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LAA TL ne nner inetnenarnnnenenne eer ——— 62 THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1928 Page Five ‘i te Town and Trooper SERB-ALBANIAN Hsh Workers BORDER TENSION BRINGS CRISIS Reveal How Mayor of Up-Sta HAND OF BOSSES | Worker Killed; << Left Desttut SEEN AS MOVE TO. BEFOG WORKERS Marshall, Jewish Hired | Lawyer, Horns In_j A small settlement of Jewish | families in Massena, a little town | in up-state New York, were terror- ized two weeks ago to the point of | fearing for. their lives, as a result | of the bigotry of the mayor of the | town and a police officer, it has | been revealed. W. Gilbert Hawes, | mayor of Massena, and Corporal H.} M. McCann of Troop B, New York | State Police, were the instigators | of the plot to precipitate what might have ended in a pogrom on Amer- | ican soil. | Two weeks ago, on Sunday, which | was the eve of the Jewish religious holiday Yom Kippur, it was discov- ered that a four-year-old girl, Bar- bara Griffith, had disappeared from Foe 2s Tribal Feud May Ignite | Fuse ATHENS, Oct. 3 (U.P).—Nine per- | | sons, including the Jugoslavian vice- governor, were killed in a fight be- | tween Jugoslavians and Albanians | jon the frontier, near Scutari, ac- | cording to advices reaching here to- day. Eight Jugoslavians and one Al- |banian were killed. | |" The fight arose after the chief of | jan Albanian clan had been mur- |dered. His relatives crossed the border demanding justice. | aes sae Her husband killed while at work on a ship docked in Staten | a | Lord Melchett (Sir Alfred Mond), Island, Mrs. Lucy Laura and her two children face starvation. eae ec British capitalist (above), is the — author of a _ class collaboration 1 hk FB: RETURN 1, CEN maa ve ee | VIENNA, Oct. 8 URa-Five gyp-| plan over which J. H. Thomas and W orkers Party Activities |stes, including three women and one| other English labor misleaders have | | | | Gypsies Killed. her home, Mayor, Hawes. and Me- slovakian village of Podedin after a| workers are fighting the Mond Plan Cann immediately began to circulate be held Saturday, Nov. 3, at the New| fight with villagers, according to|for further enslavement of the janarsigr Manor, 11th St. between 34/ advices received from Pressburg. | workers. a statement that the Jews of the eaten halen aie now Khan r 4, ‘4 School ca 8 vi town “required the blood of Chris-| ,,Workers, School catalogs are now /and 4th Aves, Secession oa and taken to hospitals, while the| Coolidge Shies at School Catalogs Out! Upholsterers Notice. All upholsterers who have partici- tian children for their holiday.”| unit agitprops should get catalogs | e i jat the school office and devote) Berel Brennglass, the rabbi of the|at the school office “and devote) Jewish community, was summoned | Workers’ School. pated in Daily Worker-Fretheit Bel villaeeen tid he the motor Ae French Debt Move; by Hawes and McCann, and forced | " S hs 5 w mee: oday 5 a he rps 23 B Y. W. L. Notice. immediately after work, at the Madi-| ‘ ‘ e: to undergo questioning as to the! 41 memners of the Bronx branches | £0" Sure Garden, In order te qiati,|the camp as a reprisal for incen U.S. Must Be Paid whereabouts of the missing Grif-|of the Young Workers (Communist) | ‘R® bazaar work among the workers. |diarism on the part of the gypsies. | WARHINETONTOIE eo oConlane lis opposed to the ingenious sugges- | fith child. Bigoted inhabitants of | League are required to report at 2075 a ‘a a OS ey | Machado U. S. Puppet tino: Premier Poincare of France Clinton Ave., for final mobilization te } the town were aroused, and for a|for the signature drive. A meeting of the C. E. C. of the| International Labor Defense will bel, . a in Cuba, Will Welcome ‘2+ the United States be made to time a mob threatened the Jews. ad * . - The mob did not disperse until the| Downtown Y. W. L., Section 2. eld today at 8 p.m. at the Man- = hattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. Dele- 4 Griffith child turned up. She stated |.¢"ira“Wiret Are Sewcont 8th | gates are urged to come early so ea 000 W Vet pay the German Rete to that she had gone into the woods | Rosen, Helfand, Roberts. to get through in time for the Daily | Oy! ar eterans France, he let it be known today. | near the town to search for her | xcs | Vorker-Breiielt/ Bassar | The suggestion, an indirect one, brother, and had remained there} Section 4, Unit 1. Ottise: Webkiee iad ae HAVANA, Oct. 3 (UP).—With|put forth by the French jingo pre+ overnight. sich Wacanekerere, Lak Deal Tarek BL | A Manel Manafling oF he ction. work. | only five days remaining until the | mier, urges that the question of Eu A large aluminum plant is located | today at 8 p. m. Comrade Golding TS Wi{l be held Tuesday, Oct. 9, at| opening session of the 30th encamp-|ropean war debts and that of Ger- eer the Labor Temple, 14th St. and Sec-| ish War Vi | e) i e ; ‘ ll lead the discussion on “The Un- ‘ Sec- | me: re ‘ion payments be lumped in Massena, which exploits many | employment Problem." ~ “|ond Ave. Prominent labor speakers | Ment of the Spanish War Veterans, | man reparation payme! Ps workers, both Jewish and Gentile, x ‘will address the meeting, which will plans for entertaining the veterans together. The full import of the| % Nua . jlaunch the organizational drive. Al. i ili ~ | provisi: var debts | aying them meager wages for long| Vewer Bronx ¥. W. L. Notice. Joffice workers are urged to attend, and their families have been prac- | provision, that the wai ts be r ane Wein (cee ee tae tically completed by the official “considered,” did not take long to hours. It is said that the “ritual” | young Workers (Communist) League | ® . . | vy pee ‘ i. - harge was instigated by the bosses | has postponed its indoor mass meet- | I, I. D. Antumn Revel. Cuban entertainment committee. |penetrate the Morgan-mind ‘of Cal | ene Co eae ay we DORTEE | ine tor: one. weak Anvil: Gunday,Cow| . Av Erolereriaa, actin Revel will ‘ ‘ f th Coolidge. | of the town in order to divide the |7, 3 p. m., at 715 B. 138th St. Brom-|be held at Webster Hall’ Saturday,; The opening session of the en- 4 r] ji . i inent speakers will address the meet-| October 27, at 8:30 p, m. workers and sidetrack their real | inen lausplces of the New work problem—that of fighting against | . . . {the International Labor their conditions of slavery. | epietaet Women’s Committee. | Prizes will be awarded to under the ;campment will be held at the Na-| The issues are separate, Coolidge Seotion of | tional Theatre at 9 a. m., Monday, | insists, and the py a debt question partici- | when the veterans will be welcomed | is closed, he sai Ts a | district women’s committee | pants wearing the oldest and shab-| i | va | A movement denianding the resig-| will meet Saturday, p. yt the | blest. clothes [Bae riaee Hae hha s paseing | SEEK FALLEN PLANE. | j 7% | Workers Center, 26-28 Union Square. * * ™ |Guba, le | 7 mahion: of Sawer Se tiny pe bas bees | Since members of the committee have | Fretheit Symphony Orcheat: |eapacity of only 5,000, while ap-| ONEONTA, Y. Ya Oct. 3 U— begun by the Jewish residents of the | Gther meetings at 3 p, m., those WESb he wrsineit piss if ieelodidt | proxtenataly. 8,000 veterans are ex.| Through the thick woodland about town. Louis Marshall, notorious as | wi Re ee pnanle| Site Gieeer emt ae conductor, | nected to be in Havana on that date, Pine Mountain, squads of men, an enemy of all militancy among By * | needs new members in the orchestra. | & if e vias , aided by state troopers, took up the the Jewish workers, who often puts | Women Work Organizers. Meetings are heli every Tuesday, §| invitations will be issued only to the | ut today for an airplane, seen to Hitaselt to the: forefront | Section Women Work directors, P-.™. at 1472 Boston Road. Thosa| veterans themselves and several | ai imself to the forefront as a PFO call at district office for cirenlars| Interested should communicate with fessional \ “protector of Jewish|and posters and arrange for thelr pathan H. Alterman, 841 Jennings | newspapermen. in the very heart of the mountain, rights,” has pushed himself to the | distripution. tiga S RESALINDE, = | be broadcast. | Bath Beach Lecture. y The Bath Beach Council and Fraternal | units Council of iain nN: GETS THE GATE jcester. of the Workingclass | | “Workers who want to help us| The program will |fall in flames yesterday afternoon) Attempted SHOES ARE NEED OF CHILDREN OF MILL STRIKERS Workers Relief Starts Drive for Clothing An intense drive to collect shoes and clothing for the barefooted chil- dren of the New Bedford and Fall River textile strikers will be launched Monday, October 8, Har-| riet Silverman, New York secretary of the Workers International Re- lief, announced yesterday. The drive is carefully planned; trucks and volunteer workers will call for clothes and shoes. Workers] and sympathizers should telephone the local office of the W. I. R. and| truck will call for the articles, Miss | Silverman said. | “One of the important phases of relief work for the New Bedford and quate clothing and shoes for the strikers and their children,” Miss | |Silverman said yesterday when in-| terviewed. “We ask those who intend to do- nate clothing not to send articles | which are badly in need of repair. | The cost of cleaning and repairing clothes, and in the case of shoes, of | soling and heeling often costs more than the article is worth. Thousands Without Shoes. “There are thousands of children in New Bedford and Fall River who cannot go to school for the lack of shoes and adequate clothing. The} heroic strikers look to their fellow workers in New York to provide} them, in some measure, with the| simplest necessities of life. and who want to send clothing and shoes can buy shoes or send money | and it will be spent for the purpose | specified by the giver.” | Miss Silverman said that a store | will be opened within a’ few days | which will be used as a central re- ceiving station for clothes and shoes | for the textile strikers. In the mean- time, she said, phone calls to Al-| gonquin 8048 will reach New York relief headquarters. lead of th vi t. about three miles from East Wor- @ movement. | Labor WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (UP).— | Women has arranged a lecture for} f 5 Organizations Friday, Oct. 12, at 1965 Bath Ave.|/Stanley “Bucky” Harris, youthful | Dr. Cantor will ‘speak on ‘venereal | y i errr 2e)) |diseases.” All proceeds will be Bes ee ie ne estate [ie Local a ‘ i. fe de S nated to the textile strikers, |tors for five years, wil not ire 185 EAST BROADWAY Local 22 of the Trade Un‘on Educa- | a See \the club next year, but will remain 187 uw YORK Co-operative Red Rally. | A The Mlection Campaign Committee | as a player on the reserve list, Clark eal 2 tional League will hold i annual | Dance on October 13 at the Park) ease a Ae ae [of the Un-Ar-Co-operative has ar-/ Griffith, president of the Senators, on | a Dressmakers’ Dance. Friday, Boerner eee meeting announced today. On. Octo Dremsinakers’| Friday, October 19th at the Park- No Tip Center Barber Shop its | View Palace, 5th Ave. and 110th St.,| NEW WORKERS CENTER JOSEPH E. ERON, Principal THE LARGEST AND BEST AS ||) WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL. ||) to learn the Engl janguage, to prepare oneself for admixsion || to College. ERON SCHOOL ix regintered by the REGENTS of the State of New York. It has all the rights of a Government High School. r 13, Local 22, T. U. B. L. will hold annual dance at the Park Palace. | ana concert and dance on Friday, Oc- tober 26th at the same place. ' The Sas ‘pcan ull proceeds of these affairs will go Ie patnedags Get, genet abicen ty. ig | SoMAUIEL the dtogtion <Campslan’ ee |Chinese supper And an interesting | the Workers (Communist) Party Krieger Will Travel for Six Months "} 4 rs -| All labor organizations are kind! 9 i ; bf e one Oo} te for Sam Krieger will begin his na-| ¢re°Guy Brichtan Bech” VOT | asked to keep these dates open ne ||] 26-28 Union Sa. 1 Flight Up | Se Soaeeae tional tour for the Daily Worker’s | TE oe. nr ne NEW YORE CITY Register Now. School Opens in : : : Brownsville Color Light Dance. fadivid ey meglery senyice, by Tix- September. election campaign drive for 10,000) ,P Cun Light Danser wilt he ala MARY WOLFE perts.—L. pre tiie BOBEING Our 25,000 alumni are our best new readers today, with his first Oct. 20 at the Brownsville Labor Ly- i pie ny po dg apg witnesses, hkeepsie, cecum, 219 Sackman St,. under the STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH Patron! a Comradely irher TELEPHONE ORCHARD 4473 Re pe to A Eee PENG | auspices of the Young Workers So- CONSERVATORY S . . ie tour will extend over a | cial Culture Club. - = = period of at least six months, during | seweters Concert and Rall. PIANO LESSONS COOPERATIVE DWELLERS coopERATORS! —Patronize the which Kreiger will finecomb the| ‘rhe first coneert and pall of the Mossy fe e Ee 2420 Bronx Park ‘East Patronize a comradely Near Co-cperative Colony. Apt. 8H || stationary store Telephone EASTABROOK 2489 | Hochberg & Canor 669 ALLERTON AVE. ! - FIGHT AGAINST -IMPERIALIST WARS MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian cities between New York and Minne-| Jewelry Workers’ Welfare Club will} sota. At Poughkeepsie, his first stop- ping place he will spend two days, leaving Friday evening for Albany, where he will stay for three days. Other cities he will cover in New York State include Troy, Schenec-| tady, Syracuse, Buffalo, Utica,| Niagara Falis and several others. Tour Thru Midwest. Leaving New York State, Kreiger will continue through Illinois, Wis- | consin, Michigan, and Minnesota. He is the fifth agent sent out by the | Daily Worker in its present sub-! scription drive. | On the tour, Kreiger, whose pur- pose it is to organize strong cam- paign and subscription machinery in; the cities he intends to visit, will meet Benjamin Gitlow, vice-presi- dential candidate of the Workers (Communist) Party, and speak with No Tip Colony Barber Shop Ladies Hair Bobbing a Specialty 665 - 67 ALLERTON AVENUE BRONX, N. Y. COMRADES EAT at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURAN' 1604-6 Madison Ave. | Between 107th & 108th Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx Buy YOUR TICKETS FOR THE D AILY WORKER- FREI- | HEIT BAZAAR AT | THESE STATIONS! Down Town N. MUSLIN, 133 Avenue B; MILLINERY WORKERS LOCAL 43, 640 Broadway. | SOLIN’S RESTAURANT, | 216 East 14th Street; ZELEG’S RESTAURANT, | 78 Second Avenue; | LIDSKY’S BOOK STORE, | 202 East Broadway; | FURRIERS JOINT BOARD, 22 East 22nd Street; CLOAK MAKERS JOINT BOARD, 16 West 21st Street; RATIONAL VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT, 199 Second Avenue; i DAILY WORKER, 26-28 Union Square. MILLINERY WORKERS LOCAL 43, 4 West 37th Street, Harlem him at meetings in Milwaukee, Grand Rapids, Pontiac and Detroit. +e 8 | In San Francisco, a recent meet- | ing outlined plans for the Daily! Workers drive, Sunday, Oct. 14 has. been designated as Red Sunday, and committees will canvass the entire | city on that day to get subscriptions | for the Daily Worker, and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N, Y. Right Off 174th St. Subway Station WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Who wins when you read your bosses’ paper? Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 19. SECOND AVE, Bot. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food. “Unity Co-operators Patronise SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor WILLIAM Z. FOSTER (Candidate for President) ‘ and R E A D the | Baily 20s Worker BUY AN EXTRA COPY EVERY DAY AND GIVE IT TO YOUR SHOPMAT GET YOUR FRIEND AND SHOPMATE TO READ THEDAILY WORKE See That Your Newsstand Has A Supply of Daily Workers BENJAMIN GITLOW 1818 — 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House (Candidate for Vice-President) COOPERATORS PATRONIZE J. SHERMAN ‘Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers 665 ALLERTON AVE. BRONX Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865 Co-operative Workers Patronize I, SCOLNICK TAILOR Fancy Cleaner and Dyers 707 Allerton Ave. Bronx, N. ¥. Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES HEALTH FOOD VEGETA- RIAN RESTAURANT, 1600 Madison Ave.; TOTENS WEINGORTEN (Restaurant), 26 East 109th Street; UNITY ARBEITER CO-OPERATIVE, 1800 Seventh Avenue. Bronx RAPPAPORT & CUTLER (Book Store), 1810 Southern Boulevard. UNITED WORKERS CO. OPERATIVE, 2700 Bronx Park East. | Brooklyn m OKIN’S DRUG STORE, White Plains & Allerton Ave. Brownsville— | J, GOLDSTEIN (Book Store) 865 Sutter Avenue; Boro Park— MAX SNOW (Drug Store) | 4224 13th Avenue; | Bath Beach— MALLEMANS (Book Store) 8603 20th Avenue; Williamsburgh— LEISVA, 46 Ten Eyck Street. jor knows of his whereabouts, is jasked to get in touch immediately to Instigate Pogrom Pioneer Disappears INDUSTRY IN | SOVIET UNION | GAINS RAPIDLY Production This Increases 22% Year for the ending September 30 show that the Statistics econc | year | production of the Soviet Union has 927, | increased 22 per cent over 1927, and IRVING AXELROD show large gains in all branches of Irving Axelrod Fourteen Year Old Pioneer Missing industry, according to Saul G. Bron, of the Amtorg Trading Corporation “Production of state industries es the of the year, amounted to 8,015,000,- a whole, for first ten months 600 rubles in value, and was 22 per Irving Axelrod, 14-year-old Pio-|cent greater than in 192 neer, disappeared from his home at 2700 Bronx Park, the Co-operative, Tuesday morning, September 5,|C88 of the gain for the prece and has not been heard from since, | Year: 7, a rate of increase which was also in ex- Moreover, increased produc- child, were killed in the Czecho-| shown enthusiasm. Militant British jan River strikers is to provide ade-| 2° W@S Seen in the company of|tion was attained not through util three older boys in an automobile, | and he took with him his clothes, a banjo and a saxaphone. izing idle plant capacity, as was |largely the case in preceding years, 4 |but through new installations and The a has red hair and brown |improved methods of production. rues baie is rather large for his age. |For the coming year a similar rate e father asks all Pioneers to co-| o¢ growth is anticipated,” reported operate in the search for Irving, and | 44, “Rron promises to donate a hundred’ dol- Solr |. Mel Bron also explained 4hasaam lars worth of books to the Daily iffi Worker-Freiheit Bazaar if tha boy |Rarvest was good, and that diffi- is found. Anyone who has seen him, |C¥!ties in grain procurement, men- ;|tioned in the press, are due not to |general crop shortages, but to un- |favorable geographic distribution of |the crop and the improper adjust- |ment of the transportation facili- ties to the rapid growth of indus- trial centers. with Comrade Axelrod. CHINA STAYS IN LEAGUE. GENEVA, Oct. 2 (UP).—Fear that China might withdraw from the League of Nations was dissipated to- day when the Nanking government notified the league secretariat that it has accepted the council’s invita- tion to continue pd¥ticipation in the Preparatory Disarmament Commis- sion. “For Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone Murray Hill 5550 Any 7 East 42nd St., New York Dr. Ia: is BACK in her office. All those who want to write to her can send their letters directly to her of- fice, 1840 Madison Ave., cor. 94th St. Phone, Atwater 9161. Office Hrs.: Mornings (except Friday) 9-12 and by appoint- ement. .Proletarianize! Juss as the capitalist class uses accounting records to formulate their business poli- cles so that their profit ac- || counts will continually swell, so must labor and fraternal or- ganizations use accounting rec- ords ‘to assist'them in measur- || ing its ability to increase its || | Fadanes proletarian activity. Your organization can do it by_consulting Louis P. Weiner, BCS. | Public Accountant and Auditor, 149 SPRING STREET, New York City. Phone: WALKER 5793 or 7. Bed sha ios saa as ate | CARPENTERS’ UNION LOCAL 2090 | Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M, at | Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours. 9:30-12 a.m., 2-8 p.m, Daily Except Friday and Sunday 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York | Telephone: Lehigh 6022. Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. Office and headquarters are in the | Labor Temple, Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. PYCCKHA 3YBHOM BPAY Dr JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 25 yrs. in practice. Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE §} E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery store || Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 Allerton Ave., Cor. Barker BRONX, N. Y. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2. Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone, ke Union Sq., New York City ee Tel Algonquin 8183 The Main Office of United Workers Cooperative Association witl be located at the Cooperative Workers Colony 2800 BRONX PARK BAST (Barker Avenue, Corner Britton St.) BEGINNING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3 Temporary TELEPHONE, OLINVILLE 8947 the Lookauin ooo “7 69 FIFTH AVENUE A BRANCH OFFICE W — TELEPHONE: A ete ee ee Cloakmakers, Dressmakers, Tailors, Fur Workers, Capmakers, Millinery Workers, and workers of other needle trades Send Delegates to the Conference for the Communist ~ * Campaign Tuesday, October 9 —6 P. M— at Bryant Hall, 42nd St. and 6th Ave, ‘ — hw ) NEEDLE WORKERS! |