The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 27, 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 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

Other pages from this issue: