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Page Four DAILY WORKER. THE EW YORK, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1927 {More Contratins eo] ~The General Military Situation | Ruthenberg Daily | in China Worker Sustaining | coe Japanese imperialism in|city that the Communist Army evac-| Textile strikes are growing in Shang- Fund \| The ¢ hinese com who | Manchuria he has a/uated Swatow. But surely a few/hai and all the foreign papers are ] a s, } contributes this article was in ’ Ca and so whenever he con-| days is hardly sufficient for an army| unanimous in declaring that these “ 99| } 3 aD 3 ; closest touch with all develop-|%* y operations in Manchuria or|to rest and recuperate. There seem| strikes are under the leadership of iy Cc ll | i een enllected)) 20> ea ae af the Chinese Tbe ee on its borders he is generally suc-|to have some other, perhaps contribu-|the Communists. The proletariat is} € Ove a | \ a eae Fetch RST NEO CML ERE neT ALS w i 1 ae a eet oO ‘ - | tory reasons. oe alive and awake. The chief problem Qa 5 \ } Betimore, Ma. BES ea se Sate tear ura he meets defeat Quits} Te supears, to us shat mop eutticient nom ae cue, Peoples ite cele One Sigmund Romberg’s| 2 es aaa aaa : is as is OnvE ie ne uy : the ks: 1 of tou Who | efforts were made to effect the nec-|0f the Chinese forces to the imperial- Musical Sh R h d | iehivine. York Cit: ass forces in the Chinese 8 SuppOry onthe liberal land- | essary reoragnization in the army it-|iSt powers. | ow tusned | Wied Ne ae olution aud the role piayed|lords of SHAN EE LE has become | self—the removal of the old generals ‘The Chief Problem. in at the Majestic | yn 00 by each. known as the “modern governor” of|and military bureaucracy, the draw- vi i iali ke conces« Hrynehuk, ss the province). He has trained his|ing in of new £ i NVI Bee Rea Dabs, COCs | a 2.00 readers to form a much clearer | borders of Shan-si and he is gener-| transfor sd to kate Means: Y jare demanding back some of the con- are being attracted to the Majestic Rartins City 5.00! estimate of the recent develov-|ally successful. But when Yer tries |e cone og ee cone ew |cossions already made. True; the! ‘Theatre, where the Shuberts are put- Wor. We onal Glob stimate of the recent develop- y successful. F ut when Yen tries}class basis. As a consequences it is| British have made a gesture of with-| ting an ENE LOW Call,” Pp Sear mad 10.00 ments of the great struggle in nce out of his province, when | possible that when the army entered | dyawi 600 trooue from’ Shanghai |: — Bamereaiet hie va 5 : cit et in ror cowardice’ drawing 1,500 troops from Shanghai show which, if John rrison, Bronx, N. Y. 3.00; China and especially the revolu- Tientt . De Te eking at | Swatow the result of contact with the|to the home country. But these were FEVET PN torniulans micah M. C. Underwood, Roston, Mass. 1.00 tionary military movements in entsin, he too meets with defeat. | bourgeoisie and of petty bourgeois|men brought from India who should anything, ought | H. Chubni York Cit 00 South China—Editors Note. Individual Armies. influence became particularly danger-|have been demobilized a year ago| io at least make | Branch N ae Oeewan.. 400 deadlock! None of the|0t8,im the higher ranks. In this con-|but were kept in arms because of the Btad. | eee Coove Bene A. situation has been reached in ls now struggling so desper-|¢ction the questions of a determined emergency. Another part have been | poli Minn .00 | cs tena hRB ee ut eecl aeahe patentee ith each other represent any | *ttitude towards the struggles of the/moved to Hongkong. Therefore the| Cowboys, _In-| BE. Adamok, (collec Chicag hing’ thet can’ well be cnaracterzed | ae “"*,| artisans and the peasantry were na- iti roops ar in- | dians, Mexican s a military deadlock ‘hane T'so-lin! ive tendency and nc 0 of ans 3 a-|bulk of the British troops are main-; 8, ; | a ‘ oh | es Se a ee an claim ane eetine Gre ofl turally very pressing. The evacta-|tained in readiness and in fighting dancing maidens, See OO ee Sec canee ny Lue Shes i "In the past, it| 10% of Swatow would follow. trim. Japan too has strengthened its | and Federal army 26 he situatic wi the Shang ast, i A . a ae ~outa. | ; a fore a with Chuan Tsu-chang (the proved strong}| ory Sh conte points to 8 Aer na in| Bouthern Mansharas sid spon eae oa Shantung forces) ~ : Chuan enough to administer a severe defeat | Qs” ee our the Communist |in Shantung. Of course, this move i act Obe ip tee | ts Tsu- hang ‘advanced | upon | ici to the revolutionary movement—be- |” ; Dinca eerie es jaimed at the Soviet Union primarily; in gocdly onun-|. : ee ae k of the support of the imperial- army, its i nnel and its policies, | but not only against the Soviet Union bers, producing “| 3 ; 1.00 and was repelled. ears ! “st jis must be fully transformed to econ-|—the whole thing is unquestionably| *°'m2 Veane with much avid- Featured in “Escape” John Gals- : pias K ee” Acai eS . eee because the count gentry, ; es Hi a non ys i i rker n Fron shek advanced upon ing— ay pes ona *!form with the new class basis of i Oee i reat ; | ity the speed and| worthy’s new play at the Booth The- Sagat 7 zip eeahae it of their wits | me move of preparation against the , y Dt au os ¢ ( i 0) repe s true that a fam eg ined in er an ity {pes support. “dead” Chinese Revolution. The re-| noise that feature this musical play, | atre. tto Olson anking generals | 2 : : ais * * + | i : J, §,| and keep a fair-sized line at the box- | —__ fea were | icurecs a hee : nt change in the head of the U. S. P e ett ‘Mont Saenger Be ec of the weak | isi : | ? : ey Beem cia ek ae to | organi orkers and peas-|/8 the Chinese Revolution Dead? |¥an-si Patrol se indicates see ne : feet audience by the addition of several s a \ > Wh Saka America too is placing increased im- aken from Augustus nomas’s | tra-la-las. Rudolph ~~ dexdlock’ | Some Who Are Eager to nee : : : pale ¢ ; peers Ped lac Beeheania alk of the bourgeoisie | Honor” a “Dead” Rev- ae ss a a its forces in the Chi Bag ae See “The Love Call” is nothing more Alfred Ki eriod of time has certainly been : of groups following “ognize a Live One. No! The Chinese Revolution is not|i8 Just another ‘mellerdrammer® set west that pictures the rise of Amer- Ne Dako 00 | Strange. Except for the Northern ex- p of the groups|¥S the Chinese revolution “dead”? | “dead”! the ease that the Communist | , ie ot na tas of Sigmund Som |ican imperialism, and the exploita- Nek ls 5 | ; 5 ; : berg, who has written several tuneful | ,; . : Finnish Federz 1 Log | Petition They are divided on|4«yYes!"—insist the Chinese land-|A'™y displayed in moving in the nalodies igen tk = . i tion of the Indians as a highly ro- Joseph Bjorkman, re al lines and no one camp can} jlords and bourgeoisie, the foreign | * ‘outh, its extensive and rapid sweep,|) |. Pita 3 mantic era.—S. A. P. Betenit, Mich. 59 | The exception » vietory over the others. | imperialist =. “Fes!”—-repeat the so-|i8 82 indication of the strength of the}, With an ae of romance Vee y pars bod eager Sst ems ae te i a Ge, Moo At set Broadaay Brig _) Mministration Rallies thie way. Mae “ The relations hetween Wuhan and democrats of the “left” such as Fred- | 10". Pele eoraay, there ae SHES | coteneibantanments Henny Cente ill if way ofs ere seug pea ie er ca ng are a particular ease of the | «tich Adler and the latter hastens to |i”, the situation. fhe Kuomintang) 4 parcel of Indians under Black Soe Forees to Defend Idea! iss jes with little suc- ae al military situation. Ideologi- ce “Honor to the dead Chinese Povo nubnecys eage aa * sasenta | Hawk and when the Indians, in a} “Inmmoral Isabella,” a_ satirical 4 y the two have united; they have | lution.” caer Tht te wf th, | last desperate stand agai : i ith Isabella and rf AOD ie baad Ee anovement: Degen: ; 3 they rs , : and petty bourgeoisie. That is of the lesperate stand against the west-|comedy dealing wit sabella an Of Monopoly for Loans AS SER 7a ssued a joint manifesto against the| Tt strikes us that these gentlemen,| 90° PeUy poureccish a is oe Ba, [Ward drive of the budding American| Columbus will open tonight at the ee, SAN Bees ption. 4 __ | Communists and a t the Soviet | are a little to ready ox Phonon oa | oi ere Ge an) the. order of! the day. empire besiege the fort, the arrival|Bijou Theatre. Lawton Campbell is ASHINGT ON Doce. _ A real exception to this rule is| Union. But the forces of Nanking and dead revolution and a little too reluc-| “When it occupied Swatow th C of more troops to finish the slaughter}the author and Frances Starr is the Representative Fred Brit found in the nt movements of the|of Wuhan have not joined. Within |tant to recognize a live one. It was | UAE a a ae | de doubly significant for the featured play . Jiean, of* Tine one of the adminis-| Communist Army in the South and it|the camps of each and between the| only about two years ago when after | (oes ie iT tee, anneal a Sateen is Sa - ae tration men has been is this exception that provides us| two there are many contradictions. | Feng’s defeat, after the defeat of the | ie nak ae rupee ge te around Ear ied ith the key to understand the| War has not yet been declared but| First and Second People’s Armies, [power on the ae “class ba eee 2dvisi ay. ‘ ik : 2 re se is | 78 .- a) ee but to ieeaethen the connection with | either sane The Canton army was successful in| obvious. For example, it was an-| the slogan "This is We: 1349 “(that | ‘ = = = port and military | the past only insofar as it had the | nounced recently that a number of | °° the aftermpth of the ‘dead’ FAVS Ieee ecttale Serer Baal ex y 45th St. ie 130, .REPUBLIC W ST | E i : strength abroad support of the masses of the workers,! American battleships were moved to|]ution) of the Chinese Revolution.) No longer is this ap aa ad |BOOTH pee ee Shae aay IS. | Mate Wed.&Sat. ecentl Coolidge inter-| peasants and artisans. Having lost| points in between Wuhan and Nank-| Honor to the dead Chinese Revolu- it i BRIELLE een ) S prene r lidee inter : avin; F , 2 a mt ‘ logan; i . x J asiacar AMES presents vened in sguabble in the {the support of the masses it has lost| ing. Now ships are usually moved to|tion!” And this upon the eve of al tion and ste it is a real slogan of ac-| soyry GALSWORTHY’S Last Play The Mulberry Bush : ea i ‘ ae is ‘vy P jtion and struggle state department over the question its military genius, its spirit of vic-| points from which trouble is expect-|Seties of the most tremendous revolu- G a aes ! ESCAPE seb. with James Rennie & Sate Gotbert of apnrov foreign loan to say tory. At the present time the sccial|cd and this action of the well-in-|tionary upheavals the world has ever| Reese ess nee dnt pee | ke | CIVICS ER ERTORY HEAL that he hel y of state |basis of the Nanking forces is the) formed American authorities points |Seen, The readiness to recognize | ibe, (Communist, Army, inj South The Actor - Managers EGR 14 St. & 6 Ave. Prices 500 to $1.50 responsible, and could allow only one | Shanghai bourgeoisie who are not|to a critical situation. | “dead” revolutions and the reluctance | China has great possibilities before it presents Lord Dunsany’s Ge EVA LE GALLIENNE policy. The effect is to prevent sale | conscious enough, who are socially | Feie’s Paton | to recognize live ones is a little sus-| Which it must realize. It has the comet Bt eet Tonight ‘THREE SISTER: in the United States of bonds not too narrow-minded to lend real and} pho pr a i picions. - | Possibility of achieving victory in 8:30. Mats. Thurs. eRe AEE ee approved of by the larger financiers | effective support to the Northern ex-| the Pee ee Bene complicates | ‘Thut “Revolution” Lives. | South China and cf using South China The Theatre Guild Buensnte setae i pedition once Shanghai is out of im-| <i ia nm in Central _China con- No! The Chine jas the basis for new revolutionary de- M PD No Cl mediate danger. Biderably,’ Feng bas ;quite a larg@ og amen eee ee voluten as not | velopments in China as a whole. But| EN P R G ¥ No Clue of Redfern ceaaee careers oprived of its base of | 7MY:, He himself cannot continue to saad The present condition in! these possibilities can only be realized BRUNSWICK, Ga., Oct, 26-—Paul = ae 4 “| subsist on Hunan which h Chira is a clear indice f thi | | Th. W. 524. Evs. A » Ga., Oct. 26.—Pau’ : x es 2 as been ion 0} e if the army is reorga E in MI PD. | Guild FC Pa rae ea Varner, Chai ee the. wil feted aeeeee See aT has | severely hit by the wars. No one|bankruptey of the bourgeoisie. They | spond cutee hit mee abnge at the |< CAN NERY OF. THD Pmopiay «|< eee Brunswick-to-Brazil flight, said today | ¢ f % ©) trusts him or knows what to expect, |8ve Proved’ strong enough to check | Chinese Revolution. | Hampden’s "Evenings at. Lata 5 lagiely character of an adventure, more or | His positi ia. "avalon! BEREARRS | hen . . p Evenings at 8: ‘The Desert S nie ot. aviator’s helmet forwarded | joss, and has met with defeat. post ion is now that of a Shy- ution, but they have not! Wherever the Communist Party. | Matinecs paper: and Saturday 2:30/ ro O & 2 im through the State Department c ine rae lock looking out for the highest bid- proved strong enough to stabilize | penetrates it must organize the power rm -| with Robt. Halliday & Eddie Buszell from Georgetown, British Guiana, had oncrete Example: | der. themselves. Not one of the many/of the masses—Soviets, Soviets of | ~™:_Fo* presents the Motion Picture] iith Boneh elonge: to Pan > e, d oO si imsel ul i ; Ff :. isi : ri 2n 7 Bi not belonged to Paul Redfern, the; Chang Tso-lin bases himsel it upon, Seeh a situation is universal in probleme aes ge the bourgeoisie | workers, peasants and artisans dele- Ss U N R I Ss E F mee CG Century West. St ebutnor ee ar the Manchurian landlords and the in-|Chiza. Everywhere rivalries, every-| have been solved. The movement of| gates. This is the way to the victory By HERMANN SUDERMA Ma ten Wied.) amd Sats acaD: | where eile everywhere deadlock | the .workers has not beer crushed. of the Chinese Revolution. ‘ Symphonie Movietone Accompaniment The = L AD D E R imulated thru internal causes as |~ ae Ta Ti Oe, eg te fer |. well’ as thru “exterhal pn sae AMES OQ. TWICE DAILY, 2:30-8:30 e | xternal pressure (im- REMEMBER ea manipulations, intrigues, Tav a e es ar lars “Audience Quaked Delightedly.” $0200 CORT Th cre: weth Se the | ences | —Woollcott, Worla. ? B. of Bway. es, Feu Mati- The Communist Army in South (Continued from Page One) against the Soviet Union, the land of | Be CLASS-WAR China. 2nd October or of any earlier or later | the toilers. KER ALBEE'S 'HE one exception to this condition | number. | pen EFFE RSON PRISONERS T of deadlock and stagnation is the | Judging from this competition, with | Exposes Opposition. TEs TA See AVEO Dicestion 8s MOSS peomunts Army in South China. joRUE Nenana me Vorwaerts has det Pravda declares that the attitude of FULTON Sar a Sit 2.39 pa ER a a Th ae a P is army has succeeded in winning |°ided to put all previous records for|the Trotzkist Opposition recently | National , 41S. W. ra their wives bed ay Bs sie tal of the peo- | ie in the shade. ae social ceed shows clearly what road and what National Its Wed aa ° ple, especially of the peasantry, and, °7tic organ is no longer satisfied) methods of struggle the and children B|so it has won a support that made | With fabricating “documents” about | has chosen before the opening of the | TRE Trial of Mary Dagan” who have been possible its rapid military advances soviet shells” etc., it even publishes |Party congress. That is the road of | By Bayard Veiller, wit shhtvad and victories, speeches and articles that were never De ‘N HARDING—REX ¢ 3 victimized because | A short ti th Sai or PaBUahed: WEA ray tha Coe teeny ene the eavty cit | = | . A i ime ago the Communist |” zs fi P v which the Oppositi ry pos- ri ! of — activities Army approached Swatow and pe’ Vorwaerts supports the chemical war | sible eanene position-uass very: pos- | HUDSON ‘ a. & § 3 in the defeating the reactionary generals, or the fori ey the Soviet Union __ The plan of the Opposition is clear, | Vcsaegerere eres ; 5 labor movement | occupied the city. But only a few| dA ae the poison gas of it wishes to place the Party before the | Weather Clear hak Fast days later without any new strug- slander, These are the lowest] accomplished fact of the creation of THIS CH I gles the city was evacuated, “What | methods of yen ee and|a second Party. with Joe Laurie Jr. Wm. Courtleigh y | are the reasons for this? | would be in place in a yellow gutter} The “Pravda” t ae Se eee R Ss i MAS | this loegaoy: but woe in a jee aatide ice es points ont the fever. [BUILD THE DAILY WORKER | Probabilities. itself “a workers!’ papenvetie Con ish activity of the Opposition to form | — le ‘ . ‘ v W! A . 2 -lits own illegal International Labor Defense unites all forces in the labor Laat best the point, we may/|munist press nust explain to the Ger- | that. these sae tre iat the ae ee movement willing to co-operate in a fight against the Apay eeacd ony ae coamuniey man workers and to the readers of have nothing ia common with Lenin . - S ah 2 P: st and recuper- y ” x e framenip system, defends miltant workers againt im fl tc ix tn anes ‘Canton hin eeu, na, ema fhe em nd an te crane of he | Te New Playwrights Theatre prisonment and deportation and gives financial assistance Perhaps it was | to march upon that | they are doing to Torte nited a ai Bolshevist Party. An anti-Party ille- | to the class-war prisoners and their dependents, Each [| gum oo ae , - il Haslet Leela aicd eee crete ui the pro-| 40 Commerce Street, near Sheridan Square Greenwich Village CT ~ « t ictatorship is not only an 'TELEPHON: sees. ties soon sends $5 to the men in prison and $20 each to | } | offence, not only a fractional excess, eS 5 age dete Lah antago: ear ependents, a but the worst crime against the | THE ONLY HOME FOR LABOR PLAYS IN AMERICA This Christmas International Labor Defensé will send #. Leninist Party, an open challenge to|]| $25 each to the men, $50 each to their wives and $5 each [peed A nine ee | ee ane to their children as a special ex! i rian 2 , one cannot limit oneself to | f! | s pression of solidarity with t j i |Pedagogic measures with regard to |§/ | them. | AL PR CEY? the opposition. And for this reason}, | i <n the Central Control Commission was | |} é i * ‘. jabsolutely right when it decided to z Will You Hel | expel Preobrashensky, Serebriakov | The first modern labor play to debunk company unionism and the P enn all 0 S evism jand Sharov who took the responsi- so-called prosperity in the Ford factories. s : M 1 me for the organization of an ille- ota end a Message of Class Solidarity? — hBaS Fe oenk eareblioliant low Bae, s J ] $ ear) The more the Opposition withdraws || What T. J. O’Flaherty says of The Belt in the Daily Worker , f P With a Kk j itself from the Leninist line of the|f! F ~a them that those on the outside have not forgotten book, by Stalin |Party, the more it makes use of the nia aa re pray nel Le SoLERORL BHO AAR he AI | Pisin by: dispodiny of ; ‘i ; \ a largiments of the cl 4 ; speed-up system .. . the evils of class collaboration, and the folly of Rie cack r ng of a bock of 30 Christmas coupons at Here is a splendid fascinating account of the Ae bectisiaga CSubiectreGeae. Gnas | ees ons Jte to cneduteresis of a ‘benevolent’ master, this group ach. ah aac teas + - ; - | Hl artists that have undertak he ot ring Ie reat | ader— -a book on the following differences | Sition wishes the victory of socialism, || should be supported and encot nae eae Ker oe i FILL IN TODAY AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY fs Be ad tetas _ tated Stalin pointing out |but it does not believe in the pos-|f| ——————— 8 - seated a : p8~¢ the road of the Russian rty. These three sil ‘ 4 oe sha [ivreRNarion at 1 Paucar i pacaltedta- cent tor theinitsdag a) age | eee this vietory In one line|f/ Help support this theatre and The DAILY WORKER by buying | New York city. ! ee as " Se Opposition are elements tickets at The DAILY WORKER office, 108 East 1th Street. f JENIN—His Life and Work ch scerreinty, do\not want ‘the, vic~ e i by J. oslavsky us tory of socialism, namely the non- 8 3 s —-25 eae ty bourgeois intellectuals, not — — Meat tee 5} INI ISM vs, TROTSKYISM F pote nealeeiiale Whe are working| succeed in disorganizing the great) that it fully supports the principles : by Stalin-Zinoviev-Kamenev ay th A erests of the workers, but |constructive work of the Communist] of the soviet power and expresses its Tet ani é RSTO a the cistan be bear the pressure of | Party. A decisive end will be made| warmest sympathies for the scientific | NAMI pecs eed e see iberttteeeeteea bis esssselesenes | i gr sesh oops aad Questions Answered The pace Rap Pr yo dr with the anti-Party illegal work. |and cultural constructive work in the | | TRMBR . Stalin e325 Ss Soviet Union. The declarati “h por BON ied iasivus Mamniihs wed Pale Mieaws npeieiginsasg) cx oii teabiow eons A ~ hen eran teeley The hostile ac- Scientific Society. peals to all scientists and expan Ue ce | £ All for 50 cents tives of the Opposition is condemned) A group of prominent scientists and) the Soviet Union to join the society y L 4 Pan fe LA BoSRULI Oe MCHA inks pees + Under no circum- technical specialists in the Soviet |and stresses the importance of the | a 1g ed Hees a age. b alates sebakatd ae the flag| Union, including University profes- latter in the present moment when ae f < seemaniettiememeeat nga reece ane satel dee, Bat e flag of bour-| sors and well-known engineers, have |the international reaction is striving | INTERNATIONAL E: Booka offered tn this column on hand He ih cere: ere is no place formed a “Society for Furthering the|with all means to prevent the con- tn Limited quantities, All orders cash ie bols! evist ranks for the heroes | Socialist Construction of the Soviet |structive work and the strengthening i ivibiag ie " % ® and filled in turn ae received. 4 of an illegal printing shop, The} Union.” The newly founded society|of the national economic system of grt BES GME DET WAT VOT = ID: 6 BOONE TE “ fractional disorganizers will never |has issued a declaration to the effect|the Soviet Union. ‘ s ‘ { s — ad. a ro