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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOV. 19, 1927 Lalor Body Votes Support in 1, R. T. Injunction Fight The Central Trades and Labor Council has voted to support the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employes in its fight against the drastic: injunction that the Interborough Rapid Transit Co. is seeking in an attempt to pre- vent the organization of New York traction workers. A resolution in support of the street railway men’s union was passed unanimously at the semi-monthly meeting of the council at Beethoven Hall Thursday night. Nathan D. Perlman, attorney for the Amalgamated, it was learned yes- terday, is drafting a demand that the transit commission investigate the Interborough Company’s use of city |_ money to fight the union. Union Receives Support. Developments yesterday included pledges of help for the Amalgamated from other unions. Chief among these was the Bricklayers’, Plasterers’ and Masons’ International Union. Walter D. Price vice-president pledged the full support of his organization. John O’Hanlon, legislative repre- sentative of the State Federation of Labor, on his arrival from Albany yesterday, discussed with Amalga- mated leaders plans for introducing anti-injunction legislation in the next session of the state legislature. A bill drafted by Assemblyman Ham- mull and introduced late in the ses- Sion last year will probably be rein- troduced when the legislature recon- venés, it is said. Text of Resolution. The resolution adopted by the Cen- trgl Trades and Labor Council fol- lows: “Be it resolved that the Central Trade and Labor Council of Greater New York and vicinity, in meeting assembled, pledges its support to the American Federation of Labor and the Amalgamated Associations of Street and Electric Railway Em- ployes, in their opposition to the ef- forts of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company to secure an in- junction; be it further resolfed that the Central Trade and Labor Council of Greater New York and vicinity junction; be it further resolved that enlightened public opinion will con- demn any employer who deprives em- Ployes .of the right to organize and the right to choose to be affiliated with a labor organization in which he has confidence.” Bootleggers Buying Bootleg Paintings A Long Island man who grew rich by selling stolen art objects to newly- rich bootleggers and dope dealers is being sought as the director of num- erous robberies of art galleries, it was learned yesterday. Recovery of antiques worth $145,- 000 stolen a year ago from the gal- lery of P. Jackson Higgs, 11 East 54th St., yesterday spurred the search for the alleged “higher-up.” ee LABOR AND FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS - | Housewives Dance. | Working Class Housewives Branch |No. 2 will give a concert and dance |tonight at 8 p. m. at 1847 Bos- ton St. The proceeds will aid labor prisoners. * * . Fruit Ker-mess Dance. The worker co-operative branch of the International Labor Defense will give a Fruit Ker-mess dance to- jnight in the gymnasium of the Bronx | East. * * * Minor Lectures Tomorrow. Robert Minor, editor of The DAILY WORKER, will discuss the role of cf a series of open forums to be held by the Bronx Workers’ School at 2075 Clinton Ave., the Bronx, tomorrow at 8.30 p. m. * * * Markoff Lectures Tomorrow. Abraham Markoff will lecture to- morrow afternoon at the Coney Island Open Forum, 2901 Mermaid Ave., on “Communism or Anarchism?” es Drama League Meeting. The Workers Drama League will hold a general membership meeting Monday evening at 336 E. 15th St. Se Wee Newark Workers’ School. The Newark Workers’ School will start three classes next week. Mon- day a class in the Fundamentals of the Class Struggle and one in Ad- vanced English will begin, Wednes- day, a class in Elementary English will hold its first session. The school West St. Crowe 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 merning. * * * 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 tomorrow at 2.30 p. m. at the Washington Irving High School, 40 Irving Place. * * * Perth Amboy Lectures. The Perth Amboy (N. J.) Open Forum will begin tomorrow at 2 p. m., at Workers Hall, 308 Elm St., with a lecture by Juliet Stuart Poyntz on “The World Situation.” s+ © Volunteers for “Icor” Bazaar. Volunteers are needed to assist at the third annual “Icor” bazaar that will be held at the 165th Infantry Armory, Nov. 23 to 26, The funds raised will be used for Jewish coloni- ' zation in the Soviet Union. The office of “Icor” is at 112 East 19th St., where all volunteers should report. { ANTI-MIV-ITARIST MEET. An anti-militarist mass meeting tomorrow at 8 p. m. at 29 Graham Ave., Brooklyn, by th® Young Work- ers (Communist) League. The speak- ers will be Paul Crouch, Communist soldier, and Carl Weisberg. BRONX : Celebration Workers’ Symphony Orchestra. U.S.S. R. Anniversary Sunday, November 20, at 3 P. M. at HUNTS POINT PALACE 163rd STREET and SOUTHERN BOULEVARD, BRONX, N. Y. PAUL CROUCH Will Speak MASS-RECITATION, SOLOISTS. Presentation of a Red Banner to U.S. S. R. BRONX and Concert Hungarian Women’s Chorus. ee | Cooperative Colony, 2700 Bronx Park America in the next war at the first | is at the Slovak Workers’ Home, 52} 4 ADMISSION—50 cents in advance—at the door 60 cents. Auspices: Hungarian Workers’ Societies. $250 WILL BUY well built, new modern house, 6 large rooms, plot 50x100, all improve- ments, steam, garage; price $6,750; balance 1% monthly. Also new mod- ern bungalow, 5 rooms, plot 40x100; price $4,950. Free bathing, boating in adjacent lakes in 900-acre public park. Schools, buses, trolley. 5 minutes 3 railroad stations, Easy commuting, 35 minutes Manhattan. You can buy improved lots for investment at cola, reduced prices. not satisfied. Money returned, if Call or write. Lincoln Developing Company 206 BROADWAY Suite SALESMEN WANTED TICKET in advance 50c. The workers of New York YOU MUST WORKERS PARTY SECTIONS 2 &3 BALL 244 NEW YORK, N. Y. IN EVERY LOCALITY. HARLEM CASINO 116 St. & Lenox Ave. At the door 75c. will be there with. bells on. BE THERE. Drive On to Save Two Werkers From N.Y, Electric Chair The International Labor Defense is condutcing an enrgetic campaign to save Calogero Greco and Donato Car- rillo, anti-fascists, from the electric chair. They will go on trial in the Bronx Dec. 5 charged with killing two fascists last Decoration Day. An open air meeting in defense of ; Greco and Carrillo will be held to- jnight at Brook Ave. and 188th St., the Bronx, at 8.80 p. m. by the de- fense organization. The speakers will include Louis A. Baum, secre- |tary of the Photographie Workers’ Union, and Joseph J. Padgug. P. Buckenberger will preside. Next Thursday evening another open air meeting will be held at Prospect Ave. and 163d St. Issue Appeal. New York section of the Interna- | nature of Rose Baron, secretary, said: | “We call upon every one of our members in New York to see that New York is not blighted with a Sacco-Vanzetti tragedy. Today Calo- gero Greco and Donato Carrillo, anti- fascisti and honest workers, are in te Bronx County Jail falsely charged with murder. “The workers of New York must test against this frame-up, which otherwise will result in these inno- |eent workers being done to death at the instigation of the Fascist League of North America. Indoor Meeting. “A mass protest meeting has been jcalled for Nov. 27 at the Central Opera House, 67th St. and Third Ave. Among those who will speak will be | William W. Weinstone, James P. Can- non, Ettore Frisina, Arturo Giovan- nitti, Carlo Tresca and Robert Minor. We urge every class-conscious worker to be present.” Rose Baron warned against a too optimistic attitude and reminded her members of the fact that District Attorney McGeehan said that ‘he hopes “to have Greco and Carrillo in the death house at Sing Sing by Christmas.” Workers Party Meet at Manhattan Lyceum To Be Held Next Tuesday The Build-the-Party drive will be acted upon at a general membership meeting of the Workers (Communist) Party next Tuesday at 8 p. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E, Fourth St. Jay Lovestone, executive secretary of the Party, will-report. 1,000 Dancers Expected at Party Section Ball A thousand dancers are expécted tonight at the ball being given by Sections 2 and 3 of the Workers (Communist) Party at the Harlem Casino, Lenox Ave. afd 116th St. Proceeds will go toward new section headquarters. | | FOR A FRESH, WHOLESOME VEGETARIAN MEAL Come to * Scientific Vegetarian Restaurant 76 E. 107th Street | New York. WHERE DO WE MEET TO DRINK AND EAT® At the New Sollins Dining Room Good Feed Good Jompany Any Hour Any Day BETTER SERVICE 216 East 14 Srteet New York Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E, 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 d scientifically prepar ROSELYN’S HEALTH FOOD Natural and Vegetarian Foods Sundried Fruits Unsulphured. Whole Grain Cereals. Also Diabetic Foods, 1222 SOUTHERN BLVD. r Freeman St. Sta. Bronx, N. ¥, Near Pretrel. Dayton, 8469. rise by thousands and vigorously pro- | ‘To Investigate Auto Deals of New Jersey — Police Strikebreaker | PASSAIC, N. J., Nov. 18. Chief of Police Richard 0. Zober, | |recent textile workers strik» here, force Oct. 31 when a stolen sauto- | mobile was found in his posses-| |sion, will have a hearing Nov. 29, | |it was announced yesterday. | | Zober is charged with purchas- | ing and selling stolen witoinebilga.| This charge carries with it nine specifications, citing alleged vio- lations of state criminal laws. Po- | | lice Commissioner Ben Turner will feces the hearing. \ © : = —® N. Y. Strike Is Fought | With Mass Arrests i (Continued from Page One) jheld for “investigation” without bail An appeal isued last night’ by the |being fixed for them or without any |from four to six, and one had ten. | charge being placed against them. tional Labor Defense, over the sig- | Indications late yesterday were that} prevalent trouble. jthe police planned to hold them all | night. | The eight are Frank Higgins, |Charles Daugherty, Joseph Diduck, |Michael Sirkorsky, Ary Humenuck, ; Stephen Lechkie, Alex Saurhuk and | Daniel Denianchuk, All of them have | Served on the picket line in the strike, |now in its sixth week. Three Others Jailed. While these arrests were being |made other members of the industrial |squad were taking Joseph Paskar, | Stephen Cacharchuk and Peter Kraw- \chuk into custody at Lexington Ave. and E. 34th St., where they were pick- eting. After being booked at the 35th St. police station the three were arraigned for alleged disorderly con- duct at the 57th St. court. The magis- trate demanded $500 bail each. Bail was furnished and they were released for trial later. That organized labor is behind the Window Cleaners’ Protective Union, {Local 8, in its fight against company unionism was evident yesterday in re- sponses from many trade unions to the union’s appeal for relief and de- fense funds, according to Harry Fein- stein, business manager. Among the unions wWntch have sent financial aid are the Cigar Makers’ Union, Local 144; Building Service Employes’ Union, Local 32; Work- men’s Circle; United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, Locals 22 and 2090; Amalgamated Clothing Work- ers’ of America, Local 25; Window Cleaners’ Club; Elevator Operators’ Union; House Wreckers’ Union, Lo- cal 8, International Union of Steam others. Feinstein said yesterday funds were urgently n For Defense Committee Some of the achievements of the Soviet Union in its first 10 years will be shown in addition to entertain- ment tomorrow afternoon and eve- ning at Irving Plaza, Trving Place and 15th St., in three Russian mo- tion pictures to be exhibited under the auspices of the Joint Defense Committee of the cloakmakers, dress- makers and furriers. The pictures are “The Beauty and the Bolshevik,” “Russia in Overalls,” and “The Miracle of Soldier Ivan.” Dr. N. SCHWARTZ, M.D. 124 Bast 8ist Street SPECIALIST for Kidney, Bladder, Urology, 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. Specint X-RAY EXAMINATION 32. HOURS: Daily: 9 A. M. to 7 P. M. Sun@ay: 10 A. M. to 12 Noon Tel. Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: 9:30-12 A. M. 2-8 P. M. Deily Except Friday and Sunday. 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York, Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183 Butterfield 8799. FR, Dr. A. CARR SURGEON DENTIST 22 years uninterrupted practice, Personal attention, Workers’ prices. 133 EAST 84th STREET Cor. Lexington Ave, New York, eee eeeenaaraiipeceeedl To have a good Hungarian meal go to the FAMOUS STERN'S Hungarian Restaurant 202 Lenox Avenue Prices to suit you: Regular dinner 50 cents and up. Just a few steps from the national office. L. BROWNDORFF — Chiropractor BRONX BROOKLYN 1795 Clinton Av. 5813 Church Ay. Cor. Cor. Crotona Park. N. Kings Highway one: ‘ho Tremont 4267. Minnesota 6060 IN. Y. East Side Boys Hours, Experts Say official strikebreaker during the) | who was suspended from the police | | Operators and Engineers and many | _ | war, S| Page Fiv8 Workers Party Activities NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY Suffer Working 70. Dance This Sections 2 tonight at EF ce Lenox A ve. ball ive a m Casino, | Conditions under which workers and | Y.w Membership Meet. ei ilies are required to live z 3 ‘4 x Se aoe i New York and other| A general membership meeting of lcenters are reflected in a report of |the Young Workers (Communist) rida, t the aay ui held ee Health Association, :30 p. m. at § uyvesant Casino, Sec- acannon of 2,000 boys of New|ond Ave. and E. 9th St. John Will- | York’s East Side, now made public. | iamson, new district organizer, will Boys were found working 70 hours | \a week. | Messenger and delivery boys and | lads doing other types of light or) heavy labor to aid the family in the) purchase of bread and clothing were examined. and | an/|‘ New York Tuberculosis based on tion. ae hee | Pioneers Meet Tomorrow. All Pioneers must attend a meet- ing tomorrow at 3:30 p. m. at 108 |B. 14th St. A Third Undernourished. |giving Day and the next step in It was found that only 223 of the |school work will be discussed. | * * * 2,000 boys were normal. Six hundred and twenty had one defect, 645 had wo defects, 374 had thrée, 185 had | | Yonkers Celebration Tomorrow. The 10th anniversary of the Rus jsian revolution will be celebrated | tomorrow at 8 p.m. at Labor Lyceum, {20 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N Diseased tonsils proved the most More than half suffered in this respect and most d |Pat Devine will be the principal of them, it was found, were in need | speaker. of surgical treatment. More than * * © one-third of the boys were classed as undernourished; more than 600 were from 6 to 18 per cent underweight, S.S. 2A Meets Monday. A general membership meeting of | lea 9 m es 5 } a 6 many being excessively tall for their ion 2A will be held Monday at 6 age. Almost half the boys were |: ™ cee badly in need of dental werk. More Els ga Atsein Moray. than a quarter of them had impaired Be secapetant weatingl ft 0 Stbe vision and sixty were suffering from | eye diseases. Work 70 Hours. Sixty-seven cases of diseases of the section 6B will be held Monday at {7 p.m. at 29 Graham Ave., Brookly |A_ representative the New Yor |district executive committee will b ear were found. One hundred and | present to take up a question that re. fifty-four boys had heart defects of | quires immediate action. various kinds, and 187 had nasal ob- = * = structions and infections of the upper 2A Meeting. Satine Mad \ 2 ae te a All literature agents and agitprop glandular troubles and _ orthopedic | airectors of Sub-section 2A will meet defects were numerous. Six cases of | today a et cn ae age Ge Lat active tuberculosis were found, ten ay p. m. at 8 E. 14¢t of a chronic, inactive nature; thirty- t ie were listed as tubercal sus Clerical Help Needed. Special investigations were made in| Volunteer clerical help is wan 220 cases on account of the serious | the local office of the Worker physical handicaps. These boys were | munist) Party, 108 East 141 distributed among fifty-five occupa-|¢eral evenings a week. itions, mostly unskilled. Though most | $2, 08 ie of them worked about forty-eight S.S. 2A Meetings. hours a week, some worked as many| All agitprop and literature agents as seventy. Their average earnings |of Sub-section 2A are urged to at- | were $11.50 a week, but most of them|tend a meeting today at 1 p. m. were not in the habit of holding their |at 108 East 14th St., Room 41. jobs long and often there were long 7 = periods of unemployment, the report | Jersey City Class. added. | The Jersey City Branch will con- ; All the boys examined were be-|duct an English class at Ukrainian tween 14 and 17-years old. A tenth|Hall, 106 Mercer St., every Tuesday were American. Boys of Russian or/and Saturday, at 8 p. m. \Ttalian descent predominated. Twenty tee ieee | seven fationalities were represented. Y. W. L. Ball in January. Wolfe UrgesAttendance at Talk on “Chemistry & War” at Open Forum | Devine In Newark. “Chemistry and the Next War” will | Pat Devine will lecture next Tues- be the topic discussed at the open|day at 8 p, m. at the educational forum of the Workers’ School, 108 E, | meeting of the Newark Branch of the 14th St., tomorrow night at 8 o’clock.| Workers (Communist) Paty at the The speaker will be Robert MacDon- | Labor Lyceum, 708 So. 14th St. ald, whose series of articles on the | sti Ee subject will appear shortly in “The Communist.” At the west New York, N. J., Rus- In view of war preparations now |Sian revolution celebration meetin| being made, according to Bertram D. | $48.05 was collected for The DAILY Wolfe, director of the school, new) WORKER fund after an appeal by chemical devices being developed by | Juliet Stuart Poyntz and M. J. Kovac, war profiteers for the next imperial- | chairman. ist slaughter are of interest to the! workers, whom the war department | thinks to draft again as in the last | ed at League is planning its annual ball at the New Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave., for Saturday, Jan. 14. pene sae Collection For “DAILY.” Ls oe Inter-racial Dance. An inter-racial dance is being plan- ned by the Harlem Street Nucleus of —_——_——. |the Young Workers (Communist) |League for Dec. 10 in the Imperial Capmakers to Start Hale Picketing Next Week ' nha ahs Daily Worker Ball At “Garden.” Picketing of the 50 contractors’ cap| The DAILY WORKER and Freiheit shops that locked out their warkers {will hold a ball at Madison Square last Wednesday will start Monday | Garden Dec, 17. morning, it was announced last night. | Percy Ginsberg, manager of the Chicago Cap Manufacturers’ Associa- | tion, is attempting to persuade the | New York, Other Cities 116th St. | report on the recent national conven- | Preparations for Thanks- | !¢ y- | Association of Street & The Young Workers (Communist) | large New York manufacturers to de- | clare a lock-out also, it has been learned. | Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, inc, 347 EB. 72nd.St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 5097. The situatioh of the 120,000 miners | in the soft coal lock-out in eastern Ohio and central! and western Penn- sylvania is daily becoming more acute, reports from those districts show. Officially, the lock-out began April 1, in an attempt by the coal interests to establish an open shop with its wage of $2.50 a day and to smash the miners’ union. In many sections, however. the coal operators | began systematic attempts to break the Jacksonville agreement as early as 1925. In every large city throughout the jcountry relief committees are being Organize Miners’ Relief | BOSSES PLEDGE TO KILL UNIONS IN ALL FIELDS |Unions Offer Aid to Traction Workers By ESTHER LOWELI (Federated Press). “Spread the open-shop” chword of the Natic ssociation convention in New York, Coming on the h erest juncti he metal nouncement cturers’ pro- 2 than ever chal- 1 labor. tes act like the a trade British to st > trade union action in the 5 James A. acturers” 8 e Found. ers’ Convention. classed American trade ur m with Cotn- | mun and Ameriean | Fe ion of rive on radie jca erence be- | labor union ed. | Aid Traction Union. | President William H. Barr of the | Founders ¢ ight against |injunctions as n for further | extension of the oper ban labor from all activ. i obtaining . He weuld tions for the of better working cc ions a higher standard of ng. unders’ rganization tant- ly anti-union metal manufacturers, | 4 * * Meanwhile v: compos rious unions are of- | fering «id for t fight against the Interborough Rapid Transit Co.’s in- | junetion which would practically end |free trade unions if granted. Joseph P. Ryan, president of the Interna- tional Longshoremen’s Association, jand of the city central trades coun- jcil, has declared the support of both | organizations for the Amalgamated Zlectric Rail- way Employes. Big 6 local of the | Typographical~Union, Actors Equity j and the Jewelry Workers’ Union | promise support, organizer James |Coleman of the Amalgamated an- | nounced. | A. F. of L. Faces Test. | Thanksgiving week-end, when the jsubway company’s injunction suit omes up intcourt, will bring organ- d labor to the test. The whole | American Federation of Labor is | named in this effort to stop all trade junion organizing among company- | unionized I. R. T. workers. regener ie | Another attack on a section of of ganized labcr has come from the New | York wholesale cap manufacturers. | This group locked-out nearly 1,000 |members of the International Cloth | Hat, Cap & Millinery Workers’ Union. | <7 SOE | Hosiery Workers Fight. | Aggressive action against the open-shop and company-union manus facturers is the answer of the Amer- ican Federation of Full Fashioned Tosiery Workers to attacks on labor. | The big open-shop interests are push= | ing the fight against the strong hos- | iery workers’ union as a first wedge in the battle to prevent organization of the textile industry. Gustave Geiges, hosiery union president, and John Edelman, the union’s research director, told the |New York Civic Club of their strug- | gle for decent conditions in the in- dustry. They recommended “fair to |labor” brands of hosiery as part of | their unionization campaign: Best | Knit, Gotham Gold Stripe, Lehigh, Larkwood Vamp Toe, Blue Heron, Hollywocd, Lincoln, Oliver, Silike, | Van Raalte, Granite, McCllum, Loe | gan, Esquire and M Churches Investigate. | Louis Budenz, editor of Labor Age, who has been directing the organi- tion drive in Ind olis against the Real Siik Hosiery Mills, stated | | ; that a tri-church group wee begin- ning to investigate the situation. The Federal Council of Churches (Protes- tant), Amefican Association of Rab- |bis and the National Catholic Welfare | Conference will cooperate in making a comparative study of company unions as compared with trade unions. The hosiery union and the Real Silke Company Union will be - studied, Entertainment, Dance For Colorado Strikers To raise funds for the striking Col- orado miners an entertainment and organized. A great interest is being "| shown by workers in all trades in the | struggle of their brothers in Ohio and | Pennsylvania. In New York a mass meeting will | be held Dec. 4 at Irving Plaza, Irving PATRONIZE Co-operative Repair Shop 41914 6th AVENUE eer 25th Street Sets Pressed hoes Repaired — While U Wait 25% Reduction to Striking Workers. |ers will be John Brophy, of the United Mine Workers, Powers Hapgood and several rank and file miners fresh from the fields of struggle. AMALGAMATED FOOD B ve M Ist Saturday in the month at 3468 Third Avenue,’ Bronx, N. Y. aS ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO } ~ Aavertise your union | nieetings here. For information write to 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. . The DAILY WORKER Special Rates for Labor Da gl Advertising Dept. tions. (Established 1887.) 33 First St, New York City, © e | Place and 15th St. Among the speak- | [ue to a 500 gallon fuel oil dance will be held tomorrow at 4 p. m. at 158 Carroll St., Brooklyn, under the auspices of the Industrial Work- ers of the World, VETER: Carl Helber, 69, W. 5th Union, Local 2090, teruay. St., veteran member of Carpenters’ The funeral will be held tomorrow at }1 p. m. from F. R. Levin’s funvral parlor, 227 W, 145th St. 227 DIES. BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 18. e worker was killed, one left dying four others seriously injured in an explosion today on the steai Jacob Luckenbach, which is scrapped at the union shipyard at Fairfield. “3 The explosion occurred when one of the workmen applied an pri which a superintendent said had drained, been ae sea