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LL TT i DAVIS ‘Judge Considers Painter Bosses Injunction Plea Supreme Court Justice Stephen Callaghan in Brooklyn yesterday re- served decision on the application of a group of boss painters for a tem- porary injunction to restrain the Brotherhood of Painters and Decora- tors, District Council 21, “from call- ing a strike, or from continuing a strike, if there is one.” About 4,500 painters went on strike last Monday morning for a wage rate of $14 a day. About 2,500 have | already won their demands from the bosses. R. B. Moore to Talk On| Brussels Conference at Harlem Forum Sunday Richard B. Moore, who has just re- turned from the Brussels conference against imperialist, will be greeted at a mass meeting at the Mother Zion Community House, 151 W. 136th St., tomorrow afternoon at 8:30. Other speakers on the program in- clude Samuel Sha, member of the Kuomintang, U. S. Bonnejee, of the India Freedom Foundation, and George Weston, of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. NEWSBOYS WANTED To sell The DAILY WORKER at union meetings. Commission paid. Report to the Local Office, 108 East 14th Street. ‘Shop Chairmen Council To Meet in Manhattan | |Lyceum Tuesday Night The council of dress and cloak shop chaiymen will meet on Tuesday, April | 12th right after work in Manhattan | Lyceum, not Cooper Union as was an-| nounced yesterday in this paper. The chairmen will discuss the latest developments in the struggle between | the reactionary right wing leaders of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union and the Joint Board leaders who are defending the union and the rights of the workers. The attack of tHe right wing bureaucracy upon the needle trades union is producing quick results, The workers are learning that in unity there,is strength and the movement toward amalgamation is gaining new strength. To-night, the Capmakers, Furriers, Cloakmakers, Dressmakers, Millinery Workers, Food Workers, Building Trades Workers and Office Workers will dance at the great Amalgamation Ball which is being held at the Sta? Iron and Bronze Shop Chairmen Meet Today “An important meeting of the shop . chairmen and the organization Com- Casino. i mittee of the Architectural Iron and| All of the young, vigorous, deter- Bronze Structural Workers’ Union| ™ined left wing will be there which will be held on Saturday afternoon|™@ns that Schachtman, Sigman and April 9, 1927 at the office of the| Woll will give the place a wide berth. Union, 7 East 15th Street, City at| In itself this will be an event that 3:00 P. M. SHARP. will be long remembered by all those The union is calling the attention | Who participate. of all the shop chairmen that on}, This ball has been arranged under Saturday afternoon, April 16, 1927 ajthe auspices of the Trade Union Edu- mass meeting of all the Iron and | cational Leagues for the benefit of Bronze Workers’ union and non- and relief of the impris- union will be held at Manhattan .—~akers and Furriers. | | Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, City at d ‘ion will be 50 cents for tick- 13:00 P. M. ets in advance, on sale at the Joint | This will be the start of the big/ Boards and all local unions. | organization drive to unionize all the} ig P | open shops and it is therefore, neces- | Read The Daily Worker Every Day | sary that all the members. of the/ junion be present.”—A ROSEN- | | FELD, Secretary. Father Who Killed | Doctor to Die | For Worker Win 40 Hour Week ai NORTH BERGEN, N. J., April 8.— The forty hour week was won by fifty | members of the Fur Workers Union |here after a two day strike. They ‘are employed by the Alaska Chemical ) Co. tric chair at Sing Sing for the mur- der of Dr. Casper Pendola, paced his cell in murderers’ row in Raymond Street jail, Brooklyn, yesterday and cried for his 6-yearlold son, Joseph. It was because of the death of this Left Wing Workers DEMAND GROWS 4000 Flay U.S. To Make Merry at THAT KELLOGG © War—“Hands Off “Big Ball Tonight LEAVETHEGOV'T China’-Slogan Raving ilke a mad man, Heanobass | Caruso, 36, who must die in the elec-| THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1927 | Mexican Seandal Breaks Over Administration | WASHINGTON, April 8.—éecre-| | tary of State Kellogg and his under- | lings in the State Department are | stunned by revelations relating to the | intrigue of this government in Mexi- }eo. It is now clear that the Calles | government in Mexico is familiar with | some of the secret documents relating {of this country in Mexico. | Just how the documents came into | Calles’ possession is a mystery, but| when the record of the Harding-Cool- jidge regime is recalled it is not at all | surprising. From the day-it came | into power in 1921 its record has been {one long sordid story of graft and |corruption. Doherty, Denby, Fall, | young Roosevelt and the other lumin. aries of the eatly days of “revelry,” sors’ experience, but no one here | doubts that the same old game is be- jing played. It is not unlikely that } some of the oil interests in Mexico re- vealed the military plans and secrets jof this country toward Mexico, with | which they are familiar, in order to terrorize the Calles government into | ignoring its own land laws. Now that the conspiracies of the state department are known to the | Mexican government, Kellogg and his | staff are trying to evade the just de- nunciation that is their due by charg- ing that some of the more damning | documents that reveal the imperialist | policy of the United States are forg- | eries. | to preparations for military invasion! have been replaced by those who have | |learned caution from their predeces- | Page Threé [the Chinese masses, and creating a feeling of resentment towards for- eigners, Ghastly Crime. WHEREAS, the bombardmen Nar by American and Br me of the most gh committed against the Ch A city: of one-half million t afire. Thousands of itants were killed and shells, and thousands deprived of their ish peopie. people w ‘ful inh by others we: pea | Indignation at the imperialistic {massacre of innocent Chinese civi- \lians at Nanking, and demands that \the United States cease its unauthor- lized war against the Chinese liber-| ation movement, were contained in! resolutions unanimously adopted by thousands of workers who joined in “Hands Off China” meetings at Cen- tral Opéra House, 67th St. and Third Ave., and at Royal Palace, 16 Man- hattan Ave. Speak For Oppressed People. The speakers included Ziang-ling Chang, Chinese consul general in New! | York; S. N. Ghose, executive secre- tary of the India Freedom Founda- tion; Richard B. Moore, of the Amer- ican Negro Labor Congress; William F. Dunne, editor of The DAILY WORKer; C. T. Chi, Chinese student representative; Dorthy Wang, of Col- umbia, and Carl Weissberg of City College. mutilated of ing armed forces to China, thus preparing for further massacres of the Chinese people, ultimately strangling the Nationalist movement and assisting the war lords and bandits to oppress the Chinese, and WHEREAS, the mobilization by the great powers may at any moment lead to the outbreak of another world war; therefore be it RESOLVED that we, several thou- sand people in mass meeting assem- bled at Central Opera House, New York City, most emphatically protest against the shameful and blood petrated by our battleships. against defens Chir in Nanking, and be it further per- Withdraw Marines. RESOLVED, that we demand the or. a. Raps Press. withdrawal of marines and battle- Zian-ling Chang, consul general of | ships from China, the cancellation of | , China, after declaring that he fears | unequal treaties which oppress the that anything he might say will un- | doubtedly be exaggerated and gar- | bled in the capitalist papers of this | eity, said that the present liberation RESOLVED, that this resolution be movement in his country’ is the na-| sent to the president of the United tural result of seventy-fiv he secretary of foreign 4 Skins concession-grabbing, extr: avis < ‘ . at Vv . Bor: a > press ality “rights,” and other a or William E. E orah and the pre as. Chinese people and the recognition of the Canton National government, and be it further pars of forms of imperialistic domination on the part of foréign nations. “The future of the new China | very bright,” he said, “but prospects | is |for peace in the near future are con- | siderably dimmed by the presence of |the battleships and marines of Great | Britain and the United States”. Fake China Reports. SAS, our government is still | Passaic Workers Get Brutal Jail Terms ond Fines HACKENSACK, April 8. jail sentences to five me the imposition of fines all followed by venomous spec the presiding judge,—th e overtones cent textile strike at Judge Displays Ire. ki was sentenced Eleven workers were sing implicated hom are now 2 years in the g one was on a trial brought original! in this ca: serving terr penitentiary acauited when and tangible against him. be io To Jail. wen, mothers, months each assault- ing members © police force. Aggregate fines of $ 0 were imposed on 19 men and women who charged with “disord con- a result of their participa- tion in picketing act s. IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT regarding the performance of It appears, from the information at! J, discussing the current dispatches {appearing in the capitalist papers, | Ziang-ling Chang warned that “the | public in the United States is in |serious danger of being misled by boy that Caruso choked and stabbed | hand, that the state depart i } 4 4 s ment is Dr. Pendola to death February 13,! hard put to get out of Gs fix they last. The physician had been attend-| fing themselves in because Calles, in- ing the boy, ill with diptheria, and | stead of yielding to their bluff, called jin an effort to save his life had ad-| i¢ and exposed them. BROOKLYN ‘Fiesta’ - Daily Worker Concert and Spring Ball TONIGHT, at Royal Palace ‘Hall, {ministered anti-toxin. The boy died |and Caruso accused Pendola of hav- ing killed him with the injection. Patronize Our Advertizers. APRIL 9th the | A number of congressmen and sen- |ators still here, when they speak of | the matter at all, express the opinion | that there is nothing further for Kel- | lore to do but resign before the storm breaks over his head. 16 Manhattan Ave. {biased reports from China by way of | | different sources.” | Greatest In History. “History records no revolutionary movement of such gigantic propor- tions as is seen in China today,” de- clared William F. Dunne, editor of The DAILY WORKER. By arrangement with the New Playwright’s Theatre, The DAILY WORKER Benefit Week has been postponed to April 25. All tickets purchased previously will be exchanged for others to suit the convenience of the purchaser. All tickets should be purchased at least four days before the performance in order to have The DAILY WORKER receive the benefit. é PROGRAM: 1) Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra. 2) Max Margolis, violinist, with a musical quartet. 3) Yetta Stein, piano recital. A DOUBLE BAND FOR DANCING. 6, Workers Communist Party- BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY | | “one-third of the carth’s popula- FRIENDS OF ORGANIZED LABOR j tion is*in revolt against world imper- lialism. The Soviet Union and Rising jacenienmemteiinncidennienepttsnnniesiee Booth Phones, Dry Dock 6612, 7846, }|China together have 600,000,000 peo- Office Phone, Orchard 9319. ple. Patronize Ree a teat MANHATTAN LYCEUM Unity of these two great groups Large Halls With Stage for Meet- of oppressed peoples will smash the ings, . Entertain Balls, Wed- || imperialist offensive against both pe are China and the Soviet Union.” Adopt Resolution. | The following resolution adopted at the meeting held at Cen- tral Opera House and the Royal | Palace Hall, Brooklyn: WHEREAS, the Nationalist move- ment of China is struggling for the Buy your tickets now at The DAILY WORKER Office, 108 E. 14th Street, or at the Jimmie Higgins Bock Shop, 127 Univer- sity Place. Tel. Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Houre: 9:30-12 A, Daily Except Friday a 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Aye. New York. , Auspices—Section CHARLES SELIKSON was 3 Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Tel. Dry Dock £306, 8045, 2591, I. KITZIS, Prop. THE ASTORIA eile. | ttt FRED SPITZ The FLORIST ° 3 SECOND AVENUE Near sionately struggling for a “Free and United China,” WHEREAS, the advance of the People’s Armies over the largest part of China has been marked by almost | bloodless victories, WHEREAS, Britain and our gov- ernment are lauching a war against \the Chinese people. Fifty-seven | American battleships and thousands h} y i || Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 “ liberation of the Chinese people from i] Radios and Victrolas | asa ea plrariapa Pea the rule of brigand war lords and the s +) “Opis gta achat rages es oppression of foreign imperialists, 1225 FIRST AVENUE ¢ eal ecnate. 67s 62-04 E. 4th St. New York City. || WHEREAS, The Nationalist cause gE Corner 66th Street. | nee Misietly by Appointment (—_——_ ee is score by the Aly dag wed Sash enn x |]] Phone: Drydock 8880. masses of Chinese people who have C or Easy Payment 3 DR. L KESSLER awakened to a new life and are pas- a * Stromberg-Carlson Radios SURGEON DENTIST ‘ 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. Fada-Neutrodyne Atwater Kent Radiola Super-Heterodyne Freed-Eisemann Freshman Masterpiece, Etc. No Interest Charged. Slightly used PIANOS 95 NOW IS THE TIME! New York Alt fitted Houston. Week FRESH CUT FLOWERS DAILY Fresh and Artificial Flowers Delivered Anywhere. oie See eS SB Be eee ee Dr. Jacob Levenson SURGEON DENTIST 54 East 109th Street oohorhondontontonionten PHONE: UNIVERSITY 7525. v EE. Z| iat Py as | of marines are in China now exhibit- a 4 INSTALLED FREE. # ae BCTAL Hs uC Rion te LABOR ling a dtéplay oe scmal tuiges saber: » Select That Piano se Hire Long Been Waiting : £) } ¥AD NS. | * raed war, voking a ‘o Own! 4 Everything Guaranteed. £1] retevhone Dry Dock 9069. Qe eee! ralled since ee eee Come and See Our 1927 Line of 5 3 Mect me at the Public Art | NEWBY OPEN EVENINGS $=! Dairy Restaurant |) : & EVANS * lanes Players Grands and Vegetarian 75 SECOND AVE. NEW YORK Opposite Public Theatre ‘HE INSTRUMENTS WITH THE GOLDEN TONE” Highest Quality—Moderate Prices—Easy Terms FREE! DELIVERY, BENCH, CABINET o ° COVER AND TWELVE ROLLS! LISTEN ny iO FT! \ REAL ~RADIO AT LAST! perates entirely by Electricity Mass Meeting | THE PRESENT SITUATION Amalgamation Ball IMPRISONED CLOAKMAKERS AND FURRIERS onig Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5565. FOR FOR FOR A_ FRESH, WHOLESOME VEGETARIAN MEAL ee ee ee oe ee ae ee ‘ 7 Come to ee eee ii te Se ee Scientific Vegetarian DEFENSE DEFENSE Bagh. recalled roca \ : Restaurant cometh pants PNA ‘ DEN co SEEAREES? sai aecsieaiiis 75 F, 107th Street New York. i . canine nl Lait N GOLD LOUISHYMAN J. STAR CASINO alia SAM LIPZIN, Chairman BORO PARK Sunday, April 10 CRYSTAL HALL 4214—14th Avenue, Brooklyn. ’ Auspices JEWISH WORKERS’ CLUB OF BORO PARK. ADMISSION FREE. Where do we meet to drink and eat? at Sollins’ Dining Room Good Feed! Good Company! ‘Any Hour! Any Day! REAL HOME COOKING 222 BE. 14th St. Bet. 2 & 3 Aves. Phone: Stuyvesant 7661. 107th Street and Park Avenue. Auspices: CLOAKMAKERS, DRESSMAKERS, AMALGAMAT- ED, FURRIERS, CAPMAKERS and MILLINERY LEAGUES. Tickets at Joint Defense, 41 Union Square, also at Joint Boards and Local Unions. Admission 50 cents, NE DIAL NTROL SHIELDED OPERAS OOP AN tee DOUBLY 1:30 P. M. A Home-Cooked Vegetarian Meal served in a home-like atmosphere come to ESTHER’S. DINING ROOM 26 East 109th Street. . Corner Avenue A. } Gammon or mie mm om. ~=—- FALARLEM CASINO, 116th St. and Lenox Ave. ADMISSION 50c Or itearca "> YORKBRS, LEAGUE am ee Tonight SPRING DANCE and CONCERT Tonight