet Union is the hope of |the workers of the world. The F.| Pos ...| PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Jan. 13.- |sv. is calling upon all workers, farm- Tomorrow night at Broadway Arena the jobless and militant workers will gather for a mass meeting to endorse | the Workers Unemployment Insur- jance Bij], and to work out details jof their joint struggle for Unemploy- |ment Insurance and against wee cuts and speed up and part time work. William Z. Foster will be the main speaker. films just received from the U.S.S.R.| 4 sreat speeding -up of the organi- | will oe demonstrated showing: zation work in the Councils of the 1.—Class Struggles in the Village | Unemployed, and industrial unions of land Grain Collections. |the Trade Union Unity League is ex- | 2.~Imperialists are getting ready |Pected trom this mass meeting. Fos- | (16 years of imperialist war). |ter is general secretary of thé T.U. The subject of the lecture by Com-|U-L- Active circulation of the lists rade Darin will be “Piatyletke- fF signatures demanding passage of Weapon against all enemies of the|the Workers Unemployment Insur- /USS.R.” |ance Bill ‘will be one of the objectives Workers! Attend the lecture! De- of the mass meeting. The F.S.U. will hold a mass mect- jing, Sunday, January 18, at 8 p.m. = ity with the Soviet Union and fight |, PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan, 13.—Pitts- disrupters and | burgh jobless and the part time white guard counter-revolutionists— | workers of the steel mills and mil and for the United Front of all toilers |itant workers from all shops will in the defense of the fatherland of |hunger march, in defiance of police AMKINO PRESENTS—AMERICAN PREMIERE THE SOVIET EXPEDITION TO "AL-YEMEN® FIRST PICTWRE EVER MADE OF THIS ARABIAN COUNTRY! THE LIVES AND HABITS OF THE ARABS AND JEWS VIVIDLY AND TRUTHFULLY PRESENTED! B @ND STREET |POPULAR sCAMEO St.. 6th a "~~ Theatre Guild Productions “""™, and PRORRIVAT | PRICES IVIC REPERTORY 142 8. 61> MIDNIGHT ‘ WIS. 1789 Soe, $1, $1.60, Mats, Th. & Sat, 3 EV4 LE GALLIENNE, Director |Tonight ... ‘ALISON'S HOUSE” w, 4 ( Tom. Mat, . EDDA GABLER” GUILD 3,528 Pett 0 Night ROMEO AND JULIET” | Tom, 4. H, WOODS Presents | F ARTHUR BYRON " IVE STAR FINAL Elizabeth the Queen Lynn Fontanne Alfred Lunt Morris Carnovsky, Joanna Roos and others With PUDOVEL CICKETS be; ~ 29 BAST MTH STRELT NEW YORK Vel. Algonquin 3356-8544 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations NOW PLAYING! LEO TOLSTOY'S DRAMATIC NOVEL “THE LIVING CORPSE” MORNING FREIJHEIT COSTUME BALL Saturday Eve:, January 24 Madison Square Garden IN ADVANCE 50 CENTS at MORNING FREIHEIT 4) EAST TWELFTH STREET. NEW YORK , DIRECTOR OF “STORM OVER ASIA,” IN THE LEADING ROLE PRODUCED BY MEJRABPOFILM OF TH STREET PLAYHOUSE 32 WEST 8TH ST., Between Fisth and Sixth Aves.—Spring 5095 POPULAR’ PRICES—CONTINUOUS NOON TO MIDNIGHT Moscow Eyes! Scientific Uxamination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists— learon ‘able prices. | “| MARTIN BECK ZHE4 46th Bt Broadway ‘Th. & Sat, 2:40 “Five Star Final’ is electric and ai —SUN, CORT THEATRE, West of 48th Street West of Eves. 8:50. ts, Wed. and Sat. 2:30 Evs, 8:40, Mts, ARTHUR HOPKINS presente “THIS IS NEW YORK” The Actor-Managers, Inc. present RUD Draper in her Original Character Sketches GRAM CHANGED DAILY COMEDY THEATER PRICES $183 Hist FE. of Bly. Mats. ‘Thur. & Sat., 2:30 Sunday) at 8:30 4 new comedy by Robert E. Sherwood with LOIS MORAN EA. Plymouth "eA,,00p grerea Evenings §:46—Mats, Thurs. & Sat, 2:30 NINA ROSA New Musica! Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY ARMIDA, LEONARD CEELEY, Others Fvenings including ite BURKE NOVELLO ie 9 ronsing. rollicking riot of Iguehs (THE TRUTH GAME rocebe FOSTER *" Volo TREE MAJESTIC THEA, 44tb,¥¥. of Broadway ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE | Evenings 8:80~~Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:90 43th Street, West of Broadway Evenings 8:40, My Wrd. & Sat, 230 th Ave, Playhouse 66 Fifth Avenue, ENGAR WALLACE’S PLAY | ON THE SPOT Com LONESDAY TO" FRIDAY with CRANE WILBUR 200 “SWEDEN 1929-1930” ANNA MAY WONG TRAVEL FILM OF NORWAY N 5 EDGAR WATLACE'S FORRUAT THE, | 49th Street. Went af Browdway | Eves. 8:50, Mats. Wed, & Sat, gt 2:80, sth Ave. HiPPooRen Pare see) SHOW IN NEW TORK AND SWEDEN RKO GLOBE Paily From 10:30 A, SECOND BIG WEEK Bway and 46th Street uM. Always) a neo | “Mothers Cry” {i cou CHARLEY’S AUNT | ACTS | with Dorothy Teter- }|] Show with CHARLES RUGGLES | son & Helen Chandler and JUNE COLLYER 8-Day Bazaar TO HELP MAINTAIN THE NEW YORK WORKERS CENTER. COLLECT ARTICLES AND SEND THEM TO THE CENTER, 35 EAST 12TH STREET, N. Y. C, FOR THE 8-Day Bazaar WHICH WILL TAKE PLACE FROM Jan. 11 to 1 Dow'r Look AT THE vi STATES! Look Nec B ERA THEY HAVE e| exploited and oppressed masses! threats, on the city hall tomorrow. jf, TURES By RYAN WALKER A LAVERY Thee! Pittsburgh March, Foster Meet in Philadelphia Today ‘The march will start at 1 p.m. from their assembly places at four points. |One is on the south side, at 25 8t. jand Carson. One is at Butler St. — |and Tenth. One is at the “Jungles.” One is at the Fourth Hill district. The demonstrators will send in a |committee to the city council at 2 p.m. to demand immediate relief for (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Cooperators! Patronise SEROY CHEMIST « 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BRONX, ¥, ¥. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENDE Bet, lath and 13th St—. Strictly Vegetarian Food ‘ HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON. AVENUE Phone University 5965 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISBES EO a a yl ‘ New Fork a We Invite Workers tothe” BLUE BIRD: ‘- CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOb' Fair Prices : A Comfortable Place to Eat’ 827. BROADWAY : Between 12th and 13th Stx MELROSE | DAIRY om AnAS 3 RESTAURANT ” Picssent to" Bios et Oar Phase, + 1187 if m4 TELEPHONE. {SERS 302 E, 12th St. BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant RESTAURANTS Where the best food and tresh vegetables are gerved all year round 4 WEST 2TH STREET 37 WEST 82ND STREET 225 WEST 36TH STREET Patronize the Concoops Food Stores: AND Restaurant ° 2700 BRONX PARE EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” x

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