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

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1927 Page Five Ben Cold Will Cut Fur at Bazaar for Defense Connmittes Ben Gold, manager of the New| | Our Artist Surrenders ae es ene el ye Workers Party Activities NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY pee Ae Sport Meeting Today. 14th St. * * * The district sports committee will meet today at 1 p. m. at 108 E.) USSR Delegates | Here to Purchase Machine Supplies (LABOR AND FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS ——— Iron Workers’ Meeting. , The Architectural Iron, Bronze and Structural Workers’ Union will hold a ma meeting this afternoon at the Rand School, 7 E. 15th St., to A Free Ticket? ‘Joint Beard Faces - Fine In Strike Cases | Local i! to Elect the wae fF ; ‘ Eleven representatives of the Su-|acquaint the workers with conditions | ce Chur York Joint Board Furriers Union an- An anti-injunction meeting will be | preme Economic Council of the Soviet in the trade 11 Monday t nounced yesterday his intention to as- _,|held next Tuesday at 7 p. m. by Sec- | ttnion, after being taken to Ellis Is- . * ing leaders o' sist in a unique way at the furriers| “Hither a ticket or a d id tion 2, Workers (Communist) Party, 'jand on their arrival here on the Cun. Maraheca of Local 33 Dressmake repair and remodelling booth of the | the gentle Mrs. Fred at Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. and 41st 7, r ard Liner Wednesd: £ 3 ss Berengaria ‘ < tarnations found gui Joint Defense Bazaar, Grand Central | her mother trotting efi he DA St. The speakers will be Jay Love-' were released on $300 bond each. y Members of Local $8, International Murray Palace, 46th St. & Lexington Ave.,] WORKER Ball. (There will be no stone, executive secretary of the terday afternoon. This is to guaran-| Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, ominen: starting Dec. 28. divorce according to reliable informa- who have articles for the Joint De- | Party, and William F. Dunne, of The tee their return to R ia after they ; $10,000 dam: “Liebowitz and I,” Gold said, “will | tion.) DEAT AV ORAB, 7 ullgt Stuart nays madela atx monks survey tn thie| mee Cupmiuce Bevan, ahould tae urers’ As do all the cutting of the garments or- SUES a ERT RIT Poyntz will preside. country. them before Wednesday, to 41 Un ome before dered at the fair. And it will be the |Plane With 8 Machine busiest fur shop in the city for nine Arrange For Lenin Memorial. The delegation wil] devote its time Square, Room 714, and file at The DAILY , Supreme : e to a study of agricuitural impliments new. Rd . |sent the ra pee ays. None but members in good/Guns Tested; Found OK | gehearsal for the dance in the and stteode jepiculturs purchase of /,,vuliet Stuart Poyntz will lecture on | WORKER Ball, hall official, standing of the New York Joint —— forthcoming Lenin Memorial Pageant The World Situation an s E. Board will be permitted to work in this strictly union shop manned by CURTIS FIELD, L. I, Dec. 16. A huge war-plane, carrying eight ma will be held today at 2 p. m. at (rving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving millions of dollars worth of equip-| ment. | on Labor” at the Bronx Open Forum , Local Foreign-Born t Louis Hyman, Joseph Borach- Members of Delecation | tomorrow at 8 p. m. at 2075 Clinton z ther leaders one xpert: ver, ‘oce: ters, | -hine iS a racks rry a 2,00° | 5 ‘ rey 8 A | Ave | ne Wy: ha 1 an injunction sis- hailers, operators and finishers, Spe: | vound bomb and three 200" pounder: | Ia¢e:, Badith Segal is in charge. The The delegation consists of Ivan ees Conference Will Be zi s manufacturers tial privilege has been issued by the|as well as enough gas to fly 5,00¢| “dress for the rehearsal was incor- Marakoff, president of the Soviet Road To Freedom Ball. | Held Here Tomorrow ‘hrough obtained with the union for holiday and night work, but| miles, more than enough to reach peu Soncaneed gesterdey: jue ive eu tensor Seater: A Road to Freedom group costume ht wing administration ‘ A Ane ‘ ade | Ba 3 SGN G | Gregoravich; tephan renikoff; Ss int ; irst conference 2 New :¢ onal Ladies’ G ent Re a other trade See ie Gees ee ae Hudson County Membership Meet. | Vaseilif Bazulov; Daniel Kashinko;| all will be held Christmas eve at The first conference of the New nal Ladies’ Garm Furriers are engaged in preparing $25,000 worth of furs for display, ranging from french seal to mink. In addition to -the large stock of furs, the Joint Defense Committee re- ports receiving thru the Retail Groc- expectations in speed, lifting capacit and landing speed. be submitted to the army as a basi for spreading Mexico and Nicaragua. more “good-will” This airship wi! tc The Party branches of Jersey City, Union City, Bayonne and Cliffside will hold a membership meeting to- morrow at 2 p. m. at 160 Mercer St., Jersey City, to discuss the Opposition in the Russian Communist Party. Eugene Lugovoslov, head of the Tom- ski factory; Ivan Vzdanoff; Vasily Paloko and Hakov Ivanchinko, head of the Omsi factory. Virtually all are engineers or fac- | tory managers. | jthe Harlem Casino, 116th St, and Lenox Ave. * * * Newark Christmas Dance, The International Labor Defense of |Newark will hold an entertainment York Council for the Protection of Foreign Born Workers will be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th St. The con nee will s paign of publi alien le m- The injunction re- t Board from calling kes in shops where workers had n locked out for refusing to reg- r with the right wing dual union. an’s Last Stand. = ee ‘ A | re : Vork- ns to be the final stay ery and Dairy Clerks" Union '810,000 | Ga] @ Answers Query | 2m! Gardos will report for the dis- In spite of the fact that the dele- | 8d dance aaratiee ee Ts \ Teed lof the right wing's: destralieaam worth of groceries at such low prices | ENCE NEWETS QUECTY | :rict executive committee. gation was met at the pier by repre-|°TS perch 3 Serene: jing a tacks on the needle trades unions,” a that a thrifty housewife who’ stocks | Qyy Money’sWhereabou* ie Pees sentatives of the United States Steel Caniuitice Meet | born Joint Board spokesman said yester- up winter supplies from this bazaar | ae Comrades, Attention! Corporation, government authorities GOT eV Ee | An ay. “The workers will soon rid the 4 will save 50 cents on every dolla | Mme. Bran: de Petschenk:| All comrades having banners or sought to make their entrance diffi-| All volunteers for the Joint De-| New York y gainst the pro. ation of all such elements.. A Volunteers and committees working [hone atatsed’ Is s of thousands of | costumes of peasants, red soldiers and cult. fense Committee bazaar will meet} ,o<eq legislation will be started at set of temporary officers are for the bazaar are called to a | for. Russian. children who,|ted sailora should communicate with mee jMonday at 6:30 p. m. at the Labor | once, spokesmen for the council] ready to take over the work of any mobilization meeting to be held at the | as ees refugees in France, | Adolf Wolff, 225 W. 12th St., to vo'- Labor Temple, 14th St. Ave., Monday at 6:30 p. m. & Second |; g much difficul ing what heca y in explain- of all the money unteer for the Lenin memorial pa- geant to be held at Madison Square Wuxtra! Al Smith Has| No Objection to Being Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave., to| stated Jast night. complete final arrangements for the | 9-day fair to be held at Grand Cen- Speakers at the conference will in- elude Dr. Edmund Chaffee, of the, ;of us who may be sent to jail.” { The names of those who are to ap- \1 rself refusing |Garden Jan, 21, * * * tral Palace, beginning Dec. 23. |Labor Tem: Robert W. Dunn, Siar warene ea i she The lady clears herself by refusing |Garden Jan. 21. Delivered Nomination z Ps FA | Maw Gigs Libeeuee User eal one i ity Hall Park, tae . to m | * * i } ‘ ner’ 3 ui s » and! day are Louis Hy: f a , Joi Patronize Our Advertisers |‘°,7**9,2, a Section 2) Nesting! se Kreymborg Recital. st Burkhardt, Amalgamated|Board; Joseph Borachovitz, manager partner | Oriental ball, h was scheduled] All unit and subsection agitprop Alfred E. Smith would not object will | Food Workers, PANTS To match every coat or Wednesday night at the fashion- ‘ble Park Lane was suddenly called directors and literature agents of Sec- tion 2 will meet today at 1 p. m. at 10,000 pair of pants of the finest woolens & worsteds $5.95 and up Also the best Pants to order for reasonable Prices. Best wo: R. & G. 40-53 Delancey St., bet. ¥ JREL, Del., Dec..16. — A com- ed air tank in the workroom of local Ford auto agency blew up jay driving the tank through the AW intil 6 P. M OFFICE rs open turday 1.110 West 40 St. pron err iobo ECE PARTE SeCgaenEEEN Painters, Attention Yote for a Cleaa, Trustworthy Administration VOTE FOR EMIL JUST, U. L. 499 JOHN HILFERTS, U. L. 848 LOUIS KOSLOF, U. L. 905 HARRY BLUM, U. L. 1011 A UNITED TICKET PETER ROTHMAN, U. L. 499, for Day Secretary for Business Agents Saturday, December 17 8A. M. to 5 P.M. YORKVILLE CASINO, 210 E. 86th St. PAINTERS’ UNION LOCAL 499, 848, 905, 1011 BRING YOUR DUES BOOKS. '/DISCUSSION ON RUSSIAN OP- Unit 2F, 1D, will hold an educa- at 383 First St. A. Gussakoff will iead the discpssion. * * * Lecture On Injunctions. Harry Blake will lecture on anti- labor injunctions at a meeting of Sub- | Subsection 1D. Subsection 1D will discuss the im- ing Tuesday at 6 p. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E, Fourth St. * * | NIGHT WORKERS TO CONTINUE | tional meeting Monday at 6:30 p, m.| portance of a labor party at its meet- | night. | their services as students and others to the bestowal of the presidential candidacy for 1928, although he says, A | According to Ralph O. Brewster, | governor of Maine, the New England states are backing Herbert Hoover. |He stated that General Dawes is con- |sidered also, because Paul Revere is jhis ancestor. IT’S THE ACTORS’ TURN NOW. which the proceeds will go to the |members of the cast, will be given at the New Playwrights’ Theater Sunday A number of the cast donate receive only nominal compensation, according to the directors. Many benefit performances for trade unions , | POSITION, WELCOME the Rank and File Trade Union Delegation just arrived from QSOVINT RUSSIA at COOPER UNION, Third Avenue and Eighth Street WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1927, at 8:30 P.M. promptly! MEMBERS OF THE DELEGATION WILL SPEAK, Chairman HENRY T. HUNT, former Mayor of Cincinnati. ADMISSION 25c.—Auspices of New York Committee for the American Trade Union Delegation, eo A’ special meeting Tuesday, Dee. | 20, at 3 p. m. will be held by the Night Workers at 108 E. 14th St. NEWS FROM NEW JERSEY NEWARK, N. J.—A call has been issued by the New Jersey Federation of Labor through its secretary, Hugh V. Reilly, for a meeting in the New- ark Labor Lyceum to discuss the labor bills to be introduced in the next session of the Jersey state leg- islature. At the last ion every bill favorable to labor was killed. All local unions are urged to send dele- gates prepared with bills that effect on of the state leg- islature the painters’ union was re- sponsible for the introduction of a labor bill which would compel all manufacturers using ingredients like benzol in the manufacture of paints to designate them on the containers. As result of a number of deaths and serious injury to several workmen in| the factories the State Department of | Labor has conducted a thoro investi- gation, according to a statement by the sceretary, Dr. McBride. He prom- ises drastic action against the use of benzol in the chemical industries of the state. oe 8 6 Praise For Policy. | TRENTON, N. J.—Last month at the graduation class of the state po- lice, Henry Hilfers, formerly state secretary of the N. J. State Federa- tion of Labor and at present secre- tary of the Essex Trades Council, paid high tribute to the state police and praised them for their activities, COLOR COLOR }/DAILY WORKER readers will recall LIGHT Costume Ball LIGHT that Hilfers was date Ae planitie Given by THE ROAD TO FREEDOM “Christmas Eve., Dec, 24, 1927 (Sat. Evening) ‘At the HARLEM CASINO, 116th Street and Lenox Avenue HALL JOHNSON’S HARLEM ORCHESTRA TICKETS on sale: Anarchist Center, 149 E. 23d St.; and School, 7 E. 15th St.; Jimmy Higgin’s Book Shop, 106 University Pl.; Rogin’s Vege- tarian Restaurant, 13 St. near 2 Av.; Solin’s Restaurant, 216 E. 14 St. The Daily Worker requests that no conflicting affairs be ~ arranged for JANUARY 13 last state convention for shortage of funds in his accounts and for acquir- ing funds from open shop employers to cover the deficits in the state labor treasury. * * * PEACE CONFERENCE IN N. J. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Dec. 4.— The response of the mock Peace Con- ference at Geneva to Russia’s plan of actual disarmament, has finally convinced the International Youne People’s Societies of Christian En- jeavor, which is in conference here. ‘hat resolutions for peace are not enough, “We have been resoluted to death”. said Edward F. Gates, general sec- retary. “We are here with the idea f formulating some definite, tang- We program for peace.” NEW COOP APAPTMENTS, (By Federated Press.) Six cooperative apartment houses, containing 1,105 rooms and housing 293 families, have been completed in ‘he Van Courtland Pes’: section of the "ronx by the Amalgamated Clothing ‘Workers of America and approved by ‘he state board of housing. an and sympathetic groups have been iven in the past. , Alfred Kreymborg give a troubadour recital of his own poems with music at the New School for program is by special request of the class. * * * Women’s Class Today. The class for active members of the United Counsel of Working Class Women will meet at 3 p. m, today at the Irving Plaza, Irving Place and SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 16,—Un- successful in three previous attempts to shatter the world’s record for sus- tained flight, Lieut. George P. Pond, U. S. N., and Captain Charles Kings- ford-Smith, Australian aviator, were scheduled to go aloft again today. They will fly a tri-motored Fokker plane. 1573 Third Ave, B. WANKEL & SON (Bet. $8-89th) New York City Big Variety CARVING SETS FROM $4.50 UP. Christmas Tree Lights with Mazda Lamps $1.49 set of 8 lights. of Tool Sets $4.50 up. | | “The Centuries, SCHOOL L “H SYSTEM. to the city” the request of the Board of Estimate for an appropriation of $10,000 for initial equipment and other initial expenses of fitting up and equipping new lunch centers. Linville said the school lunch sys- tem needed more organization and provision for competent management “There does not seem to be any adequate explanation for the recent downward trend of textile wages,’ ays the December issue of Facts for Workers, issued by the Labor Bureau, Inc. “Operations are not being cur- tailed, and mill earnings for the first half of 1927 showed improvement.” Loe: jager, dre: Charles S. Zimmerman, man- department; Julius Port- {noy, treasurer, Joint Board, Business | ff, because the “noble” lady said|i01 W. 27th St. ‘Ihave done nothing to accelerate the | Social Research, 465 W. 23rd St.,| Henry R. Linville, president of the| Agents Robert Farber, Sam Spoil, and vest, H] he w o donated the sete movement in’ my behalf.” Smith) Wednesday at 8:20 p. m. This is the | Teachers’ Union, has sent a letter to|Hyman Grossman, Rose Prepstein, Largest selection of age suins of money for the affair 2F, 1D. stated that he approved of the OPeN | jast lecture-recital of the term and the | the Board of Education characterizing | ) r Kravitz, Peter Rothenberg, Pants in New York faut to ‘lcnow iaewa they axe: id “| |discussion of his “availability.’ as “pure waste of effort and unf: ‘annie Golos, Hyman Koretz, A, | Grassi, Ben Miller, William Himmel- jfarb, Elias Kudrenetsky and Anna | Garish and Hyman Halpern, both shop chairmen. 7 * * * Local 10 Election. David Dubinsky, manager of Local . ef ry 10, International Ladies’ Garment Imanship and qual io section 6A Monday at, 6:30 p. m.at! A benefit performance of “The| loth St. =~ [oo a maintenance cont basis. Workers’ union will today stage his guaranteed S °O CHT 46 Ten Eyek 2 Brome |Centuries,” by Em Jo Basshe, in TRY FLIGHT RECORD. | RAPS TEXTILE WAG WAGE cuts. yearly “elections” in the cutters local. Discussions held among the cutters in the garment market shows a gen- eral distinction to participate in what termed by them “a yearly farcial performance.” Save Greco and Carrillo! “Respectables” Offended at Strikers’ Presence At Benefit Performance At New Playwrights’ The New Playwrights’ Theatre is getting entirely too working classy to suit some of the prospective pa- trons of this little Commerce St. playhouse, where Em Jo Basshe‘s play of New York East Side life, ”” is being produced. Representatives of a Zionist or- ganization attended “The Centuries” one night last week as the guest of the New Playwrights for the pur- pose of determining whether they considered the play suitable for a benefit performance. But they left the theatre at the end of the sec- ond act. They expressed objections not to “The Centuries” or its man- ner of production but to the class of people who made up the audience,- according to the directors. The house had been sold out that night to the striking Window Cleaners’ Protective Union and the audience was made up of these workers and their friends and families. “The New Playwrights directors are incorrigible, however,” Michael Gold, one of the directors, said. “We aspire to attract more audiences which will be equally objectionable to such ladies and gentlemen.” | Coming Friday + $290,000 Merchandise at Half Price Every Night Lexington Av Movies and Dancing Grand Central Palace enue and 46th Street New Year’s Costume Ball Saturday, ae ee day, December 31 et Chinese, Vegetarian & Meat Restaurants

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