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STAND OF U, S, DECLARES CHEN. Seores Bombardment of Nanking and Alliance Eye Witness Appears For Sacco, Vanzetti (Continued from Page One) | have observed the shooting from the} shoe factory windows called off the| test when objections were made by| Chief of Polica John J. Heoney, of Braintree, A majority of the students were members of the Harvard Liberal Club. * HE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1928 Cable Demands Bethlen Investigate Szanto’s Trial; Give Justice CHICAGO, April 15—A cable to Premier Bethlen of Hungary, and to the Hungarian embassy at Washington, was sent yesterday Envoy to Raaiand In “Big Four’ Scandal (Continued from Page One) sight, The dead man’s standing in his poverty stricken community is judged by the number of prancing, plumed horses in the entourage. A life’s say- ings is hoarded for this one event. The most servile English worker wants his “decent” burial, Following the industrial revolution European Scientists Honored By Leningrad Geographic Society LENINGRAD, Mar. 20 (By Mail) At the annual meeting of the Geographic Society held here there, was made public the list of scien- Nationalists Refuse to Be Abased by Powers | (Continued from Page One) of Nanking by the naval forces 0, the United States Government, No Apology Yet. | “The Demand for ‘an apology ix writing by the Commander-in-Chiei of the Nationalist atmy, including ar, express written undertaking to re The seriousness with which the Nationalist government of China re. | The’test was said to have the approval || thru the Intérnational Labor De- ti frain from all forms of violence anc CD ageffepaintangendiive Hi oeral asa ‘a ireron ts powers, made | % Professor Feliz Frankfuter and his || fense, as follows: in England, during which millions of eh ve Yep an edt agitation against foreign lives. anc be without waiting for a neutral investigation of responsibility for the deaths | assistants of the Harvard Law School. |! “Press ‘reports that Szanto and || Workers were driven by economic ne-|| Ct "sor their learned works Property,” is, 80 far as an apology ie You of Chineso and foreigners at Nanking, is made evident in the following |The professor has taken an active part || thirty other Hungarian workers ||cessity from their rural homes into|/ “" "0, “uel oats | Uconcerned, justified only upon the By cabled statement just received from the office of Eugene Chen, the minister |i" the Sacco-Vanzetti defense, are now before a criminal court,}/the bleak machine-communities, tem- ‘teen elected faced members of ||2¥00f of Nationalist guilt for the dis-, Jan of foreign affairs of the Nationalist government at Hankow. It is es+| eaihesd for disagreeing with your govern- |/Porarily dispossessed, the question of || een ene ee oe Lach wecmcnict || turbances at Nanking. ma sentially an appeal to the American people not to participate in European | WV hite Plains Residents In Protest. |! ment. We ask you to intervene parben funerals and burial ground be- ana tee yi nist Borthott the det Then follows a statement that the wa intervention in China, and it was authorized by the Central Exeeutive| A petition signed by 60 residents || for a: full impartial trial and |/C#me @ pressing problem. known German physical ceowraph. || Nationalist army will, of course, pro-, per Committee, og teen of White Plains, N. Y., ahd asking |} leniency,” They Bury Him. nee pie th e the Sait rh hd Lee. tect lives and property of foreigners, 1 4 Oe and English lives she will sanction postponement of the execution of Sac- | The cable was signed by: Clar- || At this point the “industrial” life pain: to > 8 Grate tam seal and that the chief cause of friction, the HANKOW, April 15—A few days [any degree of wanton destruction ot |co and Vanzetti “until all reasonable | ence Darrow, Prof. Robert Morss || insurance company made its appear- pan bein lore DPipalaley of and possible incitement to violence, is) “g ago British and American gunboats | the wealth and lives of other lands, | doubt of their guilt had been cleared,” || Tovett, Victory L. Berger, Bishop |/ance with the “decent” burial as its Munich” call tee Shoketske has |! the Presence: of foreign troops in) 301 fired on the defenseless city of Nan-| The men who today control England's | were received here today by Gov. Al-|! Wy, Montgomery Brown, Bliza- jdrawing, card. Shortly. afterwards | hii elieied: chav, th ea China, wi king, foreign affairs are true successors | van T. Fuller, Oats || beth Gurley .Flynn, Robert Dunn, || this form of petty larceny life insur- | enim Bacletd 2 nae Pcie soe, Up to the U, 8S. | At the same time foreign troops, | Of those politicians who ea Dagtieng Bre ae Gils hanse Pivthel David Rhys Williams, Colonel |/ance made iia Seley te United | | STOP LAB alata eda shal | RE 3 alternaijves confront the} ¥ ald at Shanghai, shot | Slavery in America and tried to con- y Labor Protests. Yhas, Ersk Scott Wood, D |States via the Prudential Life. | American Gove: nt in deal ryinsgdlilanincetaitee ade snippit vince the Chinese by means of navai|e KANSAS CITY, April 15.—A reso- | MeDona a, Efron Sinclair, Theo- |. Since that‘ time the “Big Four”! the Seine aay ai sin big ea Wt the name time British atkplanes | eure of the necessity of opium. lution Precio) the re te the || gore Del s, H. W. L. Dana, William |have been having a pretty nice time | almel igs 0 i It can consider the answer “un. | bs bombared Kwangtung vil a ics Rips ces be is 8. ics | ecaseth was waieed be vragen iinet Mahoney, Edw. C, Wentworth, jof it, Controlled legislatures, crea- | | satisfactory” and take “punitive ac- | hi At the same time Br’ sailors hina is not surprise at England. iF, o 4 : opted I vy e Centr: Carl Haessler, Ralph Chaplin, ture superintendents of insurance, and| . tion,” or it can consider that the note | hi killed a’ number of Chinese at Chung- uae layin ey cree reper | bs gh nag boyd See ‘arlo Tresca, Forrest Bailey, Scott jie, state seein edhe cos it a} Be Fired Monday 1 goes far enough to meet Washington’s | ar : o see hints that Ameri o- e >t Near most profitable business to ee | i a a, day? Velnge? the’ sepork. of |ORRERMS in the imperialistic eritaes of | operate local bodies in agitating for Nearing, and Ellen Hayes. me. fe dnadintia theless oo 5 geaance to justify further correspon- | w some such incident. You in Amertea | the country against whom she battled) @ new trial for the two framed-up | "i “cash” business. THere is no “pa-| . ' Coolidge Went Too Far. ‘ ae nbs? heat than tnciiadte They for her own freedom, workers, |per,” no extended credits, everything | Jail Two Picket The belief ptevails that there will a le Gor Paported 4 elarthe headlines| The Chinese people wish to point} se ae! e Vv if Fil S lis done on a cash basis, Naturally | ; be no punitive action, There are al- ~ tr'the foreign press in China con-|°Ut to America, whose leadership tt] 1,800 Denounce Verdict | |these companies carry lagge cash de- | pret ready reports current in Washington st troll d by the toi n powers and |i§ she is following. It is the British| |The Architectural Iron, Bronze and | , |posits in local Bhnks. The Metropol-| Gussie Kimberg and Clara Kim-|that several Cabinet members ob- . ter are Sak cabled trike aewepa gent |seeretariat of colonies and the Bri- teh pod sacbavaniy gh seal Troops to Crush |itan Life has a balance in the Chase berg, who were accused by a scab of] jected to the vigor of the American i 8 . i ilitary ve | New York i 3 vorke | Nati ali ; «, ” . ‘ You in Risssletbes ose of incidents | in this ney enterprise in China, which | pci act decision as an act of H H ‘ions. Now ean any bright boy in the | Voorheir in Special Session in Brook- United States taking joint action with ; +. Chi oh th lected |.c2n benefit neither the British nor | post-war hysteria, i 2 | eV0 ll 100 \class tell me who really controls the |lyn yesterday. the British Government. The State I roll ag fad oy fa hepa “fi tae | Americans but which will sow dts-| Pointing out that there is no valid i, ;Chase National Bank? Johnny, you| The two girls were convicted in department is more and more inclined I the truth in such a way that Na- tionalist China, an awakening coun- try struggling heroically to break away from the fatal fetters of feudal military and economic imperialist op- pression, appears as an aggressor against the west. Therefore the Chinese people ap- peal directly to you, the people of of America. The Chinese people want you to know the real situation of this land so that you can judge for yourselves if the policy being conducted from your capitol is not a treacherous dual policy which may provoke on the Pacific coast a catas- trophe so bloody that the most hor- rible years of the past decade will seem to be mere child’s play. | Struck For Freedom. The civil war now going on be-/ tween the north and south is a strug- gle for national freedom, the same | freedom for which America has/| waged two great wars one against | the degrading status of a colony, an-/| {a discontinuation of all privileges, | with the object of bettering relations| |sension between America and China| eVidence against the pair, the union! | and precipitate catastrophic events m|asks Governor Fuller of Massa-| | the Pacific, in which America’s recore| Cchusetts to commute the vicious sen- } in the Far East will be sullied ana} tence of the two men. her prosperity menaced. 4 | fr sen SRT Sa The Chinese people never believed | i i | that the Washington conference would | Nee cae a | S ing | be able to “awaken the conscience of | the twentieth century and be a good) omen for the peoples,” as was solemn- | (Continued from Page One) ly declared by President Harding in| Foreign Minister has received no re- | 1922. But at the same time the Chi-| ply to his notes protesting against {nese people did not anticipate that|the raids of British soldiers on Chi- American diplomacy would turn aside | nese schools in Chinese territory, the jfrom the policy of the open door,| cutting of telegraph wires, and air from the promise to withdraw alli| raids by British planes. | foreign garrisons from China, from| British troops celebrated Good Fri- | the avowed intention to work toward|day by parading along Nanking Road | in full equipment, accompanied by five poison gas tanks. * . and from “the policy of mediation! . 3 More U. S. Warships WASHINGTON, April 15.—Three American warships, the Cruiser Cin- | cinnati, and the destroyers Preble | and Noa, have been ordered to Han-| kow “where the situation appears to | between China and the other powers | on a basis of mutual equality.” But) today America has bombarded Nan-| king, and her naval forces are con-| centrating at Shanghai. American} citizens are being evacuated, and | Morocco tonight, jare perfectly right. And if you will make careful investigation you will find that the directorate of the Bank is nicely sprinkled with Metropolitan | directors. Inside Clique Profits. Needless to.say the “mutual” policy holders in the Metropolitan Life do Many of the Spanish military bases |not benefit in any way by this nice in Morocco have been destroyed by| juicy contact, but then that is one of the hurricane and huge quantities of |the drawbacks in only being a policy- war material have been dai It} holder instead of a director. | is estimated that the total damage| Capital is reproductive only by will reach 100,000,000 pesetas. means of investment and manipula- Rush 30,000 Troo) tion, The power it confers upon its The government has ordéred each/| possessor is in direct ratio to the use regiment in Spain to prepare one com-|he has of it, rather than in its mere pany for immediate embarkation legal possession. which means a new army of 30,000. An extravagantly obliging legisla- General De Rivera embarks for /|ture allows these companies 4 of 1% of the total assets as an annual “in- vestment” fund. Investments are lim- ited to only the safest bonds and mortgages. There is absolutely no expenses involved in purchasing bonds of this nature. On the contrary bond houses usually pay a commission on HENDAYE, France, April 15.— Spain’s position in Morocco has been made difficult by the hurricane that has swept the Mediterranean Coasts, according to a statement by General George Jordana, Director of Colonies, dispatches received here stated. Anti-Toxin Rushed to Tornado Hit Town, Tex. 15.—Dr. rushed into him and assaulted him r against an eet te | America is participating in ‘the com- 4 h — Te Sonenyga fighting, | Position of diplomatic notes written China today, as Ar dies se. |in a thoroughly English style. for democracy, independence, unifi}} China never expected to find Amer- | oy sagas Wawa bae eagbegrmaer Omer ica on the side of the enemy of free- | In China today, as in America in} her great national crises, ninety-nine | out of every hundred people are sup- | porting the forces of freedom against | the forces of slavery, the sovereign not in control of her own policy, but, instead, being involved automatically by armed intervention at the bidding | of England. dom in the Far East nor to find her| and MeCormick. re: : «| _ AUSTIN, Tex., April be threatening,” Admiral C. 8. Will-| ,.. 4 ! jams advised the navy today in a dis-| Livingstone gear neat bsirhes ee patch from Shanghai. He also re-| officer, made another lag ta hin Abend ported three destroyers from Manila | bese rete Re as kind es std to Shanghai, the Simpson, McLeish | ° Dt: J. E. Rogers, Edwards County :. | health officer, who sent in an urgent Py | call for typhoid anti-toxin from Rock a3: ef ‘ | Springs, tornado-hit town. British Censor News | ss " WASHINGTON, April 15.—Most| Dr. Anderson carried with him 308 of the news dispatches from China |40Se8 of serum for the storm suf- anti-tetanus serum by airplane to the sale of bonds. Still, in the face! of this fact the “Big Four” charged | their “Mutual” policyholders more than eleven and a half million dollars for investing the assets in the best legally prescribed bonds, Director Houghton. Who wouldn’t be a director of a} life insurance company? spite of the fact that Mrs, Anna Bloom, who appeared against them, mixed up her story on the witness stand, and even admitted that she was not sure the Kimberg sisters had struck her, but thought so because they had worked in the same shop with her before they went out on strike and she went to scabbing, There were no ‘other witnesses against the girls. The courtroom at their hearing was sprinkled with agents of the Interna- tional who seemed to take special in- terest in their case. The trial of Luis Blumenfeld and R. Rurse, who attacked and brutally assaulted Joseph Di Mola, chairman of the Monroe Dress Shop, on Jan- uary 3, will be held on Monday in General Sessions. Di Mola, who was beaten with lead pipe, was not ex- pected to live for some weeks, and is still unable to work. The gangsters who attacked him are said to be from Philadelphia. They shortly after he had refused to order the workers in the shop to go to a meeting at the offices of the Inter- national, when requested to do so by to “go along” with Great Britain, but that inclination is regarded with dis- favor by some of President Coolidge’s closest advisers, ‘ Furthermore, it was. pointed out today, the state department would have-a difficult time justifying a “big stick” policy on the basis of the ex- pressed Nationalist willingness to make reparations if and when a joint commission determines their respon- sibility for the Nanking affair. Utah Senator Favors Statehood for Porto Rico; Nordies Oppose WASHINGTON, (FP). — Senator King of Utah, democrat, who visited Porto Rico at the time of his recent exclusion from Haiti, announces that whenever the Porto Ricans desire statehood he will favor giving it to them. “It is incompatible with our theory of government,” King told the press, “that the United States should hold colonies or territorial possessions in- definitely. The Porto Ricans are a business agent from the Interna- tional. Blumenfeld. and Rurse attempted to jump their bail at the time of their first hearing, but were found by po- American citizens and are entitled to all the rights and immunities enjoyed by citizens of all others sections of the United States.” This view is firmly rejected by the i : ‘ oe ; a «=| ferers, Yesterday, the State Health| Surely Alanson B. Hgughton, the/|lice and admitted to higher bail.]Soythern democrats in corfgress, who r sae of ae sahara As fomrienage RM RD are bse ‘censored by British | Depactesant pean a large supply of|American ambassador to England| Subpoenas have been issued. Ia resist any move to incorporate cynical violence of 2 Sco t t Nearing Will sources, ear Admiral W. H. G. would. And he is.. Asa side line he Porto Rico in the union—due to its financiers. China is fighting for civil) rights as opposed to feudal depend-| ence,. for the improvement of the} economic status of the great masses | of people, who are today suffering} from poverty so extreme as to Be| beyond the comprehension of the! American people. In China people | are Starved and dressed in rags and{ patches, housed in hovels so wretched that the worst tenements of the West | seem comfortable by comparison. | China is fighting to lift the people | Bullard, retired, U. S. N., chairman | of the Federal Radio Commission, de- clared today after a conférence at! |the White House. | Bullard, just returned from China; | BOSTON, Mass., April 15.—Scott! called to thank President Coolidge} Nearing will deliver a series of in-|for his appointment to the commis- | teresting lectures in the state of | sion. | Massachusetts. The dates have been| British censorship is being exer-| arranged as follows: April 17, 2\cised chiefly on dispatches sent) o’clock, -Brockton, at Eagles Hall,| through London,” Bullard declared. Ward street, April 17, 8 o’clock,; America should not join Great! Providence, at American Co-operative | Britain in an aggressive policy in Deliver Series of Lectures in Mass. \city until the morning of March 24th, | directs for the Metropolitan Life for} the measly salary of $45 per year. At any rate that’s what the Insur- ance Report says. If that’s all this | plenipotentiary extraordinary gets for such an important job I would sug- the Nationalist general in command | gest that he go on strike immediately of the capture of Nanking, stated: |for more pay and shorter hours, But “We captured Nanking on March |then again, $45 may only be part of 23rd, but our troops did not enter the | his pay. Every “Big Four” policyholder Before our arrival some 70,000 to| knows the name of his agent. He 80,000 Northerners ransacked the | calls often enough, fifty-two times a/ Rock Springs. and some of the best troops have been withdrawn and sent down the river to aid the Tientsin drive. In an interview today, Chen Chien, | josaur-lizard which lived at least three Dinosaur-Lizard Bones | ressible encouragement to southern Discovered in Russia On New Railway Route; LENINGRAD, Mar. 22 (By Mail). In the course of research Work car- ried on on the line of the Semiret- chensk railway, which is under con- struction, there have been found, | near the villages of Karagok and Kalkan, parts of the,bones of a din- Negroes to demand their own political ‘ights, Aireraft Reeords Aid Factories. American supremacy in air records reached its high pitch after. the war, but Europeans have been gradually taking records away until on March 1 the Federation .Aeronautique Interna- tionale credited the United States with but 11 out of 85 major records. The standing was France, 33; Italy, 21; out of this degradation. She is fight-| Association Hall, 1753 Westminster | China, Bullard said. | Mie bra 11; Switzerland, 7; ' Germany, 4, , During the last year Italy and Ger- many have made great strides, aezo- ; | oe i let i | . But here is a name which I gm | jy}; i i lightenment in place | . April 19, Springfield, Cooley | Raps British All jcity from Yuhuatai. They undoubt-|year. I : \million years ago. agate liam eerie \ Hotel 1787 Main pans 25 ‘April 20,| He dseintea this ouaenctant should | edly looted a whole night and urd pag be oi 93 eee a an | It * the first and only find of such Decaying Feudalism. |Taverhill, Moose Hall, 20 West street. | confine itself to protection of Ameri- | before we were able to restore order/0ur of the 24 million Metropolitan ia giant.lizard in the U. 8. S. R. Up qt 4 Her struggle is a struggle between, on the one hand, industrial develop- ment, which can bring the people out of the depths, and on the other hand, the decay of feudal economy, 2 strug- gle between honesty on one hand and pelitical corruption on the other. China’s people are hungry for this liberation. Since the Nationalist Re- volutionary army, the small but in- vincible force of emancipation, left the borders of Kwangtung Province | ] } jin Massachusetts, Scott Nearing will they have destroyed in a few months three of the most powerful militarist groups in China—We Pei-fu, Sun Chuan-fang, and Chang Tsung-chang. Thus half of China, ineluding such rich centers as Wuhan, Shanghai, and Nanking have been cleared of the enemies of the nationalist revolution by a few fighting thousands battling against enemy forces infinitely su- perior in numbers and arms and back- ed by the agents of the imperialistic powers, i Will Win. These great victories could have been won in a few brief months only by the sympathy and support of the people of China. This sympathy and support make the Nationalist forces unconquerable. In three more months the banner of Nationalist China will be plainly planted in Peking. It is the hatred of the slave-owner toward the slave who is challenging a lot of callous as that of an animat and daring to ask freedom and equat- ity and a glimpse at some beauty of the world, English Brutality.” From England the Chinese people do not expect understanding support. England’s hands are too stained with Chinese blood. To crush China Eng- land will go any lengths. She would add another world war to the casual massacres of May 30, 1926, in Shang- hai, of June 23, 1925, at Shakee in Canton, and of Wanhsien last sum- » England will destroy, loot, and if her supremacy is challenged, For the protection of English trade thee oe | April 22, Woreester, New Bay State Hotel, 283 Main street. April 23, Lynn, Lasters Hall, 84 Andrews street. - A very interesting .series of lee- tures were arranged 6n the follow- ing subjects: Rige of the American Empire, Dollar Diplomaty, The Bri- \tish Empire, The Japanese Empire, jand the Soviet Union, and The Role jof the American Labor Movement. In addition this course of lectures deliver a course of 4 lectures in Bos- ton, on 4 successive Monday evenings at 8 o’clock at Tremont Temple, Lori- {mer Hall, Boston. The following llectures are arranged: The Rise of |the American Empire, April 18; Dol- jlar Diplomacy, April 25; The British Empire, the Japanese Empire, and the Soviet Union, May 2; The Role of American Labor, May 9. |\District in Ukrainia Holds Soviet Congress KHARKOV, Mar, 22 (By Mail) |The first Congress of Soviets of the Jewish national district newly organ- ized in the {opened on the 2ist inst. It is the |first big administrative national Jew- ish division in the Soviet Union, The |population consists of some fifteen thousand Jews and several thousands |of Ukrainians and Germans. The district was created in view of | the express wish of the Jewish popu- |lation of Kherson. In the very near future the Ukrainian government proposes to create a second Jewfsh division in the Krivorog district. Four Children Bitten, Four children were bitten and seri- ously injured yesterday when a mad dog ran amuck in Neptune Terrace, Coney Island, Sacco and Vanzcttl Must Not Die! ae e First Jewish National. Bin age Kherson district was! “The Ameri- | }ean is today the most favored for- |eigner in China,” he added, “The | present unrest there will work itself | | out if the world powers do not place | |obstacles in the path of the Chinese | | people. | “Many exaggerated reports have | been printed in the United States about China. I doubt if the news- | papermen in Shanghai would recog- | nize some of their dispatches if they saw them in print.” * . jcan lives and property. * | Warships Sail forShanghai | MANILA, P. L, April 15.-—A rush | |order from Admiral C. Williams, jin command of the American forces | jin the Orient, sent the destroyers | Simpson and McCormack at full | steam fbr Shanghai today. The | Blackhawk and Macleish, now under- | going repairs, will be sent to China | by Monday or Tuesday and earlier if possible. Nationalists Victorious. LONDON, April 15—-The Central News correspondent states that an} important contingent. of Nationalist | troops from Changsi has penetrated | the outskirts of Kinhan, and is men- acing the northern communication | lines. | ae ea | Japan Sends Troops. TOKYO, April 15.—Becanse of the tense situation in Manchuria the Jap- anese war office has decided to strengthen ite forces there, sending an additional division, it was learned here today, ‘ | The war office is sending replace- ments, without recalling the present forces, it was reported. Advance On Tientsin. The military campaign is to be pushed along the Tientsin-Pukow line in a rapid march toward Tientsin and Peking. The forces of Feng Yu- hsiang, Chin Yun-ao, and Tang Sheng-chi are protecting the Honan front, The position is impregnable, | —_ on the evening of the 24th, when I,) personally, went into the city to take charge of the situation. ‘ Shantungese Sacked Nanking. “Chang Tsung-chang’s propaganda were men headed by Ho Hai-ming. In the confusion the foreign con- sulates, houses, and churches were attacked. This was done with the) expressed purpose of creating anti-| Nationalist feeling among the for- eigners. Immediately after my ar- rival I took urgent steps to restore peace and order in the city. I exe- cuted 20 to 30 local ruffians to stop the mob rule, “There was great confusion in Nanking on March 24th as our sol- diers were busy disarming the thou- sands of Northern soldiers who were still in the city. _We took 650,000 Shantung prisoners.” Chen Chien went on to say that when told by a subordinate of the bombardment, he immediately noti- fied the foreign naval authorities to stop such ruthless measures, Cieveland Doctor Says Psvitonitis Wil Be Hares A course of treatment which will make a comparatively harm- less complaint cf the now deadly disease of peritonitis was pre- dicted today by Dr. Bernard Stern- berg, of Cleveland, 0., before the medical societies meeting here. Dr. Sternberg told the meeting how in experments with healthy dogs inoculated with peritonitis germs they were brought back from a d condition to good health by injections of bacteria taken from human beings also suf- Pa sean eacse in the mi the animals Sacco and Vanzetti Must Not Die! rq policyholders. I refer specifically to} one Albert H. Wiggin. | Mr, Wiggin is the chairman of the | Board of Directors of the Chase Na- tional Bank, one of the most impor-| tant banks in which the Metropolitan | Life keeps its money. Is it small wonder, then, that the} powers that be see to it that the “assets” of the “Big Four” keep mounting to the high heavens? How Mutual? ; How mutual is a “mutual” indus- trial life insurance company? This is a question which is agitating mil- lions of weekly premium policyhold- ers throughout the country. It is a question which will have to be an- swered. And that right soon. Although the forty million “indus- trial” life insurance policyholders in this country have no effective means within their companies to voice a protest against the fraud and decep- tion practiced by their self-appointed directors, they would, to be sure, be very interested spectators in a legis- lative investigation into the evils which beset this business. Charles Evans Hughes rode into the executive mansion at Albany on the wheels of his insurance investiga- tion in 1905. So widespread are the ramifications of the “industrial” life insurance business today, that he who could be instrumental in effect- ing lower rates, a return of the ex- céssive “reserve’—or better still— State rey eo my even ride in to the White sult. Who -knows? No hope lies in the direction of the corrupt Tammany political machine which has always worked hand in hand with the “Big Four.” e re- publican machine is, as always, hand in glove, with the Wall Street gang, who are behind the financial manipu- lations of the life insurance com- vars / An-hroused public might help. Get busy and see that this article finds its way into the hands of a co-w organ of the “Big Four.” or neighbor, The purse, is the vital ‘ouse in 1928 as a re- to now the only skeleton of a dino- saur had been found in North Amer- ica, nautic experts say. Since March 1 five of the French records have been transferred to Germans. LECTURES THE PEOPLE’S INSTITUTE At Cooper Union (8 St. & Astor PL) at § o'clock Admission Free gers April 17—Easter—No Meet- ing. Tuesday, April 1—Louis Fischer: “Changes in Social Life in Russia” Friday, Apt 22—Everett Denn Martin: What Is the Matter With Modern Ideas? — “Individualism * and Collectivism as Contrasting Modern ideals.” AT MANHATTAN TRADE SCHOOL Lex, Av, & 22d St, at 8 o'clock. Single Admission, 25 cents, Reduction for Course Tickets, Monday, Apr. 18--Houston Peterson Flaubert and the World of Ilh sion.—-"Bouvard and Pecuche' An Outline of Belence, Thurs. Apr. 21-—De,. B. G. Spaniding: Questions People Wapest a Philos- opher to Answer.—"What Is In- telligence? The ‘intelligence’ Tests.” * Sat. April 28—Dr. Scott Buchanan: Platonic Attitudes.—“Science as the Search for Wisdom.” * LABOR, TEMPLE 14th Street and Second Avenue THIS SUNDAY 5 P. M—The Pioneers of the Race DR. G. F. BECK “The Spinoza of the Old Testament” —Isaiah ADMISSION 25 CENTS 7:15 P. M— EDMUND B. CHAFFEE “The Doctrine of the Cross” ADMISSION FRED 8:30 P. M.—Open Forum HARRY F. WARD “Economics and Religion"—I. ADMISSION FREE and FORUMS TOMORROW NIGHT, 8 P.M. Jay Lovestone Acting Gen. Sec'y Workers Party will speak on ‘America and the Next War’ A report on the analysis of the world situation by the last Plenum of the Communist International, at The Workers School Forum . 108 East 14th Street, Next Sunday: JON FREEMAN, who is returning from Russia this Week, will speak on “Hussia te 3927" anti-religious center of N. Y, CHAMBER MUSIC HALL, | CARNEGIE HALL — SUNDAY EVENING, 8 P. M. WILLIAM H. ANDERSON (Formerly Head of Anti-Saloon League) “How Political Romanism Railroaded Me to Sing-Sing”” Questions and Speeches from floor. Admission fr. All weloome, } Peer mace enn nema Freethinkers’ Society of N. Y. 226 WEST 58th STREET SUNDAY, at 3 P. M. DR. HARRY HIBSCHMAN “WHY I AM A MATERIALIST” Admission Free, Questions, WORKERS! PROTEST AGAINST DEATH OF SACCO and VANZETTI! ee Non Seinen Segeee ae ew York prepare VIII," in which he will play the role of Cardinal Wollsey. e '