The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 29, 1931, Page 2

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Page Two ere DAIL Y WORKER, NEW YORK, es = NTWU EXPOSES AFL SELLOUT PROGRAM TO ALL STRIKERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | gether with the A. F. of L. o! had refused to let the entire r shift, a majority of whom a members, return to work. When workers protested about this, t a swer of the boss was that the union. the UTW, didn’t care. In contrast to this sellout, is the SATURDAY Concert The well known Calesky Malve- @ore’s Russian Quintet will play the Boro Park Workers Cente 1373 43rd St. this August 29. Ad sion 35 cents. English Dramatic Sec- tion will also perform. miaeas bak Sen Gate Women’s Coun: Is having a concert and V rinka around the Samovar fo! benefit of Miners Relief August 29, at 8:30 p.m. at 4114 S Sea Gate, Coney Islan ar Mapleton Workers Club will hold a dance and packa at 1684 66th St., Brooklyn. to go to Miners Relief. have a good time. Amnual District Picnic LD 1 ‘The International Labor [ +] will hold a picnic this | Pleasant Bay Park, Bronx, grand affair has been oy, arrange There wil] be music, sports and re freshments and dancing. Among the | speakers of the afternoon will be Louis Engdahl, national secretary f the IL D and B. Leib, one of the strikers facing first degree murder in the Silk Strike. ee et 8 Young and Adult Workers Attention! Plumbers Helpers Ball Are you out for a swell time? | Are you interested on seeing the First American Youtk Union grow and succeed? Come to the Plumbers Helpers Ball to be held Saturday night, Septem- ber 19, at Hoffmans Mansion, 142 Watkins St. Brooklyn. Phill ‘Conn and his famous Variety Club Or-| chestra wiil entertain with some shappy music. There will be danc- ing and all the rest. Attend and you will not forget it. ae, FM Aanual Section Convention will be held on August at the Esthonian Club, 2336 3rd Ave. Ad- mission 50 cents. All fraternal or- | ganizations are asked to send at| least two delegates. USNR, Wallabout Branch Newly organized branch, will ce- {ts formation with a gala e at the Workers Center, 61 Graham Avenue, at which Barbara Harding, a well known dancer will give some exhibition dances. Ad- mission 35 cents, , oe, a International Labor Defense Has arranged a gala dance to be held August 29 at & p.m. Dance music and concert to be given by prominent orchestra. Come and have a good time. . Youth Section [WO Is holding an excursion to Camp Kinderland. Will leave from Union Square, Total expenses $5. AN, invited. An election campaign rally will be held Saturday at & p.m. on Sey- mour and Center Street. All workers are urged to attend. We should learn to expose the corrupt Yonkers ad- ministration and fight against grow- ing unemployment. Coa ae ‘Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League Branch 2 sade hold an outdoor rally at 5th @ 126th St. tonight at 8 p.m. Gooa Speakers are requested to be | present. | a Yeung Communist League, Bx. No. 4| Will have a party at 1494 Crotona Park East, Apt. D4, the Bronx. All | invited, “Saat ae SUNDAY Brownsville Workers Centre Picnic Athletics, refreshments and a Pio- peer Field Day have been arranged by the LSU and other Brownsville ‘Workers organizations. Ren settleme! 11 Di tled f the Equity Silk Co. of th the boss set- rkers under an granted all thelr VU. Arrest Worker on Picket Line. While the UTW continues its prep- aratiol for the sellout the other of the boss, the police, are arrests of militant rs on the picket line. A worker named Vanora shouted, “Down with cockroach bosses” on the picket line yesterday morning. He was not ar- rested at that time, but last night the boss pointed him out to the cops and he was immediately picked up. The judge fined him $.0, but he ts now out on bail pending appeal of ers on the NTWU and ket lines were arrested this ning in front of the Prudentiar in the Gilt Edge Building on 12th Ave. They were charged with shouting and singing. As soon as the arrests were made, the picket line was i ned under the leadership of Ben Kirschbaum, youth leader of the NTWU. He was immediately ar- rested by the police. In order to divide the workers, Co- of the UTW, came to bail out these UTW defendants and refused absolutely to act for the NTW de- fendants in any way. Showing that they realized the necessity for sol- idarity among the workers, the rank | and file prisoners, members of the UTW, refused to be bailed out un- less the NTW workers were also re- leased on bail. Through this demon- stration of solidarity on the part of the UTW pickets, the UTW officials were forced to take all of these strikers out. The UTW officials told their rank and file, however, that they wanted not NTW pickets on their line. This is an open admis- sion on the part of the UTW of- ficials that they are opposed to sol- idarity among the strikers. The same thing occurred at the Fair Silk Co. on Franklin Street, where the offi- cials of the UTW prevented a uni- ted picket line despite the fact that the workers of the UTW demand- ed it. All strikers and their children and other workers are urged to attend the Pioneers Field Day which will take place this Sunday, August 23, at Pennington Park. The field day will be preceded by a program which will start at 1 o’clock-in Turn Hall. Send Relief At Once Relief is becoming more and more urgent. Wives of the strikers weep | in the relief store because their chil- dren are hungry. This morning a | woman came for relief for herself Gdeal BUSINESS SCHOOL DAY AND EVENING Commercial—Secretarial Courses Individual instruction Open the entire year lth St., at 2nd Ave., N.Y¥.C. TOmpkins Square 6-6584 G. A. PHILIPS CHIROPRACTOR 109 West 139th St. N. ¥. C. Apt. 1-C. Phone TI. 5-2296 recognition of thelr | SATURDAY, _AUGUST 29, 1931 and her children. She wsa forced to walk barefooted because she had no shoes. Workers throughout the country are urged to collect and send as much food and relief funds im- mediately to the Paterson strikers. All relief should be sent to the head- quarters of the Workers Interna- tional Relief and the relief commit- {tee of the United Front General Information on Fall Term is is Ready Strike Committee at 49 Ellison St. The militancy of the strikers on the NEW YORK me the Fall Term, picket lines depends upon getting as| for which registration has already | much food as possible immediately | been open, the Workers School this for their wives and children and for themselves. This Sunday the Red Front Ath- letic Club is helping the relief cam- paign. The club which is affiliated to the Labor Sports Union will go to New York for a soccer game. All funds collected at the affair will be turned over to the relief headquar- year offers a number of important pecial courses to train workers in rious fields of revolutionary ac- tivities. al insurance is one of these courses, The course will cove: the different phases of social insur- ance, including that of unemploy- ment insurance; a comparison of the system of social insurance in the Soviet Union with that in the cap- ters. Another youth affair will take Mee en ae social place on Saturday night. A dance; S.A, etc. At the present period of deepen- ing economic crisis and increasing unemployment, social insurance is one of the most pressing problems and program has been prepared and Frank Henderson, National Secretary of the Labor Sports Union has been invited to address the strikers dur- ‘age tise intarrileniak: for the working el Wanker et . ,,| pecially their vanguard, members ot ‘The Lithuanian Working Women’s) +. Communist Party, must know Alliance, Branch 38, will hold an outing for the relief campaign. The| ,, 4 ¥ outing will take place at the Vis. | “ent for it. Party and League units, : trade unions, unemployed councils, niauski Farm, High Mount Road, N.| : aE . Pie ALG Semen te q_| 2nd other mass organizations should Me eee ene: AG eend. their mambers), to skake toe: mission fee and all money raised at " ji : , course on a scholarship basis. Regis- the affair will go to the relief. ; tration must be taken ag early as A shop meeting of the Blake and/ jocible as the number of students Blake workers will be held on Mon- | PS?’ : in each class will be limited. Geol EE RA A HI The catalogue of the Fall Term is what social insurance is and how to ready with information about the Soccer Game Sunday school in general and the many : courses given in particular. It is ob- Between Paterson And Bronx Workers tainable at the School office, 35 E. 12th St. 3rd floor. Telephone Al- gonquin 4-1199, This Sunday, August 30, at 1:30 p. a ee m. at Crotona Park, Bronx, N. ¥., on| HARLEM SECTION BANQUET TO- the Soccer field there is going to be} | NIGHT FOR CONVENTION the return game played between the * Paterson strikers’ soccer team, the| 7" Semi-annual banquet for the Red Front A. C, against the Spar-|Harlem Section Convention of the Communist Party will take place to- tacus A. C. team, Last week the Red Spark A. C.|night at the Esthonian Hall, 2336 beat the Paterson strikers’ team in a | Third Ave. The admission fee of 50 close game of 5 to 4; this week the A ;: cents will provide for food, entertain- Red Fronts are out to win and they)” will have plenty of good competition | ™°At i lier eae ae to overcome in the Spartacus A. C. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES The game promises to be a good EAST SIDE—BRONX exhibition of soccer playing and full ae on of fast and shappy passing and playing. | Ze Ke oO: All workers are invited to come to THEATRES“ the game; there is no admission and plenty of seats in the grandstand to watch the game in the most com- fortable positions JEFFERSON : Stas ave and refreshments. Today to Tuesday Glorious Star of es | ig =o Gia nee arent ole “ New Reduced Barbara Brownsville Workers Center si2"%in."Se¢| | STANWYCK to 3 p.m. P I C N I ¢ Exe. Sat. In Sun. and Hol. “The MIRACLE Guaday, August doth | Soer| WALI? ULMER PARK Foot of 25th Ave., Brooklyn DAVID MANNERS SAM HARDY ADMISSION 25c “HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY Dancing—Singing—Athleties—Sports | Also PIONEER FIELD DAY Races—Games—Refreshments Protected from rain Will be held on Sunday, August 30th At 3 P. M. at 233 Clinton St., Hoboken, N. J. Take BMT. Subway, West End and stop at 25th Ave.; walk three blocks to park Daily Worker Readers Meet, SOCIAL INSURANCE Williamsburgh in COURSE IN SCHOOL Signature Drive Dangerous Laxity in Election Work BROOKLYN, N. Y.—The section committee of section 6, Communist Party, at its recent meetings decided to call to the attention of all Party members within the section the dan- gerous laxity in coiiecting signatures for the election campaign. “The placing of Communist can- didates on the Ist, 2nd. 4th, 6th, 13th, 14th and 19th Congressional district is in great danger. Six thousand signatures are needed between now and September 6,” the section com- mittee stated. All Must Turn Out ‘The grave danger of not being placed on the ballot has compelled the section committee to call off all unit meetings at the regular dates in order that the whole membership can go out and collect signatures, All members are called upon to come right after work to collect signatures. ‘The following stations are open every night. Workers Center, 61 Graham Ave., Workers Club, 796 Flushing Ave.; Laisve Hall, 46 Ten Eyck St.; IWO headquarters, 118 Codk St.; 1 Fulton St., Middle Village, L. I. One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. WIR TO MEET IN WORLD CONGRESS To Meet in Berlin on October 9-16 NEW YORK.—After ten years of service to the international working- class the Workers International Re- lief will convene with representatives of all countries at Berlin, October 9 to 16 in a world congress. The world organization has a membership of 18 million workers and during its 10 years of existence has collected and distributed 20 mil- lion dollars in relief. The organization was first initia- ted in response to the call of Rus- sian workers and peasants during the famine period following the holo- caust of the world war. Miner to Speak at Annual ILD Picnic Sunday, Aug. 30th A coal miner who has just come from the battle front of the Pitts- burgh coal strike area will tell of the battles of the coal miners in their struggle against starvation, at the annual defense picnic of the New York District International Labor Defense on Sunday, August 30, at Pleasant Bay Park. A feature of the picnic will be an exhibition with mass exercises con- ducted by the Red Front. This or- ganization of workers defense must be built CHICAGO $40 $45 California Seattle Florida $20 Packards, Cadillacs and Lincoln cars—Rates equall- as low to all points in country. +. . aby TRAVEL BUREAU HOTEL JACKSON 137 W. 45th Street Phone Bryant 9-0573 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations AMUSEMENTS GiLBERT =" SULLIVANSOY WORLD FAVORITE OPERA “THE MIKADO” “Thrift” Prices Bx 28 Mat Mats. 50e to $1.50 GER THEA. W. 44th Street 6-7963, Evenings Next Opera beg. Mon., Sept. 7. “Merry Widow” with Donald Brian 6th Ave & 4ta Bt IN NEW YORE gis | WILL ROGERS LOCKFORD ‘= CAMEONOW 10 49 nd STREET & B'WAY TOLSTOIS MIGHTY STORY THE WHITE DEVIL With LIL DAGOVER and IVAN MOSJOUKINE MUSIC TADIUM CONC s S phony Orch LEWISOHN STADIUM Amsterdam. Ave and 138th St ALBERT COATES, Conductor. EVERY NIGHT A'T 8.30 Pricea: 25e, 50e, 81. (Circle 7: 73) 28% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS Have Your Eyes Examinea and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL OPTICAL CO. ander personal supervision of DR. M. HARRISON YOUR FOOD will do you more good if you CRUSADER 113 EAST FOURTEENTH eat under conditions of QUIET There is Comfort and » Protection in CLEANLINESS Eat with people who have the wit to know that FOOD and HEALTH are RELATED > COME TO THE (SELF-SERVICE) Restaurant sT. (Near Irving Place) Unusual Wholesome Dishes Made of FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS AFTER THEATRE SPECIAL LUNCH 50c DINNER 65¢ ARTISTIC SURROUNDINGS QUALITY FOODS Vrufood VEGETARIAN RESTAURANTS 153 West 44th Street 110 West 40th Street (East of Broadway) True Food Is the Key to Health $58 Clir-mont Parkway AU ‘“.omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant Bronx Optometrist 218 AVENUE Corner ‘Street } NEW YORK CITY Opposite few | far | Felephone TRAVEL TO RU New York—Southampton and Leningrad and by rail to Moscow, Our business is done directly and best service. y not go and see the most gigantle building up of a new society ‘within the shell of the old—U. S. S. R. Holmberg of this agency has recently returned from Russia and will gladly furnish you with information on travel to U. 8. 8. Ry whether you intend to go there to stay or vi Bureau of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. HOLMBERG S. S. AGENCY 2 East 125th Street SSIA, U. S. S. R. London and by Soviet steamer to ting. through INTOURIST, State Travel Standard prices New York City of RUSSIAN NATI AID SOCIETY OPENING NINTH CONVENTION of the the ONAL MUTUAL OF AMERICA 3y6uan Neyebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 3 BAST TH STREET (Corner Second Avenve) Tel. Algonquin 7248 We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts. 657 Allerton Avenue fistabrook 3215 BRONX, N.Y, Intern’ Workers Order A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street Patronize the Concoops Food Stores PARADE CRAFT working class organizations NOVELTY EVENTS hee aes Wing Movement.” Czechoslovak Phone: Lehigh 4-1812 1 ADMISSION 25 CENTS Tickets can be had at all branches of the Society and at the Novy Mir offices, 35 E. 12th Street, New York City ‘Women’s Council 17 of Brighton Bench August 30, 11:30 a.m. ULMER PARK Wo sers House, Inc. jenc! will serve dinner in the afternoon trem 2 p.m. Singing and f - gy AND dancing until midnight with genera Airy, Large DENTAL DEPARTMENT amusements are to. be" enjoven TARTS | oy Saturday Sept. 5, 1931 INION 8 Restaurant eae bling you fmsaee WORKERS IN YONKERS || come an. ' | Me eting Rooms and Hall 9 { 1 UNION SQUARE 2700 BRONX PARK EAST erat: Sipe ameter mene MA 3 ; MASS MEETING AND CONCERT eH FLoOR : Brownsville Picate Committ Buy Your Daily at the Following TO HIRE : ; - Alk Work Done Under Personal Care All those appointed on the com- Stands PIONEER FIELD DAY Bultahin tbe Recerca cane Good Speakers—Gosd Artists ‘of DR. JOSEPHSON “Buy m the Co-operative 7 rf rotate i Suitable zs, Rueust 30, at "Hae cee atais oes: | CUTMANSTEIN pa kS ime ere ana’ Dace i the Speeches of greetings by prominent representatives of various, — — Store and help the Left Cosmopolitan Hardware to 7 p.m. at 140 Nep- site.” "all welcome, = **a8 2 Get Your Tickets a‘ Pioneer Office eles bsnl : ae bell CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE & Electrical Corporation oe age ee 211 Metenn sve. 35 E, Lith St, Sth Floor bis): arenas ey el Abe Aa (ih Blo NER WER : RESTAURANT ets Club Headquarters Report at BRIGHTON BEACH ¢ T AND DANCE Factory Supplies 216 EAST 14TH STREET AreanGausn Damoure Gist Sc ang Mermala Aves Coney taland 2018 2nd AVENUE 8-Course Lunch 55 Cents —_ |}, T OUR BATTLE IS GREAT, OUR FIGHTING IS VITAL PROLETRIAN CAMPS MAKE US READY AND STRONG PROLETARIAN CULTURE, SPORT AND RECITAL TEACH US TO FIGHT WITH A SONG COME TO WOCOLONA COME TO NITGEDAIGET COME TO UNITY AND KINDERLAND— THEY ARE ALL WITHIN THE REACH OF YOUR HAND Automobiles leave for Camp Unity, Nitgedaiget, Kinderland and Woco- Iona every day 9 to 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. from 143 E. 103rd St. FRIDAY—9 to 10 a, m. and 6 p- m. SATURDAY—9 a. m. to 10 a. m. and 5 p. m. STMNDAY—9 a. m, to 10 a- m. We also take passengers to Kinderland Headquarters for Children—143 E. 103rd St. for information call at the office of all 4 camps 32 UNION SQUARE, ROOM 505, TEL. STuy. 9-6332 CORNER 101TH STREET Regular Dinner 65 Cents NEW YORK CITY ISAC A Sfoup of artists from DANCING UNTIL MORNING enor, d the Laboratory Theatre ADMISSION 50 CENTS Mass Demonstration and Festival Russian HEALTH FOOD } Vegetarian Restaurant Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUE Wind up the Season with the DEFENSE PICNIC of the N. Y. District—INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE SUNDAY, AUGGUST 30th All Out Show Your Solidarity with the SCOTTSBORO NEGRO BOYS MOONEY AND BILLINGS PATERSON VICTIMS ALABAMA SHARE CROPPERS STRIKING MINERS ALL VICTIMS OF BOSS JUSTICE THE IMPERIAL VALLEY PRISONERS 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-9081 Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5974 All Kinds uf ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty SOLIDARITY DAY Sept. 7th (Labor Day) 12 am to 12 pm ‘ ‘ MELROSE DAIRY feerxcnast Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St. Station) VELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—0149 NEVIN BUS LINES 111 W. 31st (Bet, 6 & 7) Aves.) Starlight Park, 177th St. and West Farms Rd. Biggest cultural event of the working class calendar to celebrate Solidarity Day—solidarity with the sriking ‘ Tel: Chickering 4-1600 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 miners and textile workers. Moying pictures, pageants, And HAVE ONE GRAND TIME—From Morn Till Midnight John’s Restaurant singing, orchestras, dancing, prominent speakers—a most Take LR.T. Subway to 177th St., then Unionport car up to end of line. PHIL ADELPHI A gensthinycitaiian pian complete and beautifully planned program. Workers! Buses will meet you there. SU NLIG HT ¢ AFETERI A pip ead hahaa + Negro and white, native and foreign-born! Bring your PLEASANT BAY PARK—UNIONPORT, BRONX mine S qhere all. endicale meet ‘ shop mates, organizations, families and yourselves! ADMISSION 35 CENTS Schiffman ond Whittlin, Proprietors QURLY EXPRESS SERVICE 302 E. 12th St. New York | | Tickets 50c, benefit of the miners, 68 AVENUY A.—Bet. 4th & 5th Sts, NEW YORK Phone:—Dry Dock 9021 $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Rational Vegetarian ATTENTION, NEWARK, N. J. Round | 4 RAIN OR SHINE way “itp Restaurant } ; . ‘ i 00 $5.75 #@ Mass Demonstration and Festival On AUGUST 30th, at 6:30 P. M. In Memory of Our Deceased Comrade and Sister Lod S00 she 199 SECOND AVENUE At 52 West St., Slovak Hall Washington 525 8.25 SLs Veen ake ‘There will be a Grand Banquet to celebrate the successful Dafly SONI A RESNICK Richmond 8.00 12.00 Worker finance drive and revolutionary competition during the drive. f Pittsburgh 8.00 14.25 =o PROGRAM i ‘Eas Cleveland 12.50 18.75 ¥ Who died in Nicaragua—June 5, 1931, we donate Detroit 15.50 23.25 Advertise Your Union Meetings } | YOUR WORK—YOUR PRIDE! a Bodeber tovlbe, just returned from a tour around the country. Bib cs aka sTHLlty yncbeVaneatglbaueeniaantes 16 pair ee sae Cee ec gent ee ; ; NOT LONG AGO A MINIATURE UNITY, ri eon Uren raise high the banner, which early death wrested St. Louis 22.50 33.75 Advertietig ‘Uspabbnant NEAR PEEKSKILL, ON A MEASLEY, HIRED HILL. 4. Presentation of banners and other prizes to units and organiza- out of her hands, 98 Angelos 57.00 105.60 The DAILY WORKER IT I8 WITH YOUR AID AND CO-OPERATION | tions. A very good time is promised to all. Come and bring RALPH GRAIG, AL end KAWRA RESNICK owest Rates Everywhere hae & ‘THAT THIS MARVELOUS CAMP UNITY WAS BUILT. your friends, papacy th EK 50 East 12th St New York City Rate $17.50 IT’S YOUR OWN T.UUL Week /

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