The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 6, 1928, Page 3

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f | THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1928 rage Three Bukharin’s Speech in Reply to Discussion on the International Situation This is the final section of Bukharin’s speech in reply to the discussion on the international situation at the Sixth Cangress of the Communist International, which began in Saturday’s Daily Worker. Those sections already published are: “I. The Positive and Negative Sides of the Discus- sion,” “II. The Stabilization of Capitalism and the Con- troversy over the ‘Third Period,” “III. The War Question is the Central Question,” “IV. The External and Internal Contradictions of the Capitalist System,” and “V. Probléms Connected with the Work of the Communist Parties.” * * * Comrades, now a few words about | that in the French Party here were inner-Party affairs. It is quite clear that now, after the defeat of the Trotskyist opposition, which rep- yesented a bloc of the right and ul- tra-left, the chief danger is un- @oubtedly the right wing danger. | This danger is fairly serious both | from the standpoint of current tasks as well as from the stand- point of the future. This danger -has been frequently referred to from the standpoint of current af- fairs, in regard to the German Com- munist Party in connection with ac- tivity in the trade unions; in re- gard to the Czech Party in connec- tion with the Red Day; in connec- tion with the opposition against our “new tactics” in France, and so forth. The right wing danger is a fact, a dangerous fact not only from the standpoint of the present situa- tion, but also from the standpoint of tomorrow. We must not lose sight of this. Take the Czech question. The Party tried to mobilize its forces, but proved incapable of accomplish- ing this. The result was a poor re- hearsal on the eve of future events. The diagnosis of the internal ail- ment has been made; the disease proved to be fairly serious. Now we must calculate quite calmly. I am not a particular believer in alarms about the right danger and left de- viations. I believe that during the last year the Communist Interna- tional has effected a big change,— mind you, a big, not a little change —primarily in regard to the British and French Parties. Comrade Lo- minadze was. quite wrong when for some reason he thought fit to as- sert that only a slight change has been made towards the left. It seems to me that a big change towards the left has been made particularly in regard to the British Party. Any one who knows the inner life of the British Party will realize that we have broken with all the old traditions of the British labor movement which exer- | cised great influence upon our Party too. (Voice: “The same in France!”) Yes, in France as well, But I cannot speak about two coun- tries at the same time. The strong- est traditions in the British work- ing class was that of the unity of “organized labor.” Such “unity” has been a big trump in the hands of the reformists: by deceptive use of this slogan they were able to combat revolutionary ideas, the re- volutionary Party, and so on. This “unity” (of «the revolutionary workers with the reformist wolves) proved to be the most formidable obstacle to the emancipation of the proletariat from the influence of the reformists who have openly resorted to the outrageous policy ofgexpul- sions and splits. On the one hand they enjoyed the protection of the police, and on the other hand they shielded themselves by cries about unity. This tradition is so deeply rooted’ among the British prole- tariat that some of our best com- rades could not conceive of a fight being waged simultaneously against the Baldwin government and the Labor Party. The chief danger, they said, was the Baldwin govern- ment against which a united front of the whole working class was to be formed; but the whole working class was in the grip of the Labor Party, consequently, the Baldwin government. could be overthrown only with the help and support of the Labor Party. Such was the or- iginal position. Hence the slogan adopted at the congress of the British Party, of “a Labor govern- ment under the control of the exe- cutive of the Labor Party.” Then our British comrades, not without the influence of the E. C. C. L, made a sharp turn. How is it pos- sible ta fail to appreciate the im- portance of so important a change for the whole life of the Party? We effected this change without a lot of noise, and without bandying epi- thets against each other, effected it by conviction and frank,and open discussion. This will render it all the more durable, notwithstanding the friction that must inevitably arise. This change in tactics con- stitutes a big event in the history of the British labor movement. All of us have known all along | ties. also deeply rooted parliamentary traditions. Only a few months ago the parliamentary traditions were revealed, for instance, on the ques- tion of loyalty towards the state (the question of the arrests). Was this a mere accident? Was this merely a surface phenomenon? No, these tendencies were deeply in- grained in the ranks of the Party. And yet, within the short period of two months or so we took a sharp turn and hurled forth the slogan of “class against class,” the slogan of Don’t vote for the Socialist Party, this implies not a little, but a big change in the tactics of the French Party. Here again the change was effected without superfluous noise, by relying upon the rank and file by comradely reasoning with those who hesitated, and stern combat against those who were stubborn. These tactics have not been carried out without friction, not witheut in- ternal conflicts, not without internal difficulties; nevertheless, the change effected by the French Communist Party is one of principle. It is a change which relates to principle to a larger extent than any change ef. fected in the French Communist Party since the time of its founda- tion. I do not mean to say that the French Communist Party, the Brit- ish Communist Party and the Com- munist International, have accom- plished a great “feat.” However, looking at this question objectively, don’t you find that a big change has been effected in the tactics of both| of these big Parties. I believe that is the case. And does not this change constitute a decisive bfow to the right danger? Of course, it does. Does not this tactical change help us to focus the light upon the hidden danger from the right? Of course it does. This very fact accounts for the opposition from the right, this explains the misgivings expressed as to the correctness of these tac- This accounts for the fight which has been waged against these tactics. The best means of combat- ting the right tendencies both in the French and in the British Parties is the consistent application of the so- called “new tactics.” As Ihave already said, the right danger may grow in the future. Why? We must expect the phe- nomenon referred to by Comrade Lenin in the article which I quoted, namely, that a section of our press may not prove equal to the task. Such a possibility is not at all ex- glyuded. Another question is, to what length may the wrong position be carried? It is not merely a ques- tion of the press, but also of Party organizations. Where is the guar- antee that at a period of immediate danger of war, when we shall have to decide upon still another change in our tactics, that some ‘deviations’ will not be discovered? A number of changes will be required in. our tactics, on organization questions, in our attitude towards legal and illegal work, and upon many other | issues. Where is the guarantee that there will be no schism in some par- ties, no facts and phenomena re- sembling a crisis? Such things are quite likely to happen. They will come, naturally first of all, from the extreme right circles in the dif- ferent parties. And for this rea. son, if we thoroughly analyze the existing situation and the outlook, we must arrive at the conclusion, as regards the question of our inner| Party policy, that we must hit at the right wingers all over the front, | all along the line. Inner Party Questions. Breaches of discipline, in which the right danger is hidden, certainly cannot be toleratéd. Against this we must wage the most strenuous fight. Nevertheless, I must say: the task of conducting a vigorous struggle against the right wing danger with- in the Party by no means removes the tasks of internal Party unity, the task of reasonably conducting given campaigns and of developing a sort of inner Party tactfulness. In Germany we have a right danger. We propose in the theses to wage a vigorous fight against this right danger. In the theses we propose to combat systematically any con- ciliatory attitude in regard to right | | | | | to all of us, the American Party ap- VI. Tactical and Inner Party Problems dangers. Yet, at the: same time we must by every means in our power rally all the comrades who stand on the platform of the Essen Party Congress, of the decisions of the Comintern and who promise, to wage a relentless fight against the right danger. (A voice: “This is what we are doing.”) I am instructed by the delegation of the Communist Party of the So- viet Union to declare—in so far as the German Party is concerned—| that we are opposed to any atempts to oust Comrade Ewart from the Party leadership. I must say, how- ever, that leading German comrades have no intention of doing that. At this Congress we wish to create the pre-requisite conditions for a situ- ation which will make even the slightest fissure in the leading in American industry are also a fact and so is also the growing discon- tent among the unskilled workers.|tion with the Factory Committee | shouting. is there any ground for the.growth of the Communist Party? Yes, there is. Does this furnish any justifi- cation for an acute factional strug- gle? Of course not. All steps must be taken to avoid such a struggle. It seems to me that the Czecho-| slovakian Party presents the most! This imposes upén us the task of} workers. difficult problem, Perhaps we are not yet in possession of the neces- sary data for a correct analysis of the situation and for drawing up the proper measures; nevertheless, the case of Red Day is highly symptomatic. it | te Lately the Czech Party commit- a series of mistakes in connec- Bill, for example ingthe plan to vote for Massaryk in the presidential |election, and in a whole number of jother questions which revealed the | passive attitude gf the Party. Just now we are witnesing even some- hing more than mere passivity. thoroughly analysing the situation and of taking efficient | measures. At the present time, when every- |thing must be done to strengthen our ranks, it seems to me we are|as follows: “If you are going to| without Something is wrong|‘confronted with a tremendous task|expel all the not very obedient but |not get the social democratic work- ers under eur influence merely by Therefore, at a period when war is approaching, it is abso- lutely nectssary to liven up the in- ner work of our Parties, to increase the activity of the rank and file members of our Party, to promote the conditions for their growth and ffor raising fresh cadres of active Discipline, this is our commandment. Nevertheless, com- remedial |,rades, I should like to allude to an} |unpublished fetter addressed by | Comrade Lenin to Zinoviev and my- |self in which Comrade Lenin wrote | Comintern, the Executive Committee of the | VII. Conclusion. | Com ist International we must There is no doubt but that the| den ed ideological activ- international situation is going tojity, ¢ in recruiting become more and more acute. We! members, be in regard to are heading fi second imperialist| the day to day qui ons, further world war. This does not mean that tomorrow, say, the war will be started against the Soviet Union. But if we are to speak of the time we have at our disposal to prepare, I must say that we have very little. This is an incontestable fact. The brief respite which we still have, whatever its duration, we must util- ize with all our energy, with all our revolutionary zeal, in order to strengthening of the Pa , great- er efforts on the part of our youth organizations to recruit new mem- bers, more energetic activity in the colonies, in the army, and prepara- tion for the eventuality of our Par- ties becominng illegal. To believe that we are going to continue such a relatively “tranquil” existence as we are now enjoying is to indulge in illusions. Moreover, we must take | strengthen our Parties and consoli-|all steps to prevent other Parties date them, in order to win over to from repeating the Red y experi- }our side the large masses of the ences of the Czechoslovakian Party. proletariat and to attract the large) Comrades, the Communist Inter- |masses of the peasants. national was born out of the war. These are huge and important| The Communist International has tasks. These tasks we cannot achieve| scored many a big victory. The persistent work, without largest achievement of the world | working every day, every minute,| proletariat is the establishment of tha Soviet Union. In the final in the Czechoslovakian Party, not) —the task of ideologically educating| clever people, and retain only the|‘and every second. All the comrades | the Party. We do not yet show suf-| obedient fools, you will! most assur-|are aware that in the instructions among the rank and file, and the| ficient energy in this work. To my|edly ruin the Party.” only among the leaders, but also Party as a whole; there is some- mind, it is one of the tasks of our | I believe Comrade Lenin’s view bodies of the Party impossible. All| thing wrong from the standpoint of | Parties to force tHe pace of mental| to be perfectly correct. We need a the comrades must act uppn the| the political line, of the fundamental activity, of the ideological struggle, |firm hand in the leading bodies of basis of the strictest discipline, the Orientation of the Party, and of|of ideological discussions, etc. This our Party, a hand which will not strictest subordination of the -min- ority to the majority. Without such a pre-requisite condition it will be im- possible to carry on a political fight. Further splits, further schisms either in the leadership or within our Parties, would lead to the most fatal consequences. I take it there- fore that the essential pre-requisite for our successful activity should be discipline. We have seen how actu- ally the question stands in Poland. Consolidation, unity, and discipline are absolutely essential for the vic- torious development of revolution- ary events. Lately we have had moments of crisis in the Comintern.) Such critical moments, experienced | by some of the Parties, have a high- ly detrimental effect upon the masses of the workers. It is pos- sible to get rid of such crises only by pursuing a firm and definite poli- tical line. This constitutes the fun- damental postulate to the whole of the subsequent development. For! instance, among the minority of the} German Party there is a striving} towards effecting a change in the) leadership. I believe such aims to| be improper. We must do nothing) of the kind, as this would lead to| internal strife in the German Party.) The E. C. C. I. fully and entirely supports the historically formed nucleus of the Polbureau of the C. C. with Thalmann at the head. I believe that questions like that of inner Party democracy, for example, | questions of the new cadres of the Party, of rawming the theoretical level of the Parties, of livening up the rank and file groups, of mass activity, etc., should be raised as big Party questions. The Parties should learn to live more of a real political life, and eschew all politics without principles. Take the Polish Party for exam- ple. There are no great political dif- ferences in that Party and yet a furiops factional strife is raging in it. Or take the American Party. Quite lately, at least so it seemed peared to be overcoming the internal friction; but now we find that the) controversy is flaring up again. The internal Party struggle has “re- vived” to such an extent that at- tempts are being made to utilize the} present conjuncture for the purpose of continuing the struggle in the} -acutest form. Are there any really) big political differences in thé Amer- ican Party? No, they are petty. Are these differences so important as to warrant the formation of factions? | I beliefe they are not. For instance, | take the question concerning the at- titude of American imperialism. Some say that American imperial- ism has grown stronger; others claim that their opponents, i. e./ those who say so, are advertising| American imperialism. Such an ex-| pression should not be used. No good can come of it, and it does not help clear up the question. I must confess that I do not entertain hopes of a revolutionary situation) arising in the United States in the near future. I say this quite frank- ly. In no country in the world is! capitalism so strong as it is in the United States of America, where it has reached its zenith. Is it a ter- rible thing to say that there is little | likelihood of an immediate revolu-| tionary situation? It is, if this is! used to contradict the argument! that there is positively no ground | grave social democratic survivals. It jis essential therefore after this|the whole of our development. | Congress, or during the Congress,|instance, if we desire to prepare|time we need in our leading Party | for the Executive Committee to take| against war, we must carry on big| bodies people — and I believe we|cial democracy, up the Czech question specially in} propagandist activity both among|have them—who will quite tactfully | expose its sophist order to frame the necessary meas. ures not only in regard to the lead: jing bodies, but also in regard to the} orientation of the whole Czech Par- corresponds to the general line of For hesitate to expel every blackleg |from our movement. At the same |the social democratic and among) plead the cause of every “not fool-|to prepare the organization, etc.” ur own workers; yet we have very|ish” member of the Party with the| This we cannot do without straining | tarian dictato: ittle agitational and propagandist| view to getting him back to the| the forces of our Party to the ut-| longed cheers iterature for the purpose. We can-| proper line of the Party+and of the! most. From our Parties and from|and give th FASCISTI WOULD. CRUSH KNAPP NEARLY FOSTER TO FAMILY OF ASSAILANT’ epee 1p ppison OBREGON CAUCUS. SEEKS NOMINEE Report Mexican Group Favors Trevino MEXICO CITY, Sept. 5 (UP).— A majority of the Obregon faction, at a caucus yesterday, were re- ported te have decided in favor of Perez Trevino as provisional presi- dent to succeed Presjdent Calles. Others mentioned were General Gonzalo Escobar, General Andrew Almazan, Senatoxy Eduardo Neri and Secretary of the Interior Emilio Portez Gil. | . Obregon Investigation. MEXICO CITY, Sept. .5.—The hidden power of the Catholic Church to alter the testimony of witnesses was revealed as the government’s investigation of the Obregon assas- sination plot, adjourned from Mon- day, continued today with conflict- ing statements before the authori- ties of the part alleged to have been played in the plot by Mother Su- perior Concepcion. Elugio Gonzalez and Maria Elena Manzano, who had .confessed that they: planned to kill Obregon by sticking him with a poisoned pin while dancing, retracted their state- ment that the nun joined them in the conspiracy. In spite of damaging testimony, Mother Concepcion again denied any knowledge of the plot, or of the manufacture of bombs to be. used + * Meet Names Nominee for the Presidency) . | KANSAS CITY, Sept. 5.—The ex-| ecutive committee of a fake conven-| tion calling itself the “Farmer La- bor Party” today named Frank El-; dridge Webb, of San Francisco, as} its presidential nominee. The con-| vention is said to be part of a plan} to split the farmer-labor party in) this section. The committee in charge of the convention stated that it would attempt to get Senator! James A. Reed gf Missouri to run as} vice-president. If Reed declines, it} was said, L. R. Tillman of Georgia,| nephew of former Senator Tillman/ of Georgia, would probably be) named. NEW YORK JINGOES MEET. SCHENECTADY, N. Y., Sept. 5) (UP).—The tenth annual convention | of the American Legion, State De- ROME, Sept. 5 (UP).—Three per- sons went on trial before a special | military court today accused of plot- \ting the assassination of Premier | | Mussolini. | They were Mammolo and Ludvico | Zamboni and Virginia Tambarroni, |father, brother and aunt respective- lly of Anteo Zamboni, 16, who was | lynched when he tried to kill Musso- | lini at Bologna on Oct. 31, 1926. .. Bloody Mussolini Helps. but by another young man standing that a revolver found in his room | closely’ resembled that carried by | Anteo. written by Anteo on the leaf of an anarchistic book: “The tien of a despot who is the people constitutes an tice, not a crime.” is Ex-Hillman Flunkey Fined for Bootlegging BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Sept. 5.— After forsaking the “labor” business for more lucrative fields, Lavitt, of this city, has run afoul of the police. Lavitt, formerly a busi- ness agent for the Amalgamated {Clothing Workers and ex-flunky of |other corrupt union machines, was jtoday fined $200 and costs in city |court for keeping and selling liquor |at the Lincoln Hotel, of which he is |the proprietor. Three of Lavitt’s assistants were |fined, and five frequenters of the |place, which was raided by police a gasinsy Obregon ‘and ("President vreck ago Sunday, forfeited $60 eae) | bonds. ioe | “ . | “ r Fake “Farmer-Labor” police Slug, Then . Jail Mine Militant Continued from Page One turned and arrested the miner for “disorderly conduct” and “inciting to riot.” The case against the miner was given the same treatment from the court. The charges against DiPiazy were dis- missed at the same time that the charges agaimst the coal and iron policeman were. The policeman was released after the costs amounting to $46, $17 less than ‘the costs impose upon the miner, were paid by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation at whose mine the private policeman was_ stationed. DiPiazy is still in jail. Funds must |be raised immediately to free the | miner. FRENCH CREATE AIR DEPT. PARIS, Sept. 5 (UP).—The cab- for activity among the American’ partment of New York, opened to-|inet decided today to create a sepa- masses. As far as I know, however, no one has made such an assertion. | Unemployment is a fact; changes | day with a series of preliminary rate air ministry instead of having aviation urfder jurisdiction of the meetings. Actual business session | will get under way tomorrow. Department of Commerce. Samuel) “tmpartial” | “Life Is Ruined Now,” She Says Continued from Page One sus of 1925. Conspicuous as a lead- jer of republican women and a crony |of some of the shadiest G. O. P. |lieutenants in the state, Mrs. Knapp’s | reign revealed the fact that she had | appropriated for her own uses thou- |sands of dollars. When her own tively satisfied, Mrs. Knapp thought- beside him. Police claimed the sec-| fully put a score of her relatives on| Convention of the Workers (Com- ond young man was Ludovico and/ the census payroll, and thousands of|™unist) Party, Foster said: | dollars were grafted in this way. | Early today a rumor gained ground that Mrs. Knapp would ac- |tion ptison cell, hut it was quickly assassina-| dissipated when the county sheriff,| enormously; strangling | qualifying suddenly as a medical di-| borne down on them; in short, their | act of jus-|agnostician; announced that “it)former relatively favorable condi-| tire quota of subs set for Buffalo is | would not be safe to place her in a |cell at this time due to her delicate | condition.” ! From a Good Family. | “The cell block is noisy,” explained |the solicitous sheriff, “and for a | woman of her breeding and delicate health I think it would be more than she can stand.” | Mrs. Knapp’s dainty constitution did not prevegt her, however, from | consuming a rather substantial sup- per last night. The sheriff's wife and a well-equipped restaurant in the neighborhood collaborated in the preparation of the meal which con- sisted of steak, mashed potatoes, corn on the cob from the sheriff’s own garden, sliced tomatoes, sliced peaches, fruit cake and coffee. “Life Is Ruined.” Despite the mildness of the sen- tence imposed upon the lady embez- zler in an effort to sustain the pre- tense that “justice will be done,” Mrs. Knapp Has been whining shrilly since she arrived at the sheriff’s home. | “My whole life is ruined,” she told |friends today. “What is there left jafter this? What difference does | air and sunshine make to me after serving 80 days in jail?” France Fears Austro- * PARIS, Sept. 5 (UP).—Frarle has become greatly alarmed over the possibility of a closer relationship ‘between Germany and Austria, it | was learned today. While Germany has shown in- creasing signs of worry because con- sideration of Rhineland evacuation has been delayed, French statesmen have geen a menace to European peace in the “Anschluss” demonstra- tions among peoples of the two former allies. It is known that For- eign Minister Briand said as much to Chancellor Ignaz Seipel of Aus- tria at Geneva Monday night. German Unity Move at the League of Nations Assembly | he gave to the delegates to the Hague Conference, ‘Comrade Lenin wrote: “Not the cry of the general strike, ete. is important; it is im- portant to prepare system against the event of war, ema- tically to combat the danger of war,| to fight systematically against so-| ematically to » systematically ally | Continued from Page One workers out for several onths in one of the most fiercely fought indus- trial battles in American labor his- tory. This strike was Jost through the treachery of the heads of the |international unions, who were |more concerned with grabbing off members and per capita tax than ‘| with building an industrial union of steel workers. Most Exploited. automobile workers The are A deposition from Mussolini said|needs as Dean of Home Economics|#™0ng the most exploited in the the shots were not fired by Anteo|of Syracuse University were rela-| United States. In this acceptance speech at the National Nominating | “The automobile workers for {years were among the best paid |workers in the United States. But The indictment quoted a remark/| tually be transferred to the regula-| recently their wages have répeatedly |been cut, they have been speeded up unemployment has ty have been taken from them to| | such an extent that a growing spirit | jof resistance is spreading among| |them, in Canada as well as in the| | United States. . . | “The automobile industry has! | been held up, not oply in this coun- try, but all over the world, as a| most decisive achievement of Amer- | ican capitalism; as the industry in| which American capitalism! with a |formula of mass production and |high wages had laid the basis for a contented working class. Yet we see that under the wage-cuts, speed- up, unemployment and generally {worsened conditions, the privileged | automobile workers are being forced | jdown to such a position that senti- | |ment for organization and struggle | lis rapidly developing among them.” | | Foster will speak in the principal |cities of the country, touching Spo- | |kane, Washington, in the north- | west and going down the coast to| |Los\Angeles. He will travel east | las far as Chicago, then south} |through Kentucky, Alabama and/| |Georgia. He will finish his tour at |a monster mass meeting in New | York on November 4. } *“ * * | DETROIT, Sept. 5.—William* Z Foster, Workers (Communist) Party |candidate for president, will be the |speaker at two election campaign |meetings in this city and vicinity | Sunday. At 2 p. m. Foster will speak at 1228% N. Saginaw Ave., Mich. In the evening at "8 o’clock he will |speak at Danceland Auditorium, | Woodward, near Forest Ave., De- | troit. | Hundreds of workers are expected |to hear the Communist presidential candidate at these two meetings. 9 KILLED IN ACCIDENTS. | HARTFORD, Conn., Sept: 5 (UP) | —Following a holiday week-end dur- ing which nine persons lost their | lives in motor accidents, six persons | were killed in automobile mishaps in| | Connecticut yesterday. analy if the bourgeoisie unleash the dogs of war, the proletariat will sis, capture the world. This is by no means a pessimistic view. On the contrary, together with Friedrich Engels, we, the Communists, say to the whole of the ruling class: “Gentlemen. unleash your spirit of war if you will. The Communist In- ternational will reply by closing its ranks for the revolution, for civil gwar, for the triumph of the prole- ! (Loud and pro- ] the delegates rise speaker an ovation.) START NATION-WIDE TOUR BUFFALO GETS 18 NEW ‘DAILY" SUBS Many Cities Respond in Big Campaign The election campaign drive of the Daily Worker to procure 10,000 ad- ditional readers for the paper throughout the United States got off to an auspicious start yesterday when 18 new one-year subscriptions to the militant daily were raised in Buffalo, N. Y. through the efforts of Louis Sisselman, Daily Worker agent who has been touring the country for the past two months in |the interests of the paper. Considering the fact that the en- 75, the start of 18 subscriptions which were procured yesterday au- gérs well for the realization of the entire quota in the city, and for a successful campaign throughout the country. . Buffalo is not the only city, how- ever, which has responded vigorously to the Daily Worker election cam- paign subscription “drive. Pitts- burgh, Philadelphia, Boston and other big industrial centers of the country have also begun sending in new subs. In many cities throughout the United States, committees have been elected among the class-con- sctous workers which will concen- trate all their efforts on the reali- zation of cities’ quotas. Rescuers Will Come Here Soon Continued from Page One plane believed to indicate the al- most certain death of Roald Amund- sen and his five companions, the Soviet icebreaker Krassin will con- tinue to search the northern seas for traces of both the members of the Amundsen expedition and of the six lost members of the Allesandri | party, according to an announce- |ment by the Russian Arctic Rescue Committee. | The rescue committee declares that it will persist in the search for the 12 victims of the disastrous ex- pedition of the fascist General No- bile as long as there is one chance in a hundred that any of them may be alive. Mexican Federals Rout Reactionary Forces MEXICO CIlyY, Sept. 5,—Fed- eral troops killed 27 counter-revolu- tionists when the garrison at Pen- jamo, State of Guanajuato, was at- tacke1 by reactionary forces it was announced today. PUT YOUR ARTICLES, DONA- TIONS AND ADS ON A FAST | TRAIN AND RUSH TO THE BAZAAR COMMITTEE 30 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK 7" aily Worker-Freiheit Bazaar Special BARGAINS. Clothing for Children; Hats, Caps, Dresses, Art Objects, Cameras, Raincoats, Over- coats, Furniture, Knitgoods, Books, Furs, Jewelry, Shirts, Toys—All at Half Price. Do Not Buy Now. Wait for the Men, Women and Jewelry Repairing, Bazaar October 4, 5, 6 and 7.

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