The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 27, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1927 Page Three TRY TO FORCE YOUNG WORKER INTO NAVY FOR LOS ANGELES, Sept. ees Bartchy, 16, was forced to shake the} eet recently. dust of this open shop city off his his radicalism any longer—especially among the children. He was expelled ,months ago. stand for Communism and Atheism. Young Bartchy was arrested twice during the last Saeco-Vanzetti dem- A little later, the ultimatum was: “Join the navy or go to onstration here. reform school!” Comrade Bartchy was also the secretary of The DAILY WORKER Build- | ers’ Club. The reorganization of thi quarters, 322 West 2nd street, next Monday, Sept. 19. Get in touch with | cup air races, which have been so ex-| The DAILY WORKER agent at once! respondent class in the near future. “Write as you fight,” says The D both the club and the class! THIRD ANNUAL I. L. D. CONFERENCE 10 LINK THE SACCO-VANZETTI CASE ganizations and units of thé Interna-! certain that with the Italian planes entered at 700 horsepower, but really} (Continued from Page One) Points to Frame-Up Menace. The conference will be organized around the slogan of building a wall of labor defense against the frame-up system. The call points out that “the frame-up system which kills and) imprisons the flower of the working class is a growing menace to the further development of the labor movement and the struggle of the workers for a better and freer life. In recent weeks this frame-up sys- tem—which has become an eStab- lished part of the police system of American capitalism—has claimed the lives of the two heroic labor fighte' Sacco and Vanzetti. Mooney and Bill ings still languish in a California} prison and the Centralia victims are still confined at Walla Walla, Wash. Cites Class War Cases. “Leading spirits of the Passaic and} Too much Bull-Mooseism connected with that institution to! FASCIST FLIERS BOAST LOUDLY, BUT LOSE RACE ‘Schneider. Cup Flight | Wonby England | ¢ VENICE, Sept. 26.—The Schneider ! | \ | The police couldn’t stand | | his Communistic and Atheistic work | from the Roosevelt high school a few} He beat it away from both. s club will start in earnest at head-| Will also try to-form a Worker Cor-|tensively advertised by the fascist |press were pretty much of a failure, from a fascist viewpoint today. An Englishman Won. Despite the fact that only two na- |tions were represented, all other air- imen contemptuously boycotting the} affair, the races were flooded with) | Italian official entries, and prelimin-| ary boasting was-great and glorious | AILY WORKER. Join one, join all In Her Third Crash | Cen ee ASSISTS TRUST TO GRAB RADIO | 25. More Independents | Forced to Surrender | WASHINGTON, (FP) Sept. - @@ | Twenty-five of the most important of | |the independent manufacturers of | | radio equipment in the United States | | have bowed the knee and paid tribute | | to the radio trust, according to latest | returns from the field. is means | | that the threat of ruin ued by the} |Radio Corporation of America, based} | on its possession of many hundreds of | patents and winning of several) Sixteen - year-old Eleanor HOOVER BENIGNLY'S° He" For Soom WIND KILLS 5,000 aaa | IN SGUTH CHINA; YUNGKONG RAZED ria, Switzerland, |. Ravaged by Fleods LONDO SRS AME EEO LLB: OSS e98 WITH OTHER ATTACKS tional Labor Defense which are urged to send delegates to the conference. It is expected that several hundred delegates will be present at this year’s meeting, which will not cnly review the past work of the organization and lay plans for future campaigns, but will pay special tribute to the mem- ory of, the Haymarket martyrs of 1887, and to the two fighters, Sacco and Vanzetti, in whose defense the I. L. D. was ially distinguished | res eee a nae. (a forced landing after the second Jap as the main organizer of the protest movement to secure their release and vindication. ., Prominent Speakers at First Session It is planned to open the sessions of the conference with a huge mass meeting, addressed by prominent speakers from the labor movement from the defense movement, and by well-known class ‘war prisoners who { \ { | | failed. among the Italian officers. It seemed measuring up to about 1,000 horse- power, and with more Italian planes than there were of English, and with no rivals but the English, that Italy should have a chance to claim for fascism the “air supremacy of the world.” However, the fascist fliers all Lieut. Ferrarin was the first to return to the hangar, unable to make the first lap. De Bernardi made was started. Then the other con- testants gropped out. Only Lieut. Webster, piloting a “Supermarine EK” finished the 350 mile, triangular tcourse, at an average speed of 186.1 miles per hour. * * * BOSTON, Sept. 26.—Miss Thea Rasche, Germany, flying fraulein continued to entertain crowds at East |suits for infrirfgement, has caused | {these independent concerns to agree} ito pay a minimum o: 0,000 h, | per year, for the privilege of stay- ing in business Sen. Nye other men in Congre the experience of being virt cluded from the air du th campaigns, are going to back a de- mand for senatorial investigation of | the radio trust. They will try to keep LEAGUE FOR ARMS Smith of New York escaped / uninjured after third crash of her-nlene at Mitchell Field, . North Dakota and| who have had ally wh i What they see in the radio sit-| and discussion in} Spends Money on Palace | this country, and at the same time| s stifling te E Jevelopment and Instead of Relief tener and cheater rudcenion Ge radio service. Independents Unit During August there Chicago, the ., comprisi | GENEVA, Sept, 26.--The League of Nations’ assembly by unanimou vote, today adopted resolutions r ommending progressive de at ‘Demands Recognition of | President Moscicki, President , who has been ited the Chicago Centennial YOUTH DAY RALLY DENOUNCES U.S. WAR PREPARATION the Soviet Union | International Youth Day was cele-| brated last Saturday afternoon when | of per 000 are The the ha stroyec The tidal wa d to excec You of F Floods Sweep Austri VIENNA, S a score were property Austria, rendered hor damage w Eastern Switzer] the New York strikes,” it continues,} have recently been released from peni- “aye paying the penalty of their mili-| tentiaries, ‘ tancy in New Jersey and New York; ‘The call concludes with an appeal penitentiaries and other prisons in dif-|to all organizations favorable to the Boston: airport today with stunt fly-| : ; ; ing. She is touring the country to/0f arbitration through particular « encourage the movement for more | Collective agreements, and recom airports. The aviatrix will appear at|mended speeding up the work of th and in the prin- turers who refuse by the weight of the s outlined by the more than 1,000 young and old work- | ,: ers rallied at Union Square under the | direction of the Young Workers cloudbursts ferent states hold working class pris-| idea of a concerted movement against | Portland, Maine, next week- | preparatory disarmament conference | tatement made to the public, the) (Communist) Leag avon dnote were dead an tiaveaee oners. The prosecutions against the|the infamous frame-yp system “to a8 * * |to permit the calling of a general dis-| trust requires that all independent! Denouncing the war plans of the of Grissons and St. Gallens, Communists in the Michigan cases/send delegates to the conference and Ruth Flaps Over N. Y. j armament conference before next Sep- LeU eat who wish to remain in| American government, the assembled an where the Riwniosee ar inni ai a lrive |help to make it an imposing demon- “Ty 2 Iyvi¢ oc | tember, [oonees Sie 4 1 Ss ed for an active gle Heeb’: h i are -begiming again, and the drive) help Pree CURTISS FIELD, N. Y., Sept. 26. 1. Pa per cent of their whole | g Sdaniebe Pon TRE de countr ht per-, against radical and foreign-born work stration of national and internation- +-The proposed New York-to-Par Another resolution was adopted sale receipts to the Radio Corpora- ates impe 1 at In ruck, Aus- ers is taking on a new impetus. The | al solidarity.” The Third anuuel flight of Ruth Elder, Florida beauty recommending the appointment of Stan gas ine “lieensc’ to. avoid sarke the pedehitibn O& the Soviet Uni 4 organization of the counter-attack of /Conference Headquarters of the In-| contest winner, today was postponed special committee to study the ques-|¢. infringoment of patents. Thel cme coun wow ba el more persons in the working class is the task of the; ternational Labor Defense are now} yntil Wednesday because of un- tion of security, simultaneously with | vinimum Frida pean is $100,000. | peakers were Philip Fi Liechenstein » rendered homeless hots g located at 80 Bast 11th Street, Room | favorable weather conditions. that of disarmament, thus meeting | “9 Buy all tubes from the tru : 4 ve wg a eee *|by the Rh flood w Local The call is addressed to all labor| 402, New York City, to which all Miss Elder and her navigator,|With the French demand that the two thereby binding themselves to build! » Herbert Zam and a 5 and police fore inade- unions and other working class or-| communications should be addressed. Captain George Haldeman, made a flight over New York yesterday, but questions be jointly considered and discussed. their sets around the trust type of | | tubes. ntative of the Young Pioneers hachtman was chairman. i e to cove mn, - = — nn = ts —f/| Captain Haldeman explained today No Peace in Sight. Carry a label on all produc Text of Resolution. tria. C : t Events ye EIT a) that it ae just eerie ne oe Hitherto, and in all probability in indicating obedience to trust require-| The resolution adopted, reads as —— _ By T. J._ 0” | ie plane—a, stinson etroiter|the forthcoming conference, say the | ments. : . urren { ae wet eed a dee experts, the question of security will | Dealers Writhe. ; A ne United oe to- Army Determined To TON AELDS Elaine, Ek ag ee — somal | was y the trans-| 54, a i . = 3 <eontive | gether w or rialist_ powers ae : prevent any real reduction of arm-| Oswald F. Schuette, executive | Sether W Obber USDer AS) Boy |B Able to Fly Fr Atlantic hop and had been thoroughly Ba ok aie ore ete mae ea i reparine for a few war with the e Apie to Fi rom on his customers they turned their|looking? The Danes seem to have) Wednesday was the first day he| ‘rico to make a gesture towards | warned against selling any goods that| national independence and against the = qalediadie sisal guns on Bemak and he is now in solved the problem of what to do Bellevue in a precarious condition. | with potential poets. * * " | | would consider for a start to Paris because of a low pressure area over the Atlantic. peace, there having been sotvery many | do not bear the trust label are show- | rumors and quarrels indicative of war |itfg active sympathy with the revolt. oppression of their native mil bureaucracy and foreign imper: lism, | —New t being wu a bri man dies but once he) : save ow Tid be, rae “i Fens oe ahead of his time by) THE Danish government having re-} pS ERNE eal at their debates. “But the saving|He anticipates a series of startling) Pee apes thie “United sisted I AC- | the. .-S.-aemy 1 Ww 7 bei ‘e brave than discreet. | cently reduced its stationary navy,—| eae) .,, [clause about “security” insures, they |“isclosures when the Federal Trade|tively preparing and supporting the|/j4; already made of 20¢ being “more bray! i Cee aes . lary navy | Says Millionaire Gave Car For Bride : 3 : | Commission’s inquiry into the radio| war preparations of Great Britain|,. Sam + Courage is a much over-rated vice. | it having nothing to do‘ but fire a ps believe, that the armament interests | é rnd bal : P: . : “21! miles. The use of the plane in bat- peta e 7 broadside on the birthday of some EEN eee a deal fae will not suffer. jeune euepende aaa a pea sy pede eae Hove Wi tabrut first|t]e will depend on ability to so re STERN democrats are said to| member of the royal family—had a G ow Bird byl x be Als a 2 Palace, Not Relief. ie anes gress aa ee ei oe en Met! sid DS aie see the | inforce the cae ystem that Tat? litically in tavor|treasury surplus and decided to de- eorge Birdy, Topeka, Kan., milllon- “ $ wept San ave feared|struggle for liberation of all op-|, single bullet will not bring the craft be oscillating politically aire, for the love of his brunette} This resolution recommended that} punishment at the hands of the| pressed the world over, lto the ground with a punctured ra- -esidential aspirations of Al| Vote the money to the advancement ote ea F lof art. All regular poets who have Smith. Not so very long ago the sug- | : i gestion of ‘a catholic for president | succeeded in having at least one poem would be just as obnoxious to the accepted, are placed on the govern- political nestvils of a protestant ment payroll. And in some cases, democrat of the west as the odor of | When the Minister of Finance is con- fish glue to the sensitive smellers | Vinced that a poet yet unrecognized of a prima donna. But even senator bY the trade, shows promise of future Borah seems to be adopting a kindlier | fe cere ata eC OEAB es Un ite ; rds J 2 Str 5, it) s Salary. S| is attitude towards Wall Street, so it TEOraETEe BUBRG. rent Sh aoe is not surprising that natives of the/ V0" * x lonely steppes should fall before the dus from the Village to Copenhagen y Kansas City bride, told in Salem jail by Paw B. Gordon, young Missouri bridegroom held as an automobile thief, was under investigation today by police of Kansas City and Tope- ka. Gordon declared not only that the ear he was accused of stealing was loaned him by the millionaire, but also that Birdy offered to adopt him as a son if he would get a divorce or members of the League draft region- | Radio Corporation if they made any al defense accords among themselves, | complaint at the crushing tactics of! and recommended that the council of }the monopoly, are getting ready to the League require each member to | speak. make known the extent of military! Discussion of the case from the aid that would be forthcoming in any | standpoint of the independents has | particular armed conflict. been excluded from one of the chief The.assembly refused to accept the | trade journals, under, pretext that it suggestion of Fridtjof Nansen, noted |** BUN: Coma ect ye: Hoover For Trust. | Norwegian explorer who has been ad-| In its appeal to Congre ministering the League’s welfare work | “Whereas, the United States rines and battleships upon the ma- in-| jstructions of Wall Street invaded} Nicaragua and China and killed hun-! dreds and thousands of people who} fought for their independence and} against the domination of American} |imperialism, “Whereas, the United States in the rish preparations for war is mili-} fe °|tarizing the American youth through, diator. Howev it a pilot will be able to run nimbly aw from a fight if he is not riotic enough tc commit suicide in i + LEE a, HE OC.AMUNIST. , great, silent wave of change that is|® W2!™ prospective emigrants that a marriage annulment. in Armenia, that the League increase | Public, the Protective Association | its war agencies like the CMTCs,| ereeping over this once-dogmatic | the Pee ee nn HEMBURY: rom The Robber Rend His Prey.” its work among the Armenian refug-| Says: “So far as the listening public) ROTCs to serve cannon fodder INTERNATIONAL land. There was a time when the|*"¢ only for natives, Brom: The Rouper He Me ¥ lees because of insufficient funds. s concerned the consummation of this) and as strike breakers, therefore be it | Siemt=sa.---_11cs2.-<e | LOS ANGELES, Sept. 26.—Held | monopoly will mean higher pr! for! “Resolved, that the hundreds of writer entertained a wholesome dread | of protestants, and when, at least! in theory, he favored their elimina- tion from worldy cares by whateve means promised the quickest results. Now, ‘hey only provide him with amusement and once in a while with) material for a paragraph or two. | * * * \tomobile market. PARIS, Sept. 26.—Henry Ford is} planning to capture the French au- He will shortly start building in his Bordeaux fac- tory a new model to sell at a consid- erably lower price than the cheapest French-made car. up, gagged and bound by two men in the offices of the City Department of Water and Power in the down- town district. Three employes of the Department lay helpless while the bandits rifled a safe and escaped with $85,000 in cash today. The assembly voted a credit of $3,- 3 4 . 3 A 4 *\ sets. Under the cry of ‘stabilization’ 500,000 for the construction of a there will be stagnation in the de- League of Nations palace at Geneva | velopment of the radio industry; un- as a permanent home for the League.| ger the pretense of the patent laws A committee of five was appointed to | there will be a stifled art; in defiance select plans for the structure. of the anti-trust laws, there will be | meeting young and adult workers at a mass | held in Union Square on} Saturday, September 24, 1927, call) upon the American workers to begin} ‘a struggle against the danger of a jnew world war jimperialism by giving their full sup-/ 1 defeat American port to Soviet Russia and to the! Othe Ongena ef Comes othe Comemamtinaraaneaas No. 12 OUT NOW! VERY month con- taining a survey of the most important de- velopments affecting the at ate touched. Befor ther is ui part played by intelligent eae iat ne partially. explored | *"uggle of the Chinese workers and world of Labor. Leading propaganda in breaking down re- | fields of radio id peasants, and be it further figures in the Commu- ligious bigotry is by no means as) great as that played by Henry Ford’s| flivver, the movies and by the | radio. Strangers in the flesh are} usually suspicious of each other ex-| cept when they are intoxicated, which | accounts for the opposition of the’ K.K.K. and the fundamentalists to) the liquor business. Isn’t it ironical | that a bigot like Ford with his ani-| mated tin can should do more. to de who was as isolated from civilizatiof | LOU 8 el the destruction of competition. “The future of radio is still un- Flowers From U, S, science—television, | wireless telephony, tele-photography, To Maltzan Grave: | broadcasting of power, the breaking | 5 | down and building up of electrons in| |food, the transmissior” of the lifegiv- H | ' jing ultra-violet s, and the many as ld é VOY ssriscrtions that lead from these. | ; Yet in all of these there is to be no} jco nmercial basis for independent or 26.—Bresident | competitive development.” } 6.— President | Seeretary Hoover has always looked revolently upon the Radio Corpora- BERLIN, Coolidge, Secretary of State Kellogg. ,,. Sept. which the body of Baron Ago Von) , | To Withdraw Support. | “Resolved, that we call upon the} American trade unions to request the, Executive Council of the American Federation of Labof to withdraw! their support from. fhe CMTCs and} the American Legion and, begin a) militant campaign against the mili-! tarization of the working class youth, and be it further | “Resolved, that nist International are regular contributors. 10 Ce Tsu esu nts a d ever Copy weeks louse the rustic mind of superstition | EXTRAORDINARY jand American ambassador Jacob | rey ee nostle of “stablliza,|the U.S : we demand thal THE DAILY WORKER and creed-prejudice than the editor of ‘ Gould Schurman sent floral wreaths | ()'",, ih alt 5 bly iza-|the U. S. government withdraws a PUB. CO the Truth Seeker? The poor farmer . today to be placed on the casket in| tio? and he wi probably get into | troops and battleships from Nicar: . Y : this Fight. gua, China and other countries ay 23 FIRST ST. NEW YORK ‘hs a typhus germ in a sealed bottle | nowy can erank up his bus after a) day’, work, take a ‘look at a distant | city alnd be back again in time to go to bed with his cows, tune up his yadio and hear a sermon by a catho- lie priest, a Mormon or a reformed Bahaist and pick his favorite hokum. | Or he can go to the movies with his! family and see half a dozen churches getting burned to the ground in a news reel while a burlesque house re- | mains unharmed. All those things) cannot help making a farmer think. | And those who are of the opinion that | farmers do not think are’ advised to | take a trip to Plentywood, Montana, ' where the citizens of Sheridan County, have been returning a Farm- | IN yesterday’s column I commented| on that small but respectable class of the community, the men and wohian of no property who are addicted to poetry and realistic prose and try to live in Greenwich Village. It is hard to be an artist and retain those curves that add charm to the figure. A starvation diet is conducive to ‘sharp angles. But who likes th be V SOVIET RUSSIA To witness the Celebrations and Gala Festivals of the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution, sails Oc- tober 14th, 1927, via Cunard liner “Carmania” to London, Leningrad, Moscow. Entire World Tourists, Inc. 69 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK,N. Y. ALGONQUIN 6900. | | Maltzan, German Ambassador to} Washington, who was killed in an air- plane crash last Friday, will be in-| terred tomorrow. | Burial will be made at the Von! Maltzan family estate at Gross-| luckow, Mecklenburg, at one o'clock | tomorrow afternoon. Ambassador! Schurman and Colonel Conger, Amer- ican military attache, will attend the services. The German government represents Hysterical Dayten Police Shooting at an Arrested Negroes selected to negotiate with Morgan’s| DAYTON, Ohio, Sept, 26.—The government hereafter; von Maltzan/ Police department here is going crazy being almost irreplacable for that|on the subject of Negroes. Jn an at- purpose, tempt to arrest Otis Bridges, a Negro, a squad of policemen opened fire on him and in the ensuing battle, Cap- ain John C. Post, and two other of- Gardner Shot For Boss. lard, 22, a gardner was probably| ing circulated. Knight was found, fatally shot today. |dead, but no arrests have been made. Rouillard had been summoned from | Lynching is ‘threatened. the gardner’s house by Mrs. Wallace | Policeman Tries Murder. as her husband was warned back into} A Dayton policeman, mentally up-| bed by the masked stranger. |set by the slaying of officers here, Bullets whizzed over the head of|crept into a local hospital, prior to Wallace during the pistol battle. the removal of Bridges late Satur- : day, and fired two shots at the Negro Coming! The Big Hed Bazaar. ! prisoner. | sia. immediately recognizes Soviet R Revive the Daily Worker Sustaining Fund Many comrades have during the summer months. Now is the time to start again build it up on a stronger and firmer basis. allowed Now is the time of renewed activity. their contributions to lag with the Sustaining Fund and With a strong Sus- -», er-Labor government to office so, cost $600.00 You must ap- | SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Sept. 26— | *® persistently that sheriff Rodney | ° Pa During a pistol battle with a lone ficers were hig unded, Prop bly by | taining Fund, our financial troubles will be thi of the past. Salsbury is running out of crooks 0 ply immediately! masked burglar in the dressing room | Shots from their fellow policemen. | Do your share in your Workers Party “init, in your union and put in jail. i | of Douglas V. Wallace, wealthy resi-| Rumors that Alfred Knight, a de-| Ng test = ig 4 hd dent of Longmeadow, Henry Rouil-| tective, was killed by Negroes are be- | fraternal organization or club. Send Your Contributions To the Sustaining Fund Local Office: 108 E. 14th St. DAILY WORKE 32 First Street New York, N.Y,

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