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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, S| ) PTEMBER 9, 1927 nse sn ECU RNR RR RNR NAN EOE nme nmeucremaeeceannt nh epee A EG gn eee | | |Spy Placed Next to Cell|‘, . ae Of Framed Victims | Painter Who Refused ' to Scab Faints From Blast in Chicago Alcohol War Blakes $700,000 Damages <= CHICAGO. d from Page One) are Julian De Ho: Jose Christozal Rc - Hunger; Starved 4 Days and ig, Fern and explosives, union paint- | Medreno with rrying ndez is held as a were killed hunger in Jersey City. anion a, not eaten for the last four d. ee een Sey oe admitted yes-| | Laventhal refused to seab dur-| Y E no evidence! | ing the he decided to work south side of ¢ en with the ving his wife and} stations of me he started for Ik - on Aug. 5. ng no money he had) | ference at Moose Hall he There eer Z Toralowcs d os ihe of the way. Sev-| | were present about 75 delégates rep- feud” mz ait ate Sl (abi people fed Lavy- enting 54 Loeal Eouncils, Labor blasts York ent, was : aan pk Paka EES Pe SSS . enthal him $16.75 the s ral fraternal and re-} Both ht forwa a wit~ zs 5 < ii | ADD bie ot sfute” : result of a collection. He now eomprising a-mem- pining ¢ able to refute” the i pre- z ; Pere | a BRA ON | Me ed by two of the accused men,| |!0°king for a job’ at his trade. hership of over 250,000. | riod of 4% “a Spaatieely Adentcls —®| <Jeanette Pearl, the field organizer terrific « ¢ ndvenia sie forthe National Coun soteetion | ploding sti Beha wea ig {for Foreign Bogn Workers, opened the Merin the powerhouse and up conference by outlining its purpose, | to death i ./and down in the street at 9 o’clock itold how=she was received by the| Anothe on Sunday night. | Workets. With “much ‘enthu m in all plosion, On Job at Time. ies localities she had wi in, that and Marg ares that he was at his} in many-localities-an organization for wreckage , at that time. De that he was. work- at j dishwasher at the . George Hotel at that time and hat he can substantiate that the word of fellow employes. ssion that “evidence” scat rom someone in an adjoin-j| Nie usucled ies tin cell brings again forward the ee 3 - oe from other | Startling sithilarity which this case} CHICAGO, Sept. 8—In spite of} is had to be called in to quiet bears to the Sacco-Vanzetti frame- the united front of the police and| htened pat jup in its early stages. the right wing forces, the strike of — — Familiar Features. dressmakers employed by. Hyman In the latter case the Department Bros, is continuing to be successful. of Justice admitted placing a stool- The workers are deterrtined to| smexx, pigeon in a cell next to Sacco in an _, 4 | effort, it was explained, “to get in- show the bosses, the police and the | formation about the Wall Street ex-|Scabs furnished by Morris Sigman’s| | plosion.” é In the present case it was declared that “information about the subway explosions” might be secured by the } authorities. - FIGHT WORKERS | | \Dressmakers Continue Their Strike of | expected ing @Wway, when patic nts scab agency that the struggle will result in victory. One hundred and seventy workers are on strike and have pledged to continue in spite of |all the obstacles that have to be} i . A a Sigman has furnished the} lIlinois Miners Still boss with 28 scabs, but very little | Reject Wage Cut 0s | work is being produced, as most of (Continued from Page One) | them are gangsters and do not know how to work at the trade. Help the Police. | Saul Pleck and Ruffer, right wing | |thugs, are handing out summonses| lopen or secret wage cut is as great ver. Harry Fishwick, president of as he ions. PENN. CONFERENCE OF FOREIGN BORN VERY SUCCESSFUL Delegates of 250,000 at Harrisburg Meeting opt. 8. The on of Foreign state con- * HARRISBURG, Cowneil for th the -proteetion ofthe foreign born workers has ‘been~a long felt need which now becomes a necessity owing to the proposed laws to finger-print and register the foreign born work- ers. * Patrick MacDermott of the U. M, W. of A. was elected chairman for the conference. MacDermott in a stir- ring speech called upon organized lab- or to fight the obnoxious anti-alien bills that will come before the next Congress. Attorney Robert Rosen- berg of Harrisburg was then intro- duced. Rosenberg said in part ‘if our fore- fathers in this country had passed such stupid legislation, many of our great men of foreign birth could not have contributed their valuable serv- ices for the upbuilding and greatness of our country.” A. Ramuglia representing the na- tional office of the council explained in detail the perniciousness of the pro- posed anti-alien bills, reading from the bills some of the subtle provis- He pointed out the class char- acter of the legislation stating that, “The purpose of the proposed laws is to divide and set aside a section of Old Turkey Tries Again | Ta Assassinate Kemal; | Suspect Foreign Cash! | LONDON, Sept. 8.—Existence| jof a plot to assassinate Mustapha | |Kemal, the Turkish dictator,| | |through the dynamiting of a train |upon which he was returning to | Angora, was revealed by confes- paons made by prisoners in the | hands of the Constantinople police, 18 id a Central News dispatch from} | Constantinople today. The prisoners had been arrested| }in connection with a previous plot} | Against the life of the Turkish premier. Reactionary interests, |and those in the pay of foreign timperialists, have been trying to} }overthrow Kemal for some time. | DAVIS PLANS TO TRY GZARISM ON FOREIGN BORN Names and Fingerprints to Be Listed by Police (By Federated Press). WASHINGTON. — Trade union leaders in Washington are trying to reconcile the purported era of good will in industry between capital and labor with the savage campaign be- ing initiated by government officials and a part of the press for the revi- val of the red hunts of 1919-1920. If industrial conditions are as peaceable as painted, they ask, why the i nt *New Revolution Rises Entire Country to Rally for Bazaar OF Daily Worker (Continued from Page One) tion of revolutionary divisions in Hu-; nan and Hueph provinces, sees in this; new movement irrefutable denial of. the pessimisti¢ prophesies of the Aus-; tro-Marxists and other reformists and | a j _ | opportunists regarding the bank-; Be ona e ree Hie | eras the ies revolution. Not; |tion the eyes of the working clas Sopsbbarn pre tatiana aa jare turned towards the building of aj to predict its victory, but nothing can] strong powerful mass organization| detract from its historical signific- able to fight the losses on every field. | ance. No one can ignore the tremend- | one Aad) args tasks pia job is| ous power which the revolts of the | Ae ee ee eee x rot troops required because of their uni-' | the forefront of the aie ul sor a | we PRIS cea long time, The employers have made | talist. and are still making bitter attacks in| May Win Victory. order to crush our militant -voice.| Provided the leaders of the revolty |Judges, law courts and police have! further lead it in the right direction, | been pilted against our paper—but it) and take advantage of the unques-} are r a e a chance to succeed in establish be silenced. ing a yew army that will be able to With the attack greater than ever|challenge the bourgeoisie and the before the need for activity is also| agents of the imperialists. greater. Ve must get on the job. At ix rs? azaar being held under the joint| assure a really correct revolutionar auspices of The DAILY WORKER | directi . r e jand F'reiheit in Madison Square ele oe peyemene den on October 6. 7, 8, 9, are well un-| Holds No Iilusions. |der way. The Communist Party certainly | All DAILY WORKER sympathizers , holds ‘no illusions regarding the pos- jand other organizations who have not | sibilities of the new situation- Tt does |yet started work for the bazaar are, "°t immediately set forth as its task \ urged to do so at once. Committees| the realization of socialism. It is |must be formed immediately to col-|T@ther a question of two fundamental lect articles, names on the Red Honor | ‘@8Ks of the national revolution: (1) |Roll and program, ads. * An especial | The overthrow ef the alien imperial- |vequest is that all organizations im- | 'S* yoke; (Gy hp Serpracun: ot the Epa prepare to have a booth at | “a! eset De eco eeu Becca. vestiges of feudalism generally. Three more weeks are left in which pune tase ewer dale entitely une to put over the largest bazaar in the | sok ed by the bourgeoisie and now the history of thelmovement. "This memne Chinese workers and peasants are een Ge ae ee |setting about to solve them without line 4oB. vary Bie peerec ae on | and against the Chinese bourgeoisie. District 12, repeated again as he en- to workers who are “violating” the tered the conference chamber that he| injunction prohibiting picketing. hoped te settle the dispute thru some | Groups of policemen and right wing- other arrangement than cuttingjers are working hand and hand zes.” But he did not say what that | against the strikers. Pleck is con-| angement is, and if it includes a/|tinuing his cowardly attack on the outery for the arrest and deportation | booth, every organization must have for foreign-born radical workers and |g booth, every section must have ae stricter laws against the native-born. |pooth. The bazaar must give a mini- jature picture of the militant working \class of America. The Red Honor Roll must include the name of every militant worker. Don’t be missing. Be one of the his- toric band who rally to the militant labor dailies, Will Terrorize Foreign-born. Secretary of Labor Davis will de- mand tighter immigration laws trom the next session of congress and while these will be aimed ostensibly at curtailing the “bootlegging” or il-| legal entry of immigrants, jokers in the bill will require the closest atten- tion of labor. Working through exist- Conn. ROCKE\ ILLE, Sept. 8+ In spite of the croaking of the op- | portunistic ravens of all kins in all | countries the Chinese revolution lives and will conquer sooner or later. NOTICE || Jamboree Tickets the working class as more or less un- e Teor ; een zi desirable, with the purpose in view ofping statutes, Davis is bent on i sti- Leonere Jcinbe povela aul taken) must be turned in at keeping them unorganized.” This tuting more thorough search of im-|was learned today. with the evening once to the Joint Defense legislation is a well planned piece of migrants’ minds. He is having acute] o¢ the second day of his trial on a) C in 41 i work concocted in Wall Street for|psychological tests devised which|charge of slaying his friend, Wilfred | ommittee, Union general police surveillance of all work-| will ferret out hidden sympathies of|P. Trin, while he was a guest nl Square. Do it now. sidden wage cut, thru a provision for worsening the conditions of work, o: perform the miner, there may trouble for Fishwick. A t Local Mining. of the Rus Party and a be a lot of erators and the union agree upon, of | opening mines on a district basis, or even on a local basis, one mine at a tir is not popular in Tlinois.. Re- cent reports that enough separate mining companies had reopened under |the Jacksonville scale to put back to | work 10,000 miners ten questions the students of THEORY AND OF LENINISM PRACTICE |touch with the situation in their in- dustry. There may be, these say, as many as 2,000 men back at work, and in some cases where separate agree- ments have been made, the men have walked out again, afterwards, rather | than break the united front of their j union. 23 LENINISM VS. TROTSKYISM cw. with DAILY WORKER PUB. CO. York. WANTED — MORE READERS! ARE YOU GETTING THEM? 33 First ot, New | nee of more unpaid work by } The policy which some of the op-| in Illinois are} | flatly denied by progressives in close girl pickets. Yesterday he hit some of them most brutally. | In face of the struggle that is go-| ing on, the Chicago ‘edition of the Jewish Daily Forward, personal or- gan of Sigman, publishes a story to the effect that there is no strike. The answer of the workers is to re- double their picket line and continue to fight, in spite of the terrorism that they have to face. ‘Walker to Visit Pope; Riots in Fascist Glory ROME, Sept. 8—Mayor James J. Walker of New York, now on a junketing tour of Europe, will rest from his fawning at fascist function- aries long enough to pay a hurried v to the Pope. Walker, his wife, and his official entourage arrived in Rome today and were greeted by the rector of the ican College, who is making the sary arrangements for the visit to the chief of the e hierarchy. Carry on the Fight for which Sacco, Vanzetti Gave Their Lives Support The Daily Worker, which led the struggle to save them. Defend The Daily Worker against the attack of those, who murdered Sacco and Vanzetti. Help to maintain The Daily Worker to carry on the fight for which Sacco and Vanzetti died. Answer the capitalist as- sassins with your sup- port of The Daily Worker in its fight FOR The Defense of Class War-Prisoners A Strong, Militant Labor Movement A Labor Party and a Labor Government The Protection of the Foreign Born The Recognition and Defense of the Soviet Union Hands Off China The Abolition of All Imperialist Wars The Abolition of the Capitalist System Bartolomeo Vanzetti Here Is My Tribute to The Memory of Sacco, Vanzetti. DAILY WORKER 33 First St., New York, N. Y. Inclosed you will find ae dollars as my tribute to the memory of Saceo and Vanzetti, and as my_contr.bution to help the Daily Worker carry on the fight, for which they have given their lives. Name Address City } jand defeat of all laws or proposed ‘Prosperity Registers a| \ers,” said Ramuglia. A mass meeting was held in the | evening at Moose hall which was well | filled with serious minded workers and | liberal citizens. | Dr. R. W. Hoag, a member of the American Federatioh of Teachers and the former director of the educational |department of the Pennsylvania Fed- ‘eration of Labor was introduced by Chairman Patrick MacDermott as the | principal. speaker of the evening. Dr. | Hoag denounced the proposed laws as | well as the proposers of the bills. He |said “the “bills were introduced by | stupid and prejudiced southern gentle- | men.” He further condemned all such | legislation as being contrary to all the | traditions of America; and pointed out that all such legislation was directed at the worker. Dr, Hoag in conclud- ing, called upon the intelligent trade unionists and other liberty loving peo- ple to do all in their power In a legal way to prevent the passage of such | legislation. Class Consciousness First. Ben Thomas, the next speaker, -rep- resenting the Philadelphia Council for the Protection of Foreign Born Work- ers pointed out that class gonscious- ness is more important to the work- ers than racial or national conscious- | ness. | A resolution among several others |was adopted calling on the A. F. of |L. to initiate a campaign of education | through its affiliated organizations, | with the end in view of uprooting dis- crimination and prejudice; the repeal |laws discriminating against the for-| | eign born werkers. | The naturalization committee pre- jsented a draft of a bill, which was | adopted, to be presented to Congress | that would make it more easy for the |foreign born workers to become nat- uralized. Need Funds. One of the difficulties with which the conference had to deal was the question of raising sufficient funds to carry on the present work and fur- ther extend the organization. Stamps are to be sold for this purpose, and \organizations are called to do their \best in contributing funds so as the Hwork ean be extended. Money should |be: sent immediately to the national office of the Council for the Protec- tion of Foreign Born Workers, or Nina Samorodin. Sec, room 817, 41 Union Square, New York City. New Setback as Iiiailway Earnings Show Decline | WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—Political | and industrial leaders in the national | capital were staggered when they read | the July financial reports of the rail- | roads, shqwing a drop in revenue of | $50,000,000 as compared with July | last year. This barometer of businegs | activity shows that the railroads re- jceived 3.95 per cent return of the | valuation they place on their proper- | ties, as compared with 5.62 per cent earned in July, 1926. Their net earn- lings were $84,000,000 against $117,- prospective immigrants toward union | and radical ideas. These tests, admin- | Cline’s farm home in Mansfield last May. istered abroad in secret star cham-| ber sessions by consular agents, will | weed out the “undesirables” and the agitators, he hopes. 2 Davis gets loyal support from the Washington Star, reactionary repub- lican paper which for the past month has kept up an insistent editorial din for the suppression of radical agita- tion. Confusing anarchists, radicals and criminals, thé Star characteris- tically effuses: | Registration Urged. | “A systematic round-up of radicals | has been urged since the Sacco-Van- | zetti agitation began for the purpose | of deporting those who are alien and holding under some form of restraint | those who have citizenship status. | Such a housecleaning is certainly to be desired, in view of the plain fact | that this country is at present infested | with anarchists who are both openly and secretly working to undermine the | foundations of government. Unfor- | tunately there is lackiyg in this coun- | try a system of registration enabling the police to identify dangerous char- | acters, but in view of the flagrancy of utterance and action on the part | of many of those who are thus en- | gaged in propaganda and crime| against the state it should not be} difficult to make a large clearance of | these plotters and destroyers, with | the result of a decided gain toward | public safety.” Man Felled by Boss’ Gun | in Labor Camp (By Federated Press) | The darker side of Florida. life is set forth in the following fragment of a letter received from Madison County by the National Association | for the Advancement of Colored Peo- | ple. The. Negro writer says: “This comes to inform you of some of the suffering of the colored people of Madison County, Fla., and vicin- ity. For years Neal Harvey (col-| ored) worked for Clifford McCall (white) and through some disagree- ment between Neal Harvey and the white woman, Mrs. McCall, he quit the job. His reason was that she wanted to increase his work without | inereasing his pay. The day follow-| ing, Monday, two or three weeks ago, he went fishing; caught a few legs than nine inches long. Their Nati Bazaar FOR THE BENEFIT “Or THE DAILY WORKER and the FREIHEIT at Madison Square Garden, on October 6, 7,8 and 9 ALL WORKERS PARTY UNITS, AND WORKING CLASS ORGANIZATIONS ARE URGED TO COL- LECT ARTICLES IMMEDIATELY meme ran cere rare a onal law being nine inches long, he was arrested, tried and convicted and sen- tenced without a fine to a road camp on Tuesday, and not being able to give satisfaction to the boss man, he knocked him down with his pistol and in a few minutes he was dead.” Continuing, the letter tells of an- other murder. A Mrs. Wiggins (col- ored) mother of nine children, was murdered by the roadside by some the largest cities will Names received for the Honor Roll at $1 per name, Delegations are coming, to this gigantic affair from the entire country. Prizes will be given Each of have a@ booth of it own. for the finest booth. Advertisements solicited for the Souvenir Program, ery Ran enemies of her husband. The hus- band was in jail—had been there four months—after sprinkling some bird shot into a member of a mob that 30 Union Square. For further information apply to Bazaar Committee, , New York, N. Y. intended to give him a whipping over some dispute. The National Associa- tion put these cases before the Goy- ernor of Florida and are awaiting 00,000 for the same month last year. action. a THE BIGGEST AFFAIR OF THE YEAR amare sce P| 4 )