Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
"Page Two Historic Kremlin © ‘MORE U, S. TANKS, Listed in Travels. MARINES, PLANES Df World Tourists RUSHED TO CHINA The Kremlin wall in Moscow has (Continued from Page One) just received the body of another revo-|to the Shantungese war lore. ionary leader, M. Voikoff, who was! Fessenden has been clamoring for | assassinated in Poland. This famous|an open imperialist war on National- | wall is the burial spot of two Ameri China, His close conection with cans—John Reed and C. E. Ruthen-| Chang Tsung-chang, notorious for| berg—and before it is the mausoleum| his wholesale murders in Shantung, | of Lenin where his body lies on view.) has aroused a great deal of unfavor- This spot of historic interest, is to| able comment here. one of the sights visited by the! Although a number of capitalist y which leaves with the World| newspapers mentioned the trial of Tourists on July 14, for a six weeks’! Husar, none of them, as far as we| tour to Russi, Within the Kremlin,| know, made any mention whatever } n is the old fortress of Moscow,} of the testimony implicating Stirling} \ be are cathedrals, monasteries and pal-| Fessenden. The trial of Husar sheds! aves—some of them eight centuries! a good deal of light on the characters | old—which have been turned into} of the opium-smuggling gun-running| museums by the Soviet Government. Much time has been devoted to restor- ing the ancient beauties of these buildings so that they shall regain their original appearance. Whi the s Driven Out. During 1917 Revolution, the gvafters in Shanghai who are clam-/ oring for American intervention inj| China.) | * . * Ask Aid for Wounded. HANKOW, June 14.—Eleven thou- sand wounded Nationalist troops are jamming the hospitals of this city.| one ees eNom pei In sweeping the war lords from| Vuhkers “ lly captured | territory south of the Yellow River, | after a bé Since 1918 it| the Natio ist armies have suffered | Ge Bean t the chief Govern-| ™@ny cas alties and the inadequate want Ins hospital facilities make the situation seriou! ief drive, led by Mme. Sun and Anna Louise Strong, en American journalist, is under way.| a Pip wit A special appeal for funds is made| Sse, will pail ¢ to American syapatiiizers. wns. In Mosec he sights will, (By Nationalist News Agency) he visited, with t of guides and} ,SHANGHAI, June 14.—Removal tourists, and an visitors | pert ae ras from ae ep agePhceangee S e _|is urged by the American-owned ‘uasee torial * via see issue. It sr _ epens gests that all the powers recal : a eee their ministers and send special high eis orngaah commissioners, unbounded by diplo- = an matie preceder to negotiate new eee § *' treaties with China. ] “The foreign legations in Peking hort in which at present constituted,” it says, ade, vantage of t so the constitute a handicap rather than a help in Sino-foreign relations, hence they should be dispensed with and the sooner the better.” WOLL'S GANG NOT ABLE TO DG MORE THAN SLUG 1 MAN (Continued from Page One) ner of Broadway and 22nd Street, an automobile stopped in his rear?) Room York, once to the Wo 803, 41 Uni Southland Boosters Use Cheap Labor Plea Yo Northern Capital DECATL United Text a huge ine 14.—The Vorkers Union will > on its hands in the th’ before long. Shipments of tex- tile machinery from the North are creating a bigger field for organiza- b tion below the line. Decatur, Alabama, for instance, has lately received a shipment of 200 cars knitting machin The knitting machines come m the Textile Trucking Co. of F er, Mass. and are assigned to t necticut Mills of Decatur. In addition to this 100 cars of the Same commodity went from the Oak Knitting Co. of Syracuse, N. Y. to Nashville, Tenn veral men jumped out and hit him over the head with an iron bar. En-| tering the auto swiftly they drove/ away leaving the worker laying help- | less on the sidewalk. Tron Rod Found. Several minutes later some other workers discovered him and rushed him to Bellevue Hospital where five stitches were taken in his head. The iron bar was found on the sidewalk where the assault took place. It ig | floor to make a reply. Schachtman, | New York’ is next—In New York | 15 inches long and one half an inch | Presiding, refused to recognize Gold, | the, furri ‘WORKER, NEW YORK. Peter Smith and his ten children, flood victims, arriving in Chicago from Arkansas in their sale pos- ession, a tumble-down car, have come north secking an opportunity to settle where Fate will be kinder. FOR His HEROIC SERVICE TO & THE Scunce or AvtaTions Souramy Fuiour raow New Your: to Pasis May 20-21 49 Col CHARLES LINDBERGH The coveted Hubbard gold medal of the National Geographic Society, awarded to Colonel Charles Lindbergh in Washington, is pictured above. Lindbergh is the eighth man to receive it in the 89 years’ of the Society's existence. Two other recipients were Admiral Peary, below, left, for discovering the North Pole, and Commander Richard E. Byrd, lower right, for being the first to fly over the Pole. SLUG 2 LEFTS AT Needle Trade Defense CONVENTION OF FURRIERS UNION (Continued from Page One) | Si on 25! |To Newark Furriers’ Local Ne. Congratulations! You were deter- mined in your struggles and “y | emerged ious-—the combined on- |slaughts of the Se htman-McGrady {clique and the police could not break iyour determination and you fought jon to victory, s have fought on bravely. ‘Lindy Hits Jingo Lobhy; Refuses to March in Uniform | | r WASHINGTON, (FP) June 14.— | Charles A. Lindbergh gave a shock |to the army-navy-militarists lobby in | Washington by refusing to appear in a military uniform. The son of the Minnesota congressman who was persecuted for his anti-war princi- ples, and who braved the mobs in- cited by the regular Republican or. ganization in Minnesota in 1918, ig- nored his new-made title of colonel in the reserves of the Missouri state militia, and faced the tremendously | emotional reception in the capital as a plain civilian, |. It is reported in army circles that | Alice Longworth first suggested that |the militarist element should make use of Lindbergh for restoring the | war machine to popular favor. Bas- {com Slemp, West Virginia non-union coal operator and former secretary to President Coolidge, is said to have arranged for sending a military uni- form, by plane, to the Memphis so that the hero should return in mili uniform. The army and navy families who enjoy or anticipate big retire- ment pensions for father or brother were elated. And then the young hero showed his quality by coolly ignoring them, and telling that crowd of 200,000’ people, gathered at the Washington monument, that he brought to them a message of friend- p and peace from the Old World. Lindy Wise to Kellogg. In his witty talk at the Press Club ; reception, Lindberg described how he jhad been virtually kidnapped and sent home by the State Department, which claimed it was merely giving {him advice, but had a warship wait- |ing to carry him home. He said he | was opposed to subsidizing the air- | craft industry in America, because it would probably mean that the gov- ernment would control the “use” to | be made of aircraft—-a hint that he essnen Daan Wa DME U EEF a a Re nao PEIN 1 4 ‘HOOVER TO LEAD Gov, Fuller Resumes U.S. IMPERIAL Hearings on Case of RADIO PROGRAM Sacco and Vanzetti WASHINGTON, June 14,—-Her- | bert Hoover, secretary of commerce, | has been named by President Cool-| connection with the case of Sacco and }idge as chairman of the Americ: Vanzetti. He plpanned to interview | delegation—and hence to be general} the eleven living members of the jury |chairman—of the International Rad-| that convicted Bartolomeo Vanzetti |io-Telegraph Conference, which will of “robbery” prior to the trial which | assemble Oct. 4 in Washington. From | resulted in the death sentence for both this conference Secretary Kellogg | Sacco and Vanzetti on the now-famous | has barred, by refusal of invitations, | trumped up murder charge. | The Union of Socialist Soviet Repub-| It is expected that John D. Williams |lies and Ecyador, because they are|of Maiden, defense witness in the lat- | not recogniged by the United States, | ter case, will also see the governor, In this conference the American “A gains BOSTON, June 14.—Goy. Fuller | today resumed his private hearings in delegation will load the battle of pri-) | vate versus public ownership and op-| |eration of radio communication. It | will speak for the Radio Corporation | of America, which is the gentral or- gan of the American Radio Trust, owned by the General Electric power trust, the American Telephone & Tel- |egraph Co.’s wire trust, and the | Westinghouse electrical equipment manufacturing combine. The Amer- ican radio giant is allied with British | Marconi in the foreign field. It has | also establshed what it calls a “radio Monroe Doctrine” for Latin America, | to eclude all competitors from the republics south of the United States. Latins Refuse. In the recent Inter-American Con- | ference on Aircraft, the Latin Amer- jican governments refused to accept |dictation from Washington. Led by Argentina and Colombja, they voted |down every proposal which was ad- |vaneed by Hoover’s delegatea on be- jhalf of American private monopoly in air transport in Latin America. | This spirit of determination to main- tain the open door for free develop- jment of air travel in Latin America jis said by the South American diplo- mats to be a fair indication of what Protest Meeting In Utica. UTICA, June 14.—“Sacco and Van- zetti were convicted not for murder | but for being radieals and foreigners,” |declaréd Rabbi I. B. Hoffman of Tem- |ple Beth-El at a protest, meeting in | their behalf held here Sunday under the auspices of the Sons of Italy | Lodge. | Besides Dr. Hoffman the other | speakers were Rev. Antonio Pierrotta, and R. Cordiferro, who spoke in Ttalian, The audience voted to forward at jonce a petition demanding the imme- diate release of Sacco and Vanzettiy * * * § Demand Release. DUQUESNE, Pa., June 14.—Reso- |lutions demanding that Gov. Alvan | Fuller of Massachusetts free Saceo ‘and Vanzetti were adopted at a re- {cent meeting of the Duquesne Croa- tion Association, 150 Workers Escape In a Factory Fires J they will say when Hoover’s program Two Badly Inj lj red |for a private radio trust control of | the western hemisphere is brought | before the radiotelegraph conference.| One worker is in a critical condi- In fact, they have only to repeat what | tion, another is seriously injured as they did at a pan-American radiotel-|a result of a fire which broke out egraph conference in Mexico City| yesterday afternoon at the Empire |two years ago, when they protegted| Tinware Company, 29 So. Sth Sty |the United States’ delegates’ attitude | Brooklyn. More than 150 persons so sharply that the conference broke | Were at work when the fire was dise up without making a report. covered, but they escaped from the | i four-story brick building. Radio Imperialism. = =|‘ Sam Mizrach, 32 Pitt St., Manhat- In substance, the situation is this: | ton, hurt his left foot and sustained The American radio trust is deter-' internal injuries when he and four |mined to invade foreign fields, while others, trapped by smoke and flames, |the European, Latin American and| ran to an extension in the rear of |some of the Asiatic governments are the building and leaped out of the determined that government owner-| windows two floors to a concrete |ship and operation of radio communi- yard. Daniel Goldman, who also cation shall be maintained as a fun-| jumped. sprained his left ankle and damental public policy. Soviet Rus- Was eut on both his hands. The cause of the fire is being in~ sia, one of the most important usérs of radio comniunication, would have been prominent in defense of the pub-| lic-ownership doctrine if she had not. been barred by Kellogg. | Because the two groups, or the | ‘American trust versus the govern-| will get nowhere with it. Instead, lin the sending of messages will be. ments of -40 nations, will be dead-|]) locked on this issue, the conference |}, some rules for avoiding interference | | vestigated. CHINA. IN REVOLT | | i Cheap labor is the attraction. | claiming that he was not a “legitimate |They have combatted every attempt | adopted and the question of estab- Ww. ant any i in diameter. |did not want aircraft to be made to| *°° 4 7 me ners aay of the ‘xedlest ox | 1 sical Eatrathe active member of | “legate” to the convention, and jof the bosses and the scab agents to! serve the war business chiefly. |lishing an international code based adverse legislation, and no threat of ihe aa : Sa dae i‘ was | threatened that not only Gold, but all |destroy their union. The Furriers in} a. a. oh on government ownership will be! it that is afflicting other sections of | the union, it ast weel ‘ 1 has Se a es | The fact that Lindbergh did not - 4 J fined $10 rday in Jefferson Mar-| the other left wing delegates would!New York are also determined to postponed until the next conference, wear a military uniform, and did not the country.” | dal about naGonal défeme, male the| Which will be held in Europe in four This is the bait offered by the’'Tex- as Power & Light Co. in an adver- tisement in the American Wool and Cotton Reporter. The Texas Com- pany wants industrialists move South and use its power. ket Court: be ejected from the convention hall if |protect their rights and cleanse the At a crowded meeting of the strik-| they persisted in “interrupting the junion of the traitorous elements who} enthusiasm of his admirers in the|t-five years. ers held yesterday at Webster Hall it | 8°8sion- are bent on destroying it. The nu-| crowds in Washington all the keener.| With Hoover on the American de!-, was voted to hold a bigger demonstra- Slug Delegates. merous attacks inflicted upon them | for Washington—outside the military |egation Coolidge has named Sen. Jim! |tion than ever this morning. It was} Englander demanded to know what |daily by the police do not deter them) clique—is fed up on martial music| Watson of Indiana, Sen. Smith of i also decided to protest to Mayor) privileges the 33 delegates brought from continuing the fight against the | and salutes and militarist snobbery.| South Carolina, Owen D. Young, of J, Co™m™munist International on Walker about the mass arrests of|from 33 “paper locals” in New York | betrayers of labor. ltt hailed Lindbergh as the finest|General Electric, John J. Carty, of | the great revolt in China by | | STALIN * a new pamphlet Including the diseussion by outstanding figures in the sue cea pickets yesterday morning. [vee baw. Pcie ocho A. Sorkin,| It is the duty of every worker to/| type of young civilian who has come| 4. T. & T, Rep. White of Maine,) PPD GeGUGIaGM 1. 2s pointed out that the arrest one of the International vice-presi-| aid this fight financially—to supply | into fame in this generation—unpre-| asst. g, of State Castle, Stephen |[| ‘| of so many workers at one time is an} dents ond several guerrillas began | the necessary ammunition so that. tentious, cool-headed, modest, and ob- ois eas hae sorts riage eas reset pad , | jindication that the police department) to beat Englander an] the convention |these brave fighters can continue. viously proud of and faithful to the ag | r SKY BOOKS ON REVOLUTIONARY is attempting to follow out the in-| | structions. of Matthew Woll. |Seattle “Skid Road’s” | Biggest Collection Is was in an uproar. Delegate Stein was also viciously attacked *vhen he attempted to defend Englan‘er. Green a Spectator. Green was at this time seated on HISTORY For Hands Off China SEATTLE, Wash., June 14.—One| of the largest open air meetings held | on the skid road on “Hands off} China” was addressed by District Or-| ganizer Aaron Fislerman, Shih Chun} Huang, editor the Chinese New Star | and D, G, O’Hanrahan. All of the} speakers demanded that the Imperial-| ists withdraw the battleships and ma- rines from the Chinese waters and \China and exposed the intrigue of |Great Britain to. provoke another | | world war. . A collection of $50.80 for the local Chinese newspaper which was sup-| |pressed by the local followers of the | Nanking regime, was taken. This is the largest single collection ever taken | on any meeting in skid road. | SOCIAL FORCES IN AmERi- CAN HISTORY By A, M. Simons $1.00 ASAN'T WAR IN GERMANY AINE OF LOU By Karl Mar: tropia BY ASP MIS /Birdist Takes Flight| By Karl Kautsky 2 HISTORY OF THE FABIA 'To Heaven as Preacher sOCIDTY By Edward R. Pease 'Coos Funeral Notes TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK — | 7" 7 cw Ay deke eet o1ne EW ROCHELLE, N. ¥., June 14, REmorRS OF A REVOLU- —Funeral services for Clarence Coles TO. Bia. "i " By Vers Fign m0 Phillips, the noted pigeon fancier who died Sunday night after a long illness, will be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon at his late residence, 158 Sutton Manor, New Rochelle. Only the members of the immediate family and Phillips’ closest friend; will be ad- —_— The Daily Worker Pub. Co, 83 First Street New York, N.Y. | the platform, and Englander jumped jon a stool and shouted to him, calling |his attention to the procedure of the official machine. But Green appeared to be entirely unconcerned. The credentials committee has not as yet brought in its report, but it is practically a certainty that none cf the members of the New York Joint Roard and the delegates from Local 25, Newark, which has just won an overwKelmmg victory over the right wing machine will be seated at the convention. Tories Keep British Children From Visit To USSR; Fear Contrast LONDON, June 14.—The Brit- ish Foreign Office today refused passports to six children who were going on a two weeks’ visit to the Soviet Union. All of the children were children of workers, some of them miners’ children, and the British Foreign Office felt, it is believed, that the contrast between the treatment of workers in the Soviet Union and workers in Great Britain would not add to the glory of Winston Churchill or Austen Chamberlain. The children werg to have sailed last night. $50,000 must be raised at onee! Every the Coney Island Stadium Concert immediately. Not only will this Con- cert be one of the finest events of jthis season, but it will also be the biggest demonstration against the union-smashing tactics of the bureau- | eracy. Every class conscious worker |and progressive individual should | participate in this demonstration, Ben Gold, Louis Hyman and the lawyers of the Mineola trial will address the |30,000 workers. | The relief committee has also issued bonds ranging from $10 to $25 and |we ask that every worker buy a | bond. The strike is yours and you must jhelp win it! * ” * From the Bazaar to the Stadium. The excitement of the bazaar is jover. The comrades had the oppor- tunity of settling for their tickets, and rest up after the four days of |hard work. Now is the time to. work even more energetically to make the Coney Island Stadium concert a suc- cess, d The defense committee has no doubt that this will be done, We have the utmost faith in our comrades and know that they will throw. all their energies behind this campaign and help make this concert the most out- standing event. We must, however, jremind you not to delay. In order to make this concert a success, the work must be done now, It is dan- gerous to delay. Every worker must sell as many tickets as possible. All energy must be concentrated on the concert of July 16, at the Coney Is- |land Stadium, worker should purchase a ticket for | memory of a father who dared to face persecution by these very poli- ticians that now were flattering the son John Beaver} White, electrical engineer, John Hays. Hammond, Jr., and representatives-of | radio communication in the war, navy | and commerce departments. | |meree Department; TAN PING SHAN 1b On China Read Also Armour Grain Steal AT THE NEWSSTANDS \ BUY THE DAILY WORKER ; THE AWAKENING OF Ousts Concern From Chicago ‘Wheat Pit j ‘ 2 CHICAGO, June 14—George E. Thompson, general superintendent of the Armour Grain Company, today faces expulsion from the Chicago Board of Trade, following his con- viction by the Board of Governors for “dishonest conduct.” The case has been investigated by | state, federal and local authorities. The high position of the Armours in the industrial and commercial world apparently saved them from the sum- | mary action which would have fallen upon smaller delinquents, caught in, jsuch a bald swindle as that charged to the defendants in ‘this case by the board of trade investigator, The report of that official says that the Armour concern wrecked the co- operative “Grain Marketing Corpora- tion” by substituting samples of wheat on which a big deal turned, and cheating the “Grain Marketing” deal- ers out of $3,000,000. SACCO and VANZETTI SHALL NOT DIE! ‘Communists Win Bout. ‘In So. Wales Labor War |; AMMANSORD, Eng., June 14,— ; An effort to apply the decision of |the Liverpool Conference of Trade], | Union executives, that al! Commu- nists. be excluded from the Labor Party, was temporarily defeated at a Conference of the Llanelly Divisional Labor Party, here. The vote stood 53 for observing the decision and 55 against. On a call NOW 50 CENT for division, the chairman ruled that) “The there be a roll-call, but as this was! opposed by a section of the confer. | Pally CHINA. by Jas. H. Dolsen. A complete histery of the | awakening of over four hun- dred million people. With * photographs, maps and orig- inal documents, ence, the chairman declared the con- |] | ference closed. It will therefore be! | necessary’ for another conference to PUBLISHING be convened in order that this issue! COMPANYS may be decided, \ 33 First Street Many of thé divisional Labor par-| NEW YORK | ties, who have stood by the Commv- | nists and refused to expel them from! the Labor bodies, have, in turn, been disaffiliated by the bureaucracy, and are continuing to function as inde- pendent groups. A Zoo That Failed. It is said that the producers of the movie, Rough Riders, had a hard time finding an actor that looked like teas nal ae a the first time ‘8 ever failed \gelleae the goods. " : The COMMUNIST 10 cants a copy—-$2.00 a year INTERNATIONAL 7 cents in bundle lots.