The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 24, 1928, Page 5

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i ’ Welcome Foster ormtila SS THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1928 “Socialists” in Boston Call - WORKERS AT TWO RED MEETS ABE ATTACKED of | | | Desert Speakers Socialist Party (Special to the Daily Worker) BOSTON, (By Mail) —Officials of the socialist party here called | ‘pon the police to break up a Com-| Wunist meeting Sunday night at the | ‘orner of Lawrence and Blue Hill) Avenue, Roxbury, when workers de-| serted a socialist meeting for one being held under the auspices of the! Workers (Communist) Party. | Police headed by a sargeant broke | into the Communist meeting while! at the same time they provided pro- tection to the socialist meeting be- ing held nearby. More than 200 workers were at the meeting when| the cops broke it up. The meeting then, adjourned to the opposite cor- ner this time directly across from that held by the socialists. Attack Second Meeting. | The police then proceeded to at- tack this meeting also. They pushed the workers from the street onto the sidewalk and from the sidewalk! onto the street, pushed them about and ordered them gruffly to go home. ances, Pueblo, who was speaking, | kept telling the workers that the/| police were servants of the capi-| talists and that they were trying to) might have an excuse to give the workers a taste of democracy. Failing to break up the meeting, a six foot police scab grabbed | Esther Brooks of the Y. W. L. andj} arrested her for distributing cir- The Higher Learning: olice for Su American Youths Improve Their Minds rs S Photo above'shows a group of young bourgeois hopefuls engaged in one of the activities which gives American colleges a reason for existence. This is no less’ an event than the epoch-making freshman-sophomore class rush at St. Francis College, Brooklyn, an institution dedicated to the service of his holiness, the pope. Prizes will | pants wearing the oldest and chab- | During all these disturb-| iest clothe: Jewelry Workers’ be held Saturday, Nov. 3, at the New Webster Manor, 1ith St. between 3d provoke trouble, in order that they | 4nd 4th Aves. the New York Progressive Club will be held Sunday, Oct. 28, 2 p.m. at the Stuyvesant High School, 15th St. and Ist Ave. graphical Union who are in sympathy with the progressive principles are 1. L. D, Autumn Revel. A Proletarian Autumn Revel will | be held at Webster Hall, Saturday, | October 27, at 8:30 p. 4 wera auspices of the New York section of# Workers Club and Branch 671 W. the m, under the International Labor Defense. | be awarded to partict- Jewelers Concert and Ball. | The first concert and ball of the| Welfare Club will! N. Y. Progressive Club Meet. A regular semi-annual meeting of All members of the Typo- culars advertising Comrade Gitlows| invited to attend. | | Tse oo Nga again Na a MR Franklin Union Hall, corner of} Berkeley and Appleton Streets on} Children in U.S.8.R. The above society is arranging a Vetcherinka at the Carlton Hall on Wednesday, October 31, at, 7:30 p.| Saturday, Nov. 8 and asks all frater- | |al organizations an® sympathizers m., the protext for the arrest was) ft, %¢ arrange any of their enter- that she had violated a city ordin-| tainments on that day. | ance. The ordinance, probably) passed sometime in the year 1620 | ‘rom which, of course the capi-| Goods a es | Thanksgiving Eve, Nov. 28, in Web- ster Hall, 119 E. 11th St. talist parties and the party tl calls itself socialist are immune, is| supposed to forbid littering city} streets. | he went to the station house to bail) A ee aks ation ‘uleo ru speaking | their club rooms, E. law ee pee ‘a B24 floor, on Sunday at 8 To Hold Ball. < A ball will be held by the" Knit Welfare and Culture Club Downtown Workers Club. The Downtown Workers Club has ratification meeting at 2nd St. on p.m. The addres: following’ will the out Brooks and there learned from| meeting. Wattenberg, Endin, Work- the lieutenant of police that the so-| es (Communist) Party assemblyman cialists had complained, to the police’ that their.meeting had been flooded | with Communist circulars. | at Cleveland Meet Continued from Page One working class districts, where lit+ erature was distributed to great numbers of workers, s * * Speaks in Pittsburgh Sunday. PITTSBURGH, Oct. 23.—William Z. Foster, presidential candidate of the Workers (Communist) Party, will address a mass meeting at the Labor Lyceum, 35 Miller St., on Sunday. The meeting is expected to attract the attention of the entire city, due to the fact that Foster was barred from speaking at the North Side Carnegie Music Hall, which is owned by the city. All other parties, in- cluding the socialist and the social- ist labor parties, were allowed the use of the same hall. It is expected that workers from all over the Pitts- burgh district will come to hear Fos- ter to learn why the “city fathers” closed the hall to the Communists. The arrangements committee is preparing an elaborate program, which includes singing by the Frei- heit Singing Society and recitations. Gitlow Attacks Legion Terror Continued from Page One and the farmers to mobilize their forces to meet these attacks upon the working class and its vanguard, the Workers Party. A Program For Farmers. “Hoover and Smith have offered nothing to cure the evils, from which the farmers of the west are suffer- ing,” he said. “Prosperity, which the republican party is offering as an issue, is a myth, Gitlow showed. * The Communists, he explained, are the only ones making a fight for Negro equality in the south. Negro and white workers should organize together against capitalism, the com- mon enemy, he urged. William Patton and Walter Swe- vey, other Communist candidates, as well as Mother Ella Bloor, well known labor militant, the meeting. Roy Stephens was chairman. TYPHUS IN RIGA LONDON, Oct. 23 (U.P), — Ex. change dispatches last night said 10,000 cases of typhus has been re- ported in Riga and that all schools and theatres were closed. Many deaths ‘were reported and medicine and provisions were needed at once *, prevent more deaths. FORMER SENATOR DEAD TUCSON, Ariz., Oct. 28 (UP).— Former United States Senator Charles A. Towne of Minnesota died of pneumonia here yesterday. Labor Temple, tomorrow at 8 p.m, are urged to attend. . * day at 7 E. for the purpose of mands to the bosses. . eC * A will 143 East 103rd St. tions of workers, amongst them the case of William Schiffrin, discussed. also be unveiled on that night and @ representative from the local of- fice will be present. “For Any CARL BRODSKY ERON SCHOOL |for 8th district, Bert Miller, Milgrom, | M. Berlov, Silverstein fromthe club. Finnixh Workers. The Finnish Workers Club cooper- ating with Local New York Workers ® |International Relief, has arranged a|How?; | benefit performance of “The Crowd,” | proceeds go to the struggling textile workers. mance will be combined with a mass and Jay Lovestone are to speak. The |ad Jay Lovestone are to speak. The The motion picture perfor- 15 West 126th St., ‘All comrades , | Bronze Workers. and Bronze Workers’ Iron, The Iron 15th St. at 8 p. m./ discussing ae- | Women’s Council 22. | English Council 22 of the Coopera- | tive House, at 2700 Bronx Park E.| will hold an educational meeting to- day E , class women invited. * * at 8:30 p. m. All .working | arlem I. L. D. | Hi meeting of the Harlem I, be held today at 8 L. D. p.m. at Recent persecu- will be The I. L. D. corner will Boro Park Workers Club. i A ratification meeting for the can- Fraternal Organizations NATIONAL CLOAK ee Page rive pression of Communist Elect 1,000 PROTEST +©Workers Party Activities Night Workers Meet Today. | the lower downtown sec- A meeting of the Nighi Workers | tion ty. . The following open POLICE TERROR Branch will be held today at 2:30 p.| 4 have been arranged | m. at 26-28 Union Sq , top floor. | Clinton and Broadway. Speakers: A. . . Cheskis osenberg, sullen. Rutgers Square. kers: L, District Literature Conference - : ¢ A district literature conference will| Kleidman, B. Wakshull, J. Glass. | be held Friday, Oct Op. m.,| Columbia and Rivington. Speakers | at the Workers Center 8 Union|. Block, J. Klinghoffer, M. Blei- Ene Square. Bert Miller ‘and Rebecca | ™4n is A ie 3 |Grecht will address the conference and, Grant _Speekers. ¢. | € All literature agents and members trator, R. Pollak. |Huge Mass Meeting on | 41 wterature agents and members ind, Rivington. Speakers (Communist) Party and Young Work vurye. Da | e Yo ‘4 ne: and Ave. 8. Speakers: H | Coast [ere (Communist) League must at-|,,7h St, and Ave. 8. Speakere: 1. | ‘ | o . . ty_and_ Pioneer. | (Special to the Daily Worker) Section 1 Organizational Meet. Hieospacae ie AN a | pean tre Me: jlayed).—Over 1,000 workers at-|6:30 p.m. at 60 St. Marks Place. All cath St, and and Ave Speakers: H. |tended an overflow meeting at| unit organizers and members of the Fimintnee 8 eee Walker Auditorium, i y | Crmenibe tonal? committee >, must. 79 Irving Place and l4th St. L. Rich- a SP oes 7 | prorat a J. Harris, J. Fox, Party and the Workers (Communist) Party as ard ia : . Sl ORL aS tate 2 | i A Section 2 and % Notice. | : 3 S : |a protest demonstration against the A special membership meeting that 10th St. and 2nd Ave. M. Duke, M. Exter, Brustien, B. Rosenberg, M Helfand, Paul Crouch, Herbert Zam, Party and Pioneer. |continued police terrorism which the Party) is meeting throughout the was originally called .for Thursday, Oct. 25, will be held Friday, Oct. 26, by decision of the district executive : eetings on Thursday. Do not fall mt Sepo! selthe The meeting followed the arrest | tn attend. wectnn darn fal el CRAP ge enenR aRtenerons wus jhere of two Communist members| W. 27th St, 6:30 p. m. Friday be siven By’ a comrade’ iu; charge |for distributing election campaign Literature Agents Section. 1. A Wseting cou bes Red: onsUAlt sm |literature during the recent Red| A conference of literature awent hada at 16> Dn 101 W. |Sunday drive. The two workers, as| Section 1 will be held to th St. jwell 4s representatives of many |iterature agent must atten * ee sp.” | working class organizati PE 5F 3D meets today at 6 p leer ah . fe ganizations, were Notice To All Party Members. girs Me aie a es oe {30 he: piat ae |__A Party membership meeting will | ® Se a | © meetin; edged itself j-|be held Friday, November 2, at Man- " | 1 Fo dei unani\hattan Lyceum East 4th St. All| ich ton py nel h, jmously to fight against the raids] other meetin e to be set aside|, Section 1D. International Branch. jand persecutions which are now tak-|for this meeting——District Executive Peep c cone 7 at Ee aE eee i ‘4 ' * lace, at 8 p. m. Educational meet. didates and platform of the Workers ing place. Committee No: 2. Gusakoff will speak on the “War Party, will be held Friday evening, | z ty lDbangen’t SG Oct. #6, at 1373 43rd St. Brookly | Twelve hundred dollars was con-| In for Same under Cloakmakers’ Council. | Cloakmakers’ Workingclass The will hold an open air meeting to- the corner of Washington 169th St., Bronx. night at Ave. and Baum, si Workers’ U Workers School Will sub-sections Workers positions in Workers. School Significance Records of Workers Organizations; Why Keep Committee? ; records; the auspices of (Communist) | well as from workers who hold such be Must a Financial Secretary | or Treasurer Be a Bookkeeper?; How to Fit Yourself For the Office of Treasurer or Financial Secretary | In Your Organization; Bookkeeping meeting will be held at the Finnish | Made Clear to Every Worker; What | Are the Duties Of An Auditing How to Make |How to Write Up Minutes; simply Union is calling a special meeting to- | the Jewish | Couneil Housewives of the Council, Union Convention Louis A. ty of the Photographic n, will speak. Continued from Page One in the cloak and dress trades. range a full At this meeting a full report on a and sections of the| upon. Party, as unions, fraternal or- ganization Committee. has arranged ajtives of various centers. 5. Finances. | and cloak situation. |building of our organization. of the Financial Workers Cosperative Clothiers, Inc. Books and Records? How to Analyze Reports; | Advertise your union meetings here. For The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City SUITS MADE TO ORDER. READY MADE SUITS. Quality—Full Value 872 BROADWAY, N.Y. Cor. 18th St—Tel. Algonquin 2223 information write to Local 174, Labor (SSS, BUTCHERS’ UNION Office and Heagquarters senple, Regular meetings every first and third Sunday, 10 A. M, Employment Bureau ope: day at 6 P.M. Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 -- 7th Ave. New York Botween 110th and 111th Ste. Next to Unity Co-operative House A.M.C.&B.W. of NA, 2438 Room 12 K. Sdth st. every To Lay Plans for New well as the industrial siteation both SUDEeria Are Discovered “We have therefore decided to ar- meeting of the Na- tional Organization ‘Committee, in- | Offer Course for Unit |ciuding the out of town member Financial Secretaries 0" Saterday and Sunday, Oct. 27-28, our activities throughout the entire| Due to the great demand last year country since the Boston conference | jon the part of the workers who are|and recommendations for our future | |financial secretaries in the units,!work will be submitted and acte: “The agenda for the meeting will 1. Report of the National Or-| 4 | 2. Supple-|&rade liquor, valued at $15,000 at} ganizations, workers’ clubs, etc., the |mentary reports by the representa-|Current bootleg prices, was seized 8. Conven-| today when police raided a four- | special “Course for Financial Secre-|tion for the establisment of our) Story building on Broad St., in the | | taries” to consist of four sessions on| union on a national scale.. Monday evenings, from 8:30 to 9:50/of organization to be adopted at! p. m. The instructor will be Max) convention. | Kitzes, who gave several sessions in this subject in the “Organization with the other needle trade unions. Problems Course” given for the Na-|8. Other problems connected with the tional Training School last year. The following will be taken up: 4.Form | business district. 6. Dress | 7. Our relations preparation the Square Garden meeting Sunday Madison . . . Ney. Lower Bronx Y. W. jtributed to the national defense ‘i 7. Fes 4, tickets and posters are on’ hand ioe meet! w. |fund which the Party is raising to]at the district pffice. : PGE Oe due ena erg |combat the police and boss te-ror. Also Vote Communist posters and} 2°) . eee ‘bis akers: B |pictures of Foster and Gitlow for| gheakers: B. Cohen, Adler, Menbisky, r ° et ee eae ‘ ~ Briday, open atr meat at Simpson Natural Soda Fields in’ sinastitba So. and 161st St. Speakers: Namis, Weiss, A special meeting of the outgoing and tncoming Executive Committee will take place today at 101 W. 27th| St. at 6:30 p. m. The presence of every member of the executive is imperative. Stein, N. Smith, pioneer N. J. Attention. The City Central Committee of Elizabeth, N. J., is organizing a Mas- querade Bull and Bazaar for Satur- day evening, Dec. ist. All units and workers’ organizations of nearby cities are requested not to arrange any conflicting affairs for that day |. NOVOSIBIRSK, Oct. 23.—In Si- |beria, in Slavgorod province near the Lake Tanatar, fields of natural| |soda were discovered. | According to moderate calculation yj the amount of soda found here! reaches not less than 90 to 100 mil-| lions tons. The fields being on the| surface permit constant work all] q \vear round. Williamsburg Red Meet. | The Young Workers League of | | Williamsburg will hold a Youth Blec- tion Campaign mass meeting on Sun- day, Oct. 28 at 56 Manhattan Ave., Bklyn. ,at 2 p. m. Herbert Zam, can- didate in the 14th assembly district of the Workers (Communist) Party will speak. A minstrel show will fol- low the meeting. 8, Unit 4, Section 7 Meet, A meeting of Unit 4, Section 7 of the Workers (Communist) Party will be held today at 8:30 p. m. at 1965 (Bath Ave. A roll call will be taken. All members must attend ene Workers Party Notice. All_units are instructed to meet regularly and promptly every week until the election campaign is over and take up as the main order of business the immediate tasks of the| the murder election campaign. Sg th SELF-DEFENSE KILLER FREE. NATCHEZ, Miss., Oct. 28.—Dun- $15,000 LIQUOR SEIZED | BOSTON, Oct. 23 (UP).—High- | of a white man, Robert Py Fields, was released today when it ts Sar Gana, was shown that he acted in self- All ah are uneteacted to secure defense when Fields attacked him. oe on ckets for the Madison) Following the shooting of Fields, [Ath 'at the district ‘ettice, N°Y°™*r| Morris went to Texas and to Loui- | Telienwa EW. hak Hint | sana, after two months he returned Downtown units ay 1 and 2, of ee Natchez and voluntarily ede oa jthe ¥. W. L. will hold a Red Night dcred himself to the sherriff. Patronize | No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hair Bobbing Specialists, Mimeographing Multigraphing; Typewriting; CELIA TRAURIG PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER 799 Broadway, Cor. 11th Street, Room 523—Tel.: Stuyvesant 2052. The buttons for the 1lith Anniver: aré now ready, the design o h ix reproduced above. One hundred thousand workers should wear one of these buttons on November 7th. — Every Party Member! — Every Militant Worker! See That You Wear An Eleventh ry of the Russian Revolution Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues. Thurs. & Sat.. won Wan ahelen, Geka Anniversary Button Sunday, 10:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. Please telephone for appointment 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022. DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST For to do this means | Support and defense ‘of the Soviet Union! Fight Against American Imperialism! | Fight Against Imperialist War! | Building the Workers (Communist) Party! | Voting As You Strike—for the Working Class Against Cor, For A Workers’ and Farmers Government! International Proletarian Solidarity! ind of Insurance” | Telephone Murray Hill 5550 7 East 42nd St., New York COOPERATORS! PATRONIZB E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N, Y. Tel. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2. 185-187 EAST BROADWAY NEW YORK JOSEPH E. ERON, Principal THE LARGEST AND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL, to learn the English Age, fe Prepare oneself for admission to College. ERON SCHOOL Is registered of the Sta the REGENTS New York. It has al of a Government High | Phone or write for Catal: Register Ni Our 25,000 "e our best witnesses. TELEPHONE ORCHARD 4473 Proletarianize! UST as the capitalist 8 uses accounting records to formulate their bfsiness 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 proletarian activity. Your organization can do it by consulting Lo uis P. Weiner, BCS. | Public Accountant and Auditor, || 149 SPRING STREET, | New York City, ‘ Phone: WALKEIER 5793 or 7537, | | | el: LOOPERATORS PATRONIZE AMALGAMATED )| 4 | J. SHERMAN | Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers AVE., FOOD WORKERS Baker's Local 164 Meets 1stSaturday in the month at 3468 Third Ave, Bronx, N. ¥, Ask for Union Label Bread 365 ALLERTON BRONX Window Cleaners’ Protective Union—Local 8 Affiliated 15 E. Inflow Cleaners, J: Srd St. New York | Meets each Ist and 3rd Thursday of each month Co-operative Workers Patronize 1. SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR Fancy Cleaner and Dyers 707 Allerton Ave. Bronx, N. ¥. with the A. F. of LL. [ at 7 P. M. at Manhattan | Lycew PRESS, Inc. 26-28 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY Scott Nearing will speak in the Bronx on November 9 Watch this space for further announcements. | the Capitalist Class! i 1 UNION SQUARE fro 808—Phone, Algonquin ae) | Buttons Sell at: 100 or more 5e each — less than 100, 7e each. Order from NATIONAL OFFICE, Workers (Communist) Party, 43 East 125th st, New York, N. ¥. | Workers (Communist) Party of America, 43 East 125th St, New York, N. Y. Enclosed find §. | | | | | Not connected with any other office PYCCKHA 3YBHORM BPAY Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist Please send llth An- 26 yrs, In practice. Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. niversary Buttons to Name PORTER Toe < ints iV reese cestineetheas You Must Answer the Fascist Terror | of the Ku Klux Klan and American Legion Daily 5 Worker The Only Fighting English Daily In the United States BUY AN EXTRA COPY EVERY DAY AND GIVE IT TO YOUR SHOPMATE! GET YOUR FRIEND AND SHOPMATE TO READ THEDAILY WORKER! See That Your Newsstand Has A Supply of Daily Workers can Morris, a Négro, charged with | ion Rally U.S, GOVERNMENT MEDIATION’ KILLS EXPRESS STRIKE Union Officials Stage New Sellout Continued from Page One |been settled,” the statement de- jelares. No info: tion of the terms jof the new sell-out is made public {beyond the misleading suggestion thrown’ out by Harrison that “all union demands have been met.” But it is known, for instance, that the company did net definitely agree to grant the wage increase demanded nor to eliminate the seven-day week. It is further known that the com- any made no agreement to stop its | discri tion against union activi- ties. urther questions are now |being raised as to what agreement {the union misleaders have entered jinto with the compan ir joint e: |efforts to persecute the militants in the organization and to eliminate the [independent organizations with |which a majority of the men are affiliated. No plans for submitting the new “settlement” for the approval of the membership have been announced. From the moment when two weeks ago the international union officials entered the situation until the final strikebreaking act, announced Mon- day, it has been the obvious effort of these officials to hold back and de- feat the men, DUPONT TO FORM TRUST WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 (UP),— The proposed merger of the E. I. Dupont. de Nemours and the Gras- selli Chemical Corporation has been | submitted to Attorney General .Sar- gent for a ruling as to whether. the combine would violate anti-trust | laws, | At Sargent’s office it was stated |the merger report was under con- sideration and an opinion would be |issued soon. READING, Pa., Oct. 23 (UP).— |A 20-months old baby was fatally injured and its mother badly .hurt | following explosion of a kerosene stove today. MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THR DAMROSC) CONSERVATORY sa PIANO LESSONS 2420 Bronx Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. 6H Telephone EASTABROOK ‘3483 Special rates to students from the Co-operative House, COMRADES EAT at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts. For Good Wholesome Foud EAT AT "RATNER’S Dairy and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. 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; Orchara 0430 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 19. SECOND AVE. Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food. —_—_—_——————— Phone Stuyvesant 3316 ,’ \ John’s Restaurant* SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere wh all radicals meet, th ST. NEW YORK All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian: and Dairy Restaurant:. 1708 Southera Bivd., Bronx, N.Y Right Off 174th St. Subway Stn: WE ALL, MEET~ NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Health Food, Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE, PHONE: UNIVERSITY ofits :

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