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Defense Rallies to Save : : Sacco and Vanzetti | Lynchings* Doubled in (Continued from Page One) America During Last itant labs vement, The fight for | Sacco and Vanzetti : Year, Church Reports Sacco and Vanzetti is the fight of | the working class. | ee cual “The need of the hour is an organ- | WASHINGTON, April 8 (FP). ized, united movement of protest and} —Lynchings nearly doubled in solidarity on a national and inter-|| number in the United States in national scale. In this movement|| 199¢ as compared with 1925, ac- unity must be the watchword. All cording to a summary made pub- partisan aims, all differences of opin-|| )j. by the Federal Council of Chur- ion and all controversial questions |! ¢hes, While there were only, 17 must be put aside, All forces must lynchings in 1925, there were 30 in 1926. Five states formerly on be united without delay on the broad- est possible basis for the struggle to}! the “honor roll” of commonwealths in which no lives had been taken free Sacco and Vanzetti. Organize the protest s oatte by mob violence, were the scene of Ee, ail) forces! deliberate mob killings. New Mex- ico was one of these. It had had By Aniter at Meeting, CLEVELAND, April 8.—The Chin-| |from Shanghai. cans who were with Williams when Missionary Shot In China Drew A Gun, — “Nation” The American killed at Nanking, J. E. Williams, vice-president of Nan- king University, was shot as he drew a revolver on the threatening Chin- ese soldiers, according to a report cabled to the New York “Nation” Four other Amer- the shooting occurred were not in- |jured. G. A. Kennedy, an American resident in China and a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism, is responsible for the statement. Mr. Kennedy went to Nanking for the purpose of investigating the out- rage. His report states that there | were over 27,000 soldiers of the Nor- thern army in Nanking when the first Nationalist soldiers entered the city .at 3 a, m. on the 24th of March, and that it is impossible therefore to hold the Nationalists responsible for what occurred. “The attacks on foreigners in the morning and aftermoon of that day, resulting in the deaths of one Amer- ican, two British, and one Japanese, and the looting of the consulates of those countries, cannot be conclusively fixed upon the Nationalist soldiers, “The fixet of the four foreign |ese Community Association of Cleve-| deaths, thay of J, E. Williams, vice- “Free Sacco and Vanzetti!” * * . : * no lynching in the previous years. The churches’ statement does its statement, called for the immediate | organization of a national conference | - “4 || cated that they took place in 7 states, chiefly in the south. all workers’ organizations and sym-| pathizing bodies and uniting all sei * { P it | GOMMUNIST FOSTHION statement. “The necessity for this nation&l ex- ment. Opposition to such a mobiliza- | tion is assistance to the executioners. firmly believes that a mighty protest | movement of the masses can yet stay | Sacco and Vanzetti. All our energies and resources will be devoted to the The national office of the I. L. D. has sent instructions to its local or- freedom of Saeco and V: bigger scale than ever tional offical calls for the loding of mass meetings and demonstrations I. L. D. Calls for Conference. not say where the 30 lynchings of for Sacco and Vanzetti. ces for Sacco and Vanzetti must be | . ' pr n of the workers’ unity and pro- Towards China Given Protest Can Stay Execution. the hands of the murderers and bring organization of this movement.” ganization in 200 cities throughout the preliminary stages of this work of the | circulating petitions, distributing leaf- | land held a banquet to celebrate the | capture of Shanghai by the National Revolutionary Party. About 100 per-| sons were present, including Chinese students at Oberlin University. Among the speakers were Mr. Lewis of the Y. M. C. A., Judge Mills and Captain Kirby. Mr. Lewis ex- plained the demands of the Canton | government, and ascribed some of the looting at Nanking to “Communist agitators.” Judge Mills assured the Chinese present that the American people are in sympathy with the “jus- tified demands of the Chinese peo- ple for independence.” He warned the Chinese that they must be wary, The International Labor Defense in the past year did occur, but indi- “A national conference embracing organized without delay,” says the test is so obvious as to need no argu- | “The International Labor Defense about the triumphant liberation of Agitation Must Be Revived. country to revive the agitation for the I. L. D. locals as laid out by the na- ickers and posters printed by the national office of the I. L. D. and| for the hardest period will come when the sending of letters and telegrams | they have to establish law and order. to Governor Alvan T. Fuller at the | They must be careful to institute laws state house, Boston, demanding the | that “would be equal to rich and poor release of the two victimized agitators. | we enc Ghee tks . st Ni fe? ‘aptain Kirby told of his experien “The Bed TULA uevecbed: with the Chinese beginning with his says the statement, “must lead up to jeccustnienes with two Chinese in New the holding of a gigantic national con- | York. Very instructive as far as the ference at which the faith and soli- | Present Chinese situation is concerned. darity of the masses in the cause of | China’s Friends. Sacco and Vanzetti will be dramatized| I. Amter, district secretary of the| before the whole country. | Workers (Communist) Party, began) sACCO AND VANZETTI ARE/|his address with the words, “Chinese | INNOCENT AND §HALL NOFjjsomrades and American friends.” j DIE! , Amter blasted the so-called inter- “This slogan proclaimed long ago |est of Americans in the struggle of by~Exgene V. Debs is the slogan, ef | the Chinese people for freedom. Re} our fight.” assured the Chinese that their friends . * were Soviet Russia and the Commun- BOSTON, April 8.—World-wide ap-| ist International, to whom Sun Yat peals calling for the freedom of Ni-|Sen had sent a letter on his deatn- cola Sacco and Bartholomeo Vanzetti| bed..In answer to the insinuation reached Gov. Alvan T. Fuller today. | that=Commumists instigate looting, The-executive chamber is being flood- | Antter said that the “Communist Par- ed with cablegrams from every cor-|ty and the Young Communist League ner of the earth. | of China work hand in hand with Cablegrams arrived from the Red | the Kuomintang. ‘The industrial work- Aid, the German organization formed | ers of the capitalist countries and the Yor the defense of class-war prisoners | oppressed peoples of India, Afghant- and-which is similar to the Interna-| tan, Java, Egypt and Africa are the tional Labor Defense in this country. | friends and supporters of the Chinese Wires were also received from 20) revolution, ‘Hands Off China’ must members of the British parliament,|be the slogan emanating from the whose names have not as yet been! friends of China.” made public. Wants Realism. General Strike in Buenos Aires. Mr. Mong, seerétary of the Chin- Coincident with the appeals to the| ese Students Club, a Columbia stu- governor, word comes of a 48-hour| dent, begged the assemblage to come general strike in Buenos Aires as a|down out of the realms of idealism protest against the action of the|to the -plaie of reality. “It would Massachusetts courts in refusing to|be splendid if the American people | grant a new trial to Sacco and Van-| were all in sympathy with the as- zetti in spite of the overwhelming in-| pirations of the Chinese people. Un- This Monday The DAILY WORK-| ER, the only national labor daily, and | “The Freiheit,” Jewish Communist | daily, with combined circulations of | 75,000 in the metropolitan area, lead | off with a series of articles attack- sistence on their innocence by millions | fortunately they are not. Theoretical- throughout the world, including disin-| ly, even business men are in sympa-| by the flagrant injustice of the case. | different. “What is to become of our| ‘2 i ea | concessions, settlements, investments,’ they ask. That is the hitch to the Fx ert Puts question.” Mr. Mong explained in de- 0 tail what is going on and what the Chinese revolutionary party intends Light on Gigantic g ig It tion of a resolution demanding that . American warships and marines be Insurance Swindle | withdrawn from China, | ee | Pole Loan Strikes f | Snag; U.S, Bankers y Vii ing the graft and corruption with) ° which the industrial (weekly pay- Want Govt Control ment) life insurance business is sat-| . urated. | Prepared and written by Charles| for the $80,000,000 American loan Yale Harrison, intimately associated| struck a snag yesterday when the with insurance activities for a num-| American representative, M. Monnets | ber of years, the articles which will insisted on control of state finances, | run for 30 days will describe vividly | the management ofsthe credit policies | and in a lively style the technique of | of the Bank of Poland and the ap- the huge insurance combines in| pointment of four of sixteen direc- | workers throughout the country. It is understood that the Polish Praised by Nation Editor. |Government had struck a tentative Lewis S. Gannett, associate editor | agreement with the American bank- of “The Nation,” after reading these|ers providing for an American ob- articles in a preliminary form, de-| server who would not be a member clared that “this ought to start an-/of the bank’s board but who would other Armonstrong investigation!” | “In 1917, B. P. Armonstrong, the | sactions. late president of the late American) Later, however, it was learned that Union Life Insurance Co., said: “In-| the American bankers wanted great- dustrial inguranceis a swindle of|er control over Polish finances, and such Bigantic magnitude that its lit-| that M. Monnet was not authorized erature should be excluded from the|to sign an agreement on those terms. mails, its business suppressed and| = terested lawyers who have been stirred | thy, but practically the question 1s| The meeting closed with the adop- Writer Well Equipped. | WARSAW, April 8,—Negotiations swindling millions of dollars from) tors of the bank’s board. act as adviser in all financial tran-, taken over by the state.” ‘Read The Daily Worker Every Day aR president of Nanking University, oc- |curred at 3 a, m. on the twenty-fourth. It has, been proved that four othet Americans were with Williams at the | time the soldiers threatened. Williams | drew his revolver and was immedi- ately shot dead. The others were jnot hurt. The thtee ‘other foreign deaths occurred in the late afternoon | before the bombardment, which was |at. 4.80 p. m. The Nationalist gen- eral entered the city at 5.30. “The foreign houses burned or loot- ed were all on the route taken by the Northerners in their efforts to escape from the city. Foreign houses were not the only houses looted. Hun- dreds of Chinese were robbed and |many killed by the soldiers, presum- ably, again, Northerners running amuck, “The physical effects of the bom- bardment by the British and Amer- ican war vessels are comparatively slight. About ffty Chinese houses Were wrecked, and one foreign-inhabit- ed home was demolished. The num- {ber of Chinese casualties was prop- | ably under one hundred. But this ts uncertain, as they have not yet been | recorded.” Rank and File Miners Against Split Contract (Continued from Page One) | killed in the march on Cliftonville jin 1922, Over fifteen hundred people gath- ered in front of the P. and W. Hall, and formed in marching order for the parade to the cemetary. The line was headed by the Can- nonsburg Band and followed by the | children from the <Avella schools. | Then came the local unions with the flags and banners of the union, and in addition banners bearing slogans calling for a general strike of the en- tire coal industry. Slogans On Banners. Other banners read: “We want no sliding scale because it will always slide down. “Oragnize the unorganized miners. “No separate agreements. Keep the United Mine Workers united. “We want a general strike of American workers for the freedom of Saceo and Vanzetti, and many oth- ers.” When the crowd gathered around the monument to the Cliftenville miners, a truck was provided for a speakers’ platform, and Fred Siders, president of Local Union 2881 U. M. W. of A., and candidate for district president on the Brophy “Save the Union Ticket” in the recent election, opened the meeting. Dislike Partial Agreements. Siders recounted the purposes of the meeting, among which was that of calling for a general strike of all mine workers, to defeat the bosses’ lock-out of the miners of the central field. David Hickey, who spoke in the |name of the district organization did not meet with favorable response when he told the signing up of small mines on temporary agreements. He was interrupted with cries of “No separate agreements! Keep the mine workers united!” Participants in the Cliftogville march spoke, as did also D. E. Earley of Pittsburgh, who took the stand for the International Labor Defense, and to call attention to the Sacco- Vanzetti case, ” » * Propose Hlinois Conference. SPRINGFIELD, Il, April 8. — Harry Fishwick, president of District 12, U. M. W. of A., has invited the operators to a conference. President Rice Miller, of the operators’ associa- tion, has replied that he will meet with the miners’ officials only if they are prepared to discuss a reduction in wages, The southwestern operators’ asso- ciation and the union officials of Kan- sas, Oklahoma, and other southwestern states have adjourned without an agreement . They are meeting In Kansas City. The conference will con- tinue tomorrow. BUY THE DAILY SORRERY AT THE NEWSSTA | reason at all and was freed upon ap- | not to take notes. \do you think we would be paying the | | Board leaders had strenuously omjec- THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1927 Woll Confesses That He Acted As Spy (Continued from Page Ono) dreds? I myself was arrested for no peal to a higher court.” Shapiro also pointed out the un- precéedented brutalities of the police up to the very end of the strike, and particularly the activities of the in- dustrial squad, He told how workers were attacked by gangsters, and that these hirelings of the bosses were almost never arrested, Police Attacks Brutal. “We often used to say that the po- lice and the industrial squad could not do a better job if they were on the employers’ payroll. “Our lawyer took the matter up with several police officials whom he| knew, and we protested to the Cen- tral Trades and Labor Council, which sent a delegation to the mayor. But the brutalities went on just the same,” A. F. of L. Hearings Fishy. Several times at yesterday’s hear- ing it was mentioned as it had been by witnesses the previous day, that Matthew Woll was the only member of: the inyestigating committee who was regularly present; and that on many occasions there was no steno- grapher present, or she was asked Walsh Hits Woll. Frank P. Walsh, attorney for the} Joint Board, drew attention to the fact that Woll and McGrady had at-| tempted to give the impression that the Joint Board leaders had asked} for this withdrawal of the steno-| grapher. “Assuming that this inquiry is only to get at the facts in this case,” said Mr. Walsh, “I believe, in the interests |\Discuss Seniority | Sapiro Took Money From Speculators For Potato Co-op. DETROIT, April. 8.—The first di- rect evidence tending to support Henry Ford’s charges that Aaron Sapiro tricked American farmers, was given the jury today at the million-dollar Ford-Sapiro libel suit in federal court. Loans From Merchants. * Under cross-examination, Sapiro ad- mitted he had obtained $4,000 in loans for a baby potato cooperative in Idaho from Weyl and Zuckerman, Los An- geles commission merchants. The notes, securing the loans, were made out to Sapiro but Maurice Zuckerman, head of the commission firm, dig- counted them by signing the coopera- tive king’s name. | Kidding the Farmer. | Reed, defending Ford, charged that | this trickery was resorted to in order, to prevent the farmers from discover- ing that the “cooperative” which was advertised to prevent speculation, was | being financed by two well known | speculators in potatoes. | Rule on Railroads Attacks on the seniority rule of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks before the wage increase arbitration board were answered by the union of- | ficers. John G. Welber, New York Central. Railroad vice-president, tried to tell the arbitrators that individual }of fairness it should be brought out, | that it was Mr, Woll and the rest of| the committee who asked the steno-| of the proceedings was Mr. Woll. .« This was the case during Shapiro’s appearance before the committee, and he declares that Woll made repeated efforts to force from him statements that he had: paid money to members of the police force, Woll Plays the Stoolpigeon. “I told him over and over again that we did not pay any money,” said Shapiro. “But he would come back to the subject and say, with a wink, | ‘Now come on, tell me how much you paid captains. Was it $250 a week? | How much did you pay the members of the industrial squad? Come on, tell me. This is just’a conference on union affairs between friends. There is no harm in telling me.’ “And I would tell him: ‘Mr. Woll, | industrial squad to beat up our work- | ers and send them to the hospital ? | We never paid any money to any po-| liceemen o¢ to any official.’” Shapiro said he and other ‘Joint ted to Hugh Frayne, the New York organizer, being a member of the com- mittee, “ “Mr. Frayne had proved himself dishonest in his dealings with this union and we objected to his being a member of the committee,” said Shapiro: “Time and again he had showed himself to be not a represen- tative of labor but a representative of the employers. We did not trust him.” “Did you object to Mr. Woll or Mr. McGrady,” asked Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Brothers. “No, we did not know them then,” Never Saw Own Testimony. | Questioned as to whether he had ever been shown what was alleged to be his testimony before the inves- tigating committee, Shapiro reported that altho Woll had promised that the minutes of the proceedings should be submitted to the members of the Joint Board for correction, they had never seen a copy of them, had never signed their names to them, and knew noth- ing at all about what they were charged with saying until the stories came out in the newspapers. Explains Expenditures. Shapiro was grilled about expendi- tures he had made during the strike in an effort to discover whether there was any money for which he could not account; but he explained just what had been done with the Law Committee’s money and that vouchers for all of it were in the hands of the finance. committee. Asked about one particular recelpy which the auditors said they coulda not find, Shapiro replied. “Well there were a lot of things those auditors did not want to find.” Gold and Hyman Speak On Crisis in Needle Trades This Sunday The present situation in the needle trades will be described to the work- ers of Boro Park tomorrow, by the | leaders of the left wing. | Ben Gold and Louis Hyman, the Chairman of the Cloakmakers and Furriers Joint Boards and J. Boru- chowitz, Manager of Local 2, will be the chief speakers with Sam Lipzin of the Amalgamated Clothing Work- ers as chairman, * The meeting was arranged by the Boro Park Workers Club to acquaint the workers of this section of the city | grapher to leave,” | At these times, the sole recorder} wage adjustments upward would have been made before if the seniority rule were inoperative. Union officers J. A. Robertson and W. J. Winston, chairmen of the road’s |lines east and west, replied that the | brotherhood was always ready to ne-| gotiate in individual cases where the company wated to give an employe a higher pay rate for greater efficiency 3, GARMENT WORKER PRISONERS WRITE LETTER TO COMMITTEE OF HUNDRED COMMENDING CAMPAIGN The nine prisoners held at Hart’s Island because of their activities in the cloakmakers’ strike appealed to the committee of one hundred to “give us a helping hand” in a letter received yesterday by Ann Washing- ton Craton, secretary of the commit- tee. Thank Committee, The prisoners had read in the news- papers the attacks made by Morris Sigman of the International upon the committee and its attempts to raise a defense fund to work for their re- lease, and to give aid to their fam- ilies. They declare in their joint let- ter “we are thanking you and wish- ing you success in this great under- taking which means our freedom.” Their letter is as follows: * * * New York Penitentiary Hart’s Island, New York. Sec. of Committee of Hundred, Civic Club, 18 E, 10 Street, N. Y. Dear Miss Ann Washington. Craton: We, the undersigned prisoners of the recent garment strikes, at Hart's Island read a statement in the press that a committee of one hundred has} been organized for the purpose of freeing the prisoners of the recent cloxk and furrier’s strikes, © We wish and hope that the fair and liberal minded people of this great country will give you a helping hand morally and financially in order that your committee shall be able to carry jout the great undertaking for our | freedom. children and families whom we are so much in need of, we are thanking you and wishing you success in this great undertaking which means our freedom. Joint Board Cares For Them. We are also glad to inform you \that the New York Joint Board of |the Cloak and Dress Makers’ Union leadership of Louis Hyman and man and Julius Portnoy are up to the present time taking care of us jin prison and our families at home | financially. | | on us, or communicate, if any in- |formation is required. | Yours for our freedom, and hoping |to hear some good news from your |committee, Sincerely yours, | Max Bernstein (No. 46849); Morris Turettsky (No. 46703); Harry Fried- man (No. 46894); Paul Kalechman (No. 46708); Arthur Zinn (No. 46733); Samuel Grossman (No. 46711); Charles Wolfish (No. 46705); Tony Morandine (No, 46704); A. | Kutzuk (No, 46728). ANGLO-AMERICAN BANKS DRAW TRIBUTE FROM EVERY PART OF EARTH WHICH CAPITAL RULES Those figures have no parallel in any other country. The huge reserves of $35 billipns\in deposits easily crowd out competition from any and all oth- er capitalist nations. Look at the first 10 banks: 1. Midland, London. . .$1,783,000,000 2 Lloyds, London. 1,684,000,000 Barclays, London. .. .1,508,000,000 Westminster, London1,388,000,000 4, 5. National Provincial or exceptional ability. Walber had | pe eee Rees 1,261,000,000 argued that when the company was/6, National City willing to pay an individual worker New York..}...... 1,083,000,009 more, the seniority rule enforced the 7. Federal Reserye same rate for-all in his grade, unless | New York.,....... 923,000,000 a special status were made for him.|§, Chase National Arbitrator William B. Wilson, New Yortk....... «+ .852,000,000 chosen by the union, stated his belief |9. Bank of England that the seniority rule had generally; ° London ee eho oc 695,000,000 inereased the efficiency of the rank | 10, Bank of Montreal and file. Montreal .-.sb:.00 04s 656,000,000 é The English banks rank first be- cause they, constitute the Big Five, | with control over practically the en- tire banking structure of England. But the combined deposits of the 150 | largest Anglo-American banks are Current Events — (Continued from Page One) there are certain alleged radicals who |seem to forget that countries long™ 900,000,000 in 91 U. S.. banks and under the yoke of imperialism, coun- | $17,885,000,000 in 59 British Empire tries like China, India, Egypt and| institutions. ag races like the Jews and the Negroes,|__ The far-flung Empire is represented are the victims of a propaganda de-| in the 10th bank in size, the Bank of signed to humiliate them and render | Montreal, ee inion gs Haya th bjects of universal scorn. | Bank of Canada of Montreal; the 17th, apes, Bs be dep * the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, cee is a past master in this in Sydney; the 18th, the Canadian lart, She is working it off on the Bank of Commerce in Toronto; the Chinese just now, as well as on the a the oi agp anger 3 India in Hindoos. Sure, England would have | Calcutta and so on. er empire no objection to a United India or a|>anks with deposits of more than United China if only the Chinese and | $200,000,000 are to be found in Hong- Hindoos stopped killing each other!|Kns, Manchester, Edinburgh and Indeed, England is engaged in the Halifax. rid | The only foree which could ever erates rome ot pecenennig the ped overthrow such a colossus is that of id Shapiro. ples of those countries from each} ; ¥ ne ny ai 1Bther. In Ireland it was the catholic | the srsloived: peoplan: co the word, Al ready the workers of half of Europe and Asia, as represented in the Soviet Union and China have thrown off the pray dear B possibilities of bondage to London and Britiah’ intrigne is the chiet cause of) New York. The great Hongkong and the disunity of those countries which A * British imperialism holds for pur-| Shanghal Banking Corporation, with poses of exploitation. She fastened | the opium trade on China at the point and protestant religions that prevent- ed the Irish from getting freedom. The fact is. that British money and | split nearly 50-50 between the Brit-/ ish and the United States, with $17,-| its $280,000,000 deposits, which es- sayed to rule the Far East from its yantage point on the stolen island of Hongkong, already enters the eclipse. How soon before the Im- perial Bank of India and the Central Bank of India in Bombay fall before the revolt of Asia’s rising masses? Harlem Young Workers Opening Forum Tonight The Y. W. L. of Harlem is or- | ganizing for the coming month four open forums. The first will be held this Sunday at 81 East 110th St. at 8 P. M. Carl Weissberg will speak on “Opportunities for Young Workers in America.” Admission free. All young workers are ‘invited. Chicago Workers Greet “Freiheit” _ Tonight at Fete CHICAGO, April 8.—Thousands: of workers are expected to join in celebrating the fifth jubilee of the establishment of “The Freiheit,” Jewish Communist daily, at the Ashland auditorium. Moissaye J. Olgin, editor of “fhe Hammer,” Communist monthly, and associate of “The Freiheit”; Jay Lovestone, acting general secretary of the Workers (Com- munist) Party, and Ben Gold will be among the speakers who will greet “The Freiheit,” which has become the standard bearer of the militant Jewish workers in Ameri- ca. There will also be an elaborate musical program by the Freiheit Gensags Ferein. Last Saturday night 22,000 workers jammed Madison Square Garden in ‘New York to Join in felicitating “The Freiheit.” | | I i LECTURES and FORUMS of a gun, exploited Chinese workers at the point of the bayonet and now tries to block the onward march of the Nationalist movement with war-; ships, tanks and purchased Chinese generals, THE PEOPLE’S INSTITUTE At Cooper Union (8 St. & Astor PL) at 8 o'clock - Admission Free es ip as Ta same attitude is being develop- Menge: "Daily Living and Recent Scientific Experiments.” ed here towards the Filipinos and Latin Americans, The idea is being Bilge AB br ata Vpicagioal Prove planted in the public mind that those Jems.” a people cannot live together in har- mony. The bayonets of American soldiers must be tnterposed between the perpetually warring factions. It is the old imperialist method under Friday, April 15—No meeting. AT MANHATTAN TRADE SCHOOL Lex, Av. & 24d St, at 8 o'clock. | Single Admission, 25 cents. Reduction for Course Tickets. the slogan “Divide and Conquer.” || Monday, Apr. 11—Houston Peterson: Mi i Ww peaperires Radical workers should be careful not Fiaubert Se ke BA 4 A lg od to ape the bourgeois flunkeys from thony”: An Outline of Religion. the editorial seribblers to the buffoon comedians on the stage. The battle array against world imperialism will find the insulted, bullied, exploited and humiliated subject peoples lined up with the exploited workers jand farmers of the ‘so-called, free coun- tries against the common enemy, un- less our stupidity throws them into the arms of the foe. | Dawes Decides Graft Probe Can Continue Reed Will. State Plan Wed, April 13--Dr Irwin Edman: ‘Three Metaphysical Poets. | “Percy Bysshe Shelley. ‘fhe Poet of Pantheism.” Thurs. Apr. 14—Dr, 8, G. Spaulding: Questions People BaHess, a Philos- opher to Answer.—"{s There Any Ground for Religion?” Sat., Apri) 16—Dr, Seott Buchanan: Pintonic Attitudes, —- “Philosophy as Criticism of Morals. ————_——_$_ Read The Daily Worker Every Day LABOR TEMPLE 14th Street and Second Avenue THIS SUNDAY 5 P. M—The Pioneers of the Race DR. G. F. BECK “The Heretic King of Egypt” CHICAGO, April 8.—Plans of |) Achnaton the Reed Senate Committee in- || ADMISSION 25 CENTS vestigating campaign fund ex- | 715 P.M penditures were expected to be announced today in Detroit by Senator James A. Reed, following EDMUND B. CHAFFEE “Tired Radicals” ADMISSION FREE with the situation which is constantly growing in tensity, The meeting will be held at Crys- tal Hall, 4214 14th Avenue, Brook- sion will be free. the ruling here yesterday of Vice- President Charles G. Dawes that the committee did not lose its power with the adjournment of the sixty-ninth congress, 8:30 P. M—Open Forum ROF, MARK MAY Sunday, April 10—Dr. Edward J. v. |! |{ TOMORROW NIGHT, 8 P.M. ‘Samuel Sha . Will speak on “WHAT IS HAPPENING IN CHINA?” The inner situatio; Ming Tang Party of of the Kuo ina. At The Workers School Forum 108 Kast 14th Street. Next Sunday: JAY LOVESTONE, Acting General Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, will speak on “America and the Next ar” ADMISSION 2c. BUY THE DAILY WORKER _ AT THE NEWSSTAND INGERSOLL FORU anti-religious center of N. ¥. CHAMBER MUSIC HALL, CARNEGIE HALL SUNDAY evening, APRIL 10th 8 o'clock —-DEBATERH— “WAS JESUS DIVINE?” Dr. Jan, G. Rodger—Aftirmative Dr, Harry Hibsehm: Negative Questions and Speeches from floor, Admission free, All welcome, ‘Brooklyn Dances For - Daily Worker Tonight A Concert and Ball for the benefit of The DAILY WORKER will be held tonight at the Royal Palace Hall, 16. Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, under the auspices of Section 6 of The Workers (Communist) Party, The Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, Max lis violinist ate b pe Stein in | In the name of our beloved wives, | at 130 Hast 25th St., N. Y., under the | Joseph Borchowitz, Charles Zimmer- | We will also appreciate a repre- | | sentative of your committee to call | I