The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 30, 1932, Page 2

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THU DAY, » JUNE 30, 1932, Commissioner Wood's 5 Lies Get Injunction Against Striking Shoe Workers ‘Jail Members BARS PICKETING AND EVEN STRIKE, HEADQUARTERS =: I. Miller | and Geller| Strikers Rally for | Sharper Struggle | NEW YORK.—The I. Miller and Andrew Geller injunctions) ie ‘ ile. was suspended. Were served on the shoe strik | Although the YCL had received | ers yestdrday. These injunc-| , for this and previous meet | tions were secured on affida- , pressure by neighborhood mer- | vits of U. S. Commissioner of} chants moved the police to act. Conciliation Charles Wood, ac- = ris an tor, and known in New York as DESPITE ARREST, the man who caused 58 shoe companies, to break their con- Defense Attorney Also} tract with the union. The injunctions are very 5 drastic, they forbid all picket-| Arrested at Trial ing, and forbid that the strike] \ypwarx, nN. J, June 29—An at- headquarters can be in the vi- apt to evict a Negro worker’s fam- cinity of the struck shops. on Saturday was stopped by the r nisé or so shoe| Concerted action of white and Negro/ ae ene OF os | workers of the neighborhood. strikers who have paralyzed) 4; the workers gathered, police ap- the I. Miller and Andrew Gel- ted last Friday air meeting of unist League, at gton Sts. three me up for trial to- rket Court. s in the Workhouse, the sec- er was sentenced to , and the sentence of the i, who had beeen badly beaten of Y. GL for stone HOME. RELIEF IS Street Meeting | Magistrate Smith in the | Sandberg was sentenced to FORCED TO OPEN Rally July 2 to Fight for It to Give Relief NEW YORK.—The Home Relief |Bureaus this week reopened their doors for registration of the unem- | ployed. No public announcement was made for fear that the offices would |be stormed by the starving thousands |who had been denied any relief by these agents of the richest American city. The Home Relief Buros also have }invented a scheme to make granting Jof relief as dificult as possible, and |to prepare a gigantic black-list. Every |Mew applicant is forced to pay 25 cents for a notary public fee, and to jevee to a four page document the applicant has to fill out. He has to list all members of his family, state whether they are working and whe- ther they are able to work, how long he has lived in each place, ete., etc. 18 Out of 100 In one Homie Relief Bureau, Bronx, |out of 100 who applied since the of- fices reopened, only 18 were accepted, and they do not get anything yet, |they are being “investigated.” The | budgets of the various Home Relief | Bureau offices have not been increas- jed, and whatéver relief is actually given new applicants, will result in cutting down the relief of those al- Con tiecak Whitewash of Jersey State Police at Curtis Trial (P,P. Piet on) As the prosecution neared the end of its case in the trial of John H. Curtis, charged with “obstructing the search for the Lindbergh baby,” frantic efforts were made to prevent details regarding activities of the New Jersey state police from being brought out. Brutality and third-degree methods toward witnesses, coupled with a general bungling of the case, are some of the charges openly being made against the police. Inset shows Lindbergh, o VETS PARADE IN YORKVILLE, FRI Urge Workers to Join) in Bonus Fight NEW YORK, June 29.—The worker Ex-Servicemen’s League will hold a port of the bonus marchers who are now in Washington. The veterans will assemble at 72nd St. and ist Ave. at 4 p.m. Friday. All ex-servicemen and workers re- gardless of their political affiliations are urged to come to this demon- stration in support of the worker vets in Washington. Hutcheson Henchmen Ousted from Office in| Carpenters Local 20, Staten Island, N.¥., the rank and the old type who were singing “Hal- laluia” to the betraying policies of the District Council and the Hutehe- son machine clique. The newly- elected officials, although old typ? English trade unionists, are not fake ing some of the propositions of the left wing opposition program. veterans of Post 50 of the Workers} huge rally and parade Friday in sup- | NEW YORK.—In Carpenters’ Local | file have defeated the “Yes Men” of) politicians and they are not oppos-| i12 MORE FUR STRIKES WON Get Wage Increases; 15 Still Strike NEW YORK.—Shop strikes for bete ter working conditions and against | wage-cuts and long hours are spread- ing through the fur trade. Under | the leadership of the Fur Department | of the Needle Trades Workers’ Ine dustrial Union, 15 shops were stopped off this week and the strike has been won in 12 of them, Some were struck before and 15 shops are therefore still on strike. In the settled shops workers reé- ceived wage increases, shorter hours | and other improvements. | These shop strikes are part of the preparations for the mass campaign {for July increases in the entire fur trade. CHASE FOR U. 8. SENATOR | In the report on the New Hamp- shire Communist state convention in Saturday's. Daily Worker it was | stated by mistake that F. B. Chase |was nominated for lieutenant gov- |ernor. Chase is nominated for U. S. senator. There is no lieutenant gov- ernor in New Hampshire. Chase is a | veteran in the labor movement and | was Communist candidate for gov- |ernor in 1930. Explains Curtis’ Lies — - Democrats Make Big: As Itch for Money | WATCH THE ADS! Cohen's (Opticians) Coes and Bpinioel! (Barbers Dental Dept., 1.V Histth. Contes Gateteria Jade Mt. Chop Suey Optometrist Cafeteria Union, Local 174 ‘afeteria PITTSBL ed and tried to make the rally- ler production for weeks now, in- e i in-/ three workmen to remove the furni-| ‘icany to provide for new applic. iT Copper Trust Man FLEMINGTON, N. J., June 29— stable, seeing that he could not carry Nevertheless, even this reopening is| Walsh of Montana, fake liberal but|told were all a bunch of lies, Lind- REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER March on August 9 | to take the locked-out family to the| councils, It is necessary now to fight iron hand. He is Roosevelt's man,| structing justice.” eraiuan Wiring unemployed Concoops Food Stores workers move on, but» were are making preparations to de- junstion against the right to|ture, they were surrounded, and ante, though none of the new ones Their Chairman John H. Curtis, Norfolk ship builder, idnideens cee Tan ort ee ae ee coor [something of a victory, and was due/(Governor’s Relief Is |actuall? a creature of the Anaconda | bergh testified during his cross-exam-|H] 3.4 ssa press cotne ond”) Manhattan Wiping Cloth Co. City Hall to demand redress. One|narder to make this victory mean| NEW YORK.—The fake schemes of |too, and the vote by which he went:| The reason Curtis told these lies, Camps Unity, Kinderland, Ni¢gedaiget ares canis the hides! sr ready on the list. fend their ri orien ee chine, ae with Already, those getting formerly $10 AMTER T0 SHOW strik¢ and to picket. @ week have been cut to $9, theo- jeket is an injunction against | When told of the nature of the Job) nave anything so far. never knew the kidnappers of the the right to live Rebicrgghel yn ube ope, prc pre Beak Won CHICAGO, Ill, June 29,—Senator| Lindbergh baby and the stories he s reh H neer of the flat. A committee was atonce!tg the mass pressure and demon- > Copper Oo., is ruling the Demoeratic | ination at the second day of the trial Lueke-Kitfe Co, (Tents) Pittsbu ung! chosen from the assembled workers! strations led ‘by the Unempioyea| All for Railroads | party National Convention with an| here of Curtis on the charge of “ob- jf] Ohester Cafeteria - John’s Restaurant June 29—The | of the white workers, mounting a| something, to make the Home Relief |the Roosevelt government for “relief” |626 for Walsh against 528 for | Lindbergh said, was that he hoped to] Marry Stoiner Octteal Co, here putting | stoop to ask the rally to remain until | pureau actually give relief, and not|@%d the real program of relief to| Shouse, shows Roosevelt's present! sell a story to the newspapers. Capi- up a hot fight against evictions, and the return of the committee, was at-| py cutting down on the quantities |banks and big corporations will be | strength. talist greed, that seeks profits every- clipened eee Leanna) A gid Colony { is mobilizing all jobless and part time| rested. Again the crowd was told to given the older registrants, etc. exposed by Israel Amter, Communist} Walsh made a new keynote speech | where, and the vogue established by en’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund’ Santal Midy . Workers for a h Welfare Association, What’s On— mar Augus Manhattan ‘Lyceum Sollin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy Gotitied's Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (So. Blvd.) World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Kale Cafeteria Dr. Kessler Crechoslovak Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop Dr. Schwarts on the disperse, but refused, and one Negro} ‘The Unemployed Council of Great. | Candidate for governor of New York, | when he took over the gavel, and in- |capitalist newspapers of financing | worker was arrested. er New York is calling upon workers |i" an address tonight at 8 p.m. in| dicated the Democratic Party cam- |scandal mongers and notoriety seek- The committee returned and re-|thruout New York and Brooklyn to| Westchester Workers Center, 27 Hud-|paign arguments will consist of |ers, were the theme of today's testi- Ported the city's Overseer of the Poor | celebrate on Saturday, July 2, the|S0" Street, Yonkers. blaming the Republicans for the | mony, had promised to take care of the| forced reopening of the Home Relief} The New York Central Railway,|whole business depression though family, but not putting much faith|Buros and demonstrate the determi-|one of the wealthiest corporations in | Democrats shared in and supported in such promises the workers tore out | nation to struggle for more adéqu-|the United States, was given reliefj/every one of the Hoover starvation as the nails from the door and re-in-| ate relief. Saturday is the day on|to the extent of $13,600,000 by Re- | policies. | 5. Against capitalist terror; against Coney | St@lled the family in its home. Mon+| which there will be held the first | construction Finance Corporation, ac- sacle all forms of suppression of the mance |@ay, when the trial of the arrested Grand Picnic at Pleasant Bay Park|cording to an announcement yester-|/smaller type, it appears that this political rights of workers. eee workers took place on a charge--of|for the Hunger Fighter, official or-|day. This was the total amount they | figure covers fifty years. aganltagn A special meeting of the Film Section of| Ulawful assembly, the workers so|gan of the Council, which has con-| asked for. They got it because the} It also covers every treatment for the Workers’ Film and Photo League will) packed the court inside and out that| sistently exposed the fake charities| government appropriation for relief| toothache or a mote in the eye, it Amusements VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: the Brighton Isiand Ave. Gf the Bonus March. ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT be nela at 10 W. st Bt. at 8 pm | they ford a Judge eo penis the|and relief schemes of the city. to banks and cape Died set 4 appears, that was treated at a clinic, 80 FIFTH AVENUE i All xeterans and ex-servicemen ave. in-|.case unti ursday, thinking that for this purpose, by the banker and|The fifty year period covers three 15th FLOO rig 3 | Fee ee eae ae eee in| the spirit of the workers will have Epic Film Is Feat corporation control of the govern-| panics and‘ depressions besides the a . * WORKERS CENTER i Euney island and Brighton Beach. Meeting | died out by then, but gathering out-|ADIC Fim Is Feature | ment ana treasury. present crisis, which has lasted three 5 fod | electat arreteete i rsoaee 50 EAST 13th STREET et ee, A 2888 W. Sand St, Coney side the court they promised to| at Anti-War Meet in | on the other hand, Roosevelt re-| years already and deepens from day | EARL ROSSMAN’S ; ape “bring out the whole neighborhood.” Patronize the Health Center ¢ 9 centiy announced approval of an ap-|to day, with ever-mounting starva- | “ .” ‘New School’ Tonite propriation of $6,546,784 for “relief” |tion, and more than a million in| Dangers of the Arctic ‘The Imperial Valley Branch, LL.D., will hold an opencair mesting at 170th Si. and|_ 24@ International Labor Defense Walton Ave., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m lawyer that came to defend the two] new YoRK—‘C; to the unemployed of the state —| need of relief in New York Cit: sei . . .—"Cannons and Trac- ‘y now. A regular mecting of Post 25 of the| WOFKrS was arrested for talking tol tors,” nailed as an eple war film,|through forced labor. While the ap-|—~ Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League will be| the men and women outside the! win)'be a feature at the meeting to- | Propriation for relief to financial in-) NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES held at 1180 Southern Bi ard, Bronx,| court. He was immediately released. night at thé New School for Social | Sttuttons (more than two billion dol- EAST 61DB—BRONX at 8 p.m. pens ae \lars) was carefully planned to be Aa open-air meeting will be held at | Research, 66 W. J2th St, arranged | iste enough to take care of any RKO gus ees ‘and Python in Fight for Lite! demands they might make, the New FRANK BUCK’S Hreeman and Intervale Aves. at 3/200 U nemployed Storm | |by the American committee on be- | | r FaNKUN | | ORING EM BACK ALIVE" # Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS A RENDEZYOUS WITH ICY DEATH “oMAYEAIRS So": DINE IN THE OPEN AIR Garden Restaurant i 323 EAST 13th STREET (a ar Second Avenue REASONABLE. PRICES COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE NO TIPPING MUSIC Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames $1.90 i 117 ORCHARD ST., Near Delancey @f 35, U. 8 Bank Deposit Terre Haute Trustees) wer, to bs neta in Geneva, Aug, 28| YoTk state reliet for the unemployed The Tremont Workers’ Club will 4 ‘ ~ |provides a maximum of two dollars \ the Trmont Workers’ cor vil uxeland Demand Fo 0 d| pee Tisd we oe ey invite leach for the two and a half million hititon Ave, at 8 p.m = i ‘unemployed of the state, and has no ai ea TERRE HAUTE, Ind. June 29— | Workers’ Book Store, 50 E. 13th St.| oietion to the needs or demands of F "c:/Two hundred hungry workers| Speakers will include william sim. | elation to | at piesa the Sugar Creek township | MS. secretary of the Anti-Imperialist | “yore ig no provision for stretch- Bim, undér the auspices of half of the World Congress Against | Prospects sist WEDNESDAY TO SATURDAY “STRANGE LOVE OF LAST WEEK Vhe Wheatre Guild Presents REUNION IN LE A Comed ‘The W.LR. Band Morlal of Comrade G Gaurel Gardens wm, Band members mus resent and | tre | MOLLY LOUYV. ” i en time. trustee's office here Friday demand- | {Eesti Doane fe the Chinese|1. Oniy mass demand can push| me’ AIN By nonpiy 2 SHEWwoOD, es, ing food. A grocer fed some of them. ers’ Alliance; Malcolm Cowley.| the relief” beyond the narrow limits GUILD ‘West ‘or ‘B'way THURSDAY | They had had no relief at all tor two | editor of the New Republio, and rep- \| Ann Dvorak and Lee Tracy By 8.40. Mts Th,, Sat, Tel. Go 5-6220 || COCO and SPINICELLI INVITE YOU TO of a two-dollar bill. Figures Can Lie —— | The fake role of the private char- The Proleteult will nave a symposium on| “The Way Out” st 25 E. 14t 8:30 | days. resentatives of Jewish and other so-| Bm. Admission is tree One result is that the $20,000 bond | lal welfare bodies. ——PATRONIZE—— A Comradely ig SANDWICH SOLS *LoNncH AT JEFFERSON—Extra Feature TOM MIX in —MusIC— 108 University Place q | SH cONCERTS=—— Besiais cart winters. w issued for unemployment relief which tt. ‘The Rider of Death Valley’ \ Bae ocx Bove cu rs ities in New York and vicinity will| ley LUM CONCERT § ra B ARBE \ H Peete ete pi, cater tne neslim si] rad been out dawn snd forgotten VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: —_| also be exposed by Amter. A widely || maps 1 eae COE cs os Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 188th |! (Just Around the Corner) i the Boro’ Park Unemployed Council. Jeaal novice Bae been alven wey and| 6. Against imperialist war; for the | published statement of the New York pe bad rd abekdal Bicol cad Willem Van Hoogstraten, Conductor Telephone Tompkins Square 6-97H0-9181 i seniors of tre PS. Teiegution wo ene eual notice has been given by the| defense of the Chinese people | Welfare Council shouts that 000,000 Ett Nl spices tere ie nie 1000: BOSTON: ROAD i Boviet Union will report at Paradise Mi e = » and of the Soviet Union. have been aided here. Later on, in Corner of Wilkins Avenue q {11 W. Mt. Eden Ave., Bronx, ubject to objections filed within ten es ERE Le ada BRONX, N. ¥. e ge | bast our work wil pee the men, ine {/| Bungalows and Roomis to | Branteh, F.S.U. % . women and the children i A report of the shop delegate conference | VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: THE LITHUANIAN WORKERS’ DAILY NO TIPS Rent for Summer Season i ce made to the Laundry Workers In-| 6, Against imperialist war; for the ‘ ‘ 5 ! i pepe ce ee sl oats Picn iC of i aisve “Training for the Class Struggle” | f and ef the Soviet Union. P i f t for the summer season, Bei + | 35 EAST 12th STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y.—ALg. 4-1199 fai farm in Eastern Pennsylvania, “Run j WG ite meeting in the Se 700 | thx Park East at 8 p.m. ning water. Electricity, Swimming, fish- ing, ete. Reasonable tates. —Commun'- ime delegate si sofissel Union LABOR UNION Sunday July 3rd, 1932 SUMMER TERM Camp Wocolona cate with A. Benson, ¢.o, Daily Worker. if} I sis eces: ve, soo MEETINGS | ULMER PARK MUSIC HALL FULT Seer TER ER 1s MONROE, N.Y. aes Connolly—Our Rev Her- | Foot of 25th Avenue is CAMPERS ATTENTION! Brooklyn, New York Comrade WILLIAM W. WEINSTONE Candidate for U. S. Senator and Managing Editor of the Daily Worker will speak @,” at the Irish Workers’ Club, 2072) h Ave., at 8 p.m | Dressmakers he block committees of dressmakers on h and 38th Sts. will meet Thursday night e Industrial Union office, 131 28th St., up plans for the organization drive | Lodging: $1.00 Per Day $4.00 Per Week FOOD STORE ON PREMISES Light lunches at all hours ROUND TRIP FARE—$2 Erie R.R. N. ¥. Office—799 BROADWAY, Room 303 Phone STuyvesant 9-0878 Army Tents 16x15 and Otuers Also Camp Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INO. , 478 Water St. corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-3476 An Open-air meeting will be held vurth Bt, and Second Ave. at 8 p.m., un-| f, (fine Suspices of the Workers’ Zasiuntt | using he coming season, Ce | he 27th St. Block Committee of dress- Brownsville Workers’ Club will dis-|makers are giving e concert and dance the Dies Bill at 1440 East New York|July 3 at Brighton Beach Workers’ Cen- Rear Amboy St., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m., ter, 3159 Coney Island Ave., for ail dress- Ree le |makers in Brighton Beach and Coney rade Max Levine will speek on “The| 1sland. les of the Needle Trades” at the eS ee Workers’ Club, 2008 70th St! 41 furniture workers called by the Fur-| | niture Workers’ Industrial Union to. « meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. at 108 E. 14th Concourse Workers’ Club will hold| gt. to discuss the united front in connece air mosting at 170th St. and Wal-/ tion with preparation for. strike in the ae #8 om. | coming season. Rady Workers’ Clad of Lewer Bronz| Laundry Workers ye lecture at 383 Beekman Ave.,| Laundry Workers’ Industrial Union calls , ab 8 p.m. All workers, ere invited. | a special membership meeting for Thurs- ‘ |@ay at 8 pan. at Ambassador Hall, Third on-air meeting will be held at 8:30] Ave. and Claremont Parkway. Organizers “Burke and Holland Aves, under the| and officials will be elected and a report Of the Co-op. No. 1 Branch of the! given of the shop delegate conference and of the Commodore strike. REGISTRATION NOW OPEN Register now in order to get into classes desired. Number of students in each class will be limited. Summer Term catalogues are now obtainable by com- municating with the Workers School office. Soparate entrance, elevator, shower, ac chen privileges (Frigidaire). $25. Second Ave. Entrance Ninth St, Apt. ie TWO AIRY FRONT ROOMS—For 2 or % \| CAY PERS ATTENTION Genuiw WU. S. Army Ventilated 9x9 Wall Tents $12.50 $12 A WEEK IN ALL THREE PROLETARIAN CAMPS GO TO YOUR THREE PROLETARIAN CAMPS Nitgedaiget :.: Kinderland :.: Unity ALL CAMPS HAVE NEW UNIFORM RATES $13.00 Per Week, Including Organization and Press Tax WEEK END RATES: FIRST DAY $2.50, SECOND AND THIRD $2.00 NO COLLECTIONS The camps have enforced this drastic cut to enable more workers to come out for rest and recreation Admission 50 CENTS Beginning 10 a. m. in advance 40 CENTS PROGRAM 5 p.m. LAST DAY! et Talkie of the Imperialist Intervention in “iapteed ‘on the Moscow “Armored We ‘These wre used tents i in excellent condition, bs ou her tents. cots, stoves, blankets fishing supplies, We have been es- 8) ut, ie also tarry a ‘complete fin a general line of cai pine is {ablished in the same spots OUR GUARANTEE GOES A LONG WAY LUCKE-KIFFE CO. 523 BROADWAY (Corner Spring St.) Phone CAnal 6-2985 Mail Orders Fille / Promptly STARTING TOMORROW “ALONE” 4 Tense Story of Soviet Russia Today WILLIAM W. WEINSTONE The famous chorus “Aida” of Worcester, Mass. and four New York, New Jersey chortises on the program. A mass chorus of 300 will sing revolutionary songs TWO ORCHESTRAS WILL PLAY CONTINUOUSLY Automobiles Ie lly fhe all camps at 0 ADM, Feiss snd Saturday © ARE Sie P.M. and 7 P.M, from M$ E. 103rd St, and the Coop. Cafeteria, 2800 Bronx Park E. ‘You ean also travel by train or boat, All-at low rate rglish Title. Mn ACME THEATRE ith STREET & UNION SQUARE For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City office: EStabrook 8-1400 and for Kinderland TOmpkins Square 6-8434 New York City 9 A. * to 1 PM. 1$¢;. & Sun, Midnite shew Gat. City Office of Camp Kinderland 108 6. 14th St. Auto Station Phone Lehigh 4-2882

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