Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ERT a etre |e Pace Two THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 25,1927 0 3 OSreSsteeesensse eer 4 ) RUSSIAN PARTY OPPOSITION IS “RUN AGROUND” Bankrupt Politically and Organizationally murder of Sacco and Vanzetti in the Federation of Labor; Labor; Dr. John Lapp, Rev. Norman of the International Labor Defense. MOSCOW, July 24. — An article in| . | Pravda headed “Opposition Runisacco and Vanzetti Aground” referring to prospects of| Weaker: Fast 7 Days| ’ further development of the party (Continued from Page One) writes: The party is strong and uni-/| ted and there can be no question of | a split.. The party will remain as it| conditional release of Sacco and Van-| is today. Only the stranded opposi-{zetti. | tion prattlers whom the party will} As the July 7th demonstration at | always be able to put, in their right|the same location was broken up as/ places can “threaten” party pros-|a result of the combined efforts of | pects, with a “split.” | socialist party leaders and ths police The party as a whole is taking as| department, this Friday’s gathering | its starting point Lenin’s theory of|is of utmost importance. Leading} the possibility of building socialism |members of the workingclass miove- | in our country. It is overcoming | ment of this city will speak. | contradictions between the working * 4, elass and peasants. It is convinced} of the full p ity of preserving; paris, July 24—More than 10,-| “united and ae ve Ht repudiates | go9 workers gathered at a Sacco-Van- | pepesaes theory which eventually | soit demonstration held here at the is useful only to enemies of the PPO-| Grieme de Paite whede-.tho: feeedom | letarian dictatorship. | . = aa oe Opposition Hits “Sand Bank:” of the two Italian workers was de. as Parra “lable” | manded. ae ot “hoe paste” ot sree STEN gs ped ue were | it aan f hed to Sante Prison where Mar- on an anti-party struggle they will |™®7¢! ae meet proper Bolshevist repulses | Pl poaseaid a 2 Dey genes 2 worthy of the party of the proletar-|* Gommeunis y, ian dictatorship which is leading first | bee held. socialist state thru the most difficult| ., Pollee|Smash Meeting. zig-zags and passes in the world’s arcana te ae ies et * Paris Meeting. | arene Ot Be — ment” and “Idberate Cachin, Liber- ee vpcommeiog witliint ot ate Doriot,” were the slogans of the. workers. The police were called upon, | who broke up the demonstration in-| juring many workers. * . party has actually struck a sand bank idealogically and organizationally. Idealogically because all thru the op- position there is a clear indication of | a severance with Leninism which our | party will never barter for Trotzky-| ism or any thing else. Organization- ally because apart from limited circle of avowed oppositionists, apart from | microsopical “Cadre of Cadres” no-| body stand behind opposition in the| party. This unenviable situation must | be thought out by opposition and con- elusions must be drawn from it a the- ory whieh leads to a sand bank must} be repudiated. There must be no more sailing with this unreliable compass. While it has not yet to social demo- cratic “pole.” * Arrest Argentinian Workers. BUENOS AIRES, July 24. — The} Sacco-Vanzetti case in America is be- ing used as an excuse by the authori- | ties here to raid and arrest radicals who tHey have been watching closely for a long time. A bomb, which it is believed was | planted by government agents was/| found unexploded in front of the Ford | automobile agency. Immediately the | police got into action and took many radical workers into custody. Guards have also been placed around the SACCO-VANZETTI MASS MEETING IN UNION PARK, CHICAGO; JULY 30; PROMINENT SPEAKERS CHICAGO, Ill, July 24.—A monster outdoor mass meeting is ar- ranged to take place here on the afternoon of July 30 at 3 p. m, in Union Park, at Ogden Ave. and Washington St. to protest the intended electric chair. Among the speakers invited are Clarence Darrow, John Fitzpatrick, head of the Chicago John H. Walker, of the Mlinois Federation of Blair, and James Cannon, secretary The meeting is under the auspices of the Sacco-Vanzetti Conference of Chicago. Allowed Whipping Mayor C. A. McIntyre of San Toy, O., above, gave Ray Wiggins the choice of prison or a flogging. Needle Trade Defense Pearl Halpern made a collection at warded to the Defense Committee. * ° Tailors Call Meeting. A big mass meeting of all tailors has been called by the Tailors De- fense Committee for the Cloakmakers and Furriers on Thursday, July 26th, 8 p. m. in the Stuyvesant Casino, 140} Second Avenue, New York City. Ben Gold, Louis Hyman, J. Boruch- owitz and S. Zimmerman will speak on the latest developments in the Cloakmakers and Furriers struggles. No tailor can afford to abstain from ROMANY MARIE "PLAYS ROLE OF - WEEPING QUEEN ‘Everything Rotten as | Usual in Roumania BUCHAREST, July 24. — Marie, queen of Roumania, chief figure in a series of debauches with soldiers at | the front that would make a hootchie- |kootchie dance green with envy, and who shared with the Britianos and Prince Stirbey, her partner in depraved excesses, responsibility for the frightful terror against the Bess- arabian peasants and the workers of Roumania, is now playing a new role. Her latest publicity stunt is to do the garb of a “broken-hearted” queen, whose sole interest -in life is the wellfare of her country. . Pulls Publicity Stunt. Calling in the sychophants of the press, who make their living crawl | ing before the muck of European roy- jalty and despotism, this old debauchee, |declared amidst artificial tears in- spired, like movie actresses, with a plentiful supply of glycerine, that she had never sought nor would seek to become regent of Roumania. In spite of her professions she is the nominal figure-head, with the Briti- anos operating things behind the scenes. | The regency that was created to operate until the five-year-old “King |Michael” is of age, comprises Queen | Marie, and two very old and polit- | ical imbecile men, Miron Christa, |patriarch of the Greek orthodox |church in Roumania and Chief Justice |® party in the home of Brother Kiss- | Buzdugan, both of them elevated to | bach and realized $26 which was for- their present eminences by Jan Bfa- tiano, and through whom he will dom- |inate the situation until kicked out of | power either by a palace rebellion led |by former Premier Averscu that has as its object placing Cecil on the |throne as his puppet or ousted by a workers’ and peasants’ revolution. | dead the debauchery proceeds as usu- |al and the masses suffer as they | silence. Hats men | Everything here is as rotten as | usual and while the old king-lays| have long suffered—in chains andj a | United States embassy and the Amer- TACOMA, Wash., July 24. — A|ican consulate. meeting of 150 persons at Roslyn, } Washington, passed a resolution de-| | manding the unconditional release of |Germany’s Postal Rates Sacco and Vanzetti. 'Go Up; Dawes Payment ssclemnlligetihiikmnaiasigsan | Keep Up the Sustaining Funa| Is Due; Money Needed | BERLIN, July 24-—On August 1 | German postal rates will become the | highest in Europe. The latest result |of the Dawes plan pressure for more | government revenue is bringing much | opposition, but there seems n> way +to avoi(: it, if reparation payments |and government expenses are both to | continue. The Federal Council refused GET ONE NOW 14-Karat Gold .Emblem Q *; (Actual Size and Design) SCREW-CAP TYPE re H \ i $1.25 | to sanction the increase, whereupon Sent by Insured Mail for | the Executive Council went ahead and $1.50 |ordered it anyway. A sor to refub- | lican sentimest is contained in the de- |cision to put Ebert’s face oe one c.! |the stamps. Letters will cost 4 cents, | postcards 2 cents, and paper rates go | up. Telegraph rates increase sixty | per cent. It is expected to clear $250,- Sse | 000,900 a year this way. On Receipt of Money by Jimmie Higgins Book Shop 106 University Place New York City In Lots of 5 or mone $1.25 each. No Charge for Postage. er }this meeting. |tion of the present situation in the PARIS, July 24.—Apparently the | |former crown prince of Rumania, | Workers Clubs Mass Meeting. | Carol, has a large following among | At meeting of the Action Com- | the Rumanian colony here. As h¢ was mittee of the Workers Club, it was| leaving church this morning where decided to call a mass meeting of all|® memorial was held for his father, | club members of New York and|he was enthusiastically greeted by | Brooklyn. At this meeting the ques-| many of his countrymen. : Fs Prince Cantaouzene, Rumanian Needle Trades will be taken up and | minister to France who accompanied | plans formulated how to further help | Carol, was a silent observer of the In- in the struggle. The meeting will be cident which may have a far-reaching | held in the headquarters cf the Down | effect on the future of his country. | Town Workers Club, $5 Second|On returning to his Neuilly Viila,| Street, New York City, on Friday | Carol received a delegation of Ru- July 29th. manian political leaders said to be fFmpeuiene ered i ea of ren inters Wanted! | those who would restore his royal pre- Se fee elec. | Tokatives. Carol said that no plan tricians and painters in connection | Would be formulated until after the with the Ccney Island Concert and} period of mourning, even in the event he decides to emerge from the retire- those ¢ mrades who can spare a few) ‘ : a ‘ cio Oy ment which began with his renuncia- iwars during the day are asked to tion .of his rights to succession come into the Defense Office, , 41! wore | eighteen months ago. | ation: Saterej ootn ate | Elaine Lupeseu, Carol’s beautiful | | ies. Sea Mies ae - F | red-haired companion, kept in. the| BUY THE gp Rlsp gro jbackground today, although when AT THE N ei |Ferdinand’s death was announced | ‘THIRD BLOCK COOPERATIVE ==HOUSES== IN THE WORKERS | COOPERATIVE COLONY ° | | COOPERATIVE Now is the best time to obtain light, airy, Come now to the office of the Opposite Bronx Park Is Being Constructed by the UNITED WORKERS Apartments of 2-3-4 Spacious Rooms The first block houses is completed and fully occupied; the second block is under construction and rented; the co-operative stores are to be opened soon; plans for the third block houses are completed. first, she immediately started agita- tion to have the self-exiled prince rec- | ognized as the rightful king. Hankow Yields Supinely | To Reactionaries (Continued from Page One) tionary center still remained its con- tents entirely disappeared, Pawns Of Generals. The Kuomintang leaders hesitated to the end and feared a rupture but they were playthings in the hands of the generals. On the suestion of the expulsion of Communists the Koumin- tang leaders were split, definite de- cisions were put off tho practically they were already carried out in ac- tion. The Communist withdrawal from the government put an end to a state of painful uncertainty. The revolution severed the semi-decayed past in order to follow new ways in the heavy struggle against counter- revolution. ASS’N sunny Hunger Strikers Released. SHANGHAI, July 24.—The Soviet citizens arrested on board the Henli have been released on Chiang Kai- shek’s orders. The arrested citizens of the Soviet Union declared they were badly treated during the entire time of their imprisonment and were held in chains, therefore they de- clared a hunger strike which lasted for four days until their release. The United Workers’ Co-operative Ass’n and select the best apartment. 69 FIFTH AVENUE Telephone: Stuyvesant 6900-6901-6902 Open daily till 7 P. M. Saturdays, 2 P. M. \2 Tarvianen, (collected) Con- | |Gary Workers Cooperative, Gary, | Peter Thomas, Chicago, Il. EEE: <<< 0s tio owe tae ae ee | A Comrade, Buffalo, N. Y. . | Dr. Wm. Meyerson, (coliscted) | Philadelphia, Pa. ......... 25.00 .|John Scheidt, Roanoke, Va. ...1.50)} East Side Valet System, Providence, he Who Os comely ds wach ae 6G5s 3.00 Soviet Consul General lodged an em-} Malaria Experts Study U. S. Southern Swamps at Professor N. H_ Swellen- grebel, top photo, and Colonel S. P. James, below, European experts in the study of malaria Mexican General in. Presidential Race Is for Capitalism MEXICO CITY, July 24. — The| camp of reaction in Mexico is split; by the appearance of General Franc- isco Serrano, as another “anti-re- electionist” candidate against General Obregon, but also rival to the re- actionary General Arnulfo Gomez, already in the field. General Serrano, under a cloak of “liberal” arguments, promises in his, proclamation of his candidacy, issued | today, he will turn over the oil rights to the United States because, “na- tionalization of the sub-oil, as stated in the constitution, should not apply to those rights held by foreigners be- fore the constitution was adopted. A Black-Shirt Liberal. Now that the and right wing labor movement have the power of government in their hands, Serrano, representative of the old feudal and priestly forces, is in favor of “free press”, and announces that separation of state and church should go so far that the state has only police powers in the state-owned church buildings. Since his own party has tried armed counter-revo- lution and has had numerous mem- bers exiled for that offense, Serrano is in favor of recalling all political exiles. Serrano’s subservience t: foreign capital is stated almost with- out subterfuge: Strong For Capital. | | Have liberal bourgeois|the Ruthenherg Sustaini: Textile Paper Boasts Hundred Percent More Exploiting In Decade “Wages are too high in any in- dividual textile mill,” says the American Wool & Cotton Reporter, employer trade paper, “unless that mill—on the basis of full time—is today operating its equipment with a little more than 50 per cent the same number of operatives that it had on the payroll ten years ago.” The editor goes on to tell of worsted mills that run 12 looms to a weaver instead of 3 as formerly, and cotton mills running 66 looms instead of 18. What he does not tell is how this speeding has developed an unem- ployment situation that hangs like q black cloud over the textile work- Paid Your Contribution to “My attitude toward Mexican and} foreign capital,” he says, “will be one of sincere protection and cordial welcome. IMPERTALI The Final Stage of problems, ‘cs ow: Yattel | What the Daily Worker | Means to the Workers | More Encouraging Contributions | to Our Emergency Fund, | | 5 | Neawats OWI0:° 550555 6.05 cs $2.7 S. A. Nelson, International Falls, | MUR T s (ou Salety aig ere matel aie 1.50 Ira Liebrasse, Fort Benton, Mon- WANA i. Soc eRe lees 10.00 N. Osadezuk, (collected) Ham- teomek, Mich: 9.5.0.6... 3s 4.00 O. Zimmerman, Milwaukee, Wis. 1.25 |James Sifakis, (collected) Pitts- DERE, Pee ae keno ards 5.55 Giana <n... ck Ba eae 50.00 | M. R. Naiman, Chicago, Ill. ....2.00) J. W. Crowe, Oakland, Calif. 5.00 | J. R. W., Los Angeles, Calif. :.7.50| «++ +5.00| Mt. Vernon Nucleus, Mt. Vernon, Wes ingtOn i c.1gcs ease ine 5.50 Wm. Mollard, Turtleford, Sask. GRUANAN sco oo cc ye ae a 2.00 | J. Siegel, Ontario, California ..1.00 E. Pekman, Paso Robles, Calif. 1.00 Nucleus No. 31, Toledo, Ohio ..10.50 Bessie Zogolin, Kansas City, Mo. 5.00| C. W. Foss, Kansas City, Mo. ..5.00/ Harry Lawrence, Fort Worth, Texas John Auert, Ukiah, Calif. ....5.00/ Herbert Mansolf, Seattle, Wash. 1.00) Wm. Brown, St. Louis, Mo. ...1.00 Joseph Jaglowski, Rutledge, Andrew Tarzek, (collected) Bridgeport, Conn, 4 Section 4, Max Hagen, New City 8. S. 6A-F N. No. 1, New York 1.00 P. Bokos, (collected) Waterbury, COMMS EST e eas Ensen ihe eer’ 6.85 | James Rechnagel, New York | Cin aaa yee ears cant HE, 2.00 I. Barsky, Conneaut, Ohio ...... 2.50 | S. H. Babcock, Conneaut, Ohio D. Haan, Chicago, Ml. A M. L. Vawter, Los Angeles, Calif. 5.00} John Landers, Youngstown, | POEs cits ip worst ius aiaigae apes 6 14.75 H. J.. Mullen, New York City, | Guard D. W. ..... ‘ Louis Levi, St. Paul, Minn. L. R. Suto, Johnstown, Pa., | Guarded Wicracnciencies 1.00 Armenian Fraction, W. P., De- troit, Mich. A friend, Hoboken, N. J. Leo P. Lemley, Philadelphia, V. Blumenthal, Los Angeles, CHU eS Miner e hee nie es 7.50 | Night Workers International Br. No. 1, New ‘York City ....5.75| 1A F. D.6 -10.00 | phatic protest declaring reports by|SS 1B F3 .... 5.25 | the military authorities that the|SS 1B F3 +6.00 | prisoners were well treated was ab-|SS 1B F4 7.50 solutely false. SS 1D Fl. . 1,00 : aie Ye S$ 2A FD1 . 1.00 All modern equipments ||) powt rorget the Sustaining Fund!| 88 2A D2 2:78 and accommodations, cul- aeRO $8 2A FD6 . 6.50 ing Pot 2E FDI . 7.00 tural as well as social in- The oe tt a stitutions, size of rooms as COMMUNIST Hake tee i 10 cents a copy—$2.00 a year 8c SN4. 2.00 he as ee ie - A eae Sate |SS 8C FD1 . 5.00 at in the secon loc’ |. |SS 8D FD1 . 13.00 of houses INTERNATIONAL $8 3D FDS | “00 : Tomes iy Te ee: [$8 3B FD3 |. 1116.50 I $6 Int. Br. No. 4. 9.60 Po 4 “To believe that with our own re- Capitalism sources we can reconstruct the dam- ages of past revolutions is plain By LENIN | lunacy, as without the power of cap- ital we condemn our country tg des- HIS book, a classic ef ‘Harry Leff S. N. No. 8, San Francisco, Calif. 5.00 | ) poliation, misery, ignorance, contin- ual revolutions and crime, waving the | = hated banner of false nationalism. lz “Nature made us neighbors, with | what is now the greatest country in the world, the United States. What has been called the fatality of geog- raphy should not be turned to our injury, but should be utilized for ties of friendship and strengthened bonds of frank and sincere amity.” Communist Hterature, was written, (as Lenin ex- plains in his introduction) to “help the reader to under- stand the fundamental eco- nomic question, without the study of which modern war and politics are unintelligt- ble—” With a growing danger of an imperialist war, at time particularly it should be read by every worker. In a new complete edition e = PAPER, .60 CLOTH $1.00 S65: Bibs Bri Wo: 5. sos <5ce; c+ On. S5 Int. Br. No. 6 . American Imperialism $5 Int. Br. No. 6 . SS 6A FL READ: SS 6A F2 OIL IMPERIALISM By Louis Fischer Cloth, $2.00 IMPERIAL WASHINGTON By R. F. Pettigrew Paper, .25 Cloth, $1.25 DOLLAR DIPLOMACY —s0 By Scott Nearing THE AMERICAN EMPIRE OIL _AND THE GERYS OF WAR LABOR LIEUTENANTS OF AMBRICAN IMPERIALISM. Monkofsky John C. Musa . Women’s Council Bronx Mary Clayman G. Maynard Girls of Camp Unity Cloakmakers Council Women’s Council ... W. P. Union City, N.. J. Klimas —10 J. T. Muso By Jay Lovestone E. & F. Lind Ba. Sein THE DAILY WORKER J. Horn PUB. CO. 33 First Street New York Have Paid Your Contribution to the Ruthenberg Sustaining Fund? Next Number Out | July 25th. It will be a combination of July-August issues. Retail price the same—25 cents, THE BEST EVER. Watch for the announcement | of contents, REAL TIMELY ARTICLES AND CONTRIBUTIONS. The COMMUNIST 1113 W. Washington Blvd. CHICAGO, ILL, Subscribe! 25 Cents a Copy $2.00 a Year Convention Elections Soon! Have You One of These in Your Dues Book? Te , 1 ‘ ' { ' ' ' ' ‘ ' ‘ ' ‘ ' If not, YOU CANNOT VOTE! See your Nucleus Secretary today. Tomor- row it may be too late. For Assessment Stamps, Inquiries, Remittances, On Sale of Stamps, etc., write to: NATIONAL OFFICE 1118 WEST WASHINGTON BLVD. CHICAGO, ILL,