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DI ce ‘ Page Two YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1927 ‘ oute- of New York-Spokane Air Derby Flyers Japanese Delegate Asks League to Aid Sudden War on U.S, GENEVA, Sept. 20. — The ques~ tion of a war betweenthe United | States and Japan, came up before the League Council today, and the Japanese delegate, Harukazu Naga- oka, offered an amendment to the Polish “peace” resolution which would have allowed such a war to take plage without objection by the League. However, when the full,im- port of the amendment offered by Japan to restrict the provision for are bitration before beginning the shoote ing to League members only finally reached the delegates, they became flurried. Agents of American finance among the consultants of most of the councilmen present» objected on the grounds that the League seemed to |be banding around Japan to threaten | America. The Japanese delegate was quietly told that his amendment was not to be passed, and he diplomatic- ally withdrew it. Hungary Defies. | But the shadow of war, darkening the incense to the sham Goddess of | Peace which all the delegates are industriously burning, left a consid- ‘erable feeling of restraint and worry upon the gathering. Nerves were further strained by the obstinate rejection by Hungary of Sir Austen Chamberlain’s report, favorable to Roumania in the Hun- garian land’s dispute. The spectacle ofa tiny “enemy” country defying the League and its “Triple Entente” leadership roused some of the dele-~ gates to wrath. Hungary was sound- ly scolded, Chamberlain threatened to jresign from the investigation com- mission, and the Council finally de- cided that Roumania and Hungary should try to agree, outside the League Council. Spain Sneers. Another third rate power, Spain, lcontinues to jeer at th€ apparently — | powerless League of Nations. Primo @|de Rivera, dictator of Spain, pub- |lically stated yesterday that the ‘ | League assembly is “no better than |a casino,” and that nothing of value |comes from all its wrangling. * * * Send— ARTICLES NAMES = ADVERTISEMENTS For Sale For the Honor Rell At $75.00 Per Page ATRPI By ANE FIFTY PLANES are scheduled to take part in the cross-country flight. They are divided into three classes, according to route and number of stops, both based on their fu carrying capacity. Class B planes, which left Monday, make ten stops; Class A planes left Tuesday, to make six stops. Non-stop planes leave Wednesday. All are due in Spokane Thursday. “6 BY SHIP First Plane Crew in Class A Dead; Many Others Fall ROOSEVELT FIELD, N: Y., Sept. —The Class A entries in the New to the BIG RED BAZAAR FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE DAILY WORKER and the to be held on October 6, 7, 8 and 9th MADISON SQUARE GARDEN THE BIGGEST HALL IN THE WORLD. ADDRESS NATIONAL BAZAAR COMMITTEE 30 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK, N. Y. ALL GOODS, NAMES AND ADVERTISEMENTS MUST BE IN NOT LATER THAN OCTOBER 1. | ork to Spokane air derby started jhopping off at 7 jing. 4 The first of the 15 to take off was ja Buhl Airster, entered by the Buhl Aireraft Compa: of Marysville, | Mich., and piloted by R. E, Hudson. Within three-quarters of an hour, the first plane had fallen, at Morris-| town, N. J., killing Pilot Hudson and| his mechanic, J, D. Radike. Other} jPlanes were forced down, without) | casualties, along the way. ” * * o’clock this morn- FREIHEIT Some Survive. | CHICAGO, Sept. 20. — Twelve planes, survivors of the twenty-five that sailed out ahead of the sun from Mineola, L. I., yesterday morning, in the transcontinental air derby for Spokane, zoomed into the hazy sky today, with Glendive, Mont., as their} day’s objective. Fueling stops were | scheduled for St. Paul, Fargo and} | Bismarck, N. D., and then into the | Montana stop-over town. Twenty-eight airplanes flying west- ward, remained in the a day in} jthe Class A and Class B divisions of} the transcontinental New York to} Spokane, Wash., air derby. Seventeen | of the number were Clasg B ships and eleven were Class A. | CRASH OF PASSENGER MONOPLANE Saturday near New Market, N. J., in which seven were killed and four others perhaps ratally hurt, is being investigated by Middlesex county officials and by the United | States Department of Commerce. Above is the plane after it had planged into an apple orchard when its engine “went dead.” The plane was filled with passengers, had carried many, and many more were waiting to take advantage of bargain rates offered by the Reynolds Airways Company, operator of the aerial ~*eAged Galleani, Friend ‘Massachusetts Lawmaker (QF Sacco and Vanzetti, Wants Life Imprisonment ‘Victim of Fascist Rage) for Displaying Red Flag "Monarchists in English | Pay on Trial in USSR. (By Federated Press). | | for Bombing Worker Club Luigi Galleani, close personal friend and counselor of Nicola Sacco andj | Bartolomeo Vanetti, has become a virtual prisoner of the fascisti or- ganization in Ravenna, Italy. Old, penniless and physically broken, fol- lowing his deportation from America | several years ago, the aged man has {long been under close observation by the Italian government. Recently he | |was placed under guard in his own home by the Ravenna blackshirts, and is forbidden to leave it or to associate with friends, according to reports reaching New York friends of the an- England Still Dopes. | GENEVA, Sept. 20. — The assem~ A ‘| |bly adopted a resolution demanding 14 eee ae Seu that the governments of the various sons of former saasiet phi offi- j countries ‘spéed sup: measures to cons SAE Seah en Abad ha ae ae trol illicit traffic in narcotics. y 7 A 4 The assembly also adopted the larardoupetib eer ae by ee the committee’s report dealing with Ago RIES “4 m rm the diminution of poppy culture in instituting a reign of terror in} * * Heuliesad lkabo Jame. | | Persia. The Persian government last is vate, Pi the espionage} week announced its willingness to | charges, the men were accused of | jeurtall poppy courya on ie ee see having bombed a Leningrad Com-| heece periey xa meer ie If munist»meeting last June, and with| | es “paces pS rhe Sati 2 having killed three officials while of India, urged efficacious interna- eeeiatinge arent | tional action to put down and con- He did not Paris Gendarmes Club | Workers Who Protest | (Continued from Page One) way to christen the “Sacco and Van-j} etti Square,” in memory of the two “myurdered workers. After the cere- monies at Sacco and Vanzetti Square the mass meeting, which had swelled to an unprecedented size, heard Vaill- ant-Couturier and other prominent #rench Communists and labor lead- | ers voice the demands of the over-| whelming mass of the workers that RY BOSTON, Sept. 20. — If a bill| | |just in*-oduced in the Massachu- Fascists of Lithuania , SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20,—|. [Just im coameeu an the’ i Use Severe Sentences | Final inspections were being made |setts legislature by Representative | Harrison H. Atwood of Boston be- 5 | [today on the 12 planes which will . ; in Attem; t at Terror | |participate in the Pacific coast ‘air| |COMeS 2 law, “anyone «displaying P | |derby. The planes will take off from| |“@ red flag or any emblem of op-| BERLIN, Sept. 20. Heavy; Mills Field early tomorrow morning pekiae to organized government’ sentences have been meted'out by| |it a race which will end at Spokane, ee ne es oy erica ae : a court martial to the alleged ring-| | Wash, The derby is being held in jeharge 0 = fie vata by cn leaders of the recent rebellion in| |Commection with the national air| |to life imprisonment. ¢ | Taurrogen, Lithuania, dispatches | |T@¢es at Spokane. Hie ae oleeeeiocs dees agit from Koyno revealed today. | ze ing tt a felony to: advocate syndi- a calism,” the maximum penalty to} | = j One insurrectionist was exe-|| New Strike Talk When New Race Ready. the American Legion leave French soil at once. The police action is part of the systematic attempt which the Paris gendarmes under the direction of Chi- appe, the prefect of Paris, have been making to stir up the workers, who are infuriated by the insult felt in the presence of the murderers of Sac- 6 and Vanzetti on French soil, to aéts of violence. Police persecution cuted, seven sentenced to life im. | Bosses Evict Leaders prisonment, and fourteen others sent to the penitentiary for par- - aae " ticipation in the rebellion, the des- (Continued from Page One) patches said. groceries and drugs sent to neediest 6 @| cases, now being deducted from pay. Sacco and Vanzetti has been raised | Profit sharing promised and now be- to fury as a result of the orgies in jing carried out through increasing which the legionnaires participate | work of each operator. Investigation nightly in Pa Accounts of the ac- | 0f! overseers not being carried out. tions of the Legion have reached the | poe) ane Hee eer aired alee | some strikers. and scores be 14 years. Bosses Only $ Their Own Produce 4: | _|archist leader. In America Galleani edited Cronaca Sovversiva, a revolutionary anarchist paper published in Lynn for several years till his arrest in late 1918.) {Sacco and Vanzetti, as subscribers and |active circulators of this periodical |were on the suspect list of the) de- partment of justice. After Galleani's | deportation in June 1919, the round- | up of his followers began. Galleani’s age saved him from} trol the drug traffic. co ; ' uA see eae |promise that the British plantations Indiana M in India would cease to “legally” pro- . y I duce quantities of the: poison. On Trial for Graft Adinits Helping Klan mits Helping Klan WANTED — MORE READERS! ARE YOU GETTING THEM? By Teamster Raise sy ART SHIELDS Federated Press. Hard-hitting tactics are winning for eamsters and chauffeurs. 00 men, who move perish- Gut lable fruits and vegetables for the com- provinces of meetings | strikers are reaching a large num-| sprang up all over France in response | her, Of 150 leaving town about half to the feeling of desecration which the | received notice to quit. Dissatisfac- French workers will feel so long as/tion high since settlement, due to the legionnaires are among them. highhandedness of managem at. Strike talk again rising high.” The strike of 300 workers lasted weeks. It stirred North Caro. when the militia was called has reached an unbelievable pitch and séores of workers are being deported from France on framed-up charges. The French intelligence and secret Sérvice have received special orders to | stop at nothing in carrying out their campaign of relentless persecution. “While the police action at Clichy was the most flagrant, other meetings thruout Paris were broken up and sterner punishment by the Mussolini | government. Seized after a recent INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 20. anti-fascist outbreak at Ravenna it|Mayor John L. Duvall today contin- | was at first intended to deport him to|ued to face a stinging barrage of one of the tiny Mediterranean islands | questions concerning his alleged po- which the blackshirts use as jails for | litical deals as prosecuting attorney. | the radicals. William H. Remy cross-examined the Indianapolis mayor, who late yester- | day finished his direct testimony on} \charges of political corruption. | | Duvall has tried to deny charges | that he promised William H. Armi- | j tage, Indianapolis politician, three city jobs for $14,500, the klan 85 per,| cent of his appointments and numer- | A SHORT COURSE of ECONOMIC SCIENCE By A. BOGDANOFF Soccer Player Dies. NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Sept. 20. | ~Hit on the head by the elbow of an Sauk i s bapotice slayee! os a soccer game, | Most of the men and women joined | ees saerehanis ay Aras tae an unknown number of workers re- | Arthur P. Sylvia 19, was so badly | {Re sae plat eee Ta a ae ie yenuit rs 30-hour strike. ived injuries in the course of the| injured that he died. today. Despite| ‘Rough the strike started spontan-/ more 28 bie ce’ j s ir s njured ae eously before organization began. Force Raise. government’s attempts to suppress his injuries, he stayed in the game/ The strike of. 800 cotton mill work- Pe re | the workers’ hosti to the Legion. ing the only point for his team | o.. ended on the eniploversprominas | Seven thousand truckmen won & - ye bloyers’ Promises | similar raise the week before. So this and was treated by a physician after- . 4 hegede teat Fi ners S paid to improve conditions without raising | September shows a total of 9,000 Chicago Girls Finally Freed for Sacco and Vanzetti Activities CHICAGO, Sept. 20 (FP).—Signs $T. ETIENN Pain s0 pi epie sche |wages. A textile union representa- | ye eee and chauffeurs, represent-|of returning sanity appeared in Chi-|ous alleged offers to small-fry poli- | ry Satta R eras sie all ; tive writes: ing families of nearly 50,000 persons, |C@&0’s courtrooms as the first month | ticians. | Despite the police edict forbidding a New Hearing for Scott. Raises Not Mentioned. bd Aas td rd of |8inee the Sacco-Vanzetti executions} But Duvall was hi aie | tings to protest against the pres- "HICAGO. S 2 Us Ber Bo ‘ who have jacked up their standard o! ut Duvall was hazy in his reply | mee’ CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Chief Justice! “They were promised shoes and living by an extra five spot a week. began drawing to a close. Judge Sam | to questions concerning agreeing to} ence of the American Legion on the jof the Criminal Court William V.} school books for all the children, five soil, of France thousands of French | Brothers today reassigned the sanity | week of back rent, unlocking at mill + workers demonstrated thru the streets | hearing of Russell Scott, under sen-| gates (workers were locked in be- BE. St. "tienne, demanding that the legionnaires be expelled immediately from the country. The fi of the workers against the of Heller on Sept. 15 released the 28 re- maining prisoners picked up by the police during the meetings and pa- rades of protest prior to the double murder by the state of Massachusetts. Two days before, he had freed a couple of girls arrested for making street- corner speeches. “T guess if Jane Addams can speak her mind on the Sacco-Vanzetti case without being arrested you can do the same,” Heller told the girls as he bawled out the brave coppers that had pulled them in. the Klan’s political policy. One of the mayor’s most signifi- cant admissions was that he appoint- ed George S. Elliott, former exalted eyclop of the Marion County klan, to the position of superintendent of | banks and Harvy W. Bedford, Klan organizer, as traffic department head, and that he indorsed notes of $1,000 each given by the two men, who afterwards left the city. Wages are now $45 for the men in |charge of the trucks, something less tence to be hanged for the murder of | tw istles i _| for helpers. 8 tween whistles), cleaning of all wells! New: Works. fruits varld’ yegetables Joseph Maurer, to Judge Emanuel | (dirty open wells, breeding disease, 4 5, Eller. Judge Eller set October 24th | furnished the town’s water supply); | Come in by lighters from New Jersey. | The . was a boon to Newark, Jer- the date for the hearing. running electric lights into homes; a acm: investigation into the actions of over- Sey Cit) and the other towns across seers and second hands, but not athe river. Unable to sell the stuff in word in regard to wages.” | New York the merchants dumped ap- The strike began spontaneously |Ples on the market for as little as when the workers discovered their | 10 cents a bushel; tomatoes for as low petition for a 12% per cent raise in| &8 25 cents a crate; beans brought the boss’s wastebasket. The work- | only 50 cents a bushel. Melons went _ Revised and supplemented by |S. M. Dvolaitsky in conjunc- | tion with the author, Trans- | lated by J. Fineberg. murderers ANTHRACITE FIREMEN WIN DECISION AGAINST COAL BOSSES ON FIGHT TO LAY OFF WORKERS | (6 SOMRADE BOGDANOFE'S book is a comprehen- sive and popular intro- duction to the study of the | principles of Marxian philos- | ophy. It was, as the author | says in his preface, written | | | 4 LAWRENCE, Mass., Sept. 20. -- in the dark days of Tsarist reaction for the use of secret workers’ study oirc By ED FALKOWSKL. bosses, demanding the replacement of J i | 7 ‘ vi for a song. . Eighteen- -old M: aera ey Federated Pre: the laid-off worker. The bosses | ¢tS Were not hosiery workers, but the | 2 i nghteen-year-o. ary Owikla, an. serves today as a textbook in SHENANDOAH, Pa . 20. —| protested their helplesaness, while | hosiery federation loaned an organi-| Bosses Appalled By Possible Loss, Shan wate beset ced acini attractive blonde of Suffield, Conm.,|f/~ hundreds, teat peemaciar The full quota of fir will be) superintendents merely _shrugged| 7°" peek ey mee: While. he| Pacing a loss of millions of dollars 4 r was the central figure today at the|{| circles “now functioning In maintained on every idle day as has| their shoulders, and blamed officials te. Be Fa iia ty conven- of grapes, apples, tomatoes, melons,,) ‘ | trial in Essex County Superior Court |} anna epee: pies p gies ‘Carol of Rumania Asks ak? was pustieies Stn of Herman A. Reed, of Waterbury, jf) beans, berries, etc., the bosses became Conn, and Leo J. Nolin, of South | still higher up. Soon after the Fruit mae tn the past, according to book was published in 1897 and the ninth in 1906. It was | | first published in English in Seven hundred of the 800 joined the | the decision handed down by the con- Threaten to Withdraw Men. eager to settle. ciliation board which met in Phila- Finally the case was taken before vied age A id coos the| ond Produce Trades Assn. and the More Than the $500,000 Groveland, Mass., charged with slay- 923—this new editi t delphia last week the Anthracite Conciliation Board | §*™!*¢- 6 are Ong yaree mass Mfarket Truckmen’s Assn. met the ¢ ing William Griffin, a Haverhill gro-|}| issued, is the second.” meetings a week, and the one on Left Him for Expenses I " : \eér, during a hold-up last March. | LABOR TEMPLE SCHOOL - which wavered in its efforts to reach a decision until the union officials present declared that if the firemen are to be laid off on idle days, the union would withdraw all mainten- Es During the slack time period the company has developed a labor-econo- mizing policy which penetrated even to the boiler houses where a fireman from each shift was laid off on every 9 committee of local 202 of the team- | sters’ international, the $5.00 compro- mise was agreed upon, the union scal- jing down its demands from the $7.00 originally asked. Wednesday saw an attendance of 60 people,” writes the organizer. “If we can keep up attendance we will be able to maintain an organization and get a real union going.” $1.00 ELEMENTS OF POLITICAL BUCHAREST, Sept. 20.—-Former Crown Prince Carol, of Roumania, is attempting to break the will of his Cloth, $1.50 LENIN ON ORGANIZATION Cloth, $1.50 William Faversham, famous Eng- lish actor, is broke. Recently Faver- sham went into bankruptcy. Today the actor filed a schedule of his as- sets and liabilities. Although his as- sete total $58,508, they are all claims on The Plays of Shakespeare John Cowper Powyes Beginning tonight at 8:30 P. M. “ROMEO AND JULIET” SINGLE ADMISSION 50e, VEE FOR COURSE $2.00. } ' idle day. The contract recognizes! ance men from colliery duty on every : he 14th St, and 2nd Ave. EDUCATION—By A. Berd- + _ idle 4 , € oh é ‘ ry ; id The reason for the settlement is|father, the late King Ferdinand and . tk 4A, Bvett \ ‘ bi firemen as essential maintenance/idle day, thus imperilling the condi- | frankly given in the front-page head- | has already obtained the intervention || Announces course of 5 Lectures | er at vs aici | tion of the mines, and letting the boilers get cold. The officials pro- tested very strongly against the em- ployment of confidence men — office clerks and time-keepers. workers, who are employed 7 days a week and 52 weeks a year. Boiler- house men never knew, hitherto, what a day off felt like until this unpleas-| antness occurred, and trouble com- menced to brew. Evidently this warning had its ‘ “In many boilerhouses the firemen, proper effect, for on reconsideration which ere more or less uncollectable. 0 a walkout, and only for the/a decision was handed down stating|These claims include one of $50,000 conciliatory tactics of union officials, that hereafter the full quota of fire-| against Brock Pemberton, the produ-| would have shut down the colliery. men are to be retained on every day|cer, and $4,298 against the Pilgrim- Other firemen wrangled se with the colliery is idle. age led of Hollywood, Cal, ! . 4 a of the court of appeal, it was an- nounced today by the official court gazette. Carol’s petition for a trustee to safeguard his interests was granted by the court of appeals with the ap- pointment of General Condescu as trustee, Under Ferdinand’s will Carol is understood to have received more than half. a million dollars, ! |line of the Journal of Commerce: “Perishables Saved, as Truck Strike Ends; Enormous Loss is Prevented When Teamsters Are Given $5 Wa: Increase” reads the caption on the employers’ paper’s story. THE DAILY WORKER | PUB. CO. | 33 First Street, New York. ' BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS