The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 13, 1928, Page 5

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IS THE DAILY WORKER, 'W YORK, FRID. ’ APRIL 13, 1928 Page Fivé a Pennsylvania Coal Miner Exposes Lies of Yellow Socialist “Daily Forward” ATTAGKS PAPER AS ANTI-LABOR News Agent Refuses to Handle “Forward” BROWNSVILLE, Pa. April 12.—| Condemnation of the “yellow. socialist} sheet,” the Daily Forward, for the) position taken by that organ in the/ miners’ struggle was voiced today by! eye ie and Fraternal | Organizations Neuping’ To Lesture' ls Yankees! Scott Nearing will lecture on “What Happening Today in Chi and Soviet Rugsia,” at the Workers Coop- erative Center, 262 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, April 20, at 8 p. on Friday, m. The lecture will be given under the auspices of the Workers Interna- tional Relief, and the proceeds will go for miners’ relief. . League for Mutual Aid. The Léague for Mutual Aid will hold Spring Revel, to at Beetho- en Hall, 210 E. Fifth St. * * * Workingclass Housewives’ Ball. The United Council of Workingclass a yn| Housewives, Councils 1, 2 and 8 will A. Rodriguez, a miner of fin COW ate Nconcere. End) bales today: y ‘wy @ paper! at 3692 hnird Ave., near 103rd St. who hasbeen’ receiving th a Perl ithe proceeds will bé donated to min- “Without knowing its character” and/ ers’ relief. i - _ who has acted as the distributor for) Dr. Liber. To this and other papers among the min-| Dr. B, Liber will 1 ers of his section. | Stops Orders. In a letter to the editor of the For- ward, Rodriguez orders the immediate) stoppage of his subscriptions, giving! the reason for the act. At the same) time he indicates to its editor that} ways will be found to give publicity’) to the facts even though the Forward} will refuse to do so. Rodriguez’s let-er to the editor and) business manager of the Forward as well as to the Metropolitan News Ser-| vice, the distributor, follow: , A “Yellow Sheet.” | So. Brownsville, Pa. | P. 0. Box 360, April 10, 1928. Jewish Daily Forward, Dear City Editor: Thanks to your yellow sheet of) paper, the Jewish vard, for the} publicity that you give me, in con- nection with the Save-the-Union Con-| ference of the United Mine Workers! of American held at Pittsburgh, Pa.. April Ist. 1g Your yellow socialist sheet carried the news that a prosperous Mexican| » at- a P: business man of Brownsville, tended the conference, as to mak uppear that this conference was) merely attended by business men, and! ; not by miners. I want you to know this: A. Ro-! driguez is a member of Local Union} 762, United Mine Workers of Amer-| ica. I have worked in the Vesta No | 5 mine until 1925. I am not a business man as your yellow sheet said, but a miner, Forward Against Workers. The policies of your paper tend to d'seredit the real struggle of the yorkers against the present ruling} class; your paper is helping the pres- ent ruling class to mislead the Amer- ‘ean public sentiment against every left wing movement of the American vorking class.. I am an American) sitizen and will continue to fight hand in hand with my fellow workers. with the slogans, “Lewis Must Got” Organize the Unorganized,” not only} in the coal industry but also in other| ndustries, till the workers are fre; from wages and slavery. I was handling your paper at my newsstand at Brownsville, Pa., not knowing the character of your yellow| sheet; from now on I will not handle} it because I consider it a crime io| sell your yellow sheet to the workers. | Fraternally yours, A. RODRIGUEZ. informs Circulation Manager. Jewish Daily Forward, Circulation Manager, Dear Sir: | I wish to inform you that you must at once discontinue sending copies of your yellow sheet, the Jewish Daily Forward, to me. Please send jour bill at once. Fraternally yours, | A. RODRIGUEZ." | P. S. You may not publish this| letter in your paper but I will see to! it that other papers will do so. Also to News Agency. | Vetroploitan News Co., | 17 Chrystie Street, | New York, N. Y. | Gentlemen: Please do not send any more copies | the Jewish Forward, eopies of the Jewish Morning Journal | daily. Thank you. ; Yours truly, | A. RODRIGUEZ. | MARY WOLFE STUDENT, OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS at her studto 49 WADSWORTH TERRACE Telephone Lorraine 6883. Will also call at student's home. | i | i | of Health Examination The Newest and Most Success- ful Methods in the Treatment of Blood, Nerve, Skin and Stomach Diseases ‘of Men and Women. Consultation Free Charges are Reasonable Blood Tests X-Rays DR. ZINS Specialists—Est. 25 Yrs. 110 East:16th St., N. Y. (Between Irving Pl. @ Union Sq.) j 113 I tion of th | Forum, 170 W. 130th St. Pe Pe ES only~-twott and Health” a Guild Hall, Steinway Buil 7th St, this Sunday at § gion orum, Dance For Miners Saturday. The Lower Bronx Braneh of the | Workers International Relief will hold a dance tomorrow night at/715 %. 138th St. to raise funds for the relief or the striking miners ° . . Kaplan to Lecture. A lecture on “The Youth Press” will be given by Nat today at 8 p. m, i of the Friends of Solidarity, St, Williamsburg. ee 'To Hike Sunday, The Friends of Solidarity will con- iduct whi Sunday at & a. m:- from their headquarters, 184 §, 8th St., Williamsburg. * . . Freiheit Gezang Farein, The Wifth Jubilee Concert of the Farein of New York be held Saturday, ‘arnegie Hall. May 12, at ¢ Hungarian Actors’ Concert. The Hungarian Actors’ and Artists’ Union will hold its annual concert, on 5 p.m. at York- Lad@n composer; I nt Hungarian , of the Roxy | Theatre; Charles De ‘Thomas, concert | piani and other prominent Hun- garian artists, F isicaa of Nature. On Sunday, April 15, the Junior S Friends of Nature will hike |from Tarrytown to Valhalla with Flor- ence Pitchur as leader, ‘The hikers will meet at 242nd Street Van Court- andt Park 7:30 a, m. Fares will amount to 60 cents, The Junior Section will hold its monthly meeting today at its regular meeting rooms. All members’ will kindly be present. Shachtman Lecture, Max Shachtman, editor ‘of the Labor Defender, will give an illustrated lec- ture on “Bleeding China,” this Sun- a at 8 p. m. at the Brownsville Youth Center, 122 Osborn Brook- lyn, Admission will be 25 cents. * * ‘ Dunn at Forum. Robert Dunn will speak on “Imper- falism in the Caribbean”, at 3. p. Sunday at the Harlem Educational Refreshments will be sold after the forum for the benefit of the Miners’ Relief Commit- tee. Women Shoe Workers. Women shoe workers and the wives of shoe workers are invited to a meet- ing called by the organization com- mittee of the Women,Shoe Workers on Monday, April 16, at¥8 p. m, at 51 E. 19th St! Seakers will be Hyman Le- vine, official of the Shoe Workers’ Union, Rose Wortis of the Joint Board lof the Dressmakers’ Union and Ray |Ragozin, organizer of the Women’s Councils. All interested are invited to attend this meeting.” Non-Partisan Schoo! Raster All Wemen's Counci] mem s call at the central office, 799 way to get tickets for the san School Bazaar fur collecting articles. short and there must now. Non- Pi and_ credentials The time is be no delays . * . Open At the Mest 14th will speak Halg” At the Yonkers Open Warburton Ave., Yonkers, } J. Baerberg will speak on Morality?” At the Bath Beach Forum, 1940 Benson Ave., Brooklyn, Eli B. Jacob- son wiil speak on “The Backwardness of the American Labor Movement,” Forums Sunday, Workers School Forum, St. William Ww. on “The 108 Forum, 252 Dr... ‘What Is rogram will be , ™m-|denz of the union and now Mr. Wil- Weinstone | New Tammany } | KENOSHA, Wis., j answer to the conspiracy trial of 19 |PICKETING VOIDS | NO STRIKE WRIT ‘Kenosha Hose Strikers | Patrol Mill Gate April 12 (FP).— | Federal injunctions against picketing | don’t look any birger to the Kenosha hosiery strikers than does the owner of the Allen-A plant. They are suc- | cessfully fighting the boss and since | the government lines un with him | they are taking it on too. As if in union leaders that opens in federal court in Milwaukee April 17, a flood lof pickets swamped police and detec- tives in the streets leading to the plant. There were men and women and several hundred of the children that had surrounded the place 600 strong some days earlier-velling ‘seab’ and ‘rat’ at the strikebreakers as they sneaked out of the gate. Can't Call Scabs, Seabs. Federal Judge Geiger's injunction |° forbids picketing and forbids calling | seabs, scabs, The strike here is of -exceptional importance to the American Federa- | tion of Full Fashioned Hosiery Work- ers. The future of the western hos- market from the union point of view is pretty closely boun’ un with the outcome of the fight for union recognition and against sneed-uns heing waged azainst the $4,000.00 | Kenosha mill. It is owned by eastern capital. | The normal output of the mill is ,000 dozen pair of women’s silk hose day. Production since the strike | ; began in January has dropped to 250 dozen a day and of such poor quality that the Allen-A trade name is kept ,off the stockings. Poor Quaiity. There are being sold at 31 to un- wary customers in the Boston store, in Chicago and elsewhere. without the brand and without the high quality that the skilled workers now on strike used tc put into them. Frank Wilson, chief scab herder for the company and a professional strikebreaker in the hosiery industry, is herding no “more for the present. |He was last seen in public drunk and flourishing a gun. A law and order committee disarmed him before he could shoot Organizer Louis Bu- a son is convalescing with a doctor and nurse in the Dayton hotel. Gazing into a mirror he reflects that other things besides strikes are occasionally broken. |_N. SCHWARTZ ‘Barber Shop. 1681 Boston Rd., near 174th St. | CUSTOM SERVICE for LADIES AND MEN | COURTEOUS AND COMRADELY ATTENTION. i Discount to Striker: | | | | | 50% SELLING OUT a full line of MEN’S, YOUNG MEN’S and BOYS’ CLOTHING at a BIG saving. 93 Avenue A, corner 6th St. NEW YORK. | | sn Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. | PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865. | Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all Minna meet. 302 E. 12th St. New York. No Tip-Union Barber Shop |discussion jizing WORKERS PARTY| ITIES NEW YORK—NEW JERSEY y Da Tickets for the Ac y celebration at Madison Square Garden are now ready at the district office tribution, and cz be thru. section or; who can dispose jto get them at once. Spring Dance. A “Red Spring” entertainment and danco will be given by Branch 4, Sec- tion 5, tomorrow at 2075 Clinton Ave Ave * * * Downtown Y. W. L. The Downtown Section of the Young Workers Le will have its next open forum this at 8 p. m. at 60 St. Marks Pla h bject for will be Youth and the Press.” Dancing will follow * * . To Unit Organizers. Unit organizers should lection lists for the Wo Building fund at 26-28 B. or 108 E. 14th St. . Unemployed Comrades. The Party calls upon all unemployed | comrades to respond for work of first rate revolutionary character. During the next few weeks special tasks in connection with addressing and organ- unemployed forces in the pres- ent campaign, will demand the efforts | of all comrades who be secured Report at the local district office immediately. The response to this work must be larger than for any previous task. Bert Miller, . for col- fs « . Subsections 2 and 2F Meet. A joint membership meeting of Sub- Sections 2E and 2F will be held to- day at 6 p.m. at 101 W. 2ith St . ee Section 2 Organizers Meet. meeting of all subsection organizers of Section 2 will today at 6 p. m. at 101 W. St. All organizers must be pres- A unit held 27th ent. * Morning Int’ The Morning Branch. International Branc will meet at 103 Kast 14th St., tod at 10:30 a. m. A discussion on’ unen- ployment will follow a short business session. * * Women’s Work Meet, All women Party workers are called upon’ to attend an important confer- ence on women’s work tomorrow at 108 E. 14th St. Room 42, at 1:30 p. m. to take up. the. mobilization. of work. ing women in the mining campaign, and organization of a New York Fed- eration of Working Women. Organ- izers of women's ork, must. all. be present. (igen res Meeting Tomorrow night at 8 p.m. at Stein= way and Jamaica Ave., Brooklyn, up- der the auspices of Sec tion 3A, Meeting For 380,000 Drive. All units, sections ‘and subsections are to call special membership meet- ings this week to take up plans for raising $30,000 for the new Workers Center in Unis n § ? Coil datour Meet, iAv 6FD, A special meeting of Section 6FD will be held on Monday at 6 p. m. at 60 St. Marks Place. bs “ICOR” WEEK IN NEW YORK. National “Icor” Week in New York will open with a concert at Carnegie Hall May 19, (3VBHAA TEYEBHMIA DR. BROWN Dentistry in All Its Branches 301. Kant 14th St. cor. 2nd Ave, Over the bank. New York. rs Center | Union Square | 1AC} TRACK DESCRIBED Clothi ng “Workers Will ‘ARREST 40 MORE. FRUIT STRIKERS Honor Samuel aaisie Sam Lipzin, leader of the left wing op pe sition the Hillma oa ie he Auial ga ng Workers’ Union is i : rey, to be welcomed back to New York by | Pa]i, , : ; Bidders Wired OO MGR) Be Res oe ie pai v xork ’Y' Police and Bosses’ Thugs Harding i in Vain “proletari juet” to be held in| Teprorize Pickets his honor tomorrow night at the club: WASHINGTON, April 12—Ap-|rooms of the Jewish Workers’ Club,| noeuie eee rade Garaeaanioin wald-by atte E 1 St ission cards can| _The fourth day = he rail tore bidders to President Harding, Secre-|be obtained at the Progressive Labor | “let foe ee cares : ‘tary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, |Center, 101 E. 14th St. for one dollar. |4a@y bbe ecaieets bade dbe ide 2 Srna Secretary of War John Weeks | Lipzin has been spending the last pee z ne the oe pe eres life in } * aq \the strike > 83 so far. ar; and former Attorney General Harry |few months touring the country in a = at noes we arveated euniben M. Daugherty while the Teapot Dome oil lease was being 1 up for! Harry F. Sinclair, witnesses showed at the trie! of Sinclair for criminal | conspiracy today. | Sought Lease. | | Birch Helms, of the Texas-Pacific | !Oi1 Company, made the rounds of | | Washington in the spring of 1922} fund |seeking a lease on Teapot Dome, he testified. “I was referred to Secretary Fall,” |the Studen “He told me he would |ers Sc hool at | Helms declared. |be glad to consider a proposition.” | Sinclair had actu signed a lease | a week befere this, on April 7. | | | Helms then returned to Fort Worth ‘anization Secretary. |to confer with his company and pre- | The Margolis Newsstand, j pare a bid. From the ers, however, he learned of the Sinclair lease. He | promptly wired not only Fall but also | | President Harding in protest against | |the discrimination. Other telegrams vent to Attorney General Daugherty. ecretary of Commerce Hoover and! | Secretary of War Weeks. Helms was | demanding an interview with Hard-| | ing. | Daugherty failed to answer; Weeks wired that for “good reasons” he | cculdn’t do anything; Hoover add d | he knew nothing about the matter and George Christian, iurstary to} the president, wired that an appoint- ment with Mr. Harding was impos- sible. Fall answered saying merely: “Tea- fot Dome closed: Salt Creek Royal- ties still open.” Others told of similar experiences, | ARNT ROE EERIE LO LAW OFFICE CHAS. “RECHT For the chnysntence of workers open unti. 6 P. M. and all day Saturday. Ho ‘WEST 40th ST. Room 1604. Phone: PENN 4060--4061--4076. ir. J, Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists || 1 UNION SQUARE | Room 803 Phone Algonquin 8183 IT] |fund-raising campaign for the Joint |Defense and R were dismissed, and the remaining 10 | were paroled in custody of their coun- | sel until they come up for hearings ef Committee. Séudenta: Couneit Will |today before Judges Smith and Me- | Kin] the 6th id 8th agis- Aid Workers Center QU clue oO" jtrat Jc The campaign to raise the $30,000 2] cle for the eph Kanarsky, a striking fruit was beaten up yesterday by ane gnew Yorkers Center, | gangsters hired by the newly formed ae Pas Square, will be on the fruit bosses’ association. embers of business at the meeting of | o¢ the industrial squad are aiding the Coun of the Work- bosses’ gunmen in an attempt to te ay at 8:30 p. m. aign of intimidation, the stril- —_—_— Jers’ spirits continue high, following DAILY WORKER GROWS. |the announcement that four more PROVIDENCE, R. I, April |stores had come to terms. 244 Prairie | an jAve.; Charles Smoke Shop, 165 Pine| - " St.; Krauss, 136% Charles J MeQuaide, 23 Manton Ave., Olney | A Big Reduction ville, now sell The DAILY WORK K the local agent announced toc y. THIS MONTES paRnvnRErrer ore rrRERRRRETD s {TONIGHT AARON KLEIN H EA xs 1 hemp oyment =| Men's, yo Men's aud * SES %@ § ANY REMEDIES? § Boys’ Clothing g Discussed by ¥/1 SUITS MADE TO ORDER x WM. W. WEINSTONE & A SPECIALTY. and % o iss is opport : JOHN DI SANTOS Dg Rs ial tad eden . | Pare sth S : at 2075 Clinton Avenue ¥) 95 AV ee , iis Maree x Be sues lanl incense Concert & Vetelierinks: Given by the UNITED cou NCIL OF WORKINGCLASS WOMEN, BR. 3rownsville i SATURDAY EV NG, APRIL 14 i 122 Osborne Street, Brooklyn. Proceeds to pealy Worker. 4, fel, Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF || SURGEON ea eres eal Hours; 9:30-12 A. M. Ballt Except Friday and Sunday. 249 BAST 116th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York. Lenin said: MEET THE ORGANIZED TONIGHT, Jay Lovestone SPEA (Communist) Party “Organize the Children.” CHILDREN OF AMERICA { At the PIONEERS’ CONVENTION at 8 P.M. | at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 East 4th St., New York City KERS: Herbert Zam vorkers National Seere You (Communist Party) Lea 77 FIFTH AVE. Bet. 15th and 16th. Streets NEW YORK CITY Individual Sanitary Service’ by perts, — LADIE: SPE Patronize 2 Co: Ex- HAIR BOBBIN? IALISTS. radely Barber Shop. 1 \ | premaitinnaiciianaeeniiaamtiaeaenge All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH REST AURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx. Deposits made on or before the THIRD day of the month wil! draw interest from the FIRST of each month, Last Quarterly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 to $7,500.00, at the rate of Ranking by Mail We 8 Daily 9-8 P.M. Sunday, 10-4 Tel. Windsor 9052. Open Mondays (all day) until 7 P. M. Society Accounts Accepted lers Certified Checks BAKERY PRODUCTS If not, let us know and we'll instruct our’ driver to call at your home, Finnish Co-operative Trading Association, Inc. 4301 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. (Union Made) Program Living Newspaper—Mass Scene—500 Participate. | National Secretary Workers | | TICKEY | 14th s 25 cents; Send Greetings to the Pion: | Reman nn nnn nnn nnn nn nny |PACKAGE PARTY (The home of Com Admission - 35c. EVERYBODY INVITED. Proceeds for The Children's 15 cents, at Young Pionee: SATURDAY EVENING, at 1200 Hoe Ave., near 167th St. Apartment 2 eer Journal.—JIndiv APRIL 14th rade M. Turkewitz) Auspices 3D 5F. “BRING A PACKAGE. DAILY WORKER. oie ~--------------1 GREAT Concert Saturday Eve., Great Finnish Band Orchestra. 25% of Proceeds TICKETS: in advance **to" be -held | At the Large Hall of HUNTS POINT PALACE 953 Southern Boulevard, Bronx Under the auspices of NOVY MIR. Concert Program: Mme. Euphaly Hatayeva, in a unique program —Peter Bilgo’s Balalaika Quintet—Bavarian National Dancers— ‘for Miners’ Relief. SPRING and Bail April 21, 1928 Music by Kulick’s Orchestra, Tc; at the door $1.00. ¢ Big Midnight Show SATURDAY, APRIL 14th, at 11:30 P. M. at ALLERTON THEATRE, Allerton Ave. and Kruger Ave. PROG Charles Lichter. ..Famous Juris. Re Basso Mme. Dorseha.... Classic Gibson. . .Characterizations enting 3 One Act Plays. WORKING CLASS WOMEN NOS E ADMISSION 30c. Auspi GOSH DING IT! 1 wish THESE WORKERS Important Books That Every Worker Should Read HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN WORKING CL/ Ds WORLD—J —~A Bimba. )-CRITIC I—E. Lyons. Vale i) OF RI et RECE} SS ON SOVIET RUSSIA cents each) rs WOR HOW THE SOVIEE SSIA WOMAN IN SOVIET KUSSIA—Jessic HEALTH WORK IN SOVIEi RUSSI SOVinbT TRADE UNIONS—Robert W. A- Dunn, Anna J. Haines. ORDER FROM WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 43 EAST 125th STREET, NEW YORK CITY.

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