The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 3, 1927, Page 5

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1927 Page Five WALKOUT IN ALL SHOPS SHOWS JAIL GANGSTERS "wk" Workers. WOLL'S OUTFIT "etc!e'ton SAB COAL BOSS STRENGTH OF JOINT BOARD IN CITY FOR ATTACK ON °**="8™="" BOOSTS FOE QF 2 °"29 6 FENGES IN WHOLE To rally the workers of Brooklyn The demands of 30,000 locomotive een ran. | to the campaign to save the lives of engineers e eastern railroads will (Continued from Page One) 5 CLOAK PICKETS Sacco and Vanzetti, a large mass SACCO VANZETT| go to medfation on July 6, it was TOWN of MINERS working cards will enable them to-re- . |meeting will be held Sunday at 2 ' n d yesterday by the Bureau of turn to work Monday morning. |p. m, at Arcadia Hall, Halsey Street, ee ion of the Eastern Railway Lae ‘ To Stay on Strike ; s i near Broadway. It is being arranged| | , Re i Presidents. The mediation will be ; ay “All fur workers of the Associated WANT TQ J Al Joint Board Manager |by the Brooklyn Sacco-Vanzetti Con-|Civic Federation Wants |conducted by the Board of Mediation Paisley Outfit Makes shops will remain on strike until the pecs Say ee ference. | is created by the Parker-Watson Act: m, i oe ae Associated, manufacttiters will in- : Denounces Rights The speakers will be Forrest Bail-|to Broadcast Wigmore |The mediation has not yet been 700 Prisoners crease the wages, guarantee the union | i meets ey, director, American Civil Liberties Beer Gb: named, conditions that were won as a, result) UPTON SINCLAIR Three notorious gangsters, Sam | Union; Ludwig Lore, editor, Volkzeit-| In an effort to drag Dean Wigmore| The ‘engineers want a 16 per cent) PUCKETY CREEK, Pa., Ju of the last. strike, recognize our union, | Gre Sam Schechter, and Sam) ung; Carlo Tresca, editor I] Martello; }of Northwestern law school, the onl nerease in wages. | (FP).—What used to be the country and guarantee to desist from’ organ: oct Tomki ere held without bail when | M. J. Olgin, editor, The Hammer; legal expert in the country who has mining town of Puch izing company unions. > y : ‘arraigned in Jefferson Market Court! John Tertamelia, manager, Barbers’! heen found to declare the Sacco-Van- |times known as P. “At 10 o’elock in the morning, all Rather An est Him than yesterday charged with assaulting a| Union, Local 913; Ray Ragozin, In-|zetti death sentence just and war- i near Pittsburgh, is now t fur workers will assemble in the fol- + Gow group of dressmakers who were pick-| ternational Labor Defense and Ar-| ranted, out of the obscurity of a Chi ily il | els an industrial prison stockade. lowing hallst Webster Hall, Manhat- Anybody, They Say eting the Ruby Dress shop at 148|/mando Borghi. cago methodist college, the Nat ing ea ih the Valley Camp tan Lyceum, Stuyvesant Casino and) ¥ deeb ts West 28rd St. | Vice-president of | ater Civic Federation has written to Gov- . « |Coal-Co., a Paisley concern, has put Arlington Hall. At these mass mect-| BOSTON, ad es ey ee vv Employed by right’ wing officials |Joumneyman’s Barbers’ Union willlernor Fuller of Massachusetts pro- avin non Ca p a close woven 1 aronnd pa bi will-.receive. very important elgg) Sinclair than anytody of the ti ‘ Garment | Bteside. | posing a debate BatwWeen Wikmore and the ming and is about instruetions, 3 Workers’ Uni y strong a ty. : soils: ie ‘ett | F Frankfurter, of Harvard. eet hi . be “On to the General Strike! Letus|, These were the words today of thant inde wit eC itd “aN ob aistorial worsens. pow; Horatio & Deriding as “ Ja” the ef. ! strung inside the property line at the fiehi 1 wan spin 1, Mike Crowley, superintendent of men wien <f others appeared! Simon, 205 West 39th St., where the eriding as “propaganda” the ef- p | top, making i to climb fight until we wint | Bost ti ti n St about 9:30 yesterday morning in| entire shop of 40 workers are locked |forts of the workers who have stay su a Gan dal te No annotincement of the date for/ “oston. police, commenting on Sin-|¢ront of the Ruby Dress shop which over and ou " ste ir’ > i Beck i any others. the hand of Massachusetts “justice” the strike was made at the. “mobili-|Clair’s offer to come here and be ar- out—and> ins niany oth : - , 700 Prisoners. from electrocuting Sacco and Va | rate has been called on strike by the Joint} : : ve r the s: i 1, “Oil”. ; “Does Sigman take any st s , al : ‘ edited The wn hous zation” mass meetings held right af- etree fer agar fenrr aria Sib »|Board of Cloak and Dressmakers be-| declare these shops on str ti for six long years, Ralph Easley,| | Rite Usk ng say for ponte pales ter work yesterday in Cooper Union : 3 tal, |C&USe five workers were discharged | force the employers to reinstate these |Chairman of the National Civic Fed. Nal ig tt: acca t We agg ‘ and Manhattan Lyceum. The talk | Sinclair wired from Pasadena, Cal., nent _ | act on the leng deferred | sonville agr for refusing to register with the In-jworkers. The entire sqad of guer-|eration’s council, has asked the gov i i ¢ | * i ‘ 4 vage ‘or e city’s skille » mine was shut do 4 month was of strike, and every mention of |“ holding 4 bookseller’s clerk for pa | ‘ ‘ 4 Paaednpers semana wage for the city’s skilled|the mine was ¢ bah eiy ay id vith |my novel, ‘Oil’, If I come to Boston | °*tstional. ‘ International? ernor if he has “any” objections” tol. oyiors ore than 25,000 have been| and then tried to openshop. the coming struggle was greeted with! ™Y * A As a result of the peaceful picket- r i Work the debate, which would be broadcast e . : enthusiasm by the workers; but they |immediately, will you permit me t0| ing Whith his bo er a thi ic Terrorism SHOP BSESS 80 5: ite radia. , wa z for a $1,300,000 increase in| It was the first at y the oper did not know the time until they/@#sume the responsibility which be-/ 46 “> Tre Line ee eee {m8) “Sigman's proclaimed organization |" Eee ; __, [order to bring wages up to the union| ators to break nion front in the reached thelt. as thi i ‘longs to me?” shop for some time, a meeting was! campaign has resolved itself into a| But the Civic Federation, of which | jeyel, | Allegheny val s stood reached t ot Ree SB. HORNER, "Sare,? answered Mike. “Unfor- | be held yesterday morning to ad- campaign of terrorism against union|Matthew Woll, disrupter of the Fur- a inal § r THp Sere Mirth MER BAL Sete tunately we cannoot take action |JUSt the shop difficulties. It was) workers. The entire siuad of guer-|riers’ Union, is acting president, fell gcc a last night not only by the New York) “nates just at this moment that the gang-|ilas and his executive board members |into an open ditch in its letter when hive ten fur workers about to’ come out on|®®ainst him for having written the 1400. |... 5 f ‘novel, but if he wants to sell a copy | aes strike, but by the members of New-!N0v¢l, | i turbance ark Local 25, which is already strik- of it in Boston, we will immediately ing against the attempts of the bosses |@** a warrant for him. n the union scale cale is be- imate today. xpected vote tually paid less on city jobs. 17 he Board | Labor leaders hailed th and started the dis-/are edncentirating their forces |Easley commended the governor for in which Harry Simon,|around the shop of Caron Bros,,|not appointing a commission to re- |ehairman of the shop, was seriously|where union conditions had been|View the case. Right on the heels of jeut and several other workers were maintained because of the activities |the Federation’s pat on the back, keep up their solid union i Boston booksellers have voluntarily i . " 5 |with satisfaction as the culmination}, The company g and tha -Inieenatsonel . soupdwls, fo withdrawn “Oil” from their shelves, |°Tised and beaten. !of these workers who are supporting |Fuller did exactly that thing when| of the Tammany A. F. of L. alliance, | breakers and is force. registration and to steal their Bait. th ih eilipaies that Worker Catch Then the joint board. - jhe mamed three Bostonians es a com- . is ““"! but the ported labor q when it local. leg panda abkeinas ertea) the | Workiéts th th Se it kel a eot “The cloak and dressmakers have | mittee to review the case. Vhs ont reps workers affected, with |learns of the situation from the pick- * | Vi i id vi in the vicini Be T ae Ls 4 oy dete! and new d rate, Pinang aan Paige eye) A Down ‘With Fraitors: | DAILY WORKER Publishing Co.,/catch the three gan es y aah °| withstood the attacks of the Interna-|__ “I only know what I read in the rate alleys ets and sizes up the wire pen the con Members of Local 25 attended last | - ™ ‘ J ey © gangsters and have tonal inghine til now. T'hiy have |New York papers regarding it (the Oid New| pany has construc Of the 10 im night’s mass meetings in a body, bear- | 23 First St., New York City, by mail.!them arrested. Both Greenberg and i Hiesls tesla @ have Gait Sud 10:98 BOk ing signs reading, “Through solid-| Judge Duff, having read the book|Tomkin have previous lengthy police ; defeated the ogee they ber gal pec age ager Bricklaye arity we will win!”, “Down With the | through, found passages, he declared, | records; and Schechter is at present | defeat the contempt of court. proceed: | | Traitors!” The workers came from| ‘manifestly tending to corrupt the | under $10,000 bail on another assault ings, and they will also defeat this | | Newark by bus loads, and with their morals of youth.” But modernist | charge. last desperate attempt of Sigman to} | | manager Morris Langer at their head 14.00 who had worked cordially with the 12,00 j union, pulled 12.00; On the first day of 12,00 | ation almost 1000 pic’ ‘a commission of impartial men’—as Carpenter Sie if there were any such thing i. a case Dock Builders . | Electricians \they seem to have lost interest in the | Pile Driver Enginee: ypenshop oper- from other ide the wire Hae a far M / writers here contend that Sinclair is} This activity of hirelings of the|throw out hundreds of workers on of this kind—to ‘thresh it all out, i ‘i 4. i i ie z 9.00 18.00 |camps were on hand ov they marched into the halls and on notorious | for what they call his [right wing International officials was | ek age Lo ae ie maintain Wiss, | matter.” Cement Masons .. 8.00 12.00|)gates. Powers Hapgood and T | to the platforms singing “Solidarity’| ‘Prudery and “old-fashioned” out-|denounced yesterday by the joins | SS SOee re e ald @ . i Vikiotis aid Thaieraes Stone Masons . + 10.00 14,00|Minerich of the progressive miners \ Forever.” They were greeted with |!ook on sexual matters. | board of the Cloak and Dressmakers, | A hearing on the pontenipt of cou! Easley, Woll’s ‘man Friday ak Plasterere + 11.00 14.00 jand 8 organizers of the Lewis admin | cheers and whistles and lou? ap-| _—— |through Louis Hyman, its manager. yee <a mae ante ee tee takes a slap at the “reds” for geving| eiumbers $a - 11.00 12,00; istration are among those It | lause, and the sa noisy welcome | “I suppose Morris Sigman, presi- | *SSocl@vion = + |S y ¢ i «| sneet Metal Workers .. 10.00 was the fi 2 ce / war cen, Ben Gold. when te arrived NEWS FROM NEW JERSEY | dent of the International, will eay ye asta ils guid ces Ror chi ohade cae. wig ta gy agri Steam Fitters ses . 11.00 April 1 in Dist. 5, the Pittsburgh sof | and when he rose to speak, and to \of this shop—as he did of the Caron | 93 June 3. 7 ernor as “giving a good Jesson to the Se CRETE ++ 9.00 coal territory. | Louis Hyman, manager of the Cloak Clean Up Scab Shops. | Bros. shop where 31 workers were! ya, webster, Hall Crowded. governments throughout the world| pet + 10.00 The union is working hard to upse | d Di kers’ Joint Board. 7 Y P in-|atrested on Tuesday—'There és no|_, Webster Hall was crowded last hich Keve be. i | Flaggers - 10.50 the openshop attack as it wants to pa Hr eng Fs a ge bbe NEWARK, N. J., June 2—The win- | 97% ie ; ° | night with dressmakers who respond-| Which have been stirred up by their) yachin " 7 ‘valley b { Isadore Shapiro, who. acted as|dow cleaners’ strike is spreading, 20 Strike; the Communists are merely |™®' H own Reds to make clamorous appeals | cj., ‘ - 9.60 11.00) keep the Allegheny valley from be chairman -at Cooper Union, stated | gh. 2 t bei dad © co picketing in order to become toate | 27 bald eat of the Joint Board for to you.” Bite Structural Workers .... 10.50 12.00 |coming a Pennsylvania edition of the that for the first time in their history pecan Seckaii gs denims ata tyrs’. & membership meeting of Local 22. Spas oe en earaes Painters ............. 10.00 11,00 |West Virginia non-union terror reigns. the fur workers are forced to strike ere * ” “Gely cna’ tthe haa le sth see Rose Wortis, as cotter outlined Byrd Plane 0. K. Foremen of these classes will re- ip chee tanec ii i i ell | . ‘ Pe ae seen Te se | phases of the workers’ problem were! 4 successful load test flight was °eive $1 a day above the scale. y Worker Every Day against a section of the union as well | Scabs Disappear. of responsibility and regards his | 4 d by Isad Weisb ORI | 4 y ards S| discussed by Isadore Weisberg, C. 8. |made yesterday with the Fokker as against the bosses. “But,” said| The furriers’ strike is continuing | readers as simpletons can come out} . > | _ | Zimmerman, Joseph Boruchowitz and | Shapiro, “the right wing leaders are|with the few scabs that the besses in with a statement that workers, | .. |monoplane, America, i vhi om who | Louis Hyman, manager of the Joint : ae ee | really no longer union men. They) co-operation with the right wing of-! have been employed in the shop for | Board. Persehuseny E. Byrd plans to tr Are You Getting FINCO Co-operative : : are all going into business as fast as |ficials obtained in the beginning of | six, eight and ten years, have sud-| The dressmakers responded enthu- they can and care nothing for the| the struggle rapidly «disappearing. denly decided to go out on strike,|siastically to the proposal that they | welfare of the workers.” * » * submit to arrests and brutality at/should help the fur workers in every bi ‘areas Oy AbisiNibieds Speakers at Rally. | Electricians Winning. the hands of, hired gangsters so as|possible way in their impending | ‘ | Ben. Gold, Samuel Liebowitz, Louis! --he electrical workers’ strike here to become martyrs.” | strike, and a ‘pledge 6f support was | DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. New York | Hyman of the Cloakmakers, Fanny | ;, continuing in about 40 per cent of| Sigman’s announced organization | given with great spirit, | Warshofsky, Jack Skolnick, Hyam | the shops. The other 60 per cent are |Campaign was branded by Hyman as ee Lavage” Ramat iat Bassin, S. Biro, Louis Belford of Lo-| hack at work with an increase in| “equally ridiculous” and the reaction-| ‘Theatre box offices “cooperate” | cal 25, I. Cohen, Yosel Cohen of Local |wages from $12 to $14 a day. Those |ary right wing leader was denounced | with ticket agencies in boosting| 25, A. Winogradsky, Joseph Borucho-| who are working are donating $2 a for his statement, made at a recent | Prices, according to testimony in in-| ‘ -witz of the Cloakmakers’ Union, A. day from their wages towards the| meeting, that the left wing joint|¢ome tax hearings on several agen-|| Telephone Mott Haven 0506. If not, let us know and we'll instruct our oe driver to call at your home. Finnish Co-operative Trading Association, Inc. i . 1s 3 i ° 2 4g i é : , Nelson and 8. Lipson of the Amalga-| strike fund. ‘ lboard is wiped out and that he will | cies. Dr. M is Shai © Tel. Windsor 9052. 4301 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. riggs AS eae by igaay Union ron Re jnow undertake a campaign to organ-| . a or Ls 1s : ain apie ne ~ @ speakers and each one poin' Spurn United Front. \ize the s¢ab shops brought into ex | Flora Anna Skin Ointment EON DENTIST ee out the absolute necessity of calling a strike to re-establish union condi- tions in the fur shops. Samuél Men- cher acted as a chairman of Manhat- tan Lyceum. The workers passed a resolution niedging full support to the Joint The socialists held a Sacco-Van-|istence by the “Communists”. zetti meeting here last week refusing | Bosses Throw out Workers. |to allow representatives of any other! “Why continue ‘talkin’ organiza- organizations to co-operate with! tion,” says Hyman, “when hundreds them, The proposal from the Inter-|of workers are being thrown out of jnational Labor Defense for a united|the shops bythe bosses of the cloak a +, | meeting was turned down. industry without any regard to the ae Whenever it issued the strike The International Labor Defense is| provisions of the agreement, as for bata = calling a pee Toure ar rd rig in the shop of Harris Bros. a - for June 6. It will held at the} & Mann, 525 Seventh Ave., where 18 - Hays. We're Congested. Labor Lyceum. out of 82 workers were thrown out| Gee SATAN, Yo ditt Be Yi) ARE |on the street; Heit & Son, 205 West arrying to this city his appeal for Want Coolidge Here. 29th St., where 15 wokers were dis- an additional $300,000,000 for subway ; cial pe i & construction in/ New York City, President Coolidge was invited yes- | charged two months ago and nine ad. M J 2 Iiterday to attend the dedication {1 | prem memes * ei y, STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK | and ite congestion “a menace to River Memorial bridge between New for PIMPLES, BLACKHPEADS, LARGE PORES freckles, rash, itching skin, eczema or stubborn skin trouble of any Kind will be banished by use of FLORA ANNA SKIN OINTMENT, $1.00. Sold on money back guar- antee. NEW WAY LABORATORIES 276 West 43rd St. New York City 25% of all sales are donate: The DAILY WORKER. Ail mention The DAILY WORKEF your order. 141st St. and Crimmins Ave. | || 592 Oak Terrace, Bronx, N. Y. i DEBATE—CONCERT Tel. Lehigh 6022. | —|A. GARFIELD HAYS [eee SCOTT NEARING Gor. Second Ave. New Yorn | | “IS Democracy Suited for Modern Life?” Dr. FRED. B. ROBINSON, Chairman (Pres. City College) Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin | | Friday Eve., June 3, 8 P. M., in the Great Hall Surgeon Dentists COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK 1 UNION SQUARE 139th Street and Amsterdam Avent ————<$<—$ $$ Booth Phones, Dry Dock 6612, 7846, Office Phone, Orchard 9319. Patronize MANHATTAN LYCEUM || Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 ADMISSION 50¢, Organ Recital by Prof. SMhuel Baldwin. | nges Tosti att es Yor. Patronize Our Friend | | health and life. haces Paced SPIESS STUDIO || Larwe Halle With Stabe for Meet- Asbury Arcade Doomed. 1 Second Ave., cor, 3rd St. neh Sing manatats cote Prd | ingen Se Judge Left Plenty. ASBURY PARK, N. J., June 2—|| spacial Rates for: Labor Organiaa- Oot 4th St. New Yorks N.Y, || eee ng TALS The estate of the date Supreme|Fire last night started in the Beach || tions {Bstabllsbed 188%) See Beier fl Court Justice William P, Platt, who! Arcade, 2 $300,000 structure over the . IR. A ; ; | died on-November 2 last, was valued|ocean and extending off the board- og feotbl ta Ore pathetic initia | yesterday at $397,109, wall. : PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 5000 Workers Wanted To Enjoy the Afternoon and Evening Saturday, June 4th ] with the Jewish Daily Freiheit Excursion oem emoe To Bear Mountain and Back on the Hudson On two large steamers Everybody Will Meet at Battery Park at 1 o’Clock... RED POETS’ NITE will be celebrated THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 9 at the LABOR TEMPLE (14th Street and 2nd Avenue) Among those present will be Mike Gold Floyd Dell Langston Hughes Adolph Wolf Arturo Giovinitti Countee Cullen ; Simon Felshin Joseph Freeman . Abr. Raisin Main Laib Russian Poets Chinese Poets | ADMISSION 50c. Benefit of The DAILY WORKER. For a Rational Combined Vege- ~tarian Meat Come to | Rachil’s Vegetarian ‘ For TInAL NE Rast Agtion™une RATIONAL VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1590 Madison Ave. New York University 0775 Dining Room 215 East Broadway. . Ist floor. Phone Stuyvesant $816 John’s Restaurant SPRCIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th St. New York Health Food tarian Restaurant Madison Ave, : UNIVERSITY 6666, DEMONSTRATE ‘AGAINST NEW WARS | Demand Hands Off China—Learn the ‘Meaning of the Break | in British-Soviet Relations—Learn the Truth About China. China Mass Meeting | CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE, 67th Street and 3rd Avenue, FRIDAY, JUNE 3rd, at 8 P, M. SPEAKERS: Scott Nearing Chas. Kraumbein A. M. Wicks Wm, F. Dunne Chinese Speaker M. J. Olgin i Juliet Stuart Poyntz Bertram D, Wolfe Alexander Trachtenberg | Y. W. L. Speaker Jack Stachel—Chairman ADMISSION 25 CENTS. WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY, DISTRICT NO. 2. | DON'T LET YOUR ORGANIZATION FORGET Your union, fraternal organization, left / wing group and Workers Party Branch he he DAILY WORKER CONFERENCE = |on Friday Evening, June 3rd, at 6 P. M., at Webster Hall, 119 East 11th Street. Principal Speaker BISHOP WILLIAM MONTGOMERY BROWN TICKETS—In advance $1.25. At the dock $1.50.— BUY TICKETS in advance—and save time and money. — Buy Tickets at the Freiheit, 30 Union Square, New York, N. Y. Auspices:

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