The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 5, 1931, Page 2

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Page Two Jailed Fol ence Shai: he Saying ‘On to BOSTON, Mass., March 4. National Textile Workers’ Union in its campaign ag cuts in New England and assurances that whatever happen to the three held for deportation, they will always remain true to the cause they represented when arrested at the Lawrence strike, was given in statements issued yesterday by Edith Berkman, Pat Devine, and Wil- liam Murdoch. Berkman was the Lawrence organ- izer before and during the recent strike; Murdoch is an organizer of the N. T. W., and Devine is tempo- rary national secretary of the un- fon. All three were seized by the Lawrence police at the end of the strike, in furious retaliation against the success won by the strikers, and later were handed over to the gov- ernment for deportation. They are now held in the immigration deten- ti pen at East Boston, with the International Labor Defense fight- ing to release them. Two Held in Lawrence Meanwhile, all forces are being llied by the International Labor Defense and the N, T. W. to force the release of two strikers, John C. Czarnecki and Alex Danilevitch, both still held in Lawrence. The first campaign is to get a reduction of the ridiculously high bail set on these two workers, $20,000 each, and to get them out. The Lawrence capitalist press lies when it says these workers are being neglected. Of the three arrested in the raid on the union office Monday, Johanna Reir was driven out of town by the police, Donaigian was released, and A. Harfield is to go on trial on a frame-up vag charge. In defiance of the terror conduct- (CONTINUED ON PAGE THRE Food Workers Ball to Support Union Under the auspices of the Food Workers Industrial Union, a Food Workers’ Ball will take place Friday, March 6, at the Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126 Street. There will be an Inter- New Victories’ —Enthusiastic support of the ainst wage 1M STARVING! TM cz TO FIGHT EXILE ‘OF FOREIGN-BORN ON WOMENS DAY March Sth to Rally | Working Women THE ADVENTURES OF GUY IN THe BIBLE 1M EATING GRASS 5 a KE THat THE 1c Geass ay DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1931 BILL WORKER PAY DEAR SISTER IN THe LoD Jess Gia ARICHEST, Meme ONGERATIO IS" A STARVING NAN ERLINE Bue fy aa REGS PROS coor ne Goon ae TM av \ CAUSE THE Rice: meade of Perey Repay Is GoUVe To HELP Youwny) FoopD! 5) * \P\ AY ACK Door | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of the Communist Party, of the trade unions, and fraternal organizations will address these meetings. | The Freiheit Gesangs Ferein, the} John Reed Club, the Red Dancers and the Workers Laboratory Theatre of the W. I. R., the Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, will take part in these monstrations. Revolutionary son dances, plays will be part of the pro- | gram of the International Women’s. The campaign against the persecu- tion of the foreign born will be brought to the forefront at the In- | ternational Women’s Day demonstra- | tons on March 8, to be held in every section of New York City, and throughout the country. The work- ing women recognize that the pre-| — |sent campaign of the bossse against ¥ |the foreign born is aimed at terror- BIG WOMEN’S DAY | izing these workers who are fighting WG coal |side by side with the native bi workers the attacks of the bosses on PROGRAM IN CITY the living standards of the workers 4 - fighting for unemployment insurance a at the expense of the bosses, At these demonstrations, work! women, white and Negro, native foreign born, will solidify their ra with all militant workers in support of the struggle. The women delegates who participated in the hunger will tell their experiences on this march. They will'tell of the rising discontent of all unemployed workers in the towns that they covered on their way to Albany. They will tell of the brutal treatment the delegation Day demonstrations. re All Needle Workers Attention! There will be a general fraction meeting of all needle workers on Saturday at 2 p. m., at the Work- ers Center. All needle workers must attend and bring along your Party membership card. GANDHI FINISHES INDI A SELL-OUT, the boss to send out work so as to Agreement With Vice- elected by thousands of workers re- | ifi ceived at the hands of the politicians| Working men and women are roy Ratified in Albany and Trenton. |called upon to come en masse. The | meetings will send greetings of soli-| y to the worl women of the capitalist and colonial countries, and to the free women of the Soviet Union. | International Women’s Day will |serve to bring the working women more actively into the cl struggle and line them up in support of the demands of the unemployed. These demonstrations will give impetus to (By Imprecorr) LONDON, Mar. 4. -— The sell-out agreement of Gandhi with the vice- roy was ratified at noon today: To save the face of Gandhi and | meeting! the National Congress in order that ¢ — Maybe She’d Like to Try It Herself! — |; THe REV. NORMAN FOOZLeé See Ocnes FoRYovu. You LOOK LIke AN Honest, BUT HUNGRY many 5” By RYAN WALKER AE Geass 1s Muctt LONGES 1 THE BACK YARD- EA’ WANT FoRItT 4 NEEDS CuTTing) AWY WAY, ‘TRY 0 SELL OUT 500 TAILORS | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) “Trial of the Moscow is accustomed to large , @monstrations, but even Moscow seldom witnessed what took place in | the streets of the Red Capital dur- | ing the first day of the trial of the leaders of the so-called “Industrial Party.” ‘This agitation of the population of | Moscow expressed itself in demon- | strations of hundreds of thousands | of workers in front of the House of the Unions, where the session of the Supreme Court in the U. S. S. R. took place. The entire procedure of the trial | of these counter-reyolutionists may | be seen and heard no win realistic form on the screen in the first Soviet sound talking newsreel. It takes more than an hour to show these films, | wage cut is needed in the shop, and that a cut will bring the work back? | “Mr. Blumberg is doing this not because it is in the interests of the workers, but because it is in the in- terests of the boss. Blumberg is an agent of the boss. Blumberg advised force another wage cut on us. “The Hillman-Blumberg outfit is planning to send us back to work | without a meeting and without vot-~ | ing on the settlement. This must never happen. You have the power to make a stop to the sell-out of your conditions. The way to do it is to make the strike real! “Demand a meeting of all strikers! Don’t go back to work without a Reject any proposal to go Party” a Sth St. Theatre| Industrial |BAZAAR TO AID This historical document, under the title “The Trial of the indus-|FYom March 19th to trial Party being shown continu- | March 22nd ously at the Eighth Street Playhouse. NEW YORK, — The mass Con- ference in support of the dress strike held in Irving Plaza last Saturday, Feb. 28, decided to mobilize all the members of their organizations to make this bazaar a success. Material was distributed to the workers’ clubs, MOLIERE COMEDY AT CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE Moliere’s satirical comedy, “The Would Be Gentleman,” goes into the repertoire at the Civic Repertory Theatre again on Thursday evening, March 12. Exactly 261 years have passed since Moliere first presented 7 : this play at Chambord. It has been | W°Men’s councils and other organi- played from that time all over the | zations. From the preparations, it world and is considéted one of the | is already evident that the Needle most humorous and satirical of the | Trades Bazaar, to be held in Star great Frenchman's works. The pres- | Casino, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, ent cast will include Egon Brecher, | 2nd Sunday, March 19 to 22, will be Walter Beck, Donald Cameron, Alma | the biggest of the season, Kruger and Miss Le Gallienne. back without having our demands In Brighton Beach, as in all other the movement for the reduction of Hey ee het, enauled 40/Opc nue.) Benwea! racial Dance which will be accom- rent, and the high P panied by the E. J. Morg orchestra, T°" and the A oe ee Since the purpose of this Ball is| Toes men and women, are called to establish and support the Food | (Pop oy ‘He Communist Party to rally Workers and the Union, all workers| °° Wess cemonstrations, to give the gee degen ta inttena iS ik ie @ mili! a workers to the brutality of the bosses and to solidify the ranks of the workers in the fight | against capitalism, which means star- | vation for the workers, | The demonstrations will send greet- | ings of solidarity to the working wo- What’s On— parts of the city, working women, housewives and working men, white and Negro, will demonstrate against the existing miserable conditions of | the workers, for a 20 per cent reduc: tion in rent and cost of living, and | will pledge their solidarity with the workers of the Soviet Union. Brighton Beach workers will gather at 140 Neptune Avenue at 2:30 on} March 8, their betrayals of the masses, the viceroy has agreed that the Gan-| dhites near the sea can manufacture | salt for their personal use. Gandhi | foregoes demand for an inquiry into | police excesses, and agrees to a defi- nition ot picketing which renders the | latter. futile. | To make complete his betrayal of | the Indian masses, Gandhi agrees to discontinuance of the civil disobedi- | “Don’t leave the strike committee in disgust of the sell-out of the | betrayers! Make the strike real! De- NEWARK, N. J., March 4.—Judge mand a full report of the committee irom Baltimore. Demand that the name of the Baltimore shop be made public! Simondle of First Precinct Court, “Demand a vote on every proposal | infamous as the “spanking judge,” | separately. | “Strike until victory is ours!” today afforded the working class an- Mildred Shulman and Susie Yourok cases were were freed. Six other postponed for two weeks, “Blumenthal, who is not a member emcng the defendants and her ac- other example of capitalism’s answer | tivities had nothing whatever to do BOSS COURT JAILS sisi uit Banquet and Dance SATURDAY NIGHT of the Unemployed Council, was| xestioned by the judge as to the Soe! ies of his daughter in the| MARCH 7TH AT 8 P. M. | Communist movement, although at the Blumenthal’s daughter was not Workers School Auditorium THURSDAY jmen in all the capitalist countries anq| There Will be prominent speakers, | ence campaign. As a reward for the | | with the case. However, Blumen- 48-50 East 13th ae especially’ to the ‘Working wine o, |eud the progtaus will, cousst of the | beteigel My Gandhi aud obhed teed: | . to the struggle of the unemployed | With th ey ei gata Street lave ee 5 @ working women in : ; \Furniture Protest , 2 | thal is known as having several times | nq wetcoME STUD: meets at 1374 4 | the Soviet Union, who have won rea} | following: A Revolutionary Play, pro- | ers of the National Congress, the | against starvation when he handed | helped arrange bail for arrested 'UDENTS OF THE at 8 p,m. “Organizational Problems government agrees’ to restore confis- | out heavy jail sentences to several in the L1.D.”, Admission free. Harttie Carnegie Br. 1,L.D. Meets at 6 p, m. at 108 14th St Needle Trades speaker on the Stri Report on Bazaar | quality under the rule of the workers duced by the Young Pioneers, mass }and peasants. \ recitation and dance by the. School; The striking dressmakers, food | Violin Solo by Ben Pell and Piano | workers, shoe workers and the work- | 500 by Gretta Corina. rs from other industries are cailea| Section 1, CPUSA, has made ar: cated property of congress leaders, Complete betrayal paves the way for closer co-operation between In- ian and British bourgeoisie against the masses in the near future, Meeting on Friday A jebless workers who took part in the NEW YORK.—Upholsterers, frame! unemployment demonstrations on | makers, cabinet makers, varnishers, | Jan, 23 and Feb. 7, when the Unem- wood carvers, mattress makers and | ployed Councils presented their de- piano makers are called to a protest | mands for immediate relief and un- workers and Judge Simondle had it in for him on this account. Simondle is the judge who in his zeal to serve the bosses made him- self ridiculous some time ago by National Training School GOOD FOOD DANCING SHORT PROGRAM Plumbers and Helpers of Greater | t0 come in mass. |rangements for an International 4 F handing down a “public spanking” y Dg, ae caer | Women's Day mass meeting to be | rupees is Wr EOE ae |employment insurance. sentence against Margaret Staff, a ——Auspices meet a P. at Stuyv: 0, la x be le . i" wh pa " 4 Ps bs and Ave, and 9th St. | held Sunday, March 8, at Manhattan | test the expulsion of three active| This viscious, fascist judge sen-| young worker active in the Interna-| Students of the Workers School ae ee English Branch No. 500 of the m.’ at’ Jewish Work- Room 202, 108 EB. 14th the “Aims and Ideals meets at 8:31 St. Lecture o: of the TUUL,” “Women In the Soviet Union” WHI be the topic 0 Br. 0p. m. Park East, Admission +. Wale ust attend and should bring fellow worker, W. I. R, Orchestra Rehearsal. at 8 p,m, at 7 B. 14th St. (1st floor), Concert in 2 weeks, Attendance | of every agency of capitalist terror. | Ave., Brighton Beach. Many open air | Glenmore Shoe Co, on “The Mass Tri I e1 2 ‘ lal and the Attempt Breen The hypocritical bouregoise ‘consid- | meetings will be held. On Thursday| For months the employer has open- to Deport Yokinen. “i FIRST SOVIET SOUND FILM DR. J. MINDE: FRIDAY— $ eration’ for women never existed for|open air meetings in Bath Beach,| ly declared that after March 1, he Comrade Moore will explain the Youth Br. 72 I. W, 0. qneets at 1844 Pitkin Ave., Brooklyn, All young workers who wish to join are welcome to do so; no initiation fee. of a lecture to be} x Jefense Calls On All| tyceum, 66 ©. 4th St, 2p. m. In addition to prominent speaker: x Rally on March 8th, such as Comrade I. Amter, there will | ntern’tl Womens’ Day |be a very interesting musical pro- |gram. There will be a play given by ‘The New York International Labor the Arteff players. | Defense has issued a call to all work-| Section 7, of the Communist Par‘ y ers to rally on March 8. It reads, |is busy in South Brooklyn preparing in part: | for International Women's Day, Sun- “Women workers bear the burdens |day, March 8th. In preparation for workingclass struggle where together |48 Bay 28th St., Bath Beach, 1373 with the men they are facing the | 43rd St. Borough Park, 2921 W. 32nd | Savagery of the police; of the courts; the millions of women workers who | are slaving long hours in the facto- St., Coney Island, and. 140 Neptune Coney Island, and Brighton Beach. On Saturday Borough Park, Coney ries for .wages that are in many|Island, Bath Beach and Brighton cases lower than the men’s. And cer- | Beach. tainly all such pretences are thrown WIN ALL DEMANDS AT THE GLENMORE \Shoe Company Forced to Sign Contract and Leather Workers Industrial Union, and carrying all the demands of the workers, was signed by the would run an open shop. The Boot and Shoe Workers Union, the A. F, L. company union outfit, has also boasted that its slave ccn- tract would be signed instead of the | militants from the A. F. of L. Up- | holsterers Local 76, All in the in- dustry are invited. ‘The meeting is called by the Fur- niture Workers’ Industrial League of the Trade Union Unity League. tenced Sam Blumenthal to three | months, John Casper, secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, to| 60 days; Saul Stark and J. Ludin, | 60 days. He placed on a year’s pro- | bation Rebecca Brodkin, Harry Po-| lutik, Shirley Etlin, Tom Kularik and Eva Jularik, threatening them with tional Labor Defense, when she was arrested- for distributing leaflets of that organization. The spanking was to have been administered in court by the girl's father. The father, however, declined. ‘Today, in sentencing Shirley Eltin to a year’s probation, this pervert ADMISSION ............+.50 CENTS —Tickets obtainable at the—— WORKERS SCHOOL (Office) or THE WORKERS BOOKSHOP heavy jail sentences next time they participated in the struggles of their Moore to Speak , 48-50 EAST 13TH STREET | COME AND GREET SELECTED expressed the desire to spank her in public, NEW YORK.—Comrade Richard E. Moore, defense attorney at the mass trial last unday will speak at the Harlem Workers Forum this Sunday, Mine NRK SietSt, exec, | Of capitalism not only in the facto: |the four demonstrations arranged in| NEW YORK. — Monday the reg-| Harlem Forum, Sun. COMRADES FROM ALL PARTS OF meets at 6:30 p.m. Com- ries and the home; but in the daily |South Brooklyn, which take place in| ular union agreement of the Shoe THE COUNTRY! AMUSEMENTS significance of the mass trial and the decision to expel Yokinen with the right to re-apply for re-admission after he had fully proved that he SEE AND HEAR First Full Account of the Trial Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Party of Industrial in Moscow Room 803 Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any Office Workers vaton Trentre Part overboard as soo! th Shoe and Leather Workers. They Pesee bebbibaretad eee apo bene Geer FIRST SOVIET SOUND NEWSREAL IN RUSSIAN ibiladl sui at 8 p.m. “Gods ¢ ightning,” at m -as ‘e ~woman | 2 J tendencies by actual participation in SOVIET SOUND NEWSREAL IN Ri a Mekets sn 18% MacPougal St. | worker begins to fight to free herself | Plumbers, Helpers Would give the employer o reduction | the Rediiaestte es Py ‘IH rectimonige ot defendants, court procedures spsech of the Prosecutor, demon- | Ep Soe iar i on that enslave her and To Meet Thursday Pau aaretmlgonas betel ence The forum, which is usually held strations In the streets of Moscow and before the Court building Txonguin 4-7712 Office Hout I Steve Katovis Br. I, L. D, er fellow-workers. gi - at 3 o'clock, will be held this Sun- : Pi and tani ae Koes ] beet Frou Youth clus. | , “Interational Women's Day, the| NEW YORK. — Unemployment| ‘The crew stuck solidly to the Shoe |Gay at 6 o'clock. TH STREET PLAYHOUSE Dr. J. JOSEPHSON meets at 8:30 p. m. at 1492 Madison | day of the fighting working woman,| among the unorganized plumbers,|20d Leather Workers Industrial 42 WFST STH BT. Be Fitth and Sixth Aves.—Spring 5095 sige g Ave. T Seem oe patfnedaU?” | is this year more than ever before a/ alteration and pobbing, is as high as | Union, and showed so mucli readiness} NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES ee adhidsp soit Mas eels Msc hed SURGEON DENTIST will be on the order of business. the openiny of the rellef fund at 8 ki m, at Manhattan Lyceum, B. 4th t. Murticinants in program, Artef, Proletpen, leor and Yasha Fredman, Tickets only & cents, Childrem free. 7 DANCING AT 10 COSTUMES OBLIGATORY—COME IN GYPSY COSTUME POPULAR PRICKS—CONTINUOUS 10 A, M. TO MIDNIGHT ' Friday, March 6, at 8 p. m. 66 EAST FOURTH STREET, NEW YORK CITY ADMISSION 75 CENTS _ Advertising Department 50 East 13th St. New York City geet eee call to action for all of us, The New| 70 per cent. Wages are cut to $5/ to put up a battle for their demands | EAST SIDE—BRONX - = ae Pook ly Pe } mecte ate ine Sabjeet ot lenture | York District of the International] and $6 a day. and men are forced | however, that all this scheming came | Theatre Gulld Productions —' readers ecobites | ' to be deliverd: “Sovit Literature and | Labor Defense calls on all- its mem-| to work overtime without pay, and | '0 nothing. as} A W A R ! 14 Hinsdale RtBtogtigac™” At #2 | bers, male and female, as well as on| forced to work under terrific speed| ‘The crew here has voted to assist |b : Green Grow the Lilac ‘ Cooperators’ Patronize 3 feet eed all other workers to participate in| up conditions. financially the family of the union's JEFFERSON GUILD. 822% Bven. 9:60 Leahy \« Suspeeed, Workers Ball, | |the International Women’s Day| Plumbers Helpers: have often tried| Philadelphia "organizer, ©. Lipa, sire Toile. et ine SEROY t at the Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th st.) Meetings and make March 8 a day to organize, but the A. F. L. has a| locked in jail for defying an injunc- |] Smith Bellew LAST WEEK . By the | \ caren Apipiraclnl dance: purpone, of Ben. ae of struggle against the vicious ‘jus- | policy of leaving them unorganized. tion. They have also elected a shock Others ° th ! yaike money for supp time’ of the capitalist courts, against; The Plumbers Branch of the| troop to carry organization work in- FRANKUN Elizabeth e Queen “CO MRAD' 657 Allerton Avenue ; me ivinists Wackied Gr eeniox | the attacks on the foreign-born,| Building and Construction Workers | to the Brownsville section, and the frouinarniynney Pp fynn Wontanne | Altrea Lunt Estabrook 3215 BRONX, N. ¥. I are called to a protest meeting to | @éainst every form of capitalist ter- | Industrial League of the Trade Union| entire shop crew pledged to place |} youngsters of S\ own? an maa denote OF ]O1R” | protest the expulsion of three mil-| ror.” Unity League calls all plumbers and | themselves under orders of the union ‘Senteraay ‘Magy AaroR Beck Thes.45th St. 2ND BIG : itant members of local 76 Uphol- to epread’ tin otganien tion, Others Martin Beck ° wor p'was { serers Union by the misleaders of | helpers, organized or not, to come to | to spr -Aetanrmabeceed | aasensunneseianessncnanenistsssasisnsiansisasnsiasnssnts tive, 8:40, Mts, ‘Th, & Sat, 40 WEEK HEALTH FOOD | the local. Meet at 6 p. m. at 16 W. Marth “Co ist” a meeting Thursday at 8 p. m. at ms = “es t aint. St. at See Oe mmunt | Stuyvesant Casino, Second Avenue IVIC REPERTORY 14th St. stn av. 3 Vegetarian Restaurant tal ee tet eves cme | Now OFF the Pregs; | sd un sow J 800, $1, $1.50, Mate Tha Sat srse 1600 MADISON. AVENUE dah} will speak on the “Role of the) Get Your Copy Soon) one, on Women in Mass Work, by THIS SATURDAY NIGHT— EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director chide Paraaie aie { Bee pete ee hae rie es |O W. Kuusinen, “On the Question HEPPODROME 6th Ave. 7 | workers invited, r The March issue of the “Com-|of Trade Union Democracy,” by Wil- q & 430 8t. ‘i Prosh teecior tr, nu st"'a theoretical perioden! of | lam 2 Foster, and an, important| DATLY WORKER CONCERT AND DANCE Renate soa co nue Seoee He een E i it Sp. ™ at 61 Graham Ave. | the Communist Party, is just off the | outline for discussion on the agrarian arranged by the ACTS ON THE STREEN ’ la | Sympathizers welcome, press, There are many interesting | question. Workers are urged to get Lh Woote Boma 8 “DRACULA” J obn’s Restaurant | | SATURDAY. and valuable articles in this issue, a copy. EAST SIDE WORKERS CLUB ARTHUR BYRON ™ REO! vin BELA LUGOSI SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES lw cat A place with atmosphere | } Concert and Dance. F eee where all radicals meet ‘ Sedan, dtoplece stoeeF Oe ae IVE STAR FINAL | ORGANIZE TO END|[see tems. new roe | P| ‘ i Communist Party. PLAYBOY EXCELLENT PROGRAM in adaewieoagpayee Co STARVATION: DEMAND ‘ } Young Liberators, Yorkville Br. Presents CORT THRATRE, Went, of 4sth Stree | QE TOR! holds a dance at 8\p, m, at 210K, , esse si nnabarase news ond, St. ADL, T.Aamietlon 28 cente, ROMANY MARIE’S ——————— Rational Vegetarian Concert and Dance. GYPSY BALL THE REVOLUTIONARY PLAY Restaurant given by the, Hinsdale | Workers — —LECTURE BY—— “REVOLT” 199 SECOND AVENUE i aks woe IN GREENWICH VILLAGE a midice winders a in sil ais Bet, 12th and 13th Ste fi Cie M 2 Comrade Engdahl on the an will be given by the kussian Communist Fa) Strictly Vegetarian Food Harlem Prog. Youth Club, sosptttanmaee 2h fie’... Ml] WEBSTER HALL |FRIDAY EVENING cade veka 66 Y MIR” F frethinegic™ Negro Jame Band. Re- HI) 179 HAST 11th STREET MARCH 6th ROLE OF THE CO! th i Advertise Your Union Meetings fe Club. TICKETS IN ADVANCE $2.00—AT DOOR $3.00 Auspices:—Branch 71, International Workers Order * Nor Ave. a . . . Lit orma' “Rice PrsetADG (Aves. At FROM PLAYBOY—-32 UNION SQUARE . sn SATURDAY, MARCH 14, AT 8:15 P. M. = e Information Write . % PtP aaa ROMANY MARIE’S—42 WEST 8TH STREET 1373 43RD STREET, ARK e DAILY WORKE. : A ae ys ae ag fin PPE Telephone STuyvesant 9-968, Spring 7-736 MANHATTAN LYCEUM :

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