The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 22, 1928, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER Page Three mings in Antwerp De mand Seating of Their De uty REICH ATTEMPTS oe sts Greet Agent of a ar TURKISH g OV'T. “TO LURE SHIP. ge < REPORTS PLOT’ = THD ARE JAILED Mass" Demonstrations of Fle BORMS, WINNING ioe By 85,000 VOTES, DENIED CHAMBER Submarine War Preparations Continue Year After Tragedy ree STRIKERS BACK : ° tat ‘a rch] Reactionaries Attack Workers Unlikely to Strict Censorship on Flemish Center | Accept Decision Newspapers ANTWERP, Dec. 21—A huge | BERLIN, Dec. 21—The German fe Turkish authorities deslacsaiaal mass demonstration of Flemish na- | arbitration court today handed down | that ¢ ved ‘aicoine tionalists was staged here. yester- a decision on the shipyard strike na soe day in protest of the invalidation of |which has succeeded in shutting | have’ Baal the election of August Borms to the | down the shipyards of the German ve chamber deputies, North Sea and of the Baltic ports | " Thousands paraded the streets |for three months. It is improbable 6 tion ies bearing banners demanding the seat- that the 50,000 striking shipyard ne Noe ing of Borms, who had been elected | workers will accept the decision. ; ph b, a in the Flemish city by a majority | The court decided for an average ncover al of 85,000 but who he leniec ; : " wage increase of five pfennigs nd for wha ie at He Raa ce eee In U. Ss naval war preparations for coming imperialist war, the submarine S-} was raised to the | (about one cent) per hour, which is government 7 “anti-government” activities. ‘The | S2”face by means of pontoons attached to giant hooks imbedded to the steel sides of the sunken. hulk. | but a fraction of the workers’ de- tted a word The S-4 was deliberately sunk again Wednesday off Block Island, R. I. in naval tests. A year ago the S-4 went down, and 40 seamen were sacrificed. Photo shows the submarine before being sunk Wednes- day. Hiemings consider the ousting of eir candidate as a suppressive ove on the part of the govern- | lent. | |mands, and further decided to fix | | the working hours at 50 a week, in- | |stead of the 44 demanded by the workers. The workers and the owners must n t Pa: sha and Photo shows P: Borms had been imprisoned for | | |_, The work ; eruvian president Leguia and a group of as ‘ what the Belgium government, sub- | | Signify their assent or retasalof the lackeys of Wall Street greeting Herbert Hoover, the drumme stantially backed by the 1. | decision by December 28. Judging | yyaly Street, who is now on the homeward swing of his imperi from the militancy displayed hy the | strikers during a bitter strike of | three months it is unlikely that they will agree to accept any such arbi- | tration award. The shipowners have. been hard | with the filing of a charge of im-|hit and many of the ship lines have | democrats and led by the “socialist” Vandervelde, termed “anti-state” ac- tivity. | POLICY CHANGE Workers Forced to Labor Without Pay staged in Brassels by students from| (4) nad Gives Wendel | ' | the universities and high schools, tour of the Latin-American Wall Street Colonies. CHINESE FIGHT WALITARY ORGY (Crusader News Service) | their employer, their are threatened | Copper Trust Engineer Who shouted “Down with the Flem-| Which Remain Words |, “every exists today in New York |v ceatity against.tHiem, whi t bles iar BRITISH TROOPS F OR MARCH ATH ‘ fa . fj Ss ich would | been unable to run regular service if uee eka vormsl: The sstudents;| raha | m the very shadow of the Statue of | resutt in their deportation, |beeause of the complete walkout of Mav Be Hoover Choice armed with canes, attacked the| BUENOS AIRES, Dec. 21.—The| Liberty, and serfdom is being prac- . ocd WANS eeGnets dheew ce ate . . |the workers and the shutting down | ised Ww 's of the | | An Estonian woman of 35 years | of the repair docks. headquarters of the “Viamche Huis,” | ‘ eee newspaper “La Epoca,” which is the | conste magnificence of the Cathedral | as Secretary of Interior the headquarters of the Flemings | official organ of Hipolito Irigoyen, in Brussels. They broke through the Argentine president, says that in passive police lines and succeeded in | two private conferences held between smashing the windows of the of-|Irigoyen and Herbert Hoover, the tices. | Argentine president brought up in OT - a definite way for discussion between RRANITE COAL the two, the intervention policy fol- Trate Textile | Boss Gets Set-Back Continued from Page One Novak happened to be near by and seeing a factory owner hitting a Rho aiatter,. and “patered | tos the union organizer made a rush to de- d_ referred fend the organizer. - Organizer | speeches of Coolidge, in which Cool- Kaross succeeded in making a speech | 48¢ declared that the property of to the workers, telling them the|U- S. citizens in foreign lands is need of a fighting union and calling | Part of the U. S. domain and as such upon them to attend the mass meet- | ing the following day. In the mean- < en i time the police arrived and artested | ,, At this, says “La Epéca,” Hoover Novak and put him in a patrol | ,,°xPlained that Coolidge had been wagon. The International Labor | Pliged” to proceed in such man- | relations with several Latin-Amer- ican countries, and as shown in an official manner by the speeches of the present president of the United States, Calvin Coolidge. « Hoover began by “explaining” that North American interventions had | not been for the purpose of protect- | ing the economic interests, but the | lives of its citizens, Drives Hoover Into Cernor. The Argentine president pressed forces of the United States. lowed by the United States, in its| | of St. John the Divine, according to the findings of the Travelers’ Aid. Young immigzant women, whose passage has been prepaid from the West Indies, Europe and South America, are being bound to work | with bourgeois families in this city | and elsewhere in the country under such circumstances as to amount to | Miss Kathryn) indentured service. Young, supervisor of port work of the New York Traveler’s Aid So- ciety, declares that immigrant do- mestics are working here sometimes for no wages at all or for such} | scanty sums that they are detained | indefinitely paying off the debts | piled up against them by their cm- | | ployers. Vicious. Exploitation. West Indian and South American \girls are the most imposed upon, according to the report of Miss| New York on the upper west side, even | was brought over to New York by |an Irish-American family. She was | told she must work a year without pay, repay $125 paid out for her passage, and then continue working for low wages out of gratitude. She found out what her services were really worth and left the family. | The Skin Game. A Czech girl was farmed out by the man who had paid for her pas- sage. Money for her services as a domestic worker was not paid to her, but to the man who brought her oyer. He thus received his money back and made a profit from the girl’s work. i The worst situation is found among the Mexicans who are | brought in wagon loads across the | border into the southwestern states, and put to work without pay. | In the Latin-American section of | Battle on. English Oil Hoover Inaugural Will Be Imperialist Fete NEW GAS RATE GOUGES WORKERS The Public Service Commission yesterday decided not to suspend the new rate schedule of the Brook- lyn Borough Gas Company, which is due to go into effect Jan. 1. | The commission said it would give a decision on the schedule it- self soon, but that meanwhile it should go into effect. The rate schedule has met severe | opposition from householders be- cause, while it allows reduced costs | for large consumers, manufactur- | ers, it retains and in some ¢ases increases the rates on the Young. Some of these are forced to| a very bad condition of affairs ex-| small consumers, workers living in work for $3 and $5 a week until better jobs. If they attempt to leave | ists, it is charged. Absence of rec- would be protected by the armed| they pay off the amount advanced ords and statistics means that no| for their passage, in the meantime| one knows. exactly how many im-| having no opportunity to look fo. | migrant women may be working | practically in slavery. jtiats and apartments. Co. Grounds HONG KONG, Dee. 21. fighting is reported at ( 1,000 miles up the Y ungking, > River (Continued from Page One 1 (UP).— in specu- cabinet— mining engi- Utah, who is men- fi appointment 00 sailors and ‘ “s ary of the interior. from, ShAMehst. ; sper eao wh s now manager of the Utah Shore batteries of machine guns Point and Annapolis, Company and interested and field ired on the British | picked marching squads from ing enterprises. He is re- steamer Kangting and the fighting !cading mi schools > in- s one of the leading engi- is concentrated on the compound of Vite the British owned Asiatic Petro- 5.404 ty part leum Co. The British gunboat Tern | ;, ory vited to participate, i iggenheim copper in- connections were one senator today as > | terests. cir | mentioned I b ive delegations to 20 persons likely to e some opposition. is proceeding to Chungking from ¢ach. Apvointment of a Guggenheim Wan-shien, 200 miles distant. Cost $169,000. nan to the c et would be in line The authorities are preparing to| ‘The states con furnish nai‘c-al With the general imperialistic trend acuate the ci! guard troops of Ho ’s policies, as the Guggen- FIND ANCIENT CEMETERY DEAL, England, Dec. 21,—An ancient Jutish cemetery has been unearthed near here. It dates back to A. D, 400. infantry and Lieut. Col. U. | | man of the gener: mittee, has estimated the c the entire celebration at $100,000. 1 two l f heims own th copper mines of Bo- 1ador, Chile and other n countries. It is now the Anaconda Cop- ng Company, the copper % . ner because of circumstantial rea- | . cee ae ne rok pees sons in certain cases, but that that | Boston I. L. D. Will |17-Year Boy Gets Hold House-to-House | Life Sentence in 7 | did not mean that those conceptions torney, Sheprowich. ry :: | . bi : th ier | might be a doctrine accepted by the | é | 5 Lottie Lubesca, and three other Collections Sun day | Trial for Murder BOSTON, Dec. 21.—The Interna+| icles were fired from this factory | government of the United States. {few days ago. In firing them the | Running Herbie Down. i id, “ i | f ST. GEORGE, S. I, Dec. 20 (U.P). boss faid, T1 Spent $1,000 to hire | When the conversation between | tional Labor Defense of Boston will| —Vineent Rive, 17 year old high Geer ind out who 1s tying the two had reached this point, the |p, Id h uk llecti 1 adh 1 th rh idmitted leit to organize a union here, and | hol a jouse Oo jouse collection | school you! Who admitte ing am | Arcenti * : Argentine president said that ac-| Sunday, Dec. 23. Volunteers are| Alice Joost because he resented her sure you girls were ready to call @/ cording to what he was hearing from | ‘ strike in my factory.” | Hoover cHé:deduted' thats Hooyer did} urged to report for duty at 93 Stani-| amorous advances, today was sen- 5th Anniversary Celebration Daily <a hs = The girls in this factory work aj 10-hour day and receive from $5 to $13 a week. The girls are paid |: a week to start with, $7 a week for girls with 8 months experience, $11 for girls with 6 months experience and a maximum of $13 a week for | girls with over 2 years experience. But the girls are fired or must quit | before they work the 2 years. Most of the girls are daughters of the miners in the anthracite section. | The reactionary “leaders” of the union do nothing to help these girls sean ‘Already. the miners or. |¢™Phatically that that policy had | 10” Tbe z Least ila ice BO or Mi ceased and that never in the future |} 20070 Bolshevik Galop . Orchestra f+ fanized into the National Miners would the North American govern-|| 20074 New Russian Hymn . Singing Union are taking up the ates ont i | ment intervene in the internal life 20046 = La Marsallaies .... Singing helping in the drive to organize al | of other countries in respect to their |} 20085 = Workers Funeral March , Singing of the textile workers in this section. | sovereignty, recognizing the full 12082 Russian Waltz . «(Accordion Solo). Magnante An office of the National Textile | right they have to determine their |) The Two Guitars -(Ace. Solo-Guit) Magnante Workers Union has recently been | own destinies. |]! 12076 Tosca (Waltz) . Russian Novelty Orchestra Gpaiiad tn oben 906, Commerce Build 22 SS Broken Life (Waltz) Russian Novelty Orchestra if. 109 So. Washington St Wilkes | SEEK STRANDED PAIR. |] 12079 In the Trenches of Manchuria . -Walts pei AN F : .P). Sonja ........ . Waltz OTTERS a her: seuciW spatiae Gate et ee 12059 Cuckoo Waltz . Columbia Quintette | Drug Clerks Meet to ported nearing the spot where the | 12051 Danube Waves ( -International Dance gets . . boat .of Glenn Hyde and his wife, | On the Shore ...--.... International Dance Orch. 4) Plan Organization | of iansen, Idaho, was stranded in| 12083 Ramona (Waltz) . Mabel Wayne H & i | The Seashore .. +e Waltz Thruout City, State [spe Gent Canyon ‘of ‘the Salute 12062 Espanola (Waltz) sColumbia Dance Orch. 4} 3 cae 4 dthe.| 12063 = International Waltz .. ..Umbracio Trio §} nae be a ala age AR i! 12066 —_ Beautiful Roses—Mazurka -Romani Violin Solo }! peck i \f "12. $1.25 ee Ae UTR R OLnt Emuarey, nee | 59048F Wedding of the Winds—Wlatz ....Russian Novelty Greh. # the auspices of, the New York Drug | Hi Clerks Association that has Las sale | 59047F Victor Herbert Waltz Medley (Kiss me again; Ask her | oy pig aeicen wee central'ot- | while the band is playing; Toyland; Gipsy Ese song) e in New Set Eddie Thomas’ Collegians ponte et Pea i le Beautiful Ohio—Waltz with vocal refrain ies of lo m Y Eddie Thomas’ Collegians oughs as part of the general a | 59039F Love and Spring—Waltz . -International Concert Orch paign to organize all drug clerks Spring, Beautiful Spring—Waltz .....Int’l. Concert Orch in the city and state of New York, | 59040F Over th eWaves—Waltz ...--International Concert Orch according to a statement issued by | | ~ Vienna Life—Waltz «International Concert Orch the secretary, Aida Flamenbaum. | * |], 59046F Three O'Clock in the Morning—Waltz ..International Orch “The enthusiastic response and | well attended meeting shows the | growing need of organization,” said the secretary. Many of those pres- | » @t have immediately secured their | embership. | The task to organize the drug | clerks was thoroughly discussed and | taken up at the meeting. | The New York Drug Clerks’ As- | sociation meets every first and third | Thursday of the month at 142 Sec- | ond Ave., Stuyvesant Casin | | | not share the ideas of Coolidge. Hoover replied that Coolidge had | adopted the line of international ac- | | tion he did, according to the cir- | cumstances, but did not deny or af- firm that he disagreed with Cool- idge. Hoover Dodges—and Lies. However, Hoover, “with real warmth,” asserted that the inter- vention policy was unpopular among | the people of North America and | that he, Hoover, was able to state Reading and studying it your eyes are in good con- dition is a pleasure. If, however, they are defective or strained, it is drudgery. A pair of rest glasses will relieve the strain and H keep good eyes well. ] OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 4. M. TO9 P.M. 4 for St., Russian Club, and at the| tenced to serve from 20 years to 3 j | | | | 59042F Luna Waltz ....... L. D. office at 118 Dudley St. | life imprisonment today. Newest Selected =e Columbia Record Danube Waves Waltz—Waltz ....Russian Novelty Orch My Isle of Golden Dreams—Waltz ....International Orch 95045F—Dream of Autumn—Waltz ....International Concert Orch 59038F Gold and Silver—Waltz Fisher’s Dance Orch 59042F Just a Kiss—Waltz Fisher’s Dance Orch Fisher's Dance Orch 59043F Morning, Noon And Night In Vienna—Part 1. & 2. (F. v. Suppe) ++++.-Columbia Symphony Orch. We Carry a Large Stock in Selected Records In All Languages eee We will ship you C. 0. D, Parcel Post_any of the above Series or we will be glad to send you complete Catalogues of Classic and all Foreign Records. When ordering, pl give your order at least for 5 Records, ‘ostage free, Surma Music Company || MANHATTAN OPERA HOUSE 34th Street West of 8th Avenue JANUARY 5, 1929 | ISADORA DUNCAN DANCERS From Moscow, Soviet Russia, in program of Revolutionary Dances—Symphony Orchestra Speakers: JAY LOVESTONE, WM. Z. FOSTER, BOB MINOR and others i Sne , 103 AVENUE “A” (Bet. 6-7th) NEW YORK CITY ; . — S Formerly Polem Mill Ont Go i Always At Your Service Admission: $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50. All Seats Reserved. Onsale at The Daily Worker Office, ed ‘arnierly Polen Miller Optical Cov ; = QPTONETRISTS —.OPTICIANS Radios, Phonograpar, Gramophones, Pianos, Player Planos, Player |{/ 26 Union Square, New York. ti ii Rolls. Piano Tunin; epairing Accepted. | i 1620 Lextegice a co WH aikLLiPOR CAMH Oh POR GAMDIT ws Greatly Reducee, Brteen (4

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