The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 23, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW Y cee TU ESDAY AUGUST 23, 1927 BOSTON PICKETS MARCH DESPITE POLICE TERROR | Scores Arrested in Big, Demonstration (pecial to th BOSTON, Aug. picket lines had been br: raids and wh Vincent Millay poetess. Prof: Ella | Reeve Bloor. Ma caret Hatfield, head | of Mount Airy private school, Powers | Hapgood. youne militaat mine leader | who has already been arrested twice for Sacco-Vanzetti demonstrations placed under ar- he picket line and ; y Worker). Mfter four | n by poliee | Known i PARAS There Sacco, Vanzetti Are Murdered! ‘Last Legal Atterpts f for Sacco, Vanzett (Continued from Page One) At 10.40 Governor Fuller closed the | last door of hope for Sacco and Van- zetti. He refused to grant any fur- ther respite to the two doomed men, His answer was made to Miss Luigia Vanzetti and Mrs. Rose Saeco who made a last impassioned plea to the governor when less, than two hours life remained for the two work The women were accompanied dur- ing their visit to the governor by at- torney Michael Musmanno of the de- fense counsel and William G, Thomp- son, former head of the defense 4egal forces, and his son. The party left the state house shortly afterward. A constant stream of eallers waited ig? Gov. Fuller all evening and pleaded for a respite for Saceo and Vanzetti. Mrs. Rose Sacco, Miss Liugia Van- Zetti, Arthur D. Hill, chief of defense counsel—all were dismissed casually {by the governor who told them te demonstarting in front of the State | “produce more evidence.” Flanked by House. lthree of his hard-boiled legal advis- Hapgood was taken away to the! psychopathic hospital where he will | be held for an ‘ Hee one of the most brie n his class at Warvard ng the Boston cossacks j a good deal of trouble, and his arrest is a frame-up to keep him from lead- ing new protest demonstrations. Mrs. James S. Cram and J. Borden Harriman have left New York for this city fo join the protest. It is said that they have in their possession a plea from Mrs. Thayer, wife of Judge Web- ster Thayer, who sentenced the men to the chair, for the release of Sacco and Vanzetti. * * * BOSTON, Aug. .—Four groups of picketers, maintaining a death march in front of the state house in protest against the execution of Sac- co and Vanzetti, had been arrested by the Boston police up to 1:45 o’clock this afternoon. Among those arrested were John Howard Lawson, playwright; Harry Cantor, of the Work (Communist) Party; Paula Halliday and Alfred Baker Lewis, of the socialist party.| Despite police terrorism and at-| tempts to smash demonstrations at the state house, pickets continuel to demonstrate before the state house. As the picket lines began to increase in size and as crowds of spectators began to boo Governor Fuller and to} demand the unconditional release of | Saceo and Vanzetti the police made their charge * * * German Workers Theatening BERLIN, Aug. 2: So high is feel- ing over the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti running among the workers of Germany that the United States Ambassador Shurman fears to enter or leave the embassy without a guard of secret service men. Thousands of letters protesting the action of the Massachusetts Supreme Court in up- holding the death sentence are pour- ing into the embassy. Many of the letters bear the name of prominent Germans. ee eee Japan Workers to Boycott U. S. TOKIO, Aug. 22,—Following the sending of a cable to President Cool- idge protesting against the killing of Saceo and Vanzetti, labor organiza-)| tions have covered the entire city with | a rain of handbills and posters call- ing on the Japanese workers to boy- cott American goods. A monster mass, meeting has been called at which prominent Japanese labor leaders will speak. The police have promised not to interfere, but it is expected ‘that they will attempt to break up the protest. Extra guards are being thrown| about the American embassy as ex- citement rans at fever pitch, » French Workers Aroused, MARSEILLES, France, Aug. 22.— Hundreds of workers assembled here | in a huge meeting to protest against | the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti. | Speakers from all branches of the la- bor movement addressed the workers, outlining the history of the case and calling on the international working class to strengthen the protest against this legalized murder. Police were present but did not care to in- terefere. Protest meetings and demonstra- tions haye been held at Avignon, Limoges, Nimes and many other towns and centers thruout France, ¥ * * Brest Council Cables Coolidge. BREST, Franec¢, Aug. 22—The municipal Council has passed a reso- lution asking for mercy for Sacco and Vanzetti. ‘The resolution has been cabled to President Coolidge, * * % HAVRE, France, Aug. 22.—Several were injured when police here inter- fered with a meeting that was being | held to protest the legal murder of | Saceo and Vanzetti. The police had! refused permission to hold the meet- ing and when the crowds assembled tried to disperse them. The workers resisted and the police used foree. Excitement is high among the work ers thruout France, and __ special! guards are being maintained at all | United States official buildings. i * * * Atlanta Protest Meeting. ATLANTA, Ga. Aug. 22—At a huge mass meeting in which hundreds here participated, and labor and sym- pathetic organizations took part, | resolutions denouncing the action of | the Massachusetts Supreme Court in upholding the death sentence for Sacco and Vanzetti and demanding their immediate liberation were passed. Copies of the resolutions were sent to Judge Webster Thayer and President William Green, of the Bmoavicns Podesation of Lakyy, They Fear Their Own Crime! By JOHN DOS PASSOS. Sacco and Vanzetti died tonight. The trembling hand of an old man reached for the switch that threw the current of hate, terror and death into the bodies of two great men, two young men who went to their death with their eyes open to a new sun rising over a festered world. In the state house the head of the lynehing party sat in his office keep- ing the mask of strength and fair- ness to the last. In comfortable country homes well-guarded by riot embers of the commission, es, the attorney-yenerals, on whom the guilt of this seven-year‘long assassination rests, sat in their easy chairs. They have proved to the world that they are masters. Whoever their class wants to kill, they kill and protests are mere eiapty wind. Only one member of the committee has broken and run, Judge Stratton sailed for Eur- ope yesterday. If they are so sure, why the terror? Why have they had to mobilize state constabulary | with riot gurs, tear gas and ma- chine guns for their protection? Why have they had to resort to futile tricks like kidnaping Powers Hapgood and hiding him in an in- sane asylum for fear he would make aspeceh? Was one speech going to overthrow the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The government lynchers in their silk hats and in their comfortable swivel chairs, sitting at their ma- hogany desks are afraid of the crime they seareely darcd commit. Beyond the hurizon they hear the rumble of marching feet. They know that they are dead stinking corpses, and that Saeco an¢ Van- zetti whom they kill are 2live—a million men marching on Boston under the fiery sun of the future. Put Sacco and Vanzetti Placards on Car Charged with obstructing traf- fie, Herman Zukofsky, was arrest- ed in front of the Sacco and Van- zetti Emergency Defense head- quarters yesterday. Zukofsky was putting placards demanding free- dom for Sacco and Vanzetti on his automobile when the police made their arrest. He was held at the Mercer St. station for the night ABC OF COMMUNISM By BUCHARJN and PREOBRAZHENSKY IN A NEW CLOTH-BOUND AND COMPLETE EDITION Just Received from ENGLAND The authors were commis- sioned by the Russian Com- munist Party to write a com- plete and simple explanation of Communism, The student will find this book a gem of Communist teachings. It is the onty edition con- taining the complete text— printed on thin India paper to make a most attractive book for your library and for $1.50 Cloth Bound The Daily Worker Pub. Co. 33 First Street NEW YORK, of ers, | Fuller was deaf +o aioe At 9 p. m. Warden Hendry Sacco and Vanzetti that they are to die. “We must bow tu the inevitable,” was Vanzetti’s comment. Thousands of workers started to march on Bunker Hill from the north end at 11,55 tonight. They were broken up at ence by police who rushed them into disorder. They immed ly reformed their pro- cession and again started. Clashes were frequent. Police swinging their clubs mercilessly. At Buxker Till. of mounted men pleas. otified Squads mu from the prison to break up the work- | ers. Machine guns were mounted on Bunker Hill, Mounted cops, and foot police. guns, rifles and ¢ outside the Char a few minutes tal of “any state fortified lubs cor been reervited for emergency,” in the words of | SYDNEY, Aug. Sacco and Vanzetti. * TOKIO, Aug. the doomed prisoners. hear the protest of Japanese labor. | line: ments in the case. praying over Sacco and Vanzetti. * LONDON, Aug. 22.—A protest Britain has been cabled to President Coolidge, calling on him to pardon | | ITALIAN LEGION CABLES COOLIDGE. | | | “to oblige humanity and Italian blood.” * * . Sacco and Vanzetti x PARIS WORKERS APPEAL. Aug. 22.—A delegation of 70 workers’ called at the United States embassy here and presented a plea for The American charge d'affaires refused to listen The delegation was headed by Piquemal, head of the left wing in the French trade union movement. * ® * | SWEDISH WORKERS STRIKE. Aug. 22.—A general strike to protest against the legal murder of Sacco and Vanzetti has been called here. downed tools with an enthusiasm that alarmed the authorities. ing runs high and the workers are demanding a boycott of all American PARIS, Saeco and Vanzetti. to the appeal. STOCKHOLM, | produets. | * * \ FRENCH PROTEST MURDER. | PARIS, Aug. 22.—French radical newspapers today printed last | hour appeals in behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti. The Communist newspaper L’Humanite published a demand that President Coolidge intervene, citing the Mooney case in California in 1917 when President Wilson intervened. “It is most significant that everywhere in Europe and the entire world today the Star Spangled Banner must L’Ouevre commented: be guarded by armed forces.” * out altho the union officials refused exceed in numbers the strike of workers went out. * and Vanzetti. | doomed workers. * * gram runs, carriage of justice.” * City Hall here. Several prominent crowd who had gathered in hundreds to protest. The meeting was held under the auspices of the Stamford Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Com- mittee. MURDERER IN ITALY CONFESSES T0 CRIME FOR | WHICH SACCO AND VANZETTI HAVE BEEN DOOMED; | AMERICAN AMBASSADOR WON'T HEAR NEW EVIDENCE (Special to The DAILY WORKER) | CHICAGO, Aug. 22. proof that Sacco and Vanzetti did not commit the crime for which they have been sentenced to burr by the Massa- ehusetts overlords is contained in two cablegrams received by the Interna- tional Labor Defense from the Inter- national Red Aid. signed by. Jacob Schloer, secretary. | The first eablegram says: “The , Vossische Zeitung of Berlin today re- ports that the real participant in the murder and hold-up of Parmenter was | found by a Berlin architect in Italy.” U. 8. Ambassador Accomplice. Declaring that the American am- bassador in Italy is aiding in the mur- | der of Sacco and Vanzetti by refus- ing to listen to the new evidence, the ‘second cablegram says: | “The Berlin architect, who saw the real person in Rome who committed H Sak Geowey ~ STRIKE EVERYWHERE F OR Sacco AND VANZETTI SYDNEY WORKERS 2.—All members of the seamen and other unions dowrled tools here in a strike to protest against the electrocution of Posters and placards have been put up thruout the city and the feeling among the workers is intense. i peri. * * 1 TOKIO POLICE the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti. | when an enraged worker tried to force his way into the American embassy in an effort to compel the United States officials abroad to ing which the police had promised not to interfere. * - | PRAVDA FRONT PAGE APPEAL. " | MOSCOW, Aug. 22.—The entire ‘front page of Pravda has been dedicated to the appeal for Sacco and Vanzetti. “Save the Proletarian Martyrs,” up of dispatches from the United States telling of the latest develop- A cartoon represented the American hosses as a top-hatted snake, about which were strewn crucifixes and swastikas, * OVER 20,000 ROCHESTER WORKERS STRIKE. ROCHESTER, Aug. 22.—Thousands of workers went on strike here in protest against the killing of Sacco and Vanzetti. strike was taken by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers who walked ers were joined by others from many trades. * * YOUNGSTOWN GENERAL STRIKE. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Aug. 22.—Thousands of workers downed tools here in a general strike to protest against the execution of Sacco The strike call was issued at a mass meeting in the Ukrainian Hall which was aaddressed by Carl Hacker, secretary of the Cleveland International Labor. Defense. | Plans. for organizing a death watch were under way late last night | as the watchers awaited the final developments in the case of the two EDITOR PROTESTS. Amos Bertacchini, editor of United America, has protested in the | name of his readers against the electrocution of Sacco and Vanzetti. n the name of many thousands of readers,” Mrs. Bertacchini’s tele- “we go on protest against the execution of the two 4nnocent leaders of the working class sentenced to death thru a positive mis- | & * STAMFORD PROTESTS AT CITY HALL. STAMFORD, Aug, 22.— meeting to protest against the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti was held yesterday evening on the steps of the Certain | terview. of the Boston police | the death sehaciber: desman i he shook jad department. with his guards. The victims of one of the most cold-| Then he sat down in the chair with- blooded judicial murders ever record- | out any instructions and said: “I wis! ed, Sacco, shoeworker, and Vanzetti, a fish peddler, were framed-up as a result of a conspiracy between agents of the department of justice and a jcommitted a crir I thank you for am innocent of ail petty Masse chusetts prosecuting at-|this one but of all crimes. I am an torney as q means of aispcsing of |innocent man.” them as “dangerous radicals,” The proceedure the death cham- Never in the history of the world | ber was still and grim, W en Hen- labor moyement has there a s gave the signal. Robert ©, Hllictt, a-thunderous mass fury again assassination of these two workers by the mill-owners of New Tngland. ly. In every country of the world, work- ers by the thousands joined in angry xecutioner, was standing at the h and caught the signa! instant- He pushed the switch in with a hand. The lights went dim. The viec- tim in the chair gave a lunge that protests against this iniquitous crime. made the strong leather straps creak. y| With cold contempt the oif of the |After ten ids the switch was Massachusetts proceeded h the gradually drawn out, bui nct ail the plans for the murder, way. The lights grew bright again. Vanzetti Speaks. In another t conds the switch nzetti made a short talk in!was forced in again. More dim lights. | which he protested his innocence. He |There was second lunge by the victim was cool and collected. Ar he entered ‘but we r than the first. . : ~~ | Thousands in Union | pRop TOOLS. Sq. Sing International When the twelve th. ers gathered at Union usand ie Square until ARREST 31. 22.—Twenty workers were arrested here when the i 11 a. m, learned that the Massachu- Japanese police broke up a monster mass meeting to protest against | bother oli, eiche bad alle ‘dears Later ten more were arrested on || joncd Sacco paar z Vanrélil iter | their way to petition the United States embassy for the liberation of seven long Tosi of toriinm ebhey Another arrest was made yesterday morning broke into the International, : Scores of women fainted when the news of the murder was flashed on the board. Hundreds of policemen, heavily armed, watched the demonstration. When it was announced that! Sacco and Vanzetti were murdered the crowd groaned—then booed and hissed. Scores of women fainted. A new march to City Hall was then started. Armored cars tried to pre- vent them from continuing. e ® WARDEN MAY NOT The Srrests were made at a meet- Under a huge head- appeared a page of news made from the Italian Legion in Great representatives OF MURDERED MEN BOSTON, Aug. —Massachusetts | jearries its cruelty beyond the grave. Tt was very plainly intimated today \at the warden’s office that the rela- | tives and friends of Sacco and Van- zetti, the workers who have braved | police clubs in the effort to save them | . j will not be given their bodies to bury. | Prison quicklime for them. When Sacco and Vanzetti aye thizers began talking today about the big demonstration they would have| | at the funeral of the men, the author- | | ities became silent and started look- ing up the law. Deputy Alexandre All workers Feel- to give up the bodies unless they choose. The executed men, under the z, law, can be buried in quick time. But be done. In all probabilities the bodies { will be held for a post mortem and} surrendered to relatives after the {feeling dies down and then only on Initiative in the to call a strike. The clothing work- The strike is expected to two weeks ago when over 20,000 | b€ Private and quiet. remains to be seen. But all that One Killed, 25 H Hurt In Geneva Protest (Continued from Page One) streets, gathering sympathizers as they marched. The agitators attack- ec several of the big hotels and Amer- (6 \iean shops, and broke all the windows ‘in the American Legation Building, the dispatch states. Revolvers were used freely by |the demonstartors and it is believed jthat a check-up will reveal a toll of | casualties greater than now estimated. An American garage was partly destroyed. The police station, where five lead- is who had been arrested were lodg- ed, was stormed and those incarcer- ated were freed by the sympathizers. City Councillor Albaret, who attempt- ed to interfere, was stoned and re- moved to the hospital. speakers addressed the enthusiastic TWO PAMPHLETS | on the Sacco -Vanzetti Case By Dr. Michael A. Cohn | Brooklyn, N. Y. SOME QUESTIONS AND AN APPEAL ‘Thirty-two questions expos- ing the unfairness of the trial of Sacco and Vanzettl, together with an appeal for their immediate release, Price Ten Cents, TWO WORLDS An imaginary speech dellv- ered by Bartolomeo Vanzetti before Judge Thayer: Why Sentence of death should not be pronounced on him and Nicola Sacco. Price Twenty-five Cents, the crime, gave the newspapers an in-| We are convinced of the'}| truth of the statement. We are in! Possession of a drawing of the per- son. The witness is rely’ to make a statement under oath) before the! American ambassador, |itt the am-| bassador declines to see him, declar- ing that he is too busy.” | Wy The Vossische Zeitung is the big-| gest paper in Berlin. Both cables. have been forwarded to the Sacco- Vanzetti Defense Committee at Bos-| ton to be used by the attorneys for a} stay of execution, | AA ad We NAR iH Send orders to— Hairspinners’ Union Disbonds. | INDEPENDENT SACCO- CHICAGO, Aug, 22 (FP). — The'}| VANZETTI COMMITTEE to tell you I am innocent and never | everything you have done for me. I| rime—not only of THER NAMES WILL BE Upon News of Murder | THE result of this act of barbs GIVE UP BODIES They found that they do not peat no one would say that is what will} |an agreement that the funerals will) 1.—Justices Faft and refusing to permit their case to preme. Court. 2.—Judg stay execution. decision. 3.—Assistant k of Massachi He had been apy Attorney Gen would open files of Department Fuller or Pres. Lowell 4.—A new action of a “ wm the United States District C Arthur Garfield Hayes, New Ye delphia and Frank P. Walsh, Ne vould ma ators David I. Walsh of Ma Idaho, chairman of the Sena 6.—At 10:47, a little more t Gov. Fuller refused last plea of Vanzetti. (Ci ntina wad fro HEY took two simple workers. crucified them on the cross of Ma hat henceforth political and economic in America. ity w and Vanzetti—shall become—they j herited workers throughout the world future battles of the class war—they ever workers will gather—they will | engage in the bitter struggle for a finer, HROUGH their seven yea infinitely superior to th jand Thayer and Lowell are | be yet unborn poets. ir prosec | pitiable fate with calm courage and j Roxuicness of their plight with cool | death house and placed them forever ; They died as all true revolutionists | messages to their class. pus venal murder is proof undenia little to hope for from the courts |remain under the heels of the master class. |today to inflame the hearts of the toilers of in the past fifty years in the history seared bodies of our comrades but leay |cal agents of their decadent class. Stone new —Federal intervention was sought thru T chusett Foreign Relations Committee. long since t properly belongs—with the Fullers, and Brandeis in ited States Su- joined ees 1e8 to the Ll be brot Court declined to riday and reserved usetts Superior vealed to last eral Farnham announced that he of Justice relating to case if Gov. ke an of ficial request. and ture” was filed lawyers— her Kane, Phila- startl ourt by thre ork; Francis w York. g na famous ited ian. States Sen- E. Borah of nd Wi before the execution, nd Miss Luigia han an he Mrs. Rose Sacco a SHOUTED IN FUTURE CLASS WAR BATTLES” m Page One) and a fish peddler—and a warning to thinking workers he es shall be punishable by death ill be are far-reaching. The names—Sacco symbols for the disin- 1. Their 1 names will be shouted in all will be whispered with reverence where- hecome watchwords for all who would a better, system of society. s of fiendish torture our innocent comrades rose When Fuller forgetten Saceo and Vanzetti will utors and executioners. ioe our sorrow we are proud to remember that our dead comrades met their steadfast hearts. They met the tragic dignity that raised them out of the in the hearts of their fellow-workers. die, with quiet manner and faithful ble that the workers of America have and social institutions as long as they Massachusetts has done more America than anything else of the class struggle. We accept the e the cause of future class strife where the Thayers and the Lowells as typi- | DISTORY will record that in the second American revolution blood flowed where it did in 1776—in Boston. T is said that the American public ‘and Vanzetti died this morning, but | measurably more potent came into thi ee NEGRO CONGRESS OPENS WITH GALL TO CO-OPERATION | All Workers to Battle | Only thru Racrerntion between the | Negro workers andthe white workers {ean the problems of the Negro be solved, William Pickens, field secre- tary for the Association for the Ad- | vancement of the Colored People de- clared in his opening address to the | Fourth Pan-American Congress which is being held at St. Mark’s M. E. Church. Common Interest of all Producers. “The proletariat, the workers, the | producers of the goods of human so- \eiety are beginning to sense a com- | mon interest in a common cause, a need for mutual support in Moscow, in Hankow, in Paris and in Passaic,” Prof. Pickens said. | Declaring that the negroes were en- but because they were easy to exploit Pickens added, **The Negroes of Afri- ca were enslaved because they offered the greatest return for the smallest amount of outlay and effort to the slave hunter. They were enslaved not because they were black but for offer- ing a resistance of spear heads to powder-driven bullets.” Warns Against “Good” Imperiali Pickens warned the Negro congress against the danger of believing that any one of the imperialist powers is better intentioned than the others. The French he said are careless about labor wherever they can, notably in| North Africa. Thirteen countries besides the Uni- ted States are represented at the congress. There are delegates from| all over the world, from Latin Amer-| ica and the’ Antilles, Asia and} Africa. Prof. Pickens who was a delegate | ference in Brussels is reporting on it to the present congress. * * The Colored Worker By ESTHER LOWELL. What is the situation of colored workers around the world and what is to be done about it? These two| questions are among the problems of | darker peoples to be considered by the 4th Pan-African Congress meeting in New York Aug. 21-24, says Nina G. Du Bois. executive committee of the Circle for Peace and Foreign Relations, spon- The Circle is “an organization of American women who believe in the universality of the race problem,” their first bulletin on the congress states. Mrs. Du Bois’ husband, Dr. Hairspinners’ Union, chartered by the American Federation ot Labor as Fed- | eval Union 10,299, has dishonjed, ‘ NEW YORK CITY | 48 CANAL STREET | W. E. B. Du Bois, has been prominent in all past congresses and is editor of The Crisis. organ of the National holy task to see that this infamy is never forgotten. Pan- African E Body Calls, slaved not because they were black,| the color line but they exploit Negro) tr to the recent Anti-Imperialist Con- | Mrs. Du Bois is a member of the} sor of the 38rd and 4th congresses. | We will make it our The bodies of Saceo something greater, cleaner, and im- e world when the unharnessed bolts of forgets easily. ; burst into their tortured bodies, Mexican Token ra. | U. S. Supreme Court of — Danger of Injustice | MEXICO CITY, Aug. 22!_Reso- | lutions declaring that Sacco and| Vanzetti are “the victims of capi- | talism on whom it has concentra- | ted its hate,” were sent by the | delegates to the Mexican Federa- | tion of Labor now in session here | to the Chief Justice of the United | States Supreme Court to warn him | of the consequences that may be| expected from the murder of the} two work i “Two 1 protest b | tion prepa rld the ac- | our com-| rades Sa anzetti,” the | telegram e United States | Supreme Court should act with | justice and avoid the serious con- | sequences which would move the} entire proletariat of the world.” | Association for the Advancement of ;| Colored People. “The organization of commerce and so as to make the main ob- r than the enrich- s one point for- of the m. ing of mulated'by the executive at the 3rd congress. Another was world dis- armament and the abolition of war, but the right of blacks to bear arms in their own defense pending whites’ disarming. Another called for aho™ tion of slavery and the liquor traffic. The congress will bring together delegates from Negro groups in dif- ferent sections of Africa and from | the We: ies, though the bulk of representati will be from the or- ganizatio: an Negroes or come 4 uals from this coun- an delegates include ieee wh clapped into prison jon a flimsy pretext by president Louis Borno as they were about to | sail for the Pan-American Federation }of Labor convention in Washington. |History of Vanzetti- Sacco Case Is Sent to U. Ss. S. Ambassadors “Aug. 22. — The s sent to every diplomatic agent thruout a complete history of the etti case. rs ago e state depart- mi ent sent a similar statement to its |agents in every country. The pre- | sent document, it is statedjhas not world the been revised in y way. (At that | time it deemed ‘wit t all United States diplomats fully informed due to the | behalf of Sacco and Vi workers in the various |doubtedly the present | strike wave has resultedyin sent statement being sent ®u BUENOS AIRES, it 21.—The United States sent to-all newspapers:angeconmteat. the Sacco-Vanzetti case ee public 9pinion.”

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