The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 27, 1933, Page 2

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BROOKLYN WORKERS, N.Y. YOUTH, SEAME , DEMONSTRATE AGAINST | |Ca Ll Ruthenberg | Memorial, Masch | Pledge to yee $1,000 ‘for the WAR PLOTS AND MILITARIZATION |4_¢¢ Star Casino March Against Ship-| ment of Munitions from Brooklyn | NEW niunis staged YORK.—C at noon ssed workers | drifted down to hail and rain, rman of the meet- | the fact that war lready waging America. Davis, revealed the e belligerent Latin ies and showed that the wars in Col- ay were the Rocke- ims and Morgans. ows the dollar.” He ed out that it was a Dem- president who aimed the i that a Dem- is ut to assume profit China and the 1k motives b America gen umbia an Marks of tt of Sou ‘women streets f e warring imperialist manded that war funds be used for unemployed relief. Joe Zagarell: re Young Communist League spoke the militarization youths through tl training c: He urged the young wo! their guns seainst the imr tions in the war being trained. At 1:00 the workers at the meeting | formed ranks with the Red Front | Band in the van and marched up Court St., bearing placards and signs, | “We Denounce Columbian Consulate Recruiters in N. Y. for Columbian | Wars,” “We Demand All War Funds | for Unemployed Relief.” “Workers Stop Shipment of Men and Munitions | to South America.” | They marched up Court St. to At- Jantic Ave. and then to Columbia and President Sts. where another pro- test meeting was held. The column passed the yards of the Bull Lines and the waterfront from which muni- tions and war supplies had been re- cently shipped. As the line passed through the ower end of Atlantic Ave. a densely Populated Italian section, many windows had been thrust open and clustering about them were many workers watching the march. In one instance some workers at a window of a house clapped their hands as the line passed; to which the march- ers responded with cheers. Calling upon the bystanders to join ranks and shouting “Down with Imperial- ist War,” the march culminated at Columbia and President Sts. the of list na- r for which they were WHAT?’S ON-- IMPORTANT NOTE: In view of the critical financial situation in the Daily Worker, organizations are urgently} asked to enclose money, at the rate of one cent a word per in-| sertion, with announcements. Monday ¢ Newark, N. J) LEOTUR by William field Avenue, m. at 347 Spring- ‘Admission 10 cents. (Manhattan) CARD-DANCE PARTY, Sunday, March 5, st 2p, m., at Schnapp Hall, 9th st. neat Brown, by German Br. I. L. D. Ad- mission 20 ‘cents. UNDERWEAR. ‘Thursday, March 3 ai Plaza, 15th Stre rving Place. Speak- er Caroline Drew. Admission free. CONFERENCES of Workers Chess League, Merch ‘Ist at & p. m. at 813 Broadway. . in Irving Chess Clubs send delegates. DEBATE: F. Speakers, Burochowich, Downtown Br. “Shall the Soviet Union Be Recognized” at 216 East 14th St., at 8:30 ion free. ection 1 Olein will » Feb. 28 at 8 p. 66 East 4th ‘Street, Correspondence at 114 W. 21 St. fm Manhattan ‘Lyc MEETINGS of Group tonight at All workers invited. (Bronx) MASS MEETING at Rus Ald Society, 4049 Third Avenue 174 St. for Wein- ea ae by per Bronx Section Wo ' LECTURE by Phill Bidjan in the Co-9 olony, tonight at 8:30 in the 4 Admission free, GC Broo. lyn) MATCH at Red Sparks Club Amron about Bi: (Manhattan) LEAGUE OF PROFESSIONAL arranges lecture on Literary Criticiam at Chatfard's, 23: mh Ave. Tuesday, 8:15 with Msleolm Cow: Isidor Schneider, and Louis Grudin. UNDERWEAR WORKERS OPEN FORUM, ‘Thursday, March 3 st 7 p. m., at Irving Plase, 16 St. near Irving Place. Speaker Caroline Drew Wednesday (Brooklyn) SCOTT NEARING speaks on “Next World War” under the auspices of Hinsdale Work- ers Youth Club at 505 Sutter Ave., to- morrow. Admission 20 cents in advance, 25 cents at door. Tickets for sale at 313 Hins- dale Street. ~ LABOR UNION MEETINGS FOOD WORKERS All-food workers report at 10 a.m. Feb. 27 at Food Workers Industrial Union of- fice, 4 West 18th St. for important action. FURNITURE WORKERS Mass meeting of cabinet makers, machine hands and carvers, furniture and frame workers, is called by the Purniture Work- ers Industrial Union for evening of March 1, at 818 Broadway. Union representative ‘will report. “fhe struggle against militarism must not be postponed anti) the moment when war breaks out Then it will be too late, The struggle against war must be ear- ried on now, daily, hourly.” | to military training camps. London Club | at 8:30. Red| Against Brownsville Yor" | | GRovps | | 1,000 Demon Sta ate Against Couzens’ Amendment bout made up the core of the de- ration Jower day against war conscription of homeless ‘yout | | into military training camps through the Couzens’ amendment. The meet- ing started in the rain at noon, speeches, and was continued with < parade through Bowling Green, Jo er Broadway and Wall Street..Th demonstration was called by” th Young Communist League and Com- | nunist Party, and was endorsed by | the Marine Workers Industrial Union | and Workers’ Ex-service Men's League Banners proclaimed the demands: $1 a Day and Free Relief For Un- employed Youth,” “No Discrimina-| tion Against Youth In Giving Out} Relief.” At the head of the demon-| stration was a large banner: “The Couzens’ Amendment Proposes To] Militarize The Homeless—Demand | Instead All Military Funds For Re-| ® lief.” Five or Six Hundred marine work- ers were in the audience. Behind the speakers stood the| Seamen's Relief Headquarters on the | waterfront—a headquarters at which | there is very little relief. Meet In Rain As rain turned colder, more} seamen and longshoremen gathered. | Losowitz, of the Communist Party,} Herman of the Young Communist League, Jackson, organizer of the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union Sam Brown, and Burke of the Na- | tional Students League, spoke against | the steps being taken to prepare the | steer unemployed young workers in| They ‘told how the “Manhattan” was being so fortified that it could the appropriation just given by the J. S. Senate to the Navy could be distributed to give each of the un- employed at the rate of $5 weekly. Seamen were offered this proposal to fight for instead of the “Dog House” on South Street, the Sea- mens’ Relief, and the Jane Street Mission, At one o'clock the crowd was mar- shalled into a line, and, surrounded by mounted policemen, started their march. As they turned down White- hall Street, past the Cunard and the Hamburg-American Line Building, the streets filled with seamen and employees, and the clerks in the shipping buildings gathered at the windows. Parade Through Wall Street Up Broadway they shouted “Im- mediate Cash Relief!” and “Fight a- gainst Imperialist War!” The police escort grew. They were followed by a little squadron of mounted police- men. Sleet darkened the lettering of j the banners. A woman looked up, —- and attentive, from powder- jing her nose in front of Schrafft’s, Two men listened earnestly to the | shouts of “Down with the Couzens’ Amendment!” and started to follow the marchers. Something thrown at @ marcher struck a lady dressed in the new shade of blue named for the President-elect’s family. } Seamen Fall In Line In Wall Street, runners and clerks stopped to watch. And as the parade | turned back to the waterfront, it was noticeably lengthened by the men who had joined. The seamen and marine workers must be rallied with the industrial | Workers against unemployment and | militarism. Thousands of men in the | merchant marine have been thrown out of work. Lately, the Merchant Marine has promised them jobs on coast-to-coast transports. Jobs that | will pay them a cent a month(!) as Jackson told them Saturday. This meeting has shown that these sea- men can be reached and organized. Stage and Screen DOVZHENKO “IVAN” OPENED AT ACME THEATRE SATURDAY “Ivan,” first talking picture prod- uced by the brilliant and talented | young Ukrainian director Alexander | Dovzhenko had its American pre- mier at the Acme Theatre. “Ivan,” which Eisenstein said the world was waiting for, has a simple and a large story to tell. Ivan, a strong, uneducated, dreamy peasant is part of a group of a 100 work- ers who enlist in the village for work on the Dnieperstroy power plant. Out of his rawness, his ignorance of his | responsibility, his tools, and his work, he develops into a useful worker, a “shock-brigader” of the first class. Dovzhenko treats Ivan’s absortion into the new life in @ vigorous and original way. He introduces other problems of adjustment to the new life, the severing of antiquated fam- ily ties, etc. Of all the Soviet films shown in America until now, Dov- zhenko has made the first Soviet sound film to rank in importance with the great silent film achieve- ments of the U.8.8.R. The National Board of Review has selected “Ivan” for its list of exceptional photoplays. Titles are in English. Beginning Saturday the Jefferson will present two screen features, “Laughter in Hell” and “Self De- fense.” Wednesday to Friday the program will include “Maedchen in Uniform” and “Frisco Jenny.” The Budapest String Quartet will Play their next recital this Saturday evening at Washington Irving High School, presenting a program of Beethoven, Grieg and Brahms. WOMEN NEEDLE WORKERS RAISE $35 FOR ‘DAILY’ NEW YORK.—The Women’s Coun- cil of the Fur Department, Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, raised $35 for the Daily Worker at a movie showing held under their auspices on Feb. 22. ° | merchant marine for warfare, and to] be turned into an auxiliary cruiser | within twenty-four hours’ notice, how | ey Ww YORK A Commemoration . Ruthenberg Communist the 1 Uasd, »mMdWAL, d i mo RUAKY zi, 1950 = I Daily’; ; Set National Quotas 'Friday Contributions Are $810; All Districts | Thruout Country M Broadcasting the following appeal | 4 Sedig ust Speed Funds! | 10, Mi Kaurenen Mass Protest Wins Mann’ s Release Emrhys Llewellyn, Communist leader, was snapped at one of the many demonstrations in England protesting the imprisonment of Tom jailing caused such a stir that the government headed by the ex-socialist leader Ramsay MacDonald weak- , Leroy throughout the country, the Jewish| jopar ibsears4 ‘ | Children’s Schools of the Interna-| TO7A™ M\e Rikon ng is called by |tional Workers Order yesterday] isTRic 7 3 Yasny York) of the Communist | pledged themselves to raise $1,000 in weneate ‘eden, eo! and all workers are invited, | the drive to save the Daily Worker: | Grae Co OR i fe eens lt ers will be Max Bedacht, of | “The Daily Worker, the only Am-| 380) Brunch 15.00 central committee of the /erican workers’ daily in the English 9 CP.US.A. Richard B. Moore, and} tanguage, is at present in extremely | John A. Ballam. | critical circumstances. It needs im-| ae Pete bn noe es | mediate help. Our schools and school | who died in 1927 and whose ashes | organizations, as part of the militant & Greenberg d left wing leader. The are now buried under the Kremlin | workers’ movement, are obliged to} w Trefauakas toms dona ue ‘d Wall in Moscow, workers will be re- | help secure the existence of the or-| K Matutevte! {pM leased him. cognizing a life time of unselfish | gan of the revolutionary working class | 4 ,rssel sian Ha a a a devotion to and leadership of the jin the United States. The National!s Reikauskas Russian Mutual aid. | working class, Ruthenberg was a} School Committee therefore pledges | erie. At rh lead 4 in the struggle against im- | to raise $1,000 for the Daily Worker.” ’| PH to date $273.87| Polish Workers my, | | Technicians Protest | verialist war while prominent in the| In connection with its pledge, the | DISTRICT 5 buna Robot- left wing of the Socialist Party dur- | following quotas were allowed to| Pittsburgh nicat 381 ‘Tammany Tricks That ing the world war—and this is again | schools in different cities: Lsrapcaey cine PA eh I keThemScab |=, Besed of intense war preparations |New ork gn;‘Eiadephia, |r On om | Puce ‘:| Would MakeThemSca t 95° fi 3 a . Ruthenberg mobilized workers | 875} Boston, $40; Detroit, $45; Los DISTRICT 6 TOTAL NEW YORK —To protest against gainst wage cuts and unemployment | AM&*les, $40; Cleveland, $25; Balti- Lahiri Baio yaa | the substitution of regular engineer- against wage cuts and unemployment | yore, $25; Norfolk-Portsmouth, $25; | Wetkers Sick and District § = | & ae es : in the crisis of 1921, and this is| g¢ Louis, $25; Washington, $20; Desth Benefit Chicago ing employees of the city and ee rial . . i 7 10.00} Juge Stay Club of bi ief workers at Em- wage cuts and starvation of millions | waukee, $15; Rochester, $15; Tren- | wm Lee 1.00 W Jansen | ergency Wo 2 of unemployed ton, $10; Youngstown, $10; Plain- | 343-845 8:10| Yetta Becker jof Technical Men is joining with Ruthenberg fought the terror and | ; ; | M Korchak 2.00| collection 15.48] other organizations of technicians in : re e field, 10; Monticello, $10; Toledo, | Kore oe ey frame up system, and was the only| 5, Ren iets tae ROERE via] calling 2 mass meeting for Mar one of the Bridgeman defendants Friday's total contributions to the | Unlt 3-45 1.05) TH to date $920.35| 16th at Washington Irving High | convicted—and this is again a period | pay Worker sess #1088, which as Unit 1107 102] ISTRICE 9 | School. The meeting will also take | = % ly .88, | — Minnesota | i s laying off of city Sees bestia Se sneer the | Pace with the previous day’s total} ToTAL $25.93 A Hayden 2.00 | UP fae cone ous I as, Pgeoreaes uthenberg was cut down in the | or ss0091, ‘This is far from enough| TH to date 3827.00 =| coe prime of life, but died with the 1: \y rips DISTRICT 7 Tt to date $80. 04 of public works to help alleviate un- vords, “Let us fight ” “The party | 2 the present crucial situation. Apart Detroit | DISTRICT 10 foment eee tenhe eee Om, The Party | trom New York's $484.08, the ifollow:||\M:shegmene’ se Kansas city | “MPloymen jhe left behind him will show. and | ing districts responded to the ‘Daily's’ | Section a 30| HM Hislip The Union demands that all men er test of the workers of New vor call for help: Detroit, $75.28; Bos- F ae rd Tt to date gagaz| Placed on. relief work be paid the [wa Snow ek bey meee ought | ton, $46.45; New Jersey, $30; Mil- | Rutsies 100] ““pisrRrcr i) | Prevailing rate of wages, as the tech- on, by coming together in this Ruth- | waukee, $38.90, and Cleveland, $25.93. | J Pshibes 1 .D. and §.p. | nicians are discharged and then re- enberg anniversaty meeting. |The International Workers’ Order} 4™ |S PF Kabanuk " "29| hired to continue work as emergency The meeting becomes inevitably 2 | branches contributed $71.85, bik ateanene’. 15) Tt to date sia.25| Workers. Engineers have been forced | mass mobilization against imperialist} tm order to continue publication | P Regseft hs DISTRICT 13 | by their employers, including New War, against Hitlerism in Germany, | this week, it is absolutely essential | § Meuser 05 eerosaia York City, to contribute to these tri y Mihaljinch 05! H L Lockerid; 1.00 fi and of preparations for rent strikes |that ALL DISTRICTS in the west | be saneeae 05| Mat MeNalr"” ye9| funds, and now they find their con- and struggle against wage cuts, for | and middle-west give their FULL| son 26!N Mattick ‘40| tributions being used to drive down | reliet and for the Albany Confer-| support to the Daily Worker. The | Russel Meat ——| their own salaries. Through this ence and the March 4 demonstra- | workers in New York have been BO- | | emiartet ae asin sitzis| Means, engineers who have been re- tions. | ing at top speed and have raised|r Pot pisTRtcr 1 | Ceiving $200 a month and up as salary | more than half of their quota. The|V : 30 New Jersey have been discharged and re-hired | other districts with big quotas—Bos- pea) <lt eae tor °"°| through the Emergency Work Bur- 4 000 LINE UP ton, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Detroit, | xsi 100| 4/E. D. —5,90| eau for $52. “If work cannot be 9 | Chicago, California and New Jersey—|& Wirtman 10|E W Weisser 1.00! found for them,” declares the union, | a .|& Rushito 210 “4 i duty of ity to | FOR WEINSTEIN ji (is Sie “och "aes |i em 8) aera, | a anal i ta | | tailed to contribue Friday), Califor- | srs. F, seharie “10 pistRicr 15 | lief and not force them to scab on | nia, Buffalo, Minnesota and Milwau-|8 T Gach a i iecanss leat | their fellow workers.” . | “05 oko | Series of Meeting s De- peony cen ide Mi aBtr 10 Yorkville: Unit The Union invites all representa~ t 3 Shacknavitz g Total for Frid: — 810.88 a fale TOTAL SL. | mands Release Previously received * 0608.07 foe mean ols Fi Gatgery: eotieatag’ | ah to laste: “978 —_—— —_— thru lists 13,00 DISTRICT 10 NEW YORK —Approximately 4,-| Total to date ___ $11,493.95 :05| TOTAL Cornch Students: | ee ee “ 3 7 " NTRIB : .05| Tt to date 32: HS Vi ‘obert 2. coo Workers,“ stvending | Bara “Welt-| ai mer dk eae aa ‘20 sseeaty at H Hadiey Mrs FM Irving 00 stein Demonstrations here Friday Bellen Collected by Sparia- 10 N. C. and S.C. ° Franklin Lincoln Unit 00 | night, expressed strong mass resent- | orchester Unit 8.00| eus Greek Workers 25) © W Theinert 1,00 | Alex Maun E B Harris 1.00 ment against the railroading of Sam_| ‘awiueket Unit 3.75| Clubs: MT cesdt eisicaae |e DE Snyder 2.00 | 8 Lind 5.10) 5 “ ‘o' ja 7 lenry 3 ve 8 ket 5 Weinstein to Sing Sing and pledged | P,tnait attate 10:06 | amernens DISTRI B Clark J Tonkovieh 50 their determination to bring mass Cambridge Unit 1.90 | Anonymoas Mih 2 Elgin TT Budhick 1.00 pressure to bear for releasing him G Pavio 00 | As Hungarian Printer | £ Fierce ¥ Tilden 1 from the clutches of the capitalist |$ Sadlieanga — 1.00| Anonymous — seo ¥ Wassen F Mastolick i ell’ Unii ection. 75 Aronson frame-up gang. bec plea ty rare ha A Mekerides Unemployed Council |G Price yoran | 3 Bazaai hol: 1.60 i ‘sppes Ne. 1 M Greenberg tl to date eee welts Taser 100 focotases P Plulogiaa 3 E Bischof? 95| AH Saltzbers DISTRICT 11 About 2,500 workers crowded the|5 Galsgauskis 1.00| J Volks E Cott N Restovich | Anonymous lo] (N. D. & 8. DL) N. Y. District, I. L. D, Defense Ba-| Sarapas 3.00/ A Augustides Minors os 4 oon : § x pe 50 zaar at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East| DSA Br. 44 3.00 | L Piros i brea showed hove ekg ‘e 4th St. on “Sam Weinstein Night,”| Pesyel | wae ashes Aympsthiser Algat Starr 25 Friday. The Weinstein case and the| Lith. Wnrs. Assn. J Stroghilis R Brown 10) TOTAL 1,00 Brite Pte tee seein cn aaa el ee ay ee TR te dale $182.80 mak igsby Disreier ane nase fenkn s proved Weinstein’s innocence beyond! yoqay, eus|A Kee DISTRICT 19 Dis (Calit.) a doubt and the tricks used by the} 1 {o date $328.57 by Colorado Unit 5 Dorothy Erskine prosecution to convict Weinstein were DISTRICT 2 5 Unit 27: Lis a lack big 4 ‘ | Anonymous Ne York Al abrorine Bet outlined by sale a tey eon eel Pe O Leane collection | ToTaL ucational director of the Y. | seayers 125| 3 Schneor Unit 8, donation ‘Tt to date $122. District, I. L. D. The large audience] £ tscomo 1.00 5 peg date git20) Unit & colt. DISTRICT - was deeply silent as Kamman an-|J Fieuer 5.00 o date $47.37 | (New Jersey’ nounced the sentence given. Wein-|Presmen Dally Bese eee a3] Tur to. date $161.65) Bussisn Stuteat stein by the bosses’ court. Immedi-|s Barros 1.60 Br. 11, NYC 10,00) DISTRICT 5 | Ald Society 10.00 ately, however, workers in the audi- a4 5.00 ual she “ ee 5.00 | ae a acrid Fsu oe ence shouted, “We must help Sam|E Pearson 1.00 a eee & Marazin’ larva A . 7 2 5 RK 8.10 at 1.08 — Weinstein!” The shouts were taken Re iycades hoe +10) Br. 48, Phils, cageane re ag TOTAL 358.00 up by the entire audience, which in|a Kromus 2.00 | Coll, by Section +10} City Committee, B Searrille ‘TH to date $224.84 one prolonged shout thundered forth Srmpsihiser -10| Unit 16: “ Hertford, Conn. M Booker pune. Ph ‘ F k ‘onn. a pledge to support the N. ¥. Dis- | Comrade aS cates as|roraL gal heer |e Barnes 5.00 trict, I. L. D. and the Weinstein De-!n Blok ‘25 05" Tt to date $1118.68) Tattor | FOL (Waterbury 1.35 fense Committee in the fight to . weet Paiynit H Ce eed 1“ i A 0 pitas fer fue S eee then. EH (The following returns were omit-|% "oneun es " Sympathizer " M © Blackbone TOTAL 38.1 An open alr mass meeting in be-|M Gold So. Fallsburr ted trom: Gatamday’s iesue of the Dally | MC sero? ral aude ante strat half of Weinstein held by the Brown- Haak ay Ust fen Worker for lack of space) Hd Lirman. (iin and Fs), sville section of the N. ¥. District, I. borg S evel re nd Us 4° 03 A Web L, D., at Pitkin and Hopkinson Aves.|O'tsnate 244 riage bk wae ge (ashourn, atlee” was attended by 1,000 workers, many . van cake - ‘Unit Au See 6 bared J Berkowitz 10, Oakland Unit tion at party ve i ini -S, Sec AS F 10 bg orproet beerey tr! © Kemmonel 1.00 E Lepisto 35 105 | TH to date $194.68| TH to date $10.50 Fund. This meeting was addressed |Unit 9, Sec 2 1.00 ‘Arvid. Aho ‘25, los | prerownn 6 DISTRICT 18 by N. E. Taft. More than 500 work- wae Pat as in Paul Ylinen 25 05 | Reet ri ka’ ‘anon a * ‘ost 2% a Anon} a 65 ‘memrloyed Counc’ jexaevic! ers attended a Weinstein mass meet- | {Est Post Bed pig oid ie ‘a Ned $1.50|Sam Harbin 1.60 ing at Prospect and Tremont Sts.,|@reok Ave. Workers A Reader 25! Max Posner 210 T Jackson 25 Bronx. x ae A 19 3x oO . — 05! "TH to date suet bh ola be eee 1 Alanke 50 lan 10 D'svTRICT rene 5. Sam Weinstein panedtoraed the | Anenrmous by RGT 106M. Siegal he (Chicago) Carl Pernick 5.00 A mass meeting 1 | T Gaiperin ive one 19: A Reader 50! Zaka -10| Alex Smied 50) Tag Day and collec- release of Sam Weinste.n will be|Dr. B. Latinsky 5.00] G Gorfinne SO\H GT 1.00 Puchonk 10) J F Sloan 25) tlon at meet- held today, 8:30 p. m, at the Rus- blessed eae tor J Reed . 1.00 2 baer .05| Ben Bond - ing 16.01 sian Mutual Aid Society, 4049 Third | Sapiro Ueit S DW Club o bere 95 | Dr Wm J Twigg 2.00) Let 4.80) E Both 02 Bay .00| TOTAL $92.25 Ave. Bronx, to which admission will A Gartis Revert 1.00] F Boxer ‘05| GW Penton | Ta to date $148.00 be free. Carl Sklar, one of the re- vé tiiaen Maple Park is = Fittean 01} Collection: a |e ee ee _ ased perial priso: init 6-8: Corporation 4 Tasklic 08) WH Anderson i or but not iste sex fog. he Ri J B Cermento +10| Workers School of | S .05| Leon Moss | DISTRLOE & A Carl mar! up Affects the Entire Working- ie $ o2| Johnson Morente 1.00 class.” -10| TOTAL & Wallin a ‘ondon 1 y E W Sayer eT date $282.15] A C Bul 170 | Straus 50 The N. Y. District, I. L. D., and the |E W, Sz Sey eee ents Some e . eae 30| Sara Garfinkel 1.00 Sam Weinstein Defense Committee | Japanese Workers’ Losler [a Lucas 1.11 | Collection 2.50 will circulate collection lists for ga- ekad pte) a ee — o15| Lide G Schwartz i a kf pone Ae thering funds to carry the appeal "YC! p eecerem Naoe udovie 10) Morris Hung Press Org S$ Uni . . L a K Bask aw Michael Hi t 1.00) Friend of the for a new trial to the higher courts.| piatoush Workers | weer delsene Thos Tarvon 1.00| Dally Worker 5.001 All branches of the N. Y. District, I. pal 3 dag G Mila 05) 5 From Dist No 8 es Pico Unit oa % ions, al - | Womens Comm, Fur-| A Marinke :10| B Mofter Office 100.1 irst Ward Unit 3. Haborecuissees: Blade pee janie” ones ceria: ‘M Peller Kath Fenogiio 10 | Tower Mill Unit 1.85 id y 5.4 05) D ™M: ib 5S are urged to rally to the defense of| unit 15, See 15 10.00 Golden x eae A Semanick 05 (Ohicago) Sam Weinstein. | Fptbens Bry E Yeleich 110 Previously accounted | wactivot 14 ea Sel sos Bey bonnet aslissoto eke : x Day East | Cones Island Whkrs S Yarosiey A Packo +10] St. Louis 7.50 te 5.8 A Schwartzman J Marcinko 26) United Drive Comm| A Zakaate Workers D Rerowits ‘Anna Marcinko Dally Worker Cam- . B Yorosiau paign of Language LT Joselyn Socleties 00, Anonymous Anenymons fall DISTRICT 19 Seat Anonymous 02| G E Hellas 5.00| John Hull Sr. (Colorado) be Korus <61| Henry Post 1.00) collection 3.50| Previously accounted ‘Abramowite #2) F Mumance 1.00 aot hat, net listed: CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Feb. 26.~ A Sehwarts 5 jeciety of Free im Younger B One thousand workers of the Peer- B Sites 4 bared eee ais ok less Woolen Mills in Rossvile, Ga., BR Hecht 10 as 3 J Bisoes Ree a which is practically a suburb of this A Smith ad c nat y Prien elty, have walked out on strike S ius B Hoffman a tad Brother. 90,00 against a 10 per cent cut in their B Berman 1.00 wages, the 12-hour day and an in- one Ootioate vey, Finnish creased speed-up which forces them lub, to tend eight looms instead of four. 5.00 is maine geumremaar (re. gfe $i) GRAND BAZAAR FOR THE organized, but is continuing mili-|% Teed Workers 1.35 coo Eo tantly under the leadership of the|rwo shule No. © Makiwirts 8 workers’ elected strike committee, It| Brownsvi { Conrad 25 D |AILY WORKER is one of a series of strikes that are |} Fallate we c- breaking out in the textile mills of | section ¢ Anenymeus le ? i *. the South in reply to the mill own-| Unit 14, See ¢ Beckman fe Krueger 3 Auditorium—March 11 and 12 ers’ efforts ve dot e work-| Unit 21, See 6 Anonymous 7) See Siviie avdaee Gee Te Deraciain Martin 0\]] Restaurant—all kinds of food—cheaper than at home the present semi-starvation level. Bee 6, Unit 12 ‘3 Don't buy your spring clothes—you will buy them A Fri 3s wholesale price JAMAICA WORKERS AID ‘DAILY’ | Un't 9. Sec 2 a ic . ie ry rs NEW YORK. — Organizations in | Unit 13, see 2 ary A G : Jamaica showed their support of the | Unit 6, See 2 BU WORKERS’ MANDOLIN ORCHESTRAS — WORKERS y i |e se CHORUSES — WELL-KNOWN CARTOONIST FROM Daily Worker by raising $25 in dona- Sympathizer ‘20 tions at a banquet held in the Y Perio 90 | 4 3s JOHN REED CLUB — DANCING Jamaica Workers Center. In addi- . “ tion, wer $20 was raised for sub. |UME%, See 1 17:96 a Admission 25c—for both days seriptions Unit 4, Bec 8 2.00 ne = Frame-Up Already in Metal Strike; Strikers Stand Solid NEW YORK.—The workers of the Leroy Auto Radiator Company at 451 Tenth A corner 35th St., are entering their second week of strik- ing against a wage cut which the boss wanted to introduce in the form of a nine-hour 2 week lengthening of hours with no increase in pay. On Saturday morning a scab met with resistance at the hands of the workers who are carrying on picket- ing and as a result of this, Flager. @ member of the union was arrested and charged with felonious assault. His case will come up Thursday. Workers are urged to come down en the picket. line today and the following days, and help to win this strike. The strike is being conducted by the Metal Workers Industrial Union. tives of technical groups to a pre- liminary conference March 2nd, at Peters Tavern, Fulton and Concord Sts. Brooklyn, at 8:30 pin. STUNT TO CUT TAXICAB WAGES General Motors Offers ‘Raise’, But Cheats NEW YORK.—A new plan to cut the earnings of the taxi drivers has been initiated by the Terminal Cab Company in thelr 38th St. garage. The scheme, it is stated, is to be ex- tended to the 60th St. and then to other garages, as part of a drive by the General Motors who control 70 per cent of the taxi fleets in N. Y., to further reduce the incothe of the drivers. The company is putting this scheme forward under the guise of a ten per cent raise. In return, however, the driver will have to pay for the gasoline which he is to buy from the company at ten cents a gallon. “This little trick,” declares a statement is- sued by the Hackmen’s Committee of the 38th Street Terminal, “will bring in $250,000 per year extra profit to the company.” Actual working out of the scheme is further described as follows: “If you book $3.50 and burn up 7 gallons of gas, you will be out 35 cents! If you get a long trip and cruise back “light”—you pay that trip yourself, If you are sent down to a pier out of the Penn and get licked, you have to pay for it, and if you ask the start- er ‘How about gas money’ he sends you to the president of the company.” An idea of what this further re- duction will mean to the taxi can be obtained through the stories of the already miserable working conditions and starvation wages, which appear-~ ed in the February issue of the “Taxi Worker” published by the Taxi Work- ers Union, Room 222, 80 E 11th St. “Don't Quit! Organize!” On the first day the scheme was put into effect, 60 men quit at the 38th St. garage. In its statement, the Hackmens’ Committee, points out that the scheme can be successfully fought and better conditions won thru organization. Instead it declares as follows: “Get together now into garage committees and prepare for action. Do not quit, Stop this gyp, the men of other gar- ages will back us.” AMUSEMENTS | ! GUILD THEATRE THE THEATRE GUILD Presents “American Dream’ By GEORGE O'NEILL 52nd St., West of Brosdway. Evenings 8:30 Matinees Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 A COMEDY BY AVON _THEATRI THE THEATRE GUILD Presents: “BIOGRAPHY” “. .. and in it INA CLAIRE. The combination seems to have been arranged in heaven.”—Gilbert Gabriel, American. 45th St., West of Broadw: Matinees on Thursday an S.N BEHRMAN q coe a Not Too Aesthetie for Aeme Audiences! ——=| | . (Director of Dovzhenko’s crest) FIRST SOVIET SOUND FILM “IVAN” ENGLISH SUPERIMPOSED TITLES worxers Acme Theatre 14TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE axo JEFFERSON" &. #/NOW “LAUGHTER IN HELL” with PAT O'BRIEN and G'ORIA STUART Added “SELF-DEFENSE” Feature with PAULINE FREDERICK GISH in DOROTHY AUTUMN CROCUS MOROSCO THEATRE, ith Bt We of Weny Eves. 8:40. Mats. Wed. Thars. & Sat., 2:40 JOHN BARRYMORE in “TOPAZE” Coming “SHAME” a Film of Revotc-~ tionary Morality RKO CAMEO THEA., 4nd St. & Broadway Build a workers correspondence treup mm your factory, shop or to the Dafty Worker. PATRON ADVERTISERS IZE OUR fotern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1th FLOOR AU Work fone Under Persbuw Care ef DR. JOSEPHSON -omrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Alt « Vegetarian Health Restaurant 358 Cler-mont Parkway, Bron Downtown JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comradcs Phone Tomkias Sq 6-0554 John’s Restaurant SUKCIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES gd th nt ere all eadicais meet 102 © 12th Bt New gors Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parka Coteterle Near Mopkinson Ave, Brooklyn, N. ¥ DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Ret. Pitkin & Saiter Aves.) Biya PHONE: DICKENS 2.9013 Office Ho 8-10 AM, 1-%, 6-8: PM. Garment District PATRONIZE SEVERN’S CAFETERIA ith Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices Garment Section Workers Patronize Naverr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 2fth st. Good Food Served. Richt Farragut Cafeteria 326 Seventh Av.. at 28th St. errno Pa Se PETAL LORE | 101 W. 28th St., New York|

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