The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 13, 1927, Page 5

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NEW YORK WELCO TODAY; PATRIOTEERS GET GOING (Continued from Page One) States Marine Corps, United States Navy, New York National Guard, New York Naval Militia, and the Of- ficers’ Reserve Corps. Marching with them will be the professional patrioteers who perse- euted ‘Lindbergh’s father during the war and who are persecuting men like Lindbergh’s father now. The Veterans, the Society of the War of 1812, the Old Guard of New York and the National Guard will. march, All of them—all of the professional patriots. and militarists will be on hand to pay young Lindbergh homage. | Young Lindbergh is useful to them. Temmany Politics. Vindbergh’s feat was a glorious one. But the ovation that New York City is according him is sordid. It it soaked with war propaganda and reeks of the stench of petty Tam- many politics. New York’s for his sartor Mayor, 1 eleg: distinguished and his MES LINDBERGH | Motor cars purchased at the city’s expense, will fete young Lindbergh at the Hotel Commodore Tuesday evening. Tammany politicians quite naturally got their quota of tickets, and they are selling them at $500 a piece. Tha Tsinmany politicians are loud in their praise of young Lind- bergh. No Holiday for Furriers. New York furriers will grimly picket chops in their fur district to- morrow and face the clubs of Walk- crack in his coming young Lindbergh an: ing older and feebler jokes | honor, After his welcome at City Hall by the Mayor and efter another welcome at Central Park by “overnor Smith, Lindbergh will be <vhisked sway to the Long Island Mansion of Clarence H. Mackay telegraph king. | Lindbergh will land in New York harbor at 10 o’elock this morning; {the City Hall ceremonies are sched- uled to begin at 11:15. MOSCOW PRESS DAY DEMONSTRATION. SENDS “DAILY WORKER” GREETINGS 9y py —__ (Continued from Page One) Press demonstration in the evening, to be held in the auditorium of their Club House. When I arrived, there- fore, I found Steklov, the editor of the Isyestia, the official organ of the ed and the praesidium instructed to draw up such a greeting. This greet- |ing, in the original form in Russian, jas it was handed to me, appears in janother column with its English | translation, made by er’s cops, while the Mayor is wel- | one of the stu- Union of Soviet Republics, speaking. | dents of the school. ” THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1927 Page Five AND LETTER TO WOLL FROM BEN GOLD. CKET LINE | (Continued from Page One) has been arrested and charged with | assaulting members of the New York Joint Board “It is well known that these gang- sters do not render their nefarious THIS FOR LI RGH! } + [PARTY ACTIVITIES WOIKOFF MEETING TOMORROW NIGHT; NEW STAR CASINS {Protest Against Danger Of New World War Workers of Ne an expl NEW YORK Women’s Important A very important meeting of all Meeting. women Party members who houswives living in the Bron » neld today at 2 p.m. at Boston Road. Those who will not be present will be called to account by the district office. * Party Units, Attention! All notices cf party affairs, meet ings and other acti s for publica tion in The DAILY WORKER should be addressed to the Party News Edi- tor, The DAILY WORKER St., New York. * NEW YORK. are 1 347 York will hear to- ent speakers, we k the workers, will exp’ first step in a new ea nig Jofficial war against the first 1 and dance | ers’ * * Concert at the New § Casino on June 18, | of i ) AN open ¥ 3 p. m., for the benefit of the Young|on a All this at Pioneer Camp. Come, and bring your | the vy York Woikoff Memorial velatives, fyiends and neighbors. Do| Meeting, New Star Casinc Tuesday, yonr hit to build a Camp for workers’| June 14. The committee in charge SRST A” oO RE GSR BOP Diy ake EI ge reeset ser sshildren, has issued the follc pnnounce- Board members? Who furnishes the ree ae ment: bail bonds for these thugs? Who TALI N LA OR | uA ervauk nrough pays the premiums for these bonds? | Daily Worker Agent: Meeting. fron pr We imagine that the officials to whom ‘ | Notice to all DAILY WORKER and| "On of Come you are writing would be interested Literature agents of Section 2, rade W nivanndtoe in the answers to these questions, _ jh Special meeting of all DAILY to Poland, is part of éanhe' sed: “You gentlemen claim to represent WORKER and Literature agents has| vation that a Sa has sata ne b | e 1 - ie ae t¢ at caus he raid on the the fur workers. We challenge this been called for Wednesday June 15 Peking Soviet embassy, the raid on assertion. We have repeatedly urged | upon you to hold a referendum of all |New York fur workers to determine | whether you are the recognized rep- resentatives, or whether the elected | The memory of Matteoti, the anti-/ The lower Bronx Pioneers are ac- | officers of the Joint Board are such. | fascist member of the Italian Cham- tive again. You have failed to heed this request. |ber of Deputies Who was foully mur- Why? We now renew this challenge. {dered three years ‘ago by the direct The Red Herring. jtools of Mussolini, brought hundreds “You have proclaimed that the is- of workers to the Church of All Na- 5 7 9 s st Pp. m. at, 100 W. 28th’ St. Areos in London and the breaking off the Soviet-English relations. British imperialism, f: losses in foreign marke ing of its colonial peop They hold their regular | places, and seeing before meetings every Friday at 611 East! of the British Empire, is r 140th St., near Cypress Ave., 6:30 | long toward the world war. p.m. All party members are urged The masses of the Soviet Union OF 6. MATTEOTI | Lower Bronx Pioneers Meet Every | f | Friday. | the doom ing head- to send their children to the meeting./ have demonstrated more than once services as a gratuity, They are well Z e438 y v “oo * that they are determined to prevent paid. “The American labor movement and the publi¢é at large are entitled to know who is behind these gangsters. | What explanation is there for the fact | sue is one of Communism versus,;tions, 9 Second Ave., yesterday after- Americanism. We declare that this|noon where a meeting was held by| x < a . ce p 7 is not the issue at all, and that you/the Anti-Fascist Alliance of North Seeeet Speake Tomorrow. a war if a ee but bianisectux 2 have deliberately injected this issue | America, Subsection 8E will hold educational ri aoe a esc bay Maaerrony in order to conceal the arbtirary, un-| Enea Sormenti, well known Com- meetings on the 2nd and 4th Tues- bir haar be apt — ya do- constitutional, and Fascist methods|munist leader among the Italian|/days of every month. caleaitat then dest sets piss ‘ee oa that you are employing against the ;workers, did not speak having been| The first educational meeting will | Cera weed remy ahd % miokities thE New York fur workers. No camou-|deported from this country on Satur-| he held tomorrow at 100 W. 28 St., euinaies o? vials fase pe shiresa ‘enntnst flage emanating from you can con-|day. f : \6 p. m. The topic to be discussed | 3 ; : . ‘ ceal the fact that the fur workers | H. M. Wicks, editor of The DAILY will be, “The Offensive against the| P are striking because the Associated| WORKER, said: Soviet Union,” led by Reb Grech Fo 89, * ‘ . ’ y Rebecca Grecht. Fur Manufacturers have broken the! “Mussolini’s regime is the blackest Syoipathers ave weleome contract that they signed with the|the world has ever seen. Waded to bi bs : Steklov has been one of the leaders in| History in Pictures. the development of the Soviet Press Then moving pictures were shown. sinee the October (Nov. 7, 1917) Re-| Here was the history of the Isvestia, volution. : ‘on the screen. Steklov was shown in iy a bsihaley i senirel ie {conference with the other editors. | Saatis tye Be ey Or ene | Workers’ delegations came visiting} that your counsel are consistently ap- Soviet Union; the Isvestia bin the offi-| him, Then the activities of the pated peadinn for assailants of the Sotnt cial mouthpiece of the Soviet Power. | oys editorial departments were pic-} ——_———_______ - No capitalist government dares speak | tured, followed by a presentation of| the Communist University of the openly thru an official organ, always | the work done in the various mechan-| Toilers of the East, greet the fight- trying to screen its activities behind | jeg) departments until the paper is| ing Central Organ of the American semi-official publications. | finally being run off the presses, done }Communist Party, a true carrier of Hear About Our Daily’s Struggle. | up in packages in the mailing rooms,| the idea of the liberation of the pro- The memorial meeting for Wotkoft | arranged by the Workers (Commun- jist) Patty for T: y, June 14, at ; 7 A New Star Casino. 107 reet and é Te : : | ‘ satel ._ Tepresentatives of the New York| power through rivers of blood shed by . . “2 oa . we Gatien bet pedicure bio fa to the trains and despatched | ace ea onal unt rors aie Joint Board on June 11, 1926; and be-|the flower of the working class in Sacco-Vanzetti Meet in Long Island. | Park Avenue, will ale- & denton- 4 ria! b with the usual abundance of enthusi- asm that greets a Communist from on the one hand to the far Caucasus, | while other scenes show a bundle be-| jing rushed to Leningrad by airmail, In the most highly developed capi- | talist country, it is a true defender America. I told of the development |then by steamship to America. The| f the interests of the proletariat, a of our press in the United States, of bundle is addressed to our Russian|ttue propagandist, an actual organ’ our many foreign-language publica- |Communist weekly in America, the | of the masses, an organ lighting the tions as well as our English-language | Novy Mir. Incidentally moving pic-| correct path toward labor's emanci- party organ, The DAILY WORKER. | tures of New York City, with its sky-| Pation, _Teflecting the life of the I reviewed. the great problems, con-| scrapers and vast waterfront, are Struggling proletariat ‘and toiling fronting the revolutionary werkbrs in America in their struggles against Amynerican imperialism, and of the role | | that lasted well after midnight. shown. This was followed by a comic} Peoples, not only of its own country, but also of the whole world, battling Thus while I had come for a visit to| for labor's liberation from the grip that our American, Communist Press|the Far Eastern University, I had re-| of the bloodhounds of the imperialist plays in developing these stru Then I extended the greetings of our Workers (Communist) Party and of the readers of The DAILY WORKER, | not only to the students gathered here! in their demonstration in their own | typical of thousands being held thru- out the Soviet Union, This university is not to be confused with the Chinese (or Sun Yat Sen) University. There is also a Western University (dedi- ggles.| mained for a Press Week celebration, | bandits. | Long Live the “DAILY WORKER” | At this General Meeting of the |etudents and workers of the Com- munist University of the Toilers of |the East (Dedicated to Comrade university, but also to the Pravda,| cated to Sverdlov) attended by stu-| Josef Stalin), celebrating the day of thru its editor, that is celebrating its 15th anniversary this Press Week, having been established in 1912. Then the oldest editor of The Pray-, da spoke, He was given a tremendous jdents from some of the Western | European Nations, especially the Balkans. | The Eastern University is housed at Strastnaya Square No. 3, which is | the Workers’ Press and the Fifteenth | Anniversary of the Pravda, the Cen- | tral Organ of the Communist Party | of the Soviet Union, we send our sin- cere and warm Communist Greetings ovation. Every honor is accorded the | the building of the former college; to you, the readers and supporters veterans of the Communist Movement | here by the youth growing up under where Pushkin, the poet, was educa- |ted. Not far away at the beginning |of The DAILY WORKER, wishing |for The DAILY WORKER at un- the. new conditions brought about by | of Tverskoy Boulevard, which leads! wavering and firm struggle, in the the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. When the veterans tell of the strug- | gles that were waged under czarism, the new generation listens with deep-| est interest. | to Herzen Street, is the poet Push- kin’s monument, erected in from Opekushkin’s design. After having lunch with the stu. dents, who improve on the cafeteria 1880 | future as in the past, pressing for- ward along the path trod by the ‘great pioneer of our cause, Karl Marx, and. truly followed by the greatest leader of the world’ prole- So they listened now as they heard style of eating, by carrying away | tariat, Comrade Lenin. of the efforts to establish and build) their dishes as well as getting their! Long Live the Central Organ of the revolutionary press in the days} food, 1 was taken on a visit thru the Communist Party of America,— when illegality was nearly always the lot of the workers’ publications. They were told of the efforts that were put, forth to get the party publications! of Great Britain’s early capitalists, | past the police, to carry the revofu- tionary message to the workers in spite of the censorship. Then another editor took up the| story of the present Pravda from its | first day, thru the period of the world. war and the February and October) revolutions of 1917, and down to the) present time. | It was after the speaking had fin- | ished that the resolutions were offer-| ed. The first was a greeting to the) Pravda, and to the Communist press; generally, It was stated that the reso- lution was based on the address..of Comrade Steklov. But Steklov insist- ed that the names of the American comrade and of the earlier editors of the Pravda, who had spoken, be also| neluded in the resolution. This was’ “ckly accepted. en the demand came from differ- | bring together carefully selected stu- dents from capitalist lands, to ap- preciate the glory of British im- perialism. Here at this Eastern University are students from all the lands of ctions of the audience that a) mhust be sent to “Our Amer- amunist Organ.” This sug-| a3 also unanimously accept-. FRESH, Paces IGETARIAN MEA Come to itifie Vegetarian Restaurant 107th Street New York, do we meet to drink and at Sollins’ Dining Room “a Feed! Good Company! ay Hour! ny Day! REAL HOME COOKING 2&3 Aves, t 7661 222 E. 14th St. Bet. Phone: stuyy MISHULOW'S Nature Food Vegetarian . Restaurant 41 West 21st St. New York Between Sth and 6th Ave, Health Foods of the Highest Order. /excellent libraries, reading rooms, | class rooms and study rooms. Cecil Rhodes, one of the mightiest established his Rhodes Scholarships at Oxford University, England, to} Asia, and some from Africa, Europe | and even the United States, who are learning how and why to struggie against world imperialism. Greetings to DAILY WORKER. The following resolution of greet- ing was sent to The DAILY WORKER. We, the students and workers of Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 56265. I For a Rational Combined Vege- tarian Meal Come to Rachil’s Vegetarian Dining Room 216 East Broadway. Ist floor, Phone Stuyvesant 2816 John’s Restaurant SPHCIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A pine With atmosphere where ail radicals meet, 302 E. 12th St. New York | For HEALTH BATIBEACTION and RATIONAL VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1590 Madison Ave. New York University 0775 |The DAILY WORKER. Long Live the Central Committee ‘of the American Communist Party. Long Live the Central Committee | of the Communist Party of the So- viet Union (Bolshevik). Leng Live the Communist Inter- | national. Leng Live the World Revolution. | With Communist Greetings, | Qbairman, Yama Lydinor. | Secretary: Dombaev. | Booth Pho: Dry Dock 6612, Office Phone, Orchard 9215. Patronize . || MANHATTAN LYCEUM || Large Halls With Stage for Meet- ings, Entertainments, Balls, ‘ed- dings lanquets; Cafeterta. E. 41 it. New York, N. Small Mee! Og, Rooms Always Available, ————— ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organiza- tions (Patablished 1887.) 46. The Long Island Section of the| S!Tation of the militant workers of | this city against war and for the de- fense of the Soviet Union. The speakers will be William F. | Dunne, who is still in jail but is ex- pected to be released by Tuesday; M. cause the Associated Fur Manufac- | combating his mercenaries. A few turers seek to force upon the fur) days ago before the chamber of depu-| Workers workers’ representatives whom the|ties, this monster boasted that he} fur workers have time and again re- would build an army of fiv pudiated. He doesn’t dare attempt an “Ts it Americanism to make gang-|a million. (Communist) Party will at hold a Sacco and Vanzetti protest e million. meeting Saturday evening, 8:00 p. army Of'm. at the corner of Steinway. and No despot dares arm his ;; 3 vay: ¢ ster attacks upon innocent fur work- enemies. If Mussolini arms any ap- Serene tan te f Otey s ad tng rl ficaigienge | ers? You have persistently refused | preciable number of the population of ura ante sar WolGA Eastin kaben .c se to have the recognized leaders of the| Italy they will turn their guns upon agains si fabeneth sa beianaalie abo NEWS FROM NEW. JERSEY and Sam Don. BAYONNE, N. J., J ty-five journeymen barb on strike yesterday wher refused to sign up the new agreemen with the workers. The men demand fur workers determiried by a fair and| fascism and drown it in its impartial referendum. Is that the | blood. kind of Americanism you are fight-| “One of the best ways to fight Window Cleaners’ Strike Near End. ing for? You have expelled mem-| Mussolini fascism in America is to NEWARK,..N. J... June 12~—The bers and organizations from their | joiti the militant section of the labor strike thet he: Window Claanare’ trade union, in violation of the con-/movement here and help stifle the Union of Newark has been conduct- stitution. Is this your Americanism? | American brand as represented by the ing for the past few weeks is ‘prae- |Is your opposition to the wishes of al- | Wolls, McGradys, Fraynes, Sigmans tically over. The workers went out on| an increase in wages from $32 to $35 | most the entire rank end file of the and other reactionaries who are us- strike when the bosses began to hire| a week. To date 10 of the hosses fur workers, Americanism? ing fascist tactics against labor here! .ah “help thus violating the agree-| have signed up the new contract “Do you expect the American labor | while condemning it in Italy.” ment with the union. To date 15 of rs movement, or the public officials of| Other speakers were Carlo Tresca the shops have settled and the imei this community to be influenced by | and Francisco Coco in Italian. have gone back 6 post He Two shops s w i . r ¥N is ck ee opened th lathe, will know whom to hold re- the American and the N. Y.-N. J. 4 [sponsible for the outrages that are | Window Cleaning Companies, refuse ee ae pk wap on heing committed in the fur market Ss recognize the union. The union “You are making a request from|*Sainst the New York fur workers. ruse Gh ica te these scab em- the police authorities to deprive the Surely you and your colleagues on ot aaal-< ae sr are 100 per fur workers of the right to picket.|‘#e American Federation of Labor ce” Saige pre vig ee eee helpers will receive a sliding increase Never in the history of the American | Furriers’ Reorganization Committee mem sabi oe Seat ban tava ashes a or to $7 a day. The ecteneat Federation of Labor has an official will not escape such responsibility.” t vt a begga ae de 3 ool & ig a 1 this mornin between of the Federation placed himself so_ Big Line Tomorrow. Nat hone a time when these shops will) was ae im 1 the ME wd Electri nly on the side of the enemies of _, The Joint Board calls upon all fur-/have to concede to the demands of| Local 52 and the Master Electri- latoe, who seek to deprive the work- | Tiers to be on the picket line tomor- the workers and the union. Picket-' arg ps ea a ‘ers of their right to strike and picket, ,°W morning as an answer to the |ing will continue. sailing as weapons for the betterment of S4ngster threat of Matthew Woll. their conditions. Are we to under-, This morning the pickets will behind stand that as an official of the Amer- bp hands with the following slogan: ican Federation of Labor, you are op-|“indbergh’s Father was Sg he posed to granting the workers the poe The Furriers Fight for La- right to strike and picket? seid “Your threat of ‘mass protection a is clearly an attempt to intimidate the We allow you to make police authorities and to terrorize the $105.00 PROFIT citizens of New York by threats of in conjunction with the mass terror. The American labor, ' . ' ' Freiheit Picnic movement, as well as the public at SAT., JULY 30, 1927 afternoon and evening At ULMER PARK, Brooklyn own k the bi Electrician's Strike Ends. NEWARK, N. J., June 12.—The strike of the electricians affiliated with Local 52 of Newark has termin- | ated with the bosses’ contractors as- | sociation conceding to an increase in wages from $12 to $12.50 a day. The Tel. Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: 9:20-12 A. M. 2-8 P.M. Orchard 3783 Strictly by Appointment DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge st. New York Tel. Daily Except Friday and Sunday, 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York. Telephone Mott Haven 0506. Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin 2 . Dr. Morris Shain Surgeon Dentists SURGEON DENTIST 592 Oak Terrace, Bronx, N. Y. 141st St. and Crimmins Ave. 1 UNION SQUARE AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 Bakers’ Loe. No. 164 Meets Ist Saturday in the month at 3468 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Ask for Unton Label Bread, ATTEND: the Advertise your union meetings ‘| here. For information write to ree { - h Freiheit [sian onic] om ces Hl MEMORIAL MEETING | Advertising Dept. | offers to all: ‘ i | w ty Sub-Sections 4 2 33 First St., New York City, woe ng rod jections dia WORAb Ge Cone Young Workers League Sec- tions Workmen Cirele Branches Independent Workmen Circle Branches Patronize Our Advertisers. | Fifth St. & Surf Ave. Auspices: JOINT DEFENSE TICKETS on sale at 108 } CONEY ISLAND STADIUM CONCERT The Entire New York Symphony Orchestra A World Famous Ballet and other attractions SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 16 . | Workers Clubs PREM LTT D Cultural Organtzations Trade Union Kducational League Sections | 500 Tickets — Value $125.00 | W OIKOFF recently shot by a White Guard assassin in Warsaw. TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 14, at 8 P. M. NEW STAR CASINO East 107th Street. Speakers: Moissaye J. Olgin Juliet Stuart Poyntz For Only $20.00 NET PROFIT OF $105.00 SECRETARIES are urged to put this question on the next order of business of your } — 'Mekets will ve nination | ‘ery orga | will have @ separate seetion the Piente. SEND $20.00 with the name | Coney Island, N.Y. William F, Dunne Alexander Trachtenberg of your organization, Secre- 1 ie John J. Ballam Sam Don POY Sie OAGEONE ts Melach Epstein Bert Miller, Chairman AND RELIEF COMMITTEE FREIHEIT Rebecca Grecht Admission 25 Cents. Auspices: WORKERS PARTY, DISTRICT 2. , 80 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK, N. Y. ) en arn E. 14th Street, Room 35.

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