The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 15, 1927, Page 5

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Cen age SOR EE DAILY WORKER, NW SOT MER AUUUDE 40, L¥E TOUR OF SCENES IN GASE SHOW FRAME-UP OF SACCO AND VANZETTI (Continued from Page One) Where it was impossible to deport) The voice of Mrs. Fruzzeli utters Saccoand Vanzetti, where it was im- the cry of outraged and bludgeoned| possible to charge them with “bomb working class. motherhood of Massa-| plots,” the government found it pos- chusetts, of New. England, of the sible to frame thém up on“*a charge United | States. - Hers is a voice of|of being implicated in payroll hold- pain, much.older, but uttering the samé eryy.as;the voice of Rosa Sac- co, Whogoes:+lailyy to: thes Charles- town, prison, in Boston,.to” visit her ups and, with the thinnest thread of |testimony to lash them in the elec- |tre chair, where it hopes in.another | week to send them to death. husband, Nicola. Sa¢eo, condemned | South Braintree Visited. with: Baitéloiieo Vanzetti ‘to die in| The bullet-holes are still to be seen the elec -ehair a week from this|thru the. stained, wired glass win- Monday midnight. \dows of the shoe factory of Slater During this week, it is the thuhder/and Morrill, They are the sole -re- ery of “America’s working class wom-|uinders of .the shooting that took anhood~ taking up the ery of Mrs.|place here. in South Braintree, April Fruzzeli and Mrs, Sacco, that should; 15, 1920, more than seven years ago.! merge in a mighty, crashing demand!Those shots, however, have been for the release of Sacco and Van-| heard around the entire world be- zetti, a cry irresistible in its strength.|cause the government, instead of It ‘was under the guidance of Ed-| seeking out the reat criminals, the ward Holton James, member of an|members of the Morelli gang of ancient New. England family that has! freight car thieves: and payroll ban-| not lost all of its revolutionary spirit,|dits of Providence, Rhode’ Island, who is'a nephew of William James,/used the incident to frame up the, professor of philosophy at Harvard|two workers, Sacco and Vanzetti. University, that i visited the places| The theory of the “fatal bullet,” in the .yicinity of ‘Boston that have|that one of the five bullets taken been brought into the ‘limelight by | trom the body of Berardelli, the mur- the Sacco-Wanzetti case, now more|dered payroll guard, was fired from than “Seven” years “in” the courts of|the gun that Nicola Sacco was carry- Norfolk County, and the state of | ing when he was arrested on the Massachusetts, and clamoring at the| night of May 5, 1920, in Brockton, doors of the federal government it-|has been thoroly shot to pieces, No! self. Mr. James was sentenced to 75|reputable gun expert has been found days’ in jail for trying to tell the} who will swear to this testimony, truth about the Sacco-Vanzetti case|that Judge Thayer, however, passed | East 14th on Boston Commons, Sunday, August 7. But that has not dampened his ardor in continuing the fight for the! liberation }of these two persecuted workers. - Visit South Braintree. We visited the shoe faetory in South Braintree, where the payroll holdup used in the: frame-up against Sacco and Vanzetti took place; also Bridgewater, where another hold-up was attempted that was charged against Vanzetti, and for which he was convicted and received a sen- tence of 15, years in prison. We spent some time in the Manley Woods, where it is pointed out that an automobile was planted in order to aid ‘the prosecution in-its frame- up. We, travelled the roads over which the “bandit” cars are alleged to have sped on their way, seeking ton as a fact to the jury that brought) in the death chair verdict. Bandit Car Wastes No Time. | We saw the spot where the bandit downhill from the factory, awaiting \the appearance of the bookkeeper jand his guard with the two boxe’ | containing the $15,000 payroll. They jing, the car intmediately began mov- ing uphill, the money boxes were thrown into it, the two bandits jump- {ed into the car, and they were off, lover the tracks of the New Haven Railroad, and down the Holbrook) Road leading to Holbrook, dropping | a rain of tacks on the road as they | +went. It will be remembered that on | the identification of Sacco and Van-) |zetti as the murderers, 95 witnesses; | testified for the two workers, only 59 }car was parked, a little to the east) | eppeared, two bandits began shoot-! an escape; also to the Kelly (the! oy the prosecution. The testimony of | Three K) Shoe Factory where Sacco every material witness of the state worked, and to the cottage where he/of Massachusetts, as to identification, | lived, and then on to the great shoe! has heen completely shattered. town of Brockton, wHere they,were, }erhaps the individual, so far as I arrested. : } sould see as we covered the ground, Two deep impressions stand. out! who could have proved the best iden-| from the seven-hour tour of these’ tification witness for the state, was scenes of payroll robberies, that) Le Vangie, the gate tender of the. swept»this, section-of Massachusetts,; NewrHaven’ Railroad, on duty:at the as ‘Well: as’ thée*entire’ land, in the tine only a ‘short distance tron} years immediately following the close | yhere the shooting and the rolbery of the war. One impression 18 that took place. Le Vangie did not tome of flying automobiles, “bandit cars,”} forward until long after the shooting, that pass thru the larger population! as ‘an identification witness. try roads dodging the main highways | At this late hour, he was brought that swept’ over unfrequented coun-| forward to testify that the bandit car centers. Experienced hands must) droye up to the crossing just as he have been upon the driving wheels of was lowering the gate. He said that the cars, both in the South Braintree’ a man inside the car forced him, at and in the Bridgewater hold-ups, in) the point of a revolver, ta let them addition to well-trained eyes to pick thru before the advancing sain. the right direction at every frequent | Le Vangie identified Vanzetti as| bend, qriving the car, when it has already | Proof of Frame-up. been shown that Vanzetti does not} In this connection it must be re-|}:now ‘Low to drive an’ automobile, membered that neither Sacco norjand has never touched a steering | Vanzeiti has ever owned an automo-! wheel, bile, they have never had their hands | But Le Vangie’s testimony was! upon the steering wheel of a car, nor’ further discredited by the testimony | have they the least knowledge of how of McCarthy, a locomotive fireman of | to drive one, and they have little tie New Haven, who testified that! knowledge of the’ geography of the) three-quarters of an hour after the) PARTY ACTIVITIES | NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY | A special Daily Worker conference | will be held Wednesday, 8 p. m., af the Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 1éth St. All Workers Party units and sympathetic organizations should be represented. * * * Attention, A special meeting of the unit will be held tonight, 6:30 p. m, at 61 East 10th St. Discussion and elec- tion of delegates will take place. All members of the unit are asked to be on time. * * . Night Workers Meet Tuesday. A general membership meeting of the night workers’ section will be held next Tuesday, 3 p. m., at 108 St. Party problems will be. discussed and delegates to the district convention elected. * * “ Help Wanted At Once. Volunteers who can devote some time to the Workers Party campaign ‘should report to Comrade Fralkin at the District Office, 108 East 14th St. The work is very important and must be attended to at once. indication being that the bandits were | trying to make their way toward Frovidence, R. I. Mr. James, who has made a study of the bandit. car’s route, declares that the real bandits must have given at least three week’s preperation to the hold-up. The last seen of the baridit car, according to reliable witnesses, was on the road thru the woods,’ néar North Stough- ton. The defense-urges that the ban- dits came from Providence in a Hud- son car; that they picked up the Buick car in which the robbery was com- mitted in the woods; that they returned to the North Stoughton woods and changed back to the Hudson car, one of the gang not engaged in the robbery driv- ing off in the Buick. Where Sacco Lived. It was while going over this ground | that we came to South Stoughton, where “The Three K,” of Kelly Shoe Factory is located. It was here that Sacco worked, one of Kelly’s best fac- tory hands. South Stoughton is a mere | spot on the map. The factory stands alone on a knoll, a monument to the effort of the owners of industry to take their factories out of the great cities, where the workers are better able to get together and fight in their own interests. loeked. The cottage where read his books, enjoyed jife with his family, worked in the garden and toiled in the factory, one of Kelly’s best. “hands.” Dante might. still be | playing with Kelly’s son, had spent all his time in-the garden and the |faetory, instead of devoting some of it to books, drawing him into the Gal= leani group of Italian radical work- men, which also brought him into the struggles of the workers generally. Michael Kelly, one of the factory cwners, testified to the goo charac- ter of Sacco at the trial, but his brother, George Kelly, trying to in- gratiate himself with the prosecution, | testified that the cap found near the robbery looked like a cap that Sacco used to hang near his machine while working in the factory. These New England factory owners certainly take | a keen interest in their slaves, when Street Nucleus 2F—iD. | Carnival Tickets Must Be Returned.) Carnival tickets mustbe turned jn “at once to Cover paynient of bills in | conneetion with the affair. Seng money to 108 East 14th St. + Fs + Unit 8C-iF, Unit 30-1F mests Tuesday evening, ‘at 6 o'clock sharp to discuss: resalu- tion on G, I. decision and elect dele- gates to section convention. Comrades please be on time. * * * FD2, 8.8.2-A. A very important meeting of FD 2 §. S. 2-A will be held Tuesday, 6.20 p. m., at 108 Bast 14th St. Elections {of convention’ delegates: will | Place. . * * Nucleus 3, Sub-section 3-E. } ‘Faetory District Nucleus 3, section 3-E will hold meeting for | discussion and election of convention | delegates tomorrow at 100 West 28th | St., 6 p. m. sharp. Bring your mem- bership book and be on time, et area Unit 3-E, 1-F. The next meeting of Unit 3-H, 1-F | will be held tomorrow at the head- quarters of the Amalgamated Food | Workers, 183 West 5ist St. The order | of business will be discussion of the \C. I. decision and election of dele- | gates. verting it into a bandits’ lair, in their | effort to get Sacco, Vanzetti and other | |radical Italian workmen. | It is significant that the car was | later turned over to an insurance com- | 4 pany, that in turn quickly delivered to | |a salvage company, that is supposed INTERNATIONAL RE D AID WARNS _ WORKERS OF WORLD THAT SACCO AND VANZETTI STILL FACE DEATH . MOSCOW, Aug. 14.—-The International Red Aid Society to the workers of the world emphasizes the fact that the ex and Vanzetti were only postponed for a few days in ordc in an appeal cutions of Sacco to diminish the pressure of the powerful, international campaign of prote the enormous wave of growing indignation. ing movement of protest for the purpose of tearing these two innoce The appeal and to weaken s fo ereas- work- take | ers out of the hands of the executioners. While other sympathizers with Sacco and Vanzetti have yielded to the iusion that the respite means life for them, the Red Aid knows full well the enormous capacity of the agents of American capitalism for torturing its Labor Organizations Brooklyn Dressmakers Meet Tonight. | All dressmakers working in Brook- lyn should attend a meeting tonight (tight after work at 414 Rockaway | Ave. I, Weisberg and Charles Zim- merman will report on trade prob-| ma. | * ’ * Varnishers Meet Tonight. A general meeting of the Furni- ture Varnishers and Finishers Union| -| will be held tonight at 151 Clinton} St., 8 p. m. sharp. Members of the} union and also those who are not} members as yet are welcome to call at this meeting and join our ranks,}| as this will be the last meeting be-| fore the presentation of our new} agreement to the employers. The} Sub- | Victims and calls for action to overeome such illusions, with the employers of this trade agreement, * “ * Dressmakers Meet Tuesday. All dressmakers working St. will meet right after wo day at Local 22, 16 West 2ist . » « German Festival. The German Workers Club of Manhattan and Bronx will hold their annual summer festival on Aug. 21. Take Boston & Westchester railroad to Dyer Ave. Walk a few blocks to 238d St. THINK OF THE STAINING FUND AT EVERY MEETING! AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Bakers’ Loc. No. 164 Meets ist Saturday in the month at |to have destroyed it, altho it was an, membership is also informed that North Stoughton | It pwas. shortly after twelve o'clock, everyone was home| eating dinner, and the factory was Sacco | lived with Rosa, his wife, and Dante, |. | his son, could be seen from the main |ing the death of Andrea Salsedo, who road, in the rear/of the Kelly man- sion, in spite of the. trees and. the | shrubbery surrounding it. Here Sacco | * territory ‘where the hold-ups were perpetrated. My other impression is of the face, | patient and toil-worn of Mrs, Fruz- zeli, the mother of 16 children, whose. husband, -Giovanni, was ceported to Italy to die after living and working in this country for 28 years, like tens of millions. ef other foreign-born workers, seeking to win a livelihood for themselves and: their families in American capitalist industry. _ Fruzzeli’s: only crime, so far as. 1 could learn was that his name ap- peared upon the subscription list of the “Cronaga Soyversiva” (The. Sub- versive. ronicle), ecilited — Luigi Galles, at 1 gave Pd _naiie™ © Group” of anarchists, to: and Vanzetti are said te have ed, It» was against this’ G group Jof anarchists. that Attorney General: A. Mitchell Palmer Jevelled his bitfér attack before the commit-| tee on rules of the House of: Repre-' sentatives, on June 1, 1920, . ‘Fake “Bomb Scares.” ~ Fruzzeli, Galleani, Coaccio. “and others who lived in this neighborhood were deported: “Agents of the De- partment of’ Justive have confessed, | hovevem that the government coud, TE" get its hands on sufficient evidence to deport either Saeco or Vanzetti. It is claimed that follow- ing Galléani’s deportation that Carlo Treseawet New York, took over the leadership of this group, But in spite of every attempt made by the gov- ernment, during the past eight years to conneét this group with the bomb- ings in Wall Street and Washington, with thé much-advertized batch of bombs “taken in the mails in New York City in May, 1919, and with other “bomb scares,” none of the members of the group has been ar- rested and placed._on trial, charged, with apy?connection with these, = dents. rlo Tresea was in Boston last week to join in the demonst: tion of potest! inst the 1 ‘2 i Panna and i. murder, “Le Vangie said, ‘There was a shocting affair going on.’ I says, | ‘Some one shot?’ £ says, ‘Whé”’ He says, ‘Some one-a feliow got. mur- dered.’ I said, ‘Who did it?’ He said) he didn’t knows... . I asked him if) ‘he knew them. He ‘said, no, he did! |not. I asked him if he would know |them again if he saw them. He said _no. He said all he could see was the ‘gun, and he ducked.” _ Moreover, Le Vangie was diseredit- ‘ed by all the other identification wit- | nesses on both sides, who insisted that the driver of the car was a young small light-haired man, whereas, Van- |#etti ts middle-aged, dark, wit black Sane ae On’ i ty witnesses _ testified “positively that ‘Mone of the men that they saw in the ; murder car: was Vanzetti. Thirteen witnesses either testified directly that Vanzetti was'in Plymouth selling fish on the day of the “murder or fur- -nished corroboration of such testi- mony. Similarly. for Saceo, Who was Shown to. have been. in the Italian consul’s. office in Boston on this day \ getting a passport to go to Italy, The Story of Madeiros, | It isthe story of Celestina Ma- ‘deiros, who says he was a member of the Morelli gang, that this gang committed the robbery, and that: he | (Madeiros) was ‘in the back Séat of | the car as it sped away. ead We followed the trail of the bandit car. More successfuly than did the ‘police, however. While the bandit car quickly left the Holbrook Road at the Hairpin Beh, the police car, that soon followed, continued straight “on to Holbrook, taking some time to dis- cover its mistake, altho, when the po- lice returned to the Hairpin Bend, they found a men standing there who had seen the bandit car take the turn. ¢ pol not stopped to as the fist time aise ra) wa the sel andi fo ge Hem the sin on the of the ban- ti | woods showed no bullet holes. it is to their advantage. Car Planted In the Woods. From here we went to Manley Road, to the Manley House and the Man- ley Woods, It was on an unfrequented road in Manley Woods that Charles | Fuller, a newspaperman, and Max. Wind, a shoe manufacturer, while out horseback riding, found an abandoned ear. They just “felt instinctively” that it was the bandit car. They phoned from the Manley Home to the police at Brockton, who arrived and decided they had made a great find. The fact that the bandit car was supposed to have been green and the car in the woods turned out to be blue, made no difference. When found the car in the Some | one remedied this shortcoming by put- | ting a bullet thru the door, the day jafter it was found. No effort was | made to take any fingerprints on the car, Instead it was handled by all }and sundry and finally driven off to | Brockton. . _ But what was more important for ‘the frame-up, it was charged in the trial that tire marks had been found near the bandit ear that coincided \with tire marks found in the little | garage at the home of Cocecci, friend lof Sacco and Vanzetti, near by. Instead of having the real bandits | woods, as the testimony showed, the prosecution has a fake car discovered in the Manley woods, 10 miles: away in order to bring it near the home of Peruccio Socaccio, which the frame- up gang sought to develop as “The Bandits’ House.” If the frame-up ezvowd couldn’t prove that Cocacci’s house contained a printing plant for the publication of radical literature in the troublous days of 1919-1920; if they couldn’t prove that it contained a plant for the manufacture of “bombs” that were supposed to have been used in the New York Wall Street affair, at the home of At . General Mitchell Palmer, in Washi ton, and other change cars in the North Stoughton | | was also a new car. There could have |been no reason to destroy it, except | to hide facts that might aid in the! | release of Saeco and Vanzetti. Another Family In Coaccci’s House. | Another family is now living in! Coacci’s home. Coacci was taken for | deportation April 16th, the day after |the South Braintree robbery. It was the Coacci home that the police used | in hitching up the Bridgewater at- | tempted robbery of Dec. 24, 1919, with |the South Braintree hold-up of April | 15, 1920. This came as the result of | | the efforts of Chief of Police Stewart | j of Bridgewater to-connect the same “gang” with the two robberies. It jwas thought that an important clew | was. available in the fact that an) | Overland car had been left by Boda, ‘ | who lived with Coacci, with the John- | | son, Garage, in Elm Square, at West, | Bridgewater, to be.traded for a Ford | | roadster., Johngon had been told to notify the police when anyone called for Boda’s car. | “Tt Was of May-5th, the-day foHow- | was hurled from the fourteenth story | offices of thé department of jtstice” in Park Row, New York, that Sacco |and Vanzetti decided to make the! | rounds of their friends and urge them | | to hide any ‘radieal lterature’ they | | possessed, in case of raids. At the {same time they wanted to work up a) | protest meeting against the killing of | Salsedo. For this purpose they needed | lan automobile, to cover the distances {between the factory towns. “They {sought out Boda, who went with them snd. Orciani, another Italian worker, to get the car af Johnson’s garage. | Johnson told them that the car did | not have the right plates and that! |they shouldn’t drive it, using this as_ a.stall to gain time, so that he could \notify the police. They agreed not, |to take the auto. Instead Sacco and | Vanzetti took the street car for Brock- lton, where they~were arrested. upon their arrival. Vanzetti had in his nocket the rough draft of a leaflet for the proposed Salsedo protest meet- ing. | We visited Johnson’s garage: In | the rear, turned upside down and | rusting away in sun and rain, lies the remaines of Boda’s car. Boda disap- peared when he heard of the arrest of | Sacco and Vanzetti. Orciani had an | airtight alibi both for the Bridge- | water and the South Braintree af- fairs. He was Ict go. Sacco was also working all day in) the Kelly factory on the day .of the | Bridgewater affair. So Vanzetti alone , was charged with this attempted rob- bery. He was found guilty and given a sentnce of 15 years in prison, Both‘ Sacco and Vanzetti were charged with | the South Braintree affair. | Visit Scene of Bridgewater Affair. i We visited the scene of the Bridge-_, water robbery in Broad Street, Bridge- | water. One Georgiana Brooks tells of | witnessing the shooting from the rail- (road station. The only trouble is that | | several houses intervene between the | scene of the attempted hold-up and the | station, so she could not have seen it. | Again Vanzetti was charged with | having driven the bandit car, when he does not know how to run an auto- mobile. Again he was said to have | been smooth-shaven, when he has al- | ways worn a long, black moustache. But the facts are of little concern | | when the capitalist state is seeking . the lives of its enemies—of two work- ers struggling for a better day: That is the only conclusion we could reaé@h, 28 we came to Scotland Village, where lived Adeline Yruzzeli, the white- | haired italian mother, with her two sons, her hushand dead, deportee from the United States of America that! asts. out. thinking ‘workers, or: de- stroys them in prisons at home. | In conclusion, as in the hegitining,,| with the declaration of mothe‘m wid- | owed by American capitalism, ~ ) Fruzzeli said: be “T. hope - Sacco.. aad. Vanzetti..are treed. ges the protest of world labor will save the lives of Sacco and Ted thru unfrequented roads, every | places, they night succeed in con-| Vanvatiti.”” x jexhibit in the Sacco-Vanzetti case there will be an important report) |that has not yet been completed. It | of the executive board as to the man-| ner of taking up and negotiatin, $468 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. ¥. Ask for Union Label Bread. ie; ||Phone Stuyvesant 3816 t John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet, 302 E. 12th St. New York = ee, Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5:65. Tel. Lehigh 6023. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Oftice Hours; 9:80-12 A. M. 2-8 P, M. Daily Except Friday and Sunday. 249 HAST 116th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New | | DP RREV ERLE Ne RIE eT Cpe | Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin | Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 wma WHERE DO WE MEDT TO DRINK AND EAT? At the New Sollins Dining Room Good Feed Good Company Any Hour Any Day BETTER SERVICE it 14th Srteet New York I Orchard 3183 Strictly by Appointment | Tet DR. L. KESSLER SURGEPN DENTIST 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. New York FOR A FRESH, WHOLESOMBD VEGETARIAN MEAL Come to Scientific Vegetarian || ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY Restaurant, 75 E. 107th Street New York. = ))\ WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St, Special Rates for Labor Organiza- cs OR OUTSIDE (Bstablished 1887.) u will Be Madison Square Garden --- Organizations and individuals ‘COLLECT for sale at the Bazaar, in the world. DO YOUR BEST TO MAKH NATIONAL BAZAAR DAILY WORKER and FREIHEIT This affair is being held in the biggest. hall Enormous quantities of articles are required. THE BAZAAR A SUCCESS. Held in October 6, 7, 8 and 9th are urged to IMMEDIATELY ARTICLES York. ||| ———— THIRD BLOCK COOPERATIVE —HOUSES— In the Workers’ Co-operative Colony IS ‘United Cooperative Association OPPOSITE BRONX PARK by the BEING CONSTRUCTED | Workers Now is the best time to obtain light, airy, sunny | Apartments of 2-3-4 Spacious Rooms The first block houses is completed and fully oc- cupied; the second block is under construction and rented; the co-opeative stores are to be opened soon; plans for the third block houses are completed. . ; Come now to the office of the United Workers’ | Co-operative Ass’n and 69 FIFTH AVENUE Telephone: Algonquin 6900-6901-6902. | Q@PEN, DAILY TILL 7 P. Mj SATURDAYS, 2 P. M. select the best apartment. All modern equipments and accommodations, cultural as well as so- cial institutions, size of rooms as wellas rent-— is same as that in the second block of houses. a te at | SSSSSESSHSSSSISSIE SSS PISS HSSSSOHSHSSESSSSSOSSSSGESSFOSSSOSSIHSHHTSSs GOSSHSSSSSOOOSOSESE 33 First St., ee aeeeoeeeeeooe ‘. That Bosses Fear and EVERY BOOK REVIEWED OR ADVERTISED IN The DAILY WORKER you will find at THE JIMMIE HIGGINS BOOK SHOP 106 University Place NEW YORK. information write te For The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. Just Off the Press The most authoritative account in English of re- cent-events in China in the new pamphlet Civil War in Nationalist CHINA By EARL R. BROWDER Bu Browder has just returned from six months in China, as @ member of tho Interna- tional Workers’ Delegation, during which he visited over 40 cities and towns, during the pericd cf the Chiang Kai-shek spKt. He spent two months in Hankew, 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- Pacific 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- phiet has many documents, photos, ete. Following is the table of contents of the pamphlet CIVIL WAR IN NA- TIONALIST CHINA By EARL R. BROWDER THE SPLIT IN THE NATIONALIST MOVEMENT Visit of the International Delegation—First Glimpses of the Split—Counter-revo- lution in Kanchow — The Split in the Army—An Tdyll- ic Interlude—Civil War in Kiangsi Province. THE UNITED FRONT AGAINST CHIANG KAI-SHEK Leftward Swing of the Kue- mintang — Development of Revolutionary Foreces— Struggle Against Chiang Kat-shi A Chinese - Favorable the Arm: Ri poleon’ opment n Part of the World tion.” TUE CHINESE LABOR MOVEMENT Historica! Sketch Trade Union Textile Workers’ Union of Wuhan—Wages and Work- ing Conditions in Canton— Conditions in the Interior at Hankow of the Moyement— RARIAN OLUTION nd Ownershi bution—The Be fons. and Dis- asant Un- THE BREAKUP OF THE WUHAN GOVERNMENT Land—The Crucial Question Betrayal of the Generals Perspectives. 25 CENTS | THE DAILY WORKER PUB, CO, 33 First Street, New York» colored cover Y 900000009 H0 282838909 O9OOOFH9S9O899HOH89HHOD0OHOGHHHHDH HO HHH SHS ZO©SEDHIHOGISOSOHHOOTOSOOD

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