The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 26, 1929, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1929 Page Three 380,000 German Miners MINERS NOW LIVE AT POINT OF STARVATION Social Democrats Will Support Coal Barons COLOGNE, Germany, March 25. —A strike, involving 380,000 miners in the Ruhr, which may spread to other sections of Germany, was fore- cast today when the miners’ union determined to denounce the existing wage agreements. The agreements | expire on May Day. | The precise demands which the) miners ‘will make have not yet been | announced but it is known that the | mine owners are prepared to refuse | any increase in wages. The miners are making ready for a struggle of unusual severity, as the German mine owners are deter- mined to maintain their position in the international coal market at the price of the intensified exploitation of hundreds of thousands of miners in the pits of the Ruhr and Silesia. The miners are among the most frightfully exploited sections of the German working class, the vast majority of them receiving a wage that is very little above the min- imum on which a man can live and labor. Statements in the German capital- ist press on the miners’ decision in- dicate that the mine owners’ are prepared to fight any wage increase to the bitter end. They expect the ire support and cooperation of the social-democratic government in their struggle with the miners. The miners, on the other hand, put their trust in the leadership of the Communist Party of Germany, which is strong in the Ruhr mining regions. 5 Anarchism was often a kind of punishment for the opportunist sins of the working class movement. Anarchism and opportunism are two deformities, one complementary to up against it and have nothing to | | the W. I. R. for bread. Every worker AES a in the Ruhr Prepare to St Three Faithful Flunkeys for Hoover The three men who will act as secretaries to Herbert Hoover, writing his letters, speeches, etc., to relieve the great man of unneces- sary mental strain. They are, left to right, George Akerson, Law- rence Richie and Walter H. Newton. Mine Families Starve Miner Killed in 1,000 in Pennsylvania, Ohio; | Foot Fall from Cage; W.I.R. Asking Relief} Leaves 3 Children The National Miners Union, Pitts-| SHAMOKIN, Pa. (LRA). — A burgh, yesterday forwarded to the|miner, William Chesney, 31, fell a Workers International Relief, Union | thousand feet to his death soon after z | starting work in the morning. He Square, a letter from an old miner]... pushing a mine car from the living in Brownsville, Pa. |cage and fell down the shaft. A 13- “I am very sick in bed and can-| ear old boy, at work near the shaft, iS a saw ie miner disappear. Ever. not get out,” the letter says, “Iam|io%. in the man's body was broken jin the fall. Chesney is survived by eat and you know how that is when /a widow and three little children. you're sick, I would not do this, I never did this before. When sick | you cannot eat everything. Please let me have $5 till I get able to pay you back.” The Workers International Relief last night sent the National Miners Union a check for $5 which will be | turned over the the destitute miner. | Damaged Soviet Liner Now Safely on Way HALIFAX, N. S., March 25.—The steamer Kathleen, from the Soviet Union, was bound for its destina- tion, Portland, Me., today after run- ning into trouble on the Atlantic. The Kathleen docked here yester- day for coal and proceeded for Port- land last night. She reported she had damaged some of her hull plates after leav- ing the Soviet Union, but that re- pairs were made at Madeira. “Thousands of other miners are starving in the coal fields of Penn- sylvania and Ohio,’ Rose Pastor Stokes, acting secretary of the W. I. | R. pointed out. “They are calling upon the National Miners Union and} with a dollar to spare should send it for the starving miners and their wives and children. Checks and money orders should be made out to the W. I. R., 1 Union Square, Room 604, New York City and marked for LIGHTNING HITS SCHOOL. BATON ROUGE, La (By Mail). —Perkins Road Elementary School the other.—V. I. Lenin (“Left” Com- munism). |was struck by lightning and destroy- miners’ relief. ed by fire. All pupils escaped. ‘SWISS CAVALRY RIDE DOWN ANTI- --FASCIST MARCH 26 Workers Jailed by Government BASLE, Switzerland, March 25. |—An anti-fascist demonstration of |workers was ridden down by cav- jalry in the streets of this city to- | day. | The prezession was started on |the main thoroughfare, but cavalry immediately attacked it, driving the pants down side __ streets, ing many with the flats of | their swords. Hundreds of pam- phlets denouncing Mussolini were | distributed, howevel | ‘The town looks like an armed camp, with troops and trebled lice forces reinforced by de {ments from other cities patrolling all thoroughfare: Se en 26 Workers Arrested. GENEVA, Switzerland, March 25. ~—-With federal and cantonal infan- try, cavalry and police patrolling ets and guarding all public workers expected their anti-fascist demonstrations to be |broken up. Twenty-six of the workers’ leaders were in jail today. | | The demonstrations, which were | organized under the leadership of | |the Communist Party against Ital- jian fascist activities in Switzerland | jand the activities of the Swiss | |“Hakenireuzler” (fascisti), were | |forbidden by the government. The social democrats refused to partici- |pate. The workers decided to dem- jonstrate despite the government or- der, | The cavalry, which today. arrived | to aid the infantry and police in |whatever aggression the govern- | ment plans against the workers, was | jrushed here from Berne. Heavy detachments of police have Leen thrown around the arsenal and jth | buildin; FROM “AZURE CITIES” AZURE CITIES ASTOoRY o/ LIFE in the USSR International Publishers. Copyright, 1929 By ALEXEY TOLSTOY Reactionary Troops Guard Insurgent Leader OX Troops guarding the private train of Ger. Jose Escobar, commander of the Mexican clerical- The revolt has been broken by the Portes Gil government, latest dispatches feudal troops, at Jaure from Mexico City say, with the rike Soon for Livable Conditions MASS REVOLT OF COAL DIGGERS SCARES FAKERS | Fishwick Machine Calls : Early Convention = (Continued from Page One) chine, they simply faked the count and declared the agreement “carried” by a margin of 1,000 votes in an announced total of about 62,- j000. A roar of protest went up from all over the district, and de- spite repeated demands by dozens of local unions the district officials refuse to this day to publish a tab- ulated account of the vote, local by l.cal, as provided for in the consti- tution of the union. In several cen- ters, among them Peoria, Nokomis and Bellevile, committees were set up simultaneously to try to check so financial and military aid of Hoover's regime. German Red Front Fighters to Hold Great Meet in May UNITY Calling upon the workers of all countries to draw up\ the Red Front battle line between the Soviet Union and the imperialist war danger which threatens it, the Red Front Fighters League of Germany has announced its fifth national meet in Hamburg in May. The text of the call follows: Comrades! Class Brothers! The Red Front Fighters League of Germany has called its fifth na- tional meeting in Hamburg, to be held from May 18 to May 21. In view of war preparations of the imp t powers against the Soviet Union, the drawing up of consulater and have infested the railway stations to turn back or de- tain all workers coming to the dem- onstrations from other parts of the |country and from adjacent sections of Germany and France. Basle is at the junction of the frontiers of these countries. Many werkers have already been arrested on their way to Basie. While taking these provocative measures on the streets, the police were not too busy to attack the plant of the Basler Vorwaerts, which they closed, and confiscated the edition. up the count, and it not long hefore the Peoria committee was able to show a minimum total vote cf 35,000.*against the agreement. while the Fishwick-Nesbit gang themselves claimed fully 20,090 had been favorable. As a result local unions and sub-district conventions renewed their demand for a tabu- lated report, for a convention and in some cases launched upon a con- | scious policy of holding back dues to enforce their demands. Expulsions. In the meantime the most mili- tant and best-tried fighters in the eld U. M. W. A. began more and more to cast their lot with the new THEL, OUTLINES CONGRESS. y ~ + olutionary workers of all lands with | New Shop Committees |the soldiers, workers and peasants | to Send Delegates of the proletarian fatherland, The working class must organize (Continued from Page Onc) the international battle front for the | union center for all class struggle defense of the Soviet Union and| organizations, which shall unite all against the Anglo-French war pact, | new unions, revolutionary minorities against the battle front formed by | in the old unions, and all movements {the Red Front for battle stands as a |the imperialists from the+Baltic to | for organizing the unorganized, shop National Miners Union. Under the \the Balkans against the Soviet| committees, ete, under a single| leadership of such outstanding lead- Union. direction.” crs of the Illinois miners as Free- | The call assails the corrupt lead- jership of the old unions, proclaims |a policy of organizing the unorgan- |ized, with special attentjon to the Negro workers and the Workers in | Phe leadership of the Red Front |Fighters League of Germany there- fore asks you to help to make out cf the mobilization in Hamburg a |powerful international demonstra- man Thompson, John Watt, Slinger, Luke Coffey and others, Gozens of locals of the National Miners Union have begun to spring up within the shell of the old U. Dan tion of the workers of all lands | basic industries, neglected by the|/M. W. And more and more the against imperialism and for the F. L, misleaders. It exposes the | great k of the rank and file min- ‘oletarian revolution by support-|Muste group of “progressives” as|ers realize that it is only from this ing our national meeting in your |palliators, playing into the hands of |press and in the sympathetic press, |the big bureaucrats of the A. F. L. as well as by sending delegates tu | Fight War Danger. jambare, : _ _, | It enlls on all workers to fight the The fifth national meeting is at/.oy danger, and to defend the first the same time a demonstration workers’ republic, the Soviet Union, against the Second International, | apainst attack by capitalist nations. whose parties, as is especially shown | 1¢’ speaks of the growing military in the defnese program of the Ger-| ang radicalization of the workers jman_ social-democrats, ally them-| themselves, who want organization |selves openly with the bourgeoisie | for the defense of the capitalist state. ection that leadership can be looked for in the coming struggles. Iready in many Illinois mines comlitions have been much worsened and wages have been cut even be- low the agreed scale through un- derhanded means, and the accevt- ance of lower scales in other dis- tricts makes inevitable a demand for further cuts on the part of the A 4 |Ilinois operators. At the same and will support real unions, con- time the policy ‘of splitting up the trolled by the workers themselves | ).iners by ‘separate agreements is |snd not by a group of labor lieuten-| intended by the Lewis officialdom Vassili. Alexeievich Buzheninov | will go in, and if she is there I will life like a crow in an alley...” Jeievich weht home. In the Alley of| a EE aT BE ae a he SUBS La CAD ICSE to make impossible any nation- returns to his home town to recu- |say that . . .” Just then there} Zoya suddenly turned and pushed| Marat a stone whistled past his nose, Emergency Fund AURHERTAA HGR the Sale aes Sh The convention call is issued by| wide struggle. ‘ perate from a nervous breakdown | was laughter behind the locusts. He| Nadya. Sashok, in an embroidered|and again some one’s. footsteps . toot poo ae aed e of the! the ‘National Executive Committee! Make U. M. W. Company Union. incurred while a student at the |bent down, and between the tree| shirt, striped pants, and yellow half-| drummed thievishly across the | ractory Dist. Unit, Section 8 aoe eeenie strugele for devs aarinet (ot the ‘Trade Union Educational! While the operators are intro- Moscow > School of Architecture. |trunks he saw Nadya and a stout,|shoes, was approaching them. He’ wasteland. ~ oe, SE Gi. i yelker a SS ee apes tone the League, and is addressed to all trade) aucing machinery and speed-up He had fought through the Civil |red-cheeked girl. They lay in a|had a guitar under his arm. He * * gi: 1 Bana $1; s. R a Feo pags Ris Me orice scl ® ©) unions, shop committees, organizing | methods in the mines, eliminating Wars and is now filled with dreams | meadow on a blanket and muslin | removed his boxed cap—in the fash-| Hot Days. Knazick $140... ....... 840 lenoported by delecdtions of class, | committees, and minority groups / thousands of workers and abolishing of rebuilding Moscow according to | pillows. Before them stood a short,| ion of the Moscow Komsomol—drop-| « i ‘ seats suki ae scion ee 8.%0|supported by delegations of class-| affiliated with or in sympathy with| orking conditions that represent hi 1 At homesdhe falls |iniddie-aced halatie her | 3 ‘de the gids} THeee aren't enough wishes to) Mrs. I. Monson, Ashland, |conseious workers from all parts of |the T. U. E. L. | ez ey riage aN 5 hda CN: - ) He path you olding : oa on the grass beside the girls wish for everything,” Nadya] Mont. ..... Ge 800/Germany gnd all capitalist lands, Ut aca Mah | the fruits of years of struggle, ae H a love Mie “a lez! 09 (Na de, ee in a an 7 brs elon |and shook their hands. . |would say. She had a great deal|M. Gerst, N. Y. C. + 2.00] will: mobilize: | cseerectea pve a teited tocweite ft ta ishwick machine is turning the U. vanarAy, is old mother’s ward, |it seemed. er large lips were ‘Dreaming, citizens? ,,/of common sense. But the days be: | Jack Luches, San Jose, Cal.. 2.00 Against the armament construc- the ‘Dail ew, ia al Ss apts W. A. into’ a company union. who is sole support of the house- | stretched and smiled kindly and fool-| “Anyway, we dream least of you, ji SE. OF. N. Fiat ° : i Bs jthe Daily Worker news of the Pro-|Fvery local strike in the last six held: antics womedic ated | inks, ‘Th dcoheeked: etal Jed | Z in ticall Jog. | Came hotter and hotter, and at night|3E, 2F, New York City.... 2.00 tion and war preparations of the gress of discussion in their shops on Appa: -dered called off time brooding and doing nothing. |up cong the pillows, wee ceyings’ [Oe hes cece vith lacchter. (even the sheets seemed to burn, And|Sent in by V. G. Floves, E. imperialist. powers! lthe call for the ‘Trade Union Unity|( "Gs" antrr otteise and te Bee Rie Wave Gol eee inte (One rece eee et ee ni [oer eee ae ee. tor Wily-nilly, Nadya would tind herself! Chieago, Ind.: V. G. Flovea, Against fascism and reformism!| Convention. The Daily Worker will|UX,the district officials and prac: PCE Ute SRE Ede SEGAL pene Gide eel ne teen tina cramaaey|each day in the Maslova’ orcbartl| 0c; T. M. Burya, o0c;, B. For an fitevaational revolation-| ciaaig veh ton tha information of | {wly, Cvery miner who as tele whe 7 pts peci A ay doe ja ¢ perch Ivanovna, didn’t you/legs; her lower Race protruded | 5», the pillows under the apple tree.| Tonut, 50c ..... - 1.50 ary class front of the workers of | 2]] militant workers the story of this Lae dee tHe pregerny fas ee Ay $ Dee ee late teen tans | esis ; slightly. Sashok took a look at the/Gommon sense was all right in it-|Mrs. John Mikkila, Knowles, ali countries! mest’ significant struggle for. aT Senet (he SS Oe ae return is ere she ane ee cope Semyonich begged me sky where another cloud of dust | cir but the hot evening, the dry) Calif. .....ss.ssseeeeees TBO einie Phe i detahee OF ale Soviet | tnited Ss dais: erators has sa ‘ace’ . wi a Se Se at ee ies ee |S verrible umber of times; he went: paged. aes sawing of the grasshoppers in the|Collected by Abe Tetenman, | Union! | | wrath of the bureaucrats in addi- ager in the place where Nadya |Yevdokia Ivanovna, change your| “Hottish, citizens. What this tem-| 5 hivcameeslodusts|'. Brookins Ne Weal Ruvit- | Ese ae tion to that of the bosses and the works, who has been rejected by | decisi Hut sald Poss S iy ii lean ay Fallow t |mowed grass, the blooming locusts rooklyn, N. Y.: L. Ruvi For the successful proletarian | zi ; k Foe ie ore fain ot eetientioe, [oct cee i Te ree ecee covoune fe>” land the bees, the lounging in the| man, 260; Worker, 20c; A. Pavelhition Reactionary Fakers PolbeS. gsi eee uae eee ene bined ths bord o! Pkg enme g yonic i how shall a marry when T|—one can simply go cr azy rats ‘ satin kimono (a present from Zoya),|_Tetenman, 55¢ .... +» 1.00 Red Front! | in Pa U M Ww Fi ht The a tants ae een pare 4 a z i, an’t. ... Well, and aske - ni ‘i S re 7 ORNG 7 > " | i re ae é page! saerhoks chal tae just seemed to come along of itself.) Andrew Overgaard, + 1,00 ERNST THAELMAN ver Union Remnan : dhl of the past and expresses his dis- | wouldn't give in, Well, and from|and began to hum somewhat hoarse. Umnatwmally passionate. Jove, offal, | 7k Oe |, WILKES-BARRE, Pa, March 25-|the bureaucrat, through effective cut wie He of tne. Dhecent pict he Ee eae ara Wag cca ae chanad eh | Nadya thought at times: “The whitl- Hundreds to Lose Jobs Demonstrate Against Papoee aise Sah NB Work. |1ocals of the National Miners, Union. which he finds so prosaic. et- |Churkina, Nastasia was glad, oh, ‘I love the odor of crushed satin) #’the July. dave damioking! ze “ © 99 So es . ae 4 ipa oe x ee ae |Only where there are such effectiy yaintsev points out to him suet very glad,—she prepared her dowry,| That makes me lose my heart pee Sasa yet ay dd ioe Se pele as Talkies Steadily | Fascism at Capacity foe Pes tsi Mba Rie locals has it been proved Sabon poauites Lele taeda taints ora ad eee! ate ae one and mind... tabla: Win Over Silent Drama} Dance Saturday Nite aay Henbne te selftingwome of | yietaiee palner ‘or the crime o ret a te =the wedding. But on the eve o aie | The townspeople had not remem- | ' ' orp began ied : \fighting the boss. les i i - ; ; s atin: ts units going over to the former : é an enemy in pee seen the wedding Porphyri Semyonich{pETWEEN the verses sung to the pered such heat at the end of June| The battle of the talkies in the| Demonstrating against fascism on| misleader district president, Rinaldo|__ 2° deeaste te thls re Son. rouses papacy an pe lo edt appears drunk before his bride, and air of “Allah Verdy”, Sashok! for a long time. The leaves began|cinema industry reached a peak to-| the eve of the fascist elections, New | Cappellini. vention 0 ieee soe nadia elite o = bah esi seen rene 2 spoils her bridal dress. ‘1 says he, jested and passed clever remarks, | to fade. Fog hung above the fields|day when the Fox Film Corpora-| york workers met at a dance given| The U. M. W. A. “grievance com- ae with tl fe moet seca ee spain) ony ae Sahat she finally pau forget my first love.’” ... |jookng sharply at Nadya. When beyond the river. It was said that |tion, one of the largest and oldest | by the Anti-Fascist Alliance at the| mittee” at Old Forge endorsed Cap-|™™ the history o Es : Gicilés t0.4aik.to ism Jabaut It e seamstress amused them for | thoy got tired of the music, all three| the wheat was burning. The walls|of producing companies, announced | Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth|pellini as district president. ; 5 Gecides re han aA i talk cide a while, and left. The girls lay on picked up the blanket and the pil- crackled at night «from dryness. In/flatly that it was “through with the | st., Saturday night. rae On arti Miners Starve, Gov't He by tel Sealeet a . thew pilows, weak with laughter and | }ows and went to drink tea. the offices the employees * drank | silent drama forever.” | In its program of increasing ac- Sg il A th: Ww rid) Ss ‘Let Wi es Go on re ae sat Se ae ae taba Vassili Alexeievich, airing. nen water, all of them as lifeless as} According to Winifred Sheehan, tivities the Alliance reports that|@rrall, He er WO d | says, tM kine’ i of dust above |the locusts, swallowed all their| stewed meat. vice-president and general manager| more workers are being brought} ilitarist, Dead | n uilt-Makin: (Gentine rom Yesterday.) the orchard. Red-eheeked Zoya Mas- poisonous talk in one breath, Sil. Bes ea in charge of production, the rout of into the work of the orgenization War M » Learn Q zg = u i 5 wandered to the a acs «./the silent ci ii ti jly. sh 25 ‘ IEW tinuation of the conversation. Rut |liair, her arms bare to the shoulders, |siver, and sat down on the)elayey | BUZHENINOV was finishing his)i.° the Wintiam, eee lee aN _PARIS, March 25—Gen, Maurice NEWCASTLE, England (By the day passed as usual—hot, full | said: | clite,” } work for the academy. From dawn! whore jj has been raging, and it| Sarrail, once co-worker of Marshal | Mail). —The Coalfields Distress of flies. The wind chased the dust| “Why doesn’t he come, the un-| What happened? Nothing’ hap-|to twilight he sketched, drew, hak Z vaconit ; Hoover to Tell Solons Foch in the task of directing the Fund, of the British government, up the alley. Nadya appeared at |happy fool?” he pebhy the first days after| painted, studied in the overheated wil lose ibaa tg me naa Rail ds Must M ‘slaughter of millions of workers in has decided to teach the miners dinner hurriedly, ate something, did Bhe lay down again, and embraced Pe etaial he. saw afd heard the room filled with the buzz of flies.| yop ate eal Pa ee allroads MUS! erge ihe world war, died yesterday. (Js wives quilt-making, in order to put i Nadya’s waist. “Chi i F i ide wi rifying| All that supported him was his un- : nal nored by the French public, he “lay them to work at this low-paid in- not lift her eyes even once, and ran ae 4 fe hickadee, kitten, little things of life with terrifying oI pp ah 18 brated actors and actresses find | WASHINGTON, March 25 (UP). in state” here | aunty The small “dole” will then 1 i ion. ji i re iev: ‘ion. canvas wi , es a eM o y: a » away. . lon't pay any attention. Spit at.it, sharpness. Today there was noth | believable ‘Sension. The ca he nailed |themselves affected, but there are president Hoover will follow the lhe cut off from the sminersi (6ia8 To suffer, to wait for her, was | let their tongues scratch if they are ing new. Yet, no; those protruding | the plan of the Azure City he nailed) cuh.title writers, direciors, super- Ai ee President Cocliaee:b PRE TOTP SEE . i unbearable. And for the first time |not too lazy, Live, my rabbit. as|teeth, that tilted head, the bare|to the wall, and worked over it in| Ji.6.. and scenario writers whose beds ie sak Sac te Head ROOFERS DEMAND RAISE said, Vassili Alexeievich was stung by |vour young heart tells you. Live | shoulder that peeped as if by ac-| his minutes of rest. With each new |... has either been wiped fab A lay aI encie called coneall dations ST. LOUIS (By Mail).— Slate ; doubt—as if a needle had been as hard as you can—while you can | cident from beneath the muslin day the city seemed to ae GN A tirely by the change or else the re- lie gas tnaitied’ abyiihs awhile house | 22d tile roofers’ helpers have an-| seat seen above i at ths firat plunged into his brain cells—where live: be ee That was new ... And the eld beside ee to Moscow | @Witements of the new technique |today, This will be done in his |Tounced their intention of demand: Ing class J fo ralne the proletariat i E | . i: | y 0. a ie eet Nadya went, every. eve HW thighba and te Nadya’ k pease neta eS haa said: “There is| the Halowiie week. His mother, itl heist aera ae cies ph agts lmbssage to the regular session of ne croanized arated wore win the battle of democrn vey—Karl Mie leapt into the courtyard, Tow ayy me MeN) wire manhood ip selling doughnuts seems, found three golden ten-ruble eoepetition with mew blood. jcam@ress in December. | President, TS ered his forehead, and stumbled] “yYpu’l] get old, and it will be too|than in rushing with naked blade piece io his way haeae oo it, | ALE Ne eos oy aetias Fee OP Mat ° inst Matryona, who was split- | late, ind.” ry tack...” Manhood was| Vassya, I was saving it for my) 5} 2, | 1 . ting wood. hy ‘After Soran caine a grass- abel will, And for funeral, but Aa tars is some. Harvey Fires 2 Aides — Covlidge. HIL ADELPHI HE ATRE “Where has Nadya gone?” blade in her hand, Nadya answered:| the sensitive—death. Foolishness—|how . . . Only don't tell’ Nadya.’ 4 | a “My dear, I don’t know. Perhaps | “It’s all right for you with your |two girls and an idiot with a guitar And he would ‘have gone sway, thin)! Fraud Reward Fight ‘To Celebrate Paris ioc eae ' i Maslovs. She always goes i i t of foolish things, and as a stick, enthusi: » IN RHE put ‘ Gey Aloe ive Sonn a aay Thopeds can eae res down gloom of imagination and work, if it had| Borough President Harvey of Commune Thursday Philadelphia Radical! Now . Playing! if “Who are they?” I wrote to him, that, he would help, on his soul, and a leaden hoop on|not been for an unexpected shock. beni nesily rl Marve pe | a ] “The Masloys? —_Storekeepers. that he would lighten my load... .|his head. A fine builder! Foolish-| His sudden tension broke out in an-) ingle nie diatitnsen pert Me. | The Yorkville Branch of the 1. 6 é ez ; 9 9 t Once they were rich, and even now | A terrible disappointment, Zoya. And ness, foolishness. From tomorrow other direction. ‘ lat ‘t a5 H eo f hi \L. D, will hold a large mass meet- they have a thing or two, Run over, | besides, imagine, he is in love with | on—twenty hours of work each day,| Life, it is very possible, does not * a er ani dward James from his ing on Thursday, March 28 at $:30| {t isn’t. far.” me.” | ; and in two weeks—Moscow ... _ |excuse those who escape from it—|# er last night. ._|at the Czechoslovak hall at 347 EB. 4 The orehards that had once be-| Zoya threw up her hands. Nadya} But if a chance passer-by had the fantasts, the dreamers, the en-J Bic faster = was Benny, pep 72d St. in commemoration of the Yonged to the Maslovs stretched three | continued in a subdued voice: « looked at Vassili Alexeievich, he|thusiasts. It grips them and digs ae . Nua eek o1 pie ae aide Gambintiel’ All aura ere The Russian “Last Laugh” miles along the river. Now only a| “I, have decided that if TI give|would have scen a round-shouldered them vulgarly in the ribs: “You've 3 eatiparee taney. bad hecan Es asked to attend. Karl Reeve, editor 1] ; Si ‘ 8 : workers’ section was left, surrounded |inysalf to a man, it will be in legal | young man in a colorless shirt, with dreamed enough, rip open your Se Ra RUDE Ekecuac ahiey “ould nck of the Labor Defender will speak on | SeEmenn tae Whhtee ema. Jeger tuzery bib egies! by. a new fence, and in places by| marriage, so that he may improve| long, uncombed hair. . . The sunken} you've flown too high . . « hits lean ee dues other members |t8¢, “Commune.” George Pershing tides of the Soviet Revolution : 4 barbed wire along which ran locust | my circumstances. Then perhaps I| cheeks, the sharpened nose, the un- Tt re ne ie ane o i “3 i Othe CuMRaE aT Mlatlghe cantare | will ‘preside. Acclaimed by Revolutionary Writes! bushes. Near these locusts Vassili| will go to Moscow, to a dramatic| happy face, would have shown that terrible. The law, rather. vy’ neat ‘th fi i of polftenl sarees powerful 7 dy" “Us ttable” Alexeievich stopped. He gripped | school.” this young man, full pf contradic-|logy. Life, like a raw, evil woman, |About the passing out of political nock ERG AGAINST OVERTIME. |} “Powerful Tragedy Ro organs “his belt with his hands, and looked| “TIt's true, then,” Zoya cried warm-| tions, if confronted with one more|does not like to be looked at from, lei at ley eo GLASGOW, (By’ Mail). =) 'Tho||| “#79 Melssare Olsin. Save, Melnch Bestela Michael. Gale: into the dust. * \iy, “that your brains are all in alcrucial problem, would fly off the) above. Wisdom consists in master- tached Rod Tanenteeude Clyde dockers have demanded the! Surrounded by a distinguished program of outstanding films brits x whirl, Find yourself a rich fool at| cliff into the river... ing her, in putting,her in the proper bi nc | abolition of overtime between 4 a, m. A A ; E had come here in two jumps: /once, and marry. I have told you| But this did not happen. When Place—so, anyway, Comrade Khoty-| profetarian. movement in (and 8 a, m., and between 1 p. m.| film gul Id ci nema first into the courtyard to Mat-|a hundred times that Sashka can’t|the sunset faded beyond the ‘ dull] aintsev had explained on the cliff at) «he xett-consetoun. sndependent |ond 5 p,m. on Saturdays. The em- |] 1432 MARKET STREWT (hetween 16th & 17th). — Phone, SPRuce 5258 ryona, then to the locusts, , There | marry because his father won't let fields, and campfires sprang up ood alae oe . eee CHG Wmecny nmet. | lovers: “acated | by. strike. tbsoats, |j]: Comtlt. Rertormnnan Paps irsices—Dally 1-ks- eax Osta Sata hh ce » (To Be Continued.) ‘ had been nothing in between, “I Ne him, And so you'll sit your whole| and there in the valley, Vassili Alex- \ t fentop. ¥ offered to “arbitrate,” \

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