The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 29, 1927, Page 3

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ge Three? | ives Daily Worker 177 | | Dimes; Went Without Food to Aid His Paper’ Nathan Abramowitz, a box mak- er of New York City has just | turned over a tin box containing | 177 dimes to The DAILY WORK-} | ER for the support of the paper. | ; Comrade Abramowitz tells of his |r solution to save ten cents from [h daily meals in order to turn over this sum every y to The | DAILY WORKER. The 177 dimes | turned over to The DAILY WORK- ER are the result of many months | our paper. ITALIAN CASTOR OIL DISPENSERS ACCLAIM LEGION : Workers Shun Slayers of Sacco and Vanzetti PISA, Sept. 28.—The king of Italy. who is regularly heard of whenev Mussolini decides that it is necess: to exhibit him for state purpose granted the American Legion an in- -terview in the royal palace yesterday. The legionnaires, who stood. in little uncomfortable knots overawed by the ornate surroundings of the royal building, were suddenly aware that a tiny puppet-like creature in a bright uniform had flitted into the room. This was his majesty, Victor Im- manuel of Italy. The king expresséd himself as de- - lighted to behold so large a contin- gent of fascists from some other country gionnaires were drawn up into lines he tripped along the rows shaking hands here and there and questioning the “veterans” who had taken part in the late imperialist war on the Italian front. The king was surprised to find only one or two. But his majesty received a real shock when he saw a red flag draped from a pole over one legionnaire’s shoulder. whose device was hidden in its folds. The king crumpled up and demanded quickly: “What flag is that?” Some- one told him that it was the Ameri-| can flag which was also present. But the king was genuinely frightened and retorted in crisp tones: “No, not that, I do not mean that one, but the red flag. Surely these legionnaires are not Communists?” that the king, who is kept in almost entire well in his part and was not com- pletely sure of the identity of his guests. The Italian workers are maintain- ing their complete boyeott of the le- gionnaires in whom they recognize the murderers of Sacco and Vanzetti and the allies of their oppressors, the Italian fascisti. The movement of the Italian workers is spontaneous and} Tho the govern-| entirely effective. ment and the fascist organizations. are making all the usual gestures of reception, committees of welcome, and buildings drape with black flags and bunting, the crowds remained perfectly apathetic and show hardly any curiosity as to the nature of the noisy and queerly-dressed legion- naires who are paraded thru their streets under fascist guard. Blessingse Fly Thick and Fast. ROME, Sept. 28—The pope re- ceived the American legionnaires. to- day and expressed himself as sorry that he was unable to greet each of the “veterans” in turn.’ But “his holi- ness” was free with his blessings, and scattered them at random over the whole North American continent. “I bless you,” said “the vicar of Christ on earth,” “I bless you, and your relatives, and the whole young Amer- ican people.” No miracles are report- ed to have occurred, however. New Tong War Looms As Waiter Is Slain “s. Fears of a possible new Chinese Tang war were expressed by the po- i yesterday, following the discoy- ery of Eng Foon, member of the Hip Sing Tong, stabbed to death in his bed at 905 Third Avenue. The slain Chinese was a waiter. According to Dan Kew, secretary of the Tong, he was not an active member of the or- ganization, The body was found by Lee Kee and Tong Wow, roommates of the vie- tim. Coming! The Big Red Bazaar. of saving of this kind in behalf of | | besides Italy and as the le-| This was the legion flag) It is believed) ignorance by the black-shirt} officials, had not been coached very! ULS.S.R, Geological ‘Head in U. S. Tells Of Huge Potash Find Professor T tor of > A who ved in this country to | study the work of the American Geo- | logical Survey and other geological organizations, in a statement issued yesterday at the office of the Amtorg Trading Corporation, 165 Broadway, } declared that recent discoveries of im- mense potash beds the Soviet Union have increased the potash re- urees of the world by two thirds. Professor Mushketov’s organi conducted the expedition wh veyed- the newly revealed beds in the | Solikamsk and Berezniaki regions of the Province of Perm. | in sur- “There vast fields have great eco-| nomic significance, not only for the | Union, but for the whole * said Professor Mushketov. | “Geological ser in the Soviet Union has more points in common] with that of the United States than v uy other countr Our whole e is now in proc of reorgani- ‘o that a and study of he work of your Geological Survey and of American boring methods is ndispensable for us. I hope also to establish closer relations with Ameri- can geological institutions. We have many problems in common, including points of contact in reference to geo- logical study in the Far East and the Pacific. “In the Soviet Union geological work has developed rapidly in recent} . Last year our survey sent out| expeditions as against 60 in 1913. The aggregate borings were 9.6 miles | 3.7 miles in 1913. Ap- propriations of the Soviet Govern- | ment for geological work in 1928 amount to over $4,000,000 as pared with $100,000 appropriat the Russian government in 191 com- | Stonecutters Union le (Continued from page 1) continual prosecutions brought under | the Sherman i-trust law. The} present judgmen differs from the case of the Danbury hatters where |the defendants were convicted of con- ducting a boycott on business houses | which were hiring scab workers. | Despite the fact that the present decision carries with it no immediate | penalty, the presiding judge an-| nounced there is “‘a provision for a jail sentence in the event the injunc- |tion is violated.” In addition to the international} union of stone cutters, the four af-/ filiated labor bodies, the following} are also enjoined by the court: i | Journeymen Stone Cutters’ Asso-| ciation of New York and Vicinity; th Journeymen Stone Cutters’ Associa-| tion of Newark and Vicinity; the Ma-| chine Stone Workers, Rubbers and} Helpers’ Association of New York} and Vicinity; the Building Trades | Council of Westchester County; Jo-| seph Wall, 165 East 111th street, | |member of the Executive Board of | the Journeymen Stone Cutters’ As-| sociation of North America; Thomas| |P, Hagan, 210 East 101st street, sec-/ jretary of the Journeymen Stone Cut- |ters’ Association of New York; John} |Cronon, 2173 Third Avenue, business | }agent: of that body; Peter McNulty, 313 Hamilton street, Harrison, N. J.,/ president of the Journeymen Stone- cutters’ Association of Newark; Ed- ward Dillon, 303 North Fourth street, |Harrison, N. J., business agent of} |that bédy; Frank F. Doner, 435 Gold | street, Brooklyn, recording secretary | |of the Machine Stone Workers, Rub- | bers and Helpers’ Association of New} | York; Thomas O’Leary, 15 East {198th street, business agent for that} |body and member of the Building} {Trades Council of Westchester Coun-}| \ty; William J. McGeory, 56 Oak |street, Yonkers, president of the) |Building Trades Council of Westches- | |ter County, and Henry Wildberger, Jr., 22 New Street, Tuckahoe, N. Y.,) |secretary-treasurer of the same| | Building Trades Council. | | Refused To Work On Scab Products. | | The present action, conducted in} equity, arose as a result of the re-| fusal of union stone-cutters in the| New York district refusing to handle stone worked on by non-union men in another district. According to the decision, should the union again be, charged with re- fusal to work on scab products, the court may at once order the union; officials jailed for violation of the in-| junction, | The Journeymen Stone Cutters’| Association of North America has, more than 5,000 members in the) United States and Canada. i THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPT. 29, 1927 THREE JOLLY BUTCHERS {7 Left to right, General Pershing, American Legion Commander, in arm down the streets of Paris. The French workers are not ings blecks away, at which speakers exposed the game of impe committed against workers by the Americ ali United States Will Prohibition Cases Receive Big Soviet Clos Courts; Ta Union Lumber Gareo For Short Appeals WASHINGTON, Sept partment of Commerce advices that a mer has ered to car 68,000 board lumber fr Soroka and Russian hite Sea por York Ci ment i nd feet, SHINGTON, of | nine rds of s ion of fe Despite the « ditic f less than cargo rates on A ; a 5 ep cou are said to ican lumb ‘om North Pacifie ports A : % : . prohibition cas to New York. precedence accorded The National L r Manuf: ~| this condition, it is ers’ Association s, in refe € in long delay in many these imports, that there is no duty | suits, on lumber, it being absolutely on the Chief Justice Taft Ss expec free list. |report to the confe tl The association points out that one supreme court is deprivi of the reasons lumber was put on| persons of the benefit of the free list was that it was thought jappeal and will suggest th that the American consumers would means of speeding legislation. draw on foreign sources and thereby | conserve the domestic forest. In fact, | the association says, the inflow of cheap European lumber, if it comes in large volume, will result in causing abandonment of the low grade lumber market to the foreigner. Judge Grover M. Mo: eral court, Brooklyn, ye padlock injunctions elc leged speakeasi from three to nine mc of these were in Queens. era From All Over/ The Country! This Is a Nation-Wide Every Reader of the Daily Worker Can Participate! % pence OR the first time a huge bazaar is being held in New York City for The DAILY WORKER in which every reader can take part. Delegations are coming from all over the country. Booths representing all sections will be displayed. The program will carry greetings from workers all over the country—and from all parts of the world. This will be the greatest working class social event ever put on in this country. In this we need the help of every reader. A great success means more power to our DAILY. Deliver the goods today! . rr H. P. Save, and Marshal Foch, riding arm Pres Sloan W is Ace mniice MSwithi Ue pRAtG ‘They, were holdiuw ects 1 i J OMpice sm in E d the raids and murders an Legion in the United States. BRITISH UNIONISTS URGE DELE WAR DANGER AT ANNIVERSARY; BRAZILIA an Trad om to part || Nov. 7, 1917, re Revol solida ‘General Motors and Jailed Ford Divide World; Waits MILFORD, Mich., i Druggists Say America Has Surpassed Germany In Chemical Production had announced h model machine which is expected to on the ma about the first of Divide Field. re is plenty of opportt rl¢ for Mr. For ‘ the public honest value, r who was course he will do, with the result millions of | that he will sell an enormous number ted to | ‘ Young of rs per And there is an the at the top| cqual opportunity for General Motors ted wn-trodden | to give the public hon valt om on sts to! higher pric cewise sell a y be at | large nur r of cars per y Ss son in Hearers interpreted this sta meaning that Ford and me to an agreement, ¢ world market ‘yandoning his tendency $a m of the high priced : field, and General Motors raising . the price of its cheaper grade c of to- : eRe sor ee * Henry Ford’s Brother Dead. DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 28.—John Ford, 62, millionaire real estate op- erator and brother of Henry Ford, was found dead today sprawled acro: 1 bed in his as yet unoccupied new home at Chase and Gildow Avenues, Fordson, a suburb, The body was found by a searching party of po- lice, led by Ferd’s son, Robert. Dr. L. Sherwood, family physician, said death was caused by heart dis- asite Reynolds between thousands of enc out of was compete over selves mi er foreign mar- olds could j hearted D: the play Pickens Unable to Visit |\Soviet Union Now; Had Planned to Speak inU.S. Young Reynold jolds may be eee do an affliction from which he had| my. vicit of Will tees A gr uffered for some t | poodles as Mletity of dol uffered for some time. | Soviet Union will place this age eager See ea year. Although Pickens has been es- f THRU the intervention of the Ameri-| English “Moth” Plane Lapesg oe a an Legion, an American soldier, 4} | by the § ty for the Promotion o lot fortune who deserted the French, L'lies From London to | Cultural Relations between Russia and {army while engaged in battle with the Dru 4 pardoned. At e Marty, Com- tenced to serve s, to run con- ¢ revolution- army and n deser eruples t a people ation from an South Africa; Record | Foreiga Countrie , order to partici-~ pate in the celebrations on the tenth Janniversary of the founding of the Soviet Union, he has been unable to wenae 1 list flicht if accept owing to arrangements which orld’s s e : “ orid’s long distance flight record oF the had previous! de to speak in a moth type acroplane today when Yee piel : . Ame for the N al As a he completed a flight from the Croy- | *™"° sages pl Associa don Aerodrome here to Cape Town. * * * LONDON, Sept. 28.—Flight Lieu- unist leaders tenant Bentley established a new two terms ecutivel wy io: Advancement of Colored Peoe did not ainst figh uggling for imperialist pow Koennecke Goes On. | LONDON, Sept. 28,—Capt. otto | Near End of Suit Over oennecke, Germany-to-Japan avia: Rev. Purnell’s Church tor, and his two companions, over o his heels. will not inter- 1 Legion e n I ’s behalf or in behalf whose safety considerable - concern ee f the ot ‘ommunists who were | was felt since they last were reported) BENTON HARBOR Mich., Sept, given sim sentences. to ve hopped off from Angora, | 2 With the fate of “King” Benjani : i Turkey, for Basra, Mesopotamia, on 1 Purnell and his House of David )MMISSIONER Warren is de-! Saturday, was safe at Bagdad today, | at ke, opp wyers today ene ing more money from the according to, advices received here. | tered the a tage of their bat~ more better-paid| These advices said the German |tle in the lution suit against the licemen. The Hearst press is|flyer arrived at Bagdad Tuesday | cult. backing up Warren’s demand and! night, and planned to continue | W. J. Barnar ief defense couns urging the “people” to join with the! fight toward Tokyo on Thursday. sel, and George Nichols, Special: police’ commi ner in securing | * * * A Attorney General, were to for the blue coats. The] higher we Move Pirate By Plane. the fins rounds of their long Fee aie etal Aten |o MIAMT,- BIB ?Bapk 86-8 fight in presenting arguments before lendid se i by the | 88 received here today that British Judge Louis H. Fead, of Newberry, in.) inneiaaarig ‘ and | authorities in Bimini are ende: r nell’s colony should up radical meetings it|to secure an airplane to tra s an immoral and fraud not be ne to demand | Charles H. Nestle, former American ¥ better living conditions for these pub- prohibition agent, to Nassau for safe a Tunney Back in Town, > Tunney returned to his home like a conquering 2,000 persons jammed of the Grand Central lie servants. But soldiers who go ¢o|keeping because of fear that an at- war and run even greater risks than | tempt may be made to spirit him from the police receive even Jess, If the | Jail in Bimini. inh yeas police displayed | acrity in break-| Nestle is charged with piracy ing the heads of striking trades union- the British because of afl by leged bs n Amer- ists their usefulness might be more | ticipation in the capture of an ered the champion as appreciated by those who run this|ican rum runner by a U. 8S. coast train from Clevee rd ship. city. TO THE National Bazaar Committee 30 UNION SQUARE . NEW YORK, N, Y.

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