The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 19, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1927 SMASH INSPIRED 'tirce Toms Foose |/FASCISTI DECREE Fort Factory Workers age Three ae "WOMEN VISITORS Had MORROW, ENVOY |"Nunir of Uemslsed | | \ | 1 | OF WALL STREET, | “y<'a'stimnar| RUMOR CANDIDATE “pereszrermre NO HOLIDAYS FOR SSyte® Sete, PLEDGE DEFENSE LENINGRAD, (By Mail) —Un- | | employment in this city has de-| | ereased eleven per cent in the T UNION TO LEAVE TODAY FOR LABOR QUITS .srcsve.so-orsns ITALIAN WORKERS OF SOviE im |}jast nine months as the result of; | Fi ; Gulf of Mexico. The storm has ee uae : . Confers With Kellogg) he vapid expansion of industry } All on Garfield Ticket erie erupe Hons: |'Mass Meeting Barred Laud § Equality in Fi | | here. 1] Bao * | ‘uerto exico, ‘onteras and] vo MA reac naan a fe flan J > On Way to Mexico } The number of workers em-} ‘Determined to Fight On) Tabasco are completely flooded. é | By Mussolini the ( na8. R. ployed in industry has increased Poh id aided | se | ar pecial C WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 18. =| 9.96 per cent, while small industry Dwight Morrow, newly-appointed has increased 31 per cent. Ambassador to Mexico and unofficial | ¢———-—— agent of Wall Street, will leave rea B di C ti ‘nag LONVENtTION |; ROME, Oct. 18.—While the work- ers of the Soviet Union have gained a seven hour d 1 -but {two (and t rved 2 n abolished by Hereafter GARFIELD, N. J., Oct. 18.—Re-| futing what appears to be deliberate | jand malicious rumors spread to inter- | |fere with the ‘campaign for city of-| |fice of the United Labor Ticket here, |a statement has been issued jointly by | HAVANA, Oct. 18.—A ‘tropical eyclone which originated in tl Caribbean Sea is sweeping no ward from the region of trand Cayman Island. The Government Department of (Sp Ameri tings fro workers of to the Union.” Mexico City tomorrow, it was learned from an announcement made by the er the State Department today. H ‘ |Mr. Joseph F. Quinlivan, candidate! | Public Works sent out warnings| | Workers a week |g 4 : Altho Morrow has ostensibly given , |for Mayor; Gus Deak, Councilmanic | for the central part of the island to} |thruout the year t any break ' ' ¢ up his job as a partner in the House ff es fl ef i |eandidate for Second Ward; Felix||be prepared for heavy winds, A| in the routine. : ‘Sixteen Communists i of Morgan (which is heavily inter- |Panaerisi, Councilmanic candidate, | similar warning was issued by the} | The two “holic permitted by u : t pean dn Wesioan: Honest ania. be. H | Third Ward; John Di Santo, Council-| | National Observatory Mussolini are the t march on big aaa cnt eau darren Gri af I) S$ Tr si manie candidate, Fourth Ward, of |@—— s ws ei Paine Which took place Gath the ald ne lar Nas saint nae “Rumors have trickled thru tha bens sage pointment to the post was first made} | x 2 inlivan, Independen’ } signing of the armistice between ves them a cae ee achat for Mayor an peer bot seu agen Potlura fog tt An ts November 4, 1918. By GUIDO SARACENO. ance in protested against it. | other week (of technical discussion | abor Ticket, has dropped out of th |Who Killed Thousands Ghee: Se eeen ie Spe Shae ee "d Morrow is regarded by the Mexi-| Will be required before delegates to) ...¢ as a candidate for election. Thi. { a on the Sunday: >| which was set up under the excep’ can press as a subtler and more dan- | the international radio telegraph con-! .moy spread with ulterior motive PARIS, Oct. 18. — With his whole cording to the decree of the Council ay law which the @overnment ised rous emissary i j-|vention are prepared to risk their) ;. ahs y e and we must re-| bearing one of pride, Samue inisters i f th ot gerous emissary of American capi- | és jis absolutely false is Pp of Ministers onthe occasion of the la empt on , talism than his predecessor, Shef-| Proposals for drafting a new world] state once again that Joseph F.|Schwartsbard stood in the izes Ban Miss Mextines | Mussolini in Bologna, was supposed on- 4 row i ;.|communication treaty on the floor of Quinlivan is a candidate for mayor of | court today and frankly confessed to| pe amar sty : ah re ons field. Morrow held a final confer-| 1 fi Quin! | ae ane ‘ 0! Free speech gs are|to meet o in exceptional s in ence with Secretary of State Kellogg |the conference. | Garfield. 4 {tne Halling (pt General Petlura, white) 465 forbidden » which| order to pronounce judgement on the this afternoon. \ For U. S. Trust. When we agreed to form the United | guardist general who murdered thous- | Soclave. i Wovanben a. GAM. eros ohn: rs * * * | Secretary of Commerce Hoover,}{abor Ticket, we were fully aware of ands of workers and peasants in the ig aeiear oie : -jurisdiction. Instead, how- » thoro Obregon Denies “Assassination” Story |Pesident of the convention, after|the difficulties ahead of us. This|Ukraine, |guration, ann this special court, ever since its } NOGALES, Mexico, Oct. | 18. __|having excluded delegates from the| United Labor Ticket is coming from| “I shot five times to make certain small cente well as spee S worked uninter eae: I Alvaro. Obregon today | Union of Socialist Soviet Republics} the realization that nothing can be|of the removal of the assassin BOO ees ant caw prohibited beee i Peat Weniod bata ee t aaa | (tho Russia was the first country to) expected for the workers from the|pogrom instigator,” declared| he. Renee) ane municipal au-|in the service rae ee sn itemot was made yes,| Propose and organize a radio tele-|two old parties. The textile strike|Schwartsbard, declaring that he plan- | dab attend to. their public| «A fow: examples will aérve to illus: a a ee sie Hiae ies ites |graph convention) is now straining} of 1926-27 with its injunctions, with | ned the murder to avenge those Jew also because we must make} trate this. The special court has con ‘g | the use of the police against the pity Z ‘ t ang |every nerve to retain the monopoly OS Se te Ok aa strikers, the high sentences, the at- the air by the big broadcastin, leading candidate for re-election ini a Meera a pie Sie 1928, who arrived here a week 88° | these an advantage in European and to visit his wife and family, declared | south American trade. ‘The Ameri- the oy oF usa aise Raa |can monopoly is pained by a gov- ation “is untrue. reports, HOW-| eynmental commission for granting ever, are still strongly in circulation rights to wave lengths, established by that the attempt was made, that the /Jaw this year, and soon to be headed man involved is under arrest and that by Secy. Hoover. military authorities here are bending | esactionane Arne qdini eis: every effort to keep the affair from | yea eS pubic enewirdee: | stimulators are: oe eae | 1.—Move to consolidate the inter- Madrid Building Trades) national radio-telegraph convention Union Sends Greetings |°"4 the International Telegraph As- | sociation, independent workingclas: The labor ticket wa: need of political action. organized for this reason, knowing full well, that the bosses will everything in their power to prevent the labor candidates» from being elected into office. Notwithstanding the obstacles we ” | pledge ourselves to carry on the cam- fireworks | paign, more than in the past, bring- ling the message of labor to the peo- ple of Garfield, which certainly learned enough from the past not to veelect those who are representing the |interest of the mill-owners, but to possible To Soviet Union Labor | 2.—Proposals to reallocate the vot-| put into office labor men elected on} jing strength of the nations repre-| the basis of a labor program. sented, so as to give more power to) There is a big Labor Rally Thurs- the great imperial powers. |day night, October 20, 1927 at Bel- 3.—Hoover’s MOSCOW, (By Mail) Oct. 5—The Central Committee of the Building that Workers Union received greetings demand the| mont Park. All candidates invited. Sigg rae . +99 | from the Madrid local federation of| “tights of private ownership” be ful-| Sears Meneaee builders. \ly observed in drawing up the 1927 |treaty, which will supplant that of| 160 Collective Jewish A proposal to establish mutual re-| c : 7 [4 lations and exchange material with|the convention of 1912. Farms in Seviet Union MOSCOW, U. S. the building trades workers of the| 4-—Proposal to change the name of| Soviet Union is contained in the pro-|the organization to the international) posal of the Madrid workers. This | radio convention. _. ; One hundred and sixty Jewish col- is: the first communication received|: 5.—Question of greater recognition jective farms have been established by the union from Spain. of the rapidly developing art of|in the Soviet Union since the decree In reply the Central Committee|broadcasting as distinguished from) to grant land to the Jews was issued gave its consent to the proposals of | commercial communication. It is con-| three years ago. the Spanish organization. tended that broadcasting is really! ‘The multiple crop rotation is adop- a “educational” or propaganda service.! ted on all of the farms and the in- BUY THE DAILY WORKER ti cana ee troduction of machinery is rapidly AT THE NEWSSTANDS (BUILD THE DAILY WORKER! ‘taking place. S. R., Oct. 18— GREETINGS TO SOVIET RUSSIA ni ne ee | nnn ee. On the OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION N the special issues of The DAILY WORKER to be I printed on November 7, the opportunity to send per- sonal greetings to Soviet Russia is given to American workers. These names will j appear in the celebration proceedings—they will be published in The DAILY WORKER in a special hon- \ or roll. To cover the ex- ‘\ pense of printing, all names wa will be published at 25 cents \ aname. Send your name— \ . send the names of others— \ greet the Russian workers on the Tenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution, ¢—— as ———— - - ® Tue DAILY WORKER, 33 First Strset, New York, N. Y. ) Enclosed $........4. for greetings from the following workers, (At 25 cents a name.) (Write plainly or PRINT.) ORDER YOUR COPIES OF THE NOVEMBER 7TH EDITION NOW. PRICE $1.50 PER HUNDRED. titude of the city council, showed the the responsibility of proving that he es By ;Communist Party of Italy—and this, “We 2 | had shot and killed Petlura on a Paris | ° |be it noted, before the C. P. was de-' tives of r 1 boulevard last May. ‘Ruth Elder and Pilot | clared illegal!—to 10 to 12, and ev , do | oS a to 18 nprisonment. (The case who es oesaa at the hands of | economies, espe | SEBS ayer {must avoid oy Schwartsbard relieved the court of |tjon with holid ned persons who have only been ributing Communist flets or of being members of the ally of time, and eding the popula- rf The for Paris | ‘American Sky Pilots Leave Azor HORTA, The Flee ® ast; Upper | yes muth Blder, with ¢ | Yangtse Is Too Hot | Haldeman, left here today f — | Th a Portuguese mail ng the two oscana.) On the other ary court in Vercelli strict of Novara), after a three the rice fields, sen- s accused of dis calling on the wor to'. e, to a few months imprisonment. 874 Years In Jail. | | In the first half year of |special court has imposed list con PEKING, Oct. 18. — Consul Gen- eral Lockhart today reported the ay-| pulled out of the harbor here at da. rival at Hankow of a number of | break, bound for Lisbon. Fyrom there American Methodist missionaries, led! Miss Elder will continue to Paris. by Biskop Gross, on their way to| aie ene, Shanghai. | Junker Plane to Hop Off The party had attempted to re-es-, HORTA, The Azores, Oct. 18. tablish a mission at Sze-Chuan but! Weather per , the Junker hy- | years. were forced to return when they found | dro-airplane, will take off| Now, after a short holiday, this | the opposition to their school in the| across the Atlantic today for Newjcourt of masked hangmen of brutal lupper Yangtse so great. York. fascist careerists has again met. The t trial is that of 16 Communists from Brindisi who were arrested in October 1926, that is almost a year ago, on suspicion of being members of the Young Communist organiza- | tion, At that time the exceptional jlaws were not yet in force; the Com- Tnion r entences lof imprisonment amounting in all to |874 years, while the ordinary court -——|has imposed in the same period 62 omen thruout the wor Norwegian Die-Hards ' Beaten in Elections OSLO, Oc were that cabinet of } to resign as ar ary elections held yesterd News from U.S.S.R. 6. ative forced Another Social Democratic Libel. Help For West Ukraine Peasants. % | ; i .|munist Party was still a legal party; Complete returns we not yet The press bureau of the German | The central committee of poor |with a daily press and a_parlia-| known, but it was like the eauk | social democratic party published | peasants has addressed an appeal tol mentary fraction. ‘The accused all|servative party would 5 \lately a “sensational” statement|thq whole Ukrainian peasantry to| i of them young people under 21 years' twelve seat tories w thelp the peasants of West Ukraine | |about the text of a secret agreement jof age, were c e y e laborit nd the agricultural |alleged to have been made in 1924|(Poland) who have greatly suffered | oot voutt to 4 te enn eee pee di by the Soviet and Italian govern-;from floods. It is pointed out in the} ont. ne rae : fee ee np ments which is directed against Tur-| appeal that 500 settlements have been | | key, this text being at the disposal] affected by the’ floods and that scsaa all Re BAAS ts | of the said bureau. harvest on the has| GET A NEW READER! peasant fields been totally destroyed. 350,000 peas- | ants have been left without food, seed | and fuel for the winter. “Selsky Gospodar” (Ukrainian Co- operative organization), has contrib- | uted 10,000 roubles to the fund in aid of the victims of the floods in West Ukraine. | Strike Ends Workers’ Victory. | The builders’ strike in the private | enterprises of Mogelev-Podolsk sas come to an end. With the support | In spite of the refutation sent ab- road by the TASS agency at. the instance of the People’s Commissar- iat for Foreign Affairs, the said bureau continues to insist on the bona fide of its communication and quotes the text of some of the ar- ticles of the alleged agreement. This lying communication is evi- dently intended to create trouble be- tween the Soviet and Turkish gov- ernment in order to make it easier for the enemies of the USSR to iso- late it and to draw Turkey into the camp of its enemies. The press bureau of the People’s Commissariat Coolidge Tax Cut For Wealthy Only; to have all their demands satisfied. | WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—The Ad-|33 FIRST ST. NEW YORK, N. Y. Swiss Workers’ Delegation. |ministration’s tax reduction program A committee has been formed in|} was outlined at the Treasury Depart- for Foreign Affairs, categorically | Switzerland for the despatch of a! ment today. declares that there is not a vestige | delegation to the USSR. Enough It contemplates a total cut of $250,- | of truth in the statement of the | funds have already been collected to| 000,000, about $100,000,000 less than |i social democratic bureau, that the|send 15 delegates to Soviet Russia. | advocated by senate republican lead- text of the document quoted by it is | Eleven of the delegates are already|ers. Chief features are a one per on fictitious from beginning to end andj confirmed by the committee and the] cent cut of the present 13% per cent , PQ" Trade Union that the stubbornness with which the|/remaining four will be confirmed | corporation tax, a slight reduction of bureau insists on the bona fide of|shortly. Most of these delegates are|the maximum urtax rates and the document is the stubbornness of} either non-party or social democrats. | elimination of practically all of the Soviet Russia story a calumniator and agent of inter- Progress in Corn Storage. |remaining war taxes. Pe liti Ape national imperialism, According to preliminary statistics,|_ The plan will be submitted to the hts It should be added that the myth | 1,100,500 tons of cereals were stored|Treasury of the House Ways and PI acasae: about a non-existing Italo-Soviet| by the chief grain storing organiza-| Means Committee when it meets on fi: pertaige agreement against Turkey was al-/tions between September Ist and'| October 31 to draft tax legislation. base Communism Fiction Literature Poetry Art ready once before taken up by the | 20th. | world press, during the collision be- Since the beginning of the cam-/ recent statement of the U. S. Cham- tween Turkey and Great Britain; paign and up to September 20, 2,-!ber of Commerce, was contemplated with respect to the Mosul question 500 tons of cereals have been |in the corporation tax. However, the and was already then officially re-| stored. Last year 2,003,029 tons were | contemplated naval race and eventual futed. red during the same fy - Thus,|war with Great Britain required Struggle Against Homelessness. year’s storage operations have|funds. No tax cuts that materially The Children’s Commission of the | exceeded last year’s by 11.6 percent.| effect the poor are on the list sub- All-Union Central Executive Commit-} Expenditure for Cultural Needs | mitted by administration leaders, tho tee has elaborated a series of radical | Increases. |a@ gesture is made by reduction of a measures re struggle against home-| [n the Ukrainian budget, admin-| few taxes on the cheaper luxuries. lessness., Homelessness will be en-/ istrative expenditur: stitt tirely liquidated in Moscow and the, 14 percent in 1 against 19 pe Moscow Gubernia for the Tenth An-!cent in the current year and 24 pe A still greater cut, according to a t THE DAILY WORKER | BOOK DEPT. 83 First Street New York, N. Ye END FOR A CATALOGUE BUY THE DAILY WORKER niversary of the October Revolution,|cent in 19 This reduction of | uae bi: Swiabek etal geal ————— = All homeless children will be distrib-| expenditure will make it possible to ee : . uted among the various children’s} increase expenditure for cultural work, “tyme . institutions. |The expenditure of the People’s Ed The children’s commissions alone | cation Commissariat will increase 17 he will spend this year 6% _ million! percent in the next ye The Ruthen berg Daily roubles for the struv¢le against home- | Good Cotton Harve lessness in the RSFSR. It is proposed to organize a num- ber of new receiving centres capable of dealing with at least 2,500 home- | less children. Position of Ukraine Workers. There are about 2 million wage earners in th® Ukraine. During the last two years, 85 percent of the workers went through rest homes. On an average, wages have reached the level of 1913, and in some cases this level has been exceeded, This year 11 million roubles were assigned for the improvement or safe- ty arrangements in the Ukrainian industry. It is proposed to spend 16 to 17 million roubles for this purpose in the new financial year. The cotton ha (Central Asia), Compared with 1} area has cor ly increased and | has reached 21,000 hectares. Next year the sowing area for cotton will be increased to 40,000 hectares. Medical Equipment Works. Building cooperation have been| started in Leningrad in connection) with the putting up of. big medical | equipment works, The latter will| produce medical implements which were hitherto imported from other countries, including operating tables, quartz lamps, ete. and also a‘number of chemical-pharmaceutical prepara- tions. The opening of the works will take place in 1928, Worker Sustaining Fund should be a part of every meeting of your Workers Party unit and DAILY WORKER Builders’ Club meet- ing. Every real left wing working class organization, labor union, fraternal society, ete., should place this mat- ter on its order of business. Sustaining Fund stamp books, membership cards and full information may be obtained through THE DAILY WORKER 33 FIRST STREET NEW YORK, N. Y, , the sowing | m,

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