The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 4, 1926, Page 1

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E DAMY WORKER. |=: ; . { Entered at Second-class matter September 21, 1923, at the Post Office at Chicago, Ilinols, under the Act of March 3, 1879 Published Datly except Sunday by THE DAILY WORKER 290 : tee PUBLISHING CO., 1118 W. Washingtun Bivd., Chicago, UL THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1926 The DAILY WORKER Raises the Standard for a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government In Chicago, by mail, $8.00 per year. Outside Chicago, by mall, $6.00 per year. ne COMMUNISTS FIGH ’ Vol. Ill. No. 250. Subscription Rates: Price 3 Cents ———— i Lint Fak FILE WRIT OF OPPOSITION BEATEN BY MATURITY MUSSOLINI ; vests pied BRITISH f p | OF PROLETARIAN MEMBERS OF THE Coy ame wai = sem] EXCEPTIONS IN | SOV0ET Uéton communis P4RTY’ HELPING SMASH | uc: ---| MAKES HISTORY ale: 2 i F 3ARY, Ind., Noy. 2.—All workers of HE pope of Rome, Poland, Ireland MOSCOW, Oetot 10—(By Mail.)—The lesdifig! article in the Pravda, ‘ are inv ed to attend the cele Biatarther a1:hniees tee ieee “The Party and the. Disidptive spiseeises gt: haat che: aitees of the } Gis Hoslion sige nuamitn here’ the | under the protection of. the deity. Moscow and Leningrad organizations have dealt the leaders of the opposition tory of hievement of the Russia. | | ‘That helps both his holiness and the a crushing blow an continues: The opposition is beaten. The party, above workers, a ish hall, Madison | Eo acy all the Communist proletarians, have shown an extraordinary degree of str nd F h avenue, Sunday ‘yp Duce to live comfortably tho some- \ what dangerously. Still we know of political maturity, a fact with which the leaderg of the opposition who have . . 3 M4 bd November 7. : Aen Seer van ties renee | at etae rae For New| oire ware can ke ee But Miners’ Solidarity) x ‘sro:a: ot sveaxine, musica se * Communist Party ing intense loyalty to god, took the $ masses, obviously did not reckon. | 1¢ would be childish to make the party lections, and dancing has been arrang H precaution to: keep their power dry. Hearing The simple Communist workers and the party, off natbie for Dees All Foes ed, f rows in England Homer is alleged to have nodded at showed such 4 Bolshevist capacity sais i wicaame cata ri There will be speakers from the P Jeast once:in his life, tho we are not (Special to The Dally Worker) for. understanding the most important| that, for everyone knows that this ARTICLE 1. American Negro S, aaueeent s The Daily Worker) told what was put over on him while} DEDHAM, Nov. 2—Judge Webster | questions of our policy, that they| vandalistie destruction of the politi- By GORDON CASCADEN. Young Workers le an pei me Mal (By erga his lids drooped, But it'we were Mus-| Thayer, who presided at the original| Were completely able to resist the|cal capital of the party was carried (Special to The Daily Worker) nti-Imperialist league ele He ie aye has the Com ealini we would not put all our eggs in | trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo | °PPosition and the unprincipled de-| out against the will of the party and] BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 2.—Musso- yomez will represent the lat- | . eats arty of Great Britain opened - | against” tiie: Wale Dt the, Leniaist, Bol | ini’ i is effect-|ter organization jat Battersea Town Hali on Friday the divine basket. Vanzetti and who refused all of thel magogic advances of its most import-} aga’ lini’s despotic rule of Italy is ‘ec’ f lOct. 19th and ‘i B : see sed all of thelr! ant leaders. This proves completely | shevist Central Committee of the| ing shipments of “scab” coal from Bal-| The musical program will include a | O° continued. #>. Metiae motions for a new trial, will confer r hed " ‘i violin selection by Louis Fallek | Green the following Monday. The a 4 . 8 . | T 1s almost impossible to put ®)with Defense Counsel Willlam G.| "© Ser WANED Rana mror this reason the party cannot ae Sean the ale ti ale or by William Goldsmith, and a Be j congress was the most important ever 4 scrambled egg together again. |Thompson and Assistant District At. a eee Rarreee Srinath -the-battle ‘line.of eit t 7 : {held by the party, coming after the d Theoretically the feat is not impossi- ble, particularly if one agrees with Napoleon. A dead Mussolini might torney Dudley P, Ranney regarding the bill of exceptions Thompson wishes to file for state supreme court The political capital which the party has invested in these comrades for decades has been wasted by them. accept responsibility for the fact that these comrades have wasted their (Continued on page 4.) ain’s miners, Many Italian ships are carrying “scab” coal to Italy and Britain thru program by the I Adaission ry donation, The affairs starts at 7 o'clock. general strike, in the midst of the miners’ struggle and at a time when the party is increasing in influence resist even the incantations of the | action. The judge usually grants the re A the dual alliance that has been made ' {and membership at a rapid rate. pope and stay dead, And there are | right to file such a bill without much between the capitalist masters of these he Ay | There were three hundred delegates so many people ‘who would say nicer | questiohing, MEN R é two kingfloms to crush the labor move- yu hy {present. The party has gained 6,000 things about Mussolini as a corpse Thompson’s first exception is “to ment, v ny ers in the ¢ f the last than they feel like saying about him /the entire document entitled a ‘de- Sailors on these Italian ships and ing the roll to ost 11,000 snow that it behooves a high-spirited }parsén like the black shirt dictator to ‘ibe good. cision,’ as containing misleading and srroneous extracts from and summa- ries of the affidavits; misconceptions of the scope, meaning and significance of some of the affidavits, and an unfair and partisan dealing with them; and in general an unjudicial attitude of mind and lack of impartiality in ‘deal- o* © THINK it was Oscar Wilde who said in one of his masterly poems, that “all men kill the things they love,” nd one cannot help thinking that the FOR HAYMARKET IMARTYRS NOV. 11 $0 POPULAR WN CHINA, IT SEENS on other ships from continental coun- tries, in scores of cases, have not willingly “scabbed” on their British fellow-workers, Sailors of Italy and other land ruled by a c: tor, are forced into si “scab” ships. Conditions on many of of Spain, an- pitalist dicta. ice on these CITIZENS ACTS FOR STRINERS The party or er”, has the Ie labor weekly ha reased its list r cent in the past year to beyond the hundred thou- sand mark, Bell Chairman. Comrade Tom Bell was in the chair Jtalians must have read Oscar's poetry | ing with the motion.” The full text of ae: . * them, deserters say, are intolerable wee and opened the congress because they seem to be inspired by /the 90 affidavits submitted by both n Twelve Points ; Maae a * |Demand Owners Meet)". opening tuis cont rence,” he an insatiable hunger for their savior's | sides on the seventh and last motion I. L. D. to Sponsor the | Chi ese welve Appeals to Authorities. began, “we think it is our duty to plood. It may also be noted that the Italian capitalists have so far failed to give any proof of their love for Benito. All the attempts on his life have been made by poor persons, with a single exception, which is givén to prove the rule, that is the shot fired at the duce’s nasal organ by Violet Gib- son, an English woman, e+ @ for new trial are given with the bill of exceptions, Another Exception. Another exception is taken to Thayer's apparent refusal to rule on the nine points raised by the defense at the hearing on the last motion. An unsigned document which may be the judge’s ruling on these points has been left with the clerk of court, but Commemoration The annual commemoration of the legal a sination of the Haymarket martyrs will be held In Chicago on a larger scale than for many of the past few years in the meeting that has been arranged on November 11, at the Social Turner Hall, Belmont and Paulina by the Ploneer Aid and Sup- Look Like 12 Daggers (Special to The Daily Worker) CHUNGKING, China — (FP) — Twelve measures have been proposed by the Szechwan (province) Anti-Hu- millation Society in retaliation for the British naval attack on the town of Wanhslen on Sept. 5, when 1,000 When these vesels come to Balti more and other American ports mem bers of their crews desert them. Con- sular répresentatives of these and other foreign governments have made | constant appeals to civic authorities in Baltimore and other ports to round up these deserters. But the laws of this country are sup- posed to permit a sailor to desert a ship and remain ashore until such, 80 long as he does not go to work Passaic Strikers (Special to The Daily Worker) Passaic, N. J., Nov. 2.—Mill owners of the textile strike district are to be asked again to meet representatives of the United Textile Workers’ Union to discuss a speedy and amicable set- tlement of the nine month's old strike. All previous invitations have been ig- miners’ struggle is no sec- tiona] affair; the miners’ struggle is the battle of the whole working-class. That is why the miners are entitled to expect the stance—the moral financial, and material assistance—ot every grade and section of our move- ment. “Rea” end civilians were killed and 1,000 houses +)nored or refused. At a conference of With The Miners 1 ‘ssestiapey saat accepts sseniaa dein Abide Anam ceaeeele port Asspolaion and the International jdegtroyed. The Briton attack follow. |ilme as he may find a jod on another [citizens of Passaic and vicinity called | “Wo Communists say tothe r tdi cxgee ich Labor nse, 4 “8 iM military band |foreign-bound ship. He can stay here | py mayor John H. McGuire of Passaic |ininers: We are with you im yo $f the queen ‘ct Rumania can make | the dote “must-prove their whole | ‘The meeting will pay-tribate to the |f4 2 | en ee teen Toot thelr tthe. Hi ‘i i sid an honest “dollar be recommending | case on the new motion, not merely in- garters she never wore, if the king Of | dicate that there is sufficient evidence England can recommend whiskey he | to seriously question the original ver- never drank, why cannot a former] aict, Thompson requested a ruling on president of local 62 of the carpenters’ | this point at the hearing, claiming that union in Chicago boost the virtues of |ine defens# had only to show that ‘a patent medicine that he may have | there was a considerable body of new never sampled, Wcho answers “No!” | evidence which had not been passed Carpenters have called to thé atten-| op by a jury. Thompson takes excep- tion of the writer to’ an andvertise-|tion to Thayer's declaration that the ment in the papers which tells how| weeks ‘and Madeiros’ affidavits are (Continued on page 3) “purely hearsay.” Sialel Hemsorale and Monarchists Join Hands for Wedding Between Two Royal Dynasties ff, PRINCE / We Vv Carl Lindhagen, socialist mayor of Stockhoim was chosen to officiate at the marriage ceremony between Princess Astrid of Sweden and Crown Prince Leopold of Belgium. “Comrade” Lindhagen is a leader of the Swedish social-democracy and, when in parliament only a few yeare ago declared that Sweden should be a republic. Now he weds two scions of two royal families with his own hands while the social-democratic leaders in both Sweden and pioneers of the eight hour day move- ment for workers, August Spies, Al- bert Parsons, Adolph Fisher and George Engels who were hanged by the capitalist controlled government of Illinois on November 11, 1887, thirty- nine years ago, to Louis Lingg, ano- ‘ner martyr who was either murdered in his cell or committed suicide, and to Michael Schwab, Oscar W. Neebe and Samuel Fielden who were im- prisoned. Review History Held for their activities in the labor movement of the last century, ano lirectly for the elleged participation in the throwing of a bomb which killed a number of persons at a meet- ing in Haymarket place, they were all sentenced either to hanging or im- prisonment in an atmosphere of in- (Continued on page 6) SECRETARY OF LABOR POSES AS TRADE UNIONIST The national headquarters of the lives, The Society’s manifesto, which is being circulated, urges all patriotic Chinese to: 1. Refuse to sell butter, salt, rice or wood to the British. 2, Refuse to perform labor for the/| British. 3. Sever all economic relations with Great Britain and her people. 4, Refuse to load or unload ves- | ashore or ship coastwise. Captains, for this reason, do all pog- sible to shorten their stay in American ports. Entrance and clearance the same day with a cargo of “scab” coal gives less chance to men to desert (Continued on page 3) sels for British or accept cargo for their ships. 5. Not to Suy or sell imported goods of British make. 6. Not to travel on British-owned ships.” 7. Demand -the abolition of the un- equal treaties with Britain. 8. Shut out British warships and merchant ships from navigating Chi- nese inland waters. 9. Demand punishment of the Britishg commanders responsible for firing «1 Wanhsien, 10. Aid the families of the victims, 11, Demand that the British erect a memorial to the dead. 12. Demand that Britain shall of- ficially apologize to China. Fall River Police to at’ the request of James Starr, vice- president of the United Textile Work- ers, a resolution was passed request- ing the mill employers to confer with a committee of the striking workers, Monsignor Thomas J. Kernan, rec tor of St. Nicholas Church, the Rev. (Continued on page 2) | fight wath ‘vietory” is achieved! We will do our utmost to render oper- able the policy of your delegate con- ference, because we believe that that way in ther present stage of your fight lies victory “Our second word is to our (Continued on page 4) new GETTING MORE THAN HE BARGAINED FOR |G. O. P. issued one of ‘the most mis W , of | lesaling pieces Of publicity ever loosba Stop a P. Speaker arse, |on the public when ft. represented oi- Talking to Workers d to ‘ganized labor as having endorsed the Fas ‘republican ticket because Secretary of Labor Davis,\the millionaire direc- or of the Loyal Order of Moose, ap vealed to the workers to support the joolidge administration. Davis Trade Unionist. Davis was formerly a member of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Tin and Stool, wi s and probably still ‘carries @ card in that union. The other g¢@ rn whose namen By a Worker Correspondent BOSTON, Nov. 2.—The Workers’ Party, having candidates in the field officially on the ballot in Massachu- setts, sent one of their speakers, H. Riley, to speak in Fall River. A hall was hired. The mill owners, thru the police force; see to it that the Workers’ Party does not speak in Fall River. The only audience the speaker had was the police force, are mentioned in the G. O. P. public-| with Chief of Police Feeney in com- ity as representing’ organized labo. |mand. There were 12 or 15 policemen are quite the trade uniox }@nd gunmen marching up and down movement. | 9 the stairs around the room, It anybody le of their own One plain clothesman asked the families ha’ of the followin» | Speaker what was going on. He was New York jomists let them |told a lecture,'if he could get an apeak up: Edward Canavan, chair-|audience of working people. The man, executive committee, Associated Musicians of Greater New York; An thony Mullerei, president M. M. PF. U.; George L. Cornell, president; John J. Viele, first vice president; B. T. Humphrey, second vice president, James V. Donohue, third vice presi- dent; Charles W. Nelson, recording secretary; Earnest V. Braidwood, treasurer; Julius Waldaurer, financia, secretary, and F. O. Ostrick, corre sponding secretary, all of the Unitea speaker went on the streets and tried to get the workers into the hall. Seeing the police force marching up and down the stairs and around the door, the workers would not come in, but said they would vote for the workers’ candidates on election day. The only meeting that the speaker could have was on the street with about one dozen men, The police force followed the speaker to the station and saw him ise He ek WA. Senet i States Customs Employes. * off on the train, ™ \ isda bd a Rok Slaae aie, eagle pala of pede will be ; Since the consolidation of the nationalist forces In China by the erection of a strong government in ridesmaid an vince Guetav lolphus wi . the groom. ve |e the . Canton under thee leadership of the Kuomintang party and the organization of the national armies that have [ Archbishop of Malines whe will perform the religious ceremony later at Com ete Election Reports Tomorrow! been routing all. imperialist controlled opponents, China presents an altogether different ploture than It did Brusrels. ..1t is rumored tha another social-cemocrat, the Belgian ox-minieter Vahdervelde and @ prominent leader of the Seoond International,’ had no small part In arranging the royal contract, The DAILY Y WORKER goes to press too early todbe able to give any: thing IIke @ cdmplete report of the election returns. Tomorrow's lesus, how: over, will earry a full report with eultable comment. In the ‘a of the Boxer rebellion, position of the natlor te be OLEANED, _— British capitalism in particular is beginning to feel the combined oP lst forces and the imperialists of Japan and Wall Street are next On the list of those

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