Page Six THE DAILY WORKER THE DMiy WOBKER. Lessons of the Danish General Zinoviev Reports to the Russian Communist Party Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING o©. Strike garla is characteristic of the political lizasion. Stabilization will last a cer- the contradictions of capitalism are UU W. Washington Bird.. Chicago. DL The mighty role that the transport workers can TV/TOSCOW, April 29—(By Mall).— stabilization. tain period of time, but the above today greater than before the war. (Phone: Monroa 4712) necessary fill in the world-wide struggle between exploiters At today’s evening session Com- tTIHE unparalelled lies whloh the facts illustrate the character of this It is to differentiate be- Bulgarian government spread stabilization. Many votes cast for tween the stabilization of capitalism SUBSCRIPTION RATES and workers is shown clearly in the aid promised rade Zinoviev delivered a report on against Soviet , Immediately Hindenburg represent a protest of and the stabilization of the Sovie By mall: the Danish workers, now engaged in a general the results of the enlarged executive hatred against Versailles peace Union. gar year month* after the Sofia outrage, have already the NM *3.60....6 months sl.o#—S Speaking rapprochement By mall (In Chicago only): strike, by the Norwegian transport workers and session of the Communist Interna- been disproved., It remains a fact treaty. The direct result of the elec- of the be- 11.00 par year 34.50.-8 month* 22.60—3 month* which may be followed by similar action in Sweden, tional. Pointing out that the plenum however, that no country can be tion will be the growth of revolution- tween the British and Russian trade , Holland and Finland. had the character of a congress, Zino- ruled against the will of the workers ary sentiment in Germany. unions, Comrade Zinoviev stated that Address all mall and make out check* to viev declared that the resolutions will soon there is in England, for the According dispatches, and peasants, and that the class social-democrats first time, THE DAILY WORKER to the Norwegian sailors adopted by the plenum were extreme- struggle in Bulgaria is permeated with THEmake their peace with Hinden- a general revolutionary situation. The IIIS W. Washington Blvd. Chicago, mini* and doekworkers have agreed to handle ho Danish ly Important for the Russian Com- civil war. burg; not the proletariat however. rapprochement between the trade shipping until the demands of the Danish workers munist Party, not only as a section German furnished This election may be expected to have unions follows the line of historical LOUIS ENODAHL rpHE elections 3. f of the Comintern, but as a party that * international results. development; hence the great signi- \ are met and there are good prospects of the boycott another example of political stabi- some serious WILLIAM F. DUNNE rules great country. ficance of the united front tactics. J. LOEB Baslneea Manager a lization. Comrade Zinoviev relates In Germany’s relations with France and MORITZ extending to all the ports in the countries men- speaker The plenum established the rela- detail that the executive had proposed Poland will not be improved, but even- The then declares that the tioned above. by as aacond-claes mall Sept. 21, 1922, at tha Poet- tion of the Comintern to the retarded to the German delegation to enter into tually sharpened. The situation Is view entertained some that the ■stared development revolution, and fact of stabilization Office at Chicago, 111., under tha act of March 3, 1879. Transport is to capitalism wliat the heart, veins of the an election compromise with the Ger- wrought with troubles and dangers. means that capitalism. and arteries are to the human body. It cannot the partial stabilization of man social-democrats, whereby the There Is also the danger of a change Trotsky was correct in his analysis, Adrartlalng rate* oa appucatlas This fact has been caught up by the the to be false. The differences did not live if the circulation system is clogged. Just as Communist Party was to refrain from in German policy towards Soviet Second International, and was mis- putting Union. Stabiliation is there, but many turn about this question, but on the the average human being abuses this vital of up a candidate of its own in part interpreted to mean that the exe- the second election, voting under cer- symptoms show that this stabilization question of the tactics to be adopted by proletarian party the anatomy, so are the transport workers abused cutive of the Comintern had announ- tain conditions, for Braun, the social- is insecure. Reaction is on the up- a in such a situa- Lee and the Left Wing cap- by the bosses and among the lowest paid hardest ced the complete stabilization of democratic candidate. grade in Europe. tion. dvents that have From the company union known as the “B. and worked and consequently most militant sections of italism. Certain The majority of the German dele- to stabilization, there are in JN connection with the Czecho-Slo- taken place since- -the enlarged exe- DUEour of right vakian party, the speaker states O. plan” on one railroad system, established after the working class. gation agreed with this proposal, but movement a number cutive session, stu)w the real charac- the executive had only formulated tendencies and ultra-left dangers. The that the crisis has been overcome, and the strike in 1922, when the morale of the Bulgaria \iilway Their weakness lies in the division of their ter of the stabilization. and the general policy, leaving its prac- somewhat unclear formulation of the that the resignations in Brunn only was low point, the class peace examples economic healthy the workers at a forces by national and sectional lines—a weakness Germany are of tical execution to the German Com- enlarged executive must be made contribute to the development policy of the trade union officialdom has extended that the transport workers of the Red Interna- stabilization. The French ministerial munist Party. clear to the effect that a general revo- of the party. railways and a number crisis was no ordinary crisis; it arose In the meantime the social-demo- lutionary situation must be dlfferent- rpHE plenum had dealt with the to Canadian government tional of Labor Unions realized long ago and -*- out of the financiAl- crisls. had withdrawn their candidate, ed form an immediate revolutionary agrarian question and with the of roads on this side of the line. which they out overcome. The first crats set to step was impending' danger of an in- Supporting the capitalist, candidate situation. The charlatans of the Sec- policy of the Comintern. Events have Now comes William Lee, head of the* Brother- an effort to unify all transport unions a declare that the shown the policy pursued by the Rus- around THEflation in Franpq suddenly threat- Marx,—in return, for which, Braun ond International hood of Railway with the proposal to any Communist Party in the Comin- Trainmen, common program of minimum demands, the second ened a repetition of the social crisis was to become (prime minister in plenum had not registered revolu- sian hold a conference of railway managers and railway was their active support of the drive fpr world experienced by Germany in 1923. The Prussia. tionary situation at all. This is a tern to be correct. The immediate merely Party union officials to launch a “no movement in crisis overcome by a banking In gjaxony, many thousands of so falsehood. The plenum had task of the Russian Communist strike” trade union unity. dally scheme which coyqred the deficit of cial-democratic workers voted for established the fact that there was is to adapt its work with the the entire industry. With characteristic energy With the example of the need for international revolutionry At the pres- four milliards. Thaellman, refusing to vote for the no immediately situation. international movement. the imperialists are evidently insisting upon re- to solidarity furnished by the Danish strike, and the However, there remains a deficit of capitalist candidate,—which goes to Since the bourgeoisie is unable ent moment the Comintern needs especially support sults from their agents in the trade unions. evidence of a real belief in its necessity shown by 20 milliards. characteristics of show that there was no psychological solve its conflicts from above, the si- the moral of the Theiie, revolutionary. Party, is This movement is planned on a stupendous scale. the French stabilization are particu- basis for casting the votes for Marx. tuation remains Russian Communist which the Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, German and beginning of an and remains the party of international would include workers larly significant, because France is a election of Hindenburg is the are only at the If successful it 2,000,000 Dutch transport workers, the Marine Transport revolutions, proletarian revolution. (Applause). victor country. The situation in Bui THEfirst historical illustration of stabl- WEera of wars and and in the most important key industry and introduce 1 'Workers of the 1.W.W., as the most militant group the company union system on a national basis. in the American industry, should now take the lead The ability to organize and strike is the test of in the among transport workers in 800 COAL MINERS FLEE FOR LIVES the right strike WORKERS a labor union. To surrender to support of the movement for world trade union JOB SELLERS IN 40 CHICAGO and substitute class co-operation for the class unity, in which the British and Russian unions AS BLACK DAMP OVERCOMES struggle, no matter how vague its conception may have taken the lead internationally. WILKES BARRE, Pa., May 17.—Forty miners were overcome by black BALKAN is to take the heart, blood and bowel out of the NEW YORK ROB PROTEST be, damp when Are, breaking out 300 feet beneath the surface In the number of the plan. labor unions. This is the purpose 3 mine of the Kingston Coal company, sent 800 miners scurrying to the It would be only a half explanation to say that The Riffian War THE UNEMPLOYED surface for their lives. WHITE TERROR the railroad capitalists are behind this scheme be- brought to a hospital where It was said they All the glamor with which imperialism covers, Eight of the victims were cause they are concerned only over demands for probably would recover. Two other workers were sent to their homes In or tries to cover, its wars on colonial peoples is Thousands Slain; More higher wages and the power of the unions to en- Worker Travels All a serious condition. to be seen in the inspired dispatches relating the force them. American capitalism can afford to Night, Gets No Work The fire was believed to have started during timbering operations. Thousands in Prison exploits of the French armies in northern Africa. Three acres of coal land had been burned this afternoon and the fire was and does pay proportionately higher wages to the At meeting of several hun- Not much is said about the conscript troops, but NEW YORK, May 17.—The follow- still raging. a mass railway brotherhoods than to other groups of Chicago yesterday held plenty ing letter has bean received from a dred workers | of space is given to the officers—a slight Many mules perished when mine workers were forced to abandon rescue hall, determin- workers. Its quarrels with them are of a minor worker, who has to depend on the at Bricklayers’ Union a scratch is enough to make one of them a hero. The work because of the great danger to themselves. against and, with their reactionary leadership, capitalist exploiters: ed protest was vo'ced the nature at the mouth of the mine for two hours, wives and sister of Nicholas Longworth, husband — Confusion reigned white raging in of Alice “Dear Comrades, horrors of the terror quite easily adjusted. hurrying to scene on hearing reports that the men were Roosevelt, is the wife of General Chabrun, whose “I am a laborec doing work on auto- children the the Balkan countiios. But railway transport systems are of vital im- Bulgaria espocia'ly, headquarters are in Fez, this mobile highway construction. I saw trapped. In and also in and gives the Jugo-Slavia and Greece, thou- portance in war and war comes closer as the an ad in the New, York World of an many slaughter of the Riffians a domestic flavor for the sands of workers and peasants have rivalry between America, Japan and Great Brit- employment ageq boundaries defined by the European imperialists. told to be there «t 6 a. m. and the BUTTE, Mont., It is doubtful if Lee will have much luck in secur- Bolden, Earl Browder, in English; Comrade They are putting up a sturdy struggle and all thru boss would come tp get me. I took the of rescuing alive Gus Butte TO ‘FARM’ BABY of Michalachky, Slavic; ing the endorsement of other labor officials. Not but train at 9 the evening and miner, entombed by a fall ground in South Com- the colonial regions held in bondage by the French o’clock.Jn Bulg&iian, that they are in accord with the general tenor of travelled all night. When I arrived in the 200 foot 'level of the West NEW YORK, May 17.—Latest re- rade Koteff in and Comrade —and possessions as well—there Monday, Kostis in Greek. over on British is evi at the given there was nobody Colusa mine last was aban- ports by Dr. Otto H. Schultz on the the scheme, but this manner of putting rescue A spirited of protest de- dence of strong support for their efforts toward in sight. doned today by workers. autopsy of the six-months-old infant, resolution union membership is a little too raw. The manding the liberation. 100.000 French troops, equipped with Boss Turns Him Down. Work will be continued, however, William Winters, who died in Mrs. a cessation to the barbarities f bourgeoisie adopt- fakers are conservative even in their conservatism. camp, was told until the body Is located, mine offi- “baby of the Balkan was warfare, “I went to the ( but Helen Geisen-Volk’s farm” last the most modern instruments of have not ed, and is to be sent to the labor press The trend of thought of labor officialdom is in that I could not , see the boss that cials said. February 3 of a fractured skull, says been able even to rescue all the beleaguered thruout the world and mailed direct of sub- out- day but would have to come back the indications that the fracture the direction of class peace and acceptance are to the embassies of the Balkan na- posts of French imperialism. next day. When,l returned the next caused quick death the infant. Dr. sidies from imperialism, bnt the “B. and O. plan” Wages of to tions at Washington. France cannot afford to be driven out of north day, the boss told me that there was Boost Schultz also reports finding a large method of be- Especial emphasis was laid upon -seems to them to offer a better no work for me. He offered to send hard curd of milk in the baby’s «rn Africa. She needs a military base opposite Local Labor Head the part of imperialist powers in traying the masses for the time being. me to another camp sixty miles away, stomach which, he says, would un- the the Gibraltar coast and a line of similar bases Against Protest concealing the real perpetrators of the There is this much to be said for Lee, however. but he did not keep his word. I doubtedly have made him cross and along,the southern to Sveti Krai explosion and* using the coast of the Mediterranean stayed there 5 ddys. The trip cost irritable. Indictments for homicide He has shown the logical conclusion of a class The Chicago Federation of Labor occasion as an excuse for intensified offset British control of the sea route to French me, together by board, S2O. for other a step thru peace policy and given the left wing in the labor witfi yesterday passed a motion to raise the cases came near white terror murders. colonies in the Far “The boss at the camp declared that the result this investigation. East and to bulwark her con salary President John Fitzpatrick, of movement a concrete illustration on which to base he knows nothing about the agency. of trol of western African colonies. from $75 to a week. An amend- their arguments against all attempts to lead the \nother fellow at the camp told me SIOO British Ruler In Egypt Quits. Northern Africa is another Balkan section. Here ment was added that the stenographer that he earned $36 In three weeks, and New Board to Face LONDON, England, May 17—Sir unions into the camp of the enemy for surrender employed by the federation should be also the imperialist rivals clash and it is no won- not the $lO5 and board that was prom- Georfce Lloyd, unionist member of instead of struggle. raised $5 a week. School Problems at der that, as in 1911-12, when France and England ised.” parliament, has been appointed high Delegate J. P. McCarthy, from the These facts speak for themselves. Meeting Next Friday commissioner for Egypt, to succeed double-crossed Germany in the Moroccan affair, Carpenters’ inquired to the Elihu Root says that the prohibition law is a First, the worker is skinned by the Union’ as Field Marshal Viscount Allenby. Lloyd the eyes of every foreign office are on the develop scale of the Blacksmith’s Union of "employment” agency, then, if he does Next Friday, the school hoard served in the world war in Egypt, and setback to temperance and that control of the mind in bloody Chicago, of which Fitzpatrick is a new ments the struggle taking place there •nicceed in getting work, he is skinned on entering into its duties will be was governor of Bombay. by law is dangerous. The liquor drought such as member. He stated that as a general now. by the boss—$35 for three weeks in- confronted with the two serious prob- rule the officials of the American-la- it is, seems to have created a great demand for War cannot be isolated these days. There is the stead of $lO5 a month. lems now facing the board of educa- ' were paid too highly, freedom from legal interference on the part of Workers Must Fight. bor movement factor of the growing discontent of the colonial that Fitzpatrick should get no more tion. One is the deficit in the treas- COMMUNISTS TO ATTACK This is the “land of opportunity,” ury which now comes to the thirsty portion of our ruling class, but we have peoples coupled with the sympathy and support than the regular union scale of his $20,000,000 where every worker can rise if he fund; is FRENCH SLAUGHTER not heard of any move on their part to repeal the trade. in the educational the other IN for their liberation movements manifested by the only works hard and industriously. the acute housing shortage estimated McCarthy declared that the exhorbi- criminal syndicalism laws. working class of the imperialist nations which There is only one rising that will help at 100,000 pupils being without satis- AFRICA, REFORE CHAMBER tant salaries of labor leaders were a makes these adventerous by the ’he working class—and that is the factory accommodations. conquests ruling corrupting influence which gave them PARIS, France, •islng of the workers as an organized The new board has before It the old May 17.—The ; class a weakness rather than a strength to their a different class viewpoint than the troops Another Job for the Strikebreaking body to put an epd to this skinning board’s decision to ask for a $1 in- Riffian fighting the French ! control. members of the unions and seperated possession ind the skinners, and to install a sys- crease in the tax rate for educational Invaders for of their na- them from the rank and file. The un- stores President What better evidence that imperialism drives its lem and a government where they, purposes catry tive land have captured large skilled workers in the building trades, and to out the new devotees than the fact that confronted '.he workers, are tfie bosses. The time salary schedule proposed by Superin- of provisions and war material In One strike made Calvin Coolidge so famous that to suicide pointed were working under is coming—the workers should learn he out, tendent McAndrew. Trustee J. Lewis the Benzi Zeural country. with a financial crisis at home the French rulerr the scab Landis award, and it was lie rode into the White House on the crest of a rom their own individual experiences Coath has announced his intention to Official statements from Morocco are forced, by their colonial policy to engage in an much more needful to use all avail- I and from the experiences of the work- demand reconsideration .of these two do not disclose the number of French popularity wave. There is a possibility that an- able funds for organizing the unor- expensive and unpopular war which strains their ers of all countries. matters. > troops which have been killed in the ganized than in increased salary for other opportunity to show his efficiency as a strike badly damaged and encourages revolt at new fighting, which extends over a credit labor leaders in a time when the work- The members on the finance sever if committee selected by Edward B. Elli- front 'pf 250 miles. breaker will lie presented to him, the anthracite home? ing class was suffering wage cuts right "ZINOVIEV cott, the new president of the board, The Communists are expected to miners are forced to strike when their agreement The French Communist Party lias not been slow LETTER" I and left. are Julius F. Swietanka, chairman, attack the French military opera- to Among the many labor fakers who (with the operators terminates on August JO. in bringing these matters the attention of the FAKE, SAYS OFFICIAL Charles T. Byrne, Theopbilus Schmid tions In North Africa when the spoke in favor of the increase in sal- masses and the proof of the disastrous con and Dr. of chamber of deputies assembles on News dispatches from Washington advise us ary of President Fitzpatrick, was Carl Victor Schiller. All them TRADE UNION REPORT May sequences to the stability of French capitalism will Typographical are business men. 25. that the president is keeping a watchful eye on , LI.. . I Berreitter of the Union not lie long forthcoming in the form of new op the anthracite region. We are informed that Coo LONDON, May 17.—The report of and prominent member of the prole- pressions visited upon the most advanced tarian patry. lidge will take to break the section the trade union (congress delegation, of the French working class. BOSS PLUMBERS APPEAL TO THE miners’ should a stoppage take place and which hat been investigating the strike, authenticity of the famous “Zino- that he will take steps to “insure a continuation letter,” by RUSSIA DEMANDS THE PUBLIC WITH ATTACK ON WORKERS Jennings Bryan qualify for viev publication of which of work” in the hard coal fields. William should ad the British foreign office had much This is not, surprising. The bosses did not elect rnittnnce into the monkey section of the nearest to do with the defeat of Ramsay RETURN OF JEWELS Connecticut Master Plumbers’ of John D. Rockefeller la not "Ineffi- zoo after his brush with the students at Brown MacDonald's labor government last THKAssociation met recently in New cient.” On the contrary, the Stand- him president for his ability to make nice after- - election, now it completed and it STOLEN BY WRAN6EL Haven and went on record condemn- ard Oil Co. is tjioroly efficient in Rhode Island. The students made the ’’ University, * dinner speeches or to turn out neatly polished declared to pronounce the letter a ing "loafing on the Job” and the prac- bleeding the "people, In bleeding the , old fraud look like a chimpanzee. workers. It knows what its power is phrases. They needed a good efficient and willing forgery, taya the labor organ, the MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., May 17. tice of “forgetting” tools. The conven- power strikebreaker and they got their man. Daily Herald. Maxim Litvinoff, assistant commis- tion adopted a resolution "banning in- —the of the United Status gov- who General council considers there sar of foreign affaira, has demanded, efficient workmen and favoring a re- ernment. In the meantime the operators are speeding up 1 The ancient Hebrew walked on the Black the plumbers should be investigation of how and on behalf of the Soviet government, duction In prices in order to create "Loafers” are called, region, so Sea may not have Hat feet but lots of people arc coal production in the anthracite that why the foreign office came to Issue the return by the government of more friendly relations between the because they yefuse to' give up their Jennings energy pock- they will have a sufficient supply ahead to tide beginning to think William Bryan has the letter juat a few days before Jugo-Slavia of jewel* seized by plumbers and the public." last ounce of to till the ets of their bosses. in them over until Coolidge succeeds in breaking the > j a fiat head. the general election, and will urge Peter Wrangel, who delivered them The same day’s papers reported "Reduction Jugo-Slav Jersey Standard Oil prices” is what the bosses Intend to -. that a committee of the labor party, to the fascist government. that the New if it takes place. which means a strike together with officials of the foreign Wrangel etole the Jewela from a Co., reported earnings of $81,00,000 in Introduce, reduction “Scabby” Hill Lee not a united front of the wage scale for the workers. may get office and home office, be glvsn facil- safe deposit vault. Litvinoff said 102$. The Standard Oil Co. does not Whut the workers going Get u member for the Workers Party and a new conference liet ween the rail corkers and their ities for carrying out such an In- Russia will hold Jugo-Blovla respon- "loaf on the Job." It does not “for- ure to do subscription for the DAILY WORKER. masters, hut he will get a lot of publicity quiry- sible for any losses. get its tools.” The Standard Oil Co.. about it?