The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 29, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1927 Indian Nationalists Demand Co o~ INDEPENDENCE 1S | “Ssm4S="""©FaseiST VICTIMS GOAL OF ENTIRE. INDIAN CONGRESS Boycott Is Unanimous; Thousands Crowd City, MADRAS, Dee. 28.--The goal of the | Indian people is complete political in- | dependence from British rule, accord- ing to a resolution passed yesterday by the All-India Nationalist Congress here. The independance resolution fol-| lowed motions for a complete boycott of the Statutory Commission, headed by Sir John Simon, which is due to ar- , rive in India shortly. There are no Indian members on the Commission. mously carried. mplete Freedom; Invite Mme. Sun Yat Sen | | | | Major Tien Lai-huang, head of the |air forces of the Nanking armies has | CONFINED TO HOT VOLCANIG ISLAND Many Die as Result of Starvation, Disease GENEVA, Switzerland, Dec. 28. aul Altho the three hundred political pri oners who were removed from hot| voleanie islands in the Mediterranean | by the Fascisti as a political gesture | were pardoned on condition that they | say nothing about life on the islands, | a number of details of the barbarous | conditions under which Italian politi- | cal prisoners are confined have leaked | Mexican army. Prince of Wales of the American Empire . Photo shows Lindbergh with General Alvarez, chief of staff of the Lindbergh, who has started on his Central American “good-will” flight in the interests of Wall Street arrived at Guatemala City yester- out. \ } Housing conditions in the Lipari is- lands and in Ustica, where the three hundred prisoners were confined were | ‘Turk Cabinet Officers ‘Setting the Stage MEXICAN SENATE Stine TO DISCUSS OL LAND BILL TODAY | Calles Measures Favor U.S. Oil Magnates MEXICO CITY, Dee. ential bill rechanging pr ¢ id Te fi can intere todz i amber of Deputies. expected to take up the Cal ments tomorrow. The amend 92 The Ss amend- nts, which virtually | by American producers are exp to pass the Senate with little di sion. The measures passed the Cham- \ 7 7 a: i ani 3 DRT ha tere ree a (conte to Washington to confer ‘with |MUndted prisoners were eontined wore] || i pee DSP ee eanangaay, RIO DE JANEIRO, Dee. 28.—Direct | The All-India Nationalist Congress, | American officials. so hoe Pe a wet 8 ie Beste ee | 1] And Deputies Charged WASHINGTON, Dec. The ns-Atlantic air mail service will be § which comprises five thousand dele-| — picts —— -———. preferred sleeping on the seashore or | ie lp, jentia) bill alter: M an {established between Brazil and gates, representing all shades of In-| peony Caves: sleeping 1m ie Stee (| With Stealing Funds NRETEGe Gos SeReE ea ae | RVIaN: bedgec tice during January or | | dian political opinion, previously ters provided for them. Food was| | | It tealing unas petroleum laws was weleomed ht be ely sascha if passed measures requesting Mme. Sun very scarce, and sanitation bad. Fresh} 1} =e | State Depart: ene 0: Coming Yat Sen and other Chinese Revolu- | water came only by steamer from the} WALL ST SHARK || ANGORA, Turkey, Dee. 28.—| ee it docs vt the virtual lifting ot United States Ambassador Judah tionists to visit India in the interest mainland and at weekly intervals. | 5 The Minister of Marine, the Bursar| ie bile et a the ho» bala OF is busy preparing the stage for the of the Nationalist movement. It was | $s The bad sanitary conditions and the | and a number of deputies are im- Bia ae Pe pasa jos seats s imperialistic show which the United also voted to equip an Indian am- ""/intense heat of the semi-voleanic is-| MEXICO CITY, Dec. 28.—The seri-| | plicated in the theft scandal which | a pesos Soech Sieh the pion A nS States will stage at the Havana con- bulance corps for service with the |lands have taken a heavy toll. Hun-| ous financial situation of the Mexican| | has resulted in the loss of more ae " ‘ ference. { Chinese Nationalists. (Special to The Daily Worker.) | dreds of prisoners have perished, it is government which was revealed when| | than 100,000 lire of the Parliamen- | | —— | % * * MOSCOW, Dee. 16 (By mail) __| believed, tho the number is unknown |the Ministry of Finance announced | | tary funds. | » FA Whisicwude wt Covdiins. ‘tive tundeed, gad fifty-four fnduatvial because of the rigid suppression of in- | that it would be unable to meet pay- The Minister of Marine was | aman a ives HHT Reactionar Bands MADRAS, Dee. 28-Thousands of | plants, valued at more than two hun-|f°7mation. Letters ate subject to a) ments on debts due to international! | charged with mishandling the con-| : strangers from all over India are|dred million roubles, were constructed | S¢Ve"e Censorship, while newspapers | bankers was further complicated when| | tract for the reconditioning of the| ® ft pouring into Madras to attend the|by the Soviet Union before the cele-| 24 Books are strictly forbidden to| Luis Montes de Oca, Seeretary of Fi-| | former German ship Goehem, now | 4 sessions of the All-India Nationalist|brations of the tenth anniversary, | ‘¥¢ Prisoners. nance and Public Credit, revealed to| | the Yavonz Sultan Selim. } fl : Congress. It is estimated that there | while the oid other plants, valued at ST een Tie [ite Chane oF Pu ta oe ae wa woe ee pt SD } ‘ i thousand visitors at pres- | almost a billion roubles, were actually Dey eer ene Aur RE ce latins t Seer ae Rage: ent pet, is Pca | dae ROMREEOCEER anit 45,000,000 pesos less than the original , HONOLULU, Dec. 28,—Conditions} yeXICO CITY, Dec. 28. — With a) oy “ 4 | esti: 98 00 jin western Samoa, which is under the! the counter-revolutiona * * * Ne 7 bi 9 estimates of 335,000,000. 5 | es the c er-revolutionary movement New construction begun in 1927-28 tee for 1928 will b id {mandate of New Zealand, are so bad/in Jalisco virtually wiped out, the Labor-Hater On Commission. will reach a total value of 556.1 rou- 1 enue aoe) VoL De COnmMAeE hat they have br b a X ped : f ; eo Bedale é lably lower than in 1927 and are not that they have brought about a na-| Mexican federal troops operating un- | LONDON, Dec. 28—Members of |bles. The two immense oil pipe lines | |tive resistance which may break out! der General Figueroa have be ie es eg = re |expected to exceed 290,000,000 pesos. Ly . | de gue en re the British Statutory Commission re- | {0m Baku to Batoum and from Groz-| = | Masten Patangeal sideitlo b jinto armed insurrection at any mo-| called from Jalisco, it was learned to- ‘ cently appointed by the Tory Baldwin | "yi to Tuapse are among the enter- | ba sais pratt gta pis tae pe |ment, according to O. F. Nelson, who, ! day ‘i A regime to investigate and report on|Prises under construction. Important | — | Dertered any aah ri ht ue i Reve a iccr : |together with two other Europeans The : er-revolutionists: Baal th ernment of India, will sail|4evelopments are also being made in| According to information received | financial settlement which w i je con-} MOSCOW, Dee. (By Mail)—Amer- | ‘°F° SOMES! au nes eget e counter-revolutionists had con- ie go" e} » A ae ebigides : e ducted by Fernando de la Fuentes,|; ili, learn. cométhing new about |X" recently deported from the Is. itrated troops in Jalisco Province from Marseilles on Jan. 20, according |the metal industries and new cotton} from Vinnitza (Ukraine) the regional ; 44“ age feet Mae es Onna DEW | BOUL by ca tetien GAY Faded aiti . to reports from the foreign office. The |and textile mills are being construct-| trade union Soviet, together with the | chief of the Department of Credit, | prisons when Ernest Lundeen, former | J : | Where special ederal expeditions were fare of th Gottatedton Sir John |¢d in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. | trade unions, is elaborating the ques- | When he arrives in New York. In view| congressman and Minnesota legisla-} |The men were deported following | sent against them. ey were routed Simon, tote ait active part in attack-| The Magnetic Mountain workers in| tion of the introduction of the 7-hour |°f the concessions made to American |tor, returns home with the facts he seca v4 none s and cruelty jin a number of skirmishes with the ing the British General Strike. There |the Urals will cost 117.8 million rou-|day in the enterprises of the region.|®! Producers in the oil law amend-|gained in visits to several Moscow |towards the natives rought by Nel- | federal troop: an no Indians on the Statutory Com- | bles, according to estimates. The foodworkers’ union is considering | he hae lSlateaien by Calles, Prabal prisons. Only they are not “prisons” Leper ae ii itso ad Sie Geores re So issi SE the advisability of a 7-hour day in the | fieials expect better terms from the|in the Soviet Union, but “houses of |Richardson, the British administrator. \17 Soldi mission. : Hitce Rae i Ghrea thei we aectite | iers Frozen Dead ¥ } bi . committee of henkers, headed by » |The three men were sent to negotiate ‘0 ’ Pogue ree tne ene “og | macaroni factories, and the chemical | , : correction. | with ‘ age 4 Spe = ae ” ; z eee } Pr ee ie og |with the Samoans after Sir George} BELGRADE, Dec. 28.—Melting | workers’ union in the super-phosphate | Thomas W. Lamont, partner in J. P.| amney looked like factories rather | “1. iol dx . 5 | y , q tare sea ts have revealed the bodies Brushes for Red Army imperialists Foree | works. | Morgan and Co. than prisons,” Lundeen reported. “The mee ere rea pores angle \of seventeen soldiers te pie’ | 4 ‘ 5, 3 r nare rder, p- thousand toothbrushes, neatly packed SR (0 Employ as Soviet to supervise this work. Mass Auto Out ut |smoking. And these were among the | The Mau, the committee of Samoan pingh thelr aaiek hd in metal cases, with toothpaste or In Odessa (Ukraine) the first ex- | linost ‘hard-boiled’ criminals in all | Bative chiefs, has stated that it wants | * af powder, have been purchased by the = | periment with the 7-hour day will be! bisa: no European intervention and at first BOR BA 8 id Soviet Union vraag Se iat at} MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., Dec. 28—|made in the “October Revolution” | 8-Hour Prison Day. refused a conference. Later it made}]88 Sportsmen Abroad 7 a a, cost of nearly $200,000. Declaring that so long as the capital-| plough works, the biggest works of wn Oe a, “The eight-hour day rules in the |* ¢cl@tation of grievances. | MOSCOW, Dec. 15. (By Mailj— 7 ist powers continue to manufacture | this kind in the town, (formerly the! | prison workshops, too, along with the | jOne hundred and eighty-eight Soviet i Caen os Hikewlse, Geberal Boo. eyes? | MOSCOW, U. S. 8. R, (FP)., Dec, | Union scale of wages. Deductions are /100 Die in Turkish roe Inst sport asatcu. : iet Union to do likewise, General Bou- re j SiS eoas amie: » --y,|made for the cost of running the in-| Fy se during the last sport season. In 192 denny, writing in the Krasnaya Ga-' i i Fg ea ee rucrtie hungry: TE (ata, usually one-thled te one naif Steamship Collision |it is proposed to send about 300 ° arine Une 0: rs 2 v a ei zeta, points out that despite their re- 4 eties leaded cient nagety GOVE oe the wages, and the rest given to | sportsmen abroad. One hundred peated protestations the foreign im-| 'l'o Use Stamp Rapping es nate miy that ft ie dh Hace aes | he rluoher's: dependents or. to the |, CONSTANTINOPLE, Dec. 28— sel £e to Norway alone in perialists have no intention of halting | A ri I . li ip driven be eae, man himself when he leaves, Thus in | The death list in the collision of two | the beginning of 1928 to participate in the use of chemical warfare. American imperialism , idee: She to AE en \addition to a trade, the prisoner has | Turkish steamships in the sea of Mar-|the World Winter Spartakiad. “ER Silla Ba E ities In the U. 5. 5. Rh. have Amer-| _ o ae ;, | more was increased to 100 today. _—_ ehiinad Ge piace Ap ance The first Nicaragua Protest Stamp|ican makes of every kind. There 2 patna Sade fines eee | The steamship Svindji sank with BUY THE DAILY WORKER the use of pas in war, is nrevattnr ty | to be received on a foreign communi-| German, French and Italian and other |*?™ is up so that he can begin life! JY var AT THE NEWSSTANDS use it if there is war” Bosdanny wait | ation at the U. S, office of the All-|foreign manufactured cars. The Ford |*"°™- Hance ia = : a ne sede ‘i aomiaad ec Salc.! America Anti-Imperialist League was |rubs fenders with the Cadillac in) sy PEER Eye: Hi e eae Be retinas e Agree} Hasted on the back of an envelope!Baku. The Dodge and Rolls-Royce; “The house of correction is like a Vide gs ery wats, gas experiments | ysited by a U. S. marine stationed in| scoot together over the Moscow cob-| factory in other ways, too. There is | continue and soldiers are taught how| panama! iblestones. A Soviet chauffeur sits|a Lenin corner, a library, an orches- OR LISP 8 OYS AND Gif LS $4. Mee a ‘ oe Those stamps which are issued by | Proudly at the wheel of a Mercedes or | tra, recreation grounds. A co-opera- | _“No one takes seriously the prohibi- | 4). League as a part of its campaign Lincoln in Leningrad. tive store is managed by the men| Aphartoan biktieshipe the Head gas in war, and while the Sov- against intervention in Nicaragua, sell} To remedy the confusion the Rus- themselves. ‘ | me acne 4 iet nion has always kept all engage- for five cents each, or $1 for a book! sians have organized the Society for I went in just as the men were | | load marines in China, ments with capitalistic states, we can-| ¢ 99, |the Promotion of Auto Use and Road} having noon lunch. There was Rus- | Haiti, The Philippines hot retnain blind to the fact that other! 1:35 stated at the office ee the | Construction. It_is working out an|Sian soup, a meal in itself, with meat | and other lands of op- states which, as did the Soviet Repub- League, 39 Union Square, New York,| automobile importing plan that will|and vegetables in the big bowls. | ~pressed people lic, signed cee eee. SErostietity that the “leatherneck” who sent the, be a big thing for the American plant | Plenty of good bread and tea, At| p D - ; have ug aa carted of renounc- letter ia-opposed to 0.8, intervention | that gets the first order of 10BOG) cine the men get fish or meat with A oes it all mean? ing chemical warfare.” yin Ni i |cheap cars. The first order will| vegetables and in every way eat just 2 san sri all this affect eck oa eae Ai Hoa tGewe Wane Aoctes aciiwil ywopentlaa wall as tka womens | WITH OVER 20 BLACK AND WHITE ILLUSTRATIONS AND 4 American workers? You é Bie aber es Dee. tie bias reasons for sending us here,” he|SWitching to other makes. | “The prisoners looked healthy and) COLOR PLATES AND 2 COVER DESIGNS BY LYDIA GIBSON will find the answer in | steamer Saccarappa went mecotct ia] Wtites, “but what have the rest of] Will Build Roads. | vigorous. | —Duroflex $.50—Cloth $1.00 — WORKERS LIBRARY PUB- these interesting books | gale today near the hook of Hol-|05, Sy against these Latin-Ameri-) | The chief obstacle to auto develop-| “here are no small cell rooms. LISHERS, 39 E. 125 STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. é : h land. Her position was reported as cans? iment is bad roads. The city Soviets The men sleep in a large dormitory, | ? that should be in t e dafiefouke. Tha! Sdcenyappe: hailed jare devoting large sums to replacing a new building. To be sure, they are | hands of every intelli- Sean Philadelphia BUILD THE DAILY WURKER!|the cobbles with asphalt, creosote locked in at night, and the guards of MEPMINIA ZUR MULE gent worker. . z Cities rad ay ei ee {blocks and granite. But the country | course are armed. But there seems to i I . li . ‘districts are like Missouri at the be-|be no fear of a conspiracy to break i 7 2 1 1 m R d | b I t t l Ss t ginning of this century. Will more | jail, for the men are allowed to asso- | TRANSLATED BY iA DAILES hc gt ae 4 é a OY nN CyYNa 10nd IZ S autos bring good roads or will good |ciate with each other with a tikedoia| - —_ —— ie Latin’ 2 @.so-x0lath @hce . . . roads bring the autos, was the ques- unparalleled in any American jai ARRRIALIRE a Up Latin-American Secretariat \n setey yaw enesoens! and have inspected, a “hav W MATERIALISM AND - NOT $09 2OCIEtY ‘0 the experts and | have inspected, and my duties have ‘ BAPUAO CHITCISAC D alin mer ria professors. pte experts seared it led me into many.” Defeat the Im erialist ar 1 y Lenin x ps SBME Kereta AE was no use having autos until roads, seis dee Pp \ AMERICA j | GSpecial to DAILY WORKER) _ | is nothing but a tool for Wall Street |had been built. The society decided) | | is . . DOLLAR DIPLOMACY j MOSCOW, Dee. 15. (By mail). —A and as such, an enemy of the toiling otherwise. | England Snowed In A ainst Nicara bay i ain Be Saete MOREE ea / |Latin-American trade union secretar- | masses both of Southern, Central, and| “We know the history of Ameri-| re | Jos. Freeman 2) iat has been set up by the Executive North geek ee can auto development,” said a direct-/ LONDON, Suffering and LABOR LIEUTENANTS OF Bureau of the Red International of ersecute Yorkers, or of the society, “first many autos, | distress throughout many sections of ; AMERICAN IMPERIALISM Labor Unions as the result of a series “Whereas the reaction raging in the | then big demand ee good reads, then| England resuliing from the great! LENINISM TEACHES Wes Jay Lovestone 05 \._ {of conferences with Central and South | Latin-American countries is chiefly di- the roads, That is what will happen’ blizzard that struck the British Isles | 7 P : ‘ og omer Sodan oh 2, {American trade union delegates to the rected against the working class and |in the Soviet Union. We are cncour- over the week-cnd were still acute to- | “The victory of the working class in the advanced countries and the | J sea hd iis was celebrations of the tenth anniversary whereas nothing but the united forces aging the country co-ops to buy autos, | day. jliberation of the peoples oppressed by Imperialism are impossible without Pauls Vista Orath $2.00 of the Novembefrevolutions of the toiling masses all over Latin-;We are helping establish motorbus! Dozens of vil ages were still isola-|the formation and consolidation of a common revolutionary front, ‘ z The resolution adopted by the Latin) America can resist both United States | lines outside the cities. In 3 or 4 years ted by the snow and jhave not re-| “The formation of a common revolutionary front is possible only if the CHINA American delegates, which attacks imperialism and the aggressive policy we shall have mass production of | ceived food supplies since last Satur-| proletariat of the oppressing countries supports directly and resolutely the te tredbarveicila sy faved Re United States imperialism in Central of the bourgecivie in the Latin coun-| cheap autos. Then watch the villages | day. |movement for national independence of the oppressed peoples against the i Pe, and South America, follows in full: tries, it is unanimously resolved: set aside money for hard roads.” perenne neee ere AON , Imperialism of the mother country for a people which oppresses others re ca a Na re “Colony of U. 8.” “To inaugurate preparatory work in Jue GEORG ARNS” $375,000. never be free.” CIVIL WAR IN “We, the delegates of class trade all Latin American countries for the] U, $, MINISTER TO RETURN. LONDON, Dee. 28-—Lloyd Geor \s The Workers (Communist) Party asks you to join and NATIONALIST CHINA unions in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, unification of all trade union class or- DUBLIN, Dec. 28.—Hrederick A.lis reported to have a, ide ruta orge | in the fight for: Earl R. Browder 25 Cuba, Mexico, Uruguay, Chili and/ ganizations for the struggle against | sterling paste Minister ‘to the deo be he ia ret ; CHINA IN REVOLT Ecuador, meeting in Moscow during | United States imperialism, the imper- lwoew ate te ; cas : e714 y his journalistic writings in the The Defeat of Imperialist Wars. Stalin, ete. i AS the Tenth Anniversary of the Novem-|ialist Pan-American Federation of tae Datel Sak ee hee higher pnw pecan ue lg pag fi Smashing Government by Injunction - Kick ae : ; | Fi ; s e compensation for the “dis- é 20VE; : y C : CHINA AND AMBRICAN ber Revolution, and coming together | Labor and the attack of the national Ryesident Cosgrove is in this country.} appointment and expense” of politics egg i 4 IMPERIALIST FOLIOCY on December 11, 1927, in the Red In-| bourgeoisie, and for the establish- Pee sigan ag Organization of the Unorganized. : Latah eiabheh ds id “ ternational of Labor Unions, and dis-|ment of close fraternal ties with the Ses The London Daily News, however, ob- a SHO) a Handreny | cussing the question of the position of | international labor movement and the ENGLISH FLOODS. serves that if his political career were A Labor Party. Ps Bod INDIA the working class and trade unions in| creation of an all-embracing class In- OUST HUN DREDS en i roaeett he sould have diffi- The Defense of the Soviet Union and Against Capitalist Wars, | MODERN INDIA Latin-America, have come to the fol-| ternational, uniting the trade unions, LONDON, Dec, 28.—Whole villages | culty in getting such stuff printed. 7 sh > Gg ; Uh hataad ee) lowing conclustons: of all countries, races and continents | h@ve been cut off and three hundred | He, | A Workers’ and Farmers’ Government. i Brrr ho Gitar a EMM “Whereas, United States imperial-|in order with combined forces to |!milies are homeless as a result of/ | PRUSSIA GETS LIBRARY. | Application for Membership in Workers (Communist) Party , tionalist and Labor Politics ism is becoming more and more ag-| struggle against imperialist wars and | the floods caused by the.rising of the) BERLIN, Dec, 28.—'The library of! (Fill out this blank and mail to Workers Party, 43 E. 125th St., N. Y. M,N. Roy 50 gressive towards all countries in Cen-|for the complete emancipation of la-| Stour River at Canterbury. Prof. Ernesto Quessada has been j BRITISH RULE IN INDIA tral and South America, and the|bor from the domination of capital: given to the State of Prussia. The| Name .....-... sss. ceeeeeeeaee t S. Saklatvala ie United States is endeavoring to con-| “We, the undersigned, undertake to| BUCHAREST, Dec, 28.—Two, mill-| owner, who spent his student years in| da —ooooooooS vert the whole of Latin-America into {do everything possible in our country jion, three hundred thousand dollars is | German universities, made himselt | shansere N WORKERS LIBRARY a colony for American capital; | for the convocation at the end of 1928 | the estate of the late King Ferdinand | notorious by his pro-Germanism dur-} PUBLISHERS, Inc “Whereas the Pan-American Feder- |in Montevideo for the purpese of set-|of Rumania according to the state-|ing the war. The library contains | Occupation lath Aig eo cas aig dis a 7 : ation of Labor created by the reae-|ting up a Latin American ment legalizing its distribution to the | 80,000 volumes and is the largest in} SN uke 29 FB 126th St. New York. tionary Amarican tendo union leadens | Union Seeretariat. heirs. Tatin (America. (Enclosed find $1.00 for initiation feg and one month’ i t * 4 a

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