The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 21, 1928, Page 4

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” : gram. Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1928 BUSINESS AGENT STEALS CREDIT FOR UNIONIZING JAMISON REFRIGERATOR DO et PUR union for yout 32 years. pany has a large plant in Baltimore which is union and has made : . =) Torker Correspondent pe A EM sau pearwarey S| a7 oa lots of money by catering to union trade and sells goods with he resents very much. e Coe oper phi hia oe ; Lae The for union’ shop A aa this:district butthe ine ion label. Also this shop had to become union and the The night of the no CHESTER, Pa. (By The Jamison Refrigeraton Cold iness promised with the employer, and'signed them j..ciness agent let them pull it over with a reduction of 9% cents. brought in and they voted Storage Door Company hi ne up for 80 ‘ per hour. ‘i have been brought in two The busihess agent took the of turning the trick A brother unio: s me that the credit should:not The: buginess agent is really secretary-treasurer of the dis= The job is safe for ano’ which made this shop of 26 m union after it to the bus son Cold Storage Door Com- trict cour and while he has had that job for seven years OR COMPANY wants it again. The last two years he has had opposition which mination, the 26, new members were solid for yours truly. These men could weeks sooner, I am informed. ther year, because he has no opposition. —s. Mine Correspondent Sends Save-the-Union Leader’s Questions to Lewis Tool VOYZEY RECALLS | Steamer Penetrates Upper Allegheny River | WORKER BURNED NESBIT'S LITTLE SLUGGING PARTY And the Black Eye He| Was Presented With my | (By a Worker Correspondent) SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (By mail). — I’m sending you a copy of an open| letter which George Voyzey, the fighting leader of the Save-the-Union | forces in this field, sent to the traitor | of a Lewis henchman, Mr. Walter Nesbit. It speaks for itself. S. Mr. Walter Nesbit, i Mine Workers Building, | Springfield, Ill. | Mr. Nesbit: | I have this day received your charges and to me they 4 a good | joke. But they do give me a reason | to write you an open letter. I have been wondering what occu- pation you will follow when you are} kicked out of that office—and out you are going. Loda and Hindmarsh are l steam driven ves usually heavy (By a Worker PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (By mail) | protesting ag: g of Prof of Pennsylvania was more than a suc ORKERS CANNOT AFFORD TO WED small pebbles and are both ready tools to be used for any slimy program and enough your program limy to prove their qualifications. I have been wondering, you have told the memb your ugging party at Belleville, where you left a gang of sluggers with expectation of doing a good job e n, J. J. Watt is on Freeman Thomps pase nets id myself. ae : areas Walter, have you told the| Marriage Bureau Clerk membership how you organized those sluggers and how you arranged them in front of a restaurant in Belleville and how you came in to speak to Watt’ to advise him to leave because} there was a gang going to give us a : 2 slugging, and have you told the mem- ‘ marriage license bership that you were surprised when |bureau in this city, the usual rush of Watt refused to recognize you. And lovelorn couples to secure marriage dear Walter, have you told the mem-|licenses has failed to materialize. bership how you signaled the slug-|Compared with previous Junes, the gers to charge into the restaurant, |decline in the number of permits is and Dear Walt, have you told the |very marked. membership how surprised you were| Mr. Miller, as becomes all good to see your gang of sluggers retreat. Vare-Mellon republicans in this, the ing when they seen it was too hot. |¢itadel of Coolidge “prosperity” bun- And my dear Walt, have you also |combe, probably reads the “Inquirer” told the membership how gallantly |and the “Evening Bulletin.” He there- you came to your sluggers’ rescue |fore does not know what is the rea- when the tide was turning, and how |S0n for this unusual state of affairs. you happened to have the Save-the-| He says, “No, there aren’t as many Union label put on your eye. And|people wanting to be married this Calls It “Queer” (By a Worker Correspondent.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (By Mail). i W. Miller, t have you told the membership, dear |June as in other Junes, and that’s | Walt, how you found the city police |queer. Well, I don’t know what so quick, and how you brought those |¢auses it. People are funny.” officers into the restaurant and told} However, the workers in this city them to put us under arrest. And|Who walk daily through the streets vou also told the membership |for miles for unattainable jobs know. prised you were when one of |To them there is nothing funny about the managers of the restaurant com- |it. pelled the police to also arrest two of | your sluggers. They sure played a |because they do not have any wo: dumb part when they did not run jand workers cannot subsist on love lean out of the county, did not they |alone. Something’ more substantial is Walt? needed, bread, meat, a roof over every And have you told the membership |loving couple’s heads and things to pe mue ou had to} Wear, including shoes, in order to gay toh sluggers. It was’ a|Walk the streets looking for a job. fiard brea it not, Walt, that; And besides, the fee at the mar- two of them were compelled to stay|riage license bureau is $2.50,, payable all night in jail, and Walt, you should{im_cash only, and it’s really surpris- have stated to them, when you were|ing how many people ¢an spare organizing, that if they should be|that small amount-these da caught that they should keep their} You hem Mystery Connected With mouths shut. sir), one of ‘and egg n paid and t wet hen be kn the Walt (yes ‘amous \ butter | 1itted that he was! 3 her one was sore asa Roald Amundsen Flight ‘4 1ad not paid him — he stated that he 1 i voled, because | M e officials said t ll amount of| the been officially notified Walt, have you|that Rene Guilbaud and Capt. Roalc p how early you| Amundsen had hopped off at Troms: were down to the hall the next morn-|in Guilband’s French seaplane, ing to get your bosom friends out of| “The seaplane’ is still at Tromsoe the “callaboose.” | so far as we know,” it was announced. [And Walt, possibly you have told|“We have never received any official a membership that you tried your | notification that Guilbaud hopped off. be st to get the proprietor of the res- |We have asked the French consulate Ministry of s afternoon PARIS, Ju did not And told. the membe The steanier Kittanning, an engineering navigating the upper reaches’ of the Allegheny been able:t 's made possible of people lining the shores and bridges of the stream, is one of the greatest inland ports. in the world. AUERBACH IS HAILED AS AID IN STRUGGLE y Correspondent) People simply cannot get married, | ” ee Ba RAR R, ‘Richard Herndon’s First Play | ot ne ; by ‘Caravan’, Set for Labor Day LOUISE GROODY ree i ‘yan” is all set for early production, ‘We Don’t Pay fOY according to an announcement sent aya”? TT 7 jout by Richard Herndon. This will be Sears,” They Say (nil initial production of the new sea- {son, and is scheduled to open at the The play (By a Worke C On December 28, 1926, while work-|Klaw Theatre, Labor Day. espondent) ing for the. Manhattan Bed Co.,/deals with gypsy life. 1053-65 Metropolitan Ave., Brooklyn, | On August 20 “Caravan” will have N. Y., I was trapped in a tite because | tryout performance at the Boulevard the bosses put me to work in a small} : . place with a gasoline tank. When | Theatre in Jackson Heights, followed the fire started I was unable to escape. |by a .week’s run at Werba’s Brook- For 35 days-I lay.as dead. in the |lyn Theatre, ere coming.to the Klaw, Greenpoint hospital. Then I was dis-|George Marion “and Kate .Mayhew charged from\the hospital because it |head the cast. hag no more room for me. After this the Aetna Life Insurance Cg., 100 Wil- liam 'St., N. Y., took care of me, the Morosco, will be transferred -next At the end of a week the insurance |Monday night to the Shubert The- carrier declared me able to go back \atre. is to work. But I was not able. When my case came up for hearing at the Compensation Bureau, they, too, said I was fit for work again and the case vessel, has succeeded in It is 81 years since a o travel so far. up The un- this feat which interested thousands 3. Pittsburgh, on the lower part ee : £23 ee ee eet 8) The noted musical star is headliner at the Palace Theatre this week, ap- pearing in a miniature musical show. “The Silent House,” now playing at “Hello Sue,” a musical comedy, |with all-colored cast, opened at the Alhambra Theatre Monday night. was postponed for a final adjustment, | Russell Lee wrote the book and lyries I protested that I was not able to do|and Sandy Burns the music. my work. I couldn’t do what I used! to do before, But they refused to listen to me, showing that they don’t give'a damn about the workers who he mass meeting here on June 7, Sol Auerbach from the University s. It proved to the very many who ‘attended that the wi are ever ing to stand by th > have an lucation and who will fight hand-in- hand with the worker uerbach, like Scott Near- = \)——Pheatre Guild Productions——— PO KG %. By Dubose & Dorothy Heyward “Patience,” Gilbert and Sullivan’s jmerry satire, which was previously jannounced in these ‘columns for the Professor. cere aia tee a are are forced to carry injuries from |Ambassador, wilh open instead at the | Ge THEA, West 42d St. a “oe nce cea oe work for life. I will be one of these, ; Theatre Masque next Monday. Mary REPUBLIC Mats. WED. & § capitalist class, He told thevtruth re-| 4,0" Pt! 19; 1928 my case eame, typ | Boles: and Donald’ Kiley ;will PIFY || Gozene jgarding conditions of the workers’ nat Sogusunent.. << Tiey des ie cue ae G'Net II's gas Strange Interlude John Golden Then., 58th, E. of B’way Byenings Only at 6:80. VOLPONE | cided to give me the same award they Skeet fixed the first time. And this was| 4 screen version, of “Danger nothing. I protested that I wanted | Street,” Harold McGrath’s novel,’ is compensation for the permanent sears | now in production under the direction on my hand, face and chest. Because | of RalphInce. Warner Baxter, Duke I protested, they called a policeman | Martin, Frank Mills, Bob Perry, and forced me from the hearing hall.| Harry Allen Grant and Ole M. Ness |fatherland, the Soviet Union. For4 |that he was_expelled. He mentioned |what is being kept from the workers | {in America. |_ He said that the workers in the | Soviet Union have far more foresight V2 e ey 5 0. « . § . Evs. 8:30 than the Americans and better able —A. DE LUTIS. |are in the cast. } Guild Be ee ae 2:30 jto create a society where life is worth | ———_____ 7a living and do not live in such a cap-| = = |italist society as in America where a| |few rich live on the labor of millions | \of workers. “There they know they jare building a society for themselves, but the workers in America work only to make the rich richer and for a very little bread for themselves. In view of this the working class appreciates such people as Auerbach BOOTH? nyenines Bone Mats, Fri., June 2: Sat., :230 Grand St. Follie END ST. PETERSBURG Hammerstein’s Thea, Biway & 53 St. nee te mate knowledge of work- ‘ Twice Daily, 2:40 stant eres pier ers’ needs and can direct the workers N Ww R: e d Bde to $1.00, Eves, 50c to $1.50.” well in their daily struggles. We e . ecor S All Seats Reserved. jwelcome those Wwho “betfay” their own class, the bourgeoisi¢, and join jto make an end to unemployment, | wars, et These brothers are willing |to sacrifice their very existence in or- | The Heart of Coney Island Bate of Chateau-Thierry MILE SKY CHASER TILT-A- | Free Circus, Con- WHIRL | certs and Dancing Luna’s Great Swimming Pool LUNA PAR Made in Europe and in the United States. WORKER IS. STILL IN PRISON UNDER SYNDICALISM LAW Leo Ellis, of I. W. W. in Folsom Prison REPRESA, Cal., June 20 (FP).— By an oversight the Federated Press {reported that all the criminal syndi- calism prisoners in California had been released. Leo Ellis, an I, W. W. sentenced in Stockton to 2% years, is still in Folsom prison. His time is up Sept. 19. He belongs to the agricul- tural workers’ section of the I. W. W. Though the I. W. W. will all be free with Ellis’ release, Tom Mooney at San Quentin and Warren Billings jat Folsom remain behind the bars, |having put in over 10 years in the \penitentiary and several years in jail while on trial and awaiting sentence. cae ies ane mruaaate AEA CESh CHANIN’S: 34,W. of Broadway 46th St. Te enings at 8:38 Mats. Wed. & Sat. SCHWAB and MANDEL'S t MUSICAL SMASH | Goo with GEO. OLSEN and HIS MUSIO Bys. 8:30. Mats. Tues, & Sat. Greenwich Village Follies GREAT OF ALL REVUES, KEITH- | A TT Winter Garden ates CAMEO American Premiere Famous Russian Artist, in IVAN “ be MOSKVIN «Station Master A Sovkino Production (The Russian Last Laugh) Are you a ‘DAILY WORKER” worker daily? |der to help the wo’ in their strug- gles. Released for the first time in this country ». first you told Watt to leave and when taurant to place charges. against us, and was not you sad Walt, when the | manager stated that he could not| ink of doing that because those fel- | ows acted as gentlemen and they | were justified for their action when | ey were being attacked. And Walt, | ive you also told the boys who pay is and assessments, that you payed | for all the broken furniture, dishes | and ete. in the restaurantthat amount- ed to $75, “It really is hard to explain, Walt, | he refused, you remember, you stated ‘that you would not be responsible, and then you came to their rescue and a beauty of an eye. Later you talled police, and later yet, you got your friends out of the city jail, and still later you paid the full damages of furniture brokén in the restaurant. _ And Walt, again you caused me to “eerder how are you going to turn this in? As expenses, as taxi, or train fare? Or will you just load it ‘on the miscellaneous? >, And Walt, I wonder how long you think you can carry on your silly pro- I have been around the coal- camps quite a lot these last few weeks find you are about as popular snake and your wisdom is the ‘at Tromso to forward a detailed re- | port.” surely don’t think you can go on long the company. -Various reasons were with your wrecking policies. I notice |Siven. Some delegates branded it as you have paid the boys at Old Ben /smalling of company unionism. Some | No. 8 in West Frankfort, $10 a week charged that the employes would pay | commissary because they are out de- manding the Jacksonville scale. How much have you paid the other boys | who are out demanding the same scale of wages? They will have to be paid, Walt! And where will the money come from? Yeu could not get more than $50,000 of a mortgage on the mine workers’ building that y. qour friends, Frgnk and Ha 278,000 for. You can not last much longer, Walt. Your ship is sinking and the member- ship is building another one much more substantial and, Walt, they are going to see to it that no other set of pie-counter experts are ever going: to get control of it to run it on the rocks. Yes, Walt, you and all those petty followers..of yours are being dumped to oblivion with you, You are on the down hill run to the slimy pool of death. Your program is gaining more momentum each hour to your end, so to you and your kind bye-bye. CSS al ove, e2GEORGE VOYZEY. The federation also took a erack at the widely heralded safety com- mittee of the Northwestern in which co-operation between masters and men is publicly emphasized. The un- ionists are strong for safety but they passed a resolution demanding that their representatives on the commit- ‘tees be elected by the men instead of appointed by the company. | THe Northwestern is one of the ie that has adopted the Baltimore & Ohio plan of co-operation between management and the shop unions, 1 i wn a ! 3 CHILDREN BURN TO DEATH MILWAUKEE, June 20, — Three ehildven of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Geier were burned to death in their home here today when the mother left them alone for fifteen minutes making a trip to a bakery. ‘We will ship you cP. Series or we will be mhor in All Languages. D, Parcel Post any of e than glad to send you Classic ‘and all Foreign Reco We Carry a Large Stock in Selected Records ~~: ~> the above Masterwork Seriplete Catalogues of rds, \ SURMA MUSIC COMPANY 103 AVENUE “A” ABet. 6-7th) NEW YORK CITY .. ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE \ on maa ee a ma ene aren Sane Re ‘Radlos, Phonographs, Cramophones, Pianos, Player Pianos, Player Rolls. All OKEH, Gaeon, Colanbla, Victor Records.—Piano Tuning and Repair- “ing Accepted.—We Sell for Cash or for Credit.—Greatly Reduced Prices, When a Sol Auerbach shows sym- _ . . gan [pathy to the working class ideals, 7007 International Marseillaise e to the- our capitalist owned universities ex- - [pel him. They are afraid of their 12-inch Record, Played by a Large Orchestra. existence. But the workers will al- ways gladly receive them in their own | ot jranks and work together with them RUSSIAN RECORDS for.a workers’ and farmers’ govern-|f 59049. DOWN THE VOLGA RIVER. Folk Song: ment, a Co-operative system of so- GRAND FATHER PAHOM. Folk Song. spt 1C.P. 59047 SORROW WALTZ and MOSCOW POLKA. | aes 59006 BEAUTY and POLISH MAZURKA. | jg 59001 KOROTCHKA. Soprano Isa Kremer. | | 59044 MOSKVA. National Song., Isa Kremer. i {9 59010 PA D’ESPAGN. Russian Orchestra “Odessa”, | 59007 PERED RAZLUKOJ (March)... Russian Orchestra “Odessa”. SPORTS AS TRICK 59009 UKRAINA (March). Russian Orchestra “Odessa”. ! . TE x a3 a UKRAINIAN RECORDS nadia Ere ~ | 59048 BAJATI (Kaukasian Melody), Kavazky Orchestra. | CHICAGO, June 20 (FP).—The big} 57001 EKH. RASPOSHEL \(Balalacchny). Orchestra Gorskoy. Publicity balloon sent up by the Chi-|{° 59016 FOURTEENTH STREET (Kupley). $8. Sarmatoff. cago & Northwestern Railroad on its/§ 59035 KAMARINSKY (National Dance). Solo, Zibulski. employe athletic system has been|{ 59026 KOHANOTCHKA BALALAJKA. Orchestra. Biljo. pricked by the local board of System | KORUBUSKA... Soprano Isa Kremer. ne eh One VOSPOMINANIJA 0 ROSSII, Waltz: Patro Biljo. BR anh uae Ce ee AMERIKANSKI BABI. Humorist S. Sarmatoff. eat be etes from its employes: 59048 KAVKAZKA MELODIJA. Kaukazus Orchestra. pees ampionship meet in Chicago | 15034 OJ, GORE KALINA. Ukrainian National Chorus: { jin August. Baseball, track, tennis, |¥ 59902 REVE TA STOGNE. Soprano Isa Kremer. y jeolt, Sune trapshooting and/§ 59004 VIJUT VITRI. Soprano Isa Kremer, i er sports were on the program. 59029 ZAPOROJZI U SULTANA, Kornienko Ukr. Orchestra. : - Now the unionized shop crafts. in AY PARK Chicnad Naren teiateds a2 taste mami POLISH RECORDS P ANT B. ly meeting, that they are opposed to , ‘ / Chew ncanarbene re cies: | g bat 77006' FANTASY ON SONG OF INDIA. : the athletie association sponsored by|4 77997 FREEDOM MARCH INTERNATIONAL. LA MARSEILLAISB, 7 60029 ALL RIGHT. Baryton Ochrymovicz. 60042 BAJ-BAJ (Komishe scene). Trupe Marskiego. j 60048 DJABELSKA PIENS 0 PEKLE, Bassist Didur, siete Beir dl Wd 60014. MARSZ UKRAINSKY. Orchestra Warsaw. cone ge pure tannin ae pea 60038 NAPISZE KARTECKE DO RZYMU, Tarnow Orchestra. |pany’s thops to play against. teams 60036 NA WARSZAWSKIM BRUKU. Podgorsky & Pavlak. jof non-union roads, ( fe Labor and Frateiwnal Organizations Attention! Airy, Light Rooms for OFFICES and MEETING ROOMS at the WORKERSCENTER, 26-28 Union Square, Elevator Service. Telephone Stuyvesant 1201. ~

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