The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 24, 1927, Page 5

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mist. in Lenard With Labor Delegzgon Sees ‘New J Wor'# There \ menage (Special to the Daily Worker). MOSCOW, Aag..23.+7 jican labor de‘epation has left Len- jingrad goitg to different towns-of jthe Unica of Socialist. Soyiet-Re- |public’s, Before leaving, “James: jMarter, chairman of the delega- |tien, stated that not oniy himself. |$ut the whole delegation is -con- |vinced that a new. world-is heing., built in the U, S..S. R., whereas.the old world is dying. = » Maurer said: “I would like -to: come here again after five or Six’ THE DALLY WOR 0. OF J. FILES; © WASHINGTON, Aug. 23.—Work-| erately against time, three) ys of international. fame were | in. Washington but a few hours be- fore. .the electrocution of Sacco and Vanzetti, secking to pry open the lid onthe. department of justice files. They were Frank P. Walsh, who} |gained renown as chairman of the} industrial relations eommission; Ar- thur Garfield Ha New. York at-| “EULLER OFFERED. | Sexo an! Vane Bods | To Be Cremated; Prepare - For Memorial Meetings BOSTON, Aug. 23.—Sacco and! Vanzetti will be cremated in about three days. ~ Vanzetti's ashes will be taken back to Italy by his sister, Luigia. Sacco’s ashes will be lrept by his wife. This was announced afternoon after here this several other had been considered ‘by friends and} relatives, Nevertheless . monster memorial meetings will be held} thruout the country. plans for disposing of the bodies! / f f KER, NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1927 Page Five 4 Dead---They Live! ¥ Their spirits march to no slow drums of death. Let fall no tear! Their bodies have been slain— Their spirits, freed ‘by one hot, blasting breath, Now march with ‘those who have not died in vain. % Unleosed from narrow prison cells they go With giant strides through all the earthly lands. Red banners flaunt about them, and to show The way bright terches flame in mighty hands. They're marching, marching in the night. Unshackled now they move with steady tread And eyes that glance neither to left nor right Within the ranks of Jabor’s martyred dead. » ‘tration last night when one person | 4) There aw: 1) ~ Against torney for the Liberties .Union; | jahd Francis Fisher Kane, former U.| district attorney at Philadelphia. Put it up to Fuller. | years, Iam sure that by that.time you will obtain the same ‘results’ | |in the way of technicai achieve- )S. | ments as America does. It is like a miracle, but American workmen || ‘Following a three hour conference | are unaware of the wonderful) | with-Acting Attorney General Far-| things going on here.” |num, they wrung from him: consent | —— —~«:| for Governor Fuller, President: Lowell | or Attorney General Reading of Mas-| husetts to ‘inspect the department’, files relating to the case. An entire yoom in the department’s building is devoted to the storage of files. con-| Workers of Geneva cinta i Telegrams ‘were dispatched im- President’ Lowell, asking them to in-| the Murder GENEVA, Aug. 23.~<Drastié police precautions were taken today to guard he United States consulate building ollowing the Sacco-Vanzetti demon- respite. The statement of the defense | counsel with the telegrams were re- leased to the press associations | | through Federated Press. Governor Fuller's laconic refusai to do anything that might interfere with the electrocution of innocent men is now known tothe world. The department, through J. Edgar Hoover, chief of its bureau of in- | vestigati n, on the same day ver- mitted the release of an inspired story by William Hard explaining what it choose to regard as its attitudte toward Sacco and Vanzetti, Hoover, although not quoted directly, adopts | the same attitude he held in an inter- view obtained vecently by Federated *| Press. It is that: | Saeco and Vanzetti were under sur veillance as members of the Galleani group of anacrhists. The department ‘already had Salsedo and Elia, other | as killed and 30 wounded, including ‘ive. policemen. Fourteen arrests were made. A demonstration of 5,000 that had zathered in Plain Palais—the Central Park of Gen -marched through {he streets. Hotels and stores were \-ittacked and all the windows inthe |) Ynited ‘States consulate were smash- considerable pillaging. fter charging the mob three times | |he wolice Nually dispersed it. There he <Cormmuniates planned another de- members, in custody. Salsedo was} The department placed a spy, Car- 9 tioned in the court room during the The department spied on members ‘men and a civilian are recovering | bers of the Galleani group to see if Square last night in a final protest! ing.”-No action was taken against the |} cop had beat him and struck back.) Was traced to any members of the Hall with cries of “life for' j ments admits it was never able to seant Edgar Lewis and Patrolman Hoover Embarrassed. ot serious. |world, which cannot differentiate be-/| ‘Fgainst the execution of the two | Shire or France and the department) Vanzetti. | * . utfalo Gathering, 'deliriums are an outstanding feature ‘almer. That delirium was respon- | was much"shyoting with revolvers. 1 . Further violence on the part of the S feared this afternoon when Perens I rs fe either murdered or committed suicide | while in jail. Elia was deported. | OS rample Crowd Found Only Innocence. | . bone, in a cell next to Sacco to guin | at information. | fl 4 (ol {0 aS a The department had operatives sta- a, trial to report on Sacco and Vanzetti j}and on anarchists visiting the court 1S , § | room. | : +of£.the Sacco-Vanzetti defense com- {| DETROIT, Aug. 23.—One worker | mittee jn Boston. |'s under arrest today and three police-|' ~The New York office spied on mem- jrom slight injuries suffered when’ they had received moneys suddenly jhe police attacked a gathering of | after the South Braintree holdup. 40,000 persons who met -in Cadillac)’ The spy Carbone discovered noth- igainst the electrocution of Sacco and | anarchists visiting the trial. No ac- Vanzetti. ‘tion was taken against members of | George Moll, 29, was arrested after | the defense: committee. .No money a .-. | Galleani group. Thus despite the ef- At the conclusion of the meeting} ay he huge crowd surged toward City | ee Ae 1 eee ane seek Sacco and trace criminal activities of any kind Nanzetti.” In the battle waged by) to any members of the Galleani| 250 policemen against the mob, Ser- group. | James W. Gill were: injured slightly.| The department, according to q Spectator, Barney Dicenzo, 41, was| Hoover, is anxious to have its files yruck by a missile. His injuries are | inspected by Fuller or Lowell. - The Shouts of assent rose when the, tween the United States and Massa-| fators urged a boycott of all Massa- | chusetts any more than.we. can be-| fusetts products as a retaliation|tween Great Britain and Warmick- ‘adicals, Under plans being made all|0f the Seine, believes that the de-| imion labor in Detroit will unite in| Pattment of justice is largely respon- he proposed boycott. \sible for the frame-up of Sacco and | And whatever the fine legal nice-| | ties ef the case are, it is indisputable, ‘Hard declares, that the deportation pe “ of the Sacco-Vanzetti case. That de- Hugest i Hister lirium was engineered by the de- 5 \ } a | sible for the “consciousness of guilt” | Hears Wicks § pak which Sacco and Vanzetti are said to | have shown when arrested; but it was | consciousness of radicalism, not mur- BUFFALO, August 23.— Twenty | 1°" thousand workers and sympathizers | ook part in the monster Sacco and \Vanzetti protest meeting here, the mediately to Governor Fuller and to}f} spect the files and appealing for aj partment of justice under A. Mitchell the Pan-Pacifie Labor Congress which P. Judge Thayer told the jury! however that their consciousness of |. guilt. was the outstanding evidence against Sacco and Vanzetti. The present plan is for the} bodies to lie in state here for two or three days prior to.a big public) funeral and the cremation. Among’! | the numerous plans considered) | for disposing of ‘the bodies was) | the suggestion -of -taking them on} | a tour of the country and holding) | the bodies in state in several cities| | including New York, Chicago and| ! San Francisco. ! \ * RECREATE + AE TR , Lift high the crimson banne To shining goals that ever s Defying now the prison / \ HEAR NEWS PARTY ACTIVITIES | NEW YORK-NEN ATTENTION SECTION ONE! All Agitprop directors and unit correspondents of Section One are urged to attend a special meeting Friday, at 51 Hast 10th St., at 6 p. m. sharp. Two very important matters con- cerning the success of our open air meetings and the special section issue of The. DAILY WORKER will be taken up. ere, ee 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. Labor Organizations morning where more than 12,000 wor and Vanzetti. Browder Lectures Thursday. Earl R. Browder will speak on China at Royal Palace Hall, 16 Man- hattan Ave., near Broadway, Brook- lyn, Thursday, 8 p. m. eently returned from exceptionally well the question. * x * T. U. E. L. Mects. T. U. E. L. Local 22 wili have a meeting tonight at 15 East Third St., | 8.00 p.m. Every comrade is :equested | . | to be present as-very important mat-|Produced by a splendid cast in the fers will be taken un. great open air amphitheatre at Star-| light. Park, on. East 177th street is| bg “ * |becoming so great that the managers) Cloak and Dressmakers’ Meeting. | of the affair are beginning to worry | A series of block meetings will be| about their ability to find seats for) held this week by the Joint Board,|the thousands. of anxious workers) Cloak and Dressmakers’ Union. They | who expect to be present. will all be held, right after work at) It will be remembered that at the 16 West 21 St. \last huge affair arranged by the Wednesday: Workers of 26th, 27th| Joint’ Defénse Committee “at: Coney) and 28th Sts. Island; a tremendous crowd turned Thursday: ow: in spite of the. inclement weather. A record crowd is expected next Sun- day, August 28, greater than ever. be- fore. acquainted with The rush on the sale of tickets for the opera Carmen, which is being | Workers of 35th St. * * * Needle Workers Meet Tonight. fomear tat aeenis segs yorrerey The committee announces further will meet tonight, 8 p. m. at 350 eG x ix toh 1d Louis|2 Number of -side-splitting and nee wih tok ies . startling attractions in the park it- self, before the performance of the opera, New York’s Bolshevik army Earl Browder to Speak vi! be treated to the sensation of |riding on the Giant Roller Coaster, On China at Brooklyn |The Lover’s Reel, The House of Non- Meet Tomorrow Night. Earl Browder, who has just re- turned from China, will analyze the “ Chinese situation in a speech at the Royal Palace, 16 Manhattan avenue,: Brooklyn, tomorrow evening. Browder was elected secretary of | The Second Bleck of Houses or meat: a delegate from the, wha eBhsthdciion of the TRir T. P. Lau, former professor at the Nine Co-operative Stores ha Sun Yat Sen University at Canton, ; a will address the meeting. 1 BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS by biggest demonstration ever staged in Buffalo, || While police circhked the meeting land every precaution was taken against any kind of demonstration, {Harry Wieks of the Workers Party cold the masses of workers that only the word of Fuller, the agent of cap- jralism, stood between Sacto ‘and! — ‘Vanzetti and death. The speaker rged the workers to organize so that repetition of the crime might never ,| (again be possible. He urged the | ‘building up of a mass Labor Party,| of the Communist Party and the In- | ternational Labor Defense, and the} strengthening of the trade unions) Pigainst the bureaeracy which had Phone Stuyvesant 8816 John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES. A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 1302 E. 12th St. New York Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 6566. failed in its duty. | virdis VudvtARIAN MEAL James C. Campbell, secretary ‘of |} +: 5 Some to ithe Moulders’ Union chavadtorioed Scientific Vegetarian William Green as a criminal a8 great: R é estaurant Judge Thayer and Governor Ful. Ml a6 B, 107th Direct phe ‘he Rey. H. J. Hahn, who was. re-}, ently arrested for picketing in Bos- ‘Jton, asserted that the Massachusetts | authorities had plotted the murder of, Sacco and Vanzetti. * | The meeting which was under the ‘hairmanship of D. Benjamin of New ‘ork, was orderly and gave the po- lice no opportunity to interfere, HERE DO WH MERT TO DRINK 4 AND EAT? At the New Sollins Dining Room Good Feed Good Company Any Hour Any Day BETTER SERVICE at 14th Srteet New York ile ||| ‘br. ABRAHAM MARKOFF del. Lehigh 622. SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours; 9:30-12 A, M, 2-8 P. M. Daily Except Friday and Sunday. 249 EAST 116th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York. Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 is being paid from th a gold bond of $100 guaranteed by Orchard 3783 Strictly by Appointment DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor, Eldridge St. Now York Tel. Preferred stock shares Stores also draw 61% The only Institution funds are being use STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd. St. c'al Rates for Labor Organiza- (Established 1887.) en eas > || ANYTHING IN ce | at Fi ‘TELEPHONE? A tons. | Men and women fainted by the score | Feodor financing co-operative rs! Lift the torches! Two staunch recruits have joined this army brave teadfast marches, and the grave? —HENRY REICH, JR. OF MURDER in Union Square early yesterday kers learned of the murder of Sacco The news was flashed from The DAILY WORKER and Frei- heit bulletin board at 30 Union Square. coves". TICKETS FOR GIANT OPEN AIR JAMBOREE ARE GOING RAPIDLY sense, The Gold Mine, The Skooter and the Ferris Wheel. Tickets for this tremendous affair, which has been arranged by the Joint Defense Committee, are on sale at the office of The DAILY WORKER, 108 East 14th street, the Jimmie Hig-| gins Book Shop, the Freiheit, and the Joint Defense Committee, 41) Union Square. A limited supply of tickets is still on hand. Chaliapin May Lose His Title for Paris Talk MOSCOW, Aug. The Commis- sariat for Education ruled today that Chaliapin, famous Russian singer, will be deprived of his title of ‘peoples’ artist” unless he repu- diates a Paris newspaper interview in which he was quoted as assailing the Soviets for the confiscation of his property. The Soviets demand also that Chaliapin come to Russia for a concert tour of two or three months. The First Block of Houses is completely occupied. will be soon completed. d Block will shortly begin. ve been already constructed. Opposite Bronx Park East the United Workers Co-operative Ass'n, Inc. 6°o DIVIDENDS : e day of purchase for $300 $500 a second mort- gage of the first block Co operative Houses which are issued solely for the purpose of financing the Co-operative dividends. in New York whose a for the purpose of enter Si is the Consumers Finance Corporation 69 Fifth Ave, Cor. 14th St., New York, N. Y. LGONQUIN 6900. WILL NOT ALLOW saeco, VANZETTI TO LIE IN STATE Open! Robert C. Elliott, executioner of Sacco, Vanzetti and Celestine a Madeiros, ech- Fine ‘Boston Pickets; Arrest Over 250 to. Many that th parin on is pre (Continued from Page One) hall and began to speak to the crowd th town, ‘w being organize: for a march to t protest parade was bri state house prison. The n up, Chicago Acts Likewise. CHICAGO of Sacco \ in the past two weeks-was brought to more than p One hundred and fifty-four pickets who marched in front of the state house yesterday were fined each by Judge William Sullivan in Muni- the public exh taining “to “ft it doesn’t w partment, coror sel and all oth crime on Fine State House Pickets. en ie cae eee With the arrests of the pickets | eee ee daghes i early this morning, the number of Chief of Police Hugh« pices demonstrators a by ‘the police day. “Chicago has 1ance against cipal Court today. The will be invoked,” he charge egainst them was “loitering ror s Sines and disturbing the peace.” When a TORREMAGGIOR Aug. number of pickets declared that they To a. home filled sobbing had not been loitering their fines tives and friend es “¢ were increased to $10. A number of | today brought the nc demonstrators appealed their fines.) tion of Nicola § Upon rec Appeal Fines. |the nev ther ¢ Among those who appealed $10 fines were “Mother” Bloor, William L. Patterson, Negro lawyer, John Howard Lawson, playw aha eae ae 2 ve FOOL WORKERS St. Vincent Millay, poet; E Bakers’ Loc. No. 164 former professor at Well lege. Arthur Garfield Hay York lawyer, defended the‘ picketers. Avefiue, Bronx, N. ¥. Ask for Union Label Bread. Delay Rockaway Boardwalk. Plans whereby further delay in construction of the first’ section of | Bonnaz Embroiderers’ Union the new 2n and one-half mile 7 E. 15th St. Tel. Stuy. Executive Board Meet -8657 rues- boardwalk in the Rockaways may be avoided were outlined yesterday at a conference in the office of Michael J. Shugru, commissioner of public works for Queens, in Long Island City THINK THE SUSTAINING FUND EVERY MEETING! (rere earner none nee HELP WANTED One or Two Carpenters wanted to go with me (auto trip) OF AT Window Cleaners’ Protective Union—Local 8 New York, th T ch month at 7 P. Window Cleaners, Join Your Union! to Llano co-operative colony, New F; : aa Llano, La. Plenty work there and Advertise your union meetings chance to join the co-operative col-}| here. For information write to ony. Write P. O. Box 132, Flush- The DAILY WORKER ing, dt. Nu Xs Advertising Dept ) 83 First St. New York City. WATCH YOUR STEP! Repair Your Shoes at the | COOPERATIVE SHOE REPAIR SHOP 4191, 6th AVENUE, Bet. 25 and 26th Sts. QUALITY WORKMANSHIP 250 REDUCTION TO STRIKING WORKERS Bring :your-family’s shoes to repair in the morning and they will be ready at night. the The First Union Shoe Repair Shop. in City. (NATIONAL BAZAAR DAILY WORKER and FREIHEIT Will Be Held in Madison Square Garden --- October 6, 7, 8 and th Organizations and individuals are urged to IMMEDIATELY COLLECT ARTICLES for sale at the Bazaar. This affair is being held in the biggest hall in the world. Enormous quantities of articles are required. DO YOUR BEST TO MAKE THE BAZAAR A SUCC OOD print- Telephone . - ORCHARD ing of all description at a fair price, Let us estimate on your work, ” cACTIVE PRESS SR (O48 Ree Bae ee Re FIRST STREET NEW YORK 33

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