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THE DAILY\WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1928 x }— Four ‘SUPPORT SANDINO?-SAY ANTI-IMPERIALISTS tion between the nations of the Amer- icas. We call attention to the ob- | vious fact that there can be no co-|“The [nternational” operation between Latin America and Withdrawal of United States mili- tary and naval forces from Nicara- zua and support to General Sandino — ESE a Another Ship Sails With Marines for Nicaragua eee een once the United States while Amer the Al troops are on Li tin American Kedehe, United States Section. pnd awn American wat ships ¢ The statement points out that the eae eave vel a hslan aoe ans ; Alt liberal forces who are opposing the everywhere in the ibbean. Under Jane Barry and Franchot Tone wi American invading army “are fight- circumstance all talk of co e leading parts in “The Interna 9 against it ‘ tion is the abbiest hypocri > by John Howard he ng capitalist suppression American milita savin ‘ Text of Statement. and suggests that the words of pro- test be heard at the Sixth Pan Amer- ican Conference. in Havana. that be>> gins on pe aa oe Naas ori i | ‘ The statement in full, reads as fol- | lows: | ialist intervention. land Washington to terminate imper. y and naval forces | next offering of the Nev must be withdrawn immediately from! group, which opens Nicaragua’ and from all foreign ter- | house at 40 Comme 3t., Thursday ritory. All possible pressure in Latin | night. Rehearsals of “International’ America and in the United State are now going on under Mr. Laws¢ self must be brought on Wa n. Other players who parts in this play include H Bergman, George Price, M The United States government is sending 1,000 additional marines to ae Nicaragua, bringing the to.al marine forces there up to more than 2,500. These are in addition to the airplanes end other instruments of destruction | in Nicaragua and the United States warships in Nicaraguan waters Matthews, Lawren Felix Jacove Mur: in. Support General Sandino. The little department of Neuva| |Sugovia in Nicaragua is a far more |! important battle und than its size might indicate. fGeneral Sandino is fighting for, tk tegrity of all Latin a, ‘y worker and farmer in the} Canal Zone. U. 8. Cruiser Rochester; sailing from Thomas Kilmar imperialism which is as violent in ac- tion as it is pacifist in phrase, and as | liberty-crushing in fact as it is demo- | cratic in pretext. | forget the massacre of Ocotal, which visited most of the especially prized dramatized the “peace of death” which |areas marked out by the American ights Theatre t diet by ded Colonel Stimson fastened upon the/empire. He will arrive at Havana, ens country last July—300 Nicaraguans |Cuba, coincidently with the opening 7 Eve ne scene | It is a real war which the United; Behind the protecting barrier of|slain in an indiscriminate bombing |of the Sixth Pan American Confer-| United States—every real friend of | s | States is conducting against the Nica- | United States bayonets, the railroads jraid by United States planes! It is|/ence there. It will be a ¢ i |liberty—must support him awhole: acc wil apes & raguan people, a war of imperial ag-| and the National Bank of Nicaragua |now more than five months since Col. }event. American imperialis heartedly. All honor to General San- next Friday nig the Fourth An- } gression, a war to finally destroy |have been taken over by Wall Street |Stimson “brought peace to Nicara-/learned from the British in this re-|dino! We in the United States are | xhibition of paintings and ™ zy. concert of "dhe DSI iH every vestige of Nicaraguan freedom. | bankers. Nicaraguan customs are |gua’—the slaughter continues more spect. But it will signalize even more | put to the test by his*heroie struggle. | dra by Hugo Gellert will be Hat Mocs Pemples: iow Ail the honeyed expressions of “good will” which the lords of Wall Stréet and Washington are indulging collected by American appointees, and |furiously than ever. the entire finances of the country are Personification of Pestilence. } surely than has been done up to now,|Let us push forward, the struggle, |opened at the theatre on January 12 Ara » Janis remains at the Palace |the fact that this Pan American{which is our struggle} Demand the|in connection. with the opening of for another week. Jay C. Flippen, s nd \ n 1€ |at the mercy of an American finan-| What finer mockery could there be |dumb-show is, like the phrases of |end of all intervention in Latin Amer- |“The International.” The Alice Zeppilli, with Ray Kavanagh, 4 in at this time with regard to Latin {cial dictator, Dr. Wm. P. Cumberland. |than the fact that Lindbergh, “the President Coolidge, like the slaughter |ica. |} Mr. Gellert, which are to be exhibited Hazel She’ ; Ruth DeQuin y, Ann America only serve to emphasize | Not-only is their country taken away | good will ambassador to Latin Amer- of Nicaraguans by United States mar-| Mobilize such forces that Wall|are main! Butler and Hal Parker in “Drifting,” the cynical methods which character- |Street and Washington will have to|clude drawings and paintings made |from them, but the Nicaraguans are jica,” was obliged to make a detour in |ines, like the good will tour of Col. and American debut of Catalini, the ize this latest program of aggres- | denied all liberty of speech, all free- | flying from Tagucigalpa to Managua |Lindbergh—itself part and parcel of | heed them. |by him in the Pennsylvania steel mills. | French cyclist, are other features of sion. aa : |dom of movement. They are thrown jin order to avoid the Nicaraguan bat-!the policy of American imperialist | Let this be our word to the imper- | Airplanes, factories, laborers and the week. at “Good Will” Hypocrisy. |into prison at the whim of the foreign |tle zone, where American marines are aggression. | alist organizers of the Sixth Pan |girls are included in the varied sub- Good will as a battle cry! Good | invader—men, women” and children | shooting good-will bullets into the | American Conference in Havana. | ject matter of the exhibition by this “Pinwheel,” by Francis Edwards jranks of the Nicaraguans? \ Imperialist Hypocrisy. ; ~ a si | Lindbergh, the ambassador of good| The Pan American conferences, and eRBIaNS CUO keels will as'a pretext for robbery and jare slaughtered by hundreds. i ‘ American artist who recently returned slaughter! Good will as a slogan of | Slaughter Still Continues, from a stay in Soviet Russia. The Faragoh, one of the directors of the New Playwrights’ Theatre, will be Industry 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 |all been organized into an auxiliary | his determination to do everything in tate. 106.5 141 133 214.5 264 295 289 310 |because we want to help our men|his power to help the striking coal LISHERS 39 East 125 St. By Bayard Veiller with Rex Cherryman Republic 12-; W424. Bvs.8:40 Rubber 180 190 266 «301 311 |fight for their union and a living ' diggers win their strike. NEW YORK 4 Basuratiine P Mats, Wed. khats2e Shoe 115 122.5 120.5 121 115 116.5 WALLS Peter of BUGED SILL's ; Slaughtering 80.6 103.7 108.6 1111 1123. 110.7 a wih HUME wisextiiten Marco Millions Table oo of es Hone Fs sis seat | | John Golden 3x", Wart St, st | Week Jan. 16, ‘Doctor's Dilemma® a uanti' juantil . PR > | Nos v y. 4 Year Haru Population Mfg. "Total cae Wage watake | | | BOOTH cay Fa ge a f ives, 3:40 Guild Mats Foy) 1919 100 100 100 100 Wiitw6ou, coe 192t 712 108.3 78.6 101.8 Presents ESCAPE ~ 1923 975 106.4 120.2 123.3 Bares Oh chant ti 5 1925- 93.3 100.9 f 134.0 Sea Sanh Braedon soda imperialism! This is the democratic- Nicaragua, Latin America, the op- will and death, the advance agent of pacifist method peculiar to American pressed of the entire world, will never 'American imperialism, has already the Pan American union which con- venes them, talk of friendly co-opera- (U. 8. Section) exhibition will be free to the public. YOUTH PROBLEMS IN INDUSTRY AND (Continued from Last Issue.) America has always had a higher technique of production than Europe, but during the past six years the jindustries as mining, textile, auto- ; mobile and rubber where they do not The young worker has not had the experience of the adult worker, either, and thus has no economic organiza- tion whatsoever to protect him. Again Change in Workers’ Life This change which has taken place @(See Table 6). Consequently the struggle becomes more intensified and children have no shoes and many can- not go to school because of this. “We now live in barracks, the mine operators have thrown us out of our : CANTON, Ohio, Jan, 8.—Delegates representing thirteen labor unions and seventeen other working-class or- ganizations met recently here and or- | Two openings scheduled for this evening. |Guild Theatre, of importance are At the A special number INO: 10. Ga the aiscuaston in the Russian Communist Party, featuring an article by N. Bucharin on the first 11 | theses of the opposition on the —| pany at the Cosmopolitan Theatre, produced shortly at the Kamernspiel Theatre in Vienna. The play was done here last season by the Neigh- borhood Playhouse. =—=Music Note=== , |form the dominant section of the|in the lives of the working popula-|the conditions of the workers | ecy heatre, Eugene O’Neill’s Ruth Breton, violinist, will give a By JOHN WILLIAMSON. working masses, but only a sub-|tion as a result of the develodalent of| worsens, unless they are able thru eee ie be presented by jrecital Monday night at Carnegie Youth in Basic Industries. stantial fraction. _ |industry and its centralization of|their economic organizations to resist ‘it meas inh hy a the Cosmo- | Fall, ‘hese phenomena of “youth indus- An interesting picture is seen in| ownership in the hands of a few Wall|the encroachments of big capital. ae a OeaiIS aay Peau wana| — : tries” should not mean that the left the following table which shows us Street bankers, brings with it a rise| However, the great mass having no Servant of Win M i Me a oa e | Rudolph Ganz, pianist, appears in Wing considers, the problem of youth that in the three cities where the|in the number of wage-earners and a| economic organization, they are com- T Bl te F 2 oe ai on e Is recital at Carnegie Hall Tuesday ¢ ae nate from this angle only. In |YOUn& workers form the highest per| decrease in the number of employers. | pletely at the mercy of the boss. ack aa papas Pd Dee @ one- | night. His program includes: Two fact, at this time, when the forces of |°entage of the total working popula- PT EMS OUR Boe | Legends, Liszt; Eight Preludes, De- the Left Wing are still weak, it wiil|tion, famous American labor strug- 3 Table 6—Figures on Concentration of Industry. Privat’ aekec ek the! Bean \bussy; Sonata in F Sharp Minor, Op many times be more advisable to con- gles have taken place. This is not Year Wage Earners Employers or Self-Employers keds eahie cai ae teal fee way | JI, Schumann; Prelude in C Sharp, Op centrate upon the youth in such basic | Without significance as to the militant | 29,959,000 10,049,000 Sonshine | ge cude: Marion | 45, Berceuse, Four Etudes and Pol- on : role the youth play. | 30,740,000 10,479,000 a ie in a new sketch, Alexandria onaise, by Chopin. Table 3—Showing % Young Workers 15-24 yrs. in Cities, 31,307,000 10,023,000 ne Olsen, weeell Montgomery and City Total Employed 15-24 yrs. Emp. % Total 32,152,000 10,011,000 rarsgaiay Ney aed The feature | Donald Francis Toney will give his | Akron 108,103" 35,057 32.4% 33,148,000 9,992,000 raat ibd ger cor Riders” with | piano recital at Town Hall Wednes- Fall River 56,498. 17,699 31.39 38,897,000 9,976,000 Pt rid “nie » Charles Farrell and day afternoon. Patterson 63,879 18,711 29.39 (To Be Continued.) y Astor, ea : “ ae New York 2,531,412 700,982 27.1% I . al Pr H he : o Ornstein, will make his o: 2 B ? elene Thimig will make her first |local appearance this season at tl onde =foinae we 23% STRIKERS’ WIVES CALL FOR RELIEF Mternationall'ress | ..rcew0 se Se Cosmopolitan | second concert of the League of Come Buffalo 215,343 55,813 25.9% * ¢C or e $ d i * Jannary 16, in Schiller’s posers at Town Hall on Thursday Detroit 465,114 120,259 25.8% (Continued from Page One) wage; we have a hard time with the I pon ence chee ne in jiebe.” On January | evening, together with the Pro-Arte Pittsburgh 249,748 63,381 25.4% help us a little if they knew just| scabs and police as they shoot off 1a ie at Alexander Moissi will | Quartet. LA Cleveland 347,246 85,881 24.71% what conditions were in this strike| guns and break our windows but we rihing inte stoi’s “Der Lebende Leich- - 4 Gleidand 347.246 85,881 24.7% | field. Our men have been locked out| keep on fighting and we will be glad 2 nam (The Living Corpse), in which | Fraser Gange, baritone, appears in Chicago 1,231,434 299,089 24.2% and on strike for nine months so you|if you sisters will tell everybody bore At starred in an English |a song recital at Town Hall Tuesday . Horton 350,207 84,749 24.2% can see and we think you know what] sbout this and get us as much help bhrcep ar Redemption” in 1918. | afternoon. Los Angeles 266,100 47,620 17.9% it means for workers’ families to live|as you can.” New Numbers Ready ahaa ia are the ites e Hermann ‘ “eben : Increased Productive Schemes and for nine months without any pay BaD Si Se se imig, both of whom are | Marie Morrisey will appear in a Ag The Youth. Superior Profit Making Material |coming in. Hundreds of our school | Relief Conference in Canton, Ohio. now playing in the Reinhardt Com-|song recital next Tuesday night in Town Hall. nA d- ti has b intensified. . * i 2 — ai this miele peucans, Lich innes cae the young worker is more acceptable|homes in which some of our fam-/|fanized~the Canton section of the Sone: a ine fiscuaaions eo | it the elimination of skill, introduction because he is healthy and has not yet| ilies have lived for years. Maybe you| Pennsylvania --Ohio Miners’ Relief tive the. edad ~ oe - —— as of machines, the conveyor system, been “worn out” and has been taught|can think for a family to live in a|Comniittee, with headquarters at 611 No. ike number of the Max Reinhardt’s Production ‘of | Henry Miller’s Thea..W4SSLE 1830 simplification of the processes of pre- duction, ete. has an especial relation to the young worker, In such industries, it is found that the young worker, who has had no skilled training, can do the job equally efficient as an adult worker, with the added advantage for the boss that the young worker has not as many family obligations as the adult worker and will more easily work for lower wages. in the public schools that he must work hard for his boss. The entire tendency under these new speed-up systems, is that the rate of exploitation of the worker is in- tensified. If this is true in general it is doubly true in those industries which are highly trustified and as a result specialized (principally indus- tries where large numbers youth em- ployed). This can be verified by a study of Table 4 and 5. Table 4—Trend of Productivity. 1914-100. Join in a Real Fight! wooden shed with two rooms, no toi- Jet or water in house, no light except smoky coal oil lamps, and nothing else so we can live decent. “The injunctions have hit us hard, and we feel that something ought to te done about it, because they are trying to make our men go back to work for a starving wage as low as $2.50 a day, if we lost our union, which we are fighting to keep, as the operators are fighting to make this an open shop state. The women have Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sarah Rosenthal was elected secretary. Carl Guillod was elected chairman of a committee to collect clothing; Albert Armhurst, to arrange a, house-to- house tag day, and R. C. Parks. to ar- vange a mass meeting. In addition to the work laid out for those committees several dan- guage groups are, arranging special affairs among their own people for the relief of the miners. Every delegate present expressed invaluable revolutionary pub- leation, No. 71 includes arti- cles, on the latest develop- ments in the world of labor. Get Both Issues 10 Cents Each “The Servant of Two Masters” and “He Is to Blame for Everything” Cosmopolitan Thea Solumbus Circle bale bre Mats. Fri, ana wer hte ~ at Winter Garden 2y WORLD'S LAUGH s TION! - A Artists * Models National Buss 1Su.W gb way “The Trial of Mary Dugan” | :30. Mats. & Sat. 2:30, Subscribe to get every issue. $6.00 a Year. $3.00 Six Mos. WORKERS LIBRARY PUB- MISLEADERS OF LABOR By Wm. 7. ‘HIS new book just off the press Foster On American Labor HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN WORKING CLASS ‘sath MatineesThurs,&Sat. Grant Mitchell in Geo, M. Cohan‘s American Farce THE BABY CYCLONE ERLANGER’S Thea-W.44 St.Evs.3.80 Mats. Wed. & Bat. THE MERRY MALONES with GEORGE M. COHAN w— The Theatre Guild presents —— PORGY (Eves. ats, at 2120) “Faust.” LO THBATRE St, W.of Bway Opening Night Tuesday, Butterfly” Wed. & F Faust” Thurs. © AGAINST FOR contains revelations of a char- A. Bimba $2.75 — Soa WOE asctoceWicduees He DAILY Qeeee 1. Injunctions. ly Seema of the unorgan- psd sure to astound the world of THE WOMAN WORKER AND = 3 ized, or, It is a complete picture of PHE of wT | 2, Company Unions. 2. Miners’ Relief. { the system of control of the unions ad Setene” UNTONS $1.75 | 8. Unemployment, 3. Recognition and Defense of by political and financial bribery. LEFT WING UNIONISM i | THE INTERNATIONAL 4, Persecution of the Foreign the Soviet Union. Facts are given thru original docu- D, iT Ganoan = $1.60 } Born: 4, A Labor Party. ments offering proof of the most Aiea 4 . % BY JOHN HOWARD LAWSON ‘ 5. A Workers’ and Farmers’ Gov- seandalous sell-out and corruption TRADE UNIONS IN AMERICA } 5. War: aentient. of the organized labor movement. Woster-Cannon-Browder Be | Author of “Processional” (Pill out this blank and mail to Workers Party, 43 EB, 126 St. N. Y. ©) Ratt oe ee Foster: rhe meat CAN LABOR MOVEMENT New York Moscow Ay: Paris ain China NAMB: 24 5..: pitt tent ee eens eueuale . ae ated the policies of the railroad un- LABOR LIEUTENANTS OF | DON’T MISS IT—GET TICKETS NOW! SD ictie Shy MM ee AMERICAN IMPERIALISM } : Ne as a een Rete MAT hee eeeeee isis ob 25 centx-—Five copies for one dollar. Jay Lovestone | The New Playwrights Theatre . c tate : | 36 COMMERCE ST.—PHONE WALKER 5851. PROURALION oes dle ese e bees ta | 3 Blocks South on 7th Ave. if you’are i Caddy or unemployed and cannot pay initiation fee please | pcheck this box, “UNEMPLOYED AND STRIKERS and receive dues exempt stamps until (Enclosed find $1.00 for initiation tee and one month's dues.) ADMITTED WITHOUT INITIATION employed. Sea ee The exposure involves the leading and Investment Companies of the CLASS STRUGGLE VS. CLASS THE THREAT TO THE AMERI- | Opening on fe Ona SO Rs an ee pee oa i ae pace te, figures in the American Labor COLLABORATION > JOIN aN FIGHTING PARTY! | movement. eae K. R. Browder 5e JANUARY 12th i ‘i : are | P 1.25 ‘loth $1.75 CLASS COLLABORATION—H " a Join the Workers (Communist) Party of America japer $1:25 ‘ ze re Negi ler ear cate i Struggle for Wealth — Oil — War — Love : Read Also? pce coe COMPANY UNIONS Application for Membership in Workers (Communist) Party The Collapse of the Labor Robt. W. Dunn 25e IN Revolution — Adventure | | TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT DAILY WORKER, 108 E. 14th St—10% Discount. Subway from Sheridan Sq.