The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 2, 1927, Page 5

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Foreign-Born Council to. Protest at Alien Registration Dawes Endorses Lowden Campaign For Presiency WASHINGTON, Dec. 1. — After a} call at the white house today which | a he said was only for the purpose of! ¢ paying his respects to Coolidge, Vice President Dawes endorsed Frank O. Lowden, former governor of Illinois, and son-in-law of the Pullman mi lions for republican candidate for president of the United e8 in 1928. Cor Believes Coolidge Wen’t Run. nf Besieged by news}iiper men in the | corridor of the white house Dawes | 5, dietated to the president’s stenog- | rapher, the following statément: i “Let me say again, lest there should p. be any doubt about it, that Iam not! oun a candidate for the presidential nom- ination and favor, the nomination of Frank 0. Lowde President Co the Ford peace ship in 19 3 rk Council for the Foveign-Born phot« graph and tax nuel Cellar riday, the under auspices i autho: Bee ie rs et jplaying at the Provincetown Play-|ers’ Union. No Comment from Lowden. |house, Ludwig Lore, editor of the CHICAGO, Dec. 1. -— Former Gov-|“Volkszeitung”, Dr. Leon R. Land, | £ the Bronx Free Fellowship, | tall, journalist, and Jeanette | Board of the Cloak and Dressmakers’ field organizer for the| Union, will diseuss the latest develop- Alex Field, president of the! ments in the union Sunday ernor Frank 0. den of ~ Illinois, | \eader mentioned as a pr ential candidate, | J. 0. B declined to make 7 comment here |p, Peart, today on Vice President Charles EB. il. Dawes’ formal statement endo: ¢ ~ Point him for the presidential nomin: Fellowship, will Road To Freedom Ball. Young Workers League Ball. | The Young Wor! League annual | ball will be held S ' Feb. 11, at Harlem Casir and Lenox Ave. ‘Daily Worker-Freiheit Ball Will be Colorful; Artists and Labor Writers Will be Present The ball arranged by The DAILY ; Lenox Ave. There will also be official or in- WORKER and “The jieit” for | formal representatives. of humer- the new Madison Square Garden | ous labor and fraternal organiza- for Dee. 17 will be -colorful, the | tions in the throng. a agement committee promised | night. | hirty thousand left wing work- ers of the city are expected to at- | All the writers and artists who read or contribute to the two militant labor papers will be there. Volunteer committees have been formed to make the affair a suc- In addition te the dancing there will be an elaborate program of entertainment. Prizes. will. be awarded in various contests. HG BAZAAR OPENING TONIGHT Dec. 2, 3 and 4th THREE DAYS BAZAAR for the Benefit of the UJ ELORE in the Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 E. 81 St. } (ae Dancing Every Night—Good Pro- gram—Hungarian Workers’ Orchest- ra—Bronx Hungarian Women’s Sing- ing Society—Hungarian Singing Society—And Many Other Features Tickets: Friday & Sunday 25¢e, Saturday 50c. Hear the Story of the Striking Miners told by Striking Miners MINERS’ STRING ORCHESTRA 1 IN WORKING CLOTHES } AND BURNING LAMPS WILL PLAY \ \ Addresses by \JOHN BROPHY \ POWERS HAPGOOD- TOM TIPPET and other prominént speakers Striking Miners’ Mass Meeting STUYVESANT CASINO 142 SECOND AVENUE (near 9th St.) Sunday, December 4, at 2 ADMISSION FREE = & Auspices Miners’ Relief Committee ° . 799 Broadway, Room 540 Plans Rosika Schwimmer, organizer of | who was | of y T. Hunt, for-|Unitea Council : abe ati, will be the | Women will hold a banquet and dance | WVi}] Discuss U. S, 8, Bi similar mass | Saturday 66} son Ave., Brooklyn. | at 8:30} of the} Photographic Union Entertainment. other speakers sched- | friends are invited to an entertain- are Dr. Jacob Katz, }ment to be held Saturday evening at g ng Prison, Paul|the Labor Tempe, 14th St. and Sec- of “The Belt”, nowjond Ave., by the Photographic Work- be|at the open forum at Hopkinson Hall, A costume ball will be given by the turday evening, Road to Freedom group Christmas 10, 116th St. | Eve, at Harlem Casino, 116th St..and jurday evening at 8 o’clock at 542 EB. THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1927 rere wage Five ‘LABOR AND FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS The New: FP |yesterday announce Workers’ Culture Club. to all labor organ P. Yudich and Ben Lifshitz will lec-| papers to run benef wrights a special o ation and ney sentation of im Jo Ba: |The Centuries is a play of the E: Side; dealing with strikes and other |problems of interest to the militant | workers of this city, Among the organizations that have already contracted for special. nights ‘or benefit performances are the Win- dow Cleaners’ Protective --Union, which has been-on strike for many weeks, the United Council of Work- Club, 1111 Rutland Road, | ‘The Centuries,” by * Esperanto Class. A class in Esperanto will start to- * * Bath Beach Ball. Bath Beach Council No. 10 of the} of Working Class, t 8:30 p. m. at 1940 Ben-} aaa . Beeiiyns 5 “| Opposition at Series of District Meetings Here Section membe: p meetings to discuss the question of the Opposition in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union have been arranged by the |New York district agitation propa- ganda department. discussion will be led by a speaker representing the district executive committee. Discussion by the mem- bership will follow. F * * All photographic workers and their * ry * Hyman Speaks Sunday. Louis Hyman, manager of the Joint The following, meetings are sched- uled: Section 2—Tonight, 6:30 p. m., 101 W. 27th St., Alexander “Bittelman, speaker, Section 3—Monday, Dec. 5, 6:30 p. m., 101 W. 27th St., William W. Wein- stone, speaker. tion 5—Tuesday, Dec. 6, 8 p. m., 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx, Alexander Trachtenberg, speaker, Section 6—(sub sections 6A and 3B only). Thursday, Dec. 8, 8 p. m., it 29 Graham Aye., J. Mindel, speak- ie at 2 p.m. |422 Hopkinson Ave., | * * | U. C. W. C..W. Banquet. ; The United Council of Working! |Class Women will hold a banquet Sat- | Brooklyn. * {145th St. to raise funds for the de- | fense of the arrested cloak and dress- | makers. | * | Class For Women. | Juliet Stuart Poyntz will conduct a course at Irving Plaza, 119 E. 15th | St., Saturday at 3 p.m. This class is Ce ik Sub-section 6C—Monday, Dec. 5 |given free of charge to the members|, ee Piva eee : of the United Council of Workingelass | ‘8? Pitkin Ave. Wolfe, speaker. | Women and will train the women to} Nightworkers—to be scheduled ater, Bert Miller, speaker, In New Jersey. Newark and Elizabeth (at Newark) Baw’ . ‘aie L j—Tonight, 8 p. m., at Slovak Home, A meeting of all shop chairmen of Paterson— P s |the Iron and Bronze Workers’ Union | Benjanin Lani uke jeter, jwill be held Tuesday evening at the Passaic—to be ainounced later, D. | office of the union, 7 E. 16th St. at | penjamin speaker i | 7:30 o'clock. Eg a ta chooks | A mass meeting which the union| Jersey City, Union City and Bay- i arranged will be held Saturday at | ON (in Jersey City) Dee. 11, at 116 understand the need and methods of | organization. | Iron Workers Union. | 2:30 p. m, at the 7 E. 15th St. address. | Mercer St., Rebecea Grecht, speaker. | | The district agitation propaganda Harlem Inter-racial Dance. | department. yesterday issued a state- Something new in the way of | ment suggesting that Party members |dances will be the inter-racial dance |read the pamphlet, “Leninism and jarranged by the Harlem street nu- | Trotskyism,” and the current issues jcleus of the Young Workers’ League |f the Communist International and |Dec. 10 at 8:30 p. m. at Imperial Au- | the International Press Correspon- | ditorium, 160-164 W. 129th St. dence hefore the meetings of. their | An tnusual feature of the dance | sections, | will be a Negro jazz band. | CO-OPERATIVE Dental Clinic 2700 Bronx Park East Ap’t C. I. TEL: ERBROOK 0568. DR. I. STOMLER Surgeon-Dentist DIRECTOR ——-Monday Vednesday Saturday from TONIGHT’S Friday, December Schwartz | 124 East 8ist Street SPECIALIST for Kidney, Bladder, Urology, Blood and Skin diseases and Stomach Disorders, 1, |} X-RAY Hxaminations -for Stones, || j{{ ‘fumors and internal disturbances. | |}; Dr. Schwartz will be glad to give! | you @ free consultation. Charges| | for examinations and treatment! j is moderate. | }| Special X-RAY EXAMINATION §2, HOURS: Daily: 9 A. M. to-7 P, M, | Sunday: 10 A. M. to 12 Noon Butterfield 8799. Cae Dr. A. CARR ‘SURGEON DENTIST 22 years uninterrupted practice, Personal attention, Workers’ prices, 183 EAST 84th STREET Lexington ‘Ave. . New. Yori, At 119 East WEBSTE 4pCor. Vrel. Lehigh 6022, Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF } SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: 9:30-12 A. M, 2-3 1, M, i] Daily Except Friday and Sunday. Labor Organizations Are Taking Special Nights for Performances of “Centuries’ t performances | st;ture this evening at the Workers’ |during the current p: x Culture at the! Brooklyn. Lectures will be held every ulevard | week at the club. d by Pro- | Workers. s part of a campaign night at 8 p.m. at the Esperanto Insti 8 to register, finger-| tute, Steinway Hall, 119 W. 57th S non- * * * -/ing te an ankle injury suffered by} who formerly were attached to the In each case the | “New Masses” | Admission $1.50 in Advance—$3.00 at the Door TONIGHT { ~ | W JERSEY | ’ | Workers Party Activities s Housew’yes, the Dental M-- Union and the Anti-Horty | ‘CAP WORKERS OF “CHICAGO LOCKED OUT BY BOSSES Union Head Refuses to Lead Struggle NEW YORK- chani League. Basshe himself is now playing the role of the rabbi in his own play, ow- Williamsburg Affair Saturday. A reunion of all party members Kirk Ames, who has been pla: “Bill” in “The Belt,” a second ; Playwrights’ Theatre show now run-| gt the La e, 46 Ten Eyck St., Brook- yning at the Provincetown. Ames’ in-|lyn, Proceeds will go to The DAILY ;jury made it necessary for Lawrence | WORKER. | Bolton, the rabbi of “The Centuries,” | ill y evening at 8 o’clo + © 2 i ap | P - CHICAGO, Dec. 1——The Cap - {to return to his former role of “Bill” | Weinstone Lectures Tonight. om head a he aig uae i ‘ jin “The Belt.” No one elgg but) william W. Winstone, district| locked out. 4 |Basshe knew the rabbi role and he| secretary of the Workers (Commun-| While the w s are not willing | filled the vacancy. jist) Party, will lecture on the’ “1928 1t “11. mM... 7 Political Arena,” tonight at 8 p. m. ‘Paxton Hibben Talks af at the Open Forum conducted by the Workers School Tonight Party at 81 at 110th St. 25, give concessions to the employers; r of the nufacturers’ ates publicly that Max ’ York, president s’ Unior vor of to the assoc! m of on ‘Modern Biographies’ | unemployed Members of Section 2. ‘ ce wor the ! a All unemployed members of Sec-; Workers have una agreed | Paxton Hibben, author of “He tion 2 are urged to attend a meeting | Would be a ma h union, |Ward Beecher,” recently published,|today at 1 p. m. at 101 W. 27th St. 4 meeting oF tne Union tease {will talk on “Modern Biographies |Very important questions will be dis-|5@ntatives and the an nufacturers jand Biographers,” tonight, at 8 at| cussed. riation, at which Mullenbach, aa |the Workers School, 108 E. 14th St. | WA Bice | Partial chair sided. The em- This talk forms part of the sym- Jersey City Dance. | ployers’ repre: ves stated that |posium on “Social Forees in Amer-| The Jersey City Branch of the| they would not keep their agreement jican Literature” being conducted by | Workers (Communist) Party will with the union. The bosses’ spokes- | P i q > eve, | men refused even to listen to the ap- jhold a social and dance Saturday eye- | peal of ‘Mullenbach | i ning at 8 o’clock at the Ukrainian | fe @ |Hall, 160 Mercer St Witt Now Helps | e will not come | Floyd Dell and Joseph Freeman. Others who will appear in this , course on subsequent Friday evenings {include Moissaye J. Olgin, editor of |“The Hammer,” Jewish Communist | | Monthly, and author of “The Soul of |the Russian Revolution”; Michael {Gold and John Dos Passos, of the “T am Brownsville Affair. pio Chicago ; The Workers’ Center of Browns-| declared the manuf | ville will celebrate the moving of its on ene | headquarters to 1689 Pitkin Ave. with | | New Playwrights Theatre; V. F. Cal- la banquet and entertainment Satur: | | verton, editor of “The Modern Quar- | day, at 8 p. m, at the new address, top | | terly”; W. E. Woodward and Bertram | floor, D. Wolfe. | » lead Bosses Organ. At a meeting of the locked out cap- makers the workers an energetic 2 manufacturers. seal 5 held yes this morning to carry struggle against At a meeting on | Newark Classes. E ee itis sina inebedby: di \terday the embers voted not to ONT zs ” | e ses are conducted by the! grant conc 3 e employers |“New Masses” Ball to | workers’ Sehecl ut Newark. Monday, {tut to fight aeinst piece werk agid a class in advanced English is held | jat 7:30 p. m. and a class in Funda-'| !mentals of Communism at 8:30 p. m,|night at Wednesday a class in elementary|§. 188th St., at 8. ; Raglish starts at 8 p\m. The school Section 1 Functionaries. isWY Slovak Home, 52 West St. A meeting of the functionaries of Attract Hundreds at | Webster Hall Tonight she abolition of the 40-hour week, adquarters, | Every celebrity in town will be at the New Masses “Workers’ and} Lower Bronx Meeti Saati vill be held Monday at 8 | ” " Meeting. | Section 1 will be held Monday at | Peasants’ Ball” to be held at Web- Branch 1, Section 5 ; | t 15 E, 8rd St. later Hall, East 1ith St. and Third} Section §,, will meet: to: Up. m. at 16 |! ‘ | Ave., tonight. | An annual affair, it attracts hun-| dieds of workers, writers and artists |some who write and others who read| the only radical magazine of arts land letters in the United States. | | Those who have announced they | will be present include T. J. O’Flah- | ferty, Paxton Hibben, John Dos Pas- | ‘sos, Robert W. Dunn, Hugo Gellert, | |A. B.° Magil, Floyd Dell, Harry | |Freeman, Otto Sogolow, Erie Wal- jrond, Charles W. Wood, Art Young, | John Howard Lawson, Don Brown| and a large number of others. THE PRESS COLOR Bole Genre? B ALIL Given by the ~ DAILY WORKER and the PRELHELT | | Save Greco and Carrillo! THE NIGHT 2nd—at 9 o’Clock Saturday Evening 7 Madison Sq. Garden 49th St. and Eighth Ave. WORKERS’ AND PEASANTS’ DEC. 1927 11th Street | R HALL SOCIAL REUNION Of Former Williamsburg W.P.E. Comrades Saturday, Dec. 3, 1927, 8:30 p.m. 9 EAST 115th STREET cond Ave. New York, WANTED: Cood Stenographer; Dr. J, Mindei Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183 Must be expert; member Workers Party or Y. W. L. Apply afternoon Editor, Daily Worker Co-oprnative Repam Snop! 41914 6th Avenue, near 25th St. uits Pressed a: Pat Si. Repaired While U Wait | | —— eh =< !Great Assortment of All Makes of | {ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPRY |} | Ty7éwriters. Portables, New and Re- STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Bnitt,,, All. Qugrantesd. Patronize Our Friend Moderate Prices. For Sale, Rental SPIESS STUDIO and Repairs. Open: 10 A.M, to 9 P.M. 54 Second Ave, cor. ard St. - International Rpemndinte Co, [Emon Bee Or eT aned test) || peas, Shinde tl ag pega AT THE LAISVE 46 Ten Eyck Street, Near Lorimer St., Brooklyn, N. Y. REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED FREE Admission $1.00 Phone Stuyverant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th St. New York. PROCEEDS TO DAILY WORKER Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 6865 Are You Getting FINCO Co-operative BAKERY PRODUCTS (Union Made) If not, let us know and we'll instruct our driver to cali at your home. Finnish Co-operative Trading Association, Inc. 4301 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 3 er We Cater to Students of Health Eatwell Vegetarian Restaurant | 78 Second Ave., near 4th St. |) lg | Only strictly VEGETARIAN m served, No canned fvods, or animal fats used, All di seientificall; prepared, Pass the Papee to a Fellow Worker! | a

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