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Page Three THE D. TLY WORKER, NEW YORK THURSDAY, hssbinblda Bet 3, 1928 Horthy . Terrorists Demand Extradition of Bela Kun in Note to Austria ‘War Lords Battle Threatens Egypt BRITISH TORIES ky EGYPT | _INNEW MESSAGE s Force Withdrawal of | Assemblies Bill | LONDON, May 2.—The British | government has sent a new note to) the Egyptian government warning it that the reintroduction of the public | assemblies bill will evoke immediate | intervention, Sir Austen Chamberlain, | foreign secretary, announced in the} House of Commons today. { Threatening intervention if a meas- ure is passed prohibiting police from |} breaking up meetings the note de- MARINES MURDER Pests Prpse=>d> ITALIAN TRADE. TWO THOUSAND IN UNIONS APPEAL NICARAGUAN WAR FOR WORLD AID. } Believe Sandino May | |Ask Workers to Help| Attack Matagalpa Against Fascism MANAGUA, Nicaragua, May 2.—) PARIS, May 2.—From the national } Contradicting the report issued by) headquarters, located in Paris, of the | Secretary of Navy Wilbur, who esti- |banished Italian labor unions af-| mated the number of Nicaraguans’ peilinted with the International Fede- killed in the Nicaraguan war at sey- | ration of Tradé Unions, has been is- | eral hundred, Colonel Clifford D.) | sued an appeal to the workers’ or-} Ham, collector of customs, has issued | Pears throughout the w world, for} number of Nicaraguans killed at) | the Ttalian cuveael close té two thousand. DEMONSTRATION IN VIENNA FOR JAILED LEADER | Workers Demand Bela Kun’s Release li | | ian tradition of Bela Kun, Hungarian Communist leader, who was recently |imprisoned in Vienna, it was learned today. The application for extradition is allegedly based on a treaty of re- \eiprocity between Austria and Hun- i he Lord Lloyd, above, British high commissioner to Egypt, handed Pre- Shanghai while he is cghting Chang it| Peo-lin in the vicinity-of Fsinan. | In an-effort to eat the propa-| clares: mier Nasha Pasha an ultimatum “Thousands of Italian citizens,” was overthrow the aid of Tt: ikajeaty’s overntiant-ohsereas. | frovi vhs British tory goverantentide:| ee 4 \ganda stunt of Baron von Huenefeld,|cays, “have been thrown into prison | ——————________ ie oe Haier whe ee ee h at : f tthe ‘ a y govern | German monarchist, Count Thaon di| oy deported to Mediterranean islands ; er rere Wie eee jowever, that the intentions of the} manding the immediate withdrawal; MANAGUA, May 2.—Fear aroused] Revel, representative of the fascist | hy the Fascist rulers. charge of American “relief. Egyptian government regarding the jf future of this bill is not explicitly -* stated in Your Excellency’s note. Un- der these circumstances they think it! well to make it clear in terms which | do not admit of misinterpretation } that they regard certain provisions | of the bill as calculated certainly to weaken the hands of the administra- tion of authorities responsible for of the public assemblies bill. Great | Britain is trying to halt the demon-|. |strations which Egyptian workers and istudents have held to protest against | independence in a surprise attack on by’ reports that General Plata is lead-| terror in this country and head of the, “Every Italian who is even sus- ing part of the Nicaraguan army of | Fascisti League of North America, is | pected of anti-Fascist views may be | {planning a non-stop flight from Bal-|\ imprisoned or deported without even| tan 68 \timore, Md., to Rome, Italy, with the | the shadow of a trial. Comrade Viotto, | [British Dabs ae in Egypt. jthe important interior center of Ma-| 171. off scheduled for May 10th. }a former member of the executive of | | tagalpa, has eaused the reactionary} | plantation owners in that region DEMONSTRATIONS Ie elapse sriibearaiac ay | VIENNA, May 2.—Whether or not the Austrian Government will yield to TRY ALSATIAN the Hungarian Government’s demand | for the etxradition of Bela Kun, Hun- igarian Communist leader, is yet un- known. The Seipel government has be, 1926. Crowd hieers Prisoners | drifted steadily to the right and has ned st fi dl lati Who Want nt Republic aintaine most friendly relations | with the Horthy government: MEXICAN BANDITS been in prison since Nov j bee ie Apert officials for ma- and is still in ignorance « | rine protection. yee for his arrest. The sudden march on Matagatpa | the maintenance of order and the . } ces are being prono Pate | Thousands of Viennese workers protection of foreign lives and prop- WRECK R. R, TRAIN Pes ee acces sR tittle ey ore May” 2—Amid int the #p- | yesterday demanded the immediate ay. vy pe | prisonment—merely becaus mber- | Piause o: ig crowd for the prison-| + eicase of Bela Kun at a large May ib | ers and their boos for the prosecution, ack over a portion of the route} | crossed during the recent dash to the/ east coast. This move which is con- sidered by Nicaraguan observers as} a brilliant piece of tactics, has taken the American authorities by complete! surprise. (Continued from Page One) Consternation reigns again among | the workers. The Red Front Fighters the plantation owners whose pe on® | demonstrated against their dissolu- have been kept in check in recent) Inti Keudel- months only by the presence of sr alll With, ba aes a etenoe: eee detachments of American marines! Mectings, organized by the Com- “lent” the big landholders by the} . hruout Ber- American officials. Dread of an up-| gee Aner ae were ee non- found | \the trial of the 24 Alsatian and Lor- in their p sion. The mere q-\rentian autonomists has begun here. ; ie helped the fam of; Only 14 of the prisoners who are| political prisoners is sufficient to charged with conspiring to lib ‘cause the helper to be arrested, heavily | the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine | | fined or deported, all without trial. | and set up an autonmous republic “Torture has been re-introduced |were jroaght. into. court. Seven of into Italian. prisons. ners who|the then bad escaped the country. will not say what the fascist police} _‘\ Company of French infantry sta- | : want them to say are exposed to the! tioned in the corridors of the court-| MOSCOW, (By Mail). — Repre- most abominabje treatment. Not long house aad in the room where the trial | sentatives of the thirty-two branches since, the police informed the Family Was in progress endeavored to repress | Of the Society of Bessarabians partici- of the young Gaston Sozzi, a nt |the enthusiasm of the crowd for the | pated in the second Congress of the *! Day demonstration held in the city. | Shouting “Bela Kun must be freed,” | the workers marched to the prison | gates where they demonstrated until | driven away by the police. A number of workers were arrested. Bessarabian Congress \ship ecards or papers of som i ) 7 ne: re i BS- If, therefore, the measure in ques lapping organization. be tion were to be revived or if other measures were introduced which in} their view presented similar danger- | ous possibilities, His Majesty’s gov-| ernment would again be obliged to intervene as in the present instance to prevent enactment.” . Passangers Bound for May Day Meet | MEXICO CITY, May 2.—Rails loosened by counter-revolutionists caused a wreck on the’Mexico City- Guadalajara Railway in which more than 30 persons were injured, said a dispatch from Guadalajara today. The passenger train was derailed late yesterday between Acotlan and) Hold Militant May Day in Berlin a way ts LONDON, May 2.—In spite of the “conciliatory” reply to the British ultimatum by Premier Nahas Pasha, a section of the Cabinet is urging im- ” {which from the beginning has been! ‘he prison holding Bela Kun was| Names of labor and peasant leaders| The sharpest struggle of the da 4 — CA dhniiied mae NESRO MALITANT Sr ge capes by isteng aes, supporters guarded by see pune: A number who have: bean Peety wicelbened or|centered around the refusal of aay Coolidge Pasha, Egyptien ‘Premier, declared}. ” ‘i of the army of independence as im-} of clashes with the police took place} qcported, and the name of one who| judge to permit the exhibition in the | P hae Rieypt had done “ thi . probable sinee the American war ves-}but thanks to the Communist disci-j yas killed by a common criminal |Court room of a copy of L’Humanite, | rogram bere Be re Son hich Aa el tint acseagead sels control thé harbor, seems less) pline there were no serious clashes | placed in his company, are given in the French Communist newspaper. | by Jay vent ie ne sade ceheehc ee til th we Afraid of Activities of likely every day. The original paniz|The demonstators protested against | the’ document. The paper contains a picture of Jean by Jay Lovestone seas eg fue 368; Ben aw 2S} a was due to the excitement of Amer-|the arrest of Bela Kun. sonny Jaures, martyred French editor of Whom does Coolidge speak a | - a pemmmgatese lat ia Organizer jean investors who believed that their! deh tna eae { prt L’Humanite, and Dr. Ricklin, the} What does his « rograan tea cal Pa giitss capital might fall into the hands of 38 Meetings in Paris. | principle defendant in the conspiracy || for the workers? | CAIRO, Egynt, May. 2.—Dissatis- Goninon trom Pode One) the Nicaraguans. PARIS, May 2.—Thirty-eight meet- t trial, showing the two men together. |fP Wyhat.,js. the truth Bening | faction is widespread among’ the] attended the conference of the No-| Puerto Cabezas is practically owned! ings of militant workers were held The judge was infuriated by the at- | nphlet must be in the | Egyptian masses over the govern-} tonal! Save-the-Union Committee in|by the Standard Fruit Company, an|in Paris yesterday in spite of the tempt to introduce the paper and eee 4 SAN FRANCISCO, May 2A vie- chairman of the relief committee at} Moody Curry are not expected to’. All May Day demonstrations in “ ‘ Wednesday Nov. 14 tory for Governor ‘Alfred &: Smith is Neesbord, Ves 2 : 8 Shanghai as well as Hankow were : 9 Thursday .... Nov. 15 fndteatedby. Hconiplate’ retaiaty -teeat rs | Piawweat had obtained the iob only|forbidden. Wholesale arrests in both 3 Hy H 10 Mond: N 1 my ent after! >| u u eft t £8) . . the democratic vote in California's Be Changed at Confab thee coe tiers, “revi for ser a “Leas minds SEVERE AES Ve Nee oT : iW 5 steam bc preferential primary election. i Pe a * f i oon, N. ¥. G.) Tuesday ..... Nov. 20 Out of a total of 9,044 precincts} PARIS, May 2,—Restrietions im} bay! EO r s ae throughout the state, returns from| Posed upon foreign made films by the Woman, Man Charged. TOKYO, May 2.—Mass May Day i -.» Nov. 12 Wednesday Nov. 2 | jiate ilitar i i | lin in the afternoon. é a > mediate military action against}; ion Jadisco, while carrying a May|rising is freely expressed. The mass| pena ange champion of freedom against fascism, aos sts. At each reading of a| | cee The ome faces: Egypt. Day holiday crowd. Paul Radono- of the peons are eager supporters of i . \that he had committed’ suicide in| Prisoners’ name wild applause burst |#tectings from various Bessarabian ri ‘ aban ets ,| Da 3 Ie ‘ k Vienna Demonstration. beara ia Noesi's father ;|from the andienc |groups in Paris, Prague, Vienna and Tt is useless to delay action, Lord | vic} Czechoslovak and - | Sandino’s y and res h de-} ‘ ; erusa prison. Sozzi’s father was} i Birkenhead, Secretary for’ India de a i ae ee shes "Pe ey aes andino s army and scores have ce-| (Special Cable to The Dally Worker) | 104 avon allowed to see his son’s body.| All of the prisoners demanded in- | other cities. 3 Mili etary ~| ploye of t Juasteca Petroleum Com- i 7] e JIENN a : a See Dis 80m 8 body. 5 ‘4 Giastd; “Never tana country with-in |na. oe ce hate werted the plaritations, where they #rt) “VIENNA, May 2-—Move than tenlo, ‘iove since heard that the un-|terpreters, ‘altho all of them speak| The congress sent telegrams of perial responsibilities, with obliga- tions to other nations and the vital necessity of maintaining communica- tions agree -to legislation like~this, and never, in my opinion, will: this country under any government -so. Ment’s refusal to take ‘a strong stand against British aggression in demand- ine the stoppage of the Assenienes the-Union Committee. pany. ‘The town resembles any} Numerous factories were closed down Be RTI: nail os Gill in the Egyptian chamber. A Good Militant. American industrial center. At the| while taxi service was completely at © ae Jaures he wished for an independent | Exact contents of the secret reply] 1005) Union 762 is at Vestaburg time of the expected attack, sharp|a standstill. Blum, Socialist Leader | Alsace. 1928 which the Egyptian officials have sent to the British government is still unknown, but are understood to recommend postponement of the nate’s action on the Assemblies bill until the next session when, the hope is expressed, that the British govern- ment may be able to review the situa- won “4 Rea 9 7s 3 “ genes Be ee ae ed re tetnraetetea oe eer ig the west and that Corinto, on the|Day meetings, a number of demon-| ist-bourgeois coalition on the sec- An analysis of the roles of Ri idoeciant Panera Sty ials on account of his effective work| West coast, which has become prac-|strations were held. Police broke up}.ond: ballot, the number of votes Night ree ia eee debs ia } - IO leg acento the: Naive titans tn Eh _| tically an American harbor, is the|a number of outdoor demonstrations} polled by the French Communist | yy class-conscious The opinion of the masses thruout Hid ing e anor best port in Nicaragua. ee Party revealed a deci swing to [ Bladder Wau ctor ghee the country is that the government aanized counties of Pennsylvania who aaa = MEXICO CITY, May 2.—The work } the left The ase of ae Bienes | (Communist) Party should have maintained a defiant at-|tesponded to the strike call of the " lees executed in conectiancwith the} working class, At leiat fourteen | Weexneas Berea timmde or have given ground only in re the-Union Committee on April d DIE, 5 i URED feat riots were honored by 2} Communists were elected to the or Pains Twenty Cents per Copy. the face of overwhelming British ag- avin’ “Raby eerinde’ saves Hawking | mammoth demonstration in M chamber of deputies in yesterday’s | Relieved he emmmnnmacce RA maemo meee gression. z < gah Marea 4 RN thats City: in which 75,000 workers, repre-| elections, the results of which are Safely with WORKERS LIBRARY PUB- The decision of the Egyptian offi- cials is being widely spoken of. as an eleventh hour capitulation and a polit- ical surrender. The Assemblies Bill forbids govern- ment interference in any public meet- 5,718 showed Smith to be leading by more than 30,000 votes over the com- bined poll of both of his opponents Senator James A. Reed of Missouri and Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Mon- tana. Despite the light vote cast through- out the state, Herbert Hoover, sole candidate on the republican ticket was aceorded a good-sized “confidence vote” of 403,508 in the 5,713 Brean thus far tabulated. Sha antes a | sion tomorrow. has been convicted four times. Mrs,|¢"8 and peasants of Brazil, 50,000 po-| aoniins condemned to death at . y Pe ictions | litical , who hi tted i ; beanie ‘vith % Pis % Dh ‘World’ Man to Ballyhoo Kedrock’s “three other convietions| fp opr mane gp who have rotted in] Stip for nationalist activities. 10°° Discount THRIFT COUPON! 10% Discount At Democrat Meet WASHINGTON, May 2.—Claude G. Bowers, editorial writer for The New York Evening World, was re- cently selected as the keynote speaker of the democratic national convention in Houston in June. Bowers is’ ‘the author of ttles of the Jackson Period,” Baty saeuiltes and Jefferson.” pany had both legs broken and was otherwise injured. ~ SY STATES Sao | LEWIS EXPELS Pittsburgh, April Ist, or who avowed adherence to the policies of the Save- Pa., and includes the employes of Vesta No. 5 mines. Tho the éxcom- munication circular letter of the in- ternational office has heen circulatec in every local in the union, only few expulsions from local unions have re- sulted. Hawkins believes his expul- “T know that I’ve been working for the good of the union by going into the non-union fields under the ban-} ner of the Save-the-Union Committe: and I’m gone to continue until this striko is settled.” borhood of Brownsville. He is now! held in virtual slavery, to brave the pendence. immediately attack Puerto Cabezas.| American concern, and its subsi ry criticism was made of the Amer policy of keeping their major fo authorities explained the dispositi WHEN WALL FALLS. One Worker the debris. Sylvester. Poneoles and government cinema control commis-! sion will be diseussed and possibly | revised at a special meeting called) for tomorrow morning by Minister of Education Herriot. Will Hays, “ezar of the American movies,” declares that, unless the quota of American films was extend- ed, all American cinema companies might withdraw from France. It was this threat which led to the calling of the special meeting of the commis- U. S. Wants Cut John M, Phillips, sewer pipe man, a principal in the $29,500,000 sewer graft injury, is prepared to plead to an indictment returned against him by the Federal Grand Jury for alleged violation of the income tax law. The government claims $746,957.51 “Party fog an alleged taxable income of $2,- 970,104, his gross income for the three lyears being set at $4,575,524. i i\With Petty Crimes Face Imprisonment for Life LANSING, Mich, May — Ar- rested on the charge of the sale and possession of a pint of whisky, Mrs. Alexandria Kedrock faces a life term if she is convicted under the Michi- gan statutes, patterned after the New York Baumes law, which calls for a life term in cases where the prisoner 2 were under the liquor law. " -. * * And in New York. Charged with stealing 105 pennies James Chrisomalis faces life im- prisonnent here under the Baumes laws if convicted. He was arrested and held without bail by Magistrate Goodman in Jefferson Market Court: According to police records, Chriso- mals has been convicted four times, which under the Baumes law, results international working class © holiday ‘jin a life term. ; dangers of the trek thru the jungles} in, order to join the army of inde-! this city. Fear that General Sandino would| of them, marched in the Communist the Bragman’s Bluff Lumber Com- on the west coast while the heaviest} were two Communist members of the American investments are on the cast coast and in the eastern interior. The} ion} of troops by pointing out that the campaign against Sandino began in| government order outlawing all May Had Just) | thousand workers attended the Com- munist May First demonstration in In spite of the illegality of |the Red Front Fighters, thousands fortunate young hero died from the effects of horrible tortures practiced upon him in prison by the under- strappers of the fascist executione: in order to force him to rive informa- tion of the anti-fascist movement.” demonstration. 12,000 police and republican guards who ominously paraded the streets. IN FRENCH POLL Among the 165 demonstrators who were arrested on various pretexts Beaten by Communist PARIS, May 2..—Altho the num- ber of Communist candidates elect- ed to the Chamber of Deputies was limited by the electoral laws di- rected against it and by the social- Paris City Council and Beugrand, newly elected Communist deputy. tS eg SOFIA, May 2. .—In spite of the yet incomplete. Leon Blum, leader of the socialist party, was decisively defeated by the Communist Duclos, who has been sentenced to jail for opposing the jsenting all trade unions, participaiec All public utilities were. shut down {as the workers turned out for the | colorful. demonstrations, imilar demonstrations were held there by the French consul. | demonstrations were held in Tokyo. | Osaka, Yokahama and other. centers | yesterday. Thirty-six persons were arrested in Tokyo for distributing handbills. 50,000 Brazilian Class ‘War Prisoners Freed RIO DE JANEIRO, May 2.—Yield- ing to the mass pressure of the work- BUDAPEST, May 2.—The stag gering toll of victims which the Jugo-Slav government has takev among its oppressed workers from the end of the world war to date has been published by the Workers and peasants’ paper “Borba.” The figures, which had been sup pressed by’ the censor, reveal a tota) of 5,800 open or secret political mur ders, including that of the 19 Mace- Thirty thousand political prisoners were sent to jail during this period and at least 3,000 men and women had to flee the country. A special table of persecutions for the year 1927, published by the sam» paper, shows that 614 Croatians and Slavonians were arrested during the year, 360 Serbians, 3,000 Macedon- ians, 400 Dalmatians, 70 Bosnians, 200 Montenegrans, 55 Slovenians and 143 Nojvodinians, years; were freed on the eve of May Day. The liberation of 150,000 other vie- tims of the class war, who are now behind the bars, will be discussed in the Brazilian chamber of deputies shortly. It is thought that the free- ing of the 50,000 on the eve of May Day is intended as a sop to the work- ers whose power and militancy on this the government fears. | over the translations of the defend- \ ants’ remarks. | i | in virtually e city and town i | French war i > Ri glee aig | tae at tant | SOP NEARING Mt. Lebannon st Church at} pyqy, ADELPHIA \, May ' Murder 2 in China. down by the decision of th fined “ay AS a sv ynsville, Pa. . Hawkins, fo!- }wapkers, w a nie j \NGHAI, May 2.—Two women | party not to vote for Co ing the lead of his son, became} injured, two severely, when the } -¢ to have participated in “Com-| candidates even when socis nective in relief work when his con-| of 9 building they were razing col. wunistic “activities” were execute: | out of the running. The : gregation, composed largely of min-| lapsed, sterday as a warning against Ma} | party leaders tacitly supported radi s still open: IN WESTERN POLL ers, began to complain of conditions| John Thomas and A. Siransen. both) Day demonstrations. The women werc| cal candidates rathex than support u in the non-union mines in the neigh-| Negroes were dead when taken from! landed to the military authoritie: | Communists. | | | i | | | French, they refused te use the | reeting to the numerous Bessarabian anguage of their oppressors and ex- | militants who are now languishing in pressed themselves in the Alsatian|the prisons of Rumania for fighting language. Frequent quarrels arose! for r B sarabian freedom. clanged his bell in an effort to drown out the shouts of the spectators. | ONLY FIVE CENTS. Dr. Ricklin stated that he had told | | EUROPEAN AUTO CARTEL | PARIS, May 2.—Plans for an Euro- | pean cartel of automobile manufac: turers to fight the invasion of Amer. ican cars in the European market | have collapsed, according to informa- tion obtained here today. | Elections and the Workers by Jay Lovestone Santel Midv Sold by 41 Deugpisn — LISHERS, 43 East 125th St. New York City. For information write to Harry Blake, co Daily Worker, 33 First Street, New York City. Keep this coupon, Just show it when you make a purchase, Newly Remodeled Drug Store and Modern, Sanitary Soda and Luncheonette Dept. “BETTER SERVICE TO OUR GROWING NUMBER OF PATRONS.” LAZAR RABINOWITZ, Ph. G,. Expert prescriptionist 7th AVENUE, Cor. 112th St. NEW YORK CITY. Near Unity Arbeter Co-operative.