The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 26, 1929, Page 5

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I) j | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1929 Page Five “DISARM WHITE GUARDS” DEMAND USSR, WORKERS Violation of Border Is Tensing Situation (Continued from Page One) mater is under serious discussion, that a sharp ultimatum should be sent to Nanking and Mukden de- manding within a term of hours actual steps on the part of these militarist governments, to restore joint control of the road stop viola- tion of the boundary and stop tor- ture and imprisonment of Soviet Union citizens. oo Ce PEKING, China, August 25.—The Chinese militarist officialdom here | is much perturbed by news that Yen-Hsi-shan, governor of Shansi province has acquired machinery with which to establish a huge ar- senal in his territory. Yen has al- ways held aloof from the Nanking government and seems to be draw- ing closer in policy to Feng Yu- hsiang, who is openly accused of planning to attack the Chiang K: shek group in Nanking, at the first opportunity. Feng was the only outstanding military leader who did not go through the form of promis- Expert in Killing Workers BOSSES BEGIN TRIAL 10 KILL | MILL LEADERS ‘Mill Workers Prepare |For Charlotte Confab | (Continued from Page One) before the raid and at the shooting, will be among the witnesses for the | defense, Witnesses will tell about * the | movement for a second strike in the |Loray mill of the textile worker: |who had gone into the mill so time after the strike began, and | which, they will charge was .respon- {sible for the determined and merci- less action which followed. They will testify that before the raid, the | so-called “committee of 100” were armed in the mill, tanked up with The Unit above is said to be the Wall Street navy’s crack aerial fighting unit—trained to be adepts for killing workers in imperialist wa AFL TO THROTTLE TRIES N. J, CAR STRIKE AGCORS! CASE |Call a mass meeting was held at the tent colony, preparatory to picketing the mill in violation of the city ordi- jmance against “parades.” Workers | inside the mill were planning to join the line outside. On the same jevening, the major part of thuse | living in the tent colony had gone |to Bessemer City to see the moving for Walkout TUEL Leaflet (Continued from Page One) | in Tresea_ Starts Campaign (Continued from Page One) Fake ing support to Nanking when the | Proceed with negotiations without re- a writ of habeas corpus to stay his seizure over the Chinese Eastern | gard to the number of votes cast | execution. An appeal from this de- Railway started. at the next ballot—if any are cast | cision is now pending in the state It has been learned recently that | at all. |supreme court and will be heard in Feng is quietly but rapidly buying | “It was possible for us to declare 1 October, for his army and storing in his north | the vote of 20 per cent constitution-; The facts concerning Tresea’s ef- western provinces a huge supply of al,” Wepner said. The matter of ac- | forts to injure the case are con- ammunition. cepting the votes is left to the “dis-/ tained in a statement issued last 4) ee | cretion of union officials,” he added. | night by Rose Bar -, secretary of | picture of the Passaic strike. Defense affidavits prove stool-pigeons, members of the com- mittee of 100, were present to cre- ate disturbance. A gunshot was fired at the meeting, and eggs and rocks were thrown by the mill lack- | When Clarence | eys at the speaker. Miller, one of those charged with murder, approached Officer Hanna, BUKDEN, Manchuria, Aug. 25.— | Wepner, who met with his aides of | the New York I. L. D. The state- The first consignement of an order | ten other locals at his office at 207 | ment declares: | of 100 French pursuit and bombing | Main St., made no bones about his! « ss | olanes, for the government of Chang | strikebreaking intentions. No strike | ote Tee as eka Hsueh-liang here. arrived today. | may be called without first offering class, of the left wing movemént Chang’s war ministry is known to | to arbitrate, he quoted from the by- | and of the International Labor De- ve actively negotiating for more war | laws of the Amalgamated Associa- fense is more and more revealing supplies, sufitable for attack on the | tion of Street and Electric Em- ane . begs his true character. His action in Soviet Union. is he waved the constitution the Accorsi case show this clearly. . ae on | A few days ago an article appeared | | A. F. of L. Will Break Strike. | in his paper, ‘Il Martello,’ declaring | _ “If such a strike is called, it will | that the American Civil Liberties | be repudiated by the American Fed-/ Union is handling the Accorsi case | eration of Labor,” he threatened. * * penudistedi acdiver sieered and appealing for funds in the name ee ta {of some committee — a creature of when told of the threat. “The A.|tresca, of course—located in Pitts- | F. of L. does not repudiate strikes— Ae eet iecbrestw then’? he aaden: aes No mention is made of the | Wenner’s clique tirelessly repeated | ean : 5 the “Red” scare as reports from the |, nel Casio rece ae that the | entire state made it clear that the | Sacwe rece an Arte fighting He |car and busmen were prepared to ernse s | thrust them aside and organize their | Prevent Accorsi from etl Fie | own fight for the 25 per cent raise | a th ad ein phen eam ee | \ and the eight hour day. 0 e elec! Tie chair. Tesca: was eR Wey eee sang “union bureau- | Present in court at Accorsi’s hear- cracy to the. Public Servieo wan| ing; he has several times discussed | | editorially expressed by the Newark| me case with our attorney, Isaac | Ledger yesterday. “A riotous Red | : iam : | a ts ei + ions | Name is not Henry Ellenbogen of Pete Ge Coane oreo tn on | the Civil Liberties’ Union’ whove name | follow the sound, sane leadership of the lying ‘Il Martello’ article gives | jtheir officers and accept arbitra- | "1° /¥ eae fae is aula Brvee | tion.” ) se. (SR eidae itera ges iy C. L. U. Denies Connecti 7 u ee : “The American Civil Liberties , “They cannot fool us with arbitra- | inion ig itself unaware that it is | er we ae ae see one | defending Accorsi. In reply to an} log dhe: workers, statess "We know | mauiry, Forrest Bailey, director of | Saturday August 31st MORNING FRETHEIT (Communist Jewish Daily) who was at the meeting, the police- man struck him with a blackjack and broke his glasses. Then the meeting proceeded the mill to picket. When th within one block of the Loray police swooped down upon Gilbert and Roach had returned from their shooting y of the Catawba River by this time, and were among the attackers. Vera Bush and Sophie Melvin} were viciously choked by the police. who also threw Callie McGinnis, 72- struck her on the right breast with the butt of a gon, while Bill Whit- law threatened to shoot., Chief Aderholt stood nearby, witnesses will testify, and said, “Go on, shoot her.” Earl Tompkinson was blackj jumped upon. Then Officer Gilbert, drunk and was shooting at Pete Melton, a refreshment stand keeper, a few hours earlier, said: “Let’s go down and kill that bunch of ‘white trash in the tent colony,” witnesses will testify. Other police said sim- ilar things. The union guards were scattered} |to the Jall over the grounds when the po-| pies of lice drew up in an automobile and| jumped out with drawn revolvers, proving the falsity of the charge that the strikers had “conspired” to| | booze and sent to follow the police in an attack on the tents. | | | At 7 p.m. of the day of the raid, ; that | *\ers in the group charged with mur- on the other side | rather */ers and began working in the mills, | year-old woman, to the ground and/ jacked, | thrown to the railroad track and/ who was| Schechter, Vera Bush, Sophie Mel- | weapons with intent to kill, will face a Gastonia court on Oct. 15. The I ange of venue to Charlotte which | pressure of mass protests and the defense corps forced, does net ex- | tend to these seven. The majority of the strikers ing trial today were born in the s, Villages, mountain towns and textile towns of the. South. They represent thi turdy Southern stock Freihelt Mandolin Orchestra. The orchestra Jacob S of its sixt {in Town Hall next workers who play join. Exceptional ducted into the ore! receive instruction ing the mandolin will be Fraternal Organizatio under the leadership| Club there ‘April, and invites | é will jwhich the S avian ing on for| Sept. 1 to|S in- seh a atl on being conducted. pms, | m which until recently had been | T0°E (itn st, ave open Mondays and | des chained to the stony, poor farm |i}°,hlith St are oper [aes Ae 2 Ae lands of North Carolina. They are * * ents will openir * W.LR. Brass Band, The W.LR. the generation which has been re-! cruited by industrialists of the South to man their new mills and factories. The part they played in the Gas- tonia strike represented the revolt of players have signed up. of this new generation against the| * ca ig industrializatioon of the South, with| , Se#mdinavian Workers Outing. is organizin s worker-p: mrade Coh iq. room 606, a wil mail called as soon as a sufficient num A meeting , or to send in appli-| 4 and pla Unity Cooperative abershit eting wi Aug 8pm be ber| 4 1300 7th | | Shoe Workers Pienic. | The Independent Shoe W “| the ns BRITAIN INGITES PALESTINE FEUD; OVER SOKILLED “Labor” Gov’t Sends Warships, Troops (Continued frem Page One) streets after 6 o'clock. A rigid cen- has been clamped on by the British authorities to prevent the masses in other parts of Palestine and the outside world from learning sorsh cae its nee a Scandinavian Workers Clubs] ion has arranged a picni true its speed-up and rationalization pro-! o9¢ Brooklyn and New York are ar-|Sept. 1, at Harmony Park, ( The ani Wailing Wall, the cess introduced perfected from the| ranging an outing by bus to the big]S. I od program; nation North, Not one of the Gastonia pri ers is over 34 years old. In fact, most of them are in their early twenties, again indicating that the youth, which is being most viciously ‘exploited and utilized by the mill on- Greek Fracton. meeting will 26, 8.30 p.m, 26 Union Sq. * be h at jowners, is also in the forefront of the ruggle. v 0 36 the struggle. Workers Center, There are three women charged| summer festival in Bridgeport, Conn., known eakers. Communist Activities International Branch, ts tonight, 8.30 p.m eld | the | Br i * * ; Section 3. ruin of the second temple, is again the storm center, British imperial- ism’s policy of playing off the Arabs against the J and the s against the Arabs by inciting red having born bloody rge number of dead | and wounded, despite the fact that only rudimentary weapons were jused by both is directly at- tributable to the fruit. The ; q | Unit 3F, Section 3. | ‘Will meet lay evenir ous Dekaron e: h murder, among whom is the} Will meet Tuesday, Aug. 27 t|27, at 1179 Broadwa the aut who first allowed old Sophie Melvin. That is| 1179 Broadway. * * * Ae the clashes to get well under way 0 indicative of the fact that along | Unit 5, Section 2. Bs eics) Alda cd and then dispatched the police, who 5 ae i | deacaneoikliMibetinperst the: diacus Meets 6.30 tonight at the new sec-|)spiccly clubhe, th Tae with the youth the women are tak-| 4 special meeting for the disc tion headquarters, 1179 -|ruthlessly clubbed both Jews. and ing the place of the older and mid- | Monday . 26, 6.30 p.m. at the|corner of 28th St. for dis Arabs, |dle-aged workers in the mill, and/ new headquarters, 1179|the Tenth Plenum. A repre The Wailing Wall contréversy ri 7 ; Stion Broadaw: corner of 28th St., and|of the district will be present : g all Sy, jare reacting to their conditions by! ! onl * which, judiciously stimulated by the fighting against them. in the letter sent out to members. | British authoriti has served to * Unit 2F, Section 6. | Of the group of 16 charged with | murder, nine are native-born South- Meets to discu the Tenth Plenum | s to be led b: t c held tonight at| beginning at 8 p.m thesis tonight, 6.30 p.m., at 46 eyck St., Brooklyn. * * Ten |the district, will be erners who were working in Loray 143 E. 103rd St * ae mill in Gastonia at the time the| strike was called. They are K. 0.| ange wlittt, tr Seotion | Byers, Russell Knight, J. C. Heffner, | renth Plenum. th |Robert Allen, K. Y, Hendricks, W.| sentative of the district, t M. McGinnis, N. F. Gibson, Delmar) Broatovy (on Mesdauartel Hampton and Louis McLaughlin. | All of the seven charged with mur-| |derous assault are also roned tne HAGUE MEETING = the Ti u of the district will be comrades must attend | |East Hampton Textile Workers Will Take Up |Wage Cuts Tomorrow EAST HAMPTON, Ma | Southern workers who had joined the| | National Textile Workers’ Union, | just before or after the strike was! called. Of the nine native-born Southern- , Aug. of this group are sons of mill work-| (Continued from Page One) jected entirely the previous offer and demanded again in the name of the British empire the 48,000,000 marks increase in what he declares is England’s share of the spoils tak- Workers Union, and im Reid, presi- dent of the union will be among the speakers, The meeting will take up the plan of the West Boylston mill to again cut the workers’ wages. Organiza- tion of the workers to oppose this cut will be discussed. lside by side with father, in their early teens. Of this group of nine, | one began to work in the mills when he was 9 years old, two when they | were 11, three when they were 13,en from defeated Germany. and one when he was 14. | The French and allied represen- | Seven of the group charged with| tatives are reported to be offering murder by the mill barons are or-| on the basis of their figures, which naa epee fol ganizers for the National Textile} Snowden has once before questioned|/ORTUGUESE DISCONTENTED |Workers’ Union. ‘These are Amy|as to accuracy, about 36,000,00| Despite the large world wheat | marke ($8,575,000) increase, and|crop the Portuguese authorities who hope that Snowden will accept. | control the price of bread have de-| The situation is very tense. Ram-|creed‘that only brown bread shall] say MeDonald, premier in the labor |be made and sold in the country. | There is general complaint. vin, Fred E. Beal, Clarence Miller, Joseph Harrison and George Carter. | Six of them have worked in the tex- tile and other mills in the North.| party cabinet of England, is report-| Of this group three started to work! ed on hisway here. He traveled by for many yea divide the wish and Arab masses % flared up again at the beginning of the month, when, despite protests, the Moslem. Su- preme Council was given permission to begin building operations near the ancient Since that time there have been sporadic’ clashes, ruin. culminating in the bitter street fighting of Friday and yesterday, The Arab leaders e found % no difficult task to incite the Arab masses, as they have since the Brit- ish occupation of Palestine in 1917 been the vict of one of the most shame robberies in history: Out- , five a sons e is = Ss 0 one, in a country which n|farmers who worked on their Tatest French Offer Is | Woe?’ of the West Boylston mill they had abited for centuries, farms in their childhood and F +e, | Will be held Tuesday at 6:30 p. m./they have been expropriated of great |had little opportunity for an ele-- Below Snowden’s Limit |on the Common. It has been ar.|Pportions of their land, have been |mentary education. The four others | jranged by the National Textile y exploited in field and fac- tory by English and Jewish capital- ists and have suffered under the insolence and persecutions of the ish authorities and their Zionist vs. tine, though it i “free land,” has thé Arab and Jewish masses to ig- nore the inflamatory speeches of their misleaders and instead to join forces for a struggle against the common enemy-British imperialism and its Jev and Arab retainers. illegal in this ed an appeal to Build Up the United Front of the Working Class from the bot- |when 14 years old. Most of them! airplane from Scotland to London “For Any Kind of Insurance” |have taken an active part previous | yesterday. ! Gastonia strike in the strug-|* ee Sree labor in other parts of the| France Threatens. country. PARIS, France, Aug. 25. — The This group of organizers is well|French press continues to denounce elephone: Murray Hil. 5530 known by the textile workers of/ the British position «1 German rep-|7 East 42nd Street, New York Passiac and New Bedford and for|arations, and the Temps, the offi-| | tom Up—at the Enterprises! Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUP, Cor. 9th St. Phone, Orchard’ 2333. In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who bas Jong experience, and can assure forrest: B fl ambush the police. When Carter, | that arbitration would 'mean in prac- | "© CT@@nization, issued the follow- | rou of careful’ teentmeae |the valiant part they played in the|cial organ of the government, is h i ing statement: jone of the guards nearest the police, | strikes tice—that two representatives of here in 192 icularly defiant. “It would be| approached them, Gilbert grabbed| ere itr 1927 -eng dees. They) particalanly Comrade Public Service would choose a third |P. S. representative to decide our | fate. It is clear that our reactionary cfficials have been carrying on the | Same propaganda and actions against us as the companies. We refuse to | have our rights gambled away | around the arbitration table. “We must immediately organize jrank and file committees in every | car barn, garage and shop and take | the situation into our own hands,” | the call declares. | Meeting halls of the Public Service Employees Section of the T. U. E. L., | full use of which has been extended the carmen in their preparations for the fight, are at 205 Patersor. St. Paterson, N. J.; 93 Bercer St., New- In Ulmer Park (West End B. M. T. Line to 25th Ave. Station) { | “*This organization has retained | no attorney either in New York or | in Pennsylvania in the proceedings instituted against Salvatore Accorsi now held for extradition to Penn- sylyania upon the charge of murder. .. It is our understanding that the |- resistance of the present extradition | proceedings is exclusively in the hands of the International Labor De- | fense.’ “Moreover, the victim of this | frame-up, Salvatore Accorsi, has! shown no desire for the kind solici- tude of his fellow-countryman, Tres- | ca. He has made the following sign- | ed statement, addressed to Rose | Paron: | | “Only I. L. D. Defends Me.” | his shotgun, while another police-| man blackjacked him, knocking him to the ground, One policeman said, “Lets him for a ride and then send him to the hospital,” strikers who stood closely will testify. When Joseph Harrison, union organizer from Pas- saic came up and asked for a war rant, he was greeted with “We don’t need any God damned warrant” from a policeman. Harrison was one of the three shot. Then Roach, advancing from the the first shot, and fired directly at a striker, eye witnesses declare. Then other police opened fire, and the guards defended the colony. take | jear towards the headquarters, fired | During | jare known for their undying ideal-| dangerous,” says this paper, “not to} jism and self-sacrifice in offering| understand that the extreme limit | their services and lives to the work-|of complaisance and condescension | jing cla: has been attained. Let everything | | These are to be tried for murder| be done to avoid a break, but there | |in Charlotte today. lis something more dangerous than) a break itself,” and launches into a/ bitter attack on British financial Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. Tith St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 2 to 6 P. M. Tues., Thurs., 9.30 a. m. to 123 2 to 8 p.m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p.m. imperialism. HUGE. CHARLOTTE DEFENSE MEET | (Continued from Page One) |to get richer exploiting workers, | |the workers’ children have to go to| work as soon as they can get a job Patronize 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) No-Tip Barber Shops Advertise your Union Meetings || here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER | Advertising Dept. || 26-28 Union Sq., New York City AMALGAM FOOD WORKERS Mcets Ist Saturday in the month ut 386] Third Avenue, ¥ Ae es, + eRe | ry a vith barely enough to live on. . Bronx, N. Y. | ark, N.'J.; 25 Dayton Ave., Passaic,| “‘Replying to your inquiry of re-| the general shooting which followed, | With. ‘a i erators Patronize els Jeroine (2086 | N. J., and 305 Elm St., Perth Amboy, | cent date, please be informed that! Joe Harrison, Aderholt, Roach and|, Elizabeth McGinnis told about the | ie sin L ESSE eiltoe Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor SPORTS | N. J. Expose “Red” Scare. your organization is the only organ- | ization authorized by me to ecnduct | Gilbert were shot. In the meantime, the committee of brutality of the Manville Jenckes | | crew during the strike leading up to | Baker's Local 164 Union Label Bread! = Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST NION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Dai “Do not let the P. S. companies, the defense of my case. I have not| 100, most of whom were connected | the raid on the tent colony on June | | es, || C rieasant bahay Msg a aby es 2 Soccer Games | their kept press and the reactionary | given authority to anyone else to th the mill, left the Loray mill | 7: Ethel Hartness and Binnie Green iD pid: nae ai shad ao Hotel and Restaurant Workers 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, fie Freiheit Sport Club (A) [f) union officials divide our ranks with conduct my ease or to apply for -~1 advanced upon the colony, to /S"e Workers! songs which were |] BTSs ty Gocoperative House ||| Branch of the Amalgamated (near 174th St. Station) re the cry of “Reds!” the T. U. E. L.| funds for my defense except the In- ‘-an it out,” witnesses will say, | composed By, i saat ae ay. Food Workers |LPHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, Avlate call urges. Be ‘ | Serpenenel ete neta i » lacta that this was the plan of Seiten ane tremendous ap- Z = SRUSINESS MEETING} | “In a fight like ours, every worker t is obvious that Carlo Tresca ‘ho Loray management. It is known fe i a | Freiheit Sport Club (B) |p) 9 is sapkicalting gtho fights) tox |tian: deliberately. “sab gut ‘fot pat- that they were organized, armed at| Daisy McDonald told about the|] Phone: LEHIGH 6352 j[ Bela on the tirst Monday of the ||| MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Lat his convictions, is dubbed a “Red.” | poses of personal publicity, to cripple | the mill, in readiness for the attack. | Workers’ loyalty to the National International Barber Shop loge’ dabesteeabas Gatsb=aeks . , of vs The decisive question for us is: Who | and defeat the efforts to save Ac-|To bolster up courage, much liquor | Textile Workers Union and how dis- |{ ana Fight the Common Enemy? Messinger $ Vegetagian i i" is fighting | i. ivi jecti: i ERT fea usted they are with the treachery M, W. SALA, Prop. |] Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. . Harlem Prog. Sport is selling us out and who is fighting | corsi, thus giving objective aid to| was imbibed, and then they marched |&" aa . 2016 Second Avenue, New York fe : Club |with us? The Trade Union Educa-|the Pennsylvania hangmen. All| upon the colony, following the car |0f the United Textile Workers Un- (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) and Dairy Restaurant { ip! | tional League, the organization of | workers are warned not to give aj of the police, at least some of whom |ion- She said that the workers ‘as militant labor, is fighting for us.” Sport Tournament Workers Sport Union Vesa Athletic Club Bronx Workers Athletic Club Red Star Athletic Club Kaytee Athletic Club Political Rally Leading nationally-known speakers will discuss the coming political Graf Makes Hop From Tokio to California in 56 Hrs.; Tailwinds Aid SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug. 25. —The Graf Zeppelin, carrying group of German and American cap- \italists and American naval officers, was sighted at 6:10 p. m., Pacific time, at San Francisco, having made the trip across the Pacific from To- kio, by a somewhat short northern \route, in about 65 hours, The old USSR FLIERS OFF cent to this campaign started by Tresca, but to contribute all funds to the organization that is defending | Accorsi, the International Labor De- | fense.” ON WORLD FLIGHT 'Resume Moscow-N. Y. the strikers were also drunk. ved, however, by a freight train, drilling on the tracks, and were a block from the colony when the shooting occurred. Following the shooting, a series of raids and mass arrests followed. Lists of union members were hunted for especially, In jail, the men were beaten and men and women bombed with tear gas, and held incommuni- cado. Mass protest demonstrations developed throughout the country, and the International Labor Defense sent in attorneys who forced habeas corpus proceedings, and finally |holt lost his life. Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor |need the 16 defendants as union or- | ganizers to lead the coming strug- Comrades in Brighton Patronize Beach, gle for better conditions. Dunne Speaks. Bill Dunne indicted the Manville- | Jenckes Company for the murder of Chief of Police Aderholt. Reading the letter of F. L. Jenckes to his superintendent who introduced the stretchout according to Jenckes him- self, robbed the workers at Loray ‘of $500,000, or $200 apiece annually. This stretchout system resulted in the strike, and Manville-Jenckes then adopted the method of terrorism which lead to the raid in which Ader- The Manville- STRIKE. RELIEF ACTIVITIES! vv Send HELP THE W. I. R. IN ITS Your Cleaning, Pressing, Laub Vegetarian & Dairy Restaurant 211 Brighton Beach Ave. at Brighton Beach B.M.T, Station Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1763 Southern Blvd., ™ ong, NYY. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEI.UE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S food and drinks all you'll want, and the best, Entertainments Tickets 40 Cents in advance at “Morning Freiheit” 30 Union Square, New York manufacturers and their American allies, The Zep refused to touch at London. True to the millionaire out- look of his backers, Captain Eckener took advantage of the meteorological and other data generously laid at his disposal by the Soviet government, but snubbed U. S. S. R. wireless operators when they asked for news. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! which like the damaged machine has two engines of 1,200 horsepower and is known as the Land of the So- | viets. Semyon Shestakoff, crack pilot of | the Red Army and the Red Fleet. who in 1927 flew from Moscow to Tokio and return, said that the Soviet government proposed to es- tablish in 1931 an air line between the U. S. S. R. and the American west coast as a continuation of the trans-Siberian service, tile workers in the South to struggle against the stretchout and miserable conditions and wages through the National Textile Workers Union, providing that even this raid could not stop the struggle. The textile workers are now actively engaged | in five Southern states, preparing for the struggle which the Charlotte Conference will lay definite plans for Oct. 12. Sixteen of those arrested come to trial today. Seven others charged with secret assault with deadly the blood of Aderholt and of men, women and children whom they sen- tenced to a living death in the Loray mill long before the night of June 7.” Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 —‘ Bronx, N, Y. (Near 144th Street) Tel.: Mott Haven 5654. Goods Called for & Delivered By Patronizing the W. I. R. Store you will enable us to clean and repair the clothing we send to striking and destitute workers. “Not Charity—But Solidarity!” security necessary. Call at our office for further information. ‘Tel: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST. NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER } forced the prosecution to make def- . r ice. 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE . MUSIC sailing ships used to take as many Tour in New Plane inite charges and present evidence. | Jenckes Company is responsible not || Dyeing and Repairing} | opposite CENTRAL PARK Vegetarian Health by a large band. days at the best, and the usual time : be come Many of the released were rearrest- | Only for the death of Aderholt but to the Cor. 110th Street Restaurant for steamers is about three weeksg MOSCOW, U.S. S.R., Aug. 25.—|ed by city police, end sent to the | for the hundreds of deaths from the Tel. Monument 0111 558 Clcremont Parkway, Bronx DANCING The Zeppelin took less than three |The four Soviet flyers whose mono-| chain gang. dread Pellagra that follows starva- Due to the fact that s number in a large hall days in making the first aerial non-/ plane crashed during a heavy fog) The reelased textile leaders im- tion, 7 . ss of teriante were compelled to : stop flight over the Pacif |near Chita, Siberia, resumed their | mediately threw themselves once The Manville - Jenckes Company leave the city, we have a num- HEALTH FOOD REFRESHMENTS This flight was iva at British pester " New ee flight at ee more into the task of rallying tex- ay a eles aa raid, hat 418 Brook Ave., Bronx bie UF dente th en, No prestige by the German airship) o’clock this morning in a new plane, and shoot. eir hands are red wit Vegetarian : RESTAURANT . 1600 MADISON AVE. “% Phone: UNIversity 5865 ~ Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet |. 302 E. 12th St.

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