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QHEMSTITCHING =| ORG ANEZED. LABOR—TR « PRINCIPALS IN-F SHOPSLOCK OUT |... —— MILITANT LABOR | Ss "sate LABOR EDUCATION LABOR AND GOVERNMENT Right Wing Advertises For Scabs \ total of 18 hemstitchin, have locked out their employ the last few weeks in .a°co: between members of the } 2 LOGGING CASE COMMUNIST SPEAKING OPPOSITE BRITISH EMBASSY] {| "ict? *™.rtscnaxs | } | | LABOR AND IMPERIALISM | EN af IN-WASHINGTON, COMPARES U, S. 8. R. TO AMERICA} j) ‘““"°* *™? ok } :' By LAWRENCE TODD. {their own; the police are maintained (Fedetated Press.) \for their service, not for their repres- WASHIN Nove 99.2 Coal | Son} the press voices” their own miners in Soviet Russia are not fac- | Wishes and plans and decisions. They img a-winter ef Starvation, eviction, have ‘achieved, within the limitations ‘intimidation and-death at the hands of of the backward economic condition | of their country, what workers in Foul Who Picketed * John D, Are Given Finger-Printing of Foreign Born Will PON, turers’ “Aauwotiation and 2 jcompany gunmen, as are the coal|°)) -*' ince cA ; . . rng Vos ba ae Heay Fines . GTB mes in America, William Wein- a peat have dreamed of and Be Hit at Meetin | tional Ladies Garment Wor ‘i |stoné, organizer “for the Workers |” ts . ine, | Union, offieers of Local 41, 1. T. ar |Party,” fold an enthusiastic crowd Pp. seria Siphon’ «et ne W., reported last night. » Workerg (Communist) Party |which -gathered to. celebrate, just by way of contrast, ‘may be} A mass protest meeting against the | across the street from the British y, the 10th anniversary of the cial revolution. Wee sted g the The lockouts were di bers case because of the refu workers to register with t local organized by the righ istration in opposition to the bona | pic! proposed legislation to finger-print- | ing, photograph, register and tax) non-citizens, will be held on Friday evening, 8:20 p. m. at Hunts Point | Palace, Southern Boulevard & 163 St. | 7 -noon | : of- protest deaf and dumb only because his ad- ministration is controlled by Wall Street, for money talks, in America.” In this country the industries are conducted in order te make big profits ited the Soviet Union | summer and spoke during tke p timi ide left wing Local 41, which was|each by Mag imistically of the present and fu-' for the upper layers of society. When | Bronx. as ies ‘ ‘ recently suspended by the Interna-; Tombs Court Monday... Joseph R./ture of the workers’ republic. The an issue of class justice arises, such{ This meeting is the opening drive tional office, according to this report. | Brodsky s retained bythe Int Soviets have proved to a doubting and |@s that involved in the killing of Sac-|in a wide educational campaign ‘ Local | national Defense as co Hlaunched by the New York Council |for Protection of Foreign-Born Work- rs with headquarters at 41 Union| “From the mill-owners in Massa- uare, N.Y. 0. : ait lahin cette: ay. Madame Rosika Schwimmer will chusetts to Brandeis and Holmes on bbitie Metusipal speaker of theleven- the suprer court y” he said, ; ; pea upreme court bench,” ih d, | ing. Madame Schwimmer was re- In each of the 18 lockouts hostile world, he said, that workers 41 answered with strike declarations | for the four es F 7, |¢an administer government and or- and the 18 shops are being picketed| The workers fined ene Milton W ich, | ganized industry and make both serve daily, the union says. | 859 So. Second St., srooklyn; Julius the common welfare. Never in human Hire Sicikcheoaters: Fleiss, 6115 19th Ave., Brooklyn; history, he declared, has any country | = Hah tat Rape ie 4 A |Sophie Margolies, i We ibth St, hinown do -yast"atn, extansion of true A morning New York newspaper’) and:Mary Kaplan, 2700. Bronx Park democracy as the revolution has co and Vanzetti, said Weinstone, the beneficiaries of this capitalist regime stand together. : ‘ ? : there was one united front against ts : be encase ee vf iy COREY ane advertisements oe hem:| East. . 5 es ‘Hie? brought to Russia. True democracy, | Sacco and Vanzetti. No frame-up in cently aenien ee tya ao er omar en ane erally 0) 5 oes soit Maer aa oiedha he said, meant equality of opportun- all the long list of labor frame-ups oor ike at Se sei ie nad W. 16th St. This is the office of charged,’ William W. -Weinstone, {4 and of tights for the masses, not by the capitalist class was ever Slim the British Patliament and is a the right wing international .admin- distiiet 5 'y of ‘the Workers | the bares Sg hl class. Today in 'foul as this one.” > | world famous peace advocate. She i istration. Officers of Local 41 said|Party, said last night “They are |the Soviet Union hodearxiers become | Loud applause greeted this state-| organized the Ford Peace Ship. « this proved that the international] proof that’ the Tammany Hall auth-|20Vernment officials, blacksmiths | ment. | Some of the other speakers are: have become red commanders, and | printers have become diplomats in the service: of the workers’ state. aaa J. Rinis, member of the local union | py, of carpenters, presiding, said 2,000 of the 2,500 of his local are now un- was actively and openly hiring strike. breakers for a large section of the employers in this trade. | orities’ of New York always stand ready to support John D. Rockefeller jin his campaign against the ‘labor | Jacob Katz, Rabbi of Montefiore | |Congregration and Chaplain of Sing Sing Prison; Paul Sifton, author of i} yemel i ; ae streets. the workers walk along are | employed. “The Belt,” now playing at the Meow “the overwhelming majority of the |™OVvement, especially in the struggle | St wee hee tzid Picci . , playing h Wout ; a . ive | Of the Colorado miners against com- = : = aaa =e Provincetown Playhouse; Ludwig ‘Mrs. Fannie Clements Daniel, above, of Luverne, Ala., whose “2: hemstitchers support the progressive | °* ae siecegee eel S, “ : S eae ey OF ie, # st Es: eadership of Local 1 and ite al M"Sndorement by Tammany Hal ot MASSACHUSETTS STILL GRIPPED BY DEPRESSION, [ter 7,0. Pensa! and Jeanette 8) story of Kan fogsings led to an inveigtion Hy Atfammey-Goneral ‘i again singe this offensive began A ae tre Caled em toe Gone fox Bistecdean or Brgesigh Charles C. McCall, left, which resulted in the indictment of the re ii spi a 3 aids 3 . ‘ i a ‘ a Jalls. ‘ 7 resolveito seen siete tam by Rockefeller’s state police.” UNEMPLOYMENT INCREASES AND WAGES DECREASE Born Workers. Rev. L. A. Nalls, of Georgian, Ala., and 37 others, charges the Ns _ > Attack Militant Labor. The capitalist governmenv 1s. tire- jless in its attacks on the workers in |the country and has its eye estab- hooded Klansmen came to.her home, accused her of adultery, and flayed her with an inch strap. Calvin Poole, circuit solic flogging trials, is at the right./ The meeting will be held under the {joint auspices of the Council for Protection Born Workers, the Bronx Free F officials and the bosses,” M. B. Taft, manager of Local 41, said. CHICAGO, Ill, Noy. 29.—Depres- ‘iivr for the New York! sion still rules in Massachusetts in- 1 sequently employment is about 19 per af Bor jcent below normal for that period. dustry, according to thé October em- }Practically-all the leading industries List of Shops. The locked out shops are: Brandes'|lishedon the militants of the work- ployment report of the state depart-|of the state report employment far | lowship, and the Hunts Point Fellow. | . Laundry Workers Win & Chaskin, 149 W. 28th St.; S. Cohen,|ing class, knowing that thege-fight-| mont of lebor. The slight gain in|below the 1019 ¢90% average jship—allr non-political, and non-sec- 0 ei 00-0 erative emer 46-00, Poh Ata Comrect Tork, 120] omp-are not cafveid: to detent thelr | <ootovment, compared wich Soptemn| The, hoot and ohes ienastry ig tarian organizations. | Another Strike In N. J. W. 26th St; Central Tucking, 48 W.Jinterests, according to Rose* Baron, |her was only a third of that a year |hardest hit with working forces 42.7 | eR Re hy gat | 5 Te s ae 3 ee ¢ 25th St.; Excel Novelty, 87 W. 20th|secretary of the International Labor ago and the. general level of factory |\per centybelow- normal. Reductions be. | | _ELIZAB N. J. Nov... 29, St.; B. Gréenberg, 233 W. 86th St.;| Defense, Local New York. employment throughout the state is low the 1919-1925 average in the cose POWEF Trust Plans | fl f 0! eC. § on tion ane be I & D. Manufacturing, 45 W. 25th| “We protest and condemn the ac- 6 per cent below that of October 1926. | of other important industries include kers have been won St.; J. Isenberg, 325 W. 87th St.; La Rose Stitching, 120 W. 20th St.; Lan- day Bros. 361 W. 86th St.; Lion Tucking, 128 W. 24th St.; Chief tion of ‘Justice’ Goodman}. whq im: posed a fine of $50 on each of the four workers,” she said. They were arrested while picketing -peacefully.” by a str a week at the Up~<, To-Date Laundry, ) Pearl St., con- ducted by the International Brother- hood of Teains Chauffeurs and Aggregate weekly earnings fell off |raifroad car building and repair 15.4 2.1 per cent from September and|per cent, cotton goeds 29.3 per cent, | average wages 2.5 per cent to $24.29. /electrical apparatus 12.2 per cent, } The level of factory employment in | foundrie With Celebration To “Help”. Issue - e s and machine shops 15 per| panies Ei rene ae {Caledonia eee Ty Massachusetts now stands at 81.2 per|cent, hosiery and knit goods 15.8 per | F DETROIT a 8 ae a ee ae me eteet . ycent based on the average for ne 5 |cent, textile machinery 36.1 per cent} News During Profe Setarday I the Woxker ft ef ‘4 » 553~ 3 Pleating, 1999 es 7 | A \ s , , Work tant. € 315 W. 36th St.; Uneeda Pleating, Congress Will Pass pyears 1919-1923 as 100 per cent. mM. and woolen goods 21.9 per cent. he wee UG a er nen Miers we 119 W. 28rd St.; Fairview, 168 W. ans , grocery and meat mar- aa 3 rag: z ae : : . . 28rd St.; Oriental Button Works, 137 “New Masses” Ball Friday Night Will Bring) at 6020 14th St., near McGr: Feedsesy W. 28th St. Tillie Fox was arrested yesterday morning when picketing the Harrison On Gerrymander; No i Together Workers, and Artists “Peasants” WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 (FP).—| Probability that the senate will not | only adopt the Walsh resolution for The management committee |been bus r 3 s * m és ere investi i i 2 watered securi- ‘o the ~ Workers; artists and intellectuals | stand on the side-lines and discuss | '=VeStigation into the watered securi nore Pleating Co. When brought to the , will be papisie ante at the Workers’ | the “thisness of that” according to |tes and the service rates of the elec- | of a store, the chi : ned $10 cg ae Naa eniccra on 0 | and Peasants’ Ball at Webster Hall, | those who know | trie power trust, but will include the been that of finan in . g ; inhe. “« Je |Norris demand for investigation of tle of the pr A Local 35. ‘ 119 East 11th St., Friday night, ‘All the workers and peasants | e anting about has | | | i | Coan, Foe of Labor, Tums Journalist; Was Burns’ Friend WASHINGTON, Nov. 29.—Two| House members today declared that they would make a fight to place a! permanent limit of 435 upor the mem- bership of the “popular branch” of congress. ee The proposal will be~ineerporated in reapportionment bills to be offered by Rep. :Fenn,.(R) .of Connecticut, chairman of the House .census..com- from the Bronx to Nitchevo”—this is the slogan of the arrangement committee. They promise: workers in overalls, farmers in hig¢hboots, gay holiday costumes and pink, ma- roon red, tired, philosophic and militant personalities. | | | arranged under the auspices of the | New Masses. | | It is expected to be one of the | most colorful events of the year. Some will go to dance, some to meet their friends and others to | | Thousands of Workers Appealed Deportation FE LRT a The “Nation” May: Yet the power trust lobby, has thrown the power companies’ spo!:csmen in Wo ington into anew panic. They an- ticipate that Sen. Walsh of Montana will be chosen as a member of the | special committee, and that Sen, N | |giant power, will likewise be a mem- jber. Norris is chairman of the judi- |ciary committee, upon whose favor- | able report the special committee will | ris, ghampion of public ownership of | tors and Ford trickled thru to the werk little did it-hungry c! | tail merch nd what the prof- other re- Workers Own It. The opening of the store, however, is assured thrw subseript of shares and numerous loans from members | who better appreciate the need fo: | the: aR Mejiedd: (BR) -of b thoweed! by thi ti operation, to mobilize the purchasing | mittee, . an ep, ¢) * of || { ° |be authorized by the senate. jes ae s workers for their Michigan. ee 1] Be a Footnote to the | Cases In Last Year The Bourbon democrats have ex- [power hes ne fas ee of aaikine WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 (FP). biel The Fenn and McLeod bills will} : pected to support the Walsh resolu-| .ontact with the woskares Blair Coan, self-advertising detective, who was employed by the secretary | of the republican national committee, seek, to accomplish. substantially the | | same result by different means. Both would: provide for reapportionment of | | tthe use membership by the secre- WASHINGTON, Nov. 29. — Cases | appealed to the immigration board of | review in the office of the Secretary Congressional Record Describing Calvin Coolidge as nition for their party’s campaign next year, while anxious that no real harm tion in-the hope of producing ammv- | The Workers’ Co-operative Associ- ation intends to extend its operation to ma parts of the city which will 3 . A gm | | ; . be done the power combine. However, Be ae of di ty in 1923-24 to “get” Senators Wheeler, Se the most inéffectual president in| | of Labor, during the past fiscal year, thin | not be ed by reason of distance by f < Pion a ners 6 | ‘ ‘e was a chance that, after author- da Biteah atnre ; Sete sae Brookhart and Walsh, has a new. Se coerce pred aah new cen, the nation’s history and pointing | | totalled 82,970, involving 59,880 infiy Walsh 3 sneatl puta theloovar this first store. The rapidity with scheme for spreading reactionary}... ig i out thatthe vepublican and demo-| | aliens. = it can branch out, and the propaganda. He is writing letters to editors, offering to become their cor- respondent in Washington without charging a cent for his services,- Inasmuch as Coan was recently ins) stalled at the Wardman Park hotel in| a luxurious suite which he ‘said was Vare’s headquarters, the "general-line of his free Washington correspond- ence to newspapers is readily sur- mised. However, he encloses samples of his work, and asks that they be printed with his name on them, and | with a note that he is the author of a} book exposing Reds and liberals, | Coan was active in defense of ‘the | ’ motives of Sinclair and Burns in the | \ jury-tampering scandal a few weeks ugo, and is known to be “right” from i the power trust viewpoint, on Muscle Shoals and Boulder Canyon and ithe | issue of suppressing inquiry into the | > power lobby: in the capital. international Labor De- | fense Bazaar in Chicago, CHICAGO, Nov. 29, Volunteer workers wanted to help. in.collection-4 of goods, sale of tickets, and various preparations, to report to their I. L, D. branch secretaries, or to the Local Lincoln Street Ss. All workers and friends, who are willing to help are invited to a Social and “Boosters” meeting. for Thurs- | ‘abdut, and is therefore m6’ effective. | : secretary of commerce represents more directly the’ big business inter- | ests, has no constituency to worry Democrats Dodge... A democratic party caucus iin Sen- ator Robinson’s rooms yesterday is | said to have arrived at a decision not to take over the control of the Senate, as they very well might, during the ‘battle. over the seating of Vare and Smith. The’ ostensible reason given is that the republican party should .de de- prived of any excuse for its misdeeds ‘previous of the election: next "year, and ‘should be left’in power. 19 cratic parties had only sectional differences, Oswald Garrison Vil- lard, editor of the Nation, recom- mends to the country the forma- | tion of a “Liberal” party, accord- ing to published reports yesterday of an address by him at the Com- munity Church. The function of this third party, however, would not be to take power but to constitute a purely eritical “intelligence” in congress, | according to the title of Mr. Vil- lard’s address. The title was, “Needed, an Op- position.” | Of this total, the cases involving warrants for deportation on charges of anarchist, Communist, I. W. W. and jother radical ‘affiliations numbered 52. Those involving charges of vio- lation of the contract labor law num- bered 21,062. Those for stowaways and surreptitious entry were 13.044. Those entering within one year of de- portation were 562. The number of warrant cases in- volving appeals apainst deportation have increased while the number of appeals against refusal of original entry have decreased. GET A NEW READER! 4 DETROIT “ADVERTIS NG STUNT THAT FAILED | trust, the Bourbons and the Old Guard | republicans could keep him busy with {small details until he would tire at | the job. To Color News. Sensing the peril to its entrenched position in Washington, the trust lobby is preparing to “assist” the press correspondents to report any hearings. It will have well-paid news- prepare material which can be had by correspondents who are busy else- where. In this way many newspapers will be induced to print accounts of the inquiry which are manufactured by and for the power trust lobby Yet in spite of all that the power drive forward in America the move- ment for nationalization of power, and to raise again the issue of na- tionalization of the fuel industry as well. If carried through, it will shake to their foundations the public utility combines and their company unions, their political departments and their pretensions of fair dealing with the consumer, Attack On Third Terms WASHINGTON. Nov. (FP) | Sen. LaFollette of Wisconsin, on re- | turning to the capital, announced his intention to re-introduce and push for 29 paper men present at all sessions, to | combine may do inquiry is going to/ Reopens at Washington ~| The order ¢ measure of saving and service it can jrender the workers depends entirely on how well the progressive elements of the working class mobilize them- selves and their neighbors to patron- | ize the store. | Invited to Opening. | The Co-operative is propagandizing | thru all mediums, including leaflet |distribution in the neighborhood and | poster display in all the halls. | | Every class conscious worker | should be present at the opening of the store. The co-operative is rapidly becoming one of the main fronts in the fight against the profit system. The store will handle only the best quality meats and other foodstuffs jand will retail the famous co-opera- | tively produced “Land O’Lakes” but- | ter. Many varieties of cured fish from the Co-operative fishe of Astoria, Oregon and other imported | brands will be specialized in. The store once visited, will prove | an attraction itself, 'Border Dispute May Be | ‘Settled by Increasing ‘Visa Peried~or Quota WASHINGTO. oa workers to. keep | from Reta See that smile? Get that look of satis- faction? Notice that air of sui ness ? THAT’S THE FEEL- ING AND THE ATTI- TUDE OF A WORKER WHO KNOWS WHAT HE IS TALKING ABOUT! You know he reads THE DAILY WORKER The only sure and ae-— curate source of all La- bor news! SUBSCRIBE! And why, not send in a sub for your shop-mated RENEW If your sub is expiring, RATES ar nths $6.00 day, 8"p. m., December 1, at Work- | adoption his resolution declaring it | test from the American Fed CUT HERE ers Lyceum, 2733 Hirsch Blyd.,*but | the judgment of congress that occu- | Labor, is under the consid rey pert Coo ae are urged to come laden with goods, pancy of the presidential offiee | the department of state s labor, THE DAILY WORKER to bring complete reports, names of should be limited to eight years. There are two po: solutions, at Firs St,, New York, Nv ¥. donators, ete. The Bazaar will be held He suggests that since President |it was hinted, one that the p 33 First St, New York, Wome December 9, 10, and 11, at the Wicker Park Hall, 2040 West North Avenue.| TRAIN USES OIL, STEAM. LONDON, Nov, 29. — A locomotive using both oil and steam has just been completed at Leeds. The fuel cost of the new locomotive will be mach lower _ than that of the old type. BUILD THE DAILY -WoRKERY ~~ that he The iden of risking: ania ator or two to drive some. more or less serviceable airplane over seas in order to popularize a big American exporting city has appealed to business men this year. Lately theré-has"been Giles of the “Wanda? conipulsion from his backers hy ey \ | certain tendency on the part of the aviators to rebel. The latest is Captain Good Will Messenger,” named after the wife of a rich Detroiter. Under started, from San Francisco to Hawaii, but he came back soon with news had run into astorm—whereé the weather bureau denies there was one. 7 Coolidge is not a candidate for a third term, the issue becomes impersonal, and the present moment is adapted to a declaration on principle against the third term ambitions of future ambitious presidents. PITTSBURGH WORKERS GIVE. South Slavic Workers’ Club has do- nated a to The DAILY WORKER.! Work Daily for the Daily Worker! during which non-naturalized wo |living in Canad could secure visas | to come into the United States be in- jereased, or to increase the Canadian | | quota so that those who are unable | to secure visas may enter the United | | States within the next few months. | | If the law stands, it will go into et-| PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 29.—The | fect December 1st. Enclosed $ mos. subscription. for ...