The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 28, 1927, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Four Se eae een THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1927 THE DAILY WORKER The Election Cam [. eublishea by the ‘the DAILY Ww ORKE R PU BLISHING co. Daily, Except Sunday 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. Phone, Orchard 1680 By J. LOUIS ENGDAHI pein lauded wii Mdesyos act Hart with the paign in in “The Anthracite” {in such a mass sentiment that even’ Cable Dalwork” # THE coal of “the anth | usual eampaign bunk, calling him| |the president of District No. 1, Cap- pa ——____.-__- ee erat air is Penn yl ania ave in polit »s,, “the most outstanding character in|pelini, with several old party politi- Up own ur esque i ere ae SUBSCRIPTION 2 ns 1 (outside of New York): italist American politics.” And so the|cians, were forced to march, for in-| 4 ie Mail (in New York es He At eee 0 six months story went. ‘ |stance, or ride in automobiles in the aaa ee EL Te i per year months § ona « | Sacco-Vanzetti parade in Pittston. | Messrs. pee and Perkins’ “Creoles,” Too j Te UV Meer Oe The point is that some of the locals| Second: Monday, August 22, when & | ——— SRraTIErT ike cue checks 1 supporting this old party mass meet-| the protest of the coal miners reached | Slow, at the Klaw Theatre THE DAILY WOREER, 33 First Street. New York, N. Y. ro ing had but recently endorsed “The | its highest level of militancy.’ This -—- co eee ae : re| Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Conference| was the day when Sacco and Vanzetti “(REOLE” at the Klaw Theatre is| GRETA GARBO J. LOUIS ENGDAHL } _. Editors dvertisements, | Of the Anthracite,” that many of the| were put to death at midnight. This | labeled on the program, “A Ro- WILLIAM F, DUNNE }§"° ‘i sampk ons in the ranks|™iners in attendance at this bi-/day marked the complete desertion Of | mantic omedy Drama”; with a.good| ERT MILLER. ..Business Manager __ lof the mine worke | Partisan old party mass meeting had|the coal miners’ protest by the old) cast jt might be taken for a imelo«| New York, N. Y., under One advertisement contained a,but recently joined in, the protest|party politicians, while Cappelini or- | dramatic farce, but as-is, it is simply | LENIN SAID: the ideology of the prole- has It is Marxism, c tariat educated by capitalism, which taught and still teaches the wavering and organization, the bourgeois intellectual are thanks to the factory ‘school’ ee very easily by the Peiectarint. ”__LENIN ON ORGANIZATION, . 167. union un- ang |’? 2r the heading. s in which the titand filers declared the un i tanding loy ne for our friend and neighbor, Daniel L. Hart.” tions held on Monday, August | when thousands went out on strike. [ was very evident, that the coal miners saw no connection at all be- tween the capitalist state, two adver ments reveal, the poi | sps down into the masses, who feel | d upon to champion in the ecapi- t press the candidacy of the old} rty standard beare | |zetti Camp? I did not learn who paid for these It may be said that the Sacco-Van- n in “the anthracite” went thru three different stages. First: _ When the protest ‘wave ge the hard as fields, Feu e that ar-| talist parties, the political allies of Judge Thayer, Governor Fuller, At- torney General Sargent, the supreme court justices and President Coolidge, those immediately concerned in put- ting Sacco and Vanzetti to death. The | the anthracite coal field. It will require the most intense and aching propaganda for the La- lhor Party to’arouse the coal miners |to the meaning and the necessity for class OEE action, [in {intelligible patter censored farces -as far back as/ Moliere, or maybe farther, and thru |some understanding with the police, | apparently, they get away with them)! on the stage at the Klaw. | But even that cannot compensate | for the wi spe 2 reste ied ¢ “Onvi S regi i > miners’ uni eariness of the theme, and/ lectuals the difference between the exploit- yt js not unusual in other eal sae feed cue Envi tes Bye EE ee ae mur ta aaticeaae ERs, Pheu : es > factory (a discipline based of the country for the old party poli-| WOPSers, Sacco and riety esa te ‘pope : a : i ing side of the factory (a discipline nes | Helana th avtenire their “Trade Union | democratic regime in 1920, and that! anthracite” was again safe for the | Hors, enue caus en Kenneth | on mortal fear of starvation) and its organ Feene ae ge ae wien l sent them to death in the electric | reaction, | eer AE ae a Lh sensed iy izing side (a discipline based upon common ) .icctions from the highest strata of | Chair in 1927, under a republican ad- sb ete thats seaduckra ie 5 si a a with Starred in “The Temptress,“ labor united by the conditions of highly de- the official family, the higher the!" ation, with the republican-| The Sacco-Vanzetti protest wave a ae s en have aid the seene | Blasco Ibanez’ sensational film play, 1aDOr Ma é + ane is he Sees aes |democratie regime of Mayor Daniel) had left little or no trace of senti- le . nee boat of New Or-) which will be shown at the Waldorf veloped technical production. TCE chee ey anthracite,” as these|L: Hart in Wilkes-Barre. |ment for independent ,political action | !¢8"S, which is partly Spanish also, ‘preatre next Sunday night for the which comes so hard to|, But in anthracite,” as these, Pa erate so that the characters are able to : benefi speak some of their lines in an un-. of mispronounced Spanish or French, thus providing a game for the wearied au- dience, if nothing else. This enables the yawning spectators to forget for of The BASED ees prayer beside it, because of a vow he has made. Good pirate. El Gato is acted by Allan Dinehart, who ap- parently regards as the height of bicsiee . ° advertisements. They might hav Ra URS Gs oS ERT gs |@ moment the ranting, posturing, | (rama his trick of resoundedly slap- i a Non-Union Fields and teen paid for out of “the mone raving and mumbling of all the 34, Ping his hands around over his rather Relief, Defense, Organization of the been IG Ge at ge eae ovestone ‘ummarizes ISCUSSION 0 [Stain ee = awkward anatomy, ashe describes the Coming Official Labor Conference in Pittsburgh Yet, the workers might have been This is the situation—judge for R2W.“the hot blood mounted” in the i ee eo baby Dae eeo Sy teens SOUBHOn 3 rts so slapped when he saw the 5 foolish enough to pay for them, | This You have the widow, Mme, Parts so slapped when he saw fae E 4 % SE RG ay ea iD: are : x ee) ace eal ; snow white limbs of the chaste Bs Epes . PR eta. aa hic: “ill I ld in Pitts-| hoping for their “rey s” after the Hi R t f th P lith | ¢ itt Hyacinthe, Creole lad played| SnOW Ww The conference of union officials w hich will be he d in : claction, if it termivated the right MLS ANG ort or @ F OHMCa ommi (a olpeeer pe tpctices netehe tony heroine. ; : burgh after the convention of the American Federation of Labor way. i ° . | running a combination brothel, saloon oe ee ee . purpose of aidi 2 miners’ strike, will have two major ae wae ., and gambling hell in her tral) ee ares cahe tc : for the purpose of aiding the nee strike, ‘will have two The official regime of President NOTE: Following his report to Where do the bureaucrats come in? Ranson: Lom AATBGEE nea dative with Merluche is off, but he has been problems to consider in this connection: John Lewis, in the United Mine| the Fifth Nationai Convention of |The bureaucrats play a very impor-| Jacinta (Helen Chandler), the chaste | U3 ne oe oon combine eee , ee “ ? ; ion-wi Workers of America, has always paid] the Workers (Communist) Party | tant part in the class struggle. We heroine. in : vent si ter | With pleasure by betraying eu 9 A ¢ | t ense on a nation-wide YS paid| the orker: 0 . F ee heroine, in a convent school. Enter | a e Gna: + ‘ (1) The organization of relief and defense on a considerable attention to the politi-| for the political committee, there | consider differences in the bureau- | the heavy-weight villain, M. Merluche}‘° the king of Spain. This fails also, scale and ‘ ‘ cal situation in Pennsylvania. After| was a lengthy discussion among the cracy of the trade union movement | (Geo. Nash) little black mustache and SRCANee a ices brig, theta Bayne (2) The organization of the important non-union fields. supporting Cal Coolidge, the s : | delegates. Jay Lovestone, the re- |as a factor which we must consider all, He has Mme. H. in his power, he eee ee to vel Both questions deserve special attention and it is a debatable breaker PEeent nationally in 1924,) porter for the committee, then in the estimation of our policies. We | financially, and she agrees to sell him nad om Fy : tie bogs TH arte question if, action of this kind, especially an organization drive e fa ee a ae publican ae summarized the discussion as fol- | say also that the bureaucracy has|the chaste Jacinta. Chaste Jacinta, \ith a foy cannon hats Ghana on 3 a 1 s » ee > ~ tional committee. ev urned 0 . G ; $ en s me CUE > le ark. 5 "8 Tes . ae rai es: Guat | LOWS |something to do with the masses. Hain, and in order to pre-|, grace ae in West Virginia and Kentucky, having | been delayed until the ae Runa ae she seeet pe * * * |Much as we may not like it, today vent marriage, conspires with Colon- Btnen eee fellow, tales strike is in its sixth month by the official labor leadership, eo Pe. Tek es y i hated nal (Continued from last issue.) |the reactionary trade union bureau-|drina (Natcha Rambova), the villain’s | pack Colondgi ag El Gato pays the be made effective now by the same leadership that shirked its (no cr the “po: depable Taielientaale dd. the Party |cracy has more masses than we do, aingerded Guistnens £0 Me Sila ales widow's debt and marries the chaste task for so long. can. Vice-presidential ewan LE Tew eegente words labonte nhac and we must try to separate the pirate who happens to be) heroine. In a longer article we shall deal with the question of coal pro- duction in connection with the unorganized fields. Here we will say only that the latest reports from all authoritative sources and later as a probable choice for secretary of labor. {tellectual who betrays his c Is. Any in- , who Ss, away letarians and intellectu foes away from the intellectua’ masses from them and win them over to us. If differences occur in the bur- eaucracy, we must utilize them to the | | fullest extent. | cidentally, the hero. handy, one El Gato by nickname, in- She passes a night in his room, but the audience is told by El Gato himself that she is It’s awful. But anyway, it is now understood why Valentino left Na- tacha Rambova. He must have married her before he saw her acting, The day that I arrived in “the an-| from the bourgeoisie, and comes and onan + oe as pure in the morning as at night 4 point to the inevitable defeat of the United Mine Workers of! thracite,” Lewis being widely an-| Civenseeevicetts dhe working ‘clakeis | sue iN paae a yn? | because when she faints in El Gaba eee one ae all rene America unless the non-union fields are organized and the strike nounced as the main speaker at a], member of the working class and | © : 2 oF jarms, he undresses her and puts-her| cop oo the tetle che woe cane extended to them. All plans for relief which the conference may endorse must political demonstration being planned for Daniel L. Hart, mayor and can- didate for re-election in Wilkes-Barre. “| directly, covertly or overtly, should be accepted as such. And he who raises the slogan, directly or in- of “In- of differences in the trade union | | bureaucracy, because we point out that we must utilize them more than | solo on the table she wore such a voluminous hoop skirt that whatever rtistic wrigglings took place beneath to bed, and then spends his time in| 4 : { 2 e@ jit left its surface placid and calm. therefore be based on the fundamental strategy of extending the ees a eh ‘ eae tellectuals and proletarians,” Fi ibaa did higge apse What the Daily Worker || Speaking of TauRUnes the whole fight to non-union territory ona huge scale. oe ae ee is bantane the Home: uses it in the name of unity or against /th. Comintern has called impermis- cast has been taught when express- Not only must relief be secured for the miners now on strike tions of both the old parties in the primaries. It did not seem strange in unity, is hurting the Party, comrades. I also can quote, Comrade Cannon. sible. I am sure these methods will! not recur; I am sure that they recur | cig hatred, lust, fear or allied emo- tions, to brace both feet well apart, Means to the Workers a ee 87 statement by Henry J. Mische, Presi-|@gainst the legalized murder of these} dered them back to work when they | torriple, Vian Oe Rant of Local 1 ie 2{two workers. They had even faced | came out on strike. eal Ese 5 i | the clubs of the State Police, the) Third: The political campaign | A vt a ia emis the audience. | | le contained a|“Pennsylvania Cossa ister |when the workers cheered the candi-| 4/07 sai! lection of risque | | e PORN Sa ae Sal BY ease tetris cor tie Gane jokes has been culled from all the i ntradictory statement signed by five | their’ protest in open air demonstra-| dates, like Mayor Hart, o: e cay i but plans must be laid for support of miners now at work in non- ? Thi 1 hi land by tensing the muscles shake i a 7 f h 2 Ss s . is time it is I, also, who can quote! at this convention only as the last) : A hati, ihe 2 : union districts but who can be drawn into the struggle. Mate anche en vang{ Comrade Lenin. Lenin has written! gasp of factionalism in our Barty! ee \ like eee Perhaps you alent 3 The A. F. of L. conference will fail in its duty to the miners | democratic tickets at the same time.|@ good deal about intellectuals and| The Skilled Workers. : ; Fo tot SCRE. weet eT em ) and the rest of the labor movement if it does not give first con- Stranger still, he won both nomina-|Proletarians. But I appeal to you) Comrade Bittelman has taken up Hlatieted por ayes one cat g a des : en caster ions by overwhelming majorities, |comrades who are speaking so much and emphasized the importance of the | P. Siva, Fall River, Mass. -1.00) s fehl pees th fi h . i sideration to the two problems mentioned and if it does not work , iminating all opposition to him-/ of proletarians clements, that these developments of the Brotherhood of} L.’Sousa, Fall River, Mass. 100) eee Navctcc ey “i ld z ae * out a program which will unite against the coal barons and the self in the regular elections. comrades of the needle trades, who | Locomotive Engineers Convention. 1/ Anonymous, Fall River, Mass. 1.00) clear "to New York to hits Meee e government which backs them, all the forces in the United States i Ro have made serious errors doing Party | want to say a few words about the | J; Ctu% oe River, Mass. 1.00) ipman & Perkins —V. 8. 5 that can be mobilized Lewis was announced as the main| Work, when they correct them, we|/B. of L. E. The B. of L. E. has Candido amor, Fall River, Mass, eee nantnasy 5 : HK ; drawing card for a “testimonial meet-; must treat them as proletarian ele-| 90,000 members. The convention, held A. G. Lage, Fall River, Mass. . q But no matter what the coming conference does or does not ing conducted under the auspices of|ments, not as intellectuals, not as we|in secret, away from the workers, |»: E- Baptista, Fall River, Mass. ‘ do, the fact that it has been called is proof that great numbers of | ten local unions of the United Mine| treated Lore, but as good proletarian} was a monumental convention, inso- a Ge ee a eee ; ; American trade unionists have realized that not only the miners’ His oe panaa a eae didn’t Aes ey oe tse eer oredste fer as the present situation 3 the rank R. Silvia, Fall Riven wae 100, . : . * ees appear, es ie usual telegram | become an in peer) part of our Party | Jahor movement is concerned. lon’t shania) “4 eS i, 4 union, but all unions, are faced with a relentless drive intended to instead. A rank and filer from Local} work. maintain and have not maintained Si Bee ror: Aen iar Manes 2,00 Th 5 A D D E R i + bring about their destruction. Union No. 2588, acted as* chairman, Union Bureaucrats. that there was any eonscious radical- |Yiarnt) Marte eg necg Oe A é p Every possible means must be utilized to bring pressure upon Be hari tec ia ae hae Not a few words about the trade/ism in the B. of L. E, convention. I) 4” Melnick, Portland, Maine... r the coming official conference to make it act in line with the vital | ,quare deal and that Ho eran union bureaucracy: Comrade Zack) even mentioned the fact that nobody |7, Grigorieff, Montreal, Canada aa ‘ need for unity and militancy on the part of the American work- ing class. Britain Fails to Get French Consent for Her Offensive owes the mayor the same considera- | tion in his campaign for re-election.” | * * . * Among the speakers was John Wil- kinson, president of District No. 24, of the United Mine Workers of America. This is the, Oklahoma district, where has discussed the bureaucracy in the ‘We never saw them, we never felt their heavy hand. Of course the comrades in ‘the needle trades don’t know what bureau- eracy is!! Comrade Zack and the comrades associated with him say that American labor movement, at that convention would dare pro-! pose a resolution for the release of ; Sacco and Vanzetti. But what I did} say was that that convention indi-} cated the results of certain important | | objective developments. What are those objective develop- | Leon Calvert, Maywood, Ill. ate Re Se Long, Philadelphia, |Th, Sepp, Philadelphia, Pa. | Charles Vins, Chicago, Ill. |K. Andrikson, Bradford, R. I. | A. Holt, Chicago, Il. S. W. Chare, Madison, Wis. Pa. 20 “The Trial of Sars Dugan” +H0O) iw Hat DEN 1.00) is “10 The Ticsett Song : . . . 3 the coal miners have suffered alike|the practical work of the Party has|ments: 1) The skill lines, the lines Peter Larson, Madison, Wis. ....2.00 Against the Soviet Union | under the clubs of democratic and es been orientating itself towards the | of skill between the B, of L. E. mem-| W. L. Fouest, Madison, Wi -1.00) with Robt. Halliday “Eddie me i ra ry . ce 4 Ps publican regimes. But Wilkinson | bureaucracy. Comrades, what are the/bers and the. members of the Loco. Friend, Madison, Wis. .., -1.00} Pi erage io Gp Reports from Geneva, relative to a “conversation Debyeen| “urged” the re-election of Mayor|facts? If you ‘will examine the ef-|motive Enginemen and Kiremen are J. Kamsar, Milwaukee, Wis. . CASINO Mate, Wed. at tia Premiers Briand and Stresemann, confirm news from Paris in-| tart. go did Rinaldo Cappelini, | fectiveness of our Party for the past | disappearing. 2) I said also that the | g 3 : dicating that Great Britain has failed for the time being to force! president of District No. 1, the|two years, you will find the major ac-|investments and real estate, have | aaa tivities of our Party have been ac- tivities based on the masses. We base our policies on the masses. We are part of the masses. We try to win the masses. France into her anti-Soviet Union bloc. | Wilkesbarre-Seranton district in the jhard coal fields. Thomas Kennedy, of Rakovsky will not be given his papers, there will be no break} Hazleton, another hard coal center, in the relations of France with the Soviet Union at present and | who is international secretary-treas- Austen Chamberlain will have to devise some new method i baad of the United Mine Work has been a pioneer in labor banking, | invetments, and real estate, hae | gone wrong and that this zoing | wrong is not to be taken merely a something of an act of deviltry or | sii iaicusioa laaiiacienaisibiinsisicind. | 4 1 ; ‘ 4 : t ' sky and the Soviet Union immediately after the reactionary lead-! ee mes ia a they | The NewPlaywrights Theatre ¢ ership of the British Trade Union Congress severed relations with las an accretion to the Communist “The Phenire Insurgent” the Anglo-Russian Trade Union Unity committee at the recent rd of the. first | movement, these workers, it would g ! y proletarian ‘ ' \} “fHE -ONLY HOME FOR .LABOR PLAYS Edinburgh conference, it is evident that the French government wrote "the [Becta ble step forward and’ the- very Seer Cer. seston ct a yatehon Speier ay ee does not dare at this time to break with the Soviet Union in the: Tiina Bho en ned Seeiiare. would . be We x RR erate mendously . encouraged when they i] putting pressure on France thru Germany. The Geneva correspondent of the New York Times reports, the gist of the Briand-Stresemann interview as follows: “Again, today he (Briand) was able to repeat that France| eontemplated no immediate steps to coerce Russia in any form; that for the moment the French position was that relations! should not be broken and that he and also the Poincaré govern- ment had no concessions to make—there was no need to talk more now about further Rhineland evacuation in exchange for any Anglo-German proposition.” British diplomacy has suffered a great diplomatic defeat which this conference between the French and German ministers marks. Britain has failed to force a single European country to follow her example and break off relations with the Soviet Union. Altho the Poincaré government intensified the attack on Rakov- face of the militancy and power displayed by the French masses. Similarly, in England the imperialists know that the attitude ex- pressed by the official labor leaders is not that of the masses and the French rulers also know this, The European masses ave not for war on the Soviet Union, they are against it—this is the principal moaning of tho diffi-, culties encountered by Great Britain in organizing tho offensive against the workers’ and peasants’ republic, There is also of course the inner impoviaiiat conflicts (Groat Britain and America, France aad Britain, Italy aad France, ote.) but it is the sympathy for and support of tho Soviot Union on the part-of the masses that i docisive. | AT PPRECIAL PRICES, Revolution and theCommune # We offer these three most valuable books at a lower rate to induce every worker to read them, If they axvé not already in your 871—THE PARIS COMMUNE : 3 Ms qAG. HTMAN, : library—get them now. Civil, WAR IN FRANCE MARX, RL Parts Commune & its results for — 25 10 Working-class movemont. collection of the writings of the famour’ rebel JACK LONDON, 0 Ail for 75 cents and we will y postage, \ re ecnemmen son meres Pooks effered in this column om hand titles, All orders cash OTE and filled In (urn as recelyed, ¢ |i the reactionary sections of our work- | i] AYS OF REVOLT - | dishonesty though there was vlenty | on the part of the leaders—but enty | A Motion Picture by V. BLASCO IBANEZ this Shows the lack of soundness, | the insecurity to. the basis of oe | Revival of Charlie Chanlin’s “THE CHAMPION” {tate antine schemes resorted to : ~ The funniest® of~his productions ~ atthe | WALDORF THEATRE, 50th St, East of 7th Ave. This SUNDAY, October 2, 1927 Admission 65c. MUSIC BY MOSCOW TRIO. ling class. 3) I pointed that out as at tsign favorable to the development of | |the radicalization of the masses of | this country. If the situation should develop whereby 90,000 on should | y workers, native American clements, | have had years and years of Lg schooling in working class, organiza- | il tion—and let me tell you the B. of L.| | E., despite its r. years of re-| y policies, is a working class zation (I am not. defending policies) but I will fight for OPENING OCTOBER 19 with THE BELT An industrial play with an acetylene flame by PAUL SIFTON. Other plays to be selected from SINGING JAILBIRDS, by Upton Sinclair ; THE CENTURIES, by Em Jo Basshe —Three lumhe: ks working on the, ‘ HOBOKEN BLUES, By ¥ chael Gola Klamath River reservation were} PICNIC, by Prar vs Edwards Faragoh th Bea ; AIRWAYS, INC, by John Dos Passos | killed instantiy when the automobils , and o play by John H in which they were riding was strack! sect — eel Lis Seven by s Southern Pecifie Limited train J The DAILY WORKER has “purchased a opecial block of tickets, at Modoc Point near here. | would see their brothers in this high- jly organized section of the working ;elass, in this powerful organization, | stepping forward. | (To Be Continued), | | Three Lumberjacks Killed. | KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Sept. 27. ive Temptress

Other pages from this issue: