The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 11, 1927, Page 3

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re THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1927 Page Three CLENCHED FISTS ANSWER BALDWIN IN SOVIET UNION ee en peememenenee (Continued from Page One) ‘civilized, cultured England,’ of the attack on the Soviet Trading Institu-; tion in London, | Britain Aims are War. “This action was carried out while | the Soviet representatives at Geneva were in the midst of negotiations with the British in an attempted col-| laboration on questions of world eco-| nomy, which once more proved to the whole world that the Soviet Union de- sires to live in peace and to develop | a world economy. The attack on the| Soviet Trading Institution was car- ried out by the police with the full consent and agreement of the English government, which is striving with all its power to drag the Soviet Union | inte a war. At the same time this! Baldwin government is distracting | the attention of the working class of England from the struggle which is confronting it in connection with the rights of the trade unions (the anti- trade union bill). “The working class of England will not succumb to this provocation. Brit- ish labor will firmly resist these re- actionaries, Soviet Union Can Be Patient. “This insolent defiance of the work- | ing class of the Soviet Union and its government will not swerve it from} its correct path. The Soviet Union will display even more enduring calm in the face of this provocation. “The working class of the Soviet | Union has enough patience with which to give the necessary resis- tance to all scoundrels who seek to break the peace. “The workers of the Soviet Union call upon their government to an- nounce a boycott on English trade, as well as to put an end to all chal-} lenges and frauds in which the Brit-| ish government is engaged because it feels the ground slipping from un- der its feet. “Down with the Conservative gov- ernment of England! “Long Live the Power of the Work- ers of England.” I tried to get a copy of the resolu- tion. But there were no copies; only the, original carefully written out in long hand by some worker. Only at} my request were extra copies made by the stenographer in the office of the Shop Committee. Back in Amer- ica the kept press would say that the Central Office of the Communist Par- ty had sent out stereotyped resolu- tions to be adopted everywhere at “forced meetings” of the workers. But, of course, the wish is father of this thought that has no basis in the actual facts. This was to be again proved in another and very spectacu- lar way. j Spontaneous Demonstrations. | We took the tramway (street car), | this word having been adopted into} the Russian from the English, back} to the center of the city. We had not gone far when we passed a throng of workers, marching, with banners flying, singing. In another minute we turned a corner and down a sec- ond street came another mighty pa-| rade. Soon every thorofare seemed to be alive with the demonstrating hundreds of thousands of workers. There had been no notice of this demonstration in the daily newspa- pers; not one word in the Pravda, the Central Organ of the Communist | Party. No appeal to the masses to demonstrate. Yet here they were,/ in the streets, as if drawn by magic from their homes and workplaces. "ut there was no magic. They had ponded instinctively to the threat gainst their Soviet Power. British imperialism had made an- other defiant gesture toward ‘war against the Soviet Union. Moscow’s workers were this day declaring their solidarity, hurling back the threat of the imperialist foe. The square in front of the Dome Soyusov (The Home of the Unions), where the Council of the Trades Unions of the Moscow government has its headquarters, was packed RATIONAL LIVING THE RADICAL HBALTH MONTHLY B. Liber, M. D., Dr P. H., Editor At last it begins to be successful. Our sacrifices have not been in vain. Splendid response. ... No, no danger of becoming popular ntelligent people have sent in the vany new subscriptions. If you" worker you must know mething about health from your n viewpoint. If a radical or revo- enist you can't postpone health after the social revolution; pitieiancy in the work for your inished through ignor- Are you a health crank? blind to all points of view ar own; you must free your- m “health” prejudic .. Are nk you know it all? You » idea how {ignorant you are nealth matters, how you suf- ough your ignorance and how Atellectual work is hampered ‘h handicaps which a «ch. viewpoint may pri “ect. tational Living is a revolution in » De! life, bs deers and eatment of dis: t contains deas taken from everywhere; but, not fitting into any system, they form a new phil hh, A magazine publish No paid ‘tisement, tors, dr Institutions, methods to recommend, T to teach its readers to b | | { i | parts of the Square. | Live the Working Class of Great} ' microphone. levery section of this demonstration! at 6 p. m. at 100 W. 28th St. party acrivrrmes| A. F.LeATTEMPT HALLS CLOSED “TO WHITEWASH TO ENEMIES OF - GROSS ASSAULT FASGIST ITALY (Continued from Page One) saults go unpunished by the police authorities, Gold cited the case of An- | thony Di Mola, a cloakmaker, who — | several months ago was attacked in is Daily Worker Party Tonight. |his shop by two gangsters and nearly | would thunder its approval. To raise funds for The DAILY |killed. His assailants, after first Mighty Voice of Labor Heard. WORKER, the Bath Beach Interna-|being held without bail, were even- We proceeded with difficulty down tional Branch, Workers Party, will| tually freed without any punishment toward the Toverskaya, then joined) hold a concert, package party and | whatsoever. the march up toward the Soviet)/dance tonight in the open air} ‘We must keep up the same splen- Square. Great sections of the dem-| garden of the Progressive Center,|did spirit which has been shown on onstration were made up of Red|1940 Benson Ave., corner Bay 22nd/the picket line so far, and it will not Army soldiers without arms of any| St., Brooklyn. All proceeds go to The| take long for the employers to change kind. They were marching with the| DAILY WORKER . their minds about recognizing the workers. We marched, too, | * | Joint Board,” Gold said. As we came abreast of the~ First Party Units, Attention! He called for “the finest picket line House of the Moscow Soviets, I no-; All notices of party affairs, meet-| ever” next Monday morning as a re- ticed my comrade, Nikolaev, who hadjings and other activities for publica-|ply to those who have spilled the gone with me for the May Day dem-|tion in The DAILY WORKER should blood of the fur workers. by i dae we a Wa po pce er ike Wane fear | Max Wallman Speaks. with many other Soviet officials. or, e 2 “ R, 33 First} as eh joined them. No speeches here. But) St., New York. auger Ftegele Pate debi the Soviet administrators would shout | * leased’ from the hospital Thursday powees ase oF pearing throng by pat NEW YORK.—Concert and dance|where he had been held since his ar- pic A 4 oe bee ae pbs at the New Star Casino on June 18,| rest and brutal beating by members the: Wore ees ‘sah 5 ru the 8 p. m., for the benefit of the Young | of the industrial squad last Monday. Pr icing bl axl ete Pioneer Camp. Come, and bring your/ Earlier in the day he, had been ar- AcHant- soho volts aeba: the. Baktare relatives, friends and neighbors. Do | raigned in Jefferson Market Court on a oad” balk hey the Riis ont, hit to build a Camp for workers’ | charges of disorderly conduct and Lire cal et Sahar in a MMe Ro aa felonious assault. His bail was fixed NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY ' Important Women’s Meeting. A very important meeting of all women Party members who are houswives living in the Bronx, wi be held Monday, June 13th at 2 p. m. at 1847 Boston Road. Those who will not be present will be called to account by the district’ office. tight when we reached this part of the city. Microphones and amplifiers were carrying the stirring speeches) of the trade union leaders to all) Two of the largest halls in Man- | with Chamberlain! Long) bazaars ‘ ‘ ‘Down demonstrations, | meetings, and other affairs, permit the Anti-Fascisti Alljance of North America to hold. mass meet- ings ®ommemorating Matteoti, Bhe anti-fascist member of the Italian chamber of deputies, who was foully murdered three y ago by the di- rect tools of Mussolini. money for a deposit had been paid by the committee the Central Opera Britain!” was the finish of one of the speeches, and the great throng * * mit the holding of the meeting and returned the funds. See Police Terror. It is believed that the Tammany police force, under Commissioner Warren, has told the proprietors of these halls not to permit anti-fascist meetings to be held. Recently the commissioner announced that he would prohibit parades of fascists and ku kluxers; at that time his an- nouncement w od as a veiled threat agair | demonstrations not approved hy Tammany. weak to make much of an im- om and the koo-koos are a negligible factor in New York. * * * * building of the Lenin Institute in the * * ° at $300 and $1,000 on these charges. Will Hold Meeting Sunday. distance. So the marching, the cheer-| Hike Tomorrow. He will be tried June 30. In spite of the action of the hall ing continued for hours at this his-) Tomorrow a hike will be held| Another speaker at the meeting owners up-town, the committee is go- toric spot of the Nov. 7, 1917, revo- jointly by the Workers’ School aud) was Mrs. Aaron Gross, who reported i ahead with arrangements with lution. ’ the Young Workers’ League. ll! to the workers that her husband was meeting, which will be held on Sunday at one o’clock at the Church of All Nations, 9 Second Ave., be- tween Houston and First. Sormenti to Speak. Enea Sofmenti, under deportation orders to y because of his pol labor and his anti-fascist activities, will speak in commemoration of Mat- teoti. This will probably be his last public appearance in the United States—at least until the workers and farmers’ government counter- mands the deportation order of all iles who have vainly sought poli- al refuge here. Among the other speakers are Car- At the same moment another sec- tion of the demonstration was stream- ing past the Narkomindel (the build- ing of the People’s Commissariat of Foreign Affairs). The marchers flowed around the statue of Vorovsky, | the Soviet spokesman slain by an as- sassin at Geneva, that resulted in the those wishing to join the hikers amceal slowly improving, altho still in a seri- be at Dyckman St. Ferry at 9 4. m.! ous condition as a result of the as- Many sports»events are being ar-/sault made upon him by two gang- ‘ranged. |sters on Thursday morning. Mrs. Gross thanked the many workers who Daily Worker Agent Meeting. had come to the union Thursday eve- Notice to ali DAILY WORKER and ning volunteering to give their blood 7 e Literature agents of Section 2. to Gross if a transfusion.was found breaking off of relations between A Gulia casic of all DAILY necessary. ‘ Switzerland and the Soviet Union, | woRKER and Literature agents has|. The other speakers included Isidor At some hour during this afternoon! }een called fer Wednesday June 15 | Shapiro, Juliet Stuart Poyntz, Louis | Hyman, George Perdicardis, Fanny Warshafsky and Samuel! Liebowitz. J. ‘Winogradsky presided at Manhattan |Lyceum while Jack Skolnick was) chairman of the Webster Hall meet-| ing. A tremendous picketing demonstra- tion was held yesterday morning in + 8% passed thru the Red Square, before the Lenin Mausoleum. The procession found its way down the Mokhovaya to i : the Comintern Building, where the NEWARK, June 10.—A hike to marchers were addressed by the lead- | Hemlock Falls, in the Orange Moun- ers of the Communist International. t#ins will be held Sunday by the| Now Bukharin was speaking. He was; Young Workers’ League. All those| followed by others, an endless list of Who wish to join should be at the spite of the large amount of police speakers, from many lands. etna ee An poprangse Pid present. In addition to the usual pa- The great throng converged 0M jotic clubs are invited. | Soe ae facto ae ty deat of tee teonga sobeatan, stots {eh | cringe the sugl Bitampts of provoce- street of the foreign embassies, where | j " | rovoca- | the British pountieaion here is housed | Open Air Meeting Tonight. tion, the demonstration was very suc- pany: the hores of Swedish, Turkish]. ee? Out of China” will be the) spent. and Afghanistan legations. The WN ee can tes bored = Max Silverstein and A. Salunias immediately in front of the British Be ‘Anse Ak: The soeaeare sill he | ere attacked by Greek scabs last Embassy was shut off-to the march-|7 i; 4 Baum: and Abraham night at 3is¢'St. and Broadway where ers, but the demonstration came 80 | Markoff. ‘they were picketing. After being close that the representatives of Brit-| 3 | severely beaten they were arrested, ish imperialism could easily read the’ Ge EMR PSE! being taken*to the 30th St. police slogans on the multitudes of banners, | thruout the Soviet Union. Every day} station. : Ball in Bronx Tonight; they could hear the challenging cheers | ‘he Pravda publishes reports of dem-) Yourteen pickets were arrested ‘yes- aig gh . and jeers, the songs born of the revo- | onstrations, of resolutions adopted by’ terday morning, all of them being lutionary storm, pouring from. the| the workers in the shops and factories, | discharged by Magistrate McQuade] Benefit of Daily Worker throats of these multitudes, until it| the mills and mines thruout the Soviet) jn Jefferson Market Court. ‘They | seemed as if this tremendous proleta-| Union, with the declarations of the| were Ray Herbst, Dora Bresler, Anna rian host had been transformed into | Peasant masses. | Chalidis, Rose Bazilkov, Dora Hal- one huge giant ready to do battle with | World imperialism needs beware of! prin, John Kondras, Helen Rosenfeld, the hated British oppressor. iad a gy Sour cad Se phe Bi wll Bahtatinc, Marie Mikson, Sara|Park East by Section 5, Branch 6. Prominent in the demonstration | Be, ' Re | Fedder, Frances Kesen, Clara Melt- The program includes Abraham nese students from the Sun Yat Sen fight to get the peace needed to build | — i d University, who not only keenly felt! the new social order that will end the) that attack.on the Soviet Union, thru present robber system of the capital-| pg Be ae pare ae Denee: | ia banditti of London, of Paris and det tea war OF Ratan inpectaiians| Serene against the working masses of ‘their, own country, resulting recently in the! British inspired raid on the Soviet! Embassy in Peking and the bombard- | ment of Nanking, with the slaughter of hundreds of its inhabitants, | So the demonstration continued | thru the afternoon. As in Moscow, so} * * * Newark Hike Tomorrow. fascist movement and well known in New York and elsewhere who will be chairman; Ben Gold, militant leader of the furriers; H. M. Wicks, editor of The DAILY WORKER; M. J. Olgin and Juliet Stuart Poyntz. Freiheit Chorus, A feature of the program will be | the Freiheit chorus of 250 voices. Other attractive features are arranged for in order to make the demonstra- tion impressive. * A Russian costume ball and con- |cert for the benefit 6f The DAILY | WORKER will be held tonight at the Co-operative House, 2700 Bronx AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKER Bakers’ Loc. - 164 ts ist Saturday the month at 3468 Third Bronx, Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc, 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 5097, Avenue, N.Y. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave, PHONE: UNIVERSITY 6565, Ask for . Union Label Bread. | Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 33 First St., New York City. | For a Rational Combined Vege- tarian Meal Come to Rachil’s Vegetarian Dining Room 215 East Broadway. 1st floor. ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organiza- tions (Rstablished 1887.) Tel. Underhill 2738. Dr. JOSEPH LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1215 Bronx River Ave., Bronx I wish to announce to all my former patients, friends, and new residents of the Bronx Gardens, that beginning Saturday, June 11th, 1927, I am opening a modern dental office and will devote my entire time, namely; every day of the week, to the practice of dentistry in all its branches. Hoping to be favored with your patronage and assuring you of my best services, I beg to remain Yours very respectfully, In practice since 1919. Dr. JOSEPH LEVIN Phone Stuyvesant 2816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet, 302 E. 12th St. New York Tel. Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST =| Oftice Hour: 330-12 A, M, 2-8 P, M. Daily Except Friday and Sunday. 249 EAST 135th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York. j For HEALTH, SATISFACTION and COMRADESHLP RATIONAL VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1590 Madison Ave. New York University 0775 Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 FOR A FRESH, WHOLESOME Office Hours: 1215 Bronx River Avenue Tel. rr Ee igiaianesee VEGETARIAN MBAL 10 A. M. to 8 P. M. Cor. Westchester Avenue iiiatas Tee ee : And by appointment. Opp. Municipal Gas Station. DR. L. KESSLER Scientific Vegetarian ional is Ath trae poeta Bes re SURGEON DENTIST . i oh St. Restaurant teont Eeithes Mar eto At Blast Av walk t bivcks beoke-#th 48-50 DELANCEY STREET | | | | fl ie « top at Sim, BSta., take W . car to Bronx Cor, Eldridge St. New York 15 E. 107th Atrest New York are i ihacks-—Weetabeeter Ave . ene will bring th ere do we meet to drink and eat? at Sollins’ Dining Room Good Feed! Good Company! Any Hi y Day! REAL HOME COOKING 222 E. 14th St. Bet. 2 & 3 Aves. Phone: Stuyvesant 7661, Telephone Mott Haven 0508. Dr. Morris Shain SURGEON DENTIST 592 Oak Terrace, Bronx, N. Y. 141st St. and Crimmins Ave. Russian Costume Ball and Concert given by MISHULOW'S - independent from them as possib: SUNT ISSUE IS OUT. b0c COR, &% months’ trial subscription $1. id met ae coples free to new readers, AS A CTOR SEES IT, by B, Rational Living, Box 2, M.. New, York, . Branch 5. Sec. 6, Workers Party of America ‘SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 11 at the CO-OPERATIVE HOUSE, 2700 Bronx Park East. TICKETS at Co-operative House, Freiheit, DAILY WORKER, 108 E, 1dth Street, Room 85. Nature Food Vegetarian Restaurant 41 West 2ist St. New York Between 5th and 6th Ave. Health Foods of the Highest Order. | hattan used by labor for its mass/ have refused to| House management refused to per-/ Fascists are lo Tresea, long active in the anti-| FOR LINDBERGH EDITIO! Wanted volunteers to sell the special Lindbergh edition of The DAILY WORKER interested are asked to day morning at 9. during the parade on Monday. Those report for papers at 33 First St., Mon- SHOP CHAIRMEN ASSAIL TERROR OF RIGHT WING Cloak and Dresamakers Tell of Past Assaults | Branding the onslaught on Gross and the attack on Char Zimmerman “cold-blooded tempt of mur¢ the Shop Cha Even after} A s B. at men’s Council, Cloak and Dressmak- ers’ Union issued a detailed state- ment yesterd “The murderous attack that Sig- man, McGrady & Co. have plann and executed on the cloakmake dressmakers and furriers on the pic et line, with the aid of hired thugs, during the past week proves once more that this gang is in despair and is seeking vengeance on the leaders of the Cloak and Dressmakers’ and Furriers’ Union. “The bloody onslaught on and. the attack on Zimmerman by professional gangsters is the answer of that clique to the gigantie mass picketing demonstration that the cloak, dress and fur workers have ear- ried thru this week. Thi -blooded Gross attempt of murder on (¢ s must open the eyes of every son and prove our contention that Sigman and Schachtman want to maintain control of our unions by means of foree and thru a reign of terror. Lead- ers who have the confidence of tho membership need not resort to such despicable methods, which, but indi cate a desire to rule by brute force. Repetition of Joint Action Days, “The events of this week are but a repetition of the brutality employed during the time of the Joint Action} Committee fight. During that strug- gle, when Sigman felt that all was lost, he turned to the same murder- ous weapons as are employed today in order to satisfy his desire for ven- geance. The outrageous attack that Housewives Council of Brownsville Has Big Banquet Tonight The United Council of Working Class Housewives will hold their first annual banquet and concert tonight at the Workers’ Center, 63 Liberty Street, Brooklyn J. O. Bentall, labor writer and or- ganizer, will be the principal speaker. He will discuss the present world situation and especially the progress of the Chinese liberation movement. mbers of the council will ‘ork the past year gwomen of Brooklyn. d that an especially program has } of Women’s Open Air Meet Is Postponed Gne Week The open air meeting arranged for this afternoon by Women’s Coungil ‘urriers and Cloakmakers, has been postponed one week. oe * * of * Postpone Shop Chairmen Meeting. The meeting of Shop Chairmen, Furriers’ Union, called for Monday |at Manhattan Lyceum has been post- | poned sever: 4 ‘Lawyers Will Quiz Into Operations of New York ‘Tee Dealers in Trust An inquiry into the details of al- leged ice trust in the five boroughs of New York was ordered yesterday afternoon by Justice Faber of the Queens Supreme Court who appointed Edgar F, Hazleton as a referee to in- vestigate the operations of the Metro- |politan Retail Ice and Coal Dealers, |Inc., a group of 1,000 dealers through- jout the city. Sigman made on the workers of Schul- | mans and MeGradys is sealed. They man’s shop toward the end of the yi!) he compelled to leave our unions Joint Action Committee struggle is ang the membership will take over still fresh in the memory of our work- ihe administration of our own affairs. ers and the present attack is no sur- prise to us. | “Now, when this clique is at a point | of despair and is seeking vengeampeal” “Men who betray strikes involving /on all the progressive. leaders, the thousands of working class families, | great mass of our membership must men who serve as agent provocateurs | once more unite its forces and make to the bosses and as government spies |a final effort to drive out the mur- are capable of anything. “The fat: \derers and traitors from the labor } movement.” f the Sigmans, Schacht- 6010 10 10 ra10rd HELP WANTED The DAILY WORKER office, 33 First Street, needs volun- teers to help in circularization work. All comrades who have time are urged to report any time during the day. Help the Plumbers’ Helpers Win Their Strike GRAND PICNIC SUNDAY, JULY 10th, 1927, from 10 A.M. to 12 P. M. At PLEASANT BAY PARK UNIONPORT, BRONX, N. Y. Music by Plumbers’ Helpers Jazz Band. Pports and Games for Young and Old—Added Attraction: Baseball Game Featuring Plumbers’ Helpers Team. Auspices: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PLUMBERS’ HELPERS, Proceeds for the Striking and Locked-out Plumbers’ Helpers. TICKETS, THIMTY-FIVE CENTS, sale at Jimmie Higgins Book Shop, 106 Uni y Place. DIRECTIONS—West- Side—Take Broady Subway to 181st §t, then 180th St. Crosstown Car to Unionport t Side—Take Lexington Ave. Subway Bronx Train to 177th St., then 180th Crosstown to Unionport. Annual Summer Festival Workers Party First Big Outdoor Event This Season SUNDAY, JUNE 26th From 10 A. M. Until Midnight PLEASANT BAY PARK—Bronx | ATHLETICS GAMES DANCING | Baseball Games Workers Party vs. Young Workers League | i. L. G. W. U. vs. Furriers | Athletic Exhibitions:—i=™), Hungarian and other lan- | * guage groups.—Special program ar- ranged by the Young Pioneers.—All kinds of games for young and old, | SCOTT NEARING, WM. F. DUNNE, BEN GITLOW, M. J. OLGIN, and ALBERT WEISBORD and many others will participate in the games.—Good Eats and Plenty of 'Em. | Admission 35 cents. Free Busses to and from Station. wakes ae | DIRECTIONS: Take the Bronx Subway or “L" to 177th St, ptation, | then take Unionport Car to the end of line. From Weat Side take Broad- way Subway to Jéist St, then erosstown car to Unionport. TICKETS ON SALE: WORKERS PARTY, 198 B. 14th gi FR 30 Union Squar AILY WORKDR, 33 E. 1st St.; JIMMIE HIGGL SHOP, 106 University Plane.

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