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a f ' THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For the 40-Hour Week For a Labor Party Ss Entered as second-class: OE TET NATIONAL EDITION Vol. V.,§ A Published dnily except Sunday by Publishing Association, Inc. The National Daily Worker nion Sq, New York, N. ¥- _ NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1928 SUBSCRIPTION RATE Outside New York, by mai ail, $8.00 per year. 6.00 per year. HOOVER b= ON BRAZIL ~ VERY APPAR Government Concerned ‘ith Spectacle, Not Eager for Orders Military Demonstrated Gave Him Cigars; Sent Him Away Home KEY WEST, Florida, Dec. 24.— Wall St.’s Merry Christmas 11 Years Ago ‘Allows’ Six Powers to | a: Hill Get COOLIDGE HOLDS. 4 eels a ved RIGHT: TO EXAGT Cova." Jor lave long hours under the piece- work system forced upon them by Refuses to Officially Appoint Delegate to German Debt Meet Snubs English Agent their union officialdom can hardly wait until quitting time tonight to vent their joy in congratulations for one another! For their president—the Amal- gamated Clothing Worker president—Sidney Hillman, has been Union arded a gold medal and a cash! of $1,000! The wage cuts instituted with the | 24.—Amet-|aid of this same Sidney Hillman, | {pri Select American SHINGTO: , Dec. BRITISH FIELD GUNS USED BY AFGHAN REBELS Removal of Foreigners Points to Intensive Campaig?r King Leaves Kabul 1s Renews 1915 Attack On England WASHINGTON, Dee. further strain upon the As a delicate re- lations existing between the British and American empires, already at war comm the state depart- ment has released a thousand word hi of the diplomatic con- flict betwi U. S. and England in 1915 over the r of search and seizure, This question has never been set- Huge High - Powered |t'ed. The U. S. government during Planes Employed the first part of the world war de- manded the right to ship foodstuffs to Germany thru neutral ports of Holland and Denmark. England "NEW DELHI, India, Dec. 24.— Price 3 Cents RUMOR BOLIVIA CONTINUES ITS WAR MOVEMENTS 3olivian Troops Still Active in Disputed Chaco Region War Threat to League New Treaty to Strike at “Third Agencies” WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 24 President-elect Hoover is expected. ican imperialism, the inventor of the|the shop reorganizations, where a| British advice to European legations seized ships with such cargoes. | While unconfirmed reports persist here Jan. 6. The battleship Utah is Dawes plan, which it now appeurs/speed-up concurred in by Hillman |in Kabul to evacuate, following the| When the U. S. government heed-'that Boliv continuing troop making fourteen knots, hurrying its is impossible for the German state|cost many workers their jobs; the |Y¢moval of 20 women and 8 children oan eager of 7 penbeerne movements in the northern Chaco future commander-in-chief in la- a ‘ a: Rec. : “’ “| of the English legation yesterday by had staked enormous loans on Eng-| |. , , cay Dored naval fashion away from to carry out, refuses to be officially discarding of the 40-hour weck de- ‘ : land’s winning the war, and entered | *°8") this only thro o darker Latin America and back to the busi- ness of cabinet making as rapidly as its heavy armor permits. News arriving from the Utah is the usual small gossip about gifts and ceremonies. Christmas will be | Dead workers on a battlefield perialists during the last world war. now preparing the same fate, not only for American wor who were slaughtered for the im- United States imperialism is kers, but | also for Latin-American workers and peasants. British imperialism. together with its French ally, is doirly the same thing. identified with the conference of six|mand—ail these unpleasantries are powers to revise ‘the plan and fix| forgotten by the workers (so Hill- ji , Id like), because hasn't the amount of which the German|”@" wow workers ean be bled. The United) ‘Heit great president brought honor States government by refusing to ae ue ae take part in the modification of the ee renee an) ale military plane, is an indication that land ‘ an intensification of the revolt is against the Central powers, the is- expected shortly. ‘sue was left hanking in the air. Additional British army planes apes Tubuman® have been dispatched today from) with the publication of the corre- Peshawar on the Indian frontier, 60 : 4 age miles from Kabul, on pretense of SPondence during 1915 between U. S. shadow and arbit ation” ¢ ‘erence the Pan-American . While Rule 14 set up by Unic the conference calls for j ; body of rotund citizens with |eyacuatine we : end Great Britain, the impression public hearings of the principal + celebrated by means of a tree plan, plainly reserves the right. to| SUS? body ens with /evacuating women and children at-|°"4 6 ge aL: z princi brought or board at Rio Janeiro. a ae = == |\eolicct - eaen sly ‘all mee of a deceased millionaire |tached to other foreign legations. eae rare Hy {as more or commissions of the conference, the Gave Him Spectacle. ir rs 3 amounts due under present agree-|*? hand out, has come to the con- qt js also reported that Queen | /¢ss of an ac at U.S. fought rule is calmly ignored, as it was Hoover is said to be somewhat of Y enti » {¢lusion that Sidney has done very |Souriya and her mother left for|G¢t™any instead of England, that) when the Daily Worker corre- mystified as to the results cf his | They Can Appoint. jmuch “for the community” and has | Kandahar. | England was and still believes in a| spondent two weeks ago led a pro- last bargaining. Brazil is a strong nation, not so easy to bluff as the little states along the Pacific Coast. The Braziliar. government gave} Three of the Isadora Dancers, | ‘Hoover an unprecedented display, militarily and officially. The people were apathetic or hostile. The president-elect had his time taken up with listening to the gov- ernment band of 120 pieces, dressed in white, red and gold, with plumed brass helmets, or in riding behind flashing dragoons and lancers, with flashing swords and helmets, and| were sent to Ellis Island by the| pennants snapping in the Lreeze.| United States officials are Lilia,| But, although he was allowed to} Maria and Elena Duncan, all under| talk to congress, the president and | the care of Irma Duncan, the famous the supreme court, he was invari- | dancer’s adopted daughter. zbly reminded that Brazil is acoun-| The detaining of three of the Dun- try not too easy to conquer, every-| can dancers is considered to be an| thing the government has is for! attempt to break up the group and | sale to foreign imperialism, but at| prevent their appearance in this| a good price, and Britain is bidding | country, chiefly because their school | as well as the United States. | is located in Moscow, the capital of | However, when Hoover embarked | the Union of Socialist Soviet Re- to leave the ar d the AL ie publies. | gave hima “fireworks display, a) Aj! efforts are being directed to- | book to read on the way to Florida, | wards having the three dancers re. | scheduled to appear at the anni-| | versary entertainment of the Daily) Worker on January 5, 1929, were de- nied entrance by Customs officials yesterday when the liner Caronia docked from Southampton here yes-| terday. They gave as their excuse the youth of the three dancers, The three young dancers who ANNIVERSARY DANCERS LEWIS OFFICIAL ON BOSS'S PAY President District 11) Operators’ Official | | TERRE HAUTE. Dec. 24.—Har- | |vey Cartwright is the latest of the | Ambassador, called upon the secre-| Medal! union-smashing Lewis gang in the | United Mine Workers of America | to be cpenly rewarded for his anti- | iabor activities by the employers. He has just resigned as president of District 11 of the U. M. W. A., to take the position, of commissioner| ofthe Indiana Bituminous Opet tors’ Association. dished out a solid gold medal and peeled a bankroll off for those ser- vices, What the services are? Perhaps the tailors can tell us, No! Don't President Coolidge today consent- ed to “permit American experts to assist Germany and the allies in solying the war reparations prob- lem,” for which a conference will be bother them. ‘At the same time it is reported| Polley of the greatest inhumanity to that King Avanvllah hes trans- civil populations. According to the ferred his government from Kabul| Present release, three weeks after to Kandahar, 280 miles south, which |{M¢ Lusitania was sunk, Robert adds to the belief that the campaign| L@nsing, the counselor at the state test of correspondents, to whom Kellogg was compelled finally to ad- mit that the rule had been violated. More Secrecy Saturday, the rule was again sus- und a box of cigars. aia For Intervention. RIO. JANEIRO, Dec. 24.—Butler | Sherwill, state department inter- preter. for Hoover during his con- versation with President Irogoyen’s statement in the newspaper Epocha of Buenos Aires, that Hoover said he was not in accord with Coolidge’s policy of intervention. Hoover said nothing of the sort, says Sherwill, and instead declared that he was in favor of all Coolidge’s policies, pre- sumably including intervention. The general opinion is that either Hoover cr Ircgoyen is lying. WORKERS SCORE leased trom Ellis Island and to| thwart the attempt of the United States government to break up the | troupe. All three arrested have | been dancing more than six years | in leading European capitals and | have appeared in China once, but | have never met with any such. at- tempt to sabotage them. | Minors who are members of other | jdramatic and dancing groups have | until now been admitted by Amer- lican officials without any question. This is an open attempt to prohibit | the famous Soviet dancers from ap- pearing, and, since they are sched- uled to make their first appearance at the Daily Worker anniversary, it can only be considered as another thrust at the working class paper. The troupe, however, will appear in |full, it is believed, since an ener- getic fight is on the way. 1 | | He takes the place of Phil Penna, | a former official of the U. M. W. A., who deserted the union 25 years ago to be commissioner for the opera-| tors, but who has now retired on account of illness. As the U. M. W. A. loses mem- bership to the new, militant, Na- | tional Miners Union, it is expected | by miners here that more and more | of the U. M. W. A. bureaucracy will be openly recognized as being on the \Fourth Anniversary of | called early in 1929, but refused to) They are too busy at |appoint or credential them. |piece-work. Time off to explain The following statement was made |means loss of so much and so much. | public at the state department: “The | The Harmon Kgundation will explain secretary of state this afternoon in- | J¥st as well; Sidney Hillman’s “la- }bor bank, the union’s real estate |maneuvers, his careful avoidance of jall ill-mannered demands from the jbosses, his enthusiastic agreement formed Sir Esme Howard, the British ambassador that if the six governments desire American ex- perts to serve upon the expert. com- kc is ; mittee the United States have no ob-|t® increase efficiency in. oe mops jection.” }——all these things are great services Sir Esme Howard, the British © the community and deserve a) tary of state this morning and in-| Why, Sidney deserves another formed him in the name of the six | medal for the modest “Thank you, governments interested in repara-|*!! he emitted when notified. “I tions problem that they wished to #PPreciate the great fortune that inquire whether the United States | is mine in being so honored,” said government will agree to American | the shy Hillman. _ experts taking part in the work of| However, left wingers doubt that the proposed committee which is to) te workers will forget the things deal with:the-inal settlement-of tae | Sidney wants them to forget. will be vigorously pushed. More complete reports of the re- moval of the British from Kabul by a military transport plane give further details of the situation in Kabul. For the first time it has been officially reported that the re- volting tribesmen have many pieces of heavy artillery which can only be from a British source and ob- tained from the imperialist fcrces in India. The airplane used to evacuate the British from Kabul, in preparation jfor a more intensive drive, is a military machine capable of carry- ing 23 fully armed infantrymen, two pilots and a gunner. in Persia. |department and later secretary of | state, held a frank conference with the British ambassador, Sir Cecil Spring Rice, and told him the Un'ted States regarded the British blockade pended and the Committee ou Con- ciliation met for four hours behind closed doors. At that, no result was reported, on the excuse that some governments wished to consu't their Machines of ¢rs, this type have been frequently vsed | clouds on the British-American ho- by the British in their operations tizon, shown by the conflict in amongst the tribesmen of Iraq and South America, the tin, were used in the recent disturbances | nickel, radio and ¢other battles of | Amexicap affairs. The accumuletion of these cireum-| shipping war between the U. as no less inhuman than Germany’s submarine warfare. “Why does not your government relieve themselves of the odium of pursuing an inhuman policy by agreeing to allow food to go to the civil population of Germany?” Lan- sing asked the British ambassador, according to Lansing’s memorandum left in the department. A War Measute. In the opinion of political’ observ- watching the growing war rubber, monopolies the recently declared s. problem, and whether, if ‘so, the| oe United States government would be | CLERKS’ UNION ready to propose the names of such American experts. | Bitter 11-Week Fight Ends in Victory FREIKEIT CLUB | INLOS ANGELES me After eleven weeks of bitter struggle against injunctions, the so-| operators’ pay roll. Y Wall St. Puppets in Nicaragua to Bow to Masters Dec. 26 MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Dec. 24. |_The Nicaraguan congress of | Yankee imperial puppets, run into |}, | of activity in the revolutionary labor | j a \cialist trade union bureaucracy po- Mandolin Players |lice sluggers and the Fruit Dealers LOS ANGELES, Dec. 24—The| Association, the Retail Grocery, Freiheit Mandolin Club of Los eaten. eee Sees. Chien hes geles will celebrate its fourth veel angel Tier toa eciile the atrike movement in a grand celebration |®8inst their s.ores, concede all which is to take place Sunday eve-| Union conditions, und sign agree- ning, January 6, 1929, at the Co-|™ents with the union. operative Center, Los Angeles. | The Freeman firm has been one An interesting symphony concert |of the pillars of the boss associa-| as been arranged for the celebra-| tion and had been one of the most stances during the last few weeks shipping board and the Cunard line, leads to the belief that the British and the naval race, publication of imperialists are now engaged in an Such documents at the present time |energetic campaign to dominate the can be understood only as pre-war countries to the south of the Soviet | propaganda. ponen and create war bases there. Trade Union Education League Starts Drive in Pacific Lumber Woods District 8 Pioneers to Hold Third District Convention in Chicago i. SEATTLE, Wash., Dec. 24.— CHICAGO, Dec, 24.—Prepara-| There is vital ned of the Trade tions are going ahead ta full swing Union Educational League among for the 3rd district convention of the the loggers and lumberjacks of the Pioneers of district No. 8, which Pacific northwest. Organization is will be held on Dec. 29 and 30 at the practically gone, since the demise Workers Center here, at 2021 W.| here of the I. W. W., and will have Division Street, it was announced to-| to be built up in order to remedy aay: the present bad conditions in the Delegates are expected from the W00ds. coal mining towns of Southern Tl-|_ The lumber workers’ section of the linois, where there are now seven, 1: U. E. L. is beginning to work functioning Pioneer units, from the ®t this job. To raise funds and get governments by cable before acting. The significance of this ap- parent when, despite the secrecy, it leaked out that the proposed “treaty on conciliation” has a war threat in it against any “third agency” which cares to intervene in a di the Pan-American a hich the treaty esta its “machinery in motion.” War Move Against League. The plain infarence of thi war threat against the League o Nations or any nation or group of nations in Latin America which in tervenes as mediator in any Latin is a Firstly, the draft treaty ‘provided that there be a permanent commis- sion set up, whieh will be obliged, even without investigation of any dispute, to offer conciliatory mea- sures at once when trouble appears. Then it is said in devious language that “the offer of good offices on, the part of third parties will not be regarded as an unfriendly act before the machinery of conciliation has beer set in motion.” By this clause the ground is laid for any offer of mediation by “third parties” to be treated as an “un- friendly act,” as the Monroe Doc+ trine machinery in the form of Pan- American commissions are set up “permanently” and are instructed to act jirst and investigate afterward. ‘the clause afer this clause bri Continued on Page Two UNGER DEAL TO YANKEE TYRANNY | steel Stor s things started, an entertainment and tion, Besids the Fretheit Mandolin |determined opponents of the work-|;t0C! territory, and from the St. Wicks, Moreau Expose Bolivia War Many workers joined in condemn- ing the activities of American im- perialism in Latin Amerca at a meeting on the Bolivia-Paraguay war, held yesterday afternoon at | Lexington Hall, 116th St., near Lex- ington Ave, The meeting was held under the auspices of the Harlem section of the Workers (Communist) Party, the Spanish fraction of the New York district of the Party, and ‘LABOR WILL MEET Will Hold Conference on January 12 | The first labor conference to fight | | the war danger and the new offen-| sive of American imperialism will take place aSturday, Jan. 12, at 1 p. m., at Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave., it was announced yes- |offics by the United States marines | les |and sailors under the supervision of | |General McCoy, has decided to wait | juntil Dec. 26 to “consider” the na- | ional elections and the report of the | American supervisors. It is 2 certainty that McCoy’s re- |port to the congress will be ap-} | proved, | | Preparations are also being made | jto inaugurate Moncada, whc be- |trayed the revolution and gave up ris arms when he was promised by | Commander Sellers, of the Ameri- | can fleet in the Canal Zone, that hé | would become president. | Orchestra there will be a piano solo|ers’ organization. They applied for) by the noted Vienna pianist, M. and were given injunctions against Wolfson; a double quartet, mando-|the strikcrs; the employers ade lin and guitar solos. |special alliances with the reaction-| S. Vost, chairman of the publicity ary officialdom of the United He-) | committee, urges that more work-|brew Trades. Despite these diffi-| ers join the Mandolin Club. Besides culties the union conducted the playing for workers’ affairs, the | strike militantly to a victorious end. club also has a music school with) ‘The two stores of the company beginners, intermediate and ad-| whch have signed up are located at vanced classes. tudents can have/443 Freeman St. and 2043 Davidson the choice of the following instru-| eit doli it: tol Ave., Bronx. | ments: mandolin, guitar, mandola, _ Ini. : anscelio ana -aebde base. The Clerks Union, for a long time | y Baha |affiliated to the United Hebrew | } Trades and the A. F. of L., had gone USSR Makes Second Louis and Milwaukee sub-districts, | dance will be held Jan. 5, at 8 p. m., In order to welcome the out-ot.|t Finnish Hall, 1239 Washington town delegates, workers here are) St: A Negro orchestra will furnish running a huge affair on the night| tke music. A little play, “A Logger preceding. the convention Friday| Expresses His Mind” will teach the night December 28, at Wicker Park need of organization among lumber Hall, 2040 W. North Ave. Werkete. Many novel features are being ar- | ranged for this affair, including! 50,000 MINERS LAID OFF various tableaux, plays, a pioneer or-| EDINBURGH (By Mail).—It is chestra from Gary the newly or- reported that 50,000 Scottish miners ganized Pioneer chorus of Chicago! have been laid off in the past year. and many other stunts and novelties. Most of these face starvation. KEEP DAILY’ ON RED SQ! END DOPE TALK Whalen Flits Around |to Hide Rothstein Case Police Commissioner Grover” Whalen continu the theory and political those equally splendif: Caesars, whose cure for gr dal was to provide carping ¢ with a good spectacle and make them forget it, Every once in a while, when his geous | i ” after the policies of ae the New York branch of the All- wae . + . \ ; utenti area. Sie ) a atiention is forcefully called by ‘ . ‘ali terday by Harriet Silverman, secre- Pilsudski’s Friend | .|its left wing leadership did not suit i ih RA ce ee AS America Anti-Imperialist League. toy se the New York section of | Payment on German | the “likings” of Jewish newspaper friends, always on hand, H. M. Wicks, of the Daily Worker, showed the workings of U. S. im- perialism in the Bolivia-Paraguay cénflict and pointed out that Stand- ard Oil and American bankers com- the All-America Anti-Imperialist League. In an official call and credential | | sent by the League to trade unions, | Is Justice Minister | | WARSAW, Poland, Dec. 24-—A | very close friend of Pilsudski and | a staunch stpporter of the dictator, | “socialist” Long Term Credits The /second payment of 26,000,000 | campaign markg ($8,568,000), due December | been ¢ Since that time a most vicious to wreck the union has | ied on by the U. H. T.,) |labor fakerdom. | Voice of Workers Must Live On In the bitter cold gray air of the; working class has stood by its Daily named ' to the fact that some one Rothstein was killed Nov. that people do say that th na one has been seriously and reason : ; ; vorking women’s | 5 : : shi t took the |early morning, that from five to Worker. Kive years, hard years! ©! the crime is because Tamy nletely dominated the Bolivian gov- | Pogice Gad teuth obpaniicetti has been appointed as Polish min- |S, 1928, on the German 200,000,000 | hich Hels took Titerally Pelee VP (ven Wasa calls Wish Wankicaihin CHGEM lee: Gere Hard “sears: | polite, and ‘Tammany )- ernment. | these are urge dto send in the names |ister of justice to replace S. Meysz- | merit ($71,100,000) long-term credit | ete ee ee te Despite | know so well, the crowds rush across| Why, they were nothing to the town were mixed in Rothstei , Wicks termed the “peace” maneu- of their delegates at once. toics, who did not prove to be pliable | @*tehded to Soviet economic organ jall this the union has grown more|Union Square. They are heading|years, that our comrades suffered, lion dollar drug ring, Whalen vers going on at the Pan-American! The speakers at the conference |enough to the will of the dictator- | izatfons wes recently deposited with |than five-fold in membership. jfor the two subways that converge in old Russia, underground Russia. “Oh, yes, must tell the Homicide + Conference in Washington as only | will include Robert W. Dunn, noted | ship. |the; Deutsche Bank by the Soviet | Fi i rb there, heading for their jobs, for the/'They were nothing to the blood: au, push the investigation clever manipulations by Kellogg to| radical economist, Robert Minor,) The rew minister, Stanislaw ia A eit for Trade, according to | - x eight, nine, ten, eleven hours of|slavery of our comrades in China nt along. We want action. This is a well-known reactionary and will cabled reports received yesterday by | Liebknecht Memorial “ pi ward off British imperialism, act- ing through the League of Nations, and “settle” the dispute in a way favorable to the Yankee interests. “The brazen assault against Para- guay is a part of the whole vicious offensive of Yankee tyranny that has as its objective the enslavement of all Latin America, and the ex- termination of the power in that of the world of its great im- perialist rival, England. The peace maneuver at Washington is a part of the preparation for a new world war,” he said. editor of the Daily Worker, and} George Pershing of the Anti-Im- perialist League. help the white terror against the} workers through the courts. FOR PARTY wih the Party Discussion. These m MEMBERSHIP MEETINGS The Central Executive Committee of the Workers (Communist) Party has arranged the following membership meetings in connection | uled earlier but due to the Party Plenum the final dates are the fol- DISCUSSION eetings have originally been sched- | in Detroit on Jan. 16. DETROIT, Mich., Dec. 24.—A | the) Amtorg Trading Corporation, | the) principal firm in Soviet-Ameri- can/trade. The first payment on the | German credit amounted to 31,000,- 000 marks. Liebknecht memorial meeting will The German iong-term credit, be held here on Sunday, Jan, 6, at partiy guaranteed by the govern-|2 p. m. in the New Workers Hall, ment, was authorized two years | 1343 E, Ferry St. Mass tableaux, | ago. German equipment to the to- | depitting different events in the life | tal amount of the credit was pur-|of the great revolutionary martyr, sat within a year by various | will be presented by the members Soviet industrial und trade crgan- | of the Detroit Young Workers (Com- | munist) League. Workers of Detroit are urged to | izations. Acocrding to Soviet cus- toms statistics of trade across Eu- | today, in India, Italy. working class fortitude and endur- ance and sacrifice that lie ahead of us. Yet they were great years, years jof fortitude, endurance, sacrifice. But they are only the beginning. We are celebrating the fifth snni- Yersary of The Daily Worker. To jmake this anniversary edition a | success, to aid vitally in building and preserving the Daily Worker, it is necessary that more and more | greetings be sent the paper from la- bor and fraternal organizations and slavery that awaits them all. One sign looks down to them, as they stare up at it, one line of hope thru the cold gray morning: “The Daily Worker” across the building that houses the offices of the only Communist daily in the English throughout the world. But what if some cold gray bitter morning, some cold proletarian morning, that sign should not be there! Suppose that the long and desperate struggle of the great American militant organ should go down to defeat in its fight for the case has been dragging too long!” And then Whalen goes out at 2 a. m. to look for undiligent patrol- men who may be chatting with friends or stealing a smoke while on duty. Sometimes he catches one, too, and the ever-present newspaper- men print columns and columns about it, to the exclusion of the Rothstein dope ring. Unger Makes Bargain. Meanwhile Unger, the only man officially connected with it, pleaded guilty yesterday to possessing $2,- 000,000 worth of drugs, and unless ‘ lowing: ropean frontiers, Soviet imports ettend this memorial meeting and | \ yore, Party bodies. the judge is unpolitic enough to give hte baie’ Pid reeves Thursday, December, 27th—New York City; Superior, Wise.; frm Germany in the fiscal year | te. bring all friends and sympa-|" What hope*would take .to your, But not only greetings are tegiart hia a ie sentence and aggravate | Seattle, Wash; Chicago, Ill.; Friday, December 28th—Boston, Phila- | 1927-28, ending September 30, 1928, thizers. day’s slavery with you if that sign Contributions are also a vital need him into telling what he knows, any Anti-Imperialist League, traced the maneuvers of British and American imperialisms in South America and showed how the Latin American delphia, Buffalo, St. Paul. Saturd; troit, New Haven, San Francisco. land, Kansas City, Los Angeles, , Workers and farmers were fighting Yankee aggression. He called for united action of the American and Latin American workers against United States imperialism. , The place of next few da; lay, December 29—Pittsburgh, De- | Sunday, December 80th—Cleve- The Central Executive Committee desires that the widest sec- tions of the Party shall participate in these General Membership meetings and calls upon every Party member to attend, the meeting in each city will be announced in the amounted to 242,000,000 rubles, and fiorh the United States to 181,500,-| Co, BANKRUPT: WAGES LOST | 000 rubles, as against the corre-| \4it_WAUKEE, Dec, 23.—The 30) sponding figures for the preceding \orkers of the Standard Crucible fiscal year of 157,700,000 rubles and | Casting Co. lost $1,917 in wages due | | 143,400,000 rubles, respectively. when the company went bankrupt. | Little chance to collect the wages | jis seem. mmunist) Party ts class struggle. \ PA of |to the revolutionary Communist were gone, comrades, | | press at this period and may be for Who would speak to you if the voice of the Communist press were leakage of information from that | source is stopped. Unger’s sister, supposed to know silent in the Wnited States, com- rades? Yet this can happen, this is al- ways lying in wait to happen. Thru five long years the American ‘long to come. But as you did net) fail in your proletarian duty in the something, too, has been taken out past, comrades, you will not fail now! of sight, Dr. R. H. Wouters of De- nor in the future, itroit, head of the narcotics squad The paper of the hammer and there, admits, “She may be in New \ sickle is yours to save or forsake, i” says the doctor.