The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 8, 1927, Page 3

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re THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1927 Page Three SACCO-VANZETTI STRIKE TIES UP ALL PARIS Bert Miller, The DAILY WORKER, i the John Day Company had waited must make a special effort to pay and fortunately we have succeeded. be impossible. nothing that we can do about it. manager and editors of The DAILY One reason why we are particularly glad of our success is the hope that the money coming to you at this time may enable you to do a little! something on behalf of dear Sacco and Vanzetti which otherwise might. / Union having exhausted all its means | We are mourning the action of the governor, but see Perhaps the money will also be of some little assistance to the! ble with the powers that be in the state. With every good wish from both for all, I am, Very cordially yours, Galion, Ohio, August 4th, 1927. New York, N. Y. Dear Comrade: By this mail we are paying John Day Company’s bill and enclosing herewith a check of $520.00, the balance of the $1,000.00 pledged to the sustaining fund of The DAILY WORKER. This pledge was to be paid at the rate of $50.00 per month, but as so long for their money and as The DAILY WORKER is in such pressing need of funds, we felt that we | the whole amount to both at’ once | WORKER in this time of their trou- | | | | | { WM. M. BROWN. CLASS FOES UPON JURY CONDEMNING SACCO, VANZETT Sacco Knew Fuller Was His Murderer By ART SHIELDS BOSTON, Aug. 7 (FP).—Nicola Sacco. the class conscious shoe work- er, had no illusions about Alvan T. Fuller, the $10,000,000 employer, who was deciding his fate. Nor did he fear him. When the big, healthy, well-dressed man with a magnetic smile visited \Him in the death house, Sacco saw through him. The conversation is here repeated. for the first time, through the labor press: Saceo: I did not send for you. I did not sign any paper. You will give me nothing. a Fuller: I understand you. a worker in a factory like you. Sacco: Yes, maybe. But you made $10,000,000 and your mind changed. Now you are @ capitalist and I am an anarchist. You are bourgeois. I am I was “> | | | Vanzetti’s Prison Boss t | those spurious forms subservient to \the counter-revolutionists the Wuhan [BISHOP BROWN HAILS DAILY WORKER as FicreR WUHAN REACTION FOR SACCO AND VANZETTI IN SAVAGE DRIVE ON LABOR UNIONS Feng and Chiang Unite | Two Governments | HANKOW, August 7.—The rick- | jshaw strike has ended, the labor | of material support for the strikers. | |The Wuhan government is still tek-| ing drastic action against labor and as a means of crippling the unions has proceeded to the reorganization of the All-Chinese Federation of Labor and the Hupeh Provincial Labor Union Council. Occupy Labor Headquarters. | As measures toward crushing all} vestiges of labor organization except | | government troops have occupied the |premises of the General Council of Labor Unions and has arrested thou- sands of active unionists, It has also caused to be distributed proclama-| tions against the council. During hte | past few days the Wuhan government | ‘has made new arrests among the| | Communists, accusing them of an at- tempt to launch a general strike as ja protest against the shooting of | striking rickshaws during a demon- | stration. | Martial Law Declared. | The strike has not yet taken place because the government, going from one excess to another against the FOR FOUR YEARS Bartolomeo Vanzetti has been working under Michael Abearn (above), superin- tendent of the Charlestown prison tailor shop. Vanzetti does no work now, having been transferred to the death honse. Big Business Glad It Gan Destroy Two workers’ movement, has_ proclaimed ; | martial law and has inaugurated | drastic measures to keep people from gathering even in twos and threes in | the streets. Protect Foreign Property. | That the Wuhan government is | playing the game of the imperialists | is indicated by the instructions sent | ‘from the government to the com- | |manders of the armies stating that | “the struggle with foreigners to an-| |nihilate unequal agreements should | |be carried on in an exclusively diplo- {matic manner and it is the duty of | |the armies to protect all undertakings | LONDON WORKERS DEMONSTRATE _ | Part of a mass poster parade thru central London on July 26 for the freedom of Sacco and Vanzetti. This parade was organized by the International Class War Prisoners’ Aid. JUDGE BROADHURST REFUSES TO STOP EXECUTION: WORKERS DEMAND SAC (Continued from Page One) Denver Workers Protest. DETROIT, Aug. 7.—On Sunday} evening, July 31st, hundreds of men,} women and ‘children paraded the! strects carrying banners, acquainting | the people with the case of Sacco-| Vanzetti and advertising the outdoor | meeting held. | At the conclusion of the parade a great crowd assembled to listen to | speakers representing all kinds of or- | ganizations. | Carl Whitehead, a prominent law- | yer; C. V. Holwell, Workers’ Educa- | tional Director for Colorado and Wyo- | ming; a Negro preacher, a representa- tive of the A. F. of L.; labor organiza. tions; W. Penn Collins, a lawyer and | secretary of the Humanitarian Heart | Mission, and Hugo Oehler, of Kansas | ‘City, representing the Workers’ Par- ty, all spoke on the Sacco-Vanzetti | ease and explsined all the details.) They urged the crowd to protest with | all their might against the execution of the two labor organizers. Geo, Saul, secretary of the I. L. D. in Denver, was the chairman of the meeting and at the conclusion made an appeal to all present to join the I. L. D. and help defend all class war prisoners. The meeting and parade was held under the auspices of the » Bp * * * | Soviet Union Workers, | jers have attended meetings held CO, VANZETTI LIBERATION 2; 7 ® | | 1] By Hundred Thousands, Denounce Fuller’s Act MOSCOW, Aug. 7—During the | last two days thousands of meet~ ings have been held thruout the | Union of Socialist Soviet Repub- \ lies, in which the workers voice |thelr extrome indignation and dis-| |gust at the cruelty and hypocrisy of American court and the Amer- jican capitalist class. It is esti- |mated that at least 100,000 work- in all quarters of Moscow alone, |while similar demonstrations took | | place in other towns, particularl \the large industrial centers, suc’ jas Leningrad and Kharkoff. |Speakers point out, and the crowds keenly understand, the’ duplicity of | the American business man who} holds up his hands in horror when | the workers’ government executes counter-revolutionaries actively en- | | gaged in assassination, arson and) terroristic destruction of life and| goods, while at the same time} American “justice” is “ratlroad- | ing” to their death after a long! martyrdom in prison, two innocent | | | Committee Bloodthirsty Bishop Is Called “Un-Christlike” By Sacco Committee Head Miss Rose Baron, secretary 0: the Sacco - Va ti Committee, wi <5 “Your congratulations to Goy- ernor Fuller on his death decree very unchristlike, but then Christ was never Massachusetts bishop.” | | The above telegram |Bishop Law: was sent to rence follow cleric’s message to Fuller in whi jhe said, i, Ia low me to express to 3 y ad- |miration of the way in which you} have done your duty in the Sacco-| Vanzetti case. You have been| jwise, patient, dignified and cour-| ageous—worthy of the best tradi-| tions of the commonwealth.” asserts that Governor Fuller has | |brushed to one side nearly all the paije relevant evidence which has accumu- lated in seven years to prove that Saceo and Vanzetti are absolutely in- nocent of the South Braintree pay- roll murder in 1929. Governor Fulle decision “does little or nothing,” declares the Sun, “to dispel the widely held belief that the execution of these two men would be, as Dr. Fabian Franklin has said, ‘a stain upon the name of Massachu- setss and a calamity in its effects throughout the world’” “Two courses,” the editorial states, “were naturally open to Governor Fuller in making public his refusal to intervene with the original verdict of Judge Webster Thayer. He might have stated his bare decision to that end, supported by mention of the separate conclusion of the Lawrence Or he might have an- swered point by point the weighty evidence which the defence has ac- cumulated, particularly since the trial, to show that Sacco and Van- zetti are innocent of the South Brain- tree crime. Instead, the governor answers a few of these points and ignores others, including many of the issues most embarrassing to the pro- secution. Inevitably the result is to ereato suspicion that there are cer- 50,000 RALLY aS POLICE FORBID ENTRY 10 CITY Second Big Strike Is Planned for Today 7.—Fifty thousand art in a demonstration neennes on the outskirts of Paris this afternoon under the eyes of a thousand police, mounted republican guards and a regiment of nfantry, to demand the freedem of Saeco and Vanzetti. | Ten thousand sympathizers paraded to the edgo of ty with red flags jand placards anigia Vannettl, sister of the condemned man at the parade began, police de~ ntyfive posters conmid- ig” to the United States. stroye ered “in No: dense under gc In Pari ra ten minute strike which ted up auto-buses and tram- ways took place today. Reinforcements around the Amer~ jean chancellory were increased by - thirty mounted policemen. Republic- an guards not permit anyone to come near without showing proper credentials. The embassy and consulate were each guarded with twenty poliee. M, {Chaippe, the prefect of police, direct- ed the guards at the Bois de Vineen- nes demonstration in person, A 24-hour strike has been declared for tomorrow. L’Humanité, commun- ist newspaper, declared that all auto- buses and tramways will stop. * * * Paris Workers To Defy Ban. PARIS, Aug. ‘ne Poincare government has forbidden all Sacco and Vanzetti demonstrations. Sacco and Vanzetti sympathizers have announced their intention to demonstrate against the official mur- der of the two workers and to carry out their plans for a huge Paris \strike strike scheduled for tomorrow. A clash jis expected between the police and Sacco and Vanzetti sym- | pathizers. * * * a proletarian. You do not live in my workers who are guilty only of |tain awkward questions which the| Mexican Boycott. i world, so I expect nothing from you, \Goodbye. 3 And the workingman, cutting the audience short, walked to his eell and hut the door to continue his hunger strike. Anti-Labor Jury. Vanzetti, the fisherman; Sacco, the shoe worker, never had a trial or hearing by a jury of their peers. Their final loom by a wealthy open- shop emple>y was a logical and Of Its Laber Faas BOSTON, (FP).—While workers around the world are protesting the decision of Goy. Fuller to kill Sacco and Vanzetti, leading bankers and manufacturers of New England are rejoicing in the death doom of the two Italian workingmen. Gov. Ful- ler’s desk is stacked with letters from millionaire employers and financiers er their underlings, betraying their | class hate in their congratulations on | i belonging to foreigners.” | This is particularly monstrous, in- | asmuch as this order is used as an excuse to regimentalize the workers in the foreign concerns and terrorize them so they will not take action against the exploiters and plunderers. Under the guise of “protecting for- eign property” industrial conscription is inaugurated. Wuhan-Nanking Unite. This new and intensified struggle “Justice Miscarried”: Galsworthy. | LONDON, Aug. 7—“I have been reading very critically and dispas- sionately Professor Frankfurter’s summary of the evidence and proce- | dure in the case of Sacco and Van- zetti From the facts therein stated upart from the argument I cannot re- sist the conviction that justice has misearried, A miscarriage of justice wherever it takes place is repugnant to man- protesting in legal ways against athe exploitation of their class. | Roasts. dont tata este © izations declare that day a day of protest.” * Baltimore Workers Send Resolution. BALTIMORE, Md.,' Aug. 7.—In a huge mass mecting here hundreds of assembled workers passed the fol- lowing resolution meeting at Fuller’s decision to railrozd Sacco and Van- * * wish to—attempt to explain away. Governor Fuller’s statement goes at length into the Bridgewater case. Of that prior case the governor says, “practically everyone who witnessed the attempted hold-up and who could Vanzetii.” Yet Prof. Felix Frankfur- ter’s comment on Vanzetti’s prusecu- it “grew out of his arrest for, and Governor cannot—or at least, does not | have identified the bandits identified | tion for the Bridgewater trial is that) MEXICO. CITY, Aug. 6—A boy- jcott against American goods has been \declared by the Federation of Labor |Unions to protest against the legal- lized murder of Sacco and Vanzetti. |Former Senator Monzon at a meet- ing of his followers urged the boy- cott. * Argentina Strike. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Aug. 6.—The Sacco-Vanzetti protest strike + tragic cli his decision. against the labor movement and the | Lind. “A miscarriage of justice which | zetti to the chair: were merely a phase of the Braintree is spreading rapidly. Dispatches Workers ists, their fate{_ Former U. S. Senator William M, | peesant unions occurs simultaneously | involves death—the | irrevocable—is a # * affair. The evidence of identification from Peragamino state that a bomb was always « y their enemies, | Butler—Coolidge’s leading Yankee | with the uniting of the two govern- abhorrent. And, sincere friend to| Hungarian Workers’ Club Demand | of Vanzetti in the Bridgewater cuse was exploded in the Ford automobile The story go ‘ to Vanzetti’s | patron—steps into the picture with a| ments of Wuhan and Nanking. The| America that I am- I hope with all General Strike. bordered on the frivolous, reaching |agency there. 1920 Plymouth ‘vial, when he was be- trayed by an attorney who was a stockholder .in the Cordage Co., against which Vanzetti had led a strike. Foreman Nickers of the cord- age plant was on the jury. The story continues through the 1921 Dedham murder trial when the jury panel being exhausted, Judge Thayer told the sheriff to get more men. The sheriff, visiting a Masonic lodge, got a jury of his peers, but not of the prisoners. Class Foes Judge Thayer, who ruled against Sacco and Vanzetti in the several trial motions of the next years, is a rich man, who considers Sacco and | i Vanzetti “anarchist bastards.” The day of Fuller’s decision Thayer was playing 18 holes of golf at the Ogun- quit Clab in Maine. ; Then came the advisory commis- sion, drawn from their class foes. Consider Abbot Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard. How Lowell, collector of a $3,000,000 business col- lege endowment, must have looked at Sacco, the workingmen, who in. broken English told the Dedham court that @ poor man had no chance to go to Harvard. Stratton Biased. Stratton, president of Mass. Insti- tute of Technology, supported by the wealthy industrialists, had expressed himself against the two anarchists before his appointment. Ex-judge Robert Grant, a favorite dinner guest at Boston society tables, had frequently expressed his abhor- rence of these two reds to admiring Back Bay audiences. A jury of their peers! Bunk! Thumbs down judges, determined to “get those bastards good and prop- er,” as Judge Thayer said on the Worcester golf course at the time of the trial. Fall Demand for Coal May Shatter Lockout CHICAGO, Aug. 7.—The Tillinois ville agreement. It is owned by the Fullerton Coal Co. eng costing $65,000 are being made on the Nason mine near Mt. Vernon. This mine » has been idle since January, 1926. Tt emplovs 500 men. by | cinuaindtony applauding the death letter from William P. Kelly, a law- | yer in his office, and at the same time an assistant district attorney in Nor- folk county where the two radicals were convicted. “It is gratifying to know,” says / Kelly, “that public officials in this} commonwealth cannot be stampeded by those who desire to cast them aside by -vieious propaganda to the end of | establishing a government in accord. | ance with their own false. doctrines.” | Big Mill Owner. Kelly’s employer is the chief cot- ton mill operator in New Bedford, | where he put through four wage cuts in a two and a half years period af- | ter the war with the aid of the Sher- man Detective Agency. Butler, as | a U. S. senator, did not: move when | appealed to by the Sacco-Vanzetti de- fence to open department of justiee | files showing the innocence of the | two workers. | Frankiin W. Hobbs, ex-president of the New England Associated Indus- | tries, an open-shop textile manufac- turer himself, a leader in the great | 1921 open-shop drive and an ardent! worker for the repeal of the Massa- chusetts 45-hour law, writes: “I have | read your decision with great satis- faction” Phone Boss Glad. Matt B. Jones, president of the crushed the telephone warkers’ union, your committee has been wise and courageous.” tional Bank of Boston, the biggest | bank in all New England, writes: | “The world at large is again assured that Massachusetts stands for law and order.” ' Among the scores of other letter writers praising the decision are the following: Several members of the big bank- ing house of Harris, Forbes & Co., whose names are not made public. Andrew J. Howard, an attorney for the Boston Elevated Railway. Benjamin P. Moseley of F. F. Mose- Bank treasurer. From Gloucester, Mass., comes a letter of John Hays Hammond, an- cient foe of the United Mine Work- ‘ers, and chairman of Harding’s coal Nanking troops situated in Wuhan are shortly to be recalled to Nanking. War Lords’ Agreement. The two war lord apostates, Chiang | Kai-shek, representing the reaction at Hankow and the counter revolu- tionist, Feng Yu-hsiang, representing Wuhan reached the agreement at Kweiten. THINK OF. THE SUSTAINING FUND AT EVERY MEETING! Many Unions Will Join Sacco-Vanzetti Nation- Wide Strike Tomorrow Among the organizations that have gone on record for a Sacco- Vanzetti protest strike here tomor- row are the following: The Workers (Communist) Party, the socialist party, verions seaman’s unions, the Sacco-Vanzetti Emergency Commit- tee, the International Sacco-Vanzetti Committee, the Sacco-Vanzetti Lib- eration Committee, the Joint Board of the Furriers union, the Joint Board of the Cloak and Dressmakers union, the Industrial Workers of the | World, the International Labor De- fense, the Trade Union Educational New England Telephone Co., which | League, the Bakers union, the Bar-| bers’ union, the United Hebrew writes: “The action of yourself and | Trades, the Jewelry Workers union, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers union, the Butchers union, the Neck- C. H. Dwinnoll, president First Na- Wear Makers union, the Cap and Mil- lnery Workers union, the Upholster- ers union, International Pocketbook Makers union, Journeymen Tailors union, Carpenters union, Excavators union, Plasterers union, Hod Carriers | union, Painters and Decorators union,'{wo victims of Massachusetts reac- | | Amalgamated Food Workers union, tion, | Laundry Workers ‘union, Metal Workers union, Shoe Workers union, Paper Box Makers union, Bricklayers union, Power Plant Workers union, graphical union, Anti-Fascist Alli- ance of North America, Young Workers League, National Couneil ed Workers Association, many work- men’s circle branches and ‘scores of others. Tell Your Shopmates to Join the Strike August 9. |my heart that the ancient and honor- able State of Massachusetts will yet avoid the commission of what might | go down to history as an abhorrent | deed. (Signed) John Galsworthy. * * | Wells and Bennett Protest. LONDON, Aug. 6.—We, the under- | signed, firm friends and admirers of America and American institutions, are deeply impressed by the weight of evidence against the conviction of Sacco and ‘Vanzetti. We implore the Governor and people of Massachu- | setts not to stain the history of their state with the blood of two innocent men. * (Signed) H. G, Wells, Arnold Bennett. * London Workers to Protest. LONDON, Aug. 6.—As if in antici- pation of the decision of Governor Fuller on the Sacco-Vanzetti case, workers throughout Great Britain have made plans for huge protest meetings, parades and demonstra- tions, according to advice received by the national cffice of International Labor Defense. Preceded by a city- wide parade in London, under the au- spices of the International Class War Prisoners Aid, a monster meeting will | be held in Trafalgar Square on Au- ust 7th. George Lansbury, M. P.,| as consented to arrange for a meet- ing between a group of Labor mem- bers of Parliament and the American Ambassador in London on the ques- tion of justice for Sacco and Van- zetti. In addition, the executive coun- ‘cil of the Trade Union Congress, through George Hicks, its chairman, | has reaffirmed its solidarity with the | * * * | Wilkes-Barre Calls for Strike. WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Aug, 7.— {Characterizing the murder of Saceo * | Committee of the Saceo-Vanzetti Con- | | ference has issued a call to very man | and woman in the anthracite region “Declare Tuesday, Aug. 9, a day of protest. We call upon you all to stay away from work on that day as! a protest against the execution for cur innocent brothers, Have special meetings of your organizations and/| leval manner haye your organ-! | eration of the working class: ernor Fuller the immediate release of these two workers; he immediately issue a call for a gen- workers; i vin T. Fuller of the State of Mass., one copy to President Green of the Aug. 7—Members of the Hunga- rian Workers’ Club of the Bronx passed a resolution condemning Gov- | ernor Fuller’s decision to murder Sac- | co and Vanzetti and calling for a gen- eral strike. The resolution says: Although Governor Alvin T. Ful- ler of Mass. has been convinced dur- ing his investigation that Sacco and Vanzetti are innocent of the crime they are charged with, and still he| wants to send them to the electric | chair, and Whereas, the working class needs | its brave fighters who are willing to! sacrifice even their lives for the lib- | Be it Resolved that we, Hungarian | speaking American workers of the Bronx, assembled at our meeting hall, $54 Jackson Ave., Bronx, N. Y.. on August 5th, 1927, demand from Gov- Be it further resolved, that we de- mand from President Green of the American Federation of, Labor that eral strike on’ behalf of these t Be it further resolved that one copy of this resolution be sent to Gov. Al- American Federation of Labor and’ one copy to the Sacco-Vanzetti Emer- geney Committee. (Signod) Lester Balog, chairman of meeting. * . * T. U, E. L. Calls for Strike. The Trade Union Educational Lea- gue has issued the following appeal | to all workers: “To all workers! Sacco and Van- zetti will die August tenth if the | working class allows Governor Full- | er’s decision to be carried owt. This | is a blow against the entire working | class. | “It is now apparent to all that Full- “There is but one form. of protest | now that ill be heard by the murder- | ers: That is the protest strike. co and Vanzetti in the only way that | counts, strike! (Signed) William Z. Foster.” | + * * | Baltimore Sun Flays Fuller. BALTIMORE, Aug. 7 (FP).—In a| its climax in the testimony of the lit- le newsboy who had caught a glimpse of the criminal and ‘knew by the way he ran he was a foreigner.’” “It is difficult to see why Gover- nor Fuller drags in the Bridgewater affair. It is difficult to see why he makes no mention of the connection of the Department of Justice with the Braintrée trial. And it is difficult to see why he does not state that new evidence was not considered by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachu- setts in refusing a new trial. The adverse decision of the governor is couched in dispassionate language, is the result of hard and conscien- tious labor on his part, and has the implicit backing of the influential | Lowell committee But it does little | or nothing to dispel the widely held | belief that the execution of these men | would be, as Dr. Fabian Franklin has July 31, a big protest demonstration said, ‘a stain upon the name of Mas- sachusetts and a calamity in its ef- fects throughout the world.’” * “To let Sacco and Vanzetti die,” de- clares an editorial appearing in all the Scripps-McRae newspapers, “is to breed hate and contempt for the in- stitutions which Governor Fuller, . by his decision, seeks to uphold. It iy that which makes the Sacco-Vanzetti case, with its seven long years of winding a tortuous way to a tortuous death, a grim and terrible tragedy. * * . * *” The officers of the Workmen's Cir- cle No. 50 have addressed the fol- lowingappeal to their members: You are requested to carry out the following decision made at our last meeting held Aug 5, at 257 Hust Houston Street: Resolved that a!l members of this Branch be instructed to carry out all decisions that may be made by the working class movement in the effort to secure the release of Sacco and Vanzetti, whether it be a call for a Those who fail to carry out this decision will be heavily fined by the branch. Wood was received here today. official lackeys of American im- but the representatives of the Fili- pinos are glad that he-will not re- leadin ¢ oditorial. the Baltimore Sun 4 U turn to fight against them as the| chief of the ocennational forces, The; Huge demonstrations are being held in the principal cities of the country. Hundreds of resolutions have been passed denouncing Gover- nor Fuller as a murderer. | * * * Austrian Protest. VIENNA, Aug. 6.—Communist and socialist organizations thruout Aus- itria are passing resolutions denounc- jing Governor Fuller’s decision on the | Sacco and Vanzetti case as a piece jof class hate. | | rae Wane a Rm ‘Sacco-Vanzetti Parade * ee In Duluth; Nearing in Anti-Imperialist Talk: By S. PABESKY. DULUTH, Wis., Aug. 7—Swnday, and parade to protest against the im- . |prisonment and electrocution of Sac- |eo and Vanzetti was held here at the | Court House square. Hundreds men: and women marched in the parade | preceding the mecting with banners bearing slogans. The nieeting was addressed by S, Bloomberg, Sigmond M. Slonim and Representative of the Legislature of Minnesota J. Youngdahl. \ Resolutions were adopted to send telegrams to Governor Fuller and to President Coolidge. Also a message of cheer was sent to Sacco and Van- zetti in behalf of the meeting. Nearing Speaks. ' A crowd of over four hundred peo- | ple came here to hear Scott Nearing | speak on Am n imperialist tae- tics in Latin American. The speaker gave an account of how American bankers have gradu- ally got control not only of the natu- ral resources of Latin American but also of : political and military power, | “America today,” declared Nearing, “is playing the role of the English itedtural ok Worker: ie r jer’s investigation was designed) .,_. . ; e 4 es i ‘ John F. Rood of the Boston Ex- Ac oman Workers, Be RIC and Vanzetti as the greatest crime of | merely to stop the protest movement vise a ie! bc eer iriure king eal Uh a thet Snel ee change. rine Transport Workers union, Typo- the last hundred years, the Executive | sweeping the world, bag dpa ty jAmerican people were _ fighting jagainst English tyranny,tdday Nica- ragua, Mexico and other Latin Amer- ican countries are strugglingsagainst Comrade’ Nearing iC his speech with an appealto S imperialist murder by i |perialism are voicing their regrets,|the system which is re for these evils. “If you want to peace in this world,”the “organize and break the t A ‘} Mine Workevs’ Union announces the /ley & Co., bankers. for the Protection of the Foreign |t® go on strike on Tuesday, Aug. 9. “Let eve ‘ker in America be | the tyranny and brutal of ‘4 ine at ile unde Ay : TY nt the warden ot te | MANILA, P. I, Aug. 7—News of| American government.™ We if : ye ig. 7 | ernment.” : poss Oe re ae tee selena Hiei ee otamt Sheldon Fall Nati.| Born, Workers Health Bureau, Unit-| The snpeal says on record against the murder of Sac-| ins death of Major General Leonard ¥ | \ H a Wall Street and its ein: | , i *

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