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‘i ¥ HANDS OFF CHINA! WITHDRAW TROOPS AND BATTLESHIPS! — THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS + St ee FINAL CITy | UNORGANIZED t's | FOR THE 40-HOUR Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the act of March 3, 1879. ss sssnsnennsensssnsneene NOL TV Noy 80 gece Nee dete Ge GO at tee NEW YORK, WEDNEMEIS, APRIL 27, 1927 <GMBe Sepbeeed Oey ‘stoent Senter by 7am nary WORKER Price 3 Cents SSS sess sss ssnenssensenstsstnsensnsnnensstennnsn “re"|CUBAN BUTCHER FETED BY N. Y. BANKERS RESIDENT MACHADO of Cuba is| in Washington and Calvin Coolidge | Pe } ! posed for a picture with Wall Street’s | @ @ | URDERER OF 200 ISLAND UNIONISTS Cuban overseer. Machado deserves! & | good treatment and no doubt he will! f I Ss O or be entertained royally while visiting | ] ‘GUEST OF MAYOR AND FINANCIERS his paymasters, This great democracy | ef ours is certainly hanging up a fine | record these days. Supporting this engesr hehe meee wmaemal Ui WANTS Anthracite Miners Want | Coolidge Rattles the Saber | President Machado Is Guarded by Hordes of war on the Mexican government, tie a : | | Department of Justice Operatives ing the hands of the Niesragusn Hbev-| Checkoff; Call Lewis to |, “We feel a moral responsibility for the countries | sb merce dg Tea balsa ts. Geta iba” Chinese Swear It Was Promised || ort of Panama. WE HAVE UNDERTAKEN TO DIS- Thirty years ago New York City was in a frenzy of passion fevolution, | COURAGE REVOLUTIONS. THIS TERRITORY IS jover the wanton cruelties of “Butcher” Weyler, Spanish general sme . T0 DECIDE ISSUE PHILADELPHIA April 26 (FP) || RICH IN NATURAL RESOURCES. We have large who was “pacifying” the Cuban insurrection. The furore aroused * * - a | : . : cot T= capitalist system does not seem —Demand of the United Mine || and peculiar interests there. | by the newspapers later permitted American imperialism to sweep a be a ee Sica 2” Japan. Workers for the checkoff in the || (—Caltin Coolidge, president of the United |through the island, kicking out the Spanish oppressors and sub- ¢ government has declared a mora- | ; anthracite region is the big issue States, speaking to the banquet of newspaper | stituting Yankees. — “Yet despite this stteaticn | Ben Gold Insists on Job sake pe pear era bagel ha editors in the Hotel Biltmore, Monday, April | Yesterday “Butcher” Machado, president of Cuba, America’s there are rumors that the new cabinet | Standards asserts the checkoff was verbally || 25.) | anost important province, murderer of 200 workers and trade is contemplating a more aggressive promised at the conclusion of the || With the aboye statement as his text President Coolidge,| unionists, was the official guest of New York City while news- policy in Japan. The deeper the capi-| | By SYLVAN A. POLLACK. anthracite strike of 1925-6, 14 ‘: i i i tati wners werful capitalist or-| papers fawned upon him and the city’s financial leaders con- tulist system goes into the puddle| The first move towards peace in|] Months ago. John L. Lewis, pres- addressing representatives and owners of pov PD pap Pp a ) the more desperate they become. Per-| the Furriers’ Union is seen as a result, ident of the international organi- || 2225» glorified the bloody and tyrannical deeds which Secretary | gratulated him on his own “pacification” of the Cuban labor haps England may help out their of the offer made by H. Sorkin, vice-|| 7ation, and other officers are ap- ||0f State Kellogg and other underlings have been encouraging and | movement. former ally with a little cash tho| President of the reactionary Inter-'| ).a:ing before the board to swear || subsidizing in Mexico and Nicaragua. American steel kings and bankers / a John Bull is not as solvent as he| Rational Furriers’ Union to sev-|| +, the assurances given. Coolidge put forward and defended the theory wherever |£#¥e Machado a royal welcome.| used to be. \eral shop chairmen that the Ameri- - 7 - Y, 1 |Swathed in all the luxuries of the Re ‘ean Civil Liberties Union conduct a there is oil, for instance, or any other valuable natural resource, | piitmore otal “the: portly -acent of WE hear little or nothing of financial | teferendum in the union and let the } jand a population to be robbed, American government’s natural | the American sugar and railroad in- stringency in the Soviet Union| Membership decide whether they sup- duty is to open up these profitable fields to American investors—|terests in Cuba was surrounded by| FOUND DOCTORED nowadays, from capitalist sources, | Port the left or the right wing. |no matter what the cost may be in the lives of workers and{dozens of uniformed policemen, plain- | ‘the fact is that the Soviet Union is| hee esi aph ghee dbl Mi , | farmers—at home and in the coveted areas—whose duty in turn ever ies agents of the depart- | Sone VEY NG pele Seg or representatives of the workers on U, a IMPERIALIS 5 lis to support every act of government abroad without criticism The Military Trappings. RY A r L CLIQUE ing. ‘The peace that prevails thru- strike held yesterday afternoon at jor complaint. The Biltmore Hotel is decorated | ' ' e _ / out that mighty country is not due to| Webster Hall, it was voted to refer TELLS NEXT STEP. Toward the struggling Chinese workers and peasants Cool-|with flags of the U. S. and Cuba; ; the presence of armed forces. It ig| the question to the Joint Board, | is i hinat : ili soldiers and officers in neat, blue uni- | 2 due to the fact that the people know | Which is instructed to confer with |idge showed the same cold-blooded and businesslike hostility. He) oorms bustle through the corridors. | 1,000 Workers Jailed Sorkin, explained, with a cynical hypocrisy that only a New England) geores of cops from the New York | ie : Puritan training and ancestry can produce, that the bombard-| police department guard the puppet Refute Bribery Charge theirs and that is alw: Midesined Workers are Suspicious. * a ‘ : Mein uid sneanivot Snakiing site ban | Most of the shop chairmen andj Further Exploitation of | ment of Nanking-and the slaughter of unarmed Chinese was due president of Cuba. they have a government which is truly The statements about police graft ter for them, ‘Tho the government is SnoP committee epresomatives v|Latin America Planned |to “a humanitarian desire for the universal reign of law.” |e Hae nee nt nt Gatien {alleged to have been made by mem- obliged to spend considerable money | 7 iat it ix not einoace: Howkvst:| — Undoubtedly making a public justification of the attempt of} ¢.)1,., Machado whenever he goes to| bers of the Furriers’ Joint Board to on defense it is increasingly able to} 5 | In the gilded ballroom on the} i i i estion to de- ; the American Federation of Labor appropriate Jarge sums for develop- | When Ben Gold, manager of the Furr- | |the state department in relation to the Mexican qu the bankers’ receptions. 1% ri : % | nineteenth floor of the Hotel Bilt- : P PAGE) shi 3 * ..|Committee investigating the fur ing industry. | iers Joint Board spoke in favor of ne- | snore, with more than 126 flags cover-|bauch entirely thesgreat press services—an incident which is eerie rooms at the Biltmore | strike, were not only denied yester- nets gotiating, the motion was passed in-| +> the’ walls and the West Point shocked even hardened capitalist journalists—Coolidge stated | a. © tr |day by four of those who testified [725 rather disappointing for the | structing the Joint Board to get in|. oq playing the Star Spangled Ban-|calmly that “it was natural that the press should represent ‘the |Proach , of “strange-looking indi-| 10.6 the ‘committee, but were ab; es le i |touch with Sorkin. Whether Sorkin | : Pg Pe Hosea e pagans igge viduals,” = ee - be ~anhin Gb eas Ma nae acting. “4 ‘ten individun) "oesrapres| 22", °2 intensify the spirit of national-| government under wi it lives. President Coolidge. stopped at. the| Solutely, refuted by the stenographic was brought over from Lofition “at| ents the entire right group ‘of the Any Galant cenehegenry et maps The utterances 6 Coolidge, takeh in connection with the | Biltmore when he came to town Mon- padi bey ae a can ate considerable expense to grace the | Union is not known at the present/ — 14 blooded analysis of the present| known contempt of his administration for the ordinary decencies ar to ative». toe ope Piess, | ie abnllga. bi Gin etat aaek: boards on the occasion of the thirtieth | me. |ruthless policy of American imperial- | of civilized intercourse when questioned as to foreign policy and oy) Saleen Speed St tne UGB |” nastions of Mine Manin's voles werk ivi Report on Thursday. hors ‘ "5 F * A * yesterday. The president of Cuba : A ences Pah ie ee oun ‘A report of the negotiations: wit |i in China, Mexico, and Nicaragua. | the scandalous stream of lies and deceptions emanating constant- was sight-seeing in the city. The| read by Assistant District Attorney i i .| The stern-jawed owners of Ameri-!1, from the state department, can be interpreted as nothing else| governor left his card. Brothers during his questioning of be given Thursday evening at meet: . ,.|4¥ trom the si pa. ’ : : g é FO pede ie Mopenekes aidehter ings to be held at 6 P. mh at Webster | pe Re ere a tees | than defiance of every person in the United States who is against Entertained By Bankers, pep et ee ee ee that the British Labor Party is now| Hall and Cooper Union. Ben Gold| jittering crystal chandeliers, the|the warlike imperialist policy pursued in Latin-America and Fhe}. senetey Srsiaent Sua Met sultant abhaee Aa Gece quite popular and that the better | Will be oe ipreprnt annem Frank | javish banquet, the obvious lack of | Far East. cca ean 4k Hid ie ty the | Chairman of ther Control Committee “clawses” can belong to it without | re ito: bees ra. ‘vited to speak, | contact of this group with the reat| Coolidge is following a war policy. Naval and military |ofticers of the Chase National Bank. during the strike, and Samuel Res- ee baa a. aivengpce ws It was also decided that if nothing asa Np reed Pinapt hepa ‘he sce: | mobilization would be proof enough but there are in addition the) Many leaders of financial thought ri aerate gee . es By ing. It is no longer a class party.) should materialize from the negotia- clusive gatherings in the Winter | Wreckages of popular governments in Nicaragua, the fomenting|in the United States made speeches. bribe hearings resumed before Magis- It is an all-class party. |tions, that an aggressive picketing Palace in the days of the Russian| of bestial outrages like the recent one in Mexico and the mangled Pee reo. gprpewinadeand ete Corrigan after an interval of * * * | vereonal ckatzmauehic of en Gold a Czar. The banquet was sponsored bodies of the Chinese population of Nanking. tion: William: A: Woodin, chairman |¢¥° weeks. * THE ritt in the lutes of Aimee Mac-) Sicted by Irving Potash. |by the United Press Associations on/ Coolidge talks like a warlord. His utterances are reminiscent |of the board of directors of the Amer- |, ese notes contained absolutely : corey road pres pha orches- Working Standards. poe ag perenne a tee "| of those of Kaiser Wilheim and altho he carries no saber saber-|ican Locomotive Works; Julius H. o¢ 4y0 police Witch’ ate abtelbatell ie fae te Wes a ee aay When the objection to conferring | Trias eeeenuate Clas: |rattling formed an undertone to his speech. pees PGS igen hina gh Ae them by the report of Hugh Frayne’g aicatedl Alvan denen to te ae Oo beckon atts ihael ty: the atin | When Coolidge said, .“Oor country | From the workers and farmers of the United States must) a4 Weadesick HL. icken, vie ph i stenographer. Answers contained in happy in the selection of choir con-| gorkin and those he represents are | has usually been too backward in de-| come the answer to the Coolidge challenge. ‘dent of the Metropolitan Life Insur- Miss rei report pays veri added ductors as in her choice of radio oper- willing to guarantee that the work-| fending our rights abroad” there was | Smash the war plots! lance Co. ontinued on Page Five) ators. The choir leader left with ing standards will be maintained, the|®PPlause. He followed this im-| Get out of Latin-America! | “All Is Well In My Country.” ; Se neeenenreireri his orchestra and organized another] Joint Board is willing to por the| mediately with a demand’ that “the | Withdraw all ‘2 forces from China! | “Cuba is a splendid example of Milk Graft Probe church. He is of the opinion that! union struggle. Ps | American press ought first of all to | ithdraw all armed gad hed £ lib. Peace and prosperity. . . . Aided by Reveal f Aimee is not near enough to god to! Gold also reported on the general | be thoroughly American.” He was| Let Coolidge, if he is bent on becoming tl ie hangman of ll |the people of the United States, it eveals Few Petty suit her ex-orchestra leader. We are/ situation in the union, on the Mine-|¢Vidently perturbed by the attacks on| eration movements everywhere, enlist along with thefat-paunched|has developed its resources. . . . Officials in Net seraia rage hehiad ye more unity! ola trial and the graft hearings be- | the, uations Le Sp kgalend yey io bankers and industrial lords from whom he now takes his orders. |In President Machado are found the } pated furs 4 were ed fore Magistrate Corrigan. | he ate ane tice atone American workers will not become the executioners of their | qualities of a statesman anda leader; after all the fuss and bother of Fs n as she is with! Fight Among Themselves. | eens 7 fellows in lands Wall Street has “peculiar” interests. ads ey . . | the sensational milk graft charges in her prayers. | He told of the bosses and the right | & American rights when threatened | * |, The American business men agreed! Qdgen Mills’ unsuccessful race for aay € wing. Many of the bosses are now © invaded in foreign countries.” He that things are going on well in the| governor last fall, only three persons, ‘HE Truth Seeker, a so-called “ra-| pepinni ; ‘ | defined the class nature of the press “Republic” of Cuba. Sa 4 eth aie by . ginning to realize that it was aly lading that “We fo -natoval that Mutual flexi | all of them petty inspectors, will be tionalist” weekly, is worried lest! foolish move to meddle in union poli-| by declaring that “it is natura | utual genuflexions were eX-/ indicted. This was indicated yester- | the general public becomes convinced | ties, as they cannot break the unity |the Press should represent the gov- changed. day by William Pecora, chief asstst- that freethinker and Communist are | o¢ the workers. ernment which under it lives.” | The aide-de-camp of Machado at ant district attorney. Synonomous terms. Because Commu-| old sta’ : sos Taking up the policy of foreign re- VE ND FROM FOR SACCO CASE |the Biltmore told a reporter for The} py, Caaiti Baas ‘ nists are not accustomed to carrying | promises mate tails tea heard) tations, he said: “I doubt if the be- |DAILY WORKER that the president | sr veer nam, now serving time for extorting graft money from the @round antique superstitions in their! tj) we are sure the j-| lief exists in any informed quarter | was asleep. “Tonight,” he said, “will | “King of the cream bootl ae mental garrets, the impression is pre-| tions signed with the partie De peal that this is a belligerent govern- / | 5 , jbe a dinner in his honor here; it is ier Meith pies cae rege _ valent that all those who deny or} maintained. ment.” jbeing given by your mayor.” times he accepted petty bribes. _ doubt the existence of a personal For Unity. Gunboat Follows Dollar, | The president is a vigorous man, he| ‘The big offenders, the members-of | deity are evolutionists. Nothing} “We are for the unity of the work-|. He added, however, that with the | jeonfided, but one must rest. could be farther from the truth, in-| ers, For the strength of the workers | increase of surplus’ capital, this| CLEVELAND, April 26.—The so-| (Special to The DAILY WORKER) | “Labor troubles in Cuba? No, all sists the Truth Seeker, in the foilow-| to be expressed thru the union, We |CUntry, was showing an increasing| cialists of this city, who up to the| BOSTON, April 26,—Governor|that is exaggerated by the Bolshevik | \\ ing language: “The freethinker is see the right wing already talking disposition to render “service” to the| present have refused to do anything | Fuller will not appoint a formal com-|disturbers. There is no truth in such not concerned so much with the trifl-| peace. No move on their part will| Smaller nations. Although America| for the defense of Sacco and Vanzetti | mission to review the new evidence in| rumors.” the New York milk combine, have not been touched by Pecora’s special in- vestigation. i ing governments of certain sections | he able to bluff us.” When Gold fin-| 88 ways been “willing to en-|have suddenly discovered that they|the Sacco-Vanzetti case, a Federated Lge eg 20 Cartoons by Bales, of the earth; he is rather chiefly con-| ished speaking there was tdemendous |°°U"@8¢ and assist other peoples” this| are facing the electric chair. Press correspondent was informed Labor Crushed. c . eerned with the government of the applause. government has “certain rights over They called a conference that was |here today. There are no genuine labor organ- Becker, Ellis, Gropper. |. universe. He’ may be a democrat, re-| ]¢ was announced that many work- ite ‘citizens and their property even| , very exclusive affair; only socialist} Governor Fuller, however, has not|izations, no labor press in Cuba. : : publican, socialist or even occasionally | ers who registered with the Interna-/ hen abroad.” | The rights go with | party branches (two of them), the| yet formally ratified the death sen-|They have all been suppressed by Bales and Vose~May 1 anarchist or monarchist. In every | tional are coming to the joint board the citizen wherever the citizen may State secretary, Mr. Willert, who rep-|tence imposed on Nicola Sacco and|Machado, the representative of the y eRe, if persistent, he upholds liber-| and asking for forgiveness, saying be, he insisted. resented his union, the metal polish-| Bartolomeo Vanzetti by Judge Web-| National City Bank. This bank con- taNian principles.” | od Admits Aid to Diaz. ‘a ‘era: a jality|trols directly the General Sugar Co.|| ,2%¢ Special May Day Number ‘ x peat Sbey eg Neen sa bop Stating that “our principles will pale agin sh nes Tones nova eo Binh s Its Tigi va coatict the Conselidated | < The DAILY WORKER will be HI is very nice and comforting for} Webster Hall will be used as strike | "°* Continue unless we are prepared| mm., conference took place at the|challenged by jurists. Instead he |Railways and the immense sugar || ); os most attractive issue yet pub- thejruling classes, who do not mind headquarters in the future. The hall|‘® ™#ke large sacrifices for their office of the Garment Workers’|may ask the warden of Charlestown | holdings of the Cuba Co., as well as} shed. It is to be an snti-im- in the Ipast if skepticism and religious | committee consists of Esther Polan-| SUpPOF” he was emphatic that there| Trion, ‘There were 15 delegates from (State Prison and the attorney gen-|many other Cuban corporations. || Perialist and psec: Og Gaia doubt Yervade the social atmosphere sky, §, Schiller, Julius Fliess, M. se noching witaty ae Teperieleine im pay A ee or} bls who |eral of Massachusetts to look into the} Leaders of trade unions have been pa Lise ons alone wgke 5 in which the upper classes do their! Jonde and Max Spivak, It is’ pro.| ‘tis teaching of protecting citizens in| vere "seated, while nearly 30 other lease, and submit a report to him. (arrested, many have been deported, || May Day number something to de- thinking such as it is. But it is a! posed to add several active wi red "| foreign lands.” It was rather due to delegates swore told that the night air Aeabhet high light in the case is|80me have been shot without hearing ~ t the eye and stimulate thot. serious matter if free thought is un-| po", perstokt ‘orkers |, “humanitarian desire for the uni- was fresh and inspiring the. decision of the ‘governor in the|0F trial. No less than 20 cartoons by Gel- hitched from its marriage with pure| Jt has also been announced that i versal reign of lew.” i of ested reprieve of Celestino Mad- Unionists Shot. || lert, Gropper, Ellis, Becker, ales atheism and used as an instrument to! those buildings where two or sieve An admission that the United epee nagehapaiers ponpboden bien who has confessed he was in| Enrique Varona, organizer for the|}| #84 Vose will be published in the: open the minds of the workers to the! shops are on strike, to form. building States government had supplied the |? in PP pe: 4 eight page supplement which any- in the name of the International|the bandit car at South Braintree |Railway Brotherhood, was shot in the | it connection between organized reli- \ reactionary forces of both Nicaragua illed while leavi thea-|| Ments the usual six-page issue for gion and the capitalist system. A committees, and Mexico with arms and animun.|L@bor Defense. He did not stop at|when two paymasters were robbed |back and killed while leaving a thea May Day. ee georgia td he statement, but told them how/and killed. Madeiros, a member of | ter. : bourgeois atheist will tolerate a lot ; tion was made by Coolidge. bi é Rar ; 2 Gradit, the tenmauber coe Articles by Robert W. Dunn, $f superstition rather than jeopardize Sarwat Pasha, Premier | ‘Recent Mexican land laws “threat-|¢timinal it was to divide the forees|the Morelli gang, has practically im-| Thomas Grant, the treasurer 0 * * ; e > Scott Nearing, William Z. Foster, that should be united to carry on the (Continued on Page Two) the Railway Brotherhood was shot the interests of the best of all pos- Of ritish. ened confiscation,” he said, but added ied 4 9" killed by 1 broad | H. M. Wicks, T. J. O'Flaherty, Ja: sible systems—for him. B Ruled Egypt | (ict “cpparently oe ol ae ele ee igdea ea Te Mea Ve | Uabvaliee, Wiese ae gf eed LONDON, April 26.—A new Egyp-| °°" eritcnitee A Chairman Kreindler was not abash- blend Abana Baldormero Dumingo was shot at | other well known labor writers on HE Earl of Athlone, governor-gen-| tian cabinet has been formed with| For a dozen years American mar- | oq. « t get out, 1 SCRANTON, Pa. (FP) April 26.) the behest of agents of the “liberal” dist of South Africa, accompanied | Sarwat Pasha as Piseilens, the Ex-| ines have been kept in Nicaragua, he pote Sie pom ies ” The ely —Thirty-nine anthracite miners were| Machado government. by several titled ladies, is making a| change Telegraph Cairo correspond-| declared. Withdrawal of the mar-| he would have called the police, killed last March, one to every 15,615| Foreigners or naturalized citizens, (Continued on Page Three) sf various phases of the class strug- gle will be featured. Wire in your orders! ent reports. ' (Continued on Page Five) } (Continued on Page Three) tons mined. (Continued on Page Five)