The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 17, 1928, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Presence TRICKS OF U.S, AT WASHINGTON MEET UNMASKED Juehes Makes Bolivia “Jump Thru a Hoop | (Continued from Page One tight Hinder control of Wall Street bankers; must, nevertheless, be pic- tured’o the world as an “inde- pé@ident” goverment doing what it does of its own “free and sovereign will.” | | | | | Framing an Alibi. Toagive the imperialist confer entechere a perfect alibi, a process ofeverits is arranged which pe’ nilts*the imperialists to have Bolivia doseverything the imperi: itetoiao, not only acting dently”. from the U. S. spokesmen, Hughes and Kellogg, but even ap- pedtingg to “oppose” their desires. Picture the situation. A dispute exists; between Bolivia and Para- guay.4 A wholly Latin-American “Peymanent Arbitration Commis- sion” which was set up at a con- férempeat Santiago, Chile, May 23, 1923, under the treaty known as thes’Gondra accord, meeting at Montevideo, Urugu: asks Bolivia to.gmbmit to arbitration. In addi- tion;,Argentina offers to mediate. Se; dges Chile. Take careful note that.no Latin country under com- plete control of Wall Street makes any such offer. None from Cuba, Venezuela, or even Mexico. £* Puppets on a String. «To permit .the arbitration of Latin, America conflicts by Latin Americans, without the intervention and guidance of the United States, is-obviously against the interests of Yankee. impe: ism with its over- lordship policy and its Monroe Doc- trine. So, although Paraguay was willing to allow the Gondra Com- or Argentina to act, Bolivia, pein _ te md out ‘the desire of Yankee ei pert@lists to crush and make fu- ile aff other commsisions and con- ferences but the one they control here, rejects the Gondra commission offer, neglects active work on the committee already formed in the Argentine, and ignores: the Chilean offere Bub in order to give the Bolivian govefhment an air of “independ- ence’ of action “free and untram- mele” by Hughes and his imper- ialist& conference here, Bolivia . is| giverthe role of a ‘‘self-assertive” | and sputonomous power, bgllicose fromesupposed injury, and by off With all commissions a ferenges, including this one Wasington, at the same time. Fréezing Out Latin Leadership. Ndi, note this fact: After Bo- livia has refused all offers of arbi- tratigh, both tin American and Yankge, and the Gondra Commis- sionwf Latin Americans seems to be no more and no less ill-treated ) by Bolivia than this impe ist con- trolled conference — Kellogg an- nounces that he is “striving for peaceby urging Bolivia to return to contre and lo, and be- holdf ‘olivia comes back, to Wash- ingfof? Kellogg is a hero for mak- of jmany of the children will have to} The Tammany stink needed a little perfume, so the pious, aristo- cratic Franklin D. Rogsevelt, will faithful service to the Tammany gr and saloons of New York—Al Smit ful and a little more “respectable. (left) discussing graft plans with ¢ Women an The a Old and the New: DATLY WORKER, N#W YUKK, MO! YDAY, DECEMBEK 11, 1920 ——— 9 Both Are Faithful JUDGE NEGRO Was Conspiracy in Graft “SON, Miss., Dec. 16.—Perry Negro national republican committeeman, and four co-defend- ants, charzed with conspiracy in the Federal patronage, found not guilty by a federal court here yesterday. Postmaster Wig- gins of Newton, S. D. Redmond, S. R. Redmond and Col. E. L. Patton were associated with Howard in the indictments. sale of were take the place of the man who by raft machine rose from the gutters hk. Roosevelt will be just as faith- ” Photo shows the governor-elect Jovernor Smith (right). W.L R. IN DRIVE FOR XMAS AID TO WORKERS In the form of food packages, the Workers International Relief will bring greetings of working class solidarity to the children of the vie- | timized and unemployed miners and| textile workers on Christmas Day. According to the plans of the W. I. R, the distribution will be made through the local branches working} in cooperation with the National Textile Workers’ Union and the Na- tional Miners’ Union, so that those | who are in greatest need will re- ceive first attention. “Aceording to the schedule we have worked out,” Fred G. Bieden- kap, national secretary of the W.| I. R., stated yesterday, “many thou-| sands of children will receive our| packages. The W. I. R. local secre-| taries in the textile and mining dis- tricts have several thousand fam- ilies listed whose children aré eager-| ly awaiting the food packages. We} fear that if we do not obtain enough} financial help in the next few days, | be disappointed. Many workers and friends throughout the country have responded liberally with their con- tributions. Thé response to our ap- peal has, however, not been enough) so far to enable us to buy as much} supplies as will be necessary. I feel confident nevertheless that every militant and progressive worker, as| well as every honest friend of the labor movement, who can, will not} yefuse to give a donation to the Christmas’ fund drive of the Work- ers International Relief. :.| “Workers’ Children Suffer. | “The children we are aiding have| suffered much because of the great labor struggles during the last few| years. It is our duty to give them| all the support that can be given.| Their parents have been in the front line trenches of the class struggle, many of them even now are in jail, others are awaiting trial for strike) | to superior force and cunning. So the supremacy of this hypocritical imperialist conference, with Hughes as its boss, is established beyond all question. A dicty job, but neatly | done. in putting smoke screens before “the eyes of the Negroes, and “urging | them to vote for the republican can- didates, the republican party made Howard the goat in a fake clean up activities and may be in ‘prison | of gvafters. There is no doubt that within the next few months. | Howard is guilty of the graft which “While the open shoppers and all|he was charged, and although he enemies of the working class talk|W@S made the goat because he is a of prosperity in the United States, | Negro, there is no reason for the we point to the starving textile Negroes to consider him a martyr, workers and coal miners and the un- las he is nothing less than an enemy employed in general, who suffer for | of his race. Mr. Howard sought to the want of bread. Will the chil-|make himself a martyr in the eyes dren plead to us in vain?’ We feel | Of the Negroes, of whom he is a confident that the working class will|ttaitor. i respond and gladden the hearts of} After his wide-spread and traitor- the fighters in'the class struggle | US Policies, Howard had the gall to and their dependents,” jask the Negroes to create a defense Gift Packages. fund in his behalf. He made thou- Biedenkapp also stated that each |88nds of dollars for himself and has package will contain cocoa, raisins, ¢Ver assumed the role of a philan- candy and nuts, all told about five | thropist or a fighter for his people pounds of good things to eat. {on the front line trenches. He has The distribution of the Christmas|" claim on the Negroes and they with the general activities of the | #! such traitors to the race. Workers International Relief which Pees ERS gives aid to the working class dur- A ing strikes and other critical per- ‘Al I RALLY OF iods, Be ane at once to the W. I. R. Workers’ Children Christmas Fund, Room 604, One Union Square, New York City. W.I. R. Shop Delegates Meeting Part of Huge Conference to Be Held Organization Drive re Continued from Page One Hundreds york : undreds of workers are expected tom Camenttien o% the Ciewk sent us attend the shop delegates’ con- Dressmakers Union, and Albert ference of the Workers Interna- Weisbord, secretary-treasurer of the tional Relief at Bryant Hall, 42nd | National Textile Workers Union will St. and Sixth Ave., Thursday eve- be the chief speakers. J. Maglia- : ‘and J. Levine will also speak. A representative of the W. I. R.| In calling ‘the meeting, the shoe from abroad will be the chief workers union issued the following speaker and will outline plans for | 2PPeal to the shoe workers in New ss x . | York City and vicinity: building a strong American section | of this important working class or- in Greater New York, who have been ganization. | Subjected to vicious wage cutting at- The struggles that face the Amer- | tacks, from the bosses, which is re- ss ‘ ‘ ; ‘ |sulting in worsening their working ican workers in the immediate fu- | conditions, demoralizing the ranks packages to the children is in line Should awaken to the fact and fight Send all checks and money orders | This Thursday Evening a leader of the National Organiza- ning itamedintaly atte souls cano, shoe workers union organizer, | “The thousands of shoe workers ture make relief an all-important | of the shoe workers, smashing their question, it is pointed out. Strikes | unions, are gradually beginning to | are breaking out in the textile mills, |Tealize the necessity of a strong, militant struggles are being planned | militant union, which will fight for d Children on Breadline Ss As a reward for his dirty work, PARAGUAY HITS. | REACTIONARY, AT U. S, BANKS NOT GUILTY ARMING BOLIVIA Chareed With Kellogg Warns League | | to Keep Hands Off (Continued from Page One | maneuver against British imperial- ism represented by the League of Nations, behind a front of declara- ions that “of course” the League ill let the United States dominate efforts to make peace, which are in reality efforts in making war. | An unofficial statement declares that on the auestion of the League jintervening in the Bolivia-Para- guayan dispute, the United States \is “neutral” and that the League’s S. Ominous silence is kept on what merica would do if the League of ations went beyond “advising,” as its constitution provides it has the right to do, and resorts to force. | U. S. Uses Cuban Puppet. | But U. S. diplomacy is malevol- ently clever. and though United States itself limits its diplomatic of- |fensive to declaring the League has ja right to “advise” Bolivia and | Paraguay, it indirectly went further by getting its trained dummy, Cuba, ta issue what amounts to a warn- ing to Britain to keep its hands-off. While Kellogg and Hughes were entertaining the delegations Sunday ‘on an outing, the puppet delegate |from Cuba, Orestes Ferrara, who 1s }also ambassaddr from Cuba to | Washington, ostentatiously remained }at “work” in his office, from where ‘he issued a statement against the League of Nations which probably | was written for him by Kellogg and Hughes. Of course, and as usual, \the statersont was full of “urgings | for peace”—but made a clear state- |ment that in getting “peace” the |Washington conference, in which | | the U. S. is the absolute king, must. be preferred to the League of Na- tions. Monroe Doctrine In Action. | Cleverly picturing the Washing- ton Conference, which is nothing less than the Monroe Doctrine in action, as “American solidarity,” Ferrara said: “Tt is useful to prevent the pos- | Sible application of the covenant of the League of Nations, we making | unnecessary the coercive measures stipulated in that paet in case of war, and applying, in accord with our continental system, the har- monious measures of American soli- | darity.” After the outing with the dele- vates here, Kellogg, Hughes and Ambassador Morrow to Mexico, re- mained in secret conference for a long time. * * MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Dec. 16,—Out-maneuvered by the cun- ning Yankee imperialists running the so-called “arbitration confer- ence” at Washington, the Latin American Permanent Arbitration Commission, set up under the Gon- dra accord in 1928, is literally ren- dered powerless by Bolivia, which “business is to advise” the two coun- | ‘Tammany Shifts Puppets to Cover Corruption > On the left is Joseph ‘Ae Warren, erstwhile police commissioner of New York City, now the “ Wa of their efforts in covering up the ‘yoat” in the Rothstein scandal. ‘en “resigned” so that Mayor Walker and the other Tammany grafters could continue making energetic hocus-pocus passes as part Rothstein meas. Too many Tam- many politicians are involved in the Rothstein scandal. for any real prosecution to be possible. On the right is Grover A. Whalen, $100,- 000 a year Wanamaker executive murderers, royal pimps, gamblers Whalen will get Warren’s job. and head of Mayor Walker's com- mittee for the reception of distinguished athletes, invperialists,: fascist and labor: fakers. It looks as if Backfire to Kelloge’s | Treaty Talk; Believers Oppose More Cruisers WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Sin- cere believers in war, good Amer- ican imperialists who intend to have \a big navy to support the Kellogg | war treaties which they have beer calling “peace treaties,” are being much. embarrassed just now by a -number. of easily credulous persons | who claim to believe they are peace treaties. | A large group of ministers, edu- | cators, publicists, W. C. T. U. and | ¥. M,C. A. workers is issuing a | memorial to the senate urging friends of the Kellogg pact to vote/ ugainst the cruiser bill. “We, the undersigned citizens,” said the memorial, “being in hearty |favor of the ratification by the | United States senate of the general | pact for the renunciation of war, | | look with grave apprehension upon the possibility of the authorization jof fifteen additional cruisers in the | present session of the senate. “We believe that the wholesome | | effect of the general pact for the} | renunciation of war upon the senti- mént of nations and peoples will be| largely nullified if the nation which | first reposed. the general pact ex- | presses lack of confidence in its | efficacy by increasing its own arma- ment.” | |RealSpanish-American |Music at ‘Vida Obrera’ Dance This Saturday Several bona-fide Spanish dances and all the latest Spanish popular songs, together with some not so late, are promised by the “Antillan Group” of musicians and singers. They will be at the entertainment and ball arranged for the Spanish workers’ paper, Vida Obrera. The affair takes place Saturday evening, Dec. 22, at Harlem Casino, 116 St. and Lenox Ave. - + The. Antillan Group has been making records for the Oriental Mu- sic Corporation, but has been espe- cially engaged for this entertain- | ment, and they say that the Spanish dances lend themselves to jazz danc- otherwise, who is able to walk will also be able to dance to them. How- ever, with that determination to make this evening an enjoyable one, which Spanish speaking workers al- ways show, another band will also ~| be there, doing the strictly U. S. A. variety of jazz, namely John Smith’s Negro Orchestra. So if you don’t dance, don’t blame the man- agement, There will be a good entertain- ment, Spanish and Latin American dances, songs, music, and costumes. |Enough Worst War Gas at Cologne to. Kill All Monarchist to BeTrans- | i Atlantic Plane Mascot | | BERLIN, Dec. 16.—The Ministry |of Transport; and the. Lufthansa Airplane Company are negotiating | with shipping companies for finan- cing of a trans-Atlantic air service |of which Baron Gunther Von Huene- |feld is expected to be head, it was learned today. Huenefeld is a mon- archist who carried fayor with com- mercial interests lately by hiring a pilot to carry him over the At- | lantic. Three Die, Ten Burned ‘in Fire in Bronx Club: COLOGNE, Germany, Dec. 16.— Thirteen thousand kilos of the | strongest..war poison gas—enough to kill the entire population is stored near the city and not buried deep enough to assure safety. The in- habitants are petitioning for its re- lease. ing, and that everyone, Nordic or} hows Seriousness of Unemployment i} | | | LINES BEFORE ~ SLOP-HOUSES GROW DAILY Number Reported at Double Last Year By aal Proof of the rapid increase, in un- employment in New. York City and vicinity has been shown by the ad- mission of the officials in charge of the Madonna House, a so-called charitable institution at 173 Cherry St., that the number of unemployed workers seeking aid at the doors of this institution has doubled over the number last winter. A new feature of the breadlines, indicating the ex- treme seriousness of the .unemploy- ment situation, is the presence of hundreds of women, most of them mothers, and children in the’ line. The Maddonna House is running“a mid-day breadline for” unemployed mien, forcing the workers to wait for hours before doling’ out 4 “meal” of stale bread and muddy coffee. So many women and children have ap- peared on the breadlines. that the Madonna House has forced ‘the chil- dren and women to form a separate breadline at 4 p. m. Officials ‘of the missions on the Bowery have also admitted that breadlines ex- ceeding even those formed last win- ter, which were the greatest «in fifty years, have formed this win- ter. a Hundred Billion Listed on N, Y. Exchange Securities listed on the New York Stock Exchange have reached the total of $100,000,000,000, the ex- change’s year book revealed today. There is an increase of $15,000,- 000,000 since January 1. Part of the inerease is due to higher prices for listed securities; part to additional listings. The greatest single addi- tion was the listing of $12,000,000,- 600 government bonds. be 9 Burned to Death in Kentucky Hotel Fire HAZARD, N. Y., Dec. 16 (UP). —Nine persons were burned to death today in a fire that destroyed the 129-room Combs° Hotel. Nine are missing and several are in hos- pital, seriously burned. The fire started in a kitchen: . It spread with terrifying rapidity thru the building. There was no fire es- cape. Fortunately,some were near exists, and fought their way through flame and smoke. Twenty-five others were rescued by volunteers and firemen who erected ladders at front windows, WORKERS LIBRARY PAMPHLETS Order from Workers Library Publishers 35 East 125th Street, New York City |in the knit goods and needle trades, | their interests in the shops, and | struggles whose success depends to | #&ain resume shop control and pre-'|js absollitely controlled by U. S.| Every worker should have all of these pamphlets ingJeace, Bolivia is to be compli- ,,!¢ should be noted here, that al- F Ab hare tae dete: A fire, breaking out at 5:45 yes- See mre saree ssi mettied-for its restraint and—the Gonlra:commission is left high and dryjevehile the Monroe Doctrine, the Pai rican Union and this par- ticullily diabolical conference have all adfied to their prestige. Angther effect is, that if Bolivia is s ingly coaxed back into this confagence by Kellogg, it naturally follow that the fatted calf must be killed§for the prodigal son. And the fatte@ calf in this story is Paraguay. The @hade of advantage thus ob+ se a Bolivia is el Kellogg mustgbe pictured as yielding to Po- livia exchange for its returning cali—only Kellogg’s yieldiny t the expense of Paraguav! And if the Paraguayans refuse to be made the goat, nothing is lost and Bolivia is fied. in ad- yanee, for going to wir, while Kel- logg’is shown as having “{ailed de- spite all effor's’ to mak» peace. ould anything be neater? vel Mopping Up on Argentina. But although the Gondra commis- sion is isolated, the commission of Bolivians and Paraguayans which } since August has been in a state of } suspended animation at Buenos Aires, under the auspices of Argen- tina, and Argentina’s new offer of mediation, must alco be broken down as any center of authority outside thie control of Hughes and h’s im- perialist fake “conciliation and ar- ation” conference hee. 180,00 Thursday, after rumors that the commission here, to which Bolivia has returned, is “rumored” to have asked, or is going to ask, though Bolivia signei the Gondra| acco:d Which set up | arbitration commission of Latin Amerivans for adjudication of their | own disputes in 1922, yet the Amer-| ican bankers con‘rolling Bolivia have | managed so that the Bolivian con-| gress has never ratified that accord, | although Paraguay has. More, in re- | turning to this conference, Bolivia | says it limits its return only to the| conference as a whole, and will “not | yet” return to the s9:cia! commit- tee set up for settlement of the pre: ent dispute with Paraguay. So that} position of demanding concessions | from Paraguay to coax Bolivia back. | Paraguay is being isolated and put | on the defensive both diplorsatically | and militarily. | To Sum Up. Let us summarize events to avoid | confusing details: Wall Street got | a large extent on adequate relief @ permanent | roy the strikers and their families. | | All workers are urged to attend the | shop delegates’ conference Thurs- day and get behind the efforts to build a strong relief organization for the working class. Weishord to Speak at T. U. E. L. Forum in the Workers Center Today Albert Weisbord, secretary-treas- | committee is maneuvered into the] urer of the National Textile Work- | ers’ Union, will speak on “Why Does | the Hillman Machine Seek to Enter | the American Federation of Labor?” | at the Workers Center, fourth floor, today. This open forum, which will | be held under the auspices of the Trade Union Educational League, | serve their working conditions. ‘hanks, refusing to accept arbitra- “In the meantime, the skeletons of | tion by it, while accepting the of- the unions that are being controlled | ¢ices, in a modified way, of the |by the bureaucracy of the labor | washington conference. Hence the eae ae ne making any ite |commission is considering ending its empts to stop this campaign, but | ¢fforts, | quite the reverse. They line up" ith! “The action of Bolivia, while based | the bosses, do not call any meeting ||oealistically on the fact that Bo- with the workers to explain the |tivia signed, but did not ratify, the present conditions to them, and|Gondra accord, and on the arbitra- be aca fail kee a acsina Os | tion limitations of the Haven Pan- vat A nY| American conference, which were unionism methods, which assists in deliberately framed to_ suit Yankee ee Abed oo Se Eaa © interests, leaves the Gondra Com- Rbeteir tits Mahila br S- | mission snubbed and isolated. “We, the Independent Shoe Work- | THis jx done consciously by Kel- ers Union, which is the only mili- ‘loge and Hughes, combined with tant organization, fighting for the | representatives of governments |which are servile to Yankee imper- interests of the shoe workers in| Greater New York and vicinity, call linlism. in order to freeze out the |Gondra Commission, which is upon all ladies’ and mens’ _Shoe jks eet eh tata Per purely Latin American, and leave ithe entire handling of disputes to A. C. W. A., will begin at 12 o’clock | control of Bolivia in 1922. Latin| can arbitration set up by Gon- | noon. Every worker is invited to come cord in 192% andard Oil | and bring his fellow worker. Ques- (0,000 acres of oil lands in| tions and discussion will follow the via, needing outlet through ter- | lecture. now in dispute. Bolivia | doesn't ratify Gondra accord. Gets : , more money from Wall Street and| Office Workers’ Mass buys arms with it. Havana confer-| ence under Hughes leadership per- | mits arms transit thru Peru to Bo-| 1 to aitack Paracuay. Hug) Standard Cil attorney. Armed clashes between Bolivia and Paraguay. Hughes calls this Washington conference, The horse- play of Bolivia’s break and return. All maneuvers end with this confer- ene dest:oying ail «ompetiction by | This Thursday A mass meeting of office work- ers, arranged by the Office Work- ers’ Union, will be held this Thurs- day evening at 8 o’clock at the La- bor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave. Juliet Stuart Poyntz, and other prominent speakers will address the Meeting King Unconscious and | Too Ill for Knitting LONDON, Dec. 16.—Although the queen went to church Sunday and in addition all the Roman Catholic | churehes in Nottingham held pray- ‘ers for King George, the doctors | didn’t seem to have any faith in | prayers and stuck to science in try- workers, to come to the mass reet- at laame te lay an 700 the tender mercies of the imper- Grhiaté set will Mgerteg this present ialist conference at Washington. conditions in our industry, and lay the plans for a mass organizational campaign to stop these conditions, “Come to this mass meeting and help us build our union!” “Women in History” at Workers School ” | whe course, “Women in History, _with Pauline Rogers as the instruc- |tor, will begin this Wednesday at |$:30 p. m. at the Workers School, {98-28 Union Square, fifth floor. This wil! be the first of a series of three four-session courses being or- ganized by the Workers School for | working women and working class housewives. The other two are | ‘Problems of Working Women To- | day” and a course for functionaries |terday morning in the McKinley | Square Social Club, at 1353 Boston | Road, the Bronx, quickly swept thru the entire two-story building, kill- ing three and seriously burning ten | others in the building at the time. The dead are William Dahl, 40; Frank McCrory, 34; Joseph P. Clayton, 40. three were burned so seriously that they are not expected to live, ‘Noted Revolutionary Poets to Appear at’ 3rd Red Poets Night | Red poetry and red-hot jazz will | be the order of the evening at the | third annual International Red Poets’ Night, to be held Friday eve- j ning, Dec. 28, at Manhattan Ly- |ceum, 66 E. 4th St. ‘The crowds of workers flocked to the two previous Red Poets’ Nights were so great that it was found necessary to engage a larger hall for the third event. In | order to complete the evening's pro- | gram another innovation has been | introduced: a dance following the}! | Yeadings. And it’s going to be a; real dance, with music by John C, | Smith’s Negro jazz band. Who are the poets that will read vat Red Poets’ Night? Here are a |few: Michael Gold, editor of the | New Masses; Joseph Freeman, Rob ert Wolf, James Rorty, Henry Reich | Jy. Langston Hughes, famous. Ne. A. B. Magil, Adolf Of the. ten injured, | Platform of the Class Struggle. that * and Stalin . Bolshevism—Stalin ...... American Negro Problems—John Pepper. | America Prepares the Next War—Jay Lovestone 10c Building Up Socialism—N. Bukharin. Wrecking the Labor Banks—William Z. Foster....25¢ Lenin, the Great Strategist—Losovsky. Leninism vs. Trotskyism—Zinoviev, Kamenev ~L0¢ 25¢ 15e WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS | Formed; viks and LENIN ON ORGANIZATION — How the Bolshevik Party Was Shop Nuclei; Menshe- . Liquidation; Bourgeois Intellectuals; Opportunism; Party Unity; Democratic Cen- tralism and Party Discipline: } | gro poet; meeting. | Wolff, Martin Russak, Edwin Rolie, David Gordon, Lola Ridge, Arturo Giovannitti, the Yiddish poets, Gondra or other all-Latin American bodies, Bolivia back with an ad- vantage over Paraguay. Bolivia mo- ji itish im-| i ¥ rk, to be given by ing to save the head of British im-|in women’s work, : | perialism. The Prince of Wales, Ray Ragozin and Juliet Stuart | seeing the governor was not on the) Poyntz, respectively, after the Argentina, which is not attending | this conference, if it has any objec- tions to this conference settling the KILLED BY ELECTRICITY. Historical Materialism vs. Bour- matter, Kellogg calls a meeting of bilizing with arms furnished by| SELMA, Ala. Dec. 16 (UP)-—|road to glory, didn’t stop for din course “Women in History” is eon- | Aoishe re aes Teiang ba pool ginont the: representatives of the press, and | Wall Street. Paraguay isolated.| Miss Elizabeth Parten, nurse at ner when visiting the palace, but | cluded the thstructor of | ™any others, Which means that the Pauline Roger's, “Women in History,” is the head of the agitprop department of the Hughes, Kellogg and Yankee imperi-| the Alabama Baptist Hospital here, ‘] sked abcut this, states that s l n i he js informed that Argentina will alism posing as angels of peace, | WAS killed instantly today in an ele- vator which carried a heavy charge | be'mos, hanpy to resign all “reace-| What more could Yankee imperial- | | loped off to have another whack at | night life before the job of exploit-| ing 465,000,000 wage slaves and op- | best revolutionary poets of various | nationalities will appear Dec. 28 and | vead from their own work. «, ta ic, . 7 i . S ‘i f electricity because of motor! tre | We "s Committee of the Work- making efforts” over to this W ash-| ism want except to pick the bones | % ‘y cau pressed peasants of the empire Women's Com! rk | 4 r ; \4 inion conference and ts rommit-|of Paraguay. as the intrigue goes| ‘rouble. Resusciation attempts | would shut down on stepping out |crs Party in the New York District. | Tickets are now on sale at the NEW EDITION 75 CENTS (F t8e especially handling the Bolivia-| on? failed. i | for a wicked night minus the hokum The course will take up the status | 26-28 Union Square. Indispensable for every Communist. ’ eS RS ’ WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS dignity attached to kings. The and role of women in the different SMALLPOX HITS TOWN. prince’s favorite game is imperson-|cpochs in the period of slavery, WAUPACA, Wis. (By Mail).— ating a lady in entertainments given feudalism, early capitalism and the ‘present stage of imperialism. This But you will never understand this, and will never know anything important if you read the endless | Parag ray cispute. This pleased the | \ state depratmen tmost visibly. Dirty Jobs Done Neatly. 200 TONS OF COAL | business office of the Daily Worker, |. WASHINGTON | (By Mail),-- Now, the writer is fer from being | hokum in the capitalist press, Only Compulsory vaccination of all local | on battleships, | t et a convinced that Argentinn really de-|in the Daily Worker will ycu find) public school children has been or-{ The king was reported uncon- | course will be the background for There are 30,000,000 acres of cal 35 EAST 125TH STREET, NEW YORK the truth of the Bolivia-Paraguayan dered, when it was learned that the | scious and in considerable pain late |the other two courses that willtake |land in She United States and sired to do anything of the kind.| But Kellogg’s demand that it “» so conflict which threatens to involv would have pnt Argentina in a baa) phe world proletariat in a new is wedi it declined. So it had to bow | Perialist war. “rang? * children had been exposed to small-| tonight. Ever since he has been up the problems that face working | Alaska, containing 200,000,000 tons, |women today. Registration is now peer oesling: to a.report of the Mines pox. Over 200 childven have been sick he could not follow his chosen | 3 going om, en ee a jureau, : p spina gown nna 4 ie absent daily this week. \ pastimg knitting, ; yy

Other pages from this issue: