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re Sc oe ee » } numerable sacrifices. » ~-olv on hand-outs and mooches.” |The combined enemies of the one: armed general had attempted to as- } 4 \ |against a challenge that Morones of the crime.” Morones with some of of Obregon and Call ‘ Both Call i (To Be Continued.) a b| Fage Six F . {HE DAILY WORKER, NEWYORK, E ; | “I LIKE MEXICO—WELL DON By Hernandez Told You So ‘ ar vu pes BY the time this appears in print u Central Organ of the Workers (Communist) Party the meeting of the executive oy . - - - ~ - | council of the A. F. of L. held in Published by NATIONAL DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING ASS’N, Inc., Daily, Except Sunday | Atlantic City may have adjourned 26-28 Union Square, New York, N. Y. Cable Address: “Daiwork” Phone, Stuyvesant 1696-7-8 | and some decision reached regard- SUBSCRIPTION RATES ing the capitalist candidate to be By Mail (in New York only): By Mail (outside of New York): | .| Supported’ this ‘year by the “bona- $8 per year $4.50 six m 5 0 three months $6.00 per year $3.50 six months $2 three months | fide” labor leaders. Or, as is threat- § Address and mail out checks to TAE DAILY WORKER, 26-28 Union Square, New York, N. Y. ea! ee cmd se final judg- - ment until 1: ear the a ti ..ROBERT MINOR | speeches of ali and Smith Sisk WM. F. DUNNE | the radio. ba 8 Entered as second-class mail at the post-office at York, N. Y., under the act of March 3, 1879. hd be ns I od = Te decided one important ques- VOTE COMMUNIST! fun of FISOMUD to erect a cite é a fund of $150,000 to erect a marble H For President For Vice-President Te ice fie dele Bam, Gompera, WILLIAM Z. FOSTER BENJAMIN GITLOW shat since his Gaath tie Pat eae | up a separat ii 8 | nation hesadtavters Bee 4 tk | his Hones te not yet much more than ninety eight cents. Unless one of the members of the executive coun- For the Party of the Class Struggle! cil has a sculptor in the family we Ne Rae the Workers! Against the Capitalists! ‘fear that marble will not experience ‘ a bull market as a result of the A. F. N of L. decision. 4 he China and Amsterdam. “That Is Diplomacy.” eet ai The struggle of the toiling masses in China| The*Mexican newspaper Excelsior. published | Heiknaemeaeicendy Yad tr for their emancipation from the power of the ey A peoloua in which it licked the | Al Smith wins G. M. will have a g foreign imperialists and their own militarists | boots of the i all Street ambassador, Morrow. | latch key to the back door of the H er pee eh ‘Mr. Morrow’s work makes us say, ‘that is White House and the prestige ac- te represents one of e mos reroic pages in t €| diplomacy,” says the newspaper in a spirit cruing to an organization that | history of the emancipation movement|which makes us want to inquire into its Hees arceident nto ae ae st) throughout the world. sources of income. | of-dollars ay savetuatie Caae ea ie Nevertheless the Chinese masses engaged in| The editorial is a virtual declaration that the | pean General Motors wants to a this struggle do not receive the aid and support | Teal yar of the babaieeh aa He) epabtioas might pea esd as ley of the international labor organizations CAs tsalane a ne ee ee aie Mr. Sloan, president of G. 3 A aie * < . . warns its employees that the w 2904 ged be enna W pis the Red ives To quote a few passages: name of the corporation must not be is national of Labor Unions and its sections have MArAAAca Bau me Ikea ANAL. sonfidease weed zie election campaign. | done their utmost to contribute to the victory which Ambassador Morrow has placed in us Aetteal plea ane eh uae 4 of their Chinese brothers, neither the Second since he has come among us and learned to Fsath of GG we GUE * International nor the Amsterdam International know us. That dignity, that bravery, that calm cupied by the Democratic National t have lifted a finger to check the furious on- Prete oe a ee my a Campaign Committee. J : OE 5 fi ‘ollowing the murder of President-elec re- 7 Prsett of the imperialists against China, to gon should convert us to complete discipline hs ‘4 ‘ b inder the dispatching of innumerable troops} and unanimous cooperation with legal orders. TE _nation wide chain of Childs .; ° and warships and to put an end to the outrage- Civilized peoples are distinguished from bar- restaurants has deserted the * ous shooting of defenseless Chinese masses. barous races by their acceptance of laws. | BA bas cause and has taken back ‘d a 4 soe “The Ambassador’s words call us to our re- | 0 its bosom the prodigal meats that 7 Already in 1925 the Executive of the Am- sponsibility, and ws aroche constianional Bias | eos : . é were banished by the founder of the sterdam International, discussing at the August try if-we do not heed them. . 9 |marble-tiled hasheries. Tho it costs » Session the question of China and of the need | “Our great task is to unmask the ideas of | ] ] ar Tall li } at r r Cd | 1eS | OO S money to dine in those starched 4 of extending material and moral support to| those who are undisciplined and to show our ; , Seearia gee = ane N the Chinese workers, contented itself with| politicians that their greatest duty is to merit | ee ee te ae L passing a resolution expressing the pious wish the confidence of the outside world.” 1 ae Pease Waacb rte Sree dete | bourgeois militarism. Sian eee oa ee ayes a ‘ i S ; < | i at does | It is not, however, for the actual Bes, * Gd ‘ that: Soe actions of J. a) Morgan and Co’s part- | not strive to learn to use arms .. . Oppressed Must Learn Use of Arms to Cast military instruction, that military the cashier’s cage.‘ Vegetables could yy “. . the Chinese workers might succeed in jner 's ould convert Mexico to complete dis-| deserves to remain in slavery.” ‘training was included in our schos. be purchased more. cheaply, than : improving their miserable conditions by | cipline.” Whose discipline? Morgan's. “The| eee. BENIN. Off Slavery curriculum. We. xéalins, ‘wwery: ‘welt tiaue Gi cretion tite © oes ” ti verful trade union movement and 4 vi i- | P | PN ahi Pars = cn : iti eee ee ee t ie toutimant econbiate eeagile” wo besser Sent ay ee cal sae |THE decision to incorporate some | AGAINST military training? What | ALL military training) just as fun- Pea ee Pee red nt gens and dinner as well as a couple of pork : lity... sponsibility to whom? To}! lewentary : fora de military | “ind of face will you have when, |damentally as we are to bourgeois ee o Rext. ported of time, the | chops or a sirloin of beef 4 ‘As to the material aid, it was declared in the|® foreign power—to the United States. |training (drill, etc.) into the cur. | 0” the one hand, you fight military | militarism and in fighting agajnst pag aii for us 2 obtain military pa * ‘ resolution that: | And “those who are undisciplined” un-|riculum of the Young Workers |‘T@ining in the City College of New|the influence of bourgeois militar-|iNetruction is in the military organ- UT 3 # i |questionably are those Mexicans who refuse|(Communist) League Summer|* 0? and other colleges, and, on the) ism and jingoism over the working | @#tions of the bourgeoisie (regular the confounded . customers “In view of the unsettled situation in China, a kite diecipline (iat cs Schools has caused a certain amount | ther, you institute military train-|class youth, we must at the same |{°FCes) National Guard, military|* would not be saved. After leav- ; in view of the lack of sufficient direct infor- accep’ € discipline that wight W. Mor- of surprise and perhaps a trace of |'"& in your own schools?” Others,|time fight just as energetically | Schools, R. 0. T. C, C. M. T. C.,| ing the best Beh one Goee ne t SastGds” dad: alug (ist Rieer GE thee Rema row, impudent imperialist from Wall Street, opposition among even some sec-| however. are not so “naive”, .they|against the influence of pacifism. |°t): (Of course, as Comrade Gor- | Childs joint the diner went away : situation in the countries affiliated to the In- _/ is trying to force upon Mexico. The bold truth tions of the party membership. This | 9% “for” the military training “in| Pacifism is a deadly poison to a ‘ie Points out, ‘Jugendinternationale, jonly partly satisfied and since ; ternational Federation of Trade Unions, the is that Morrow, in his dual capacity as repre- reaction is not entirely unexpected, | Ptinciple”—but they raise all kinds |class fighting for its emancipation; | MaY; 1928, the sending of our com-| human nature is what it is it is : latter was unable just now to start an inter- [sentative of the International Bankers and of America, Land of Pacifism, | 0f s7€uments against it “in prac-|in ptesent-day relations pacifism is wes pees peur oe ary eee se ee tek ie ri a5 " A sa oy, Z | * * * ‘ice”— % ne | oka | jecti : national campaign of financial aid. the United States government is pressing) eovaiia i ee acl dena of | now,” "Ten bring’ sil ands, of Eeaaueey Ta peeak the pevigict | Whatever of the atleuibe ta ak are better off hungry than with con. ; Even the more characteristic of Amsterdam’s | Mexico with carefully veiled military threats |Pehis "pacifism han catbortanttaty | trouble, ” and so on, arguments illusions of many elements Tot the /<!88s organization of the proletariat tented tummies. A customer would : attitude on the question of the revolutionary | (so carefully veiled at present that the EX-| left deep traces on the labor move-|‘"@t amount to the same thing in| working class youth and to wiri the |'€ Provide military training for ee ae ae Neds Be anil re 3 movement in China, was the answer given by |celsior says: “Thanks to him the American | ment and even on the more advanced the end. ‘ plas |youth away from both jingoism and (eae i a "). Our chief reason twat ‘ot eke tee a a ' 3 Oudegest, former secretary of the Amsterdam | government has lost that aggressive attitude|elements. We cannot here go into| seo oienh [pacifism to the revolutionary class |for ineuding. military instruction in “hot dog.” He ad han hi tv i r : . 2 ribet |™|O produce such “shocks” was pre-|struggl ; {our schools is to make clear, in a| hot dog.” He would have his meat. é ” the well-known historical reasons | pre- | struggle is one of our most import. > . International, to a delegation of the Chinese|with which at times it confronted us”) as well|(\° ie but it ie an olwiogs faut|+. cisely one of the objectives for ant tasks. way that mere teaching cannot it- fe Th! : Trade Unions in March, 1927. In answer to|as by the subtle pressure that the banking| that until the influence of the pro-|istituting military training in our | meet cis self accomplish, to the students, to|PUT the confounded customers | the request of the delegates to send a Commis- | monopoly can wield upon a nation in financial |letariat revolution in Russia began| Schools; that is, to dramatize in| PECAUSE of perspective of revo-|the league’ as a whole, and to the| would not be saved. After leay- ; sion of Amsterdamers to investigate the situa-| need. |to be left in America practically the | “learest possible form our Leninist | lutionary struggle, we are will-|Young workers, our Leninist posi-|ing the best part of a dollar in a ‘ tion on the spot, the worthy leader of re-| The newspaper Excelsior has virtually de-|¢ntire opposition to militarism ang Poeee on militarism and to utilize ing, yes, anxious, to have the pro-|tin on the question of militarism | Childs’ joint the diners went away f fence deridved: clared a program of punishment of any “un.| WA" it the labor movement revolved is to effect a real work of clarifi-/letarian youth learn the use of |@%d our. complete differentiation | only partly satisfied and since hu- : Th d ' is i ed | disciplined” portion of the Mexican Peaaias peer fe Oana ae fa this ene ee rape bes jarms—especially the most advanced | 70m es See etek | “ere SMO | nian nature is what it is tt is very “The trade union movement is interested in D J lism; it is characteristic that “con-’ irection have been obtained. sections of the young workers—for | V¢ are having success. doubtful if the people can ever be Os cietractive sovement which ‘can develop that may fail to bend the knee to the Wall|scientious objection” developed as| Not Against All Militarism. [this training on the part of thé Mee ee . | eonverted to the idea that they are only in such countries where political tran- Street ambassador. The suggestion is obvious|the most popular and recognized} Our Leninist position on militar-|working class is a very necessary ne Liaesied rat. better off hungry ‘than avith con- quility prevails. Whilst there is no such tran- that the workers in plants held by United| “weapon” against the world war. ism and war is very clear aad cer- | prerequisite for the proletarian rev- merican Jeague has had some | tented tummies. A customer would quility in China, the Amsterdam International “ali : Really revolutionary ideas on mili-|'tain. We are NOT against war and |olution. “The bourgeoisie has mili-| * experience with pacifism. It was | Jeave Childs’ with a grouch and re- does not intend to send a delegation to China.” ieee pc eer AN eee for | tarism and war came to the fore|against militarism “as such.” We |tarized the entire people—now it is |not so very long ago that we were | pair to the nearest Nedick stand a Thi ree it ically: freaile ee es Ome ee ega. orders” a8 CON-| only towards the ‘end of the war|are against IMPERIALIST war;/|militarizing the youth. Tomorrow,|very correctly branded as having a glass of pineapple juice and a “hot is: reply wag quite cynically frank. ceived by Morrow, will very likely come into|when the most elementary lessons|we are against BOURGEOIS mili-| perhaps, it will militarize the -wo. |committed some of the worst pacif- dog.” He'would habe his meat. Oudegest declared outright that the Amster- | Conflict with the new “discipline.” jof Bolshevism and the Russian rev- soon ie e., the militarization of/men. So much the better! So jist errors—and the fault was not ¥ * vise In the few but fast-moving days that have | lution began to absorbed. It needs |the proletarian and farmer youth to|much the faster do things go for-|all ours, but was shared by the ee cere pe 8° against eae bourgeoisie elapsed since Obregon’s panaeatnation Mexico |”° long discussion to prove that in|fight in the interests of the bour-| vard—so much nearer is the armed | whole movement. Since then, how-|'THE Childs’ restaurants began to which consi lers it necessary to crush the Chi- naa te d a ” the American movement traditions | geois-ie). But we are in favor of uprising against the bourgeoisie” ever, under the closest direction of lose customers. The old racket nese revolutionary movement. Only after the|@S been agge sauean legrees toward com-| of pacifism are strong and tradi-| REVOLUTIONARY wars (wars of| (Lenin). Our main task, of course, |the Young Communist International, | of clattering dishes degenerated into establishment of sepulchral tranquility in China | Plete subjection as a Wall Street colony under|tions of _ revolutionary-Leninist | oppressed colonial peoples against | is to prevent the young workers who|we have gone a good way towards|a faint murmur. The starched by the British and Japanese by means of blood | 2 dictatorship appointed directly from. Wash-| struggle against bourgeois militar- | the imperialist powers, civil wars of|are being militarized from becom-| stamping out the last remnants of | waitresses stood around listlessly baths like those of Wan-Kiang and Tsinan ington. ism and imperialist war very weak. | proletariam révolution); we are in ping traitors to their class; it con- pacifism in our own league ranks,|or, as soon as a stray customer m h zg a) The Mexican masses are yet to be heard Pacifism, still exercises its influence |favor of the military training of|sists in winning them for the pro-|and in carrying on a broad propa- | made for the door darted to his va- me only after the shooting of the best leaders of | Hee ie at y Fs. |in the labor and revolutionary move-|the projetarian youth to learn to |letarian class struggle and getting ganda of the Leninist principles of |cant place in the trail of the lone- the revolutionary trade union movement by|from. And there is strong reason to think| ments... . . |use arms in the interests of their |them to use their training for the militarism and war among .the|some dime. Childs, a chronic Chiang Kai-shek anf other hangmen, will Am-|that the Calles government is trying to stifle Pacifist Opposition’to Training. |class and against the bourgeoisie. benefit of the workers and not| young workers, but we can even vegetarian thought things were go- sterdam think it fit to study the state of affairs|the voice and still the actions of the masses| The “shock” some feel when they |“An oppressed class that does not against their own class. This is|now reoord to our credit some suc-|ing alright. Being a fanatic he China. sf 4 by suppressing gatherings and trying to com-| heat of the military training in the | strive to learn to use arms ... de-/ cur main task and this attitude is cess in actual anti-militarist activi- | would risk his stockholders’ fortunes it & Fi league schools is a clear manifesta-| serves to remain in slavery” (Len-|in no contradiction to—on the con-|ties, some noteworthy accomplish-|rathen than haul down the cauli- And it ought to be said that Amsterdam has pel both workers and peasants to “let Calles tion of these pacifist remnants.|in). We are therefore épposed to trary, it clearly falls in with—our|mdits. But the important thing | flower banner. But his stockhold- been consistent to the end. Whatever the blood do it.’ te | Some immediately raise the ques-| pacifism (which opposes, “as a bitter and most determined struggle | above all is that we are on the|ers went to bat and demanded that \ vaths and atrocities perpetrated by the im-| Inactivity of the workers and peasants of|tion: “But isn't « the league | matter of principle” ALL war and| against new imperialist wars and right track. . . . the embargo on meat be raised. “ae Brea. : ; ji rw “ y it.” : ey had not a thing in the world verialists and militarists in China, Amsterdam | Mexico now would mean to “let Morrow do it. deat insi s ¥ k . am | | 2 " gainst vegetables, they insisted. antl its sections kept silent. Amsterdam which TR RT CAE . ° . ° ° But neither had they anything considers itself the only representative of in- : i M: V V k Cl M t K ht R t Tl ainst meat, and if the customers * ternational trade union bepants ations could not The Panhandling Trust. €X1Can or. In ass uS 1 €ac 10na es insist on pork and beans, veal stew manage to establish contact with the three| It’s rather funny when John D. Godfrey, By HARRY GANNES his cronies’ was forced to quit’ gov- tate vee saat Mgid pv akalh Pa million trade unionists in China. mendicant officer of the Brooklyn Bureau of and LEON S. RUIZ. Ke tholic Ch h, M Allied Wi ernment positions in the Calles|the Childs’ menu. It is mince Only when the.counter-revolution got for the | Charities, as quoted in a capitalist newspaper| When Jose de Leon Toral, the 23-| MEROTIC urcn, Oras a ith Wall jeabinet, He is reported to be in back with drums beating and the time being the upper hand over the evolu. |Conducting a campaign against panhandlers, | year old art student, fired five shots| Street Imperialism | hiding in Mexico City, Morones is @/ pens of publicity men flying, in the a : > ee A * ; bi ‘friend of American imperialism and| act of writing its praises. A tre- tionary forces in China, only when it seemed |©°MPlains that 2,000 beggars arp making a) into st Leni oe ree e Bak lan ally and. wari’ supporter ofl mandous advertising. egiop Ren i st A Siig ivi i 1 Me sh ‘ si ~ mn . : P y : ertis' ‘ign wil ‘9 Amsterdam that the political “tranquility” | 00d living in New York City—chiefly aaa ea deh of Selict ate sassjnate him twice during the last|made against Obregon. ' |Green of the A. F. of L. He is one) be carried on to oki meat to ‘the. spoken of by Oudegest had set in China, its | Panhandling in the subways. Just at the time Have ‘easaped Stor athe, breakt Oe two months. ; The blame for the murder of of the most reactionary leaders of| public who were led to believe by a leaders got active, and the question is now when the Interborough subway millionaires are | Wall Street’s ambassador to Mexia: His main enemies were: The re- Obregon was first laid to the church|the Pan-American’ Federation of previous Childs’ advertising cam- a Ive; ‘ 1 ant ttle “ Saeed By pnton *°: actionary clericals and the Catholic| by the chief of police when he said Labor, outstripping at times Green! paign that it just stopped of bei saised of establishing close relations with the “ing a neat little “panhandling” job to com-| Dwight Morrow! ; , |church, which had been waging a he was “already in a position to in todying to U. S. bankers. When deadly poison. Childe Hae lndenet fascist trade unions which have been set up| Pel the payment of a 7-cent fare that ae tse us not be prea about Josing fight. Calles was beginning make public that the responsibil Dwight Morrow came to Mexico|from some mysterious source that py the hangmen of the Chinese workers. | mean an increase of 40 per cent in their gross, lee oe was not tl a eta to make important concessions to the for the crime belongs to the catholic Morones did everything he could to|the use of meat is not the cause — iy : : | income, or hundreds of millions of dollars, this remy Of ‘American imperialism 1 church, undoubtedly under the coach- clergy.” These veny same catholic) win his favor. Morones ordered the| of all human ailments but the abuse Addressing the meeting of the National Com-| reference to Eabwaya: lobes atepinioii. Bat ie Mout op pietes had ben ing of Morrow. They did not know clergy had been dancing quadriller| CROM to demonstrate in honor of| of jt, mittee of the General Confederation in France, pethapa that iv Dplsseccondery fade Gatien teed a shinai 4 hacia one ot} what treatment to expect from Obre- around Wall Street, and were not Morrow when the partner of Mor- ‘ \ in March of this year, on the perspective de-| yyig primary purpose appears to be the pro- found the revolution’ of 1910 protit| Maconeh the reactionary leader of hae Ne: Taras is tacts ae eine ee Guile & ‘elopment of Amsterdam, Jouhaux declared: | motion of the lucrative business of the “or- | wos him; ek pals ave Matthe Mexican labor movement, par- everything was owned by the church | Morrow, Morones and the Catholic “We might go into China where the workers, ganized charity.” The charity monopoly js teh dient it qa its *y of, : | ticularly the Confederacion Regional | In later days, they were willing to Church disclaim any knowledge of; |. ; disappointed in Bolshevism, will turn our way.” losing something like $30,000,000 a year, ac-|Mexico’s evoluti aa of Obrera Mexicana (CROM), was ex- divide this. honor with Wall Street./the murder and call upon the gov-| — re cesa My es Salevia cotoplatnt iieh | ein he A breil, revol nuanery ane | bea. | tremely antagonistic to Obregon. on the assurance of support from|ernment to punish the guilty.|and Obregon favored the importa- Nevertheless the . msterdamers were rather cor ig tot D! , Which is being picke bee 8. 7 fre e national unifying He had threatened to meet the as. this quarter. “Whichever was responsible for the|tion of American capital, and the hasty in their jubilations. The revolutionary | up by pencil-peddlers or by plain moochers. The servele these Pcie ae haste cension to power of Obregon with Merones Friend of U. S. ‘crime, all three are pleased. We)conciliation of U. S. imperialism. movement in China, having suffered an ad- crippled and broken victims of capitalism no aneacen wea by na aha' a ph are sla iota rye a a seat ee f | state categorically that the clergy is| They ie inet support the same j i # i the | longer able to work and those unemployed who! NE 505) rx Party ticke ut now new charges have been, guilty of the crime. groups. Calles supports Wall Street mitted defeat, 18 i igen twiobaee re lage | ted Hivekatan: Bb bane of obtal nth if 1 ho | the cir of pipe such as Macha-| controlted by Morones against Obre- made. Contrary to the usual custom) Who is Obregon? Both Calles and| outright. Morrow has won Calles eetive aid which will be rende y the | may given up hope g employ- do, president os Cuba, is in the clut-/ gon. Though he was the only candi-|/ the assassin has not been executed Obregon had fought together in va-| over and seems to be bending him to onscious proletariat of the world in spite of | ment, should still be slaves of the charity trust, |ches of Wall Street. ; (date against Obregon, he received summarily, but is being held in the rious phases of the 1910 revolution| the Wall Street wind. Obregon had the reformists, the Chinese proletariat will| according to the theory of the professional | eats Hs eye Political. Fela ms ag a i jaa ban-|hope of further bmp Open’ which ultimately established pe, pre- ies for he western brand of se for which | charity organizers. “Keep off the street, you e murder o: regon was not|quet in honor of regon, charges charges against Morones are being sent M in government. In late Uni tates bankers. He favors’ t hy wate tae aadan a make in- tia” ihe say in effect, “we have a its unten svicge mar were made guint Moone a big ie ie cathenGs eabepuategatel asthe tater m atone ny Pfister hi Sige taba a and a e1s 7m ‘Ss. f