The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 13, 1928, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

\ Page Two THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1928 District 5 Miners Twice Defeat Treacherous Moves REJECT MOVE TO OUST MILITANT UNION LEADERS Fagan Machine Again Routed S ¢ the Daily Wor t BROWNSVILLE, Pa., Rank and file Mine June miners of Local Unior 2086, Pike twice he Lewis-F refu Report Meeting At a regular held 1 Kovack After the toolpigeon named reported to Dwyer the » rank and file of I This stool defe he repor and .¢ when pi tructions of Dwyer tion bring ‘DAILY’ IN PERIL 4S FUNDS DROP Workers, Organizations Sending Aid Continued from Page One ist SI ¢ er ¢ , Chicago, Branch olection Green Home. Kiansb Philadel Philadel- hilade) ph NY. Go$1; 4 Sundwall, 50ce; Vietor man Johnson, N, ank, NYC, 500; ti, NYC, 5 *“Majarin | . AL Brander, NYC. §0e; Anna Hakuhnen, fkonen, NYC, $2; Ida Ikone 31 Walne’ Kekiconen, th. Krook, y re 0c; A, John NYC, $ 50 mi, We; Aug. Jakinen, ) NYC, 500; 'T. © 1 BB Felix Aho, NYC 4 25 600; John Vautilo, 2 aes YC Kataja, NY: Einar Nurmi, A. Pietala, N ¥, Hanninen, NYC, 260; P. XG, 250; 4 6c; A 5 J. Epstein, NYC, 26c; Theo Sappa, NYC, 25c; Pekka Aartola, NYC, i e Mynttuia, NYC, 50c;' J. Anttila, ‘C, 50c; John Ruipo, NYC, $1; Annic| NYC, 60c; John Nikkola, N.| Lo aed NYC ., 50¢; O. Manislyla, NYC, 60c. Unit¥,Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818—7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity’ Co-operative House. administered a! n| | is being operated by n al 2086} jthe Chicago and hester markets. me |The shcrter week was done away with the Me become an employer. Maria \laika orchestra, Refreshments will be tath, | Served. itonen, | >, $1; H.} Sipili, NYC, ! IGNORE 40-HR WEEK IN PARLEYS OF y AMALGAMATED IN. Y. Officials Not Even Asking for It " Wall St. Man; Backer As 8 expected, the ie: m of the New York Joint Bogrd of the HevbovesBaalbd Street's | Amalgamated Clothing Workers bable the republican | Union, in presenting the union’s de- convention is shown. above at left. |mands to the Clothing Manufactur William M. Butler, Massachusetts |°rs’ Exchange in the negotiations for magnate, the renewal of the expiting agree- Wall choice at open shop textile and re- nublieaae see whe ss. Saal ment, completely ditched the demand Hotver, tb shown ak FAIRE. of the workers for the forty /hout — = week. ; Instead of the shorter work weel § est for their ate sented a th L ef ‘anc unemployment in such for sibility In return for the insurance “pan-! }seea” the machine in control of the- union dcenated to the | the right tall t em oF commission to PermitOpenShop, Wage Cuts, ete., for Price to ir nued from Page One) Trade, Patsy Gontoro | arned, are not to be quieted by pi vork alone, it is said that many more concessions to a: The negotiaticns will get into full swing aiso obtained, ¢ the employees of the Klein, to t! tune 0. i pocketed as to verations in a day or two. MORE EXPOSURES IN GRAFT HEARING Millions Robbed By/ ‘| Wigwam Henchmen workers, The was made by a who had close He was later r job. Permis- nd work to t a generally known among the bosses) and official pri Fired Militants. price paid for permission to rker, -because of slow- 00 a head. Indictments against at least two Manhattan employes of the Street} Cleaning Department are expected as | | J. Je Pr firm, paid $400 to fire two Workers One of these was a friend of the grafters, but grafters a 'y known not to sneeze at f a friend stands in the the result of the testimony of eight s before thé grand jury here. spite of the extreme reluctance with which the authorities have fol- lowed up the disclosures revealing mil- lions of dollars of graft in the street, cleaning administration of Tammany Hall one man has already been con- vieted in the Bronx and two others are awaiting Sentence on pleas of guilty to grand larcet¥ charges. Five men are under suspénsion, Further convittions may also result. in Brooklyn if, as Commissioner Hig- gins has announced, evidence concern- ing Frank C. Gannon, suspended Brooklyn superintendent, and his rela- tions wit the Brooklyn Ash Can Re- moval Company will be sent to the grand jury A boss contractor is known te have been thé. collecting agent for the Amalgamated officials. One of the chief witnesses is a con- ractor, who was formerly himself at head of the ring, one B, He had been ousted by his colleagues cf the A. C, W., and had Probable re- fusal to “come across” led to his being prevented from operating his shop. Finally he squealed. Testimony has already disclosed FADRSE HOOVER eABKET CRASHES | activities, Is Given O. K. As the Wall Street Candidate |4§ §, 0, P, MEETS (Continued from page one) er just as it was for Cool-}sepy.. es. ” ‘ | i and Harding in 1920, | Prosperity Myth Soon | To Be Dispelled note convention speech by | meon D, Fess was warning eens second and third string dele- that Mellon, Butler, Coolidge expect them to go down the line in the balloting for the im- ist and opéntshop policies of present administration. Mellon, y F. Sinclair, who was the funder fer the republican |the market. | the Harding-Covlidge cam-} Hundreds of leading stocks lost be- nd all the rest of that ilk|tween five and fifteen points, Thou | ed the word around that to/ands of petty bourgeois speculators | for Hoover is to vote for a per-|Were wiped out, Various reasons were petuation of the present Teapot Dome | Siven to account for the cyclone which | sovernment, |seemed to have struck the market. | ena ast 'The one which received the greatest | Party Unit To Hold Daily Worker Benefit credence among the gullible was the | belief that the report that Coolidge \ concert and dance for the benefit | steady development of the economi f The DAILY WORKER will be given! 4 2 ae Levy. } fo: idge in 1 The The fever of speculation which for the past three months has motivated | the stock market came to a climax } when over five millions of | |shares, a stock market record, crashed | in a heap, to bring about one of the | greatest ‘collapses in the history of | |would not run again was “a blow to} prosperity.” | ) ib idepression and unemployment is at! evening at 101 W. 27th St.,| last beginning to dispel the illusion of | | lock, The affair which is un, | prosperity which the republican party | has been able, to some extent, to main- | tain. 5,115,300 shares were sold in the rket yesterday, two millions of them during the last hour, 1 No Tip--Center Barber Shop NEW WORKERS CE oR 26-28 Union Sq. 1 Flight Up NEW YORK CITY Individual Sanitary Service by Bx. perts. — LADIES’ HAIR BOBBING F SPECIALISTS, Patrowize a Comradely Barber Shop, der the auspices of Subsection 8E o: Unit 1F, is expected to be attended | ‘by a large number of Workers Party | members and sympathizers, Music will be furnished by a bala- Workers Co-operative “Clothiers, Inc. “For Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY 7 E. 42d St. New York City Telephone Murray Hill 5550, Patronize LERMAN BROS. SUITS MADE TO ORDER. READY MADE SUITS. Quality—Full Value 872 BROADWAY, New York Cor. 18 St Tel. Algonquin 2223. Stationers & Printers t9 BAST 14th STREET Corner Union Square Algonquin 3356, 8843, \ NY. Tel, ~ — It is more likely, however, that the | | “. ; Bd J The Tsinan wall, which has foreign, proved vulnerable when battered by the gune of the Japanese imper he pietuie above, one of the Shintung. SPEED-UP GROWS Work in : Temperature of 100 Degrees (Continued from Page One) grees, sometimes over. “Hot pang of erackers are spread all over the floor. Our clothes are wringing wet from sweat, and we all look as if we had just come out of a swimming pool. During these hot days many girls faint... 1.2, o| The conditions of the men workers are, very bad also. They work all day long-at, the eonveyor, taking -hot | pans off and .emptying them at the tables where the girls are working. They de this so rapidly that very | often thelr fingers get severe burns, No protest: How could we protest? We are like a ship without a pilot. We workers sof: the--National Biscuit ©o. must -help. ourselves!. We must realize that these conditions can’t go on forever. We all feel the cruelty and injustice which exist. We all feel the-cxvlcitation which is imposed on us by the company. We ali do pro- test—but silently. This protest must | be silent no more! ® I appeal to my fellow workers to help themselves through the: DAILY WORKER, for few of us know each other in so large a factory as the National Biscuit Co. Fellow work- ers: only an organization, a. union, can carry out a successful protest, ean demand that our rights as worlk- ers be respected! Only by uniting in a strong union can we workers defy the threats and answer the insults of our. palm beach suit bosses! Fellow workers: it’s about time we get together, talk over our troubles, and decidé. what shall be done. have an excellent medium, the DAILY WORKER—through the columns of which. we can express our opinions freely until the time is ripe for a conference at which we can form a strong union. I would like to see more of you come forward ang write of your troubles in the factory to The DAILY WORKER. Don’t forget, fellow workers,—if “ve don’t help ourselves, nobody else will help us! ’ =W.S Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq. New York City. Se SD—Large, light room with all improvements. Write Box 1, c/o Daily Worker, 26-28 Union Square, LAW. ‘made smocked dresses for only $10. “Impregnable Wall” Gives Way Before Onslaught of Japan ese Troops uffered most from the fire of the of enemies, both native and ist army which has seized t to reach this conrtry, shows a section of the wall which guns. stood up for centuries against the attacks Japan BISCUIT PLANT Zvish Guild Players Present Three Tidbits at Playhouse Of the three plays presented at the |included in the dialogue had been Provincetown Playhouse by the Irish |¢liminated, we might have enjoyed Guild Players, “The Rising of the | Moon” by Lady Gregory is the only |one that gave the impression of hay- jing been adequately prepared for. ‘Phe other two, “The Betrayal” by | Padraie Colum, and “The Building | Fund” by “William Boyle, contained |potentials for the stage which were not only left undeveloped but were ;even massacred by the poorness of the presentation and the flabbiness of |Deely, whose rendition of Mrs. Gro- the acting. *" |gan in “The Building Fund” was the All three plays were written dur- |most thoroughly sustained and well- ing the Irish literary renaissance, ;@¢cted part of the evening. when the spirit of insurgence had shall e’er pass through my lips” are unconvincing to a modern, especially when they are supposed to be utter- ed in a moment of passionate anger. They give a certain stultifying and melodramatic effect to the presenta- tion, which on the whole, hovered bé- tween a preventable mediocrity and a fresh genuineness. A word should be said about Betty —E. R. of Lewis-Faga the plays far more than we did, Sure- | ly such sentences as “No word o’ that | gripped the younger literary men. It is because of this fact .that the plays were revolutionary enough to have aroused expectations for something MEAT CUTTERS ORGANIZE. JACKSON, June 12.—The Amalga- mated Meat Cutters and Butchers has }Your’ chance to own lovely hand | ‘a bit more vital than the dilettantish | Chartered a new local here. 'YOUTH PROTESTS NEW DISMISSAL | OF INSTRUCTOR . {Pennsylvania Students Fill Hall PHILADELPHIA, June 12. — The | Staid provincial burghers of Phila- |delphia saw something they did not |expect to see when students and a }ed out to protest against the dis- |missal of Sol Auerbach, instructor jof philosophy at the University of | Pennsylvania. | Auerbach was fired for praising the treatment of students in the Sov- \iet Union, which he visited as a |member of a recent stfident délega- | tion. | The hall was filled as it had never been before. Many were turned away through lack of seats. At this meeting Auerbach reviewed jin detail his expulsion. Clarence | Miller, district. organizer of the Young Workers (Communist) League spoke on behalf of the young work- ers. ‘Juliet Stuart Poyntz, of the New York Workers School, empha- |sized the class character of institu. tions like the University of Pennsyl- vania and told of her experiences in the educational field. Anita C. hit. ney, formerly of Leland Stanford, University, also told of her experi. ences. She has served time in Calls fornia jails for her opinions, With great enthusiasm a resolu. tion was adopted protesting against the Auerbach ouster. 20 Die in German Drifts on Ice Floes NUREMBERG, Germany, June 12, —Twenty-two persons were killed and nearly twenty others seriously in- | jured when the Munich-Frankfort ex« press train jumped the track and plunged down an embankment near Siegelsdorf. offerings of the other little theatre groups now enjoying the heydey of theit season. But this vitality, though | pregnant in every word spoken last night, somehow missed birth, and | suffered strangulation in the throats |—— ‘The Theatre Guild presente of the actors. pig In “The Betrayal,” a play depicting O'Netie the domination of the Irish workers || Play, Strange Interlude jby the English agents in the jeighteenth century, there was implicit in the ‘plot a thread that, in spite of the awkwardness of the actors, kept the audience's interest to the end. But this interest was no credit to the John Golden Thea., 58th, B. of B'way Evenings Only at 6:30. VOLPONE KEITH-ALBEE Anthony Asquith’s Daritig Story— Behind the Scenes A2’stéswmay : wis i789. in a Movie Studio “Shooting Stars”? frame-up of Iron | * Workers Collapses | SAN FRANCISCO, June 12, — Irish Guild Players. Padraic Colum, Guild Sate dedter dk Sot BY ss author, should be thanked for it. “The Rising of the Moon” fared bet- | € ter at the hands of its actors. Sean P oO R G Y Dilion as the sergeant and Joseph | By Duboes & Derethy tt | Smart as the ragged man did full a ‘Sk Avent ha Bt | justice to their parts. | REPUBLIC siate Woe a east | Perhaps if the outworn expressions | BOOTH 7) s Ht, of Brey, Grand St. Follies Mats. Wednesday & Saturday 2:30, or ST. PETERSBURG Hammerstein’s ‘Thea., Bway & 53 St. Pisa od, one Col. 8380, Wice Daily, 2:40-8:40, Prices, Mats., 50c to $1.00. Eves., 50¢ to $1.50. All Seats Reserved. | CHANINS W. of 46th St. Evenings at 8:15 Mats, Wet. & Sat. SCHWAB and MANDEL'S MUSICAL SMASH Go OD NEW | with GEO. OLSEN and HIS MUSIC LUNA: PAR Broadway The Heart of Coney Island Battle of Chateau-' MILE SKY CHASER TILT-A~ | Free Circus, Con- WHIRL | certs and Dancing Luna’s Great Swimming Pool Four iron-workers, framed up on a charge of having, killed a scab, were declared not guilty in the superior} Winter Garden © vs. 8:30. Mats, I Bao “Give Everybody a Chance to Read. Me!” Tues, & Sat. Greenwich Village Follies GREATEST OF ALL REVUES. court here. The frame-up was backed by the Industrial Association, the —The Daily Worker, Irritable open-shop bosses’ organization, | Bladder y Catarrh | VECHERINKA at 101 WEST CAP SURE &: Soon cleared | ws up by genuine Santal Midy | Effective-Harmless | «Sold by All Drugeisty| | | ——— ee The Vege-Tarry In “GRIND... KRETCHME’ 97 BEST VEGETARIAN Foop MODERN IMPROVEMENTS DIRECTIONS: Take ferrics at 23ra St, Christopher St, Barclay St. or Hudson Tubes to Hoboken, Lacka- wanna Railroud to Berkeley Helshts, BERKELEY HEIGHTS ADMISSION 35c. FRIDAY EVE., JUNE 15th Russian Balalaika Orchestra—Recitation of Red Army Poems—Singing of ~ Red Army Songs. | Auspices SUBSECTION 3E WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY AND DANCE 27th STREET NEW JERSEY. 7463 R 1, Phone, anWwood MARY WOLFE STUDENT, OF THR DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS Moved to i 2420 BRONX PARK EAST Near Co-operative Colony, Apt, 5H. Telehone ESTABROOK 2459, Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. SOVIET Uy Ges so annie OPEN DAILY >. XXX XE EEE EEE EXEYEEKIE K W. NOW OPEN : 'Y orkers Book Shop 26-28 UNION SQUARE 1 Fight Up Books, Pampblets, Magazines, on all subjects, Day 9 eo VIA: LONDON COPENHAGEN HELSINGFORS UNTIL 9 P. M, 69 Fifth A Al See Russia for Yourself? TOURS to THIS SUMMER (Free Vises---Dxtensions arranged for to visit any part of U. On Comfortable CUNARD Steamships i $450 and up. 10 DAYS Of Interesting Sightseeing Trips in Moscow—Leningrad ve., New York City RUSSIA 5.8 RD .. . “CARONIA” _ "AQUIT ANIA” RETURN: WARSAW BERLIN - PARIS WORLD TOURISTS, INC.. (Agents for OF FICIAL TRAVELBURO of SOVIET Gov.) Tel.: Algonquin 6900 n Gang | large number of young workers turn-’

Other pages from this issue: