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papas ceauseln aera Reb ei Sedat anos naar SE ol eileen et allstar cmitan onan Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1928 NEW BEDFORD STRIKER, FRATERNAL DELEGATE, STIRRED BY WORKERS PARTY CONVENTION — (By « Worker Correspondent) I never in my life felt so much joy as on the 25th and 26th I then had a chance to see with my own eyes what I never Comrades, I am asking you’a favor. As I am a striker I NEW BEDFORD, M (By mail).——I v { saw the parade on the first of May demon mg s. And I appreciated it deeply. I love to see any move- g ment that has anything to do with the working class. (Communist) Party in New York City. the working class, 3,000 Cantaloupe Pickers Win California Strike, Correspondent Writes tell you that of May when I sat on the platform as a representative of the expected to see so soon, a National Nominating Convention of cannot afford to have some of the objects I would like to have. g for the work Textile Mill Committee and was nominated as a fraternal dele- the Workers (Communist) Party in 1928. Forward, comrades, When I was in New York I saw a book I would very much like te to the National Nominating Convention of the Workers to our victory! That convention will remain in the history of to have. It was the Red Cartoon Book of 1927. . 8. } | | FORCE BOSSES TO. Me? tetwsrs wim workers in contol pRINGIPAL WOULDCOAL BARONS IN 24a CEDE WITH CROP FEED HOT IODINE FUTILE DRIVE ee ie srg see READY TO SPOIL TO ALL PIONEERS OPEN UP MINES... cn | ‘aul Green, who will be remembered} GERS and | | | Jaliees | gn [for his Negro play “In Abraham's NANCY CARROLL Women Beaten, Workers| Parents Protest School !$250 a Month Bait Gets | Bosom” same es gies by the| <— x arlor A, Qhayriff gin aN iy | : | ?rovincetown Playhouse last season, Jailed By Sheriff Ov ererowding | Nothing ButSeabs (23 completed twe ew fun length orrespondent) (By « Worker Correspondent) | Plays. One of these, titled “The House| § (By « Worker Cc (By a Wo P 08 ) The Allerton section of the Bronx) CALDWELL, 0., (By Mail).—I en-|f Connelly,” is about an old Southern] The in where Workers Co-operative is} joy reading The DAILY WORKER} white family. The other, called] s - strike jlocated, is growing by SHS ieee re tee ee atical fs | Imperiz pian | onde Within the test : ‘|very much. While I was visiting in| Tima, is a poetical fantasy that) The ai ». |new and large apartments have been|the eastern’ part of the state, a per- | des roughshod over all stage conven- : ; ; The towering stéel farndces of the “iomski” steel and iron mills | hie and oeeupied. The only publie|son’ told me about The DATLY|tions and rules. “The House of Con- Gerard company ¢ The rest} aye shown in the picture. Unlike the slave-driving mills of the United | i pan fe Se sty eae tea Rise ca aneRa aA at eet * nelly,” may be seen on Broadway| } were forced into line ced ruin | States Steel Corporation where American workers are hounded to labor | ‘1h? esa Uiety coputated aco.| MOP eER: believe The DATLY | early. next season. Cantaloupes must be picked i the under indescribable conditions, the workers of the “Tomski” factory con- Hee ps ES si aeipand theit| WORKER should be read by every | HLS SES aan | right time, 28,000 acr sa large “ bs auicshan: dike <Pomekt! mall is ed for the leader of the a s have s Jd Beep, H 3 a Bee : Been to. cov (ave than 17,000/cara| Ue eae ee esi mall named’ For the Neuer oF UN entire day running to and from school | WoTking man. Edwin H. Knopf engaged the of the U. Now s-few irondst 48 to¢conditions ; Bijou Theatre yesterday for the open- \in this part of the coal fields. The|ing of “The Big Pond,” on August |Cambridge Collieries Co. started one | 14. Kermeth McKenna and Pierre de a é ., |mine open shop about three weeks | Mirande will be in the cast. The school was built for 1,000 chil-| am e PEE ORS | BERENS | F . ., |ago. Despite Oral Daugherty’s ex- El Heraldo De Mexico, a Los Angeles | ie" and is occupied by 2,000 which! tensive seab herding campaign, the} The Theatre Guild has acquired a dads. which had pene - dee ie makes it extremely overcrowded. They operators are having no success. |2&W play by S. N. Behrman, author, : erning the strike in the cantaloupe|2%° forced to eat lunch on the floor! Onty one black sheep was found in| “The Second Man.” The play is called|| Th “Abie’s Irish Rose,” Anna es val fi lds 8 P jof a dirty basement and swallow the Epanl Gal ae Caldwell : |“Meteor” and is scheduled for ‘pro- Nichols’ film play now showing at refused to plead guilty and) fields, |dirt with their food. This condition i : duction next season. the 44th Street Theatre, yet to reach 17,000. suspended sentences--for fear| Avalos Deported and Not Deported.|¢.p.e4 the parents to organize. A| Imperial Valley also has 5,400{ ime record and possible de- The U. 8, immigration service | as, meeting was held and a commit- acres in watermelons. Last year’s! portation that might follow in the} stated, May 15, that Jesus IG Avalos} joe lected bs. Veit. the OM neIpal. crop amounted to 3,544 cars. The! future. | would be deported. Officials at the) te of the season is June 10. So the} The habeas corpus application fil-| border were sure they had discovered | ——J|in order to conduct their children} here today. | through the dangerous crossings. sue | Ovyercrowded. of cantaloupes were shipped out of the valley probably be . The next day.| appeared before} Several prisoners released | id, entered a plea of} Avalos sent strike reports to the} ng disturbed the peace.| “Mexican Herald,” or, to be correct, | -ca -d guilty to hav Brawley Ne |and he received a six-months’ on at that time. Less} pended sentence on the motion of t! 00 ¢ have been shipped| district attorney. More than <¢ out to date so it is a long way to go} workers rding to th ke was part The operators are getting very un- easy in this section. They expected : f: “Strange Interlude” July 2, who. will a large turnout wnen they startedig, Tonight at the Klaw Theatre| tse a short/ European yacautl with open shop. But the few men they’ve Bottled in Bond” enters the third her husband, Alfred Lunt. They will got cleaning up the mines don’t know| ™onth. return late in August for rehearsals A second mass meeting was held bosses are risking millions if they|ed by Alfred Blaisdell, attorney for| “a clear violation of the immigration oe Nee ee sam ene the first principles of mining. i in “The Guardsman” and “Arms and i get into trouble with the workers|Hermolao Torris, Mexican viee-consul,| law.” He was reported deported in| i tots attiinde of the prin.|. The operators in their frantic ef-|_ Judith Anderson will replace Miss] the Man,” in which they will appear \\e again. The Brawley News expressed| demanded the release of said five| the papers. The next day, beak edl ae Mr. Rado Pp fort to break the strike are trying to, ¥nn Fontanne as Nina Leeds in| on tour next season. catiato line recently—editori- | workers on the ground of illegal im-| those same U. S. officials said that) ©P®' *'r- : bait some of thelr old: men "Theyare| ee | Other important crops| prisonment, excessive bail and trialj Avalos had the best right in the} Mrs. Gritz, fhe chairlady of the ally at th . : Meee | 7 a offering as high as $240 a month if y”, in the valley are cotton and hay. The|date, June 5, unreasonably delayed | world to say in the “land of the free”| meeting, reported that, after telling) in. men will return to work, Their ry low wage rates in the cotton| Justice Griffin of Brawley fixed the| and attend to his newsstand and bul-|them to wait he said he would allow| Srrars have been rejected. | 4 i fields h sen a disgrace to Cali-|excessive bail. The four whose bail] letin board, ete. The arrest and “de-|them fifteen minutes and then re- ad and every other cotton-produe-|was reduced were: Juan Barcelo.| portation” of Avalos may be tho basis| peatedly asked the clerk whether or}. uci Cy 0, Dye tas a as \as in the union. Cotton must] David Lopez, Panfilo Moreno and Joe’ for an interesting court procedure. | |not the time was up. The assistant Well, Tlearned that 150 baciness nen. ——— - : — be pic ay cut at the right| Diaz. Being unable to make the re-) he local A. F, of L. organ, the) principal had already informed them| °°" ‘ F stition " S 9Q THEATRE, B’way at 53 , time also. ‘So the workers hold the duced bail, they were sent back to|L. A. Citizen, has had nothing to say |that she herself would not even look|i" Caldwell signed a petition for HAMMERSTEIN’S ‘rove corulets esa" whip-hand in these fields as well—| jail. Release would have absolved the| about the struggle of the cantaloupe | at them. ee ‘ as they become conscious of|men from guilt and returned them to| Pickers. As far as I know, The| His first comment on receiving| In Guernsey County the miners are er through organization and| the standing they had before arrested) DAILY WORKER is the cnly labor | them was that he did not believe they | not permitted od hold meetings, ac- 8 \by Sheriff Gillett. paper reporting on it. |represented anybody and then took! cording to an injunction issued by the | THE RUSSIAN FILM CLASSIC 2.000 to 3,000 on Strike. | The Mexican government became Hostile to Union. | their names and addresses. Meera bars pee ce. pare ‘<6 99 cultivated area in Imperial Val- | interested in this case through a pro-| According to the last report to El| When the spokesman of the com-| 908% oe eee Pre) The End of St Petersbur said to be 300,000 acres, and|test by the strikers to the Mexican) Heraldo De Mexico, May 25, R. Rio,|™ittee wanted to explain their griev-|*he Akron Coal Co. oa ° s imated number of Mexican|consul-reneral in the United States. | secretary of the new Mexican Union |@nces, he refused to recognize him| I am sending you $3.50 for a six} Music by Herbert Stothart—Russian Choir—Symphony Orchestra. in the valley is 17,000. From} Lawlessness “Regular.” was arrested after all the rest of the | because he was not a parent, only a month subscription to The DAILY Nights S140; 50ce to $1.50. Mats. Daily 2:40; 50¢ to $1, Incl. Tax. 3,000 took part in the recent} “Everything we have done is regu-| prisoners had been released. Although | Drother of some of the children. WORKER. Would I be asking tou! — = he majority of these men are| lar,” District Attorney Heald said,| Rio has been turned lose, the workers|, The committce then left in disgust,| much if I asked you to send the paper | _—“pye Theatre Gulld presents — BOOTH Thea. W. 45 st. Eves, AMERICAN PREMIERE ARTHUR HAMMERSTEIN presents the f the new union, according | intimating that, no argument as to|have decided not to hold any public] Dut the principal.set out to “remedy"!|to a-couple of my friends who would)) pi gene Mata Weds i Bate s from the fighting front. | illegality could be proven in court of | meetings at present. All underground, | the acer organized a parent’s one bes pes sha hannas sa) cen Strange Interlude THE GRAND ST. FOLLIES Women Beaten by Gunmen. lee alec reo if any, for the time being—hecauso ae ae re tne gages ees agst ? s Fane Calica Gheas Eth) or Bway ) oi. Ghastes ‘L, Gilett: andvhis fia ee ae bir 2 pe the sheriff still is very hostile to the ana pheee! ae fe wy ee favors . Evenings Only at 5:30. OF 1928 5 ARBs . | venting meetings of any kind, and o| nion, Jes 5 say: roceeded to divide the childr Seas Gee deputies, too numerous to mention. | jemanding GL markesa either worker ee Jesus G ee sere Hie degedne teanantan ag Guanes Ils 2 Lage) ees Winter Gard Evs. 8:30. Mats. went from farm to farm chasing| Sec of Tae ee eee ae Worker Falls 20 Feet, Eugene @Neill's i irden Tues. & Sat. Rei 2 like wld he ae or get out, has had its effect,” Sheriff! in the southwest to get in closer touch | Viciousness of the Co-operators’ and 6 * ewe: | . ee I lexic 2 oe er ae i ‘ a S Charles L. Gillett declared, according | with the Mexican workers than has | has succeeded in creating a sentiment | Breaks His Right Arm Marco illions ' Greenwich Vill . Picket-lincs and meetings of every de-|+, the Brawley News on or about . \against the children of the C Erigtion were’ broken up in ‘hight(eos ci? core Gate cee ea eeee tne cone an the) past: Mexicana |e nel Ms iP Hg opera: Guild 1";.¥;,524 st. Bvs. s:30 | /f! GREATEST oF ALL REVUES, : i s. Tt was “To| M#¥ 14, 1928. (Emphasis the writ-|are far more progressive than many | tive neighborhood. |. MILWAUKEE, May 31.—Joseph Uud Mats. Thurs. & Sat. 2:30 Rae i Boge eeal. manneis . nearer iC, of the Americans. The latter exert! When the pioneers distributed leaf. | Lenzner, 30, a roofer employed by Week of June 4: “Volpone” Sa, ell with the constitution” put into|’” ‘The Hereafter in the Stri to become millionaires some day. The| lets for the mass meeting they were|the Becker Asphalt Roofing Com-|]|~ 3. era aa 46th Sty. of Breatwar ae peer gang of “up: An editorial in the Brawle |former have no such false illusions. | thtéateried- Some were also punished| pany, broke his right arm when he P O R G y Mats. Wed. & Sat. ; of law and or 4 4 to SATE" aa : ee a ‘ yi = Aa 3 hic SCHWAB and MANDEL’ Sees Walls Podviaues wae acncek yet Pes cages es as sollows: | Study Spanish and take the leader- ae i Day. After’ he/fell twenty feet from a roof on which By Dubose & Dorothy Heyward ORGLE Ruane by ia wife. Fr ea and Beatin le ere ature. Hox, the | ship, Comrades! Lack of able organ- ie demand put up for hotj}he was working today at Rosedale REPUBLIC PH24,, West 424 st. ed, on Francisca, sand Bests ins Jeing the Mexican labor : izers is the greatest handicap at pre lunches ob sore in pehegh he re-| Ave. and Burrell St. “ aetizal ag OO D N i W os ge wy | ton seems to have been clarified, al-/ent. Efforts must be made to draw| ™arked, “I would like to feed you hot s 5 S ae Aan the s preen jee though there are not wanting rumors/the Mexican organizations igto the |iodine.” When a boy was hit by his) r : . : KEITH-ALBEE “YOUTH | with GEO. OLSEy asd His MUSIO Were botn badly en by well-paid! tye y tr es will occur i e ic; 21 der ; music .;|can we hope to win our demands, | i BE = Sad rutag “emnlopede be tie is new troubles will occur in the American labor movement. In order fi Es ee and the mother pro i ot ae aslichts nade: sont | UNA The Heart of Coney Islané ‘ y y jheart of the season. Had the strike/to do that—jou must go to the Mexi-| tested he showed her a strap which i Ab ihe : >| Battle of Chateau-Thierry county. iff’s ultimatum to} teen staged two weeks later, when|cans; the Mexicans wil be slow to|he says he uses for his own child| for every child. Tee | TILTeAL | Free Clreus Cl og cee slag ae sete leave | the laborers were fortified with what) come: to you. Oursbrothers from the| thereby justifying the action of the} 2. Annexes to temporarily relieve | MISIT89 . powerful, Gripping ‘PAR wan certs and Dancing ee ee a lacie nny | {8 to them abundant money in their|land below the Rio Grande have noth-| teacher. é tera Seep en Re eres eee ens Js Mens Ghent Ber emeiney ee Be aivé stay vere lone dao ral pockets, doubtless it would have been|ing against the so-called whites, but % Not Enough Police. 3. A lunch room for the children, ee ae ay Ly (OnE, AS @ Tule.’ necessary to call upon white labor|they have reason to nourish a dislike! -A% appeal was made to the police| ‘2 ij thies-dtans he following reasons: for the field’ work.” |for the insult of being regarded as}C@Ptain for more proteetion at’ the ted sings fron SF a mt | “See Russi f Y Uf és ret Pad Ris on \20 i : nde: z ‘i erous crossings from 7 a. m. to | ee Nussia for ourse the Allee ne betel begat After hinting at the possibility of} “inferiors.” ae Mexican class-con- dangerous crossings a“ they Pah Pa m. | TOURS : cen es i using members of a “superior” race | sciousness is strong. ee ere was a shortage of po-| _ 4, pene : to Legal grounds +0) i526! to acabom arabkers belongitke —L. P. RINDAL. |licemen. Incidentally - there were 5. The elimination of the auto. hold the strik general cratic principal who was dismissed fexicans, the _ enough to break up a meeting of the since many , Grocery Clerks’ Union who conducted from BaS. 6D pte) ths seman of | » Mexicans a strike in some markets in the vicin-| te Parents and wished on us. | monopolized this ¢ it | HI ity. Parents, organize and fight for the| é would have been difficult to secure A new executive committee of the| Welfare of your children. THIS SUMMER Aiiedcath bellied ‘tn’ ciskiae oar Parents’ Association of Ollinville ap-| The executive of the association has| BA A one 5 . ,beals to all parents to join the or-; arranged an open-air meeting for] chee Nises—-Extousions arranged tor to. visit any part -of 0, ation which decided to charge 25| June 2 on the corner of Allerton and Jaly6.. 0. Ou. AONE lacking. 7 to an “inferior” ditto, editorial continu | years have pass underp: ied eat cents initiation and 10 cents a month’ C ruger Av a ork at 3 p. m. dues —-CHARLES SCHWARTZ. ntaloup (By a Worker Correspondent) Only through organized power! Dee, tained ee Ise of atrong-mmm (The: Jones:White Bil ¥ecentiy pant uly 9 oo ig CAOUIT ANT AS fork for might | rily solve the sed by congress and signed by P: } On Comfortable CUNARD Steamships mean dep r ver trouble of! dent Coolidge, should be of interest to| | Many i $450 and up. “reds,” ete., might be ment in fsvor of the Box bill (re tion of Mex immigration) before re Employers of chean 8,000 m | the bas and settle if) via: 10 DAYS RETURN: LONDON Of Interesting Sightseeing WARSAW Trips in r PROLETARIAN ! CO-OPERATIVE SUMMER HOUSE gnitude a s to cause every worker engaged in the marine | of betwe 2,000 and; industry. It is a militarization of the} hereafter i ain if) merchant marine for time of war. | s are n e nine The merchant marine naval reserve | ‘y detrimental ngaged in the ma- labor rly against that bill “Mind-Reading” Palesitiis | OPENS paises Maprovr: Penipemad .¢ EERUIN G Bante In thi of the world they : et i 4 ‘ De evcna to. coma.here ta: stay Pan cris the dlosk of “national 411 SATURDAY. WORLD TOURISTS, INC. slave for next to nothing. breed more! per agent and repor : se agate nica s eargseceeel JUNE 2 d 2 t ~~ (Agents for OFFICIAL TRAVELBURO of SOVIET GOV.) ee and | content i rip ee LD deve cs Pa te aaiee destioyiog Segauication whieh ; n | 69 Fifth Ave., New York City Tel.: Algonquin 6900 ns anc ‘tortillas’! store, May i3, } tt. ‘ a * ‘ i an (> like bread). | Why? Because he ed to removo| Pay be inclined to fight for better oF ga a | Outmaneuver Sheriff. |e bulletin board emN enna aen eanaatds ae eae, nt eenneeee ‘The ship-owners claim that the men will not be foree@ to join the naval |resorve, But preference will be given |to those who are members of it in, |securing berths aboard ship and thi will practically force men into join. hen the number of arrests reach-| lines of his ed 48, the labor-baiting sheriff thought! News. Numerous pay he had all the “leaders” in jail. But.| world advertise in t as a matter of fact, he didr et «| even the Los Angele: chance to lay his strikebreak baiting sheet v bloody hands on any of them. The! at the beginning, Committee of tion was under. {ican I. W. W.” s ground, out of sight.: The Me Gr workers learned a few things dv 18 years of revolutionary struggle in} all over the ne manner- ala uch to say the “Amer- ing it, cers in Imperial! “4 certain percentage of tho crews peed SEONG Sn Mr |being members of the naval reserve} y Chandler! . jallows the ship to fly the naval re. Avalos had put out the bulletin] serve flag and mail contracts will b one form or the other. | board with signs that were meant to given to naval reserve ships. Wa can d In Strike Zone. |instigate discontent among the work- easily see that any sign of militancy | Five strikers came before Judge A.|ers, the sheriff said. Unfortunately, be blocked by the seamen un-1 ©, Finney of El Centro on May 15.| Mr. Gillett isn’t the only “mind-read- | yj ingly forced to scab under guise | Bond in the case of 4 was reduced|ing” “peace” officer in the land. | of this bill, Be from $1,000 to $500 each, but the re-| “Gillett stated today,¥ May 13.! It also enables the shipowners lease on habeas corpus was denied.| “that the bulletin board said, ‘Forty-! discriminate against the progr The fifth man, Frank Hermandez.) eight Mexicans in Jail—What For— | seamen by having them blacklisted was refused reduction of bail. So}Nothing,’ and other inflammatory | they should agitate for better stand: that one-armed worker must be con-| statements.” (The Brawley News.) | ards of livelihood and wages, and this. sidered a dangerous character. Well.| “However, attorney for Avalos will|will tie their hands and force them. they had him down as “interpreter”| contend that the bulletin board con-|to become unwilling slaves of canital= and even as a “director” of the new! tained the followin translated from lism. —“BLACKTE.” CHILDREN’S COLONY in Unity Camp For workers’ children from 5 to 9 years. I Saw in China by TOM MANN For the past three years the Chinese masses have been struggling for freedom from the clutches of Imperialism. Everyone nowadays is either talking or writing China. Tom Mann, “grand old man” of the British labor move- ment, contributes his observations after a stay of six morths in China with the International Workers Dele- gation. 10 Cents Please include postage with every cash order, i WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 8? EAST 125th STREET, NEW YORK CITY. CXXXX XXX LX AAA XX EA XX EXILE XXII AE XY) HOW TO. REACH THE CAMP: Busses leave Friday at 6:30 P, M., Saturday 1:30 P. M. from 110th Street and 7th Avenue. By train from Grand Central Station or from 125th St. to Wing- . dale and from there take our automobile to the camp, i | eer ive | if For registration come to our main office 1800—7th AVE. Corner 110th St. TELEPHONE, MONUMENT 0111.