The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 17, 1927, Page 5

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"Yellow Doo” Move of Hosiery Bosses Told at Club Meet Efforts of the Full Fashioned Hos-| iery Workers’ Union to organize the | Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Inc,, of In- | dianapolis, in the face of a well- | financed company union and “yellow | dog contract” campaign, were de-| seribed at the Civie Club last night. | Louis F. Budenz, editor of Labor Age, | and Gustave Geigas, president of the union, told of the struggle, in which | Budenz has been shadowed constantly | by an agert of MacDonald Brothers, | Inc., New York labor spy organiza- tion, hired by the mill owners. Socks For Marie. It was the Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Ina, that presented Queen Marie of Roumania with a $700 pair of pure gold stockings when she visited In- dianapolis in the course of her re- cent tour in the United States. MacDonald Brothers, Inc.,. recom- mended the “yellow dog contract” and a company union to the mill owners as a means of preventing the organ- ization of their employes by the Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers’ Union, Budenz said. Budenz is a special or- ganizer for the union in Indianapolis. Several workers who refused to sign the “yellow dog” pledge were dis- charged, he said. Threaten Dismissal. When the Federal Council of Churches undertook recently to com- pare the effects of company unionism, according to Geigas, the Real Silk Hosiery Mills threatened their em- ployes with summary dismissal if they submitted to questioning by the council’s investigators. The Full Fashioned Hosiery Work- ers’ Union, with headquarters in Phil- adelphia, is affiliated with the United Textile Workers, Protest Enslavement Of Young Native Boys In Australian Mandate A report describing the wholesale enslavement of native children and their brutal treatment on plantations in the territory which was formerly German New Guinea and which is now under Australian mandate has been presented to the Australian Gov- ernment by a group of missionaries. Young Boys are recruited for labor cn plantations and herded into un- sanitary barracks. They are beaten for “insubordination.” BAPTIST PROPAGANDA. ,At a recent meeting of Baptist lay- men including John D. Rockefeller and Jj. C. Colgate, multi-millionaire perfume manufacturer, it was dis- closed that the Baptists spend more than $6,000,000 annually for religious propaganda. Dr. N. SCHWARTZ, M. D. 124 East 81st Street LIST for Kidney, Bladder, » Blood and Skin diseases and Stomach Disorders. X-RAY Examinations for Stones, ‘Tumors and Internal disturbances. Dr. Schwartz will be glad to give you «a free consultation. Charges | for examinations and treatment ‘ is moderate. Specin! X-RAY EXAMINATION §2. Tel. Lehigh 6022, Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF . SURGEON DENTIST “Office Hours: 9:30-12 A. M, 2-3 P. M, Daily Except Friday and Sunday. 249 EAST 115th STREET ond AV Yew York, iP J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183 Butterfield 8799. hi ssavenal Dr. A. CARR SURGEON DENTIST 22 years uninterrupted practice. Personal attention. Workers’ prices. 133 EAST 84th STREET Cor. Lexington Ave. New York. = Semanal ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organiza- tions (Established 1887.) THIS SATURDAY EVENING Noy. 19th TICKET in advance 50c. YOU MUST: / WORKERS PARTY SECTIONS 2 &3- BALL The workers of New York will be there with bells on. (LABOR AND FRATERNAL Housewives Dance. No. 2 next Saturday at 8 p. m. at 1347 Bos- ton St. The proceeds will aid labor prisoners. * Fruit Ker-mess Dance. The worker co-operative branch of the International Labor Defense will ive a Fruit Ker-mess dance next aturday night in the gymnasium of the Bronx Co-operative Colony, 2700 Bronx Park East. * f Looking For Work? Here is a chance to make a few dollars while looking for work. Call at the office of the Joint Defense | Committee, 41 Union Square, Room} 714, any morning. ° * * Minor Lectures Sunday. Robert Minor, editor of The DAILY WORKER, will discuss the role of America in the next war at the first of a series of open forums to be held by the Bronx Workers’ School at 2075 Clinton Ave., the Bronx, Sunday at 8.30 p. m. * * * Dr. William Picken, field secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, will speak on “The American Race Prob- lem” at the monthly meeting of the Association for Culture Sunday at 2.30 p. m. at the Washington Irving High School, 40 Irving Place. ™ * * Mohegan School. A general membership meeting of | the Mohegan Modern School Associa- tion to arrive at a decision on school bond problems will be held tonight at 8.30 p. m., at the Civic Club, 18} East 10th St. * e 8 Perth Amboy Lectures. The Perth Amboy (N. J.) Open Forum will begin Sunday at 2 p. m., at Workers Hall, 308 Elm St., with a lecture by Juliet Stuart Poyntz on “The World Situation.” Explosion and Fire Destroy Warehouse Two men were reported missing, 1,000 automobiles were destroyed and damage estimated at $2,000,000 was explosions and a fire which destroyed .a three-story warehouse, covering the block bounded by 59th and 60th Sts. and 12th and West End Aves. There were seven explosions in all, the last one hurling the entire north wall of the burning structure into 60th St., where the falling bricks and timbers injured a number of persons. SUBWAY KILLS WORKER AND AGED WOMAN. Insufficient protection in the sub- ways caused two to go to their death in front of subway trains on Sat- urday. Mike Kusturvech, an ironworker, was struck by a Brooklyn bound B. M. T. train while he was walking through the tunnel near the Bedford avenue station, Brooklyn. He is survived by a wife and child. Mrs. A. Wilhert, of No. 109 St. Mark’s Avenue, Brooklyn, a woman of about sixty years, fell in front of a train from the platform of the Ninety- sixth street station of the Broadway line. She was killed instantly. Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302K. 12th St. New York. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865. We Cater to Students of Health Eatwell Vegetarian Restaurant 78 Second Ave., near 4th St. Only strictly VEGETARIAN meals served. No canned foods, or animal fats used. All dishes scientifically prepared. ROSELYN’S HEALTH FOOD Natural and Vegetarian Foods Sundried Fruits Unsulphured, Whote Grain Cereals. Also Diabetic Foods, 1222 SOUTHERN BLVD. Near Freeman St, Sta. Bronx, N, Y. Tel. Dayton 8459. Co-operative Repar Sxop 419¥, 6th Avenue, near 25th St. uits Pressed . °, Sires Repairea While U Wait HARLEM CASINO 116 St. & Lenox Ave. At the door 75c. BE THERE, ORGANIZATIONS l ——<——— | =Pdward F. | } | | ja DAILY WORKER di recent |ing a suceses. |ways ready to form a united front z |to reason.’ done here yesterday by a series of | |\Lovestone Opens Course ‘State Atty. Charges jlaw wold have required the three McGrady, American Federation of Labor representative,! granted that you, as an organizer of | paid for this? Working Class Housewives Branch |who helped break the Fur Workers will give a concert and dance |Union for the A. F. of L. and for the union’s international gaged in a chance conv officers, en- rsation with butor at a mass meeting of traction workers. The distributor in the fol-| lowing letter, received yesterday by | The DAILY WORKER, describes the | interview and his own reaction to “While reading The DAILY WORK. ER of Nov. 11, I noticed that a meet- ing of the subway workers was to| Gity was organized almost 100 per} be held at the Lyceum on 86th St.,|cent until lately. The fur workers}¢, company unio where President William Green and | enjoyed the conditions of an organ~| op the boss 3 organizers of the American Federa- ized trade. More than that, as far as}; 2 tion of Labor were to speak. 15 Hours a Day. “I was greatly interested in this meeting because I knew that the sub-! way workers were slaving from 12}step for the advancement of organined Understanding if we would only rea- to 15 hours a day, underpaid and | forced to belong to a company union. | I knew that at this meeting an at-| tempt would be made to organize | them into a real union. | “At the meeting I helped distribute | The DAILY WORKER, which is fighting for the interests of the work- ers and which helped make this meet- | While distributing my papers a man in the audience whom I had never seen before approached | me and asked me if I had sold many copies and whether I had reached every man in the hall. | Interest In “WORKER.” | He seemed to be greatly interested in having The DAILY WORKER di tributed amongst the subway work- ers. At the same time he made the! following remark: ‘Go back to your} |comrades and tell them that the gang- | ster, McGrady, helped you to dis- tribute The DAILY WORKER?’ | “I had heard and read so. much about Edward F. McGrady in eonnec- | |tion with the Furriers’ Union that for | the moment I was quite taken back. | It semed to me that McGrady felt hurt to be called a ‘gangster’ by the left wing workers. | McGrady Says More, “McGrady made a few other inter- | esting remarks, He said: ‘We are al- | with you when you are in the right’ —mreaning, I suppose, the left wing-| ers. He said then: ‘The time is not} far off when we will be able to reach an understanding if we will only start He made several other remarks of the same nature. “THE DAILY WORKE “Now, Mr. McGrady, taking “for |the.A. F. of L., were Serious in these| Grady, do you feel hart when you are remarks, permit me, as an ordina worker, to put before you a few ques- tions. Pleased With Work. ‘Don’t forget, Mr. McGrady, you admitted you were pleased with’ the work I was doing in helping to put the facts about the I, R. T. before the workers. I can therefore surely have the privilege of asking questions. “The fur industry of New York I know, they, were the first~in<the needle. trades to bring in the 40: J week, which was highly proclaimed by the A. F. of L. as an important labor, Furriers Satisfied. “The furriers were satisfied wit their accomplishments and th leaders were greatly beloved beca of their capabilities and faithfulness to the workers. The fur workers also succeeded in. getting rid of the gang- sters and the leaders who brought these gangsters into the union and who ruled there with an iron fist and blackjack, “Of course, these leaders could not soon become accustomed to the idea of leaying the union and their well- paid jobs. They came to you, Mr. McGrady, for aid, and you made a to get back into the union. How could you make a united front with these gangsters and at the same time tell me you were ready to make a united front with the left wing? Allied With Police. “But. this is not all. A united front merely with the gangsters would not put them back into the union. You also made a united front with the fur| manufacturers, police and the courts. “And still you wanted to give me the impression you were serious in stating that you wanted to make a united front with the ieft wing. “T would like to ask you, Mr. Mc- Grady, who paid those gunmen who attempted to kill one of the leaders of the furriers’ union? And whose lawyer helped them to escape punish- ment? Who paid the gunmen who drove around the furriers’ district and beat up the workers with blackjacks and iron bars? And what would you . NW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1927 A Worker Talks with McGrady ° | themselves ? nited front with them, helping them | Workers Party Activities NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY rd call the man who saw that they were And why, Me- S.S. 2A Meets Tonight. called a gangster by the left wing- An education g of Sub- ers? sec A will tonight at m. at 108 14th St Protest I, R. T. Methods. “At the meeting of the workers the — speakers protested against the brutal methods adopted tonight {by the Interborough “Rapid Transit)». 34; . Room: 33: Co, against those who wished to be- Pi : subway Section 1 Meets Tonig gitprop directors of long to the workers’ and not to the Clerical Help Needed. }company union. Why it is you have, vojunteer clerical help is wante: jused the same methods agains the local office of the Workers (Com- |fur workers who used to b munist) Party, 108 East 14th’St., sev- , which cons: , the gangsters and the ‘orrupt leaders who had been thrown out of the real union? “In one of your remarks to me you! of {said: ‘We would be able to reach eral e a week S.S. 2A Meetings. All agitprop and literature Sub-section 2A 2 urged to at- an tend a ting Satur at 1 p. m, at 108 14th St., n Al. son.’ If, for the sake of argument, I 2 * will admit that those who are at the head of the Furriers’ Union were wrong, did you make attempt to reason with them or the fur workers Questions McGrady. “Did you ever address a meeting of |fur workers to attempt to convince them that their leaders were wrong The only argume u did make thru your lawy Mr. Markewitch. He successfully argued before the judge that th vorkers who refused |to be forced into a company union |< hould be put in jail. Is this your L-¢on- bration Sunday. 10th versary of the ill be ec . m. at Labor UY. s ms te 4 ve., Yonkers. jidea of reasoning? Pat. Devine will be the principal “You and your associates went to a | speaker. {meeting of subway workers to help cee them get out of the company union 3.8. 2A Meets Monday. and enter a real workers’ union bet- general membership meeting of ter able to look after their intere 2A will be held Monday at 6 Yet you have succeeded in smashing} py, m. |a well-organized furriers’ union and j— * |deprived the workers of the few bene- International Branch S.S. 6C. joes they Bad: | ‘The International Bre Ss. 6C will meet tonight. eae ae Sees Contradictions. “There seems to be a great contra- |diction in all this, Can you, Mr. Mc-} Grady, explain this contradiction? Or shall I draw my own conclusions, that Inter-racial Dance. An inter-racial dance is being plan- ned by the Harlem Street Nucleus of you have greater capabilities of|the Young Workers (Communist) breaking unions than organizing| League for Dec. 10 in the Imperial them and that all the above-men-? Hall. |tioned remarks were merely made in os | jest? ‘ “But, perhaps I am wrong in ~ Am Works With ‘conclusion, Perhaps your remarks | y |came as a result of a guilty con- science. If this is the case, I think 2 there still is a way in which matters Bi Power Trust }can be remedied.” | on “America Today” at! Workers School Tonight } Jay Lovestone, executive secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party | will begin a course on “America To- day,” at the Workers School, 108 East 14th St., tonight at 9.15. In this course Lovestone will. dis-! cuss the development of American ; imperialism and problems it has cre-| ated. Some of the topics to be discussed are the background of the develop- ment of American classes; the rise | of the American capitalist class; the struggle for a centralized govern- ment; capitalism establishes its su-| premacy; the birth of the proletariat | as a class; America enters on the im- | perialist path; political parties in America; the agrarian problem; re- cent tendencies in American industry; America today; proletarian perspec- tives and paths. Election Inspectors With Vote Control More than 900 votes out of the 1,300 he saw cast were “directly at- tributable to the lection inspectors or made under their immediate, phys- ical influence,” according to Special Deputy State Attorney General Meyer Machlis, who was assigned on Election Day to Publie School 160, where three election districts of the Fourth Assembly District had their polling plales. His specific charge of fraud in the | election will not receive any consid- eration, however, since he “failed to include the name of any voter,”. in his written report. “Any sort of enforcement of the polling places under my observance polling places under my observation to be closed and every inspector ar- rested,” Machlis said in his report. “The inspectors insisted on entering the booth with each voter | KRESGE LOSES $10,000,000. S. S. Kresge, ten cent store mag- nate and employer of ,.hundreds of miserably paid clerks, is suing in the supreme court to recover part of stock m&rket. losses totalling $10,000,- 000 in 1923. W. E. Hutton & Co.,, brokers, are defendants. Italian Fraction Rochester, N. Y. GREETINGS to the » Workers Party Meet at Manhattan Lyceum Next — Tuesday “at 8 o'clock A general membership meeting of the Workers (Communist) | Party will be held next Tuesday at 8 p. m., at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St. Jay Lovestone, Uuited Mine Workers. On Flood Control Relief Meetings for esas Many Cities Planned) wasninczon, Nov. 16 (FP)— |Provision for storage reservoirs, and Word was received yesterday from consequently for power dams owned the Pennsylvania-Ohio Miners’ Relief |bY the government, will not be in- Committee, of Pittsburgh, Pa., that|¢luded in the flood control program miners’ relief meetings are being ar- | for the Mis SSIPP}, if the army en- ranged in New York, Boston, Phila-|sineets have their way. Page FN® Striking N, Y. Union Appeals for Funds: Plan Play Benefit The Window Union, Local 8, rangements with wrights’ Theatre for union to take over the the two days of Dec. 2 | cording to Protective The drama ikes on the east side du the last two decades. With the ows cleaners’ strike in its sixth w the need for funds moved tl ecutive board of Local 8 to send an appeal to all officers and members of labor unions in this city. Tt read in part: “Our union has now been on strike x weeks against the employers f our trade, who have formed a dual company union and have broken their egreement with We have this far not taken advantage of the offer y the Central Trades and La- of New York in the mat ing funds to fight this com- ace. however, are now in and we ask you to con- ch as your resources Our strike has the en- pany ¢ ees need of relie and of the Central Trades and Labor Council. It is part of the live strug- gle against the menace of company unionism.” The appeal closes with a direct ap- peal for funds to help the striking window cleaners and their families |continue their struggle. | i : [Bosses Victors in New Agreement, Union Says (Continued from Page One) | agreemnt were neyer elected to the posftions they claim to hold. The resolution also instructs the ‘executive board of the local to make arrangements to protect the interests. of the members and to take measures necessary to an agreement agreeable to the workers. The speakers at the meeting were: | Louis Hyman, manager of the Cloak |and Dressmakers’ Joint Board; M. HB. Taft, manager of the local; A. Weiss, |business agent of the Joint Board; | David Fishbein; Sam Rosenzweig and }Gertrude Osdellar, shop chairman at |\the Harrison Pleating Co. 315 W. 35th St., whose workers are on strike. Louis Rubin, chairman of the local, | presided. | * : . | Twenty-four Workers Discharged. | Twenty-four cloakmakers employed iby Davis and Son, 240 W. 35th St. lwere discharged yesterday at the delphia, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, | Minneapolis, Kansas City, Seattle and} executive secretary of the Party, |San Francisco. will report on the Build-the-Party]| In New York the meeting will be drive. All members should bring | |held at the Irving Plaza Hall, Irving their membership books. {Place and 15th St. Dee. 4. |Pennsylvania fields will speak to the |workers, describing their conditions sian pictures: “The Beauty and the|in the labor movement, including Al-| Bolshevik,” “Russia in Overalls,” and|fred Wagenknecht, of the Workers) we pa 2) At the New York meeting a dele- and the suffering of their families.) “The Miracle of Soldier Ivan,” will be| (Communist) Party, who has been ac- {gation of striking miners from the Next Sunday at 2 p. m. three Rus- | Other speakers will beanen prominent shown at the Irving Plaza Hall, Irv-|tively engaged in relief work among| ing Place and 15th St. These pictures | the miners. show the life and struggles of the! The lockout of the Pennsylvania | workers and peasants of the U. S. S.|and Ohio soft coal miners, now-in its| R. “The Beauty and the Bolshevik” | eighth month, has resulted in a very | is a romance of the Red Army. The | serious condition in many of the min-! show will be continuous until mid-| ing camps. Thousands of evictions! night. Tickets can be had at the|make the need for aid in this strug-| Joint Defense and Relief Committee, Their report, coming out through|command of the right wing for par- the war department, is in harmony |ticipating in a Mecca Temple meet- with the demands of the power lobby-+ ing Monday night in which the Amer- in the capital—that the government | ican Federation of Labor was re- |shall offer no competition to the pri- | quested to intervene in the difficul- ivate power interests in connection | ties in the International Ladies’ Gar- with its handling of the flood problem | ment Workers’ Union. At the meet- in the valley of the Mississippi. jing the anti-working class tactics of High cost of construction of flood |Morris Sigman, president of the 1 jreservoirs is one argument advanced | L. G. W., were attacked. workers Shelley Among the Samuel discharged head of the sei ates ‘committee of 50, which arranged the i ’ : |meeting, and L. Kleinberg, secretary. Unemployment Growing |¢¢ the shop chairmen’s council of the ‘8 . {Cloak and Dressmakers’ Union. The In New York; Lodgers discharged workers are picketing the In City House Double shop. — : | Half Were Registered. Up to the present time half of the shop has been registered with the right wing, the other half supporting the Joint Board. | Picketing is also being continued at support of this non-competition | plan. | were More than twice as many lodgers have come to the municipal lodging house than at this time last. year, states Commissioner of Public “Wels; fare Bird S. Coler. 41 Union Square, Room 714; Cooper- ative Restaurant, 30 Union Square; Cooperative Shoe Repair Shop 419 1-2 Sixth Ave. and Local 22, 16 West 21st St. Only five weeks remain before the biggest bazaar ever held in New York City by the labor movement. For this affair to be successful, it requires the cooperation of all workers’ organiza- tions. It is time for workers to get on the job immediately. The time is short. DEMPSEY FALLS 9 FLOORS. NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 16.—Trying to evade a crowd at the trial of Jack Kearns’ suit against Dempsey today, Tex Rickard, boxing promoter, gle of paramount importance to the| There are 489 residents this year, labor movement in this country, ac-|and-a quarter of the inerease is in cording to Wagenknecht. | women inmates. Coler finds a 25 per | = Ss cent increase in the number of’ pa- " 7 te tients in city hospitals and remarks NITTI TO LECTURE that the figures indicate considerable (Pederated Press) more unemployment this early winter | Vincenzo Nitti, son of former | than last. Premier Francesco Nitti of Italy, has | _—_—oOo |come to the United States to deliver! BATON ROUGE, La., Nov. |a series of lectures. The Nittis do not | Edward Payton, a leper, was found | attack fascism from the socialist and | guilty today of murder. radical angle but from that of liber-| Judge *Louis Burns {mmediately jals and democrats. The senior Nitti | sentenced the man to-serve ten years |heads the democratic anti-fascist |imprisonment in an ‘institution des- movement and edits an Italian paper |ignated by the Attorney-General of for that purpose in France. the United States. } pind LAB RACE aes 3 'Robert W. Dunn, Author of Company Unionism, 14.—| the Louis Margulies shop, 525 Seventh Ave., where three workers were dis- charged at the beginning of the week. Forty other wokers walked out. Margulies in an interview said that it was “better to be registered with |the International than to run an open shop,” Protest Greenberg Terrorism. A well attended meeting of mem- \ bers of Local 91, I. L. G. W., Tuesday evening at Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave, and 43rd St., protested against union- wrecking tactics of the right wing, The assembled workers adopted a resolution demanding that expelled menibers of the local, including Becky’ Levy, be reinstated; that the officials of the local start a campaign to or- torney, had a narrow escape from} injury. The elevator in which they | were riding dropped nine floors and! nniacod &€ oo ake ¢ NC a ] ¢ Dempsey and Arthee Disco meet|Praises “The Belt,” New Mass Production Play ganize the unorganized; that the mim Pa .,, |imum wage scale of the local becom »mploye . education, thrift, . was barely stopped from crashing into the basement. The trio were badly shaken but uninjured. FAITH, HOPE AND,—-WAR. The Salvation Army has comemo- tated forty-seven years of charity to victims of capitalism and of aid in| the prosecution of imperialist wars by placing a tablet at the spot on the Battery where the first Salvation Army meeting was held in this coun- try. ANOTHER PROHIBITIONIST. Fred Nummer, of 189 Hudson St., Hoboken, N. J., former prohibtion agent, was arraigned before United States Commissioner Garret Cotter jat the New Playwrights’ Theater, 40 | gun-men, profi Commerce St., but a recommendation. | pigeons, and suckers. See it quick—you readers—before |turn out suckers—470 a it closes up. It’s worth a couple | schedule. dozen volumes about the perils of! Don’t take it too esthetically, you jthe company union and the gilded | professional reviewers. It’s hard pro. |welfare plans. Take your shop mate |paganda with a terrible bite in it. to see the show and I won't ask you|And when it’s produced in Detroit ito read my books on these subjects.|the cops permitting—it should w This play digs the raw meat of the | up with a union song and an oath, argument and throws it in your face.| instead of the Hairy Ape, 18th ce’ Readers who never saw a belt and|tury to-hell-with-the-machines stuff. don’t know what a speed-up is and | It should drop the curtain with a never hear the hokum that the per-|shout for organization. sonnel boys are throwing these days; What can the workers do through should hail this chance to applaud|the A. F. of L. to jimmy their way one of the realest mass plays that out of this privately-owned machine has come along. It’s not Russia or|hell? Can the workers be organized Hungary or China. The same strug-|to tear the guts out of the system? sharing, police, stool- The belt does shift, on By ROBERT W. DUNN. gums, a living reality; that Harry Green- This is not a review of “The Belt,” | hypocris stock ownership, own- | berg, manager of the local, stop furs | which is now playing its final week| your-own-garage, mass production, . nishing scabs to break shop strikes being conducted by Local 41 and that a recent $10 increase in Greenberg’s wages be rescinded, “ICOR” TO HOLD BAZAAR. The city committee of “Jeor.” ( ish colonizationfor Soviet Rus | organization to found farm colonies of Jewish people) is suner ts |fangements for a bazaar to be held Nov. 23 to 26 at Imanuy aio. cy ‘ |Lexington Axe. Music, dancing and |a concert will be offered every day {and night. | js | ANTI-EW BOOK RECALLED, | Henry Ford has written Theodore Fritsch, Leipzig, Germany, his Euro- ' here yesterday and held in $2,900 for a hearing Dec. 7. Nummer is one of 47 defendants under indictment on charges of operating a still in Florida, 10th Anniversary. gle but 100 per cent American from the service pins to the chewing gum and the unforgetable slang. The American Plan with all its group insurance, pensions, bonuses, premi- | These are questions you will ask|pean distributor, revoking Fritsch’s when you have seen “The Belt.” See | right to “The International Jew,” it yourself and tell your cousin in| which was published serially in Ford's | Detroit to take a week off and come| Dearborn Indpendent in his antic jto see it. Semitic campaign. }

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