The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 26, 1932, Page 2

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SST RC ERC 8 PROTA NRE AR SOE 2 » _ Page Ty Two - DAILY WORKER, W YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 19382 sgt ea A. FL. LOCALS ALS IN SUPPORT OF ANTI- INJUCTION MEET “Also Offer in Fight NEW YORK. — The Provisional Committee for the Anti-Injune’ Conference, that will take place th Thursday, July 28, at 7:30 p.m, Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., has enlisted the support of 100 law- yers t ele against the in- junction menace. The lawyers will sil be present at the conference where the program of struggle against in- junctions will be taken up. The response of the labor move- ment to this conference is satisfac- tery. According to the report of John Steuben, Provisional Secretary. two more A. F. of L. locals have sent in-their credentials with delegates to Lawyers Aid the conventoin, namely, the German Painters Union Local 499, A. F. of L., and local 528 of Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paper Hangers of America . Also numerous worker: nal organizations have sent in th crede! We urge all other organizations that have elected their delegates to send in the cred- entials to the present headquarters of the Provisional Committee, at 799 Broadway, Room 337-338. Anti-injunction meetings will be held as follows: on Wednesday, July 27: 43 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, at fadison Square and 23rd St., t k City, at 5 p.m.; Mermaid Ave. and West 25th St., Coney Is- land, at 8 px 18th St. and 5th Ave., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m.; Steinway and Jamaica Aves, Astoria, at 7:30 pan.; 1538 Madison Ave., at 8:30 p.m. All delegates to the Anti-Injunction Conference are urged to be present at the Conference without fail and to be on time. The Conference takes place Thursday, July 28, at 7:30 p.m., Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. this at Hold Conferences For N. Y. Elections NEW YORK. Final dates for the section and territorial conferences of the New York district, to map out plans for the Communist election campaign were announced yesterday. ‘The first of these conferences will be held Wednesday, July 27, by Sec- tions 5 and 15 jointly and united front election campaign committees will be elected to work with the state committee. The dates for the other confer- ences, as announced yesterday are: Sections 2 and 6 (separate confer- ences), July 28; Section 7, August 7; Section 4, Upper Harlem, August 8, Lower Harlem, August 9, Yorkville, August 11; Section 8, August 11. TWO PAINTERS BEATEN UP BY BROTHERHOOD THUGS. . “Two workers of the Sol Cohen shop were. beaten upby a strong arm com- mittee of the Brotehrhood, according to a statement issued by the Altera- tion Painters Union. Kaplan, one of the beaten workers, received a cut in his head. The other worker, Shapiro, was treated for bruises. The Leundry Workers Industrial Union asks all workers to come to 1130 Southern Bivd. asi help the strikers of the Bronx Home Laundry win thelr fight stefvetion. Mass picket lines every day! Comrades to address envelopes by hand or typewriter are needed by the district of. fice of the F. 8. U., Room 330, 799 Bro way Party members, Unit 3B, Section 1, report | to the section headquarters at 142 E. 3d St., *9 gei address of next meeting, “Der Arbeiter wil hold @ plénte July 31 at Finks Park, 814 E. 225th St. The Bronx. "Take White Plains subway to 225th St. sta- tioa, walk one and a half blocks east. Ad. mission 25 cents. Support the Arbeiter— ‘attend this picnic. A pocketbook was lost at the Picnic last jSunday in Pelham Bay Parkway. ers ease communicate with the District Of- flee, 50 E. 13th St. Election Committee of Jugosiay organizations is ar- ranging a pienic Sunday, Aug. 7, in the Old. Shaffer's Park, 339 Paterson Plank- road, North Bergen, N. J. There will be a Wwery intetesting program, dtamatics, sing- ing and speakers on the present election. @mission 25 cents. Take. Lackawanna y at W. 23rd St. or Hudson Tubes to joboken; from there Passaic St. car to the a. Shatter's Park, United Front workers’ ‘The- Harlem Proeieasive Youth Club will held. an outing to Camp Unity on Satur- day, July Si. Round trip 75 cents. Regis- tration up to Friday at 1538 Madison Ave. Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s has moved to 127 W. 128th Bt ‘The Anti- Imperialist League would like olunteer typist help. Office at 799 Broad- ay, Room 536. League Comradés wanted to sell the Anti-In- pectanlat Review. Make 5 cents on every) Come up to Room 536, 799 Bro ‘Ask for Bruno. way. : ‘TUESDAY ‘Toni Mooney Branch, LL.D. will hold an cpen-alr meeting at Union Square at 8 p.m. ‘The dramgroup Proletcult is casting new Jays at its rehearsal tonight at 3 p.m. at ps W. 21st St. Recruits wanted. No pre- lous: training required. WEDNESDAY ost 95, W.E.S.L., and the Irish work- Club’ will hold. an open forum air 139th St. and Willis Ave., Vets will speak on bonus be eting at Fonx, at 3 p.m. Medical Workers League will have at 16 R. Raymond will speak on ‘The ‘¢membership meeting at 8 p.m. {7,2 sist st. J. A very important special membership poiing of the Alfred Levy Branch of the LD. will be held at 8 p.m. sharp at 4° Vermont 8t., All members end, Brooklyn. “8 @ Comrade Schuster will speak on condi- fons ot office workers in Germany and @ Soviet Union. Meeting to be held at pm., Thursday, July 26, at 16 W. 2ist ‘Dancing, entertainment and refresh- yents. oe 25 cente against | Wotk- | ho have information regarding same | Arrests Mark Strike of Bronx Laundry; Demonstration Thur. All day long yesterday committees rikers of the Bronx Home on) Laundry were continuously being arrested and released, accord- ing to a report issued by the strike headquarters, Phillip Scheinert, a boss of the Laundry at 517 E. 136th St., an erstwhile Socialist, pro- the arrest of six strikers, | voked Scheinert had been acting as a strong-arm guard for scabé. Only a) few days ago he cut the wages of| the workers in his plant. A mass demonstration will be held | this Thursday. It will start at 1130 | Southern Boulevard at 1 pm. A special membership meeting will be held in the evening at Ambassador | Hall. All laundry workers should be present, | HIT NEWARK PLAN OF FORCED LABOR | Workers Will March to City Hall Wed. | NEWARK, N. J., July 2.—The workers living on Wawerly and) Charlton Streets came out 800 strong yesterday in a demonstration led by the Unemployed Couneth to protest against the foreed labor system which the “city fathers” are trying to saddle on the backs of the un- employed workers. The forced labor scheme consists of forcing a worker to work three or | four days a week for a basket of food that he is not allowed to select himself. The city makes no provi- sions for rent, gas, electric light or! clothes for the workers on this job. | | The workers at the meeting yes- terday voted to march to the City Hall Wednesday to place before the city government the following de- mands: 1. No evictions because of none payment of rent. All vacant build- | ings to be turned over to the un- | employed. 2. Free speech workers to be al- lowed to hold street corner meet- ines without having to beg per- mission of police, 3. No forced labor. Wages-for | work on all city jobs at prevailing | Union scale, | 4. Free gas and electric for all | unemployed. 5. No shutting of water of un- | employed for none payment of | taxes, JAPAN TIGHTENS GRIP ON JEHOL 'Nanking "Helps New Betrayal of of China BULLETIN Chinese strikers in the Shanghai | silk spinning mills have won most of their demands in the strike which begun on June 28 and tied up the entire silk industry. Wages are to be raised 3 cents, amd work- | ing hours reduced to 11 daily, or one hour less than hitherto worked. The striking workers, employ- | ees of the French tramway com- pany bave put forward a number of fresh demands, including a de- mand for a 15 per cent wage rise and a demand for the discharge of all scabs. ee ae | Additional Japanese troops are | being sent into Jehol Province under | cover of the sham promise of the | Tokio Government to withdraw its |invading forces. The promise, it be- comes clear, was made to help the | Nanking Government out Of its dif- | ficulties in the face of the tremen- dous mass protest in China against the new Japanese invasion. In the meantime, the Japanese are tighten- ing their grip of Jehol Province and preparing for an invasion of North China and Inner Mongolia, the latter | with the aim of extending their mili- tary base against Soviet Mongolia and the Soviet Union. The shameful role of the Nanking ‘butcher government which is carry- jing on a major campaign against |the workers and peasants of Soviet | China while refusing to resist the Japanese invasion, is further empha- ! |sized in ‘the following Tsingtao dis- | patch to the New York Times: “Talk emanating from Nanking re- | garding the sending of an expedi- | tionary force from the north into | Manchuria at the present stage is | largely designed for home consump- tion as an antidote for an atmosphere | Surcharged with the imminence of | civil war and a likely campaign against the rampant Communist | forces.” LABOR UNION MEETINGS Left Wing Groups of Cloanmakers. A general membership meeting of all the groups of the cloak trade hi for Monday night, at Irving ¥ this meeting the central committee will ex- plain the latest maneuvers afd the plans for intensifying the struggle against wage cuts. The Cloakmakers’ Unemployed Council calls @ mass meeting of unemployed for Monday, 1 o'clock, at the headquarters of the left’ wing s Carpenters and Painters. ‘Will hold ® mass meeting at Finnish Hall, 109 Uunton Hall St., Jamaica, July 28, at 8 p.m. Rank and file members will be orgen- ized. ‘OFFICIALS RAM , ture to the membership by volun-| | suffice for the local. |Dreiser Asks Mother | | World Congress Against War to Mrs. ‘and clothing for the unemployed and PACT THROUGH TO FIRE HATTERS Hutt and Wasserman To Be Allowed 10 Dismissals (By & Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK, July 24.—At the reg- j War monthly meeting Iast Wednes- day, of Local 8, United Hatters of | North Amerca, the officials who three | % weeks ago helpéd the bosses to put! over a wage cut estimated to be as | high as 40 per cent, came with a new | ~ proposition to the local membership. | This proposition was in regard to} the Hutt @ Wasserman coneern. This shop was not settled together with the others. Mr. Hutt had put the | workers on a week work basis at $40, | | with the proviso tha he be permited to fire ten workers, to which, of| course, the officials, without con- | sulting the “Bill of Price Committee,” | | Cagetly assented. The question of firing of the 10 men raised the most serious objec- tions from the floor. Some of the vietims of this reorganization scheme have been dues paying members of | the union for over 30 years. It was} the opinion of the workers to intro- | duee the bulletin system to distribute | equally the werk in the shop. Workers pointed out that Manson and Washington factories are preparing to reduce théir shop crews | and will claim to have the privileges | as have the Hutt and Wasserman con- | cern. It was oly through the man- euvers of the officials to have the entire force of the H. & W. shop come dowh to the meeting while the other shops, net knowing the im- portance of the question, were not fully represented that the officials managed to have this matter passed. Humphries and Afoic made a ges- | tarily reducing their salary from $60 to $50. Thé local membership, how- ever feels that one paid offical would of Scottsboro Boys to AttendAnti-War Meet NEW YORK=—An invitation by cablegram was extended yesterday by the American Committee for the Ada Wright, mother of two of the Scottsboro boys, to attend the World Congress Against War at Paris on CITY ELECTION NOTES WEDNESDAY—Meeket und Ghérty Sts., Williamsburg: speskers: Luiz Justta, Nell Carroll, exndideto 15th Assembly District, and Anna Finkelstel ‘Thursday—Meeker Williamsburg; spenkes rie Oretio, Sizphen Stéponattis, ea 18th Assembly District; Dominick Fiai- ant, ewndidate 10th Seriaterial District, ané Osea: Buchanan, FRIDAY—India and Manhattan Sts, Williamsbuég; speakers: Neil Carrell, can- didate 13th Assembly Distriet; Dominick , candidate 10th Senatorial Dis- Justin, ad Lat SALURDAI—Preuminacy Cherry and Mecker Sts., Bayard St. meeting at marching to and Union Congressional District; ndidste 15th Assembly Miller, am@ Dominick Fini- ani, candidate 10th’ Senatorial District. SCHENECTADY TO HEAR W.Z. FOSTER |Amter at : Symposium! on Friday Night SCHENECTADY, N. Y., July 25.— William Z. Foster, Communist can-| |didate for President of the United | States, will address a mass meeting ot the workers here in Orescent | Park, August 3, it was announced} today. Other speakers at this meeting will) jbe Walter BuHrmaster, candidate | | fro mthe 30th Congressional District, | the | here, and Jack Rend and Melvin Le: Jopportune time now to take advant- | telle, local candidates to the state assembly on the Communist ticket. The fact that 20,000 workers are unemployed here, with thousands of others working only a few days a month, iays the basis for the expec- tation that the meeting at Crescent Park will be well atetnded. ee a Amter At Symposium. NEW YORK—Israel Amter, candi- date for Governor of New York City August 20 as an honorary delegate|| from the U. S., according to an an- nouncement by Theodore Dreiser, chairman of the American Commit- tee. Langston Hughes, well-known American Negro poet, is also expected to attend the World Congress as a delegate from the John Reed Clubs of America. An international committee in charge of the Congress abroad in- cludes Albert Einstein, Romain Rol- land, Maxim Gorky, H. G. Wells, Bernard Shaw, Mme. Sun Yat-sen. The American committee consists of Theodore Dreiser, Malcolm Cowley, Leopold Stokowsky, Langston Hughes, | Franz Boas, John Dos Passos and! others. Childrer, Call for | Free Food at Home | of Old .Donovan Two hundred children, led by the United Front Children’s Committee, held a demonstration in front of Al- derman Dohovan’s home to demand that he bring their message, of free food and clothing and more play- grounds, to the Board of Aldermen and the Board of Estimate. A committee was elected to bring the petition, containing three hun- dred signatures of the children, to the alderman. The committee started for the al- derman’s door. Five men stopped them. They told the committee that the alderman was not at home. The spokesman of the five said: “We'll let one adult go up, and that’s final.” The children got angry and yelled: “Your children get what they want. They go to the country, but we work- ers’ children haven't got enough food to eat.” The children demanded free food More playgrounds. The crowd grew larger and some- one called the riot squad. The ¢hil- dren formed their lines and stood yelling Slogans: “Work for Our Fathers, Pood for Us,” “Fill Our Milk Bottlés,” “We Want More Play- @rounds,” etc. but were finally dis- persed. CITY AUGUST FIRST ISSUE The City Edition of the August First Daily Worker will be out on! Friday, July 29, at 11 p.m. All ordefs, including cash, must be turmed in to the District Daily Worker office, fifth floor, 35 EB. 12th St., not later than Thursday, July 28, at 5 pm. at 1130 Southern Bivd. Downtown Local, meets every Monday, 8 p.m,, at 108 B. 14th St. Wilkamsburg Local, bete evety Weanes=| wh times Inst week, together wit met severt the active elements in the trade, is call- ing this meeting, where the plans worked out at these conferences will be presented | to the members and definite action for mass strike for better conditions will be Alteration Painters Union. Bronx Local, meets every Monday, 8 p.m., taken, Every dogskin worker is called} upon to atténd this meeting , on the Communist ticket,. will speak at a four-party symposium on elec- tion campaign issues, to be held Fri- day night, July 29, at the New School for Social Research. The symposium will be held under the auspices of the Intercollegiate Student Council. of the League for Industrial Democ- racy. Hold Meets to Prepare Demonstration Before Banking Commissioner NEW YORK.—In preparation for a demonstration of all United States Bank Depositors, the United Depo- sitors group is holding meétings at 8 p.m. every Wednesday and Thurs- day night at 10th Street and Second Avenue., and also at Intervael and Wilkins Aves. Friday nights meet- ings are held at 116th St. and Madi- son Ave. The big demonstration on August 8, at 11 will be held before the state banking department at 80 Center St, ‘The committee in kritten tetter to Broderick, state bank examiner, in- | formed him of the demonstration and accused him of’ laxity in press- ing the settlement of the bank’s status. Claims are made by the group upo nfunds that were drawn from the bank a few hours before closing by friends of the officials. Hostility to Samuel Untermeyer’s “plan” is stated by the committee as it does not assume any defi responsibility to the small depositors and fails to ask for a full 100 per cent return to the depositors by tax- ing the wealthy officials who have had months in which to conceal their assets. Bernarr McFadden Cuts Pay in 43rd Street Restaurant NEW YORK, July 25. — The Mc- Fadden Restaurant on 43rd 8t., owned by the publisher Bernarr Mc- Padden, is cutting the wages of its workers through the firing and rehir- ring process. Workers who got $10.50 a week are being fifired and new | workers ore rehired for $5.00 per week. Workers in this restaurant are forced to work 16 ond 18 hours a day. : Workers in this restaurant are urged to ge: in t."ch with the Food Workers Indus Street. al Union, 5 EF. 19th NEW LIBZRATOR OFF PRESS. NEW YORK. — The new ‘ssue of ‘ne Liberator came of the press ‘3, with many features, includ- ing: ‘wv the U, S. Government segre- gates Negroes at the Hoover Dam— the account of an eye witness; Euel Lee Wins a New Trial; “The Best Show Since the Circus’—story of a lynching -bee, ae Nearing; The AT SHOE WORKERS ‘SHOP CONFERENCE ‘Over 1200 Join Union During Period of Struggile | NEW YORK.—One hundred and} forty-eight delegates from 44 shops, | |counting close to 5,000 workers, as- | | sembled Saturday, July 28, at the Ir- | ving Plaga to discuss ways and means jto d2velop & mass struggle in the |shoe factories for better conditions| jan dorganivation. This conference | | was called by the Shoe and Leather | | Workers’ Industrial Union, which lleads at pres¢nt close to 1,200 work- ‘ers on strike. Rosenberg, the organizer of the junion, outlined the task of this | Conference. “Dué to the I. Miller and Andrew | Geller strikes,” said Rosenberg, “the | bosses, éspecially the Board of Trade | bosses, did not dare to attack the} workers. “At present the shoe workers must develop a line of struggle for or- ganization and economic conditions. “Daily activities of the workers in the shop, for the establishment of | hour's, prices and recognition of the | | Shop Committee and the Union. | “The workers must not wait until (they will be attacked, but it is the | age of the favorable conditions and | put demands to the bosses. “The winning of the strikes which jare carried on at presént, especially the I. Miller and Andrew Geller, to smash the injunction issued against the strikers can be done only by a wide mobilization of the workers in the shops for relief cnd struggle.” Ziebel, the secretary of the Union, reported on the Union activities for the last three months, He reported that over 1,200 members joined the Union during the period of strike. After the reports a wide discussion | took place, many workers participated in the discussion. Resolutions were passed indorsing the line of the Un- ion for the development of a mass struggle in the shoe, slipper and stitchdown trade. A relief committee was elected and also an Organization Committee to start work immediately. A delegation of 15 workers were elected to the Anti-Injunction Con- ference which will be held July 28. With 1,100 workers out on strike, the Shoe and Leather Workers In- dustrial Union is desperately in need of funds to support the strike and aid the workers. The union appeals to all workers to send contributions to 5 East 19th St. Cloak Agreement A Pay-Cut Plan Masses of Workers Hit Sell-Out NEW YORK. — The International |Ladies Garment Workers Union to- day issued a statement in which the heads of the union summed up what | théy call the benefits of their latest wage-cut settlement, Although the wage-cut which was agreed upon by the Dubinsky clique is reported to amount to 10 per cent, the real cut will be 15 per cent and} even more for the majority of work- ers in the trade. The cut agreed upon by the International mislead- ers is $5 from the scale. Many of the workers are on the $26 scale. Cloakmakers, according to the agreement, will even be further cut threugh the scientific schedule de- signed to guarantee a cheaper cost of production for the manufacturers. What this point in the agreement ‘means in reality is the continuation of the bootleg piece-work plan with greater speed up. The clause for the double limita- | tion of contractors, means each job- ber will now be allowed to take his work to twice the number of contrac- tors as previously. This will cause increased competition among the} contractors and cause them to bring down the cost of production by in- creased speed-up and wage-cuts. The reorganization clause is noth- ing more than a hypocritical gesture. According to the old agreement the/ bosses had the right to reorgariize on the first of July—that is, they were | permitted to fire 10 per cent of the workers. The reorganization for this year, however, is already~complete, The new agreement epires in 11 months, Therefore the agreement for no further reorganization means Nothing to the workers. ‘Thousands of cloakmakers yester- day afternoon at four open air meet- ings denounced and repudiated the treachérous settlement concluded by the officials of the International with the aid of the Tammany Lieutenant |: Governor Lehman. At 2 p.m. an in- door mass meeting was held at Bryant Hall. Both halls were jammed to/| capacity and hundreds of workers stood on the stairs unable to get into the halls. These meetings were carried thru under the auspices of the Central) Committee of the left-wing groups of the LL.G.W.U, which for weeks hes been mobilizing the cloakmakers for ,@ real strike for union conditions. Olympic Games Draw the Color Line —an expose of segregation in sports. What Does the Communist Party Offer the Negro?—by William Z. Foster, Rush bundle orders to Liberator, Room 201, 50 E. 13th St., New York. REPORT PROGRESS| (GET INJUNCTION IN | attempt to smash the strike of the | action on the part of the workers, | will go to break the strike, so just Prepare for Tag Days to Support East Ohio Miners Energetic preparation for teh tag days this coming Friday, Saturday and Sunday are reported from many | Working-class organizations. All col- |tections will be turned in for the re- lief of the East Ohio striking miners. The Shoe Workers’ Industrial | Union has sot the pace in mobilizing its membership for the tag drive, especially those members in the af- fected strike area. “The East Ohio Miners are count- ing on these tag days for a decided expression of New York workers,” declared a state- ment issued by the Workers’ Interna- tional Relief, 16 W. 21st St: (MUSKIN STRIKE Try to Frame Leader on Homicide Charge NEW YORK.—In the mest recent workers in the Muskin Furniture Co.,/ 232 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, following | the frame-up of their leader, Sam Weinstein, the bosses have obtained a temporary injunction against the} workers, Hearings on the injunction will be held this afternoon in the supreme! court of Kings County. Injunction! subpoenaes were yesterday served} upon the various officials of the union. Frame-Up Victim, Today, also, Sam Weinstein, one of the leaders of the union, chair- man of the strike committee, who is a prisoner in the Bronx County jail on a frame-up homicide charge, will be brought to court to face charges that he threw%a stone against an automobile containing scabs. The worker denies both charges, and declares he can prove he was on the picket line at the time of an alleged attack on a scab, resulting in his frame-up and arerst. Writes From Jail. The strikers have just received a letter from Weinstein which shows his fighting spirit: Bronx County Jail, Bronx, New York, July 23, 1932. Dear Comrades: Am feeling O.K. Don't worry about me, and don’t let my arrest stop the struggle to win the strike. The boss has beén trying for the last three weeks to frame me, but he will not succeed. I never thought he could be so vicious, but I see otherwise. I expected to get bumped around and be in the hospital as he promised me a beating from the gangsters because I was on the picket line every day, but I never thought I would be in jail charged with a thing Ike that. It just shows to what lengths the boss keep the spirits of the workers high and continue the strike. With best wishes to all the strikers, as ever your comrade, SAM WEINSTEIN. —=———— S| STAGE-SCREEN “BRING ’EM BACK ALIVE” MOVING TO CAMEO THEATRE Frank Buck's “Bring ‘Em Back Alive” moves Saturday morning from the Palace to the Cameo Theatre, This marks the beginning of the| sixth week on Broadway. Buek’s picture was filmed in the heart of the Malayan jungle country. Richard Dix in “Roar of the Dra- gon” is to have its first Broadway showing at the Palace Theatre on Saturday. The picture was adapted from “Passage to Hong Kong” by George Kibbe Turner, “What Price Hollywoed,” the new Constance Bennett film, will be held for a second week at the Mayfair. On the same program with the Soviet talkie, “Diary of a Revolu- tionist,” the Acme Theatre is pre- senting the latest news of the Bonus Army and news from the working- class front. This program will con- tinue until Tuesday, inclusive. The Jefferson and Franklin The- atres, beginning Saturday, will pre- sent Frank Buck’s wild animal film, “Bring 'Em Back Alive.” Starting on Wednesday, both houses will feature Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in “Love Is a Racket.” The Jefferson will also show an added feature, “Sinister Hands,” with Jack Mullhall, Hugo Riesenfeld will make his first appearance a tthe Stadium on Aug. 9 and 10, when he will conduct the Albsrtina Rasch ballet performances. For this occasion Dmitri Tiomkin has | written three ballets, two of which are orchestrated by Deems Taylor and Ferde Grofe. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATKES VANI SIUE—8RONS RKO guooys adends TEFEN ||| FRANK LAST TIMES TODAY Tiger and Python in Fight for Life! Frank Buck’s “Bring ’Em Back Alive” the mass support of | JAIL WORKERS IN GERMAN CENTERS Dictatorship Edict O. K., Court Says | BERLIN, July 25.—Increasing its terror against the Red United Front against fascism, the Von Papen po- lice yesterday raided a meeting and Is | banner members in Brunswick. Ar-| rests also took place in the Essen, | |the Ruhr heavy-industry center. ‘The active suppression of news re- garding anti-fascist activities failed place in ~-rious parts of the cotn- try, with many injured as a result. The Von Papen press had rrevi- ously been heralding the “peaceful” week-end as justification for the dic. tatorship edict over Prussia and t clamping down of martial law over Berlin and Brandenburg. Following the elaborate ritual be- jfore the Supreme Court at Leipzig. that august body solemnly sanctioned the dictatorship decree over Prussia, and now the social-democrats having utilized this pretext to stem militant are turning their attentions to mag- nifying the elections whoch scheduled to be held on Stinday. The “democratic” character of the | election is indicated by the fact that all political parties, including the Nazi and social-democratic organiza- tions, have been given the use of the government radio for one hour each day—but not the Communist Party! In government circles there is open talk of the suppression of the Party and the Red Trade Unions imme- diately following the election. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 6. Against impertalist war; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union, jailed 84 Communists and Reichs-| to hide the fact that clashes took | are | Anti-Imperialist League Fight Terror on Filipinos NEW YORK. — The driving out cf 45 Filipino truck farmers from the | Florida Everglades by the fascist ele ments of Canal Point, has called} forth a strong protest by the Anti! Imperialist League of the United | States, in reviewing the eppression of File ipincos by American imperialism, the | League tells of the terror against, them as in Imperial Valley: the} | wounding of 60 at Watsonville, €al,, the driving out of 84 Filipinos at} | Banks, Oregon, ete. The League calls for protests to be sent to Gov. Doyle ‘Carlton, Tallahassee, Florida, and to i | Secretary of War, Hurley, Washinge ton, D, C. i 1 * 2 6 Protest Arrest of 20% NEW YORK, July 25. — A protest against the arrest and trial of 203 Japanese Communists and a call to demonstrate August Ist, has just been issued by the Anti-Imperialist League lof the United States. The League {calls upon all workers to protest the “action of the Japanese government whieh aims to crush the Communist Party and the League against im imperialism.” | War Funds for the Jobless— through mass circulation of the Daily Worker, Workers, W.LR. Fight Jim-Crow Landlord A mass meeting of the 53rd Street | Unemployed Council held at 418 W. 53rd Street Honday pledged to resist the eviction of the Workers Interna- tional Relief feeding center, located at 450 W. 53rd Strect. Resolutions were adopted and sent to the local Alderman and Judge protesting the landlord's attempt to split the work- ers by race discrimination as the bas's of eviction, AMUSEMENTS Sand ct _ Broadway Demands 6th Week FRANK BUCK’S BRING 'EM BACK ALIVE” —MUSIC— Ss PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138th ALBERT COATES, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 PRICES: 25¢, 500, $1.00 (Citele 7-7575)— G ata CONCERT | Pa 2ND WELL CONSTANCE BENNETT in “WHAT PRICE HOLLYWOOn" with LOWELL SHERMAN—NEIL HAMILTON THRILLING SOVIET FILMI Amkino Talkie with English Titles Torxees Acme Theatre Mth Street and Union Square REGULAR ADVERTISERS Red Star Press, ("The Road”) Chester © Joun's, Restaurant Hatry Stolper Optical Co. Camps Unity, Kinderiand, Nitgedaiget Lerman Bros. (Station Hen tven Bick and Death Benefit Fund Bronstein's Vegetarian Restaurant Kessler Crechoslovak Workers House Avante Farm ‘Union Squat Camp Woee Russian Art Mimeo Supply Col Dental Dept., LW.0. Health Center Cafeteri ‘Wm. Bell, Optometri IN THE DAILY WORKER rie » Local 174 Parkway C: Butchers Unt Linel Cafeteri Workers Coop Colony Sol's Lunch Santal Midy Manhattan Lyceum Sollin’s Restaurant re afeteria (So. Blvd.) 8, Inc, jdge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre . Stadium Concerts ATIENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 80 EAST 13th STREET the Health Center Cafeteria help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1U. COCO INVITES YOU TO —PATRONIZE— A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Corner of Wilkins Avenue BRONX, N. ¥. Our work will please the men, the women and the children NO TIPS Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Cate of DR. JOSEPRSON COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS / Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST., Near Delancey Intensity the mass struggle against the production of war materials, and against the tr\nse port of arms and ammunition MORNING PICNIC and MATS, 15 Cents {f beh frye suea Except Sat 4 Holida: Raise Funds for Your Organization Through the FREIHEIT CARNIVAL SATURDAY, AUGUST 6th 1932 At Ulmer Park, Brooklyn SPORTS—DANCING—ENTERTAINMENT Posen Te RGSSE NIT YORU TIE Dy CoM DO OURURURY AUEARRCWOE ST 500 Tickets for $6.00—Order Your Tickets Now! MORNING FREIHEIT OFFICE,35 E. 12th St., 6th fl. ee

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