The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 22, 1927, Page 5

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r a 7 Children Organize . . for Miners’ Relief — PRET LE The latest development i iners’ relief activity in thi mation of the Children’s Pro Committee for miners’ relief. gates from various child and organizations have laid systematic relief work among dren’s organizations. Among those Ukrainian Workmen’s § plans f chil- in Harlem and Brooklyn with the Non-Partisan Schon the Children’s Au; dow Cleaners’ Union and the Bakers Union. See Workers’ Children. A committee has been formed f the purpose of organi: all chil- dren’s clubs, organizations and schools into units functioning for miners’ lief by soliciting clothes nations. The headquarters of tee have been tempor: at.156 E. 24th St. (¢ ing re- ané cash do- this commit- | | yw Workers Party Activities | “Building a Wall of L will be the subject of a talk representative of the Intern Labor Defense at a meeting of th Morning International day at 10 a. m. day '| Brooklyn, at which speakers repre- senting the Young People’s Sogialist | League ily established | Bronx merey 1304). | Satu WV YORK-. NEW JERSEY x, Moraing sbor Defe: at 108 FE, Miners’ Relief Meets. The Young Workers’ League is ar-| ief. Id in Ave. Another me evening 29 Graham Ave., at will talk. * * * Bronx Pioneers. ij Hi | McMahon pointed o to ing will be held Tues- | |lieve it WORKER, NEW YORK, ees DECEMBER 22, 1927 Page Five Bloody Police Attack On Meltzer Is Told ued the n her story from Page One) prosecutor failed to Sum mse sume afternoon. The prosecution ¢ f Prosecutor Me ing the jury ans was a into account. pant to work in spite of the fact at there was a strike. He was do- ing honest labor when killed.” Weak Case. that for He had a Rea se is weak, a verdict of guilty ut that the def higher court victed. “While I be- a capital case,” he con- | tinued, “you do not have to send Melt- zer to the chair. The jury if it so i Wekites, can recommend life imprison- his when pleg if covld appeal Meltzer | ment.” Attorneys John F. A regular meeting of the Upper! George Cutley summed up for the de- y at 3 p. m. The committee will function inde- | Clinton Ave. pendtly of the existing adult relief committees but is obtaining their en- dorsement. Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIAL TALIAN DISHES ph tmosphere | where a icals meet. 302 E. 12th St. New York. S: -= Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. l PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865 (Fal. Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENT Office Hours: 9:30-12 A, 249 EAST 115th STRE. Cor, Second Ave. New ere Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183]! Butterfield 8799. Dr. A. CARR | SURGEON DENTIST 22 years uninterrupted practice, Personal attention. Workers’ prices, 183 EAST 84th STREET | Lexington Ave. New York. Cor. In Joint Recital With Paul _ Althouse Tenor Metropolitan Opera \ Star — cl. sd i. 2 2 Sascha Jacobson Violinist penn he will be the Baum Will Speak. “Building a Wall of Labor Defe bject of a talk by Loui A. Baum a meeting of the morn-} ing international branch today at 10:30 a. m. at 108 E. 14th St. . * * Special Meet Friday. All unit and sub-section industrial | y' organizers and women’s work direc- jtors will hold a special meeting Fri- jday at 6 p. |sity 126 E. 16th St. m. at the Jewish Univer- Dr. N. Schwartz | 124 East 81st piece | Special X-RAY EXAMINATION §2 | Doris Niles, fe. Schiwerte will he glad ia give you a free consultation. Charges for examinations and treatment is moderate. to 7 P. to 12 Noon. HOURS: Sunday: Daily: 9 A. M. 10 A.M CO-OPERATIVE Dental Clinic 2700 Bronx Park East Anite, 1, TEL. ESTABROOK ».0568, 4 DR. I..STAMLER . Surgeon-Dentist DIRECTOR OPEN: — Tues and Thursday from 10 to 8 P, aturday from 2 to M. | Marion, | timony i Young Pioneers will be held | fense. sharp at 2075 | | «The x State Calls Scab. id Drewen, “was Dodge, a who to New Jersey to ” | break the strike of the taxi drivers. “This Dodge was taken into cus- | tody at the time of Ewans’ murder and was told that he would be released soon as he picked out the one who did the killing. Escaped Luntaic. “It is upon the testimony man Dodge that the state bases Will you convict Meltzer on the from an Tat” Attacks Goddard. The attorney also attacked the tes- of Calvin Goddard, so-called expert” notorious as a escaped insane asylum “gun BOOST THE DAILY WORKER! Monument 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE . 110 St. op. Building) Dr. V. G. Burtan Dr. E. L.Kreinin tor Dental , ALL HOURS. (Unity Co 1690 | LEXINGTON AVE. cor. 106" “Ss EV’ YORK CITY - im ‘Abdiverny C Celebration § _. “DAILY WORKER” Friday Eve, 8.15 p.m. Jan. 13, Mecca Temple 55th ST. and SEVENTH AVE. International Dancer, in a Group of Russian — Gypsy and Folk Dance Greetings TICKETS $2.75—$2.20—$1.65—$1.10—T5c, At Jimmie Higgin’s Book Store, 106 University Place. © Local Office DAILY WORKER, 108 East 14th Street. Drewen and | cipal witness against Melt-) of this | mony of one who admits that he! in| state | | witness in the Sacco-Vanzetti ease. | HARLEM HEALTH CENTER Joint Board Penlies IN. Y. Building Warkars Want Amalgamation OR GANIZATIONS — | | H (Continued m Page One) te | what specifically had resulted Wolfe to Speak Friday. ina : |this attitude of the Building of the Cloak and | Council, Mr. Taylor pointed nion has replied to|fact that the’ bosses, real Tieniforial inthe Jewish newapaner SSE MEP RieRR Ge The Day.” which stated that the |their forces for a combine : American Federation of Labor had|to deal the unions a death pete od heen duned by Mor Sigman, presi- | taylor . oe t 4 diieenn ny presi \Taylor pointed to what he termed v a dent of the International Ladies’ Gar-|the “nearly criminal” attitude of the kee went Workers’ Union. into participat- ing -in destroying the needle trades The editorial proposed to the | tion that it step into the situa- | nd bring about peace between the two factions. “The Joint Board declares that the inner struggle in the union can be ended and unity achieved only when! democratic control without any di criminations, are instituted,” the Joint Board reply said in part. “The Joint | ‘Board has always weleomed anyone that is earnestly interested in work- ing for unity. | Board Is for Union. “The Joint Board declares, in spite | \of the fact that the American Fed- eration of Labor has actively support ed Sigman in the present struggle, has thereby helped to bring about this chaotic ‘situation in the cloak and ae s industry and is still in struggle in the Furriers’ Union, that 2 the Federation is now prepared to help end the inner struggle in the | Cloakmakers’ Union on the. basis of workers’ contro] their, own organiza- tion, then the Joint Board offers no | objections to the plan.” ° Criticism Against Its Pastor Causes Church | to Criticize a Judge | “Amazed and distressed” because Jourt Justice Crain dismi: | sed the complaint of its pastor, Rev. John Reach Straton, against Charles H. Smith, president of the American | Association for the Advancement of | Atheism, Calvary Baptist Church has | met and proclaimed to the world that | | the justice was unjust. Smith, charged | with “annoying” the pastor with free thought literature, was acquitted. It was the monthly business meet- ing of the church. A resolution was | passed requesting the district attor- | ney to appeal from the decision. One thing that pained the church group was that the justice “even in- | dulged in critcism of our pastor.” (ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIC OR OUTSIDE WORK ' Patronize Our Friend | SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organiaa- tions. (Bstablished 1887.) Co. OPERATIVE Repam Suop 4191 6th Avenue, near 25th St. | uits Pressed | Sire. Repaired While U Wait Nina Tarasova in Costume Recital of. * Fe eee eee Russian Folk Song Interpretations Peeeereastrereeret eet RL GEEE EEE S ESSE EE ETE E TES ETE E TT EE EEE PETE PTE P TEE ETEERE cgusesssesaeassees | plumber | bosses,” jof the workers’ nts will hose 2 Work aica Woods Sunday. T! 3 School st ’ locals of Manhattan and in having failed to aid Local strike last spring. n when the bosses locked out fhe plumbers of Manhattan and Queens, instead of uniting to fight side by side with the Brooklyn local, the officials of these unions sought 0 escape the inevitable battle by se- curing an injunction against the he said. Electrical Workers Must Fight! Taylor further pointed to the in-| or; Home, 37 Sixteenth evitability of a battle in the elec- * * * trical trade when the threat of the bosses not to deal with the union after January 1 will have to be met. } at line a to take AES and potate Newark Ch The Inte istmas Dance. Road To Freedom Ball. A Road to Freedom group costume ball will be held Christmas eve at “The program announced by the|the Harlem Casino, 116th and jofficials of the electrical workers’! Lenox Ave. union is a policy of compromise and * * ° certain defeat,” declared Taylor. “The China Protest Meet- declarations made by these officials : ase aqeaUnns at that ‘peace’ arid ‘cooperati on’ with Ho 1 St. & the bosses would solve the problem a conscious or an unknowing policy of surrender.” The customary practice of signing agreements without submitting these | m / Sat 2y to }cuss the mc nt events in Chir j;and to prot 1 against the jally k rs will ke on the agreements for the approval of the | progra |membership was mentioned by Tay-|' - lor as the outstanding act of betrayal Workers in 2 Workers “In some unions,” he pointed out, at ‘this practice has been carried to the and Second Ave point even of signing up secre: 2e- * ments. The instance of D t Soccer League Affair. ouncil 9, of the painters’ union, be- The Metropolit W occe 'g a case in point.” ue will hold an affe 14, Amalgamate the Unions! Taylor declared the first ment is for the workers the Bronx Lyceum. equire * * For Miners’ Relief. the Building Tra To rai iking min- | Movement, inasmuch lers, the Wo onary officialdom has proven its in-|and the sociali efficiency and ineapacity to advance | will hold a d the cause of the w gram of the progress first the unifi ‘s. The pro- @ movement is of the various | ion 3 Workmen Circle building councils and the amalgama- Meet. tion of the building trades. This is| Workmen’s Circle Branch 557, New- necessary, he pointed out, espec rk, will hold an educational meet- the bosses of the building trades ing tonight at its headquarters, Bel- are now combined in one assoc’ on.|mont Ave. Samson Freiman will be The second plank in the progressive | the speaker. platform is a policy of militant strug- . € % gle for the five day week and wage Paper Box Makers. increases, Next is be organization | The Paper Box Makers’ of the unorganized. No less impor 1 an organization meeting tonight tant is the struggle for the eli tion of the bosses’ contre! of e Brownsville Labor Lyceum, 229 jobs, Sackman St., Brooklyn. leper ant Meeting TONIGHT Section, Sub-Section and Unit DAILY WORKER agents MEET TONIGHT, December 22nd, 8:00 P. M., Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th Street. Dunne and H. M. Wicks will speak on the fourth an- niversary of The DAILY WORKER. Union will | 999 | effort and (LABOR AND FRATERNAL) Clerks? Union May Be Outlawed Again another injunc- 1 Grocery and Union are to be mad Court t Supreme United Webrew h employers who ar opposed to labor union K 1 Joseph The lengths Union Outlawed. hich United the employers s the 1 The to the four union mem 2 said to ed in ation of the according to unior r injunction to have In Union. mn under which the four dismissed last Mon- 2 left ay open to the ar Cent but the the Grocer} But Dair; Union. led in the | sona 3 per cent in ording to union NEWS WORRIES OV The R RIBBON New York U Medley, of the the editor y magazine, }. publication, for stating that an attempt is being made to bait students who are opposed to military drill ‘good fellowship’ with “silk ribbons, and blinds.” cups LEARN PATTERNMAKING Learn designing, copying, pattern= making, grading dresses, cloaks, fur garments, also children clothing, Complete cour: low prices. Aten DARD DESIGNING AND 154 FOU RTH Algonquin 3277. "MARY WOLFE DAMROSCH |PIANO LESSONS at her studio 49 WADSWORTH TERRACE Telephone Lorraine 6888. Will also call at student's home, Pinas our Advertizers BIGGEST BARGAINS! Clothing, Dresses, Overecoats, Shoes, Under- wear, Xmas Presents, Jewelry, Toys, ete. 25% Furniture BELOW WHOLESALE GET YOUR BARGAINS at the NINE-DAY FAIR Grand Central Palace, Lexington Ave. & 46th St. Beginning Tomorrow Night, Dec. 23 to Jan. 1 FINEST AMUSEMENTS! TOMORROW—Grand Opening Ball. SATURDAY, December 24th, 3 p. SUNDAY, December 25th, 2 p. m.—Concert. MOVIES—Every Night. m.—Children’s Concert. DANCING—Every Night. SAT., Dec. 3lst—Grand Final New Year’s Eve Costume Ball. Arranged by Joint Defense Committee, 41 Union Square, N. Y. C.

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