Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Re THE DAILY WORKER, | NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1927 Page Five , PRAVDAHITS TUC — PARTY ACTIVITIES |"""""'Ain tc Juggs” ASK FIFTY MILLION GO-OPERATORS i ~_T: : Sey: 4 NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY (Continued from Page One) “ | LENDERS ASUS oe Papa yp) Lene |e. TO HELP FHT IMPERIMLIST WAR : caer abe) Bn 2 h Ave. and 110th St. Speakers:/ An interesting sidelight is the fact | i ate. Wa AH | TO CHAMBERLAIN Join War Against USSR Says Moscow Daily Huiswood, Maslow, Markoff, Primott Wilkins ar 2 Cork ALE; (Special Cable To The DAILY WORKER.) \ MOSCOW, June 30.—July 2nd has been fixed as Cooperation Day by the Executive Committee of the Communist International in an appeal issuéd to workers’ and peasants’ cooperatives thru- out the world. = that one of tho with the s man named Victor Kro: . He w dragged into the poli net when] they were making wholesale arrests in the fur market. re arraigned nd Intervale Ave, Speak- bond sal E, Stanley, Lazarowitz, Morance. Pitkin and Hopkins ers: Julius Cohen, in, Aves. Speak- rove, Ballem, ; . — D. Gordon, Macklin. At the opening of court Mandel- appeal states that on Co- ’ ‘ MOSCOW, June 30—Commenting Grand St. Ext. and Havemeyer St.) baum asked the judge’ for a post- Day co-operators of all Brnes » on the attempts of the right wing Speakers: Bimba, H. Gordon, MeDon-| Ponement on the ground that Mag- should make a strenuot British labor leaders to smash the Anglo-Russian Committee, the Pravda Says: “The treachery that is heing com- wiltted by the General Council lead- ers is in the eyes of the workers of the world more disgraceful than the treachery of the Second International in August, 1914, “Then social democracy followed in the trail of the imperialists the. day after the declaration of the imperial- ist war; today the social democ are helping the imperialists prepare war, MacDonalds Prepare War. “They ate openly and consciously De engaged in the work of surrounding the Soviet Union and isolating the U. S. S. R. from the world proletariat. However, the franker and more open their alliance with the bourgeoisie be- comes the earlier and the more com- istrate Ewald is biased against the defendants. He cited ‘the procedure before the court Wednesday in sup- port of his contention. Ewald re- fused to postpone the cases and allow another magistrate to try them. Ewald showed his viciousr im- | mediately afterwards. The bail of | one of the defendants was forfeited because he ‘was not in court on time, and a bench warrant issued for his | arrest. A request. by Mandelbaum | that he be given until today to pro- duce the worker was curtly refused by the magistrate. and 106th St. Speak-| Ritht Wing Gangsters Released. ers: Codkind, Evans, I. Cohen, Poynta.|__ The seven right’ wing gangsters : : 4 | Who last Friday morning brutally cut | i and St. Anns Ave het up four fur pickets were released yes- by, Garnett. |terday on $7,000 bail each. Two of Steinway and Jamaica, Long Island. | them have prison records. When Speakers: Baum, McDonald, ; questioned by the ‘police at the time | Mermaid Ave. and West 26th St.,jof their arrest they admitted that | Coney they were hired to do their dastardly | ald, Nevarez. | New Jersey Meeting Tonight. Newark, PJaza and Broad Bert Miller and ae The appeal de co-operative movement ened so that it | part of the labor be unable to r the capitalist cl: Asks United Action. Only the united action of a of labor, including the co-oper p against the offen the worke the peasants of the world. The mand for the accord between the operatives and the labor on the basis of cla: more urgent than e the impending imperialist war. 50,000,000 Co-operators. Eighty-five thousand co-oper claiming a membership of fifty mil- lion memb co-ordinated in the. co- operative international from a power- From Hospital As” Result of Hazing” As a result by the “h: Sam Open Air Meetings Tomorrow. mont Par nud Washing- Spéaker selman, ‘'Ros- . Cohen, Morance, (ete the scandal caused of three Jewish in- *|ternes at the Kings County Hospital, two gentile int es checked out of the hospital on J » 20th and have not been seen s One of the | superintende: that becaus ‘he would stay ¢ When calle Mortimer B. Jor charge of the Broc fused to say tion grow . and 79th St. Patterson, R. Speaker Mitchell, ived in to the of the hospital stating ++ illness n hospital, re- on the racial f the “hazing” t pletely will they be exposed in the eyes of the workers.” Trud, the official organ of the All-| Union Central Council of Trade Unions, in referring to the treachery of the right wing leaders of the Bri- tish Trade Union Congress says: | Drawn by WM. GROPPER. } sland. Speakers: Rady, Raiss. | New Jersey Meetings, | | West New York, 14th St. and Ber- |genline Ave. Speaker: Markoff, Perth Amboy, Smith and Elm Sts, Speaker: Ehrlich. deeds by the right wing International officialdom. The workers who were cut up are James Metexas,. Frank Weiss, Stephen . Sergadian and Harry Steinhart. ful mass organization whose strength |must be used to defend the work and peasants agai all fo ploitation ‘and agair the * kers menace of { The appeal concluc “Make Co- ns of ex- | ent. than Swe: azed” J =} he intends Walker board to x edier, attorney for the es stated. that to Mayor a greivance rounds of the to recomm creation of 2 regu Labor Fakers Fight Workers’ Health operators Day a powerful de tion against the w raonger. city hospitals to re ve and investi- Flunkeys of Imperialism, vavcavonn veeong ONAL Barong Force ‘ 1 iid Aer gate complaints from patients “In preparing the death of the p | { Cl la ( Convention s : ’ clare your solida: the first ; ES Sibi < . ii n educational meeting of the new | workers’ republ Charge Cruelty, Neglect. Anglo-Russian Committee members of roposa $ a eve ll morning international branch, night! utited.- pas i the General Council expose them- unite tront Rabbi Louis Gross of Union Tem- |workers section, will be held next 1 | . | , Tuesday, 10:30 a. m. at 108 East 14th Miners Children (0 hole world a6 the Dunkeya of Bri CLEVELAND, June 27. (By Mail).—The Workers’ Health gp: Benjamin ‘will lecture on the| tish imperialism, sabotaging prole-| Bureau held its first national conference in this city June 18 and American revolution. Use Polluted Water PITTSBURGH, (FP) June 30.— tarian unity. |19 at the Winton Hotel with delegates representing trade union “The British working class will locals all over the country. (2 rere 7 n : p s ‘tow: «WS tach know how to estimate the treachery The findings of the W. H. B. covering an extensive period of ne Horn Haslet ead AB ai of the General Council, The bonds). 4. 4. ‘* he ible fataliti d ‘the injuries ¢ pail hold en- open Mey :cebgted bei et of solidarity uniting the workers of ivestigation brings out the terril le atali les an he injuries 9 cuss the danger of war, tomorrow | Peatilonce is the latest recruit the England and the Soviet Union cannot | health and limb, in industry, particularly in such work as building Sota eee and Beeoul Ave. | Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corp. has | be torn asunder by any machination construction, painting, mining and electrical construction. (eres) 7 aay eae, een } Sought to enlist in the fight to evict ‘ ask =}. z 2 i | striking coal miners from company | in furthering a movement for the pro- |Camp Registration | Continues Two| homes at. Castle Shannon, near here. \tection of the job. : _ More Weeks. 3 | . City water, piped to points near | 2,500,000 Injured A Year. Registration for the Young Pioneers | the houses, has been shut off, fore- of their cowardly leaders. Fakers Fight Resolution. The investigations and reports of/Camp will continue for two more! ing scores of families to use water | selves in the eyes of the workers of England, the Soviet Union and the Help the liberation s Let every co-oper: of the co-operati weapon in the hands of the working class. Le§ the co-operative move- ment be a pari of the ited front against capitalism Reject the decep- tive pacifist slogan “Long live the in na al prole- tariat! Long live the co-operative movement, the weapon of class strug- gle for the emancipation of the work- ers of the world!” SAVE SACCO » VANZETTI! STRIKE THURSDAY. JULY 7TH. ple, Broo: pared to aff , Says that he is pre- Walker over 100 sworn ii Kings County criminal neglect, 2 acts of an anti- Y. W. L. Open Air Meeting. | ee Longshoreman is Awarded $23,000 By Railroad For Loss of Leg in Accident * “The dissolution of the Anglo-| a ; Russian Committee would entail the/ See eas a eee weakening of the international prole. | State Federation seemed surious Gd tariat and the strengthening of the | Minimize the dangers of industrial ac- . rf A Settlement for $2 etfected enemies of the working class. | cidents, and also to feel that the the bureav covers an immense sical Roepe ribeee wae are eel from | ue haa ieesuninete an SEUAAEASSURIEER by counsel for both the suit Ca eae f ve ix'giving facts and statistics in all the |made to accommodate 50 more chil-| examination by state health author- i a dane avid Juli ‘te trade unions could take care of their eaten citing the laws relative to the |dren. This will allow a few more to| ities has revealed, contains disease 1,000 at Akron Protest Se dil ab AL yee bie POL 5 Capture Polish Spy. own affairs without the aid of out- MOSCOW, June 30.—Mme. Vish- | side agencies like the W. H. B. Be-; nevskaya, a notorious Polish woman|cause there are a few laws operating spy who has been active since 1921,/in the state of Ohio, they seemed to has been captured at Tcharkov. After |feel that a federal code and federal | a court trial, at which she was found | legislation would be unnecessary and guilty of spying and instigating re-|a duplication of work. When the mo- volts, she was executed. shoreman 3rooklyn, against the d Railroad as ttial of th day before Supreme il and a ju protection of labor, the number of ac-|g0 in the first group which leaves| bacteria. Notices to boil water taken cidents fatal and otherwise, their) New York Tuesday, July 5th. Regis-| from the wells and cisterns have been causes and remedies. tration at 108 East 14th St. daily be-| posted, but miners and union officers | Following are some of the startling | tween 10 a. m. and 8 p. m., Room 41,| are worried lest children drink the! facts of industrial accidents which the |The rate is $10 a week. polluted water. — aout W. H. B. seeks to control thru trade , sf : | If an epidemic follows the Pitts-| | standards and legislation, To Section 1 Speakers. | burgh Terminal Coal Corp. must bear | iu M 3 eran Tion | 8 the meeting tion was made to accept in full the, 2,500,000 are injured or crippled, All speakers of Section 1 who can entire responsibility, declares Union For Sacco and Vanzetti g as the result in the yards Island City, commit- was addressed by | of the railroad in Long every year thru preventible accidents. | The majority of these accidents occur | in building trades and mining. These | Party Units, Attention! accidents are rarely recorded. Occu-| All notices of pa affairs, meet- pational diseases also attack ch ings and other activities der tha | ; ion, | Wmbers, particularly women and {tion in The DAILY WORKER should len anne hey Saas eietoot See children. There is little legislature | be addressed to the Party News Edi- | sider it, second, because he did not/elating to standards and codes for tor, The DAILY WORKER, 33 First | | feel that the delegates ‘oeaill accept | the protection of labor on the job, | St., New York. | the responsibility for their respective ad ens panned ti Phir tee as junions to pass suchea motion. It was|*®eduate and not alway ° ‘a curious thing to listen to, in that trade union delegation of men and | Women who had come there for the 5 1 D eh Rabbi Alexander, prominent A Queens, -when he we ed beneath ea: Meath Banca neat of the Workers’ very year in injury thru preventible act as chairman at open-air meetings | officials. . : literal, and Carl Hacker, organizer | of machine t fell from a Health Bureau, and their recommen | accidents. 35,000 are killed outright are to report tonight, 7 p. m, to 51| —State health officers have for- for the I. D. Julie sued f 000 d: Shoe Workers Strike |dations regarding industrial codes pai! bal +a oo ee | warded a report of their findings to |*°7 the | 1b. D. Sp iever ss and standards, Mr. Donnelly, secre- East 10th Stvect, two flights up |tary of the Ohio Federation of Labor, | got to his feet and after considerable | ‘hedging and mincing, he finally came | forth with the opinion that the dele- | Harrisburg, and are awaiting in- | | structions from their superiors be- | fore taking final action. Company officials have admitted that the clo. ing of the water pipes is a new move | in their battle to evict strikers. BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY FRI..«DS OF ORGANIZED LABOR | Patronize Our Advertisers Health Food Against Scab System Of Unity Slave Pen Workers employed by the Unity Shoe Manufacturing Company of 2504 Pacific street, Brooklyn, are on strike Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. UNIVERSITY 6588. Shoot Petty Bootlegger. CHICAGO, June 80,—Extermina- tion of Chicago’s minor westside boot- { leggers, said to have refused to join an alcohol syndicate continued today when Lorenzo Alagna was shot and | killed by machine gun bullets as he | Orchard 3783 Strictly by vel. ; i Appointment 2 PHONE: Passaic Branch to Have Outing. The Workers Party Branch of Pas- saic will run a bus ride Sunday, Jul DR, L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. Phone Stuyvesant $816 ‘Negro Pupils Banned It will for recognition of their union. The shop crew is organized 100 per cent in the Shoe Workers Protective Union, but the efforts to maintain union conditions in the slave pen re- sulted in the discharge of 22 men and women. This was the cause of the! strike which has been in progress! since Tuesday morning. Drive Against Union. For months the employers in the! shoe industry of Brooklyn have beet! waging a drive against the union in an/ effort to break it so they can have a free hand in wage-cutting and de- stroying conditions that the workers have fought to establish for many years. The présent condition of the industry is due to the fact that it is for the most part disorganized and all shoe workers who have had any trade union experience realize that they must build up their union in order to smash the offensive of the bosses. : Shaw Too Old For Prize Fights. LONDON, June 80.—George Ber-| nard Shaw, noted playwright and! critic, says he is “too old” to make a good prizefight fan; SAVE SACCO AND VANZETTH! | express purpose of getting some facts and some light on the terrible condi- | tions existing in industry and to for- mulate plans for their own protection: and for the protection of thé workers in all trades, Dennis Batt of the Detroit machin-! he also believed that the delegates did not have the right to take the respon- sibility of accepting the statement and sioner of Education, to be reinstated | ¢ the recommendations for trade union action. It sounded as erude and un- convincing as the remarks of his lead- er, Donnelly. Donnelly had almost the entire dele- gation against his weird interpreta- tion of the motion. After some de- bate, James Maurer, president of the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor, called upon the opposition to lay their cards on the table and come out with the stuff. He declared himself fully in accord with the motion, but he said that for the sake of unity, a sub- stitute motion could be and should be | Passed which would substantially em- body the original motion and at the same time give Mr, Donnelly and his cohorts no cause for complaint. The change in the motion was slight; the substitute after some debate was un- animously accepted and the meeting was adjourned, all feeling that some- From Jersey Schools Ordered Reinstated TRENTON, N. J., June 30.—Thirty | | Negro children who were removed | from schools in Toms River by the Dover Board of Education and segre- |ists supported Donnelly declaring that | gated in a school by themselves under | | colored teacher, have been ordered |by Dr. John Logan, State Commis- | in the Dover Township schools “until | such time as the contract between the at the picnic of the plumbers’ helpers | _ Dover Board and the Berkeley Board terminates.” The contract referred to, however, terminated on June Ist, and Negro residents of Dover and Berkeley Townships, Ocean County, fear they have won an empty victory, as it may not be renewed for next year, The colored children had been segre- | gated on the pretense that they were from 1 to 3 years bélow normal, un- uly and insubordinate, but the fact that all of the transferred children | Were colored and that no proof had been submitted that the other charac- | teristics attributed to them were pe- culiar to them and were not shared by sidered by the Commissioner to “raise the presumption that color is the peculiar characteristic constituting any of the white children, was con-!| 8rd to Horse-neck Bridge. start 7 p. m. from the Workers Home, 27 Dayton Ave. Tickets one dollar. | |For children 25 cents. : . Labor Organizations Plumbers’ Helpers’ Picnic. The American Association of |Plumbers’ Helpers will play the | foung Workers Sport Club of Pas- aic which has been endorsed by the United Textile Workers Local 1603, jon July 10, at Pleasant Bay Park. Tickets for sale at the union office 136 East 24th St. They are 35 cents. | * = * ‘Hungarian Needle Trades Club Meet Wednesday. | ‘garian Needle Trades Club will be |held Wednesday evening, 8 p, m. at | 850 East 81st St. The speakers will be Ben Gold and Emil Kiss in Hun- garian. Save Sacco, Vanzetti! Strike Thursday, July 7 An important meeting of the Hun-! |wes about to enter his home. Detectives were unable to discover any witnesses of the shooting. For the and Fair Giant Carnival | John’s, Restaura ITALIAN DI © with atmosphers all radicals meet. 302 HE. 12th St. New York { For ger! Se TON and RATIONAL ARIAN RESTAURANT 1590 Madison Ave. New York University ———— DR. JOS. LEVIN ) SURGEON DENTIST x ay Diagnosis X RIVER AVENUE j) Cor. Westchester Ave., Bronx, N. ¥. Phone, Underhill 2738. Telephone Mott Haven 0506. Dr. Morris Shain SURGEON DENTIST 592 Oak Terrace, Bronx, N. Y, idist St. and Crimmins Ave, Tel. Lehigh 6032. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFP SURGEON DENTIST || Office Hours: 9:2 New Tork FURNISHED ROOM Lar; light, airy, attractive pri- vate house, Brooklyn Heights; spe- cial low rate $5.00 per week till October 1. Sadie Oxhandler, Phone Longacre 5215, Call between 9 & 5. | Flora Anna Skin Ointment for PIMPLES, BLACKHEADS, LAR PORES freckles, rash, ing , eczema or stubborn n trouble of any kind will be shed by use of FLOR INA IN OINTMENT, $1.00, Sold on money back guar: antee. NEW WAY LABORATORIES 276 West 48rd St, New York City of all sales are donated to DAILY WORKDR. Always tion The DATLY WORKER on your order. Booth Phones, Dr. Office Phone, Orc! Patroniae MANHATTAN LYCEUM Large Hails With Stage for Méet- y Lock 6612, 7845. hard oalh. ings, Hntertailnments, Bi wea. | dings a Banquets; C: i 66-65 E. 4th St. York, Small Meeting Rooms Always Available, 0-12 A. M. 2-8 P.M. ‘riday and Sunday. . Daily Except F: For the Benefit of The | 249 BAST 116th STREET DAILY WORKER j|_Gor Second Ave. New York. JULY 23 and 24 Workers Party Units, La- bor Organizations, Fra- ternal Organizations Are Invited to Partici- pate STRIKE THURSDAY, JULY 7TH.’ thing concrete had been accomplished Coney island Stadium Concert BENEFIT FURRIE: the basis of exclusion.” t ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend Unity Camp | Registration closed for 4th | | of July week end. Only | | those registered should | SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organiza- tions | Patronize Our Advertisers Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE | Room 803 Phone Stuyy. 10119 Dr. J. Mindel | (Batadlished 1 STRIKE F Les Dances Polovisienne Du PRINCE IGOR with ALEXIS KOSLOFF of the Metropolitan Opera | ‘D, The New York Symphony Orchestra ERNO RAPEE, conducting j | . by furnishing attrac- ivi j ; rh # | a | ina special Wagner, Strauss, Tchaikowsky, Borodine, | House and his famous ballet—also ae on bce Non shape tions, exhibitions, side- Getting F I N C 0 Co operative Berlioz, Rimsky-Korsakoff program, | Ballet Internationale and Divertissements. WHT no’ accommodated. shows, novelty booths, Saturday Night, July 16,1927, at 8 p.m. — | In case of rain, Sunday, July 17, at 8 p. m. AUSPICES JOINT DEFENSD “ND RELIDF COMMITTER, FURRIERS AND CLOAKMAKERS, 41 UNION SQUARE ‘ Tickets on sale at 108 Bast 14th Street, Room 45, and 41 Union Square, Room 714, Peper he WmaTs 82. . SRREDAL: ADMISSION :9. : THE ENTIRE PROGRAM WILL BE BROADCAST PROM STATION SYCGU. athletic exhibitions, re- freshments, concerts, etc. Buses leave Friday, 6 o'clock at Freiheit, 30 Union Square. 0:30 at 1786 Lexington | -Avenue, Cor. 111th Street. | Buses leave Saturday, 9 A. M. | and 5 P. M. from Freiheit | Building, 30 Union Squ ha BAKERY PRODUCTS (Union Made) If not, let us know and we'll instruct our driver to call at your home. Finnish Co-operative Trading Association, Inc. Tel. Windsor 9052. 4301 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Reserve Space Thru the DAILY WORKER 108 E, 14th STREET Tel. Stuyvesant 6584. NEG EES Ua