The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 20, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1927 Page Three Patrioteers Expose Senator Borah, Rabbi Wise as Fiery Reds AKRON, Ohio, May 19,—-Our patriotic wits are at work again. The latest expose of the sinister and subversive activities, old fiery reds like Sherwood Eddy of the Y.M.C.A., Senator Borah, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise comes not from Matt Woll of the National Civic Federation, Captain Darte of the Military Order of the World War, or even Fred Marvin of the Key Men, however, but from the Seab- bard and Blade, “a national hongr- ary miltary society, with subordin- ate organizations at several uni- versities. Among the terrible radicals who are aiding the Comunists “in reducing oux country to a helpless state,” are Miss Carrie Chapman Catt, Zona Gale, Francis B. Sayre, Bishop Benjamin Brewster of Maine, in addition to those men- tioned above. Diive Syndicalism Laws Off Statutes, Says Labor Defense CHICAGO, May 19.—“Since the U. §. supreme court has declared the California and Kansas criminal syndi- calism laws constitutional it will sim- ply intensify the drive to wipe such statutes off the books,” says the In- Japanese Trade ~— -Uniors Showing TOKIO (By wmail).—Not so long ‘ago the trade unions of Japan were comparatively indiffercpt to interna- tiena! questiops, especially to the question cf the unity of the intema- | Gional te union moxemesu ang- ing conditions, nowever, are inercas jingly pushing these questions to the | fore, oe It. is true, relations to the R. I. and to y with workers in other coun- tries were often diseussed at pre ‘ous conferences also. But these ques- | tions were always broached by a small group of left-wing leaders. The question of setting-up contact with Chinese trade unions was often raised among the class-conscious sec- tion of the workers, This question was also raised at Sodomai confer- ences, but all the proposals of the left wing were totally rejected, with- | oud discussion. | Oppose Solidarity. he Central Committee of . Sodo- |mai uses every means in its power to avoid questions of internatione! solidarity, especially when the matter ‘concerns unity with. revolutionary 'workers of other countries. The fact that in 1924 a telegram of grectings | signed by comrade I,osovsky and sent to the Sodomai conference was com- ‘pletely ignored by the central com- | mittee is extremely characteristic. The Sodomai leadexs, however, had | nothing against international refor- mation. Sudzuki and Niseio, the best New Militaney Amsterdam as»well as | { | | \ | | | i | It’s a bad @ for religion, Above “King” Benjamin Purnell and his | wife “Queen” Mary. On trial now, “House of David” Chief Workers Unite to Free ‘Charged With Blessing | Sacco, Vanzetti | © > 2 i |“Grabh Bag” Marriages! (contiged jrom Page One) ST. JOSEPH, Mich. May 19.— speakers presented the facts in the |Sacco-Vanzetti and similar cases. cult, will} The local Sacco-Vanzetti Emerg- ichols, of | CRCY Committee announces that dem- > tried to | OnStration marks the opening of the score. of | local campaign and will be followed |by many more meetings and other | activities. ‘ | There is a serious danger that “The House of David,” a religto |be dissolved. George ¥. | the attorney-Geri off |prove that more than couples were married | Berrien. county in “hand-i | lottery” ceremonies. | “King” Benjamin Purnell, leader -the- hat ge Erie Holds Conference " | landed on the beact “British” Defeated — In Effort to Land 13,000 Troops Here CAMP JAMS, Newport, R. I. May 19, he battle of New Eng- land” is virtually ended and the American defending forces won the “war” when they poc 13,000 troops landed by the “Brit armada ond annihilated them with heavy ar- | tillery fire, it was unofficially an- nounced today. | Ten enemy, transports with 20,000 }men on board were theoretically sunk \ during the engagement. The nine forts along the coast were | reduced fifty per cent by battleship fire. Losses were heavy on both jes. Today the war game was practically over. The pri pal expeditionary force of 15,000 men that had been 5 east of Na gansett Bay over a front of twent miles had been “boxed” by the five | divisions of defensive troops and from {a military standpoint the position of the enemy was “hopeless.” The enemy’s main body and pro- tecting vessels passed No Man’s Land, Whistling Buoy, Martha’s Vineyard, last night and turned into Buzard’s Bay. They moved up Buzzard’s Bay at midnight and assumed their land- ing formation. Meanwhile the enemy was making feints at other points along the shore toward the west with the hope of de- ceiving the “blue” commander. Point Judith was put under fire and a land attempted there, but this move- ment was repelled. Early today five transports anchored several miles The Traction Swindle, Incorporated Chinese Ball to (Continued from Page One) | . such a conspiracy to be unfolded? | alse Funds For Who is behind this deal? | No one can even begin to under- stand the answer to these questions School of Own who does not know that ction h. for many years been the moving for behind the operation of the New York City and State government. It is the gone ons, © netews 2 oe invisible power behind the dummy when ihe fir: Sohal for, Cities political organizations which appear workers ever established in Aneta to rule these governments. will be opened by the Chinese Work- In the offices of the Morgan'ers Alliance with funds raised at a Banking Interests in Wall Street have+concert and bal) tonight at Webster been pulled the strings not only! Hall. vhich operate the city traction Mnes| More than 9,000 Chinese restaurant , but in those same offices have been |and laundry workers live in New Yorke drawn the wires which control the City and vicinity b eighty percent officials in the ty Hall at New of them are unable to speak sh, York and in the Executive Chamber according to R. C. Fay, Director of at Albany the Alliance. Separated from the Are these facts which are being! Am an labor mc t by their in- | reported or ave they merely and speculation? Evidence will be ganized wor! laid before the reader which will|ribly exploited worki more than"bear out these accusations, | fourteen hours The loss to the city through the $30. Laundry vw operation of the subway lines under! What higher ps surmises | ability to ex e with the or- Chinese are ter- from ten to the so led “Dual Subway Con- Jong and no idays are given. tracts” is a figure of nearly $11,000,- The Chinese Worl ' Alliance is W00 yearly. Every year this huge|the only orga ch is _striv- | sum is placed on the city budget to/ing to raise the standard of living of be paid directly At by the tax payers these workers. Pp the Baptist and indirectly by the wage earners of | Church is con > only public the city. , Since the beginning of the | English classes which are open to the deal for this Dual Operation, the city |Chinese Workers of Chinatown. The has lost for the item of operation | Chinese Workers’ Alliance School will staggering sum which is be a real wor! school teaching pproaching One Hundred ‘’@de unionism and English, Fifty Millions of Dollars. If the city | ,1i¢k¢ts for the concert and ball, “A should carry out the terms of the Night in New China” bist sale. at present method of operation for the| Jimmie Higgins, the Workers’ Sehool stipulated 49 years it would then have and the Civic Club. sunk in interest and sinking fund the Rae | But the city has already sunk over known Sodomai leaders, for instance, | of the cult, is accused of engineering these group marriages to cover up| .ERIE, May 19.—Over 50 delegates | wepresenting various workers’ trade- ternational Labor Defense in com-| attended the International Conference | menting*on the Anita Whitney case lwest of the Vineyard sound light. | $300,000,000 as original principal in- “British” battleships poured heavy | Vvestment in these subways. The total | | figure of nearly $700,000,000. ‘Can Revoke Permits, which the court disposed of in Wash-| complete study of Amsterdam ideol-|and investigations against him on ington May 16. Under the ruling Anita Whitney, long a pioneer suffragette and welfare worker in California, is subject to im- | prisonment from 1 to 14 years because she participated in a convention of a! Communist political organization that died almost as soon as it was born. The principle evidence of revolution- ary crime that impressed the trial jury was a red piano over which a detective had draped over an Ameri- can flag in Lis endeavor to manufac- ture ‘a case. The International Labor Defense states: Defense Statement. “The decision of the United States | Supreme Court on the Anita Whitney and William Burns convictions under the California ‘Criminal Syndicalism’ law is one of the most reactionary opinions handed down by this body in the last decade. - Phe Supreme Court has given legal sanction to one of the most vicious pieces of capitalist class: legislation in the country. Under this California law, many of the best la- bor fighters have been rushed into! prison with the barest pretence of a trial, usually presided over by violent- ly anti-red judges. ‘ Is A Precedent. . “The decision of the Supreme Court will be a precedent for the continua- tion of the other ‘criminal syndical- ism’ and ‘criminal anarchy’ laws in other states that have been used for similar purposes. It means the re- vival and legislation of a whole set of ‘Alien and Sedition Laws’ which ex- isted about 150 years ago and which were repudiated by virtually the en- tire American peojle. Class Prejudice. ‘The obvious class prejudice which went into the opinion of the Supreme | Court proves conclusively again the need of organizing a strong, united) nationa] working class movement for | the ¢limination of these capitalist class laws and the clipping ef the claws which have already taken their bitter toll of labor men and women. A big movement must be begun im- mediately, especially in California where the law has been used most viciously and widely, for the release. of all the ‘criminal syndicalism’ pris- | oners, the removal of the law from the statute books, and the re-establish- ment of the right of all labor organi- zations to function freely and openly and without molestation from the legal tools of the manufacturers, . bankers and business men of reaction- \ ary California, \ “Every. labor organization through- lof Labor in Geneva. They made a | ogy and returning to Japan com- |menced energetie propaganda of re- |formist ideas. International United Front. The campaign of the Sodomai lead- ers to get Amsterdam principles re- cognized was in complete contradic- tion with the demands of internatio- nal working-class solidarity resolute- |iy defended by the left wing of the Japanese trade union movement. This | struggle drew the attention of all trade unionists to the questions of the | international united front. | On the initiative of the Geneva La- | bor Bureau and with the support of | Sudzuki, | | the Japanese government, | Nissio and others very soon orga- jnized an “International Association jof Labor” (Kokusai—rodokiokai) in in Tokio, the members of which be- came the leaders of the right wing in various trade unions, This asso ciation began its activities as the | Japanese Section of the Amsterdam International, publishing the ‘Inter- national Labour,” wich is still com- ing out regularly. Child of Ruling Class. This association is supported by cnly a very small section of the Japanese workers. At the outset even the Hiogikai, the revolutionary trade union center, set up contact with it. The Hiokikai, however, soon left the association, having become convinced that this “International Association of Labor” was simply a foster-child of the ruling clique in the reformist Sodomai, which cared nothing for the connections set up with Hiogikai. After the split in the Sodomai in 1925 and with the formation of an independent left-wing Trade Union | Federation—the Hiogikai, the ir- reeoncilable position of the right and \left wings in international questions were made abundantly clear. his guilt preliminary to, court actions/tion and fraternal organizations met | here in response to a call issued by lcharges of criminall: assaulting | the local branch of the International oe girls eg his Miscat Perel Labor Defense, to form a local Sacco- | harem. Vanzetti Emergency Committee. | % Plans were made for an intensive campaign of agitation, including a big jout-door demonstration and parade which will be held on the 28th of May. * * * BUFFALO, N. Y., May 19.—Twenty Rift in Cal's Church Over the ' Buffalo lawyers headed by former : Judge George B. Burd, have sent a | petition to Gov. Alvan T. Fuller of 5 Massachusetts requesting the appoint- | as ol $ allx as ment of an impartial committee to | |review the evidence in the Saeco and : | Vanzetti case. Among other promi- WASHINGTON, May 19.—A seri- | nent signers are Dean Carlos C. Alden }ous split in President Coolidge’s|of the Buffalo Law School, personal { church, the first congregational, was! counsel to Charles E. Hughes when reported threatening today as a re- the latter was Governor; Adelbert | sult of the $50,000 libel suit brought Moot, member of the State Board of | against the pastor, the Rev. Jason | Regents; former Mayor George S. | Noble Pierce, by Howard T. Cole,| Buck, State Assemblyman Charles I, government engineer. | Cole sued the pastor because of a) letter Dr. Pierce wrote the shipping | | board demanding Cole be fired be-} | cause of his: alleged relations with a, Hartford Has Meet | women member of the first congrega-| HARTFORD, Conn, May 19.—A |tional. Pierce charged that the en- conference of 16 organizations to Michael J. Montesano, former Deputy Attorney General of New York State. * * * | gineer had “taken advantage” of his fight for the release of Sacco and) | parishioner and then refused to marry Vanzetti was held here. The 31 dele-| | her. gates present represented 1,600 work- | Prominent members of the church ers of Hartford. | were represented today as being! |highly indignant over the publicity | | the church has received. * * * Ask for Justice ROSLYN, Wash., May .19.—The | Members of the board of deacons, } Jugo-Slav Dramatic Club has adopted | | among whom is Secretary of the Navy a resolution requesting the Governor | | Wilbur, were reported aroused over! of Massachusetts to intervene and; | the impression that has gone forth | | that the church maintain an “espion- | | age system” over members. This) NEW KENSINGTON, Pa., May 19. {impression was thrown out by one —The Ukrainian Citizens’ Club has |paragraph from Dr. Pierce’s letter | passed a resolution asking that Gov- give justice to Sacco and Vanzetti. * * * |to the shipping board which stated |ernor Fuller save the lives of Sacco) | that deacons of the church had fol-| and Vanzetti, Copies of the resolu- | lowed Cole and assisted in obtaining | tion are being sent to William Green, | Martina and Howard W. Dickey; and: To Strike Together fire into Point Judith. Forts on shore and the Yankee scouting fleet engaged the enemy and sank ten enemy transports. | Another feint at a landing was {made in the vicinity of the mouth of the Connecticut River. This attack, too, was easily repelled. Then the “British” made their main janding east of Narragansett Bay. The first and second waves that land- ed consisted of infantry, tanks and! mountain artillery. The “enemy” ex- | tended their line across a stretch of | from eighteen to twenty miles long, all the way from Littleton, through Adamsville and over to South Dart- mouth, When this move became ap- rent to the “blue” command, five ivisions of troops held in reserve were moved to the scene. Six. Thousand Vote On Pere Marquette among six thousand employes of the Pere Marquette railroad was over- whelmingly in favor of walking out, say officials of the unions involved. The railroad recently granted a wage increase of 74% per cent. to Conductors and the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen. The organizations involved over a long period of time have exhausted every possible effort to reach an ad- justment through negotiations with the company and by mediation with DETROIT, May 19.—A strike vote | members of the Order of Railway | |woukd make the colossal | ONE BILLION DOLLARS. | en if it were possible for the city |to continue under the present deal, !and even if the proposed 10 cent fare } steal. were not about @o be executed, | would the city be free and clear at the end of the stipulated 49 years of the contract? Not at all! THE CITY WOULD STIL DEBT TO THE COMPANI figure of Says Mexican Court Curbing Oil Kings MEXICO CITY, May 19.—-The Mex- ican Government’s right to revoke BE IN/ drilling permits granted to petroleum AN |companies prior to the enaetment of AMOUNT IN EXCESS OF 0,000,-| the regulatory petroleum laws was 000. legally established today through a For this figure represents the in-| decision handed down by the Supreme | terest on the amount the efty is al-|Court yesterday. | ready in debt to the Traction Trust} The case in question was that of |as a result of past deficits. This is|the Mexican Gulf Oil Company in also assuming that the present rate| which the Mellon family of Pitts- | of loss does not grow larger. burg, Pa., is said to be heavily inter- And on top of all this there is now ested. This company had appealed to about to be completed the ten cent!the Supreme Court to test the au- fare steal! thority of the government to revoke In what direction shall the people| drilling licenses issued before the of the city turn for relief from this| petroleum laws were enacted and all organized and incorporated swindle? |the judges voted to uphold the gov- There is, for instance, the possi-|ernment’s authority. bility of going to the Governor of} It was held by the Supreme Court the State, Alfred Smith. Aljthat it is against the public interest Smith has uniformly maintained the|to permit exploitation of oil resources reputation of being “the friend of} in a manner “which is in violation of the people.” Al Smith is rated! the present decision.” among the most popular governors = in the history of the state. At elec- Huerta Smuggles Arms tion time, not only the people as 2) SAN ANTONIO, Texas, May 19,— mass, but the organized labor move-| Enrique Breceda, alias W. B. Ham- ment, practically the whole liberal jilton, a federal warrant for whose section of the public and even. the arrest was issued at Tucson, Ariz. Socialists line up behind him in a/late yesterday on charges of conspir- body. acy against the United States and ex- Rut is this not the same Al Smith | porting arms and ammunition into who through his Tammany-controlled! Mexico in violation of a presidential judge issued the injunction against|decree, was in custody of federal of- the Traction Workers in their un-/jficers here today. hindered swindle now being perpetra-| Breceda, aligned with the De La ted? Huerta faction seeking the overthrow Is this not the same Al Smith who | o¢ the present government of Mexico, oom at the time that the gangster In- | dustrial Squad beat up the T. R. T. Can Expect No Aid. Thus, on the Chinese question the positions occupied by the Sodomai ‘and the Hiogikai differed completely. | Wheveas the Hiogikai sent their rep- \resentatives to China and protested | against the Japanese government’s |support of Chinese reactionaries the Sodomai, supporting the government, evidence against the engineer. ‘Yet Another Candidate For Job of Dry Chief WASHINGTON, May 19.—Dr. J. .M. Doran, chief chemist of the Pro- hibition bureau, has just announced declared that “insurgent Chinese | that he too would also like to be con- | President of the A. F. of L. and to | the labor, press. * HUDSON, Mass., May 19.—Justice for Sacco and Vanzetti is demanded in a resolution adopted by the Lithua- nian Anti-Fascist, Council here. A * * to Governor Fuller, Boston, Mass. se ¥ PLAINS, Pa, May the assistance of the United States! strikers and when the appeal was Board of Mediation, When mediation| made to him for action, failed even! | failed, the mediators urged both par-|to answer to the wire sent him by \ties to agree to arbitration, which | the strikers? =e the railway company refused to do. | Is this not the same Al Smith, this Employes of each branch of the | outstanding Democratic Candidate services named were polled, whether | for the presidency, the one who sat members of the union or not, and) across’ the table with Frank Hedley, | ing to strike were as follows: | secret pre-election Traction deal not! \it is charged, was arrested by gov- +lernment operatives. Will Hays, ex-G. 0. P. Boss Busy Keeping the Movie Stars Out of Sin _ LOS ANGEL , May 19-—-Tom.- copy of the resolution is being sent| the percentages in each branch vot-) Jerry Dahl and some others in a, Herrick, motion picture cowboy, was murdered some time ago. Sarah Her- | workers can expect no help from us.” | The same attitude was observed on the question of international and na- ment. leaders While the Sodomai left-wing movement in the Japanese trade unions, organized a “Unity Teague” to stop further disruption of tional unity of the trade-union move- | support a policy of disruption, the | sidered for the job of dry chief. | Secretary of the treasury Mellon | deseribed the situation relating to the appointment as “complicated.” | Wayne B. Wheeler, high priest of | the Anti-Saloon League is still fight- jing to put Roy A. Haynes on the job, \but he is being seriously opposed by Mine Workers, Local 1483, has adopted a resolution calling upon the State Federation of Labor to ask the Governor of Massachusetts to give ex- zetti. + Pe * Boilermakers Protest Vanzetti Doom CHICAGO, May 19, (FP),—Boiler- makers Lodge 626, Chicago, is pro- | Labor leaders at Chicago declared 19.—United | the strike grew out of the refusal of | | so many months ago? \rick, the slain man’s widow, Henry And if we were to turn to the Isabell, Anita Davis, Joe Hunt and | the Pere Marquette officials to nego- | Transit Commission for relief, could | | tiate disputes. The men, it is under- | we find there any remedy? | stood, declare the interpretation put! Are not some of these Transit Com-: | é |by the management on regulatiOhs | missioners the personal friends of, | variance with the interpretation in the ready and willing servants of th | effect on other roads throughout the | Traction Trust? fe ey | country, And are not others of th se Tran- Iria Burns were arrested and indicted for murder. . The trial is being pre- ded over by Judge Carlos Hardy. s jurist played a prominent part x ecutive clemency to Sacco and Van-| governing working conditions is at this same Al Smith and indirectly |S a defense witness during the court hearings of another Hollywood char- acter,—-Mrs, Aimee Semple MePher- son. ‘ Serious crimes, and milder forms out\of the country must immiediately | PYoletarian forces inside the country. | Be | aes aE {sit Commissioners, ‘the personal ee its protest at this latest anti- To Discuss Tactics. — / shag Be can ng eee testing to Governor Fuller of Masse- | Tornado Devastates friends of certain Insurance Company | of moral turpitude, are common hap- labor Act of the Supreme Court.” In February last the “Unity | chusetts against the impending exe- | directors who at the same time are penings,—almost daily—in the movie Arrest 3 Workers For Distributing Leaflets Outside of Cafeteria Three members of the Delicatessen Countermen’s Union Local 302, have ‘been arrested outside the B. and B. Cafeteria, 250 West 38th St, on the complaint of the bosses. They had been distributing leaflets informing the public that the cafeteria, that had just opened, was not employing union ‘workers, Several days before the opening, xepresentatives of the union had ap proached the cafeteria owners and suggested that they hire union work- | _ ers, This they had refused, the distri- buting of the leaflets being the result. The arrested workers, A. Finkel- stein, H. Grusky and I, Dreasen, were held in $25 bail each by Magistrate gl Silverman for trial next Fri- Ie SACCO and VANZETTI SHALL NOT DIE! League” convened a national ‘confe: ence of trade union delegates to di ‘euss tactics for the movement against | the Geneva Labor Bureau. This con- iference was attended by representa- |tives of trade-unions affiliated with the league, representatives ‘of Left |trade-union organizations and also )by delegates from left-wing minor. ities in reformist unions. All organi- zations and groups of the left wing within the trade-unions were repre- jsented at this-conference. The only Lexeeption was the laigunrodo Renmai |—the Fedevation of Arsenal Workers. For Support Of Pacific Meet. Delegates from the Kuomingtang and the Shanghai General Federation of Labor greeted: the conference. The following decisions were accepted: to reject the right of electing a repre- sentative for the International Con- ference of Labor to be held in Ge- neva; to make every effort to achieve ‘unify. of the international trade union movement; to give every support to the Pacific Trade Union Conference to be held in May in Canton and to co-ordinate the working class of the Far East into one o} ion. On the Chinese question, ihe conference \ their troops from China, to make a categorie protest against the dispatch lof fresh troops, to demand the abro- |gation of unequal agreements, the re- turn of the concessions to the Chi- !nese without compensation, the im- mediate and unconditional recognition of the National government, recogni- tion of the Peking government to be withdrawn. Furthermore a resolution cution of Sacco and Vanzetti. The boilermakers request unconditional re- lease of the two frameup victims. 31 Gary Sacco and Vanzetti GARY, Ind., May 19, (1'P),--Free- dom for Sacco and Vanzetti was de- manded by 31 labor organizations at ia conference in Gary May 8, repre- Labor Organizations for ‘was taken to send immediately a tele- jgram of greetings to the National army and to all trade unions in China ‘and also to telegraph labor organi- \zations in England, India, Manchuria and other countries appealing for | joint action, Finally, the conference decided to send a trade union delegation to the USSR as a correct understanding of the actual state of affairs in the USSR is essential for the interna’ tional unity of thé working class. The conference worked under po- lice surveillance all the time and in the end was closed down by the po- lice. Probably due to this fact the resolutions were not sufficiently clear, having been given insufficient consideration. Read The Daily Worker Every, Day.| senting 4000 workers. were sent to Gov. Fuller of Massa- chusetts, The conference also dempuanced the lynching of a Negro in Little Rock, the capital of Arkansas, Scranton Carpenters Pat for | Higher Pay SCRANTON, Pa., May 19.—Strik- ing carpenters here are standing pat for the $10 scale and a revision of working conditions, Out since April 1, they have rejected compromise offers from bosses. Electricians, attempting to negoti- ate a new agreement hp their o ployers, are deadlocked may a strike to enforce their demands, Resolutions | | Middle West; 6 May Die in Indianapolis | INDIANAPOLIS, May 19.-—Six of | the vietims of the tornado which de- | vastated 176 residential blocks of In- | dianapolis last night may die, physi- jcians said today. | 'Phirty-five others had been cared for in hospitals, a check this morn. ing showed, More than 100 other received first aid treatments at fire stations, drug stores and in their homes, Seventeen injured remained _in hospitals today. Estimates of the property damage ‘ran into millions of dollars, | It was estimated today between 300 and 400 homes were wrecked and that. | between 1,000 and 1,500 persons were | homeless. | One Dead in Peoria. i PEORIA, Tll., May 19.~-The body of Walter Mueller, 29, son of Mayor Louis Mueller, was found today along the banks of La Marsh Creek which went on a rampage after several cloudbursts. Peoria hospitals were filled with | directors of the Interborough and the | colony and vicinity. Being the “papa” |B. M. T.?. And are not these Tran- of the moving picture industry, Will {sit Commissioners playing the game! Hays, the former republican party of the Traction Interests who are, boss, has his hands full trying to en- ‘directly linked up through interlock-| force meek, christian morality among ing Directorates with the Big Four! his sinful Hollywood “Children”, He Insurance exposures which even now)! was here recently on such a mission, |The DAILY WORKER is disclosing | to, the public? The main trouble in movieland is too much money for booze, dope, and And if we should turn to the liberal|“good times”, for a few-—and not | press for relief could we not there} half enough for food, clothing and ‘hope for a champion of the people’s! shelter for the many \cause? Is there not at least one! Marge liberal daily which “always op- | ' ited poses privileged classes and vs in, Marriage Forces U. S. plunderers?” Citizenship on Mexican - But is not the executive editor of President’s Da | { ‘that same daily one of those who at- tended this secret Traction Meeting| ,,,, e at which Al Smith was present? TUCKSON, Ariz, May 19.—The i daughter of the President of Mexico And the Mayor of the City? | was an American citizen today fol- (To be Continued) lowing the manriage of Senorita Br- —— jnestina Calles to Thomas A Robin- Authors Meet. son of New York. ROME, May 19.—The International| Robinson and his bride were h Conference of Societies of authors| mooning today, driving opened here today, The American| border in an official automob delegate Eme storm victims and homes and chil- dren suffering from shock and fright. his. society is willing to accede to the Berne Copyright Treaty. mele married yesterday in a at Nogali , / 4 n announced that|the Mexican Government. They were

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