Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
= x THE DAILY WORKER, _ NEW YORK, WED VE! SPAY. CCTOBER 10, 1928 Tammany Starts Raids to Hide Responsibility for Mounting Poison Alcohol ‘Deaths MILL WORKERS DEFY TERROR; BETRAYAL FAIL WORKERS PARTY F a Organizations ‘SPEAKEASIES THRUOUT THE CITY, ist.z tre, cf RUN WIDE OPEN: POLITICIANS AID uh ction. Slave i is Killed in Untown Trolley Accident ons mpu le PLIONS | Feb Oataler mM, a m.’ under the Grouch 18:30" p. ch. kers auspices of the New York section of Young Comm 1 the International Labor Defense. | take [ ‘ Prizes will be awarded to partict- iN eee: pants wearing the oldest and shab- Brownsville Banquet. Blest clothes. A banquet to « pase se ck! ait ter in Browr rc : 3 : " x : aay ¢ f > From Jan. 1 to Slugging and Arrests Speakers "will Gover |i. Bath Beech tester. 3) |ariey sven 518 Die Fr mm Jan. 1 § Take Place | Entire City United Council of | Workingclass o Sept. 1 ’ ; yomen has arranged a lecture for Miners’ Cc iy Friday, Oct. 12, at 1965 Bath Ave.| he Ukrainia " Pee ¥ if Continued from Page One | Speakers of the Workers (Com- DF, Cantor aritashebiekgn: Evaper cal invites all wo ' Ww ae the i capitalist press later came out with munist) Party will cover the entire nated to the textile strikers. haprenae enc amg = ea a the gleeful announcement that Ru- city at open-air meetings this week, : . . . Friday, ( a more n ) viet 4 binstein was the victim of fits, dur- WO OMGDR, Wb Diatrarmy.oF fhe olags |: Seen nee reictagdnatlan torent, G6 mc ath ak Mit oree | pick i I ing the throes of which he had in- |struggle before the workers in all or the UncareCocoperative hae ar. {ceeds will go for the striking miners 1cials have star ¥ red himself. five boroughs. Many meetings have ranged a ratification meeting om|relief. paign of raids of | + if Friday, October 19th at the Park- & : x eriminal respor Ms “Idleness,” “Vagrancy” Charges. also been arranged for smaller | vi "Saiace sth Ave. and 110th St, Umbrella and Handlemakers. * Gonths towns and citics outside of New ana soncert and dance on F Oc-| A special organization m — # At the latest reports some twen- inate tober 26th at the same pla The|the Umbrella and Hand) One thousand plainclothes men " . strikers i ° z ‘ull proceeds of these affairs will go|hbe held tomorrow an ght fed ‘ y i ty-five strikers and union leaders A complete list of the meetings | towards tre Blection Camp: Eo Ora he on en and eight fed nts are now z were arrested, with many more ar-| and speakers follows: the Workers (Communist) Party. working F rests being made all the time with-| Today ieee tabs cm these dates ere windly:| 3 ‘0 s 0 keep these dates ope out warrants by the police who are | Tearing loose from their anchoring us the fiat car they were on started down steep hill at Lex Bea hoe: nate Se Ble- ey | I scouring the city. All of them are; ington Ave., and 103rd St, trolley trucks, shown above lying ut foot of hill, crashed thru the front car, Mink Sevan’) Bim, (Bel Auer: Local 22%. U. EB. L. ! ae being brought into court immediate- | killing th the motorman: Hoot Pan; as Rien of the Trade Union Banas: 000 bars and sp the city ly, quickly tried and sentenced to heige Dance on ‘October 1 at the Park |and refreshments. Al] which 2 amounts » er erans BE ret pees ae soni! Thi ER, nie ug, ctober 13 at the Park | @ refreshments. 1 worke ar huge fines and jail sentences that Calon Square ae Padguss| Palace. Bea ee invited to attend. | to poli ‘ range in length from one month to} \* CWilkine’ and aia CEES Shkuahiimaia ashi: Brethelt Srmphon» a Proportion 0 six. Most of the strike leaders are | or ers ar arty. C V1 1eS | Moore, LeRoy, Sumner, Ackerman. |{,0, October 13, the Dresamakers’| be aropbons soned liquor are unded being bailed out on appeals to a ial ete 2 os ns aria Pe ea ALC go orenestra: UP ' ; higher court, despite the arrests of| te Maniamin Alewasboe Spiro. . 3 Meetings are Id every Tues 1ere are more than 1,000 speak- some of the local leaders of the In- MIGHT WORKURS: MEET. gf 9 a. m. Sunday in a member WReventh Aon and 187th St—_Geo,| <Zantset at Brighton Beach. nthe ‘ ‘ i A. special meeting of ting at 154 Watkins St; All Seventh Ave. and 187th St—Geo. | saturday, Oct. 13, at 8:20 p. m, a le between Old Slip and Catherine ternational Labor Defense. Charges| workers will ba held oat mbers must attend Padmore, Nessin, Williams. jenimene eaeper and an ‘interesting t. alone. Out this section ha i i 2 i bo * * . Sea . |concert will be given by the Work-| St, alone, s section has bake snole arena nozlange Savane, math #10) eat ee vue topes “alk mcer : | Seventh Ave. and 181st St—| ors Guy’ prrene Beene | Nie eae come a flood undiluted wood al- picketing, but has now been cl ranged | called th eAdcrdaticg withne@ An open air meeting will be hel i | Wright, Ed. Welsh, Grace Lamb, eR es oY Tantei s: cohol du t le threa to “idleness” and “vagrancy.” instructions, Your presence is obliga- | tonight on the corners of Da Police Attack | Donald Brownsville Color Light D: Pe een Wee etree see tas Ps asence is ob’ onight 0 e corners of Dal : onaldson. ville Color Lig ance. Yorkers Club, 1313 43rd »| which has be ble for pr: tory. \ and 180th St., the Bron Le “A * ‘ * 0 Net. 20. A “ which has been vonsible for prac- Emelio Bento, a striker, was ar-|‘°"? te laa lm Baum of the’ Photographers’ Union, Demonstrations Ninety-ninth St. and Lexington, Coler Light Dance wilt be meld |Oct. 20, at 8:40 p.m! tigally allithe fetalitiags (ce rested outside his home, which ad- Morning International Branch. meeting is held un- es. ; Ave. (Noon)—John Sherman, Chas.|ceum, 219 Sackman St. under the , ie 0-7 Sanne The route of police raids was joins the relief store, and taken into| A meeting of the Morning Inter- 4 PARIS, Oct. 9.—With the declara- | Wilson. auspices of the Young Workers So- mr i abel Waldner, winner dotted with pers * g i natioj ch of the Workers | Campaign | {cial Culture C © 1928 beauty con dotted with persons on the sidewalks the poli hich di d OOReL Brenan oF a ; 3 ; 1 lub. | e police ie which drove up, de-| (Communist) Party will be hi ———$—— tion of a strike by the fur workers’ Thursday. . . . |May, will dance at the Grand Annual|and in the gutters writhing in the | spite the wails of his two terrorized] today at, 10 a.m. at the Worker Junions here, the hundreds of strik-| One Hundred and Thirty-eighth | Jewelers Concert and Ball, Fie Boke ene von. by the pain of acute alcoholism. Many of | children on the porch |Center, 26-28 Union Square. Plan’ f , |_ The first concert and ball of the ft | men a for Red Sunday will be discussed \ers marched in mass picket forma- St. and St. Annes Ave.—Blake, Sus- | Jewelry Workers’ Welfare Cluo will| BO? Defense to be hel the persons in the hospitals are not A tremendous rage is rapidly| Attendance is urgent. | | f the fur| sim, Buckenberger, Heder. |be held Saturday, Nov. 3, at the New| susie pon %a Halle B25, expected to live. swelling amongst the broad masses POE SEG Hn Hons to patrol the shops of thé fur! “Fortieth St. and Eighth Ave—| Webster Manor, ith St. between sa| Nace QW gfrreqmettie! Union From Jan. 1 to Sept. 1, 518 per- of strikers at these acts of extreme| 4 meeting of Shop Nucleas manufacturers and stores. The en-|Baum, P. Shapiro, Joe Cohen. Phot & 7 p.m ies chs sons died of alcoholism in New provocations, They declare their py | ares en aa Be, the Workers com: RED DRIVE epnws tire industry is tied up. Steinway and Jamaica Ave., As- a Millinery Workers, | SVOE Kaa WV ouiem Seainient York. The newest victims are éx- tentions to fight and judging from! 16 p.m. at 101 W. 27th St. All mem- They held successful demonstra-|toria, L. I—B. Miller, M. Reiss, pguilinery aad Workers Social ana is orking women, working women's| pected to bring the year’s total | their undiminished aggressiveness, | bers Tiust attend ee hy tions despite attempts of the Paris|Harfeld, C. Martin. hold & grape and Hallowe'en festive al ipapes Go yenr Aecee above that for 1927 when 719 per- they are ready to face the, entir : * eeee H lice: to break them up. | Garfield, N. J—Speaker to be an- | Saturday, Oct. 20, at the Claridge Ho-|en. Register to be able sons died. In the e: "i : ea . ets ae ves al Ua eo eabaes T Maee ee tar dina au hel ap Kk Pe arfield, Spi fal AA pelos 16 cette. eee cy [ot; Remister to be gone ind he rear before prohi { combined strikebreaking forces of! fe ership meeting of Unit 4, fe) ors Spee p The strikers are demanding that | nounced. be obtained at the union offices, 640!ter the whole wee ition became effective only 95 per- } the bosses, their A. F. of L. scablnisy party will be held today! Flection Campaign | the employers raise the miserable Friday. Broadway, and 4 West 37th St Saturday, ‘Oct it tilt | Sons died of alcoholism | agent officials and the police. at 8:30 p. ta at 1960 Bath Aves Ail 1 va wages for which they are compelled} National Biscuit Co. (Noon)—R. Havens) eaten, con, Gitigws aeinlbey Ustiah eecacn ae cS | Saulnier, the owner of the lot that] ™¢™Pers must attend. | to work. The unions involved de-|Grecht, B. Gussakoff. A meeting of the Bill Haywood| Working Women Singer Plant, Elizabeth, N, J.| Branch, I. L. D. of Brighton Beach | —______~ {ll be. held Frid: ic ‘i TIN (Noon)—B. Lifshitz, Perlman. Te at 28F Bata evenne, Oct: |JAPANESE WIN COURT FIGHT. Continued from Page Cne has been used by, the strikers for Bath Beach Y. W. L, clared the strike after an announce- their mass meeting, was threatened ihe wunaten oe fhe Buth Bene aoe In Nashua, Comrades Bloomfield| ment by the employers’ fur federa- ERON SCHOOL Building Workers’ Union will hold a j Supreme court refused to hear ar- Varet and Graham Aves., Brook-|™eeting today at & p. m, at the to prepare oneself for admission | With arrest if he doesn’t forbid fur-| tion of the, Young Workers (Com-|and Kangas covered the Mellwsin tion that they have no intention of| Bliss Plant (Noon)—A. Markoff, | Port on the Mooney-Billings Mbera-| WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 (U,P)—|j] 185-187 RAST BROADWAY | ther meetings, This threat was de-| TUMItt) .y°GEue om Bagurday, Oct: and Thom McAn shoe shone, the | conceding wage increases. | Chalupski. | meeting UNE. | Japanese virtually won their right i RON, Principal |) led, are invited to attend poe ii dies Snes gay cal Nis | Bristol and Pitkin Ave., Brook- PACE AL ARS EN i organize and conduct orparatioy 8 ANG Heenan | Six Month Sentences. M = ae r C eS Seedy ears eeraer ne ea lyn—Taft, Chernenko, Pasternack, betdsaeadi tah tan in California today when the U. DE Ook, . Lower Bronx unit of Y. W. C. L. ee east oy sta-| who were tak t i i The Amalgamated P. e E ja | Murdoch, Rubinstein, Dawson,| will hold a very important open air houses, street railway transfer sta aken back to work, In| sulin Cohen. oreo whl hola” to learn the Eng nRURBe, | Hegelias, Izakk, Manuel Pitt, Ce.|mecting. tomorrow at. 138th’ Street tions, ete. In Manchester, despite| the Amoskeag some weavers are a a ey peer Adnaea dh i ans willis Ave. Speakers saaiot, the heavy’ guard and other meas-|Tunning as many as seventy-two , Almieda and her sixteen year| Cohen, others. All comrades who can 1 h hile i 1 "| ures ‘employed by the huge Amos-|looms each, while in Dover, New old daughter Branco were arrested, |@ttend must do so, in view of th r y trouble we have haa at, last meeting. keag Mills, Comrade Bloomfield suc-| Hampshire, the workers are running, to College. Labor Temple, 243 wast Pith serene | SuMents on an appeal by the state of California in a Los Angeles case involving this question. ERON 1OOL is registered by NTS of the State of It has ail the rights lyn—Bimba, Zam, Lipzin, Geltman. |for “the "purpose. ant pith, Street Market Plaza, Newark, N. J.—H.| wider organization. All workers in | i rnment High School. Catalogue | o. F the engineering, building, mechanic, the latter while waiting for food at| 3 ceeded in getting into the mills and|ninety and one hundred looms each,|™M@- Wicks, Fregman. ete, trades are’ asked to’ attend Phone or write for the relief headquarters. The judge) ,,l°wer Bronx unit ¥."W. C. 1, open Saturday | que i ioe | alr meeting will be held on Friday | covered the entire weaving depart-| When asked how they managed to 2 Willtamsburgh Jeane: \“For Any Kind of Insurance” |] Register Now. School Opens tn}, is handing out six month jail sen-| at 1asth at and Broo Ave. Spenk- ment during one noon-hour, receiv-| yun go many looms these workers| West New York, N. J.—Stanley,| wWitliamsburgh workers will cele- : September. i, tences to union organizers, whieh | °F: Smith, Weiss, Geffin, s ing the cooperation of all the work- uitlad: that dag tas ceanoast Tae Perlman. jhe {he gnening of thelr new Our 25,000 ue are our best lt are promptly appealed, releasing | Xe We te Open Alr Meet. | iq crs in that department who, when| many as they possibly can and do|_ Elizabeth, N. J.—George Powers,|5¢ Manhattan Avenue Sater at EPHONE CHARD 44735 them for continued work im contina-| 09 open tego ym, Nat goth sc asked by Bloomfield if his presence! not do what is physically impossible ®- Duke. |@ concert and dance, saan ing the strike. and 2nd Ave., under the auspices of in the mills would endanger the jobs! for them to do. One of the workers) Perth Amboy, N. J.—Joe Padgug. atin ‘iin Telephone Murray Hill 55: Federal authorities announce in the Downtown Section 2 of sensky of these workers, all replied almost said that the mill barons expects; Paterson, N. J.—Lloyed, Freiman.| «4.1 Grupo Esperantista| 7 East 42nd St., New York ‘DR. a M NDEL the local press that they are begin-| Helfand, Brustein, Rothman, Fox.| unanimously, “To hell with over-| each worker to be an all- round com-| (Red Nights will be ‘announced | Proletaro," will begin its Esperanto} ning deportation proceedings against | Puke. Shel seers,” “We can’t be any worse off ) foreign born unionists. Mere mem- anyway, there is nothing worse than SURGEON DE | bination marathon runner, broad-| later.) } jumper, boxer, fencer, etc., in order Brownsyilie Red Sunday. —_—— 1 UNION SQUAR } bership in the Textile Workers’| Members of the Workers (Commu-| working in the Amoskeag.” Com-|to be able to take care of so man Who wins when you read your Room 803—Ph Alp : 1 Union is being used as excuse for pitted A a takiesbl ayia call zade yoneaee byes bese the jooms. A cigar-maker who talked bosses’ paper? econ sted arith seas ee fee. "arrests. z leaching department of the Amos-| with Comrade Bloomfield at the tL SS | Raids are expected on the mass set oe Shek bate keag ah the Be ane by paeees 7-20-4 cigar factory said that he COMRADES EAT = ——____ strike meetings scheduled for the| N€NKING egime WeL | sroup of workers who also expressed) does not make enough so his wife kk z ail and/aguis cade’ of thy. cite their contempt for the bosses. must work nine hours on a night SCIENTIFIC Pr. AERA Ma tonight. NANKING, Oct. 9.—Chiang Kai-| Besides canvassing the Amoskeag shift in the Amoskeag for from shek, commander-in-chief of the| they covered the large plant of the thirteen dollars to fifteen dollars per VEGETARIAN Nanking armies, and chairman of | International Shoe Corporation and Week. He further stated that when RESTAUR. ANT the Kuomintang council, was elected | similar places covered in Nashua. she comes home in the morning she 1604-6 Madi are president of China by the Central | The workers in this textile territory | goes right to bed for a few hours, no Madison Ave, ; 0 Bxecutive Council. He is now nom- are viciously exploited. The Jackson] being so tired, and then she gets up Potwaen. 10ith & 10st, Ste. inal head of the Nanking govern-| Mills which is part of the Nashua| to take a bite, and many a time she POWER: CONTROL ment, which he has actually headed | Manufacturing Company gave its|¢omes home and falls on the bed in since the time he re-entered the field employes a “vacation” for ten days| an unconscious condition. Such are in November 1927 on the side of the | during which time the entire plant) the conditions of the textile workers Nanking government. was put on a so-called efficiency| in New England. Not being satisfied But He Does! Not Mean ———— basis. When the workers returned) with speeding up the workers at a “ ‘s from their forced “vacation” they| deathly pace, they cu ie wages by Workers Soviet Union to Give or es thes wast omen m|the more the workers show can be Office Hours. § E F 0-12 a.m,, 2-8 pan. Daily E New York Lehigh 6022 PRESS, Inc. 26-28 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY For Good Wholesome Food EAT AT RATNER’S Dairy and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. PYCCKHH 3YBHOM BPAY Dr JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 25 yrs. in practice. Moderate prices, 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—Herbert Hoover, whose vote in the Coolidge Cabinet helped to defeat the Muscle Shoals public power project, and who sat beside Andrew Mellon, one of the largest power magnates in the country while millions of dollars of public rights were side-tracked into the coffers of the power trust, has come out for something or other on this issue. Only the power gang, however, knows just what it is! In an announcement made here today which is stated to be an ad- vance notice of his program, Hoover declared himself in favor of em- phasizing the agricultural research | were told they must operate sixteen looms, at the same time about one-| Pensions to the Aged third of the workers were told that MOSCOW, USSR, Oct. 9.—Rus-| their services were no longer re- sian workers and peasants, of sixty-|Wuited since the looms upon which five years of age or more, of both| they worked were added to those sexes, who are unable to support me themselves, are to receive pensions | BUTCHERS’ UNION] from the Soviet Government. Local 174, A.M.C.&B.W. of N.A. Office and Headquarters: Labor semple, 24% KE, 4th st., Room 12 Regular meetings every first and A. M, THEY PRAYED FOR WAR. LONDON, Oct. 9 (U.R).—The arch- bishop of Canterbury today in- structed all bishops in England to hold Armistice Day services Novem- ber 11 and to start them at an hour S= which would permit two minutes of 4 silence to be observed at exactly 11 third Sunday, 10 Employment Bureau open every day at 6 P. M. AMALGAMATED ) produced. Workers Cooperative Glothivey, Inc. SUITS MADE TO ORDER. H, L. HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AVE., Near 7th St. BAKING DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave. Tel.: Dry Dock 1263; Orchard 0430 Phone Stuyvesant 381 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. FIGHT AGAINST IMPERIALIST WARS All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN'S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 658 Claremont P’kway FOOD WORKERS |], READY MADE SUITS, Quality—Full Value 872 BROADWAY, 1, ale gs Cor. 18th St.—Tel, Algonquin 2223 } Unity Co-operators Patronin ) SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor phase of power development rather |a. m. U Baker's Local 164 than the power phase. He also é Meotsistfatarday pledged himself to “cheap power,” | A a int emonth at Bronx, N. ¥. that is, “as cheap as it can be pro- No Tip Center Barber Shop "4 ee | acre Label Bread While he is being quoted as favor- Bus union Bact eight U IL Union Label Bread |! ing government ownership for)||}| ~~~ ad itn ped Pp muscle shoals, he actually made his ||! maividua! Sanitary Service by Bx- EN = OATES 5 H usually equivocal statement on this | perts.—LADIES’ HAIR. BOBBING Window Cleaners’ Protective ‘ | CIALISTS. ion— * | tion of government ownership on | Affiliated with fs » B of Bfuscie spools. as the. goyecunet sd Meets each ist and 3rd Thursday of ready owns Muscle Shoals.” For. MARY WOLFE each month at 7 P. the power interests assurance, he TUD spoke eh definitely by Fe de dt STENT CRAM RORCH do not favor any general entension és of the federal government into the’ PIANO LE SSONS : competition ed to vertise your w eetings Bs operation of business in petit Moved t Advert’ inion meeti : COOPERATORS PATRONIZE MEET Your FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N. Y. Right Off 174th St. Subway Station at Manhattan || 1818 — 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House “y Window Cleaners, Join Your Untons Sedat Macbeth fhe dla WE ALL MEET J. SHERMAN | NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK WILLIAM Z, FOSTER (Candidate for President) of its citizen: 2420 Bronx Park Haale here. For information write to Near Co-operative Colony, Apt. & Vhe DAILY WORKER < Telephone EASTABROOK 245: 7 Broker-Crook Worked Under Phoney Names Special rates to students ele the Co-operative House, t HARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 9 (UP). —Testimony that Roger W. Wat- kins operated under at least two as- sumed names before coming to Con- necticut. was presented by state wit- nesses today at the opening of the Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers 65 ALLERTON AVE, BRONX AMIN GITLOW (Candidate for Vice-Presidemt) and READ the ce Baily 32: Worker Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City COOPBRATORS! PATRONIZE E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 Allerton Ave. Cor, Barker BRONX, Y Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 19: SECOND AVE. Bet. 12th end 13th Bite, Proletarianize! UST as the capitalist class uses accounting records to formulate their business poli-+ cles so that their profit ac- I. SCOLNICK TAILOR [TAILOR Workers Patronise , 11 continually swell, |! 4 F Cleaner and D: Str} ’ former broker’s trial on 26 counts | | counts will continual if Tet.. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2 ancy Cleaner an vers :tly Vegetarian Food 3 pre el. nville . Stric egetarlan ° of embezzlement. ’ manization® tien necounting eo. ee Marton Ae Benes 5. . ords to assist them in m The former fiscal agent of the! | ine its hility to increase: 4 defunct National Associated Inves- proletarian activity. Your organization can do it by_congulting Louis P. Weiner, BCS. Public Accountant and Auditor, 149 SPRING STREET, New York City, Phone: WALKER 5793 or 7537. tors, Inc., and his alleged accom- r plices, Mrs, Margaret E. Watkins, his wife, and Guy and Maynard Tresslar, his brother-in-law, pleaded not guilty and chose joint trial be- fore Judge Allyn L. Brown in lieu of jury. e fesatiets blecier * “Patronize a comradely — | COOPERATOR stationary store Patronize the No Tip Colony Barber Shop Hochberg & Canor Ladies Hair Bobbing a Specialty (665 - 67 ALLERTON AVENUE) UU eee SABA TON. ANB | BRONX, N. Y. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE, PHONE: UNIVERSITY 65 BUY AN EXTRA COPY EVERY DAY AND GIVE IT TO YOUR § SHOPM ATE! My GET YOUR FRIEND AND SHOPMATE TO READ THEDAILY WORKER! | See Test.) Your Newsstand Has A Supply of Daily Mterdins aes COOPERATIVE DWELLERS 669 AKLERTON AVE.