The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 12, 1927, Page 5

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDN DAY, OCTOBER 1927 “Hapgood Sues Chief of Cossacks for $100,000 for Asylum Detention | City Hiother-Ups Given Pay Raise; . oy ae $100,000 has just been brot by SAREE, Powers Hapgood, militant young |mine workers’ leader, in the Suf- folk Superior Court against Capt. | Bligh of the husetts state | ce who ordered Hapgood ar- the height of Increases were voted yesterday by the Board of Estimate for members} of the police department. But all in- creases go to higher-ups. Rank and file patrolmen are completely ignored ed here during in the new schedule. Many of the| zetti agitation. salaries will be ¢ igh as $8,000) | ecretly placed in under the new schedule. | hopathic hospital, At the Same time “increases were where he remained 24 hours. voted to officials in the fire depart- ment and here the salary plums were | In his complaint Hapgood, who Union-wrecking Acts Of Sigman Bared PARTY ACTIVITIES NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY (Continued fromgPage One) ‘ was asked also if the right wing legal department furnished bail for guards arrested for assaulting cloak and dress pickets. This question also was ruled out of order. Admits $100 Salary. Sigman with lowered head | * knowledged he drew $100 Spanish Speaking Members. wages during the cloakmakers’ s Important Meeting Tonight. An important meeting of the Inter- national Branch S C will be held tonight, 8 p. m., at 63 Liberty Ave., | Brooklyn. & on ‘parity plete failure. Settle up now. the city el sf i rence ‘Company Union Thugs R. Page Five = - toe ~ ee _ ree ae (= ; r /LaBoR AND FRATERNAL] SETTLE FOR BAZAAR TICKETS NOW! | oe PEVUAL Ey i | | ORGANIZATIONS =| eee l. y Comrades must settle up immediately for all bazaar accounts. Morning International Branch. We must pay many thousands of dollars on the bazaar. Our bills The Morning International Branch | cannot be paid unless tickets are paid for. If w not pay for ets toda a. m., Room 42, 108 | these bills our bazaar, on which we worked so hard, will be a com- t 14th Ax ill be made ta Bosses Support RM ‘ 4 of oth will meet Friday at 8 p. m. at § Attack W orkers Governor’ s Program All Spanish speaking members of |last year. Gold, Hyman and others’ gooo.4 st in the Kessler Th ght ithe Workers ta a |expelled fri e io y Sig aun emis t Ss t ay a - “i {She Mornay must attend a{expelled from the union by Sigman’ Buiding. Prominent speaker. Bring (Continued from Poae One for G ¢ {meeting which s held Wednes- |and his group and included among the memati card wal trends sete day, Oct. 19, 8 p. m., at 81 East 110th'|/defendants in the present case, re- vee avenue between 28th a th stre St. ceived, from $10 to $15 a weck : “Harris defended | = ae Sa enough for t living, t To Show New Elect he could, When an offic j : : Settle For Tickets. exa ion showed. _ An electr was taken before Magi ? ; When cross-examined by Boudin in| ton was to Flood, who, after All comrades are instructe: handed out to those holding jobs| |is under sentence of one year at feverites Crm Seenemett Bere Oe te by hada raver gt ee oe ranging from lieutenants to battalion| |hard labor for speaking for the orm Lake, Ia. cphagenan pie ae York Edison Co. The exposit ‘ " chiefs. e of Sacco and Vanzetti on deeds to the property. The land and 1 K ‘ * he expo ie was It is becom angerous Meanwhile both police and firemen| |the Boston Common, charges he Jbuildings were shown to be worth) Planned for publicity purposes but it k on are beginning to intensify their cam-| | was assaulted prior to being placed ipa AOE emer SEMEN EAL ETE new developmente in @h andustey (co ones eames r >. ; ‘ . I viously state ne velopment in an industry | secretary of Local 8 paign for the general 8-hour day and| |in the asylum. He was kept incom- nt . viously stated. vhict ; : F 3 3 inereasing their demands for an| |municado and subjected to humili- | | In German Election ; Built Up Busin hehe ai . sel Sede: #3 More Than 1,000 Men Out. | Aldermanic. hearing, ing questioning. Hapgood is| | au re Sigman bought the amu at park Waibn ae & pinve + dA gama of the! Harry Feinstein, business ag “Tf ouF demand is not granted! | free on $1,000 bail pending an ap-| | (Continued from Page One) July 6, 1921. Between that time and) Union ot Socialist Soviet Republics. cia Pes téciive Adnion; saidn | soon,” Joseph P. Moran of the patrol-{ | peal from his sentence. | |sible from the viewpoint of the extent |1925 he bought four pieces of sresident if he used union carpenters | 1000 men are now on st | men’s. organization, id yesterday, | ¢ z »|of the victories as the Communists |ing property to enlarge the parh in ' "on eign a Nash ged y a Settlements have been | “we shall be compelled to appeal to 4 a; q had to fight under the most difficult |fense attorneys AB A CREAT ee SY SHEED ARS Heer ae Sinan AO) | the people.” ‘'Gropper, Leaving for | conditions. When sages suc oacdy ange dae ica A tentative city budget for 1928\[JS Polish Victories. the park, Sigman attempted to mini-| ?¥ "0° caebdere Sat renew i] : eke ae sppaeet for 1928 USSR, To Be Honored - ) Vietori he parl Sig ae ¥ se mates | When the ion ended at 4 p. m.|*@#8 Tepor ene’ of nearly - $900,000, was adopted. | EF +. | The electoral victories at Lodz and e the amount of money in Sigman was still on the witness|#%¢ om the t of $46 par | The sum of $600,000 was voted to| At Farewell on Friday | Grodno, following the recent suc He said that the new floors in the FAB™MAn Was te on ee west | 44 hours with double tint municipal engineers, It w; not Lae Pili Ears : at Warsaw, are ise most ill _|dance ‘hall and the skating rink ¢ OS nearing will be continued | 7 araicitiind =o A William Gropper, noted proletarian | 2%," 4*Saw, ar IEE, THOSE EE Monday at 11:30 in the Franklin St, | #me- | specified what groups of engineers fas fi : te sal Rate 8" Ee FREL |8tipg and inspiring hey prove that | know the exact amount spent as his Asie Gath he vn meeting nid Mar i w 2 ofite Active artist, cartoonis 2 EI- * . anc) 7 ‘ ‘ <a ot | Magistrate’s court. - - vam, be pear ae but. active mem- HEIT. Jewieh Coen hin daily, ana|the Tevolutionary proletarian move- | about $600.” He said he did not Hundreds 6 S¥ oilers Present, hattan Labor 68 st 4th! tg — bs the wah esecs 065 Technical Men| seartigety eos "Wie de ,|ment is in the ascendant in Poland. wife, Tillie Sigman, operated the es-) 7 Ee IT A ae ( street, more than 600 men applauded said previous experiences convinced | regular contributor to The DAILY} gee 3h he courtroom yesterday was Mgr: them that it would reach only s WORKER, will be the guest of honor|,, 1 after, the murder of Sacco andjfapshmeny jg. crowded to capacity with cloak /and|the enrollment of 76 new memt em that. it would reach only super- wi, ne guest of honor | vanzetti, “troubles* occur in Toulon ince that time,” continued Sig- | °™ bey Saree ssi Most of the new recruits were from ior officers of the engineering staff. |at a “bon voyage” to be given him| (7, "7. ae : dressmakers, The aisles were so| °° In a joint statement issued by the|at the Central Opera House, 67th St Society of Municipal Engineers of the| and Third Ave., Friday evening. City of New York, the.Association of Engineers of w York and the/U | Union of Techical Men, it is pointed | for } out that the average salary for me-| tion. He will spend about a y | dium and lower grade engineers is|the U. S. S. R. and during hi | ion and will arri ‘tay only $2,244, These engineers are con-| there will make sketches dealing with | tinuing their campaign for an immed-| Soviet Union life both for The FREI- | iate 1 per cent increase in pay. They | HEIT and The DAILY WORKER. are affiliated with the American Fed- | eration of Labor. : \d besides Gropper, will be Teachers are promised “considera-|Gellert and Art Young. A. i in a hearing to be held soon, | will read from his poems cording to President Ryan of the eR cr ake ie Le ‘d of education. The Aldermanic * : ident admitted at the Board of | Russian-Made Prizes | Estimate hearing that “the teachers } have been fooled long enough.” Hugo Lutsk | Pass the Paper to a Fellow Worker! {be warded at the Grocery Clerks ontinued from Page One) inclusive. Clerks will be’ withdrawn | } Saturday from shops which fail. to. renew their contracts by the end of that period, the union communication! said. rae The shops which are now being} ; picketed are the Herzog Grocery and Dairy, 521 East 137th St., and the) Polinsky Grocery and Dairy, 170 Or-! | chard St. | “Trip of Your Lives,” Palmer Writes Head of | New Delegates to USSR The forthcoming rank and ile Arrest 21 Pickets. \ total of 21 piekets have been arrested at the Herzog shop since the clerks struck there. Fifteen of these cases have been dismissed. The other six are doeketed for Friday at the| court at Washington Ave. and 161st St. Attempts »f arrest have failed at the other shc Credit is g | Soviet Union was described as “the | greatest trip of our lives” in a let- \ter to William Watkins, president Local 206, Switchmen’s Union of orth America, from Frank Palm- | jer, member of the Typographical | Union and former editor of the | Colorado Labor Advocate, received | yesterday. ‘ Watkins is chairman of the new} ‘i | vy the union to the} United Council of Working Class | delegation, which is scheduled to} Housewives for valuable aid in its| | Sail Oct. 21. z ‘ strikes. “You are dead right that it v be the biggest trip of your live: Palmer’s letter said. “It was of} BUY THE '‘AILY WORKER At? THY NEWSSTANDS Help the Onward March of the Russian Revolution Swell the forces of the World Revolution with new readers of The DAILY WORKER, Ev- ery new reader's ‘pledge and ev- ery subscription is at the same time a greeting of solidarity to the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union on the occasion of the Tenth An- niversary of the Russian Reyvo- lution. Along with the new readers you secure YOUR NAME will appear in the -of the Russian Revolution, (ca Ss REN ee ETE SAE SY pie RS mE RR 9 NeW READER’S PLEDGE—Greet the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian: Revolution with your pledge to read The DAILY WORKER. LY WORKER, 33 Pirst Street, New-York, N.Y. DANY ois my pledge to-read, The DAILY WORKER. Please mail thi jedge as my revolutionary greeting to the workers and peasants of the fi the Russian Revolution, Soviet Union on the Tenth Anniversary of “My newsdealer is Gropper leaves soon for the Soviet | e there in time | the Tenth Anniversary celebra- The speakers at the affair on Fri- For Winning Costumes! Thrée valuable made-in-Russia | prizes for the winning costumes will) = |... ~ | Pets tpg costume ball of Meet the New York section of the Interna- s * e tional Labor Defense, Oct. 21st, Rose Bosses; Two Srikes On |Baron, secretary of the section, an- ;nounced yesterday. The ball will be trade union delegation trip to the) | halls of the Kremlin during the celebrations of the Tenth Anniversary j res scores big victories in Hamburg and |the property at a.cost of $1,200, Koenigsburg and if after the election: built the bathhouse at a cost o. out \in Warsaw new victories occur in Lodz | $1,400 and installed.a new water tank at a cost of $200.” He then added “A small lunch room that cost about $700 was built.” Denied Dancing. was ed if there r music at the pa , “A. concert orche tertains every Sunday.” jand in Grodno, all these are not iso jlated facts but are symptoms of thi ,|sscendancy of the revolutionary move- ment, The more the governmental policy | | turns to the right, the more insolent’ " will be fascist reaction and the strong- er becomes the left. movement and the influence of the masses. The left Trotskyist-Maslovist prat- | tle about the decline of the world} Seraiee | Communist movement will not prevent | place there every: Satur , egies d the Bolsheviks of all countries from |“#- Sigman. then admitted he bad earnestly fighting to accelerate the answered incorrectly. He serene ascendant march of the revolutionary |®&4™" tee ea, Hacea ae the 3 *\tablishment. and that he seldom sg thet present. A little later he stated he a . spent an entire season at the park Sacco-Vanzetti Dinner | several years ago. Ses | Sigman ‘sai e was so busy with To Be Held on Oct. 18 Laeian work that he could not devote |himself to the management of the A symposium on “Sacco and Van-| park. 0 | a yertisements from Storm Lake news- papers announcing that dancing. took and Mon- fay Saeetow at <h Saint oa aanet ne given at the New Star Casino, Park/|zetti: What Shall We Do?” will be Uses Scab Printing. ink i on a e union heal RUB ELEDe, | Ave. and 107th St. held. at the dinner conference ar-| gj f was shown’ placards and 17 Second Ave., from Oct: 11 to 14,|@—— ie & CRA ee NMEA Sigma: as § 2 a ranged by Le Cercle Vietor Hugo at) the Fifth Avenue Restaurant, 200 Fifth Ave., on Tuesday evening, Oct. 18, at 6:30, Speakers include Paxton Hibben, Arthur Warren, editor of “The :Na- tion”; Robert Morss Lovett, Norman| Thomas, Forrest Bailey and Harry} Kelly. + posters distributed in Iowa advertis- ing the park. They bore no union label. Brodsky asked the right wing AMALGAMATED FOOD. WORKERS Bakers’ Loc. No, 164 Meets ist Saturday in the month at 3468 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. ¥ Ask for FOR A FRESH, WHOLESOME Union Label Bread. VEGETARIAN MEAL Come to Scientific Vegetarian Window Cleaners’ Protective | Restaurant Union—Local 8 75 E. 107th Street with the 2 217 E, 6th St. New Yor! Meets eoth 2nd and 4th Thurs each mofth at 7 P.M. Wintow Cleaners, Join Your Union! A. F New York. ay of WHERE DO WE Tf TO DRINK AND BAT the eee BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A. M. C, & B. W. of Office and Headquarters Labor Temple, 243 E, 54 St., Room 12 Regular meetings every 1st and 3rd Sunday, 10 A. M Employment Bur at 6 New Sollins Dining Room Gvod Feed Good Jompany Any Hour Any Day BETTER SERVICE Oust 4th Srteet New York u open every day P.M. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurané 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 636s Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 83 First St, New York City. Bonnaz Embroiderers’ Union Sth St. Tel, Stuy. ecutive Board Meets E Membership Meetings. st Thursday of Each Month. George Triestman “ZL, Freedman \ Manager. Pr lent Harry ‘etary Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radivals meet. 302 E. 12th St. ‘w York _—— || ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIC 34 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Mates for Labor Organiza- one (Bstablished 1887.) ARBEITER BUND, Manhattan & Bronx; German Workers’ Club. Meets every 4th Thursday in the month at Labor Temple, 2. Sth New members ed at meetings. German and Eng- Sunday: lecture = entertainments. All German- king workers welcome, cial are COME TO FAREWELL. SEND-OFF GROPPER AT CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE 67th St. and 3rd Ave. Friday Eve. Oct. 14, 1927 SPECIAL PROGRAM OF wveiheit Mandolin Orchestra—Artists Cartoonists—Movies, etc. \(France), if the Communist Party|man, “I have rebuilt the cottage on) 124 the doors were closed before the session ended. un: tie Ur a un sented in the case | muel Marke- witch, former assistant district attor- ney. Boudin then displayed several ad-| ( Oftice Hourv’ 9:30-12 A. M. 2-8 P. mw the company union. The president of the I. L. G. W. . . ion charges he was “libeled” in ar. Patronize Our Advertisers. Jes appearing in the Freiheit and; - ~~ — » Workers (Com- that the nity in which he was identified as strikebreaker and ownr of a non- ion amusement par He is repre- OOD print= ing of all ROOM WANTED Jean, quiet, sunn room, with 9 State con- . Write to E. 100, ¢/o DAILY WORK- First Street. description at a fair price. 3 Let us estimate on Lehigh 6028. Ur. ABKAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST your work. Daily Except Friday and Sunday. || eK : PR ati 269 BAST ilbth STREET | CTIVE ESS il fom Mindel ||| Roem 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119! | uae ss FIRST STREET ui Dr. L. Hendin | Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE i} —, NEW YORK Telephone ORCHARD COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT ~ | Will be opened for business on Friday, October 14 NO TIPS. AND CAFETERIA at 30 Union Square MEAT, DAIRY and VEGETARIAN FOOD at the counter. Combination Lunch and Regular Supper Served. Office: 69 Fifth Ave. Corner 14th St. New York ‘Telephone: ALGONQUIN 6900. st Block of Co- opera- tive houses is estab- lished. The construction of a rd Block of Co- operative Houses will soon begin! All the modern equipments and accommodations as well as rents are same as that in the first two blocks of co-op? erative houses. Come and select an airy, sumy apartment of 2--3--4 spacious rooms. nd Block of Co- opera- tive houses will soon be ready Every apartment of this 3rd block of co-operative houses will have a minimum of two exposures and will face the beau- tiful Bronx Park.

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