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THE DAILY WORKER, tat Fwtes DE WALERAITES TO newman PARTICIPATE IN DAIL EIREANN Some London Rumors. | =—— (By a Worker Correspondent) LOS ANGELES, Calif., August LONDON, Aug. 11.—Belief pre-j yails in political cireles here that the | FIGHT FOR LIBERATION OF SACCO ~ pemnaiS ~~ ANDVANZETTIMUSTGOONSAYS Attractive INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE Ofters | zetti sympathizers had been jailed} | y night. They are CHICAGO, Aug. 11.—The International Labor Defense, thru its secre-| ‘tary, James P. Cannon, has issued the following statement on the new de- |velopments in the Sacco-Vanzetti case: ROCHESTER, N Every policeman, Vv R ment agency in Koc! Malcolm Bruce, | | ¢, cerca areniye ie “The fight ‘will go on. The laboring masses will reply to the respite | Remed cut aa. the Kinland, V. eas A ‘ admini arian Wt) soon be } with a wider and more intense protest movement and a more upsmelned protest strike of 20,000 w Dunba ia eae ay 3 spirit, The workers of America and all civilized people the worldsover will) manding the liberation Joseph a ue iP edna! tare ised ete | protest with greater indignation against this new and more brutal instance for NEW READERS os bat teliiaainas mo aSr ie ee ana 0 nidized by the de. | of the ‘cat and mouse’ game. Sacco and Vanzetti have been suspended be- in which strikers een seriously Je! rdized by t ie - tack upon their p: Jo ion of the Fianna Fail (Republi- { | tween life and death for seven years. agony for twelve days more. History Governor Fuller now prolongs this! knows no parallel for the deliberate | of the Daily Worker themselves and inju ne} | y }can) deputies in the Dail Eireann to | prolonged torture inflicted upon innocent and idealistic men. interfering cops. : 7 foray take the oath of allegiance and as- A ee nA eg a eae coat no cin’ th ig cops. Arrested For Atheism! ee thei ats when the Daily meets | t For our part we will work with all our power and energy in these | a the long 1 kinds of charges have been eae ase A VME ae ee eae i twelve days to help the movement for Sacco and Vanzetti grow in volume These valuable premiums, worth parade, on its | t lay. in Convention I “It is reported that President Cos- NICOLA SACCO and intensity. “Our local organizations" in two hundred cities are already organizing $2.50 each, can be secured FREE - . nasi: ‘ ;, o 7 tr with every subscripti Bemere, Kod i eeien a eaten a new series of protest meetings and demonstrations for Friday, Saturday! , every anhunl Subscription te other missiles 1 convenes, and the laborite land Sunday. The DAILY WORKER or through peer ars Pine pe Ratton ieee “We are advocating protest strikes of the workers everywhere and pre-| Payment of only $1.50 with 20 defended hin | dency vuncil, forming a) new | dict that the strike movement will now take on a volume which will render | the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti impossible.” } Coupess clinned from the News. stand Edition on 20 different days. a cop ‘ee State government, in which the National League Party will be repre- ented. Oath an “Empty Form.” is stated that the Republicans LONDONCOSSACKS Needle Trate Defense > Roosevelt high} trampled. ground. few} summoned on ago. It which ) | | Two other demonstrations workers are in jail—in-| | will not be represented in the bee | ‘ ‘ ———— J i Ws W. Hall, 118% So.} mein the new administration in | | | erontan Carnival We Mekhi Vugpclahie Sacco and Vanzetti ae ae ae w ‘ond | |The Fianna Fai] issued a statement | AND INJURE MANY Lipa hie wee ec ae Sagat, Street, Bronx, which was hired for that date by the Joint Defense Com- |amittee. This Park is the Coney Is- land of the Bronx, All the thrills | obtainable at Coney Island can be en- = | joyed there. There will be a free LONDON, August 11—Scores of | vaudeville show in the afternoon and Pini) ard ao Pee Doe al special performance of the Opera 5 7 |jured in front o: e United States | “Carmen,” by a fine Company, in the | si SEnOLORES Neeer embassy here when London mounted’ evening. It will be sung in the large |police charged four and six abreast} open air stadium of the park, which |into the thousands of marchers who! seats over 10,000 people. A great | were gathering at the embassy. swimming pool filled with ocean| | Ag the horses came on, the front] water where thousands of people can ranks of the masses were crushed| bathe will also be available. Prepare |back upon those behind and the strug-| to spend the most enjoyable day of | Meetings Forbidden. ance to the Free State and the king, | Radical meetings are forbidden;| | which it previously had refused to do, | but the workers have decided to} The statement said the party regards | hold a parade on the east-side to-| | the oath as an “empty formality which | morrow afternoon, Aug. 9th, at 5} |is not binding.” p. m, the same day, there will be| ‘ * a mass protest meeting at the} DUBLIN, Aug. 11. — The Republi- |Plaza. Organized labor (A. F. of|'|can deputies in the Daily Hireann, led | |L.) will participate, according to} |by Eamonn De Valera, today, for the |the master class press. We are} | first time since the establishment of | abs |also informed that shot guns have] |the Irish Free State, took the oath | Sacco Continues Hunger | been cleaned, oiled and ready for) | of allegiance to the Free State Gov-| A | Strike; Both Calm ‘ use. | |ernment and the British Crown. } (Continued from Page One) Scores Are Trampled in Sacco-Vanzetti Parade geccececocece | Just Off the Press The most authoritative account in English of re- cent events in China in the new pamphlet Civil War in Nationalist SOS ay It was the first time the Republican | Case of Two Workers |!eaders had admitted allegiance in any | BOSTON, Aug. 11. — Sacco and | gling crowds trampled one another| the summer on Sunday, August 28th |Before Supreme Court) ; | Vanzetti still live. lor were trampled by the hoofs of the|at Starlight Park. Join the 100,000. } mt |the administration of the oath, th Through the high slitted windows| English Cossacks as they charged.| ¥ * ss ¥. (Continued from Page One) of the United States Supreme Court land Judge George A. Anderson of Fianna Fail had declared that the ac- | of Charlestown prison they glimpsed | 35 of the women were forced to the $185 From Independent Workmen’s tion of the Republicans in taking the | today the pallid light of. another day. | brink of an excavation and shoved in,| Circle. oath of allegiance was “an enipty for- | It was a day they had not expected to |many being seriously injured. Morris Tubiash, General Secretary| oerey GOODWIN No. 2 (Ansco) the United States Circuit Court of| mality which is not binding.” |see, and one which they did not know! ‘The parade, began after a mass| of the Independent Workmens Cirele | Ke CAMERA Appeals had ruled that under the le-| The action of the Republicans was | they were going toesee until a scant|meeting at Hyde Park where A. J.| has sent in a check for $185 to the; “* : Rewitar Pri $2.50 . gal points involved the matter was| generally regarded as a political move | thirty minutes before they were to|Cook, leader of the Miners’ Strike, Defense. He writes that this money | Persia ee: "ate entirely in the hands of the state| toward’ unseating President William|have taken the short march to the/and other speakers addressed the| is the first reply of the Independent | eg eg Ee NU Film. Pictures 24x3%. This that they would not issue a} Cosgrave and his cabinet. By EARL R. BROWDER Browder has just returned from six months in China, as a member of the Interna- nal Workers’ Delegation, during which he visited over 40 citi and towns, during the period of the Chiang Kai-shek split. He spent two months in Hankow, in close touch with the leaders of the Kuomintang, the trade un- ions, the peasants, and other revolutionary bodies. He was also a delegate to the Pan-Pacifie Trade Union Conference, and was the sec- retary of that body. He tells a graphic and authoritative story of the beginnings of the Civil War now raging in Nationalist China. The pam- phlet has many documents, photos, etc. Following is the table of contents of the pamphlet CIVIL WAR IN NA- TIONALIST CHINA By EARL R. BROWDER™ lution in Kanchow — The Split in the Army—An Idyll+ ic Interlude—Civil War in Kiangsi Province THE UNITE AGAINST CHL KAI-SHEK Leftward Swing of the Kuo- mintang — Dev Revolutio: Struggle Ka poleon opments Part of the W tion.” THE CHIN MOVEMENT Historical Sketch Trade Union Textile york Wuhan ing Condit! ConMtions at Hankow, E LABOR in THE AGRARIAN REVOLUTION Land Ownership tribution—The ions. a nd Dis- Peasant Un- uN Crucial Qu of the Gene —Perspectives. 64 pages, colored cover 25 CENTS THE DAILY WORKER PUB. CO. 38 First Street, New York ecceccoscoeses eeeee hdeuieed ikeusedcsoosces GOSSSSESHFSHHWOHGHHSDHOSHSBOSSESS corpus writ. | @| The petition for a writ of error} @ | was brought before Judge Sanderson | of the State Supreme Court with a} affidavits attached recount-| tions by the jurist and| his unfair attitude on the bench in} @ | connection with the radical beliefs of | Sacco and Vanzetti. Their Master’s Voice. An _ investigating committee of Governor Alvan T. Fuller had much of this evidence before it, weeks ago, but it will be remembered, this com-| mittee was made up of two college, presidents and a judge. True to the} |class that endows them, they found! that while the judge was indiscreet| in conversations outside the court- }room, on the bench he was “fair and impartial.” Professor Charges Prejudice. | A new affidavit was brought here | today from Dartmouth College, the alma mater of Judge Thayer. It was from Professor James E. Richardson and told of an alleged statement re- garding radicals by the judge. Judge Thayer, in days gone by was a star infielder for the Dartmouth College| baseball nine. Labor-Republican Compact. It was reported that the Labor Party leaders have agreed to support the Republicans in a campaign to have removed from the Irish Free State constitution the requirement that members of the Dail subscribe to the oath of allegiance. The Cosgrave government is ex- | pected to meet with defeat tomorrow on a motion for adjournment, and the most immediately. General elections are forecast for the near future, i Boston Pickets Continue Fight to Save Workers (Continued from Page One) rested in the police reign of terror today when police raiders found “radical” literature in their room in a West End hotel and when the men failed to explain their presence in the city. They. were held as “suspicious per- sons” and were finger-printed and questioned. The six are Philip Palumbo, 250 New Main street, Yon- Long Conference First. |kers; David Riskin, 180 Hawthorne Before Judge Sanderson agreed on/ street, Yonkers; Luigi Bove, Antonio the exceptions, a conference lasting|Pelegreno and Salvatore Fratali, all ver two hours was held in the|of Waverly street, Yonkers, and Or- udge’s chambers, Defense Attorney | lando Del Duco, New Main street, Arthur D. Hill and Attorney General | Yonkers. Arthur K. Reading were present. | One piece of the “incriminating When. they left the judge’s lobby| pieces of evidence” found in the hotel the attorney general said an agree-|room was a cartoon drawing of an ment had been reached on the bill of|electrie chair with two skeletons and exceptions as it was to go before the|a casket. full bench, anticipating that it would) An explosion in a lunchroom in the be signed. The bill had been roughly |South End today excited police but drafted at the conference and was|investigation disclosed that a gas for a final draft, to be returned te} Cheer N, Y. Delegates. the judge for his signature. Delegations of workers arriving Ask Order For Writ. from New York to aid in the fight The bill goes before the full hench|for the freedom of the framed-up jon the question of whether Judge workers were lustily cheered as they Sanderson was right in declining to passed thru the main streets of the issue a writ of error. If the full|¢ity- bench sustains him in his action the} a a fight for Sacco and Vanzetti before | Fear World Protest. i the supreme. court would be concluded, When asked if the last minute Ful- as far as the writ of error is con-| ler respite was due to the fear on the erned. If however, the full bench | Part ot government officials that the decides he should have issued the|¢xecution of Sacco and Vanzetti writ of error a reseript will be issued | Would result in serious intentional ordering Judge Sanderson to grant |¢2™Plications, Rose Baron, secretary the writ of error and hearings will be-|°f the Sacco-Vanzetti Emergency gin. before a single justice, probably| Committee before leaving for New Judge Sanderson. : | York said, “There can be no doubt Cano: Alu’ Tit Dedliam: | that the pressure which compelled | Governor Fuller to halt the execution * ® * Meanwhile, the situation became |” ‘ ' further involved with the filing of ex-|W@5 due to the nervousness of the U. ceptions at Norfolk County Superior | 5. state department, The tact that Court, . Dedham: Attorney, Hill}Millions of workers in every, Euro- ; 7 ean country demonstrated and pro- planned to go to the Worcester home | Pe@n country I of Judge’ Thayer to dinehba: the pill | tested must. have had the effect of | Sparring our European embassies to of exceptions. This bill may reach the full bench of the supreme court | Peport to. the government that the fat the same time as the other bill, |@xeeution of our innocent comrades making it possible for the full bench| Wil result in serious international to handle the whole question at one | Complications. sitting. mitt The governor's respite was en- @ | dorsed by the executive council, al-| |though two councillors were under- ®@ | stood to have been against another delay, and in favor of going on with} @ the murder, Airship to Steamer. WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—An at- tempt to deliver mail to the steam- ship Leviathan when she is 500 miles out to sea will be made by navy avia- tors on Aug. 21, the Navy Depart- ment announced today. The test is regarded a& supplemental to the ship-to-shore flight which Clarence Chamberlain made from the giant shp recently. Sacco and Vanzetti @® Shall Not Die! sent to the attorney general’s office | range in the kitchen caused the blast.) | electric chair, Fiction writers often feature “an j eleventh hour reprieve.” The twelve- | day respite given to,Sacco_ and’ Van-| | zetti by Governor Alvan T. Fuller, has} j literally that. It was 11:80 p. m. when | Warden William Hendry stalked down | the corridor in front of their cells and informed them that the governor and | his executive council had granted an} opportunity to theircounsel to make one last fight before the ‘state courts | government is expected to resign al-|to save them from the hawning ‘chair/from the sidewalks and all traffic in the room beyond. They were doom- | ed to die afew mimutes past 12 o’clock. A. Well Protected Killing. | Outside the prison were more than | | 800. police and state troopers, heavily | armed. ! | | Behind a “deadline” were bristling | | machine guns and flaring floodlights. | | Their presence attested to the fears and the precautions against trouble that the execution of Sacco and Van- | Zz entailed. In Boston itself and far beyond, in New York, Chicago, London, Paris, Berlin, Moscow, all over the world, were innumerable thousands. waiting word of their death, 2 The men had been garbed for the death chair when the news came. They wore the gray prison trousers and blue and white shirts with short sleeves. All were resigned to their going. Sacco, weak from his 25 days of hunger striking, lay on his cot, his eyes closed. Vanzetti, stronger and more philosophical, rested quietly. | Madeiros was in his cell. Occasionally Vanzetti would break into a low song | in which his own companions in the | adjacent cells joined. “Until August 22.” “Boys,” said Warden Hendry, “the governor has given you a respite un- til August 22. Now I want you to’be | | men, and I‘want you to eat.” “T want you to be men!” | | No one commented at the time on the jeering irony of that request |from the blood stained warden to the men who have stood unflinchingly de- fiant thru seven years of hell! There was silence in the cells for a few moments after the warden made his announcement. Then a sigh from the weakened Sacco, as his compan- ion, Vanzetti, spoke. “T am glad,” said Vanzetti, simply. “J want to see my sister before I die.” Mrs. Saceo Collapses. . The news of the respite was received quietly enough by the men who were resigned to death. But to their fam- |ilies, and to the hundreds of their \friends who have flocked to Boston to | protest their execution it was differ- jent. There were cheers from those | who had been arrested earlier in the | day for pieketing the state house in| their behalf. They went to court to-|| day with light hearts to answer charges: of sauntering and loitering, while there’s life there’s hope. Mrs. Sacco was in a state of col- | | lapse when the news was brought her. She had bade her husband goodbye at the prison yesterday and hurried away to the’ home of friends, Her small daughter, Inez, who is seven,: born after her father’s arrest, cried most of the evening. because, the friends said, she “felt” something was hap- pening. THINK OF THE SUSTAINING FUND AT EVERY MEETING! crowd who pledged themselves in| Workmen Circle Branches to an ap-j model is finely finished and | taxicabs, containing men and women |trampling women and men. thousands to repay like with like if) the United States murders Sacco and} Vanzetti. | At the conclusion of the speeches! the crowd formed for marching .and, with red flags flying and singing the | International, the thousands began| their parade down Park Lane to} Grosvenor Gardens, where the Amer-| ican embassy is situated. | Thousands of spectators watched was halted in the streets as the pro-| cession poured along. Hundreds of in evening dress, had to wait half an! hour until the masses had filed into Grosvenor Gardens. There they were met by 500 police on guard and squads of mounted of- ficers, who charged into the parade Shrieks were heard from the injured and cries of “There are children here” but the} police completed their charge, leaving | numbers of the injured on the square, jammed into doorways in an effort to} escape the brutality of the Cossacks, er escaping down side streets. The crowd at first dispersed, but regathered before midnight and the police again charged it while the men showed fight and miniature battles were begun on the sidewalks. Calling for an anti-American boy- cott in the world-wide drive for the freedom of the framed-up workers, A. J. Cook, secretary of the Miners’ Federation declared: “I warn you and I warn Amer- icans, that if they murder these two men, we shall get even with them. I ask you to take off your hats and pledge yourselves to get even. I am not antitAmerican, but anti-capital- ist. We must boycott America. “British justice is no different from American, justice. Lam more con- cerned with the results of this exe- cution, if it takes place, than with the murder itself. If America kills these two men, it will be murder, and we shall reply and we shall repay.” THINK OF THE SUSTAINING FUND AT EVERY MEETiN peal sent out to them. More will fol- iow. | * Ri SNe Los Angeles Sents $480. | Samuel Fox, the representative of the Defense Committee in Los An-| geles sent in $480 that he has collec-| ted at various meetings of the Work- | ers Party, Co-operative shareholders, | Workers’ Conferences in the Needle | trades section of the T. U. E. L., and| other collections and donations. | * Ho cce } East New York Workers Club Sends $35. | Branch 84, Workmen’s Circle sent | in $5 for stamps sold-by Eva Walter | member of that Branch. of At a party given in honor of a new born baby of Comrade Cherno-| brod, a collection was made by Pearl- man and Scoller which brought in} $10.00. | Hannah Kaplan, a member of the Cloakmakers Women’s Council No. 1) was present at a birthday party in} honor of the 3 year old child of a} friend, Gelfand, and collected $14.00. This should serye as an example for all others. Make it your duty to col- lect money for the imprisoned cloak- | makers and furriers. = * Defence Ball in Bronx Saturday | The Workers Youth Club of the! Bronx will gather the Bronx friends! of the defense at a concert and ball, which is being arranged by the Bronx | Workers Youth Club for the Joint De-| fense, next Saturday August 6th, at 1347 Boston Road. The entire pro- fits will be given to the’ Defense. Feldman has donated the services of his orchestra for the evening. * * * Bronx Youth Club Arranges Ball. The Workers Youth Club of Bronx is arranging a concert and ball for the coming’ Saturday, August 6, 1927, at 1347 Boston Road. The profits of this affair will be turned over to the Defense Committee to help support the furriers and cloakmakérs. M. Feld- man is donating the service of his or-, chestra for the evening. Besa Siete COA | BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS Convention Elections Soon! | Have You Ore of These in Your Dues Book? ‘BUN If not, YOU CANNOT VOTE! See your Nucleus Secretary today. Tomor- ' t ' { ' ‘ ' ' ' ‘ * ' ' ' row it may For Assessment Stamps, Inquiries, Remittances, On Sale of Stamps, ete., write to: NATIONAL OFFICE 1118 WEST WASHINGTON be too late, BLVD, CHICAGO, ILL. complete in every detail. Has two finders for Vertical er Horizontal Pictures. Adapted for Time or Snap- shot exposures. Highest quality Meniscus lens. With ..book of instructions. NOC ec rararacncae] STORIES, PLAYS REVELRY brie by Samuel Hopkins Adams No.3 A story of the corrupt regime of Harding, Hughes, Coolidge. An inside view of Laeys American political lite. offer ELMER GANTRY No.3 by Sinclair Lewis The famous author of Bab- bitt has given a fine rendi- tion of the hypocrisy and .3ham of the American clergy. EMPEROR JONES by Eugene O'Neill i and other plays Includes the popular plays veeess Gold” and “The First Man.” eee MARXIAN CLASSICS HCONOMIC THEORY OF THE LEISURE CLASS by N. Bukharin Thoughtful Marxist read- ers will find in this book @ guide to an understanding of the ideologists of the mod- ern bourgeoisie. The book is written by the foremost ,.Marxian theorist of the day. \ ‘LITERATURE AND REVOLUTION by Leon Trotsky A brilliant criticism of present. day literary group- ings in Russia, and a dis- cussion of the relation of art to life. Offer No. 4 Offer No & Offer No. 6 MARX AND ENGELS by D. Riazanov A, striking’ account of the lives and {theories and prac- tical achievements of the tounders of scientific sociale ‘iam, by the Director of the seeeeesMarx-longels Institute, [pear serene wrap | These Offers Are Good Only Until August 31, 1927. Offer No. 7 COUPON 8- DAILY WORKER $2 First Street, New York, N. Y. Inclosed herewith you will find dollars for a months’ subscription $1.50 or with my 20. NEWs- STAND COUPONS...... fea Please send me Offer No, Name .. Address .. city desenee eee seven epeeseves eis Poe eee ey