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a THE DAILY WORKE YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1928 os Way to Nicaragua Ae _ PREPARE FOR MOVEMENT OF PLANE FORCES “Flying Coffins” at Front "Military Tools Plan Nicaragua War ga One) nued Page bout that Lik supp (Cont bandied giving servati the Liber: jrom mine-swee heh is t porting th is the poss leaders will be ie eo stand Maj. Gen. John A. Le Jeune, commandant of the U. S. Marine a corps,iand Brig. Gen. Logan Feland, who has been ordered to take Mor : | command of the marine corps in Nicaragua, are shown studying ee OLK 11-400 more} ™aps in Washington, preparatory to sailing for Nicaragua. Both Bace ae have faithfully served American capitalism in previous military cam- for the N j | paigns against Latin American republics. roieaiae terday w ng fog on the! ‘ — Chesape: to tow the Mi M Ll B / “LVLASS. 1 OSS€S Urge : wn the E Air Invasion Begins. WASHINGTON, | invasion of } the recent Lindbergh Start of a fi. 10 (FP). ure longer! centur: -| able to sec if forts nours and night work for M tene z Longer Hours for Women plane will fly ad across the| Gulf for the flying field at» Managua. Tt will be uséd in transporting mar ‘ines, ammunition and supplies “over ‘ the jungles to be used in the cam-| paign against the Liberal forces of General Sandino. | Hold More Planes Ready | CHARLESTON, Jan. 11.—Eighteen | VT-9 squadron planes, accompanied | by the airplane tender Wright, will| begin their flight for the American Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. It is rumored that they will be held in readiness for the renewal} of the campaign against General San-} dino. “Flying Coffins.” The crash of two United States Marine airplanes within two days at “the Nicaraguan battle front recalis Stories of the “flying coffins” in which American aviators were sent ~to certain death over the German ‘dines in 1927. The second crash occurred during a reconnoitering in which that the Ma oe Hungarian Singers photographs of the Liberal positions ~ had been made, according to des- _ Patches from Managua. ‘fhe plane Wrst into flames when it struck the earth tho both the pilot and his ob- Server were uninjured. The pilot ad- mitted that both planes were an old! ‘type which is being superceded. Stimson Does His Bit. 3 y, Jan. 11 — Col. L. Stimson, who has been re-|} » warded for forcing the disarmamer terms on the victoriou eral arm: last July with the ship of the Philippin White House yester the old story that ¢ an “outla and reiterated al Sandino is} Youth Conference for Miners’ Relief Called | In Boston for Sunday BOSTON, Mas ai Jan. 11.—“Flam- | ing Mil Sablich, 19-year-old Colo- | + -Yado strike leader, will speak at aj Youth Conference for Miners’ Relief | to be held Sunday morning at 11} o'clock at-28 Hayward Place. A call! has been sent to all young people! © and labor-organizations by Larry Me- | Kelian, secretary of the Conference, | asking them to send representatives. Bedacht is Speaker at Lenin Memorial Meet In Pittsburgh, Jan. 29 PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan. 11.—-Max Bedacht, Workers (Communist) Party leader, will be the principal speaker at the Lenin Memorial meeting to be held at the Labor Lyceum, 35 Miller ‘St., Sunday, Jan. t 8 o’clock. An elaborate program is) also being arranged, including the Freiheit singing society and the South Slavic string orchestra. dade ecb cede ce tbhbbbbtbth bbb Aid Penn. Strikers CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan. 11.-—To aid the striking miners of Pennsyl- Vania, Colorado and Ohio, the Hun- “garian Workers’ Singing Society ‘wave an entertainment and dance Sunday evening, Jan. 8. The Hun- arian Workers’ Home donated the use of their hall, and the printing and ‘music wes furnished free, The Finnish Working Women’s | _ Club of Cleveland have collected | " $85.60 for the miners’ relief. DONATION TO DAILY NEW BRITAIN, Conn., Jan, 11—/ _ The Lithuanian Workers’ Literature | Society held a state conference in) Waterbury, Conn., Jan. 1, 1928, It! Was agreed upon to make a donation - of twenty-five dollars ($25.00) to- wards the aid of The DAILY. i + it ts textile workers, Bay turers on the New England Coun: 2d upon Gov. Alvin Fulle ge to the le The Massachusetts mbers of | this New England boosters’ organiz: tion sent a letter to all business men of the state urging “more elasticity” in the 48-hour law protecting women and child workers. The council members’ letter sachusetts law prohibit- ing night work for women in factorie: and their employment in textile mills after 6 p. m. “is an absolute diserim- ination against the textile industry and has operated to the m ed di advantage of Massachuseti Th claim, the chief reason the ban o husetts York industrial islature for sup-| port which re 8-hour law against the dema ja straight law by the State tion of Labor. elasticity giv |49%% hour week for women workers | and is so complicated that enforce- | well Re s}ment is a problem. r year the Massachusetts State Federation of Labor has to fight at- tempts of textile overthrow the 48-hour law. gument of southern competition as. actually happened in Russia and now neighboring New) with the’ increase in national wealth England states is used against the|the prewar equipment is being grad- shorter hour law. as that of $5,000,000 SESQUI FLOP. | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan. 11.—| That the Sesquicentennial Exhibition here was a flop is well-known, but to what extent was made know when the state supreme court ruled that the City Council must pay $5,000,000 to creditors for the liquidation of the debts, DUBLIN, Jan., 11.—President Cos- | grove of the Irish Free State is re- ported to be planning a visit to Ot- tawa after his stay in the United States. He will visit New York in an cording to chamber’s president. BUSINESS M Lewis LONDON, Jan. 11,—The Prayer- Book which created’ furore here when the House of Lords. supported} $5 it and the Commons caused its rejec- |tion, will be introduced in a changed effort to interest American investors.! form in both houses, soon. manufacturers The ar- SQUAWK WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 11,—/™man- . : That new postal rates have reacted | ether German, as is the color process unfavorably upon business and public | 24 other auxiliary machinery. interests is the charge of the United) Linotypers Better Off in U.S.S.R. {States Chamber of Commerce, which| will demand a revision of rates, ac-| E. Pierson, the LAUDS CONDITION OF WORKINGMEN IN SOVIET UNION ITrade Union Press | Shows Growth | CHICAGO, (FP) Jan. 11.—One. o | the best developed institutions in th | Soviet Union is the labor press, |cording to Carl Haessler, mana) | editor of The Federated Press, ‘on his | return to Chicago from 5 weeks of in vestigation and travel in the Soviei Union. “Our struggling | papers can take heart from the |exampled development of the trad union press in the Soviet Union,” he Some of the national unions e daily papers that compare in features and _ illustrations | with most European papers. The U. |S. S. R. railroad workers have long had daily in The American | said. there i news, an influential t work was made over a quarter} Whistle. The weavers and spinners ago was because of “miser-| pave The Voice of the Textile Work- er. In many cases the ordinary daily papers for popular reading are owned in wholé or part by the trade unions f the city in which they circulate. One of the biggest Moscow dailies is r| Labor, issued by the national council ‘edera-|of trade unions. 4 The New York law’ employes ac S| “Some of the papers are printed in 2/ old plants, but others have up-to-date equipment in new buildings. It is as though the American labor movement should one day Walk into our capital- ist newspaper plants and take over the works, issuing papers with a la- bor slant instead of the capitalist angle from that day on. That is what to ually modernized and the inefficient ~.—| buildings scrapped for new ones. Most | of the linotypes are American or Ger- The presses are almost alto- The linotypers in the Soviet Union |get 1 month vacation each year on fullpay, free medical and hospital ser- | vice ‘and drngs when ill, 3 pounds of | butter a month as offset to the special | diseases of the printing industry and jvery low rents amounting usually to @ month and never more than $10. |The apprentice period is usually 3 years, but can be shortened if the ‘energy and intelligence is there.” , Mine Sweeper Oglalala, with 400:More Marines, on Its Few artists on the concert stage have receiyed such high praise from }leading New York did critics as ascha Jacobsen, who will be one of che soloists at the joint — recital _ to- morrow night, in Mecea Temple. H. E. Krehbiel, New York recent- .ly, wrote: ““‘We fe older vir- atso . tuosos of great | reputation into rivalry with whom his performance admitted him, could have disclosed the work. His tone noble as that of the b as large and t of them.” Another critic of note had this to say: “We repeat what we have al- ready said before in this place, tha Sascha Jacobsen is one of the fore- most of the younger generation of| violinists.” A third reviewer summed up as follows: “Sascha Jacobsen i recognized by connoiseurs as one 0: the most promising violinists of the younger generation. Such artistic poise, repose and concentration are rarely found in one of his age—al-| ready his reputation is made.” Jacobsen has appeared in all the leading American and Canadian cities. He has been heard in numerous joint recitals with Rosa Ponselle of the Metropolitan Opera, with Riccardo Stracciari of the Chicago Opera and also toured Canada as assisting artist with Mme. Louise Edvina, foremost of Canadian prima donnas, and one of the leading artists of the Royal Opera, Covent Garden, London; the Boston Opera and the Chicago Opera. | His appearance at the recital to- morrow night, will undoubtedly be one | of the musical events of the musical season. The concert will help cele- brate the Fourth Anniversary of The DAILY WORKER. Three other artists of note will ap- pear on the same occasion. Paul Alt- house, leading tenor, formerly of the Metropolitan Opera, who will sing, “O Paradiso” from L’Africana,” “Far on the Road” by. Ippolitow-Iwanow and “The Spring Song” from “Die Walkure.” Doris Niles will appear in Spanish dances and also in dances by td = % + i$ $ + & + bal + + — 8.15 P. Sascha Jacobsen VIOLIN VIRTUOSO Paul Althouse METROPOLITAN OPERA STAR + F ri. Eve., J tbh cbc debe eb bcbaec oh ehhh bbb ehh hhh hhh hehehehehe 4" ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION “DAILY WORKER” M. NINA TARASOVA an. 13 Mecca Temple 55th ST, and SEVENTH AVE. Costufme’ Recital of Russian, Gypsy, Georgian Folk Song Interpretations. TICKETS $2.20—$1.65-—-$1.10—-75c, Jimmie Higgin’s Book Store, 106 University Place; DAIL Y WORKER, 108 East 14th Street; Freiheit, 30 Union Sq. | ni e li the noted violinist | mg known as the} n of American} critics, who died in| deeper penetration into the Soul of }¢ chant wrights Theatre, and the 1: ei teas Street Theatre. Sascha Jacobsen, Foremost of Violinists, Says Noted Critic VIVA TATTERSALL | } | | oward in orthy’s tense drama nov Jin s fourth month. at the Booth Theatre. “huscape, Horlick and “Southern Roses” by | Strauss. Nina Tarasova will be heard | in characteristic Russian folk songs in costume. George A of Venice.” played the role of Portia. The New York premiere of the comedy will take place next Monday night, in the Broadhurst Theatre. Henry Baron will present John Galsworthy’s play “The Silver Box” at the Morosco Theatre, beginning Tuesday night, January 17. The cast is headed by James Dale, Isobel El- som and Halliwell Hobbes. Helen Chandler has been engaged by the\ Messrs. Shubert for the only feminine role in “The Silent House,” a new English mystery play opening here in three weeks. _ Jane Cowl in “The Road to Rome” is at the Shubert-Riviera Theatre thts week, “Women Go On Forever” “International” by John Howard Lawson and “Cock Robin” | Barry and Elmer Rice will ght; the first at the | Mail)- ss makes his first ap- pearance in a Shakespearan play on Monday night at the- Shubert The- atre, New Haven, as Shylock in Win- throp Ames’ production of “The Mer- Peggy Wood f with Mary Boland, is this week’s attrac- tion at the Bronx Opera House. by Philip open to- New Play- latter at the AMUSEVENTS, GEREN GENERAL STRIKE WIN DEMANDED Resolution Calls Upon Green to Act YORKVILLE, Ohio, Jan. 5 (By A resolution calling upon all labor in America to coop- organi jerate with the striking miners by de- daring a general strike throughout America was sent to William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor by the striking miners, Lo- cal Union 971. The resolution which was signed by Jack Bell, president of the local and F, A. Nunley, secretary, follows: WHEREAS. We, the officers and members of Local Union 971, York- He, Ohio. feel fe some other ac- n should be taken in regard to the strike; WHEREAS, Since we have been out on strike \for 9 months without ‘ny advantage havine been - gained by the miners. we feel that some other method should be used to force a set- tlement, and we feel that the only possible way that labor can make any progress is through a general strike; | THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, That we, the members of the United Mine Workers of America call upon |our national officers to seek through the American Federation of Labor to have President William Green of the A. F. of L. to issue a call for a gen- eral strike of all labor in America. A copy of this resolution is to be sent to the Miners’ Journal, William Green and the Press, GOVERNOR SIDES WITH R. Rs. TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 11.—Gover- nor Moore in his annual message has recommended that the cost in elim- inating the grade crossings in this state be shared by the state, the municipalities and the railroads. The powerful railroad interests in this state have consistently refused to re- move the crossings at their own ex- pense, tho many accidents to motor- ists have resulted. CLOTHING FOR MINERS. HAZELTON, Pa., Jan. 11.—The an- thracite United Mine Workers are showing their solidarity with their striking fellow workers in the soft coal fields, by collecting food and cloth- ing for the families. A large shipment {of clothing was shipped yesterday by the local.in Highland to the Pitts- burgh district. = _ [ae | [and “He is to Blame for Everything” ae | Cosmopolitan 7 | 4 Max Reinhardt’s Pro | Winter Garden Eves. 8 &| ZA “The Servant of Two Masters” Columbus Cire nin, Mats. Fri, 30. M ig 7 Thurs, & §, 23 WORLD'S LAUGH SENSATION?” duction of Mats, rtists § Models The Theatre Guild presents —, PORGY ie Dh, W. 424. Bvs.8:40 Republic Mats. Wed.&Sat.,2:40 EUGENE O'NEILL'S Marco Millions Week Jan. 16, Doctor's Dilemma’ Guild Th., W. 52d. Evs, 8:30 le “The Trial of By Bayard Vv JOHN OLDEN FaeaT RE Ww 58 2. | National Bheatre, 41 St. W. of B wa: 'v8.8:30, Mts. Wed.&Sat.2:3 y 0 Mary Dugan” eiller with Rex Cherryman Mats,Thurs.& Sat., iller’s Thea.,W.43 St.R-..8.90 Henry Miller’s MatineésThurs.&Sat. Grant Mitchell in Geo, M. Cohan's . and SAT. Doris Niles in Oriental and Russian Dances WORKER.—B. Salaveicikas, Treas. REEEPEEEEEEEE SESE PETE EEEEE ESS a EESESEEESEPEETPPEETETS Winthrop Ames John Galaworthy’s New Play REPEEEEEEEE EEE PEEP EP EEE PEPE PEGE PE TEPE EEE Presents ESCAPE with Leslic Howard |’ American Farce Rivet THE BABY CYCLONE | werxs 4, WALLS BOOTH ge gatsosncya THE MERRY MALONES with GEORGE M. COHAN MUSIC AND CONCERTS —- FULTON B way, 46 St. Evs. 8.30 Mats. Wed.&Sat, 2.30 _ “BETTER THAN THE BAT” American Opera Company N. Y. SEASON, SUNG IN ENGLISH GALLO THEATRE (ven. at 8120) 54th St, W. of Biway (Mats, at 2120) Opening Tonight at 8:20, “Faust.” “Mme, Butterfly” Wed. & Fri. Evs., Sat. Mat. “Faust” Thurs. @ Sat. Eye THE INTERNATIONAL BY JOHN HOWARD LAWSON Author of Opening on JANUARY 12th Struggle for Wealth Revolution me Adventure New York — Moscow — Paris — China DON’T MISS IT—GET TICKETS NOW! The New Play 386 COMMERCE ST.—PHONE WALKER 5851. 3 Blocks South on 7th Av TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT DAILY WORKER, 108 E. 14th St.—10% Discount. “Processional” — Oil — War — Love wrights Theatre e. Subway from Sheridan Sq. \ i