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| alliance between the Reich and Wall | | UNION ALLOWS FAKE PROBES IN CAISSON HORROR Workers Back ‘Daily’s’ Demands (Contir e) whitewash the c ec pany. notoriously contractor disasters } Six Di Six of the worl blast are still in the J hospital, and all a long time to cor these injured worke tacked by the “‘b disease which p: pressed air wor of nitrogen in th workers’ bodies in ing them with a c like pain. Criminal negli, ation Company misfit materials apparatus that pressure in the sandhogs worked, w by John McPartlon, seer Local 63 of the Cor Foundation, Subway tion Workers Union. It was to t union that all of the dead and in- jured sandhogs belonged. McPart- Jon and the . other union however, are putting th after the fashion of the A. craft unions, in the New Jer: ce which in the regi ure ed the air which the! y of- ficials, altho these officials have in the past ignored all accidents to sandhogs in caisson w Union Leaders Idle. No independent investigation wi be made by the union, it is under- stood, altho the night shift, to which the victims of the Foundation Com- pany’s greed for profits were at- tached, were told on coming to work by members of the day crew that the disaster was possible. The day crew stated that an air valve was leaking. Survivors of the explosion declared that when the} afternoon crew left the caisson, some of its members told the night} shift that there had been a sizzling sound in the air-lock all during the day shift. Weak electric welding was the cause of the blast, the sur- viving workers stated. The officials of the construction company must have been aware of the weak weld- ing, workers declare, Both insurance company lawyer: and ambulance chasers were busy visiting the injured workers, and the relatives of the workers killed in the blast, the former attempting to get the workers to settle on easy terms with the contractors, and the latter attempting to get them to start court suits in which the shysters would grab the lion’s share of the damages awarded. John Hedley, one of the six who were killed, left a widow, twenty- four, and a fifteen-months-old son, John, Jr., who have neither means of support nor any relatives who might come to their assistance. REICH ALLIANCE WITH WALL ST. Morgan Wins Points as Parley Nears End (Continued from Page One) man wartime marks, has been sur- | mounted by Young and Morgan by having the delegates agree to leave | the settlement of the matter to the two governments. The capital of the new intertia- tional bank created by the Young | Han, and which will create an inter- | national financial center controlled | by the Yankee imperialists, has been set at $100,000,000. Not only from the actual payments squeezed from the. German workers, but also from high interests and fees on these col- | lections, will Wall Street reap prof- its. ee we U, S.-German Trust. BERLIN, May 31.—Further com- binations of American and German | interests are taking place almost daily, setting up a more powerful opposition to British and French imperialism on the basis of a close Street capitalists, already united in| the sharpened exploitation of the German workers by the Young rep- arations plan. The I. G. Farbenindustrie (Ger- man Dye Trust), one of the most powerful trusts in Germany, closely interlocked with other basic indus- tries and the bankers, by buying up an entire block of the German Ford Company, becomes an influential supporter of Yankee imperialism, both in Germany and abroad. It is stated here in financial circles that this means a close alliance not only between the I. G. and Ford, but aiso with Standard Oil, whose greatest rival is the Royal Dutch Shell, con- trolled by the British, In Germany, among other things. it will mean a strong trust for the exploitation of the farmers, the dye ‘trust selling them the nitrate and | Ford the tractors. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1929 Whitewashing of Murder of Six Sandhogs we vestigations” by New Jersey autho om company guilty of the killing of six com the bottom of the Hackensack River in Jersey City when an air pr to weakened welding, which the company al to remain in di time. Photo shows two of the bodies of workers b es are under ur due e job in quic LABOR DEFENSE: WIRES SUPPORT, TO ELIZABETHTON Few Sign Pact; Militia) ‘Watches Communists’ way with a nobject d air workers, who were crushed to. death at re of whitewashing the e exploded. The explosion was isrepair in their haste to complete g removed, =| LOS Angeles Sub-District for Unity on Basis of Address Units of Party in New Yerk City Send in Resolutions Supporting Comintern LOS ANGELES SUB-DISTRICT FOR ACCEPTANCE, The Los Angeles, California, sub-district committee of the Com- munist Party has adopted resolutions on the Address of the Communist International as follows: The Sub-district Committee of the Communist Party in Los Angeles District No. 13, California, accepts and endorses without reserva- tions the Address of the Communist International to the American The Sub-District greets the unanimous actions of the Central Com- mittee of our Party as outlined in their decisions of May 18th. The Sub-district Committee pledges itself to win the entire Party membership to the complete acceptance and carrying out the Address and decisions of the Communist International. The Sub-district Committee states that “both factions of the Ameri- can Communist Party have been guilty of right errors.. Both factions show serious deviations to the right from the general line of the Com- intern, which creates the danger of an openly opportunistic right devia- tion crystallizing within the Party.” The Sub-district Committee states that it is in full agreement with the Executive Committee of the Communist International when it de- elares that those who “refuse unconditionally to submit to the decisions of the Comintern and to actively put them into practice, the Executive Committee of the Communist International will be forced to adopt all measures necessary to put a stop to all attempts at splitting the Party to secure unit; realize the de ions adopted by the mittee will fight with utmost vigor those who will resist in carrying out | in the ranks of the Communist Party of America and to Comintern.” The Sub-district Com- the Comintern Address and splitting the Party. In view of the abnormal situation in the Party in the California dis- trict, the Sub-district Committee calls upon those of the former minority who still stand outside the Party by maintaining a dual authority, dual headquarters and not recognizing the Party authority and decisions to immediately cease such factional practices and in the spirit of the Com- intern Address “get together for the struggle against unprincipled fac- tionalism in the Party to be able to carry on the struggle against the right danger, for healing and holshevization of the American Commu- nist Party, for the genuine carrying out of inner Party democracy and proletarian self criticism.” The Sub-district Committee of the Party calls upon the entire mem- hers for ip to give its hearty acceptance to the Address of the Comintern it is only by relentless struggle against the unprincipled fac- tionalism which is eating into the vitals of the Party, only by consolida- ting the whole Party for carrying out its fundamental practical tasks on the basis of the line of the Comintern and by more energetic strug- gle against the right danger and that the American Communist Party will become the genuine Bolshevik y and will be converted into a mass political Party of the American | workers in the ranks of which inner Party democracy is actually being | anguard of the American proletariat unfolded while at the same time an iron proletarian discipline is strength- ened, to which all organizations and each individual member uncondi- tionally submits; in the ranks of which is practised the submission of the Minority to the Majority on the basis of the Party’s pursual of the line and practical directions of the Comintern. Such a Party will be capable to lead the American proletarian to victorious struggle against capitalism.” The Sub-district Committee of the Party calls upon all units to accept and endorse unanimously the Address of the Communist Inter- national and to get to work to buil ld the Party into a mass proletarian Communist organization—AL SCHAAP, Sub-District Organizer, Los Angeles, California. CZECHO-SLOVAK SECRET/ ARY ENDORSES ADDRESS. I fully agree with the decisions of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of U. S. A. and the Address published in the Daily Worker May 20, 1929 by the Executive Committee of the Communist International. And as a loyal soldi ier of the Communist International I will do all I possibly can to enforce those rules of our highest body. — JOHN ZUSKAR, National Secretary, Czecho-Slovak Bureau, Communist Party. & ee ae For Building of Mass Party. I am in complete agreement with the decisions of the Executive Com- mittee of the Communist Interna- tional and pledge my support in carrying the decisions into effect. Factionalism must be stamped out established, Let every Party mem- ber take part in the building of a mass Party, in line with the instruc- tions as laid down by the Executive Committee of the Communist Inter- national. Stamp out t'e last rem- nants of factionalism, and prepare our Party for the struggles which are coming.—DAN H. SLINGER, Belleville, Ill, District 2, New York. We wholeheartedly accept and endorse the Address of the Executive jour most loyal support to the Central Committee in its effort to realize the decision contained therein, We are firmly convinced that the acceptance of the Address of the Comintern by the membership of our Party in the same spirit in which it was renderd will destroy every vestige of factionalism, unite the Party in its struggle against the right danger and make possible the building of a mass Communist Party in the United States, The membership of our unit de- mand of Comrade Lovestone and Git- low to withdraw their opposition to the Address, which has a splitting tendency and we call upon them to working it movement they are also de~ the future of the move- | * y accept and help carry out its de- cisions as the only basis for unifying in our Party, and a unified Party | Resolution of Unit 6, Section 5,| |Committee of the Comintern to the} | membership of our Party and pledge ‘the Party.—Unit Six, Section Five, | District 2, New York. | Unit IF, Section 1, District 2, | New York City. We accept and endorse whole-| heartedly and unconditionally the Addtess of the Comintern to the |Party membership. | This letter is not to be interpreted ‘as victory of any group, but must |lay the basis for the cessation of \the factional struggle which hinders |the practical work and development |of the Party. The resistance (Gitlow, Lovestone) and every open and covert attempt |to mobilize the Party against this lletter means waging a fight against |the Comintern and objectively leads ‘to a split in the ranks of the Party. Such a struggle will only come |from the Right wing elements who resist the .Bolshevization of the | Party, against whom the Comintern {carries on a relentless struggle. The main task of the membership is the fight against the Right wing, elements of which can be found in both former Party groupings. We urge all members of this nuc- leus and New York District member- ship to accept this letter not only in words (“loyal members”) but in deeds, By ceasing the factional fight and carrying out the political line and concrete tasks outlined in the Open Letter of the Comintern to the last Party convention we will build a fighting Bolshevik Party in Ameri- ca. We pledge our full support to the Comintern and promise to fight without any hesitation for the line and tasks which they put before us. Unit 1F, Section One, District 2, New York City; Prana BALDWIN CLIQUE IS THROWN OUT |Labor Party Now Chief. | Aid to Capitalism (Continued from Page One) | at that time, too, had not so clearly | exposed its reactionary face to| |class-conscious workers. | The Communist Party points out that the workers who voted for the labor party in this election are sick of the imperialist policies of the con- servative party, and were not fooled | by the blatant and hysterical cam- paign of Lloyd George for the lib- erals. They voted for the labor rarty because of the major parties the labor party used the most lip | \phrases. The vote indicates a left- | ward swing in the masses which w ot end with the hypocritical Ram- | (Continued from Page One) the reason for the failure of the plot of the reactionary U. T. W. i the government and the to sell the workers back to ery and discrimination. The two companies have united to establish an elaborate office, in a new building, for which ground was broken today, where all wishing em- ployment in either the Bember or the Glanzstoff concern must be in- vestigated. A large waiting room is to be constructed, where the work- er who agrees to the surrender con- tract can spend several days, being | examined and cross examined, fac- | ing witnesses, or hearing of the| testimony of stool pigeons he does not face. All those found guilty of being militant strikers, or taking any part in real organization work will be denied jobs. The man in charge of this spy system is E. T. Wilson, personnel director of both companies, and described in the U. T. W. terms of surrender as the mpartial arbiter” who will pass on all cases of former strikers who think they are being discriminated | against. | Militia Remains. The militia are still here, watch- | ing the N. T. W. U. organizers, and their commander, Adjutant General Boyd, refuses to s-y when they are to be withdrawn, | The trial of 52 workers accused of violation in the present strike of an} injunction against picketing granted | for a previous strike, is expected to be concluded today or tomorrow. * o" « “To Watch Communists.” Women’s Wear Daily, the largest | employers’ trade paper for the gar-| Photo shows Prince Chichibu, family, which leads in the oppression of Japanese workers and peas- ‘er, third son of the British king, on the ants, and the Duke of Glow British parasites visit to Japan. suffering great privation. The w oppose their solidarity with this s “New Leader” (Continued from Page One) readers of the New Leader is per- haps, on the whole, higher than | the income of the readers of other newspapers. . .” And then this illuminating confes- sional: “The New Leader appeals to many heads of financial institu- tions, well-known members of the legal profession, a surprising num- ber of very prosperous business men, authors, artists, doctors of medicine, dentists, educators and others interested in the socialist, liberal and labor movement.” The Daily Worker, real voice of MacDonald. MacDonald will be|ment and textile industries, states | the militant workers, does not go in he next prime minister, ard will|in yesterday’s issue: “The troops | for these anti-working class, cring- expose himself as the imperialist in|are remaining on duty because of ing, contemptible appeals to the ex- the guise of a pacifist, as no less |presence in Elizabethton of several ploiters of labor, The Daily Worker willing to support the class. collabo- |Communist organizers for the Na-|Continues its precarious existence 1ation, sell-out program initiated by | Sir Alfred Mond and approved by | the labor party men in control of ithe British Trades Union Congress. MacDonald Will Expose Self, The Communist Party of Great |Britain looks forward to the ap- proaching MacDonald regime with confidence that the workers of Great | B: having driven to disaster the Baldwin open imperialists, will not be long confused by MacDon-)| jald’s tricky policy of speaking soft | jand hitting hard forthe interests of j the exploiting business and land-| lord class that runs the British Em- | pire. There will be more battle- ships to China and Egypt, more im- ist strategy and diplomacy ing to war with the United | States imperialists, no alleviation of | unemployment and only co-operation | for the wage-cutting, union smash- | ing, union-devitalizing campaign of | British big business. | Pollitt Gets 1,431 Votes. | Harry Pollitt, the Communist can- | didate against Ramsay MacDonald, | running in a district which was of course foredoomed to the labor | party because MacDonald couldn’t take a chance on defeat, neverthe- | less polled 1,431 votes, Most of the conservatives, liberal and labor party leaders, because of playing safe, won their again. But two conservatives, | y Astor and Sir Austen Cham- berlain, were nearly overwhelmed by | | the landslide against their party. Chamberlain’s first plurality was re- ported as 50. In disgust he ordered a recount and this time got only 47 |votes plurality. Sir Thomas Inskip, \attorney genera], thought he was \safe, but the wrath of the workers against this persecutor of labor was so great that his “certain” constitu- lency turned him out, and he will | have to wait for some country pocket |borough by-election to get into par- | liament again. The leaders of all parties but the Communists have been good provid- ers for their families. Lloyd George’s |daughter, Megan, and his son, Ma- | jor Gwilym, were given seats from |two certain liberal districts. Arthur | Henderson, of the labor party, sent jup both of his sons, William and Arthur, Jr., from districts where | they couldn’t lose. Ramsay Mac- |Donald, of course, took care of his |son, Malcolm, in’similar fashion. At 2:30 p. m. the aggregate vote | stood: Labor, 4,976,480; conserva- | tive, 4, 786,606; liberal, 2,808,584: \uthers, 132,974. Total votes counted were 12, 704,844. PRMED DEPUTIES "ATTAGK PIGKETS Children’s Line Stands Solid in Gastonia (Continued from Page One) fight for the workers’ interests, but for the company, The leaflet also assails the American Federation of Labor betrayal of the rayon work- ers of Elizabethton, Tenn., where a company union was organized with the co-operation of the United Tex- tile Workers Union, The Elizabeth- ton textile workers are urged to | the operating tional Textile Union.” HOOVER FRAMEUP GANG HIRES MAN Stimson in Weasel Talk | Agitates for Navy (Continued from Page Onz) | lead of President Hoover’s Arling- ton address yesterday. Stimson said: “T have in my possession a memo- randum from the director of the budget showing the cost of the pro-| gram recommended by the navy de-| partment in case the policy of naval | reduction which the president advo-| eates is not adopted. That memo- randum shows that the authorized | and contemplated naval program for | the construction of new ships alone amounts to $1,170,800,000. In addi-| tion to this enormous sum for new} construction, there will also be re-| quired very large increase in the already large naval budget to cover | costs of these new ships. | “When it is borne in mind that the foregoing figures involve the construction program of only one nation and that if it proceeds other| nations will be impelled to follow suit, the burden of unproductive ex- penditure which will be imposed upon the econcmie world during the next 15 years can be to a certain extent realized.” Throws Smoke Screen. But Stimson warns that if the rival empires build ships against) the U. S., then the U. S. must build more, even though the cost of bat- tleships has gone up to $40,000,000 apiece, and the cost of a 10,000 ton “treaty cruiser” is more than that of the Congressional Library. The whole speech is put in a negative fashion, “unless the president’s pro- posals to other countries for navy cuts are accepted, the cost of our navy will be very great,” etc., but the implications are made very plain, and big navy-men here are smiling at the throwing of the blame for a navy race on foreign powers, where- as everybody knows that the U. S. has its naval policy all arranged, and went so far as to break off the last naval agreement conferences which it could not jockey into its own program. Killing Debentures. Under Hoover's orders to get the fake farm relief bill out of the road no matter whose reputation is hurt among the farmers, and clear the way for navy bills and for the sen- ate to pass the tariff act with its higher duties, aiding the larger trusts, and its prohibition of revo- lutionary literature, the senate house confreres again stated, guardedly, today that there had been found a formula by which to retire the de- benture clause, This was never anything but a false issue, raised by the senate to shield its members from farmer wrath, to possibly fool some of the farmers into thinking that the sena- tors were trying to do something for them, and to hold up action on the bill. form a picket line in front of their mill and join the Gastonia workers in a joint struggle, ayn Thy ae The Communist Party is the po- gates, |from the pennies of the most bit- | terly exploited workers in the Uni- ted States. Not only does the Daily Worker not appeal to the bosses, but it makes no special appeal to the | |bribed sections of the American} working class, The New Leader addresses its supporters of the capitalist class in order to continue to serve the bosses by deluding the workers. But more and more of the exploited masses are realizing that the Daily Worker \is their fighting organ and spokes-| man in every struggle. HORTHY REGIME HIT BY WORKERS 10 Join C. P. as Result of Demonstration BUFFALO, N, Y., May 31.—Ten Hungarian workers joined the Com- mounist Party today as a result of the effective campaign carried on here by the Party, the Anti-Horthy League and the Anti-Fascist Fed- jeration against the Hungarian fas- t convention which is now in ses- sion here, The whole fascist congress ap- peared at the Petofi monument to- day, claiming the Hungarian bour- geois liberator for their intensely chauvinistic purposes. Counting the police, the detectives, the children end the bystanders, about 350 were present, Workers Demonstrate. Yesterday hundreds of workers demonstrated in front of the aristo- cratic Statler Hotel, where the “Horthy Parliament” is holding its sessions, Placards were carried some of which read “Down with the Horthy Terror!” “Down with Fas- cism.” Others protested the inva- sion of the Horthy fascisti into this country for the purpose of fighting Hungarian Communists here and seeking their deportation to Hun- gary. John Mitchell, the district organ- izer of the Communist Party; Louis Kovess, representing the Anti- Horthy League, and A. Markoff, secretary of the Anti-Fascist Fed- eration, spoke, The sessions of the Horthy par- liament were postponed yesterday for fear of the demonstrators de- spite the promise of Mayor Schwab of Buffalo, who is a millionaire and who presented the key of the city to the fascisti that he would pro- tect them with his police force. Congress Fizzles, The Hungarian congress is dead. Instead of the announced 3,000 delegates there are about 60 priests present, 40 editors, 50 officials of various organizations and 50 dele- statement issued by the exposing The Anti-Fascist Federation, the connection of the congress offi- cially with the Horthy regime in Hungary, has been carried in full by the press here. LABOR SAVING DEVICE. STOCKHOLM, (By Mail).—Thou- sands of railway workers are faced with unemployment as the result of a machine invented here, a device which makes it possible for trains litical leader of the working class. vee to be stopped without a station mas- ‘ter, peeebrer enc.) | | | | TO STRENGTHEN FIGHT AGAINST IMPERIALISTS Discusses War Danger, It Gets Business Support CHICAGO, May 28 (By Mail).— |.A conference of the All-America | Anti-Imperialist League will be held {here Sunday, June 16 at 2 p. m. at {Capitol Building, Randolph and State St., Hall 512. The conference call is signed by the Middle-Western Sec- |tion of the All-America: Anti-Im- perialist League, Harry Gannes, | ) secretary; William H. Holley, chair- }man and Clarence Darrow, vice- | chairman, The agenda includes discussion of | | the war danger; United States Im- | perialism in Latin-America, China, | ete.; Negro problems, American and colonial; terrorism and butchery of | Indian trade unionists and revolu-f tionists by British imperialism and the problems of the All-America: | Anti-Imperialist League and the pro- {gram for enlarging and increasing | the activity of the organization. | “United States imperialism,” says’ ja statement issued by the League from 155 N. Clark St., “is intensify- ing its war preparations it is in-y creasing its imperialist pressure ony \Latin-America. The antagonism of}| |the big powers and their struggle | CHEMICAL WORKERS BURNED | for colonies is precipitating war. To" | ; |meet the growing menace of im- LONDON (By Mail).—Two work- | jerjalism we must understand its devise a member of the Japanese “royal” The workers of both countries are orkers of Japan and England must solidarity of their oppressors. Boasts That ers in a chemical factory on Old) present development and ans for combating it. ; ‘Chicago Meet, June 16, V 2 %: Bevis Poured spl Ford Road were severely injured al “This conference will take up the 1e) a blast, which set the workers’ | questions of the international strug- sanie gle against imperialism and will dis-) jclothes afire, One worker named | othe significance of the Second) wy, |Whitney leaped into a nearby canal. | anti-Imperialist World Congress ti aE | perialii Of rai The flames spread to workers’ | be held in Paris, July 20 to 31, 1929, t] | ree | ol « HITS BOXLEY LYNCHING}: var | —— eer th tiri ‘Negro Worker Calls tor Defense Corps)’: ing By SOLOMON HARPER ized into defense neon of ales Be t ynchi f a 19-year-, to overthrow the slave lynching sys- aa Le SN pe at ries tem which is grinding white and Mer | a) scht.| black workers to death in many Tenn., took place Wednesday night, hae ‘at Party ace engineered by a mob of capitalistic| Ways. Only the Communist Party Per |tools and members of the K, K. K. Joseph Boxley, Negro farm | worker, was arrested Wednesday afternoon by Sheriff Emison, follow- ing a chauvinistic alarm that “A | Negro had attacked the wife of the | bosses’ magistrate John James.” Boxley was working in a field near | by and his arrest by the sheriff in- | vited mob violence since the mitis- | trate conferred with his wife follow- ing the arrest of the farm worker land the sheriff prompted Mrs. | James to say “Joe” by telling her that they had arrested a Negro worker by that name. Boxley was spirited from the local | jail at Trenton to Alamo where the | lynchers, believed to be led by mag- istrate James, stormed the jail door and brutally mobbed the Negro worker without giving him a chance to say a word, or to fight for his life against the tools of the capital- istic slave and lynching system, practiced in the South on Negro workers and sometimes on white workers as was done in Florida a few weeks ago. It was only a few days ago that Edward F. McGrady, legislative rep- resentative of the “American Faker- ation of Labor” recommended that the Kluxers lynch representatives of | the National Textile Workers Union | who have been called from Gastonia, N. C., by the slaves on strike in Elizabethton, Tenn. Furthermore, scabs have been hired by the bosses of Tennessee to bomb strikers, poison their water, and help drive white working mothers back into the textile pens. The lynched man could expect lit- tle in a state where the teaching that the sun moves, that the world was destroyed by water, is a law, and where the Secretary of War James Good (Good for Wall Street) allows the uniformed national guard to shoot Yown striking white slaves. The Negroes of the South including those of my own state, Arkansas, and other states, should be organ- can be depended upon to drive the system out of existence and any Negro who is not man enough to join the party may sooner or later expect to be treated the same way by the capitalist as 19-year-old Joe Boxley was. Last Sunday, Congressman Dyer | Washington), and the Negro greek |letters societies, do about this last | murder? Nothing, except pray and} | collect fat office fees like they have) for the past 30 years during whic! |time over 3,500 Negroes have bee: burned, lynched in the open an many times that number killed b: | mobs, for the mad pleasure of ex- lercising the capitalist slave oppres: sion started here some 80 years ag |by the slave traders of New Eng/ land. In Congressman Dyer’s state] |a Negro was lynched not so many, months ago. None of these organ: izations will recommend the organ. izing of defense unions of workers| because to do this would mean thc Parade of the League on Saturday, June Ist. | starting at 1 p.m. on 126th St. | near Fifth Ave. i —— NOW PLAYING! GALA MULTI-FEATURED Inspired by A powerful psychopathic “GRAVEYARD EPITAPHS” witticisms actually photographed from headstones in England CHARLIE CHAPLIN in “THE FIREMAN” greatest screen artist in “NOSFERATU | the VAMPIRE” @ “DRACULA” a thrilling mystery masterpiece a@ symphony in sadism —and on the same program— “THE LURE OF THE LABRADOR” a film-record of a hazardous exploration trip FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. 8th St, Gustwest) Spring 5095 Saturday and Weekdays i Bron vhded RCAW babel irk) Mtl eh Starting Sat., June 8—The Cinema Event of the Year!--EMIL JANNINGS REPERTOIRE—three PROGRAM Directed by F. ‘W. Murnau, divector of ‘The Last Laugh’ , drama of the blood lust “BALLET MECHANIQUE” a revival showing of this import- ant abstract film which proved a great influence on cinema style... the forerunner of “Potemkin” technique (of Sth Av.) SPECIAL PRICES 412 to 2-~-35 cents +12 to 2---95 conte i J weeks with the his best characterizations | Business League (founded by Booker] * ! of St. Louis, Mo., home of jimcrow-| 3 ¥ jism, spoke in Harlem to thousands} 7™ of church-going Negroes, telling, onts |them. that he will fight lynching] * * with an anti-lynching bill (invented) \¥ ‘ for vote-getting purposes of the Rew) °° publican Party), now has his chance) V' to fight lynching with guns. What) “7 will the money-collecting National °™ Association for the Advancement ce pl (Certain) Colored People, the Uni-| ?™ | versal Negro Improvement Associa- ih |tion (Garvey’s Club), The National] | 4 Equal Rights League of Boston, | fraternal and religious organizations| gi] including Urban League, National) PI, | overthrow of their Wall Stree <H bosses and the Southern bosses whe Wh are furnished money by Wall Street ual to exploit white and black workers ds on the cotton farms and in the cot- 2% ton textile mills of the South, pdr Those interested in stopping lynch. ds ing should join the Mass Protes: lief Harlem Tenants (Ne Cont, Daily, incl. Sat, & Sun, Noon to Midnite || |