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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK MONDA UCTOBER 17, 1927 Page Five (Capon anp enareenat| 150 Window Washers: (ee Back at Work With Increase in Wages Mexican Communists Farmers Forced to Demand Arming of| Sell Wheat Early; <—————— | WORKER, will talk at the Open| Forum>of the Hunts Point Fellowship tonight, 8:15 p.m. The topic will be ? ke The arming of the Mexican work- \“My Experiences in Editing Labor| The second week of picketing in the | ers and peasants is now the imme- Newspapers.” The forum meets| strike of the Window Cleaners’ Union diate demand of the Communist Par- every Monday at Hunts Point Palace,|will start this morning with the | ty of that country, according to Sal- 163rd St. and Southern Boulevard. | strikers ranks growing, according to | ustino Paredes, a member of the staff i * Mi Harry Feinstein, business agent. of “El Macheta,” official organ of the Bronx Dance Tonight. - More than 150 window cleaners are Mexican. party, published in Mexico| City. Paredes, who is now in New York, MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 16— |The early harvest of this year is be- jing used by the business world in an | attempted boom of sellings. Thus the Reserve Bank of Minneapolis | states: “The cash value of wheat, rye, | flax and potatoes marketed during | September, 1927 by farmers in this The Trade Union Educational |), ee ; y Wy 337, back at work as a result of settle- League of Local 22, I. L. G. W. will | nents made with employers. The hold a ball tonight at Ambassador | .attied shops accepted the $3 weekly yesterday said the abortive counter-/ district was $95,000,000. This amount | Hall, 8875 Third Aye. the Bronx. Ad wage fnerease-and recognition:-of -the revolution led by Generals Gomez|Wwas nearly twice as large as the|mission 50 cents. union, demanded “by the strikers. | and Serrano was completely crushed| Value of marketing in Sept. 1926. | Be ae Saturd ff day. Tw PC alichtest|’ However Dib i | U. C. W. C. H, at B aon le ge ade a and that there was no tthe slightest} However the bank is foreed to ad-| . . H, at Bazaar. tythteo membered of the affiliate possibility of a recurrence of 1 The United Council of Working | : d window cleaners, the company union, | PARTY ACTIVITIES NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY Open Air Meeting Tonight. First Ave. and 51 St. Weill known speakers. J. O. Bentaill, chairman. * * * Speakers Meet Tonight. A speakers’ conference for the elec- tion campaign will be held tonight. 8 p. m. at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. Important questions will be taken up. ee Entertainment For Empross Tonight. An entertainment and dance for the benefit of The Empross, Greek Communist daily, will be held tonight |. t the New Palm Garden, 306 West d St. Admission will be $1. * * . ilar move on the part of the Tousewives operated several of | . » ts j ae of Wall Street, who, accor lue of dairy products was slightly rgest booths at the recent | parton at guile Hendauarters. fot} -D.4S.S, 2-4. Paredes, inspired the former one. ger than a year ago, the small| DAILY WORKER-FREIHEIT bazaar. |S ike-duty after quitting work, Feit-| yp. 4, . Ss, 2-A meets tomorrow, Mxican Workers Vigilant. rketings of live stock, together| A total of $2,500 was raised including | Stein added. {6:30 p. m., at 100 West 28th St. 25 at the fresh flower booth,, $463 | Two uniformed policemen. are the bread and cake booth, and $299 duty-in front of the union headquart- | ers,..15, East Third “St., as a result of the assault last Friday of Peter} Dmreis, union secretary, by two thugs. | ith lower prices for hogs and lambs, ‘ome “The militant sections of the Mex-) ‘A a a ican working class, Paredes contin-|™ake it appear certain that | e ued, “are entirely conscious of the|ffom live stock marketings was) at the milk booth. fact that the political campaign of | S™#ler in See eee Sed — als origi 8 . t r onding mon last year.” | . - y Se : the two generals originally was mere. Strikebr eakers Sign ly camoflouge for organizing ai tion is not that the farm- a ‘ Yellow Dog” Pledges $100,000 in Bail Will, Be Returned According To Decision on Aliens armed insurrection against the Calles/¢'S 2t¢ making any more from Das government.” |fairly good crops in this vicinity, but The Mexican journalist said the! masses were quick to sense the reac-| ° tionary nature of the fight against; ~ the present government. He cited the| it i promptness with which the powerful | ¢, railroad workers’ organization of- fered their services to Calles. ise in the m: eatly that the crop t up a record; y the month of November, undoubt-| pany w at the expense of Inter months. | the tion that approximately in bail bonds now being held} t in the cases of 100,000 | edl * i and at the expense of the farmers. and 1e for) non may be returned Pele eel aloe hh Hastie aeaes | - Sanne conditions e placed | to the ae a is se 4 an yee Pass a rsh | lay the ¥. & vhi nt status. of th t of Issac Shorr, advocate the arming of the workers | Resume patie! ¥. & 0. + which | ¢ _— ‘3 Si wee Trial operates mines in other parts of the! att against Benjar A gainst Progressives | coe! field: Commissioner of Fmmigration at Ellis ability of the Calles forces to quell eae RELI SAES ¥ ' ialend Say ee sapien ap dary the Gomez-Serrano teactionaries. | (Continued from Page One) | They cute leet ee ey iieht, Altho Obregon is more to the right | facts proving the Iowa amusement knowledge strike, so| ~ 07 Cas cene come Fails, politically than is Calles, Paredes| Park had been conducted as charged. that there i; no of their re-| The suit grew out of the case of said, there is no doubt that Obregon, Admitted $100 Weekly. | sponsibility ‘« ‘ the; sttikes|c. oe Weapeeee wan tedored de: whose election is considered a fore-| At these hearings Sigman also ad-/ They 1 connection potted. te aucdn 18 After his gone conclusion, will follow Calles’| titted he received $100 a week wages|the U. M. W. of A., the I. W. W., and] Sivest and prior to the deportation Land Law policies and other provi-|*uring the last strike of his union/“any other organization that ‘inter- order, he had been released on bail sions in the Mexican constitution. _/While Hyman, p etachaaet A And other | fears’ with the mine laws of this!i, the amount of $1,000 conditioned Stacia leat ne seca tee $10 | company. This holds if they were on his surrendering for hearings or N ( Trav D f "| to $15 a week, barely enough for their} union. men who have turned strike-| jonortation. Shorr deposited a liberty living. breaker. If they did not belong to|,ond with the Commissioner of Immi- He also admitted that the value of|the union, they pledge themselves nob | eaten: Be Wake Sark and sMenad the |the property of the amusement park | to join. bail bond as surety for }was much higher than he originally | Small Pay. June 18, 192 E Misher stated. What do they get out of it? It is; When it was found that the gov-| |a rare miner who, upon leaving, has|ernment could not deport Misher to | ythi i i e] v oe ; I ry si 7] - the Joint Dfense Committee to col-| sent aiikaireateta (6 Hemidca wees 4 his po ae se (evesiey Mr. ee sg ty re ea lect funds for the defense of arrested | arg loyal to the New York Joint Mewea or ies sg goes er eh ree ie | UATE SERENE eae rrier 2 *r : | 3 vel '. 1 Ss n r = Tate sax we aitite oat Seer tea end sold puna e hooks 1. | miner gets 78% cents a ton, the scab| sufficient in law. The motion was thru Sathout the active partici atest ee strikebreakers ied ge hart “|gets 58 cents—25 per cent less. Hej denied by Judge Bondy in July 1927, aE tha Women's Deana ae sie lane hak: eathady ee an) Bes to pay $10 a week board, rates|and the government was given twenty | bazaar the workingelass housewives| Re eg ‘ar k P-'that workers do not pay even in the | days to answer. Their time was ex- | ‘played a big rol er taliceting aetiaten stein, editor, SS UREE thie ana city. He has to purchase all tools tended to October 15. - pad Se ha 's!and supplies—and even his dinner Judgement By Defauit. and in helping out at the basoar cartoonist, all of-the Freiheit. Others| picket, for which he pays from $3/ Word has been received from the| Proper, apart from the special booth| are Paul Novick, editor of Unity, andes $10. ° Ag. a -result, most of .the| United States Sibiiay Mune he hae they had at the bazaar. At the Coney| Ben Lifshitz, of the Central Execu-| scabs, after paying for their trans-| hy inst: ted f Washington tit | Island Stadium concert and ‘at’ the}ive ‘Committee, Workers (Commun- oe paying S- been instructed from Washington not | ike Peck tambores tin wabeeol re, i portation, do not have a penny in| to answer and to let judgment be en- | Rees 7) dhe “Womeh'a Connells haves, Party. |their pockets for the dirty work of/tered by default so that Shorr may | ‘ig helped Pest dal Be aatit - -¢ es helping to break the strike. |recover the security he deposited. ue ood dbing ene oils, Thes| Samuel H. Markewich, former as-| piece as It is thought that this case may | Sain aps sistant district attorney, is Sigman’s’ ‘ serve as a precedent in a numb | hans Aes sey wanate z a various Hawyer ‘Two New Members for similar enek “ which dechitty esti campaigns and-collection drives. | § . i s y es Tn Memaryins, Aplin Wear Amtorg Officers Board | mated at about $100,000 has been tied | At present the Workingclass|) New Charges Against Freiheit. | jup by the government. Housewives are actively partielpating| Officials of the Freiheit have been, M. G. Gurevich and L. V. Koro-} in the campaign to defend the nine| served with summonses to appear be-| bochkin have been added to the board victims of the Mineola frame-up. jfore Referee Murrey Hulbert, 551) of directors of the Amtorg Trading group of members of the cloak-|Fifth Ave., Thursday, in reference to| Corporation, 165 Broadway. _ akers’ women’s council have taken a|an injunction granted the Dress Man- | Gurevich is connected with the/ loan of for the defense committee | ufacturers Association several months | Supreme Economic Council of the So-| and paying this loan back $1]ago prohibiting picketing. Pysee co mOn pac Stata: Soviet a week. Tho loan committee con-| The injunction was obtained by the | industries, while Korol peu in is al isted of Mrs. Weinstein, Mrs. Brody | bosses with the active cooperation of | member of an important Soviet ex- and Mrs. Popk the right wing of the International | Por organization. Benjamin Day, and peasants, according to Paredes, only because he was confidence of the on | The United Council of Working: class Housewives have shown mark-/ Had Sent Scabs. ed activity during the campaign of! Attorney Brodsky showed Sigman I. L. D. Dance Saturday. During The’ DAILY WORKER-| FREIHEIT bazaar last week hun-| dreds of tickets were sold for the} International Labor Defense ball at} New Star Casino next Saturday eve-| ning. A portion of the hall is to be} set aside for a buffet bar. ae Unit 2F 1D. 1D meets tonight at the apros office, 33 First St., 6.30 p. m. a> Night Workers Meet ‘Tomorrow. A general membership meeting of he Night Workers Section will take place tomortow at 3 p. m. at 108 E: 14th St. All memb must attend. a - Daily Worker Agents Meeting. A DAILY WORKER Agent 1 ference will be held next Wednesday, 8 p. m, at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th St. * ® . Philips Lectures Thursday. H. V. Philips will speak Thursday, 8.30 p. m., at 81 East 110th St., at a meeting arranged by the Harlem sec- | tion of the Young Workers League. The topi will be “The Negro Young } in American Industry.” es Se Settle For Tickets. All comrades are instructed to set- tle for The DAILY WORKER-FREI- HEIT Bazaar tickets at once. | Work Daily for the Daily Worker! AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Bakers’ Loc. No. 164 Mects Ist Saturday in the month at 3468 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Ask for Union Label Bread. Aaqvertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 33 First St., New York City. BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A. M. ©, & B. W. of A. [s} and Headquarters: » . 84 Room 12 and 3rd Room and Beard Wanted Convalescent comrade wishes ac- nmodation in airy, neat home of rade or with practical nurse City or immedi. ing rate, M Liberty, the s 1,000 Dry Goods Clerk: REHEARSE FOR LABOR EDITORS: PLAYWRIGHTS FACING NEW AGE Invi -;insisted, would never support any of day produc- | the arts tion this s the Play- Workers Audience Here. wrights’ The to Michael Gold, an, 100,000 pers, J tified also inv labor “The is there Ift to season, John Dos Passe modern auto: Playwrights Pp, grind of drive th e the and how impor’ nt nes, at is happen- can the ing all a growing xr New Yc The DAILY WORK- similar plea. and novelist, re blind , at the ¢ day night. ularly to ers and intellectua Arrangements have been concluded ke over Paul Ros critic, ad- ywrights’ vised the New wrights group to, 1’ from October seek support of their theatre from until November , according to Francis Edwards Faragoh, executive Hands Off China Dinner Will Be Held Thursday the advanced intellectuals. Labor, he Join Wholesale Union A 1,000 me in the WI tion Cle paign which is cer ish districts in Harle the Bro d Brov minate in strike ag: non-union houses. Annette Komer, the organ- izer, tells of clerks working from 8 a. m. till 11 p. m., with no days off except a few on Saturday and wages $8 to $16 a week. Bishop William Montgormery Brown will be the principal speaker at a dinner to be given by the Hands Off China Committee Thursday at 7 p. m. at Port Arthur Low, 7 Mott Street. P. T. Lau will also speak. Louis F. Budenz, editor of Labor Age, will preside. Tickets at $2 may be obtained at 89 Union Square, room 40. e member: reported Dr The eam- BUILD THE DAILY WORKER! Help theClass War Prisoners of America and the World over! GRAND COSTUME BALL the given by INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE New York Seetion FRIDAY, OCT. 21, 1927, at 8 P. at the NEW STAR CASINO 107th Street and Park Avenue Jazz and Classic Orchestra. 1. Costume Prizes. TICKETS OF ADMISSION, 50 CENTS. Jimmie Hig l4th Street. Chavlotie:< Warmicr “of Furriers’ | Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, the! , Dern the 12 aponihs pig Bent | Council No, 1 brought in $136 eol-|Freiheit said yesterday. |30 Amtorg reported a turnover of | f FOR A_ FRESH, WHOLESOME VEGETARIAN MEAL lected on the special Mineola sub-| Louis Schwartz, president, and R,|™ore than sete epg aati Come to | seription lists. The same council pre-| Alfred Lyon, manager, of the Dress| increase over the preceeding year, | Scientific Vegetarian viously sent in $30 on the Mineola} Manufacturers Association, have | SS SSS SS Rest: t | list. sued’ a statement saying there was || tel. Lehigh “023. | estauran Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF New York. GURGEON DENTIST 4 30-12 A. M. 2-8 P.M Friday and Sunday. 249 EAST 115th STREET . Second Ave. New York. The Defense Committee acknowl-|no labor problem at present for the! edges receipt of $5 from W. P. Nu-; manufacturers. | -eleus No. 1, San Jose, Calif., Cora P. aeaaiammaaeed | Wilson, See. BOOST THE DAILY WORKER! | |] 75 EB, 107th Street WHERE DO WE MEET TO DRINK AND EAT? At the New Sollins Dining Room Good Feed Good Jompany i i Any Hour Any Day Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin BETTER SERVICD New York 216 East 14th Srteect Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183 Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. ‘PHONE: UNIVERSITY £6. OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION SUB. CAMPAIGN of" DAILY WORKER John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmospher, where all radicals me. 302 EB. 12th St. New York Ge: That Piedge Now Along with the new readers you secure YOUR NAME will appear in the halls of the Kremlin during the celebrations of the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution, ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO jj 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organisa- (Established 1887.) x6 WORK [none NEW READER’S PLEDGE—Greet the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution with your pledge to read That Bosses Fea r and Learn English | | \ | Y BOOK REVI You can learn Bnglish in your The DAILY WORKER. | Pe BWED ||] spare time at home, Lack or pre: DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New York, N, Y. | OR ADVERTISED IN MLE see RCC, Bekd AUG ela pee ig my pledge to read The DAILY WORKER. Please mail this | ck. 4 i : erregen my Paro ionaty, greeting to the workers and peasants of the The DAILY WORKER | bene eh with the, personal ‘at- inde Union on the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution, sans | ention of an experienced, highly you will find ut i qualified teacher will enable you My newsdealer is .. | MI | desrethetio Genin one i it, DP: c a ode Address - THE JIMMIB HIGGINS |) | ratos. Write for detalls or City BOOK SHOP | eH Chelsea 5264, evenings,’ ress My name is . 108 University Place “Teacher,” Room 915 Bae: f NEW YORK. 1133 Broadway. \f ED Open CO-OPERATIVE RESTAURANT CAFETERIA Meat, Dairy and Vegetarian Food Combination Lunch and Regular Supper Served. and 30 Union Square for Business ik NO TIPS,