The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 4, 1927, Page 5

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Hall, 119 East 11th St. . | | | | { ' Be 1 THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1927 cage Five Workers Party Activiti NEW YORK IW JERSEY Postpone Banquet. The DAILY WORKER Freiheit Bazaar volunteers’ banquet has been postponed indefinitely because of the Tenth Anniversary celebrations. Com- rades who have taken tickets to sell should return whatever tickets they | have to the Freiheit office, Comrades | who have purchased tickets should watch for further notice on the ban- ' quet. | * ee Functionaries of Section 2, A conference of all the functionaries of Section 2 will be held tonight at 6.30 p. m., at 100 West 28th St. ‘oe * Night Workers Attention! The Tenth Anniversary issue of The DAILY WORKER will be ready for distribution today. Come any time to 33 First St. Ask for Comrade Perillo. Night Workers! Executive meeting will be held next Tuesday, Nov. 8, at 3 p. m., at 108 East 14th St. Come on time. Very| important. i * Brownsville Meeting Monday. agery of the fascist reaction in Hungary. THEY WHIP EVEN THE CHILDREN TO DEATH 1 The accompanying striking drawing by M. Biro, Hungarian artist, typifies the savy- ‘50 TO ADDRESS | BROOKLYN AND BRONX RALLIES Closing Meetings Will | Be Held Tomorrow The Workers (Communist) Party election campaign will end tomorrow night with “Red Night” rallies Brownsville and downtown Manhat- |}tan. Tonight “Red Night” demon- strations will take place in the Bronx jand Williamsburg. More than 50 | Speakers including local candidates will speak in each section. Automobiles and trucks will convey in | when the workers will assemble at a central point for a large demonstra- tion. In the Bronx tonight the clos- tic The International Branch of Sub-| section 6C will meet Monday at its new headquarters, 1689 Pitkin Ave., at 8 p. m. A meeting to protest against the| ; fascist terror in Hungary will be held under the auspices. »f the Anti-Horihy League at the Yorkville Casino, 86th St. and 3rd Ave., Saturday afternoon. } ie cae, Concert and Dance November 12. A concert and dance to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Russian Revolution will be given by Section 5, Nov. 12 at 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx, in the grand ball room. W. W. Wein- stone, District 2 organizer, will speak. * * Dance For Revolution. To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Russian revolution, the Work- ers (Communist) Party will hold a dance Tuesday, Nov. 8, at Webster The meeting will serve as a coun-| National Security League, will ad- ter-demonstration against a parade of|dress the fascist gathering. LABOR AND FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS The Downtown Branch of the In-/ ternational Labor Defense will meet tonight at 85 East Second St * ise, J c Plumbers’ Helpers Dance Saturday. out. : esd It is the opinion in the subw: The seeauaarsi ERE ES of | however, that militant action against bers’ Helpers will hold 2 ee meal the traction magnates is certain only urday night at Astoria Hall, 64 East) i +40 workers themselves bring ag- Fourth st, | gressive and unmistakable pressure on oc | their officials to that end. The offi Phe Newark Bhaneh of hae jcials of the street railway men’s ie Newa) Bh. i. . * tt ave will hold its second annual dance |U70P and ie ae. ofS sake ane Saturday at New Montgomery Hall, | Prefer conciliation through Mayor i | Walker and Tammany Hall. Montgomery and Prince Sts. Pro-| "nui. was the course pursued by the eens ue hs im ae hag e Gi junion officialdom last summer, when anie erg eee Mayor Walker as mediator succeed- 5 ” jed in defeating impending strike ac- Ries? a kd A sesh at | tion by the men. When last summer’s ON ee eae gy that | strike was called off it was agreed i 5 over yale ele es siyneureay aaah R. T. would make no attempt to raised will be used for'Sewish colni-|interfere with the organization of the zation in the Soviet Union. The office | traction workers in a union. The of “Icor” is at 112 East 1%th St.,|Present injunction action is viewed where all volunteers should report. |clearly by all traction workers as a The Joint Board Cloak and Dress-| Violation of this agreement. cy makers’ Union has called a meeting, The I. R. T. continues to offer 72 of all Italian cloak and dressmakers |cents an hour to any of its unskilled for Friday evening, after work at 16 employes who will volunteer for West 21st St. ymotormen, a clear move toward the * formation of a force of strike-break- Drama League Mo lers in the event of a lockout. The. Workers Drama ue has| Behind last summer’s threatened moved to 336°E. 15th St. “Rehearsals |strike lay fhe insistence on the part Automobile Needed. All party members ‘and sympa- thizers who have automobiles are urged to allow them to be used sev- eral hours a day for the campaign. Communicate with Irwin Franklin, 108 East 14th St. * * NEWARK LL.D. WILL * * * Section 3 Meets Tonight. A meeting of subsection and unit functionaries, organizers, agitprop secretaries, industrial organizers, DAILY WORKER agents and I.L.D. section directors will be held tonight at 7 o'clock at 100 W. 28th St o * * * 25 Cent Discount Tickets. “= By securing a special discount cou- pon from Workers Party members workers can obtain admission to a dance arranged by Sections 2 and 3 of the party at a reduction of 25 cents. The dance will be held Satur- day, Nov. 19, at Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox ‘Ave. * * * To All Party Members: Committees to take charge of Rus- sian Revolution celebrations are to report on Sunday, Nov. 6, 1:30 a.m., * * , | workers in industry and social life. have interpreted the most important the mayor’s promise that the | The speakers will include Moissaye J. | questions of the day from a working |Olgin, editor of “Hammer,” who re- |class point of view.” cently returned’ from Soviet Russia List of Speakers. atten Salmoloe st esucy oe eel Among the speakers tonight | there, William Z. Foster and Alexan-| 14 tomorrow's meetings will be V |der Bittelman. liam W. Weinstone, candidate for as At the Casino. - sembly, 8th district; Ben Gitlow, can-| |__At the New Star Casino, 107th St. | didate for assembly 4th district, the | jand Park Ave., the speakers will be | . “Tan abbas areal | | Foster, Rebecca Grecht, Jack Stachel Breas ete Meer, beanie uion | {and the national organization secre- Party: tary of the Workers (Communist) | a Party, and Alexander Trachtenberg, |—— whose educational work in the labor movement has been extensive. | Along with the other attractions f t Rebecca Grecht, candidate for | there will be a varied program o: | songs. | Two days later on election night | the workers of this city will further | |celebrate the tenth anniversary of the revolution in a “red” dance at Web- ster Hall, 119 East 11th St. / | Tickets at 50 cents may be bought }at the district office of the Workers | (Communist) Party, 108 East 14th | | St., and at Jimmie Higgins Bookshop, | | 106 University Place. Tickets at the| | door will cost 75 cents. | ——— ! nt 38 }seeretary of the New York Workers, for t Arlington Hall, 2 Rebecca Grecht Appeal of Baldwin Conviction May Go our workers were assemblage |the leading speakers from one meet-| wien feeyende sg is ye |ing to another, the campaign commit-| ‘Yorke: be ee candi- | Hall a ieee |tee announced last night. Meetings| date opposes Nor Thomas, social- strike £0 Balen hee, ae t| — ist, in 8th aldermanie district. » Civil Liber- | will be held at all of the important t Taine Saag Sls on $2,000 jeorners in the four districts. The a ; ‘eit Workers Party program will be ex-|2/der Juliet Stuart | bond. has asked | plained to the assembled workers. | P sembly, 17th |immed wih (et Hold Central Meeti ZS. : q anididiste, 40n | sentencing given o | : ngs. assem Kings County, | months in ja orkers $50 All meetings will end at 10:30 p. m. cae a: ernie eae Sete 3 ney fine on. secret T ordinance of requiring any the city 0: |ing rally will be held at Longwood) Salesmen’s Union Wins) ‘?! ting in the square, nor did Gage ‘|and Prdspect Ave. The main meet- I . 4 = . i ‘ ieee ee 2 : pri 4 g : : unction Hearin suggest that it uld not be ) Hungarian fascists to be held earlier, Dr. S. Buchler, Hungarian lawyer, | ing in Williamsburg tonight will be n Inj £ held,” ‘declares: Uitermyer, ‘Thesaeiame }in the afternoon when the corner-| Hugo Gellert; artist and associate edi - 9 St. Extension and Haver- Supreme Gourt Justice James had the case for months before stone for a monument to Louis Kos-| tor of the New Masses, and Imre Ba- st bia by . aoe Dunne in Brooklyn yesterday denied | giving its verdict. suth will be laid at Riverside Drive| . d extist, will b | Tomorrow night the principal down- | the application of Max and S jand 112th St. Maj. Gen. Robert Lee| lint, author and artist, will be among |town Manhattan meeting will be at| Block: of 709 Broadwac, Brook WOMEN TO VOTE. | Bullard, president of the labor-baiting| the speakers at the protest meeting| Tenth St. and Second Ave. and in| clothing merchants, for a tempor -Woman’s jat the Yorkville Casino. Dr, Galam-| Brownsville at Stone and Pitkin Aves. | injunction to restrain the FE won its first victory po ee | Hold Dozen Meetings. Clothing Salesmen’s Union of great n America when the Brazilian 3 aes, e : . From 12 to 15 neighborhood meet-,New York from picketing their place | State of Rio Grande del Norte le |U. S. Labor Facing New|Three Huge Meetigns),...‘vin be held in cach secton thalof busin 1wray., The state congress, after peace 4 . * { iy if ier ees : bias: Ranvaeer a Hae ret Re prolonged discussion, | Crisis Thru Injunction | To Greet. Anniversary (Party district campaign committee) Members of the union have been on| measure conceding. votes the announced last night. It is expec strike two months, demanding short- : — { F- 3 & ~| women of the commonwea (Continued from Page One) _ | (Continued from Page One) that more than 20,000 workers will/er hours. M 1 k 15 e esses |hearing on the I.-R. T. injunction | were delegates to the last Plenary |listen to the Communist message at hours a day, the strikers claim, and More than 1,000 floaters and re To wait until after that | meeting of. the ‘Executive Committee ieee eetnRS. a twelve-hour maximum day-ia being |i 1oe6 have been found to be regis« date’ would probably lay the union jof the Communist International, and | “Altho this has been an off year,’ asked. i tered here for next week’s election. open to prosecution for contempt of | are well qualified to speak on the the campaign committee continued, Justice Dunne found that there was| Women are offenders in greater num- court, Shea and Coleman have pointed | subject of the Bolshevik revolution | “thousands of workers have attended no evidence any violence had been| hers than ever before, according to |and the achievements of the Russian | our indoor meetings. Our speakers used, and that picketing was lawful. | George Z. Modalie, who has been ine vestigating the fraudulent registra- tions. The situation, he says, “is the most startling in years.” GUE REHEARSAL. rsals at the Worke Il be Id i Drama . 15th St. a meet- ittee called Sey EEE || ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY] STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronise Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Bpectal Rates for Labor Organiza- |juone (Established 1887. & RAINBOW BALL. inbow Ball of the League | al Aid will be held tonight ne F Mut CELEBRATE at their respetcive halls as follows: Sections 6 and 7—Arcadia Hall take place Monday, Wednesday and jof the traction workers on their 3:ght | Friday at 5 p. m. |to organize their own union as op-| IPhone Stuyve: John’s Restaurant posed to the spy-controlled company | union. } Sections 1 and 4—New Star Casing —————— Sections 2, 3 and 5—Central Opera Paironize Our Advertisers! Te. Le! (023. Hose, ie smcmne s Are You Getting FINCO Co-operative |||) Ds ABKAHAM MARKOFF Hl Office Houre: 9:20-12 A, M. 2-8 P.M. ||| Dasiy Except Friday and Sunday. | 249 EAST 115th STREBT Gor. Second Ave. New York. (Union Made) > : | Tf 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. Ae, Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin i Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183 SEND YOUR GREETINGS NOW To Be Published in the Special November 7th Number of the Daily Worker ON THE . TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE “RUSSIAN REVOLUTION Send not less than 25 cents with every name to The Daily Worker, 33 First St., New York; N.Y. FULL NAME AMT. FULL NAME AMT. Avie eet PPR TIE Pe ore LoTT SGN ARDS age an eR | ae | oe ng dpess RACE pepbaseny nas: ean: | RLU We dees hone ootesesis Nase shoes . W's wikia Wiad ele bon asioc 0/6: isi g-oreteia v.b 4a ons g\0. 600 ae | | | | TOTAL GREETINGS—Accepted from working class organizations at $200 per full page (frac- tions of a page on this basis) and $1.50 per inch. Be sure your organization sends its | greetings. RS ORDER A BUNDLE OF THE DAILY WORKER | them at att November 7th Meetings and for Distribution. RATES—$1.50. per hundred copies | prior to the! 4 soa very ‘ , l (Co-orrrarive Repair | 41914 'S SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals 3 It. 02 E. 12th St. New York Health Food Vegetarian Restaurar’®: 1600 Madison Ave, PHONE: UNIVERSITY 676. We Cater to Students of Health Eatwell Vegetarian Restaurant 78 Second Ave., near 4th St. y strictly VEGETARIAN meals . No canned foods, or animal sed. All dishes scientifically prepared. Natural and Vegetarian Foods Sundried Fruits Unsulphured. Whole Grain Cereals. Also Diabetic Foods, 1222 SOUTHERN BLVD. Near Freeman St. Sta. Bronx, N.Y. Tel. Dayton 8459, PATRONIZE HOP 6th Avenue, near 25th St. uits Pressed * * hoes Repaired While U Wait Reduction to Striking Workers, 7 Second Annual Dance Given by the INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE Newark ‘Branch Saturday Evening November 5 at New Montgomery Hall Prince, cor. Montgomery St. Newark, N. J. TICKETS 50c. Proceeds for relief of class-war prisoners’ families. ROSELYN’S HEALTH FOOD), i JULIET STUART POYNTZ “tnniversary of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION Sunday, November 6th Doors Open at 1 P. M, SPEAKERS: WILLIAM W. WEINSTONE MOISSAYE J. OLGIN JACK STACHEL | ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG@ REBECCA GRECHT SCHACHNO EPSTEIN BERT MILLER SAM DON and others | FULL CONCERT PROGRAM FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA LITHUANIAN CHORUS PIONEER PAGEANT WILLIAM Z. FOSTER JAMES P. CONNON JOHN J. BALLAM | | | | MELOCH EPSTEIN D. BENJAMIN ' V. TAMAS } HERBERT ZAM SINGERS Central Opera House, 67th Street and 3rd Ave. Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, Halsey and Broadway. New Star Casino, 107th Street and Park Avenue. ADMISSION 50 CENTS Auspices Workers (Communist) Party—108 E. 14th Street }|Tenth Anniversary Dance---Election Night, Nov. 8th--Webster Hall--119 E. 11th Street.’ i t |,

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