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Page Three coral DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1929 \ Yalian Fascist Tribunal Sentences 6 Communists, Comrades of Sozzi, to Long’ Terms ‘Find Zorgiebel’s Right Hand Man? HUNGARY EDITOR |AMANULLAA IS SCORED FASCIST, TARGET OF LIES | “DRAWS $175 FINE BRITISH SPREAD IVeszi Exposed site ‘Sympathy for for ‘Agsshiahs! Anti-Semite | Among India’s Masses BUDAPEST, Hungary, March 28. BOMBAY, India, March 28,—In —Dr. Josevh Veszi, for 50 years] its campaign to discount the tre- |editor of the important daily news-| mendous support which the Meham |paper, Pester Lloyd, has been fined| medans and other sections of Indi: ¢ $175 for charging that the notorious| fee] for Amanullah of Afghanistan Count Paul Teleki fomented anti-|the British government is not only | vish disturbances in the univer-| broadcasting reports stating that ies. Veszi was also placed on pro-| there is little support for Amanul-| | Fe Does the Work, Sapien Gets “the Gravy” FORGERS OF USSR PAPERS TO GO ON TRIAL IN BERLIN = Want Infor srmation Held by Senator Reed _ INE IS GIVEN 15 EARS; ALL SHOW | sREAT COURAGE _Tassolini Approves of Hoover ITALIAN FRONTIER, March 28. -The most important trial since 1e great Communist round-up last ear has just been completed be- ome the fascist special tribunal in ome. It is the trial of the com- ades of Gastone Sozzi, murdered y fascist police in his cell in Peru- | co) wma BERLIN. Vladimir Orl akoff, , March 28.— Michael Sumar- jail today, will trial on rred by a large Amer- ist newspaper to whom ll a series of forged to the co ican capit they tried to bation for three years. lah, but is further attempting to show that se OOeeeetr tee - | As the decision was handed down! discredit him by stating that the| pana se The accused, whose only “crime” The crew of the “Estonia” did the real work of rescuing 13 men laimed, “the liberty of the| Soviet Union is actively preparing | t government. sas the reorganization of the Ital-| from a sinking German ship, but Captain (left) Rasmussen gets the in Hungary’ has become alto reinforce him in the spring. | ead Meee n Trade Unions and the Italian} official gravy at City Hall. The cantain is shown here with the Morris | myth.” It has taken Dr. Veszi nine| For the last few weeks, the Bri-| heise oeetia ommunist Party, were EmilioHof-| Peterson beribboned second mate, in the company of Mayor walke years of dictatorship to find that] tish government thru its own paper: © ahontaneaae rayer, a Swiss citizen, who has out, |in India and at heme and thru in-| : ; prey Bunce wee of espionage is pend- pent 17 months in solitary confine- f h G t ae 3 sup-| ternational capitalist. news agen- Even before the trial of Vladimir Orloff and Alewander Guman- dives feld ia custody: sat Sy aattes eee ees | LE WOR Of the COMMUNISL), corrPest Tek: Risnet mee boon creasing lx (ins| si, Huron nigrn and manipiltare of ton international forgery [6 *. = held in custo ea Giaccaglia, wife of Paolo Betti, by which the number of Jewish stu- | effect that Soviet troops have been wi it was developed that Orloff, at least, had been in the employ of | Others Being Held. rho has become insane while serv- Youth Movement dunte in Hungarian universities ie/drawn up along the Afghan fron-| the Berlin police department. The chief of the Berlin police, the social | A deportation order was _mean- ng a 18-year sentence at Brescia; cut down to the barest minimum, is|tier preparatory to a spring offen-| democrat Zorgiebel, has long been infamous for his persecution of |while carried out against four of osephine Zolia, Amodeo, Aricli and also known for his participation as| | the workers. In this caricature, the staff artist of Rote Fahne, the | Orloff’ and the Rus- ‘hiorichetti. Editorial Note:—This is the |be nec y for the Party to un-| premier in the Horthy terrorist gov-| It is, of course, widely known that| German Communist daily, has caght the social-democr policeman | sion « Pank | wich, Pet Braud the sole troops on the Afghan bor-| der are the usual frontier patrol of the Red Army which patrols the Afghan as well as e other fron- tier where the workers’ and eH with his right hand man exposed. ANOTHER STRIKE Hofmayer has been sentenced to 5 years and nine months’ impris- mment, of which three will be in| olitary confinement, and the others | o periods of from five to three) third installment of the report delivered at the Sixth Congress of the Communist Party on the activities of the Young Workers derstand and,which at the present)ernment during its early days. He time is not $et sufficiently under- | wa ss succeeded by the equally reac- stood both in the league and in the|tionary Count Stefan Bethlen. Party, particularly in the Party. Shortly after the Horthy govern- I refer to the problem of the or-|ment, with the aid of Rumanian) AWES TO HELP | s’ republic is contiguous to he eer ee | ears. (Communist) League by its ex- ganization of youth sections in trade |troops and the starvation policy of| ant eee one | al gn office, are Even the fascist press was com-| ccutive secretary, Herbert Zam, | Unions and the organization Ob-cep- | Merkert) Modyeny then food dictator | 1 di workers are by no means INA IL AN uy oa eos Lapeer 1 LG | au hongiee) Abe nomi ciations of the young|of Europe, had overthrown’ the So- BOTAN WO) Uy Hd u d Reed, now in Sicily, relied to recognize the courage of) Additional installments will be |) kers in those places where no|Viet Hungarian government, the ter- imposed upon by this systematic | ied. a committee to investi he peeenere ee pend: published until the report is com- | trade unions exist, these economic |Torist sent Teleki to the United| lying on the part of official Anglo-| red eine kee Ee pleted. male ‘Amanullah is so high) Walkout in in Pelzer, SiGe Igails Soon to Tighten orris and Borah were in the \ associations to be a transition form|States to whitewash the white ter- Mussolini Approves Hoover. * en. Feeling for ay of the Soviet Union si Rice tes to the organization of the young|ror. There he lectured to the delight - 2 é S | Ren. ae pay of the Soviet Union. ROME, March 28.—Mussolini was | By HERBERT ZAM. workers and also of the adult work-|of the liberals at the Williamstown] among the Indiat baer nae Ends in Victory | U.S.FinancialGrip | wilkhold: Date wnxious to know whether “Hoover (Continued) ers into trade unions, into new trade |Institute of Politics. a gpa sir leer nt ; . Reed, it appears, has some ad- was’ an interventionist” (meaning| J, this situation, the basic task unions, Sere UG AEN Meer vag all: (Continued from Page One) | For the purpose of reorganizing poet F biol ge sl | list), in an interview which A Fi d G ll f R wishing to support him materially! fyneue wee ‘ ional and valuable informatior m illenkeg eee ease cee the for our movement becomes the or-| Because there are comrades in our | KIN alleys 0 Oman | ond morally. ing force marched out to meet the|!. &» OF Se further discrediting the forged ae ganization into class struggle or-| Party, and mdny comrades in very Interesting and significant for the enthusiastic cheers of thousands | American cor Sorah and Norris documents, but Saekliys xeactlonary< Cincinnati | Foss, into mew trade unions, |inmpectent pocltimis, who dé not wi [Emperors by Pumping} Mteresting e siastic ; great popularity of Amanullah is gan finances, former V President e has never made Times-Star yesterday. who had gathered outside the plant of the masses of the unskilled and derstand this problem, there has| ake Dry in Alban Hills eae a that all Indian newspapers carry) _., vai : mall Charles G. Dawes is to sail for that When the editor told him that he | semi-skilled workers who constitute, ‘been some uncertainty and some re-| Pe aivaisiite fom the’new “Aman: |Soee oe or ne walkout | ied pial ienieecia caean (ais ae ere een cy hought Hoover was a “nationalist,” | and will constitute to a greater de-| luctance in permitting the league| ROME, Mar 28.—An interesting | tllah hat” which is all the rage in| The crowd outside was composed | Country. | veatelips danonneed = the) actives Mussolini is said to have smiled| gree the basic factor in the strug-|to proceed with this work, in giving | archeological endeavor was crowned |tndia at present, It is a copy of|latgely of those employed on the] Dawes arrived here recently, to- of the Orloff forgery ring and con- with relief and remarked that he | gles which we are facing in the capi-| the league sufficient initiative in| with success today when, after five| 4 nanullah’s. |night shift who will stay out of the | gether with T. W. Robinson, vice-! nected it with the spionage work ‘cannot quarrel with him for that.” | talist system. And in this connec- ths work. Comrades, we must not) months of ceaseless pumping to Even the reactionary “Times” of plant, |president of the Illinois Steel Co.,| which the imperialist powers, es- ‘In reference to Communism, Mus- |tion, the question of the organiza-| forget that for the league, this prob- | empty Lake Nemi in the Alban|ryqia has been forced to admit that| The strike wave in this region is ;and two other busine en, pecially Great Britain, are attempt- olini* remarked that in Italy the | tion of the young workers, the ques-|lem is just as basic as the question | | Hills, the stern of one of the Roman} «q certain sympathy for Amanul-|definitely ascribed to the propa-| With the general will go a com-| ing to carry on within the U. S. anger of a “Red Revolution is com- | tion of the mobilization of the young of the organization of new unions j galleys, used by Emperor Caligula lah” exis ganda carried on by the locals of | mission selected by him. The com-|R., it w aa not until the, Amer pletely passed,” and he also thought | workers for the class struggle be-|and no comrade in the Party now) as a pleasure ship for summer the left wing National Textile | mission will include Robinson of the |senators were accused of So that there would be no revolution in| comes for the league a basic prob-|has any doubt, any hesitation, any | orgies, appeared above the surface Workers Union. Steel Compa Major-General | affiliations that the proceedin England, although he added that|lem and the basic task which is/passivity in the task of organizing | of the water at 7:10 a. m. today. By ; Ree aca Jaman: Go. Harbowl,. conimanden 'of lapatine (OHOE and: Hie eecoriplioes there “was a good deal of vitality | analogous to the problem of the|the new unions. No comrade should | 4 p. m. three inches of the stern was | Garhi tahoe the marines at Chateau Thierry.! became earnest. loft in the Communist movement.” | Party of the organization of the un- | organized, the masses of the un- have any doubt, hesitation or passiv- | above the water line. This is the fourth strike against | ——- ity in the organization of the young| There are two galleys, one 232.88 speed-up systems to break out in! skilled and semi-skilled workers. workers thru the youth sections and | feet long and 84.55 feet wide and the KINLOCH MINERS this immediate vicinity. The three | No Agreement Reached 47 comrades, this is not a prob-|thru the economic associations of| other 209.92 fect long and 65.6 feet |other strikes all ended in a victory | PHIL ADELPHI A 1 HE ATRES Ghia Yon German Reparations Jem only for the Young Workers) the young workers. |wide. The emperor used these gal- for the workers. First to walk out (Communist) League. While the |, by Conference at Paris young workers (Communist) League, i | takes the initiative in this work, he- | cause it is the organization of the) young workers, because it is the vanguarc of the toiling youth, never- theless, the Party cannot succeed in the task of organizing the unor- ganized unless it also undertakes the task in conjunction with the Comrades, this general analysis, which I have just given you, and this general orientation has been the analysis and the orientation upon which the league and its National) emperor’s fancies far into the small Executive Committee have endea-|hours of the Roman nights, while vored to work in the period since the Roman proletariat had to be fed our last convention in November |from the public treasury to keep the 1927. Our line has been the line|starving thousands from revolting I have just given you, a line which;and joining the bitter slave out- leys to escape the burning heat of summer in Rome. Roses decked the masts and rigging and dancing girls and musicians beguiled the in protest against the speed-up | jschemes were the workers of the | big Ware Shoals Co. W.LR. Calls Workers to Help Militants (Continued from Page One) barons and their lackies treat the workers. Similar acts, take place every day in all sections of the coal region but are not brought to A Picture for Every Philadelphia Radical! “Two Days” Now Playing! The Appleton | Mills then followed and now the| workers have won their demand | from the New England Southern | Co, at Pelzer. All these strikes | lasted but a few days each. The fifth strike to break out was a struggle for higher wages by the PARIS,. France, March 28,—The yveparations conference seemed no nearer a solution today as Dr. Hjal- mar Schacht, head of the Reichs- bank, and Owen D. Young, Ameri- can delegate, failed to arrive at any agreement on the annuity which the Germans are prepared to pay. Schacht returns from Berlin with the offer of about 1,300,000,000 jing the young workers. league, (the league playing the proper role in this task) of organi: And it yuarks, about 500,000,000 marks un- | for this reason that there are some, 0 lace, hinting that the workers de-| —Acclaimed by Revolutionary Writers! what the allies are asking. In|new problems, new policies and|which we saw at work and affect-|world, tho the woe of the Italian P i A | | y ie eS a bf y jermany Schacht conferred with|new line for our work in re-| ing the young workers. working class, takes all credit for eee ad Be de we, io ene Chamber Votes | “Powerful Tragedy ‘Unforgettable Tremendous class he industrial and financial leaders. lation to the youth which it will was not static but which developed ourselves to the changing situation, to adapt ourselves to the processes (To Be Continued) in the course of our efforts to adapt | |breaks that periodically held the Roman legions at bay. Mussolini, whose neo-Roman atti- tude is the laughing stock of the the recovery of the galleys, Vassili Alexeievich Buzheninov, home to recuperate from a ner- yous breakdown incurred while a student at the Moscow School of Architecture, falls in love with Nadezhda (Nadya) Ivanoyna, his old mother’s ward and the sole support of the household. Tho Nadya does not return his love, the town gossips about them and Utyovkin, office manager in the place where Nadya works, is very jealous of him. Buzheninov, a highly neurotic person, spends much time brooding over his plans for rebuilding Moscow—the Azure City—on the ruins of the past. One morning Nadya discovers that the garden gate has been smeared with a vulgar word. Both Buz- ieninov and she are certain Utyov- kin is responsible for this dis- honor to her. Buzheninov goes out to look for Utyovkin, determined on revenge. He finds him and murders him with a rock. Mean- while Nadya is returning home (Concluded Tomorrow.) FROM “AZURE CITIES” crack between the door and the Nadya only moved her lips. Sashok came in, the moonlight fell on his big white teeth. Silent, he quickly sat down beside her on the bed, and Nadya’s mouth felt the ebony cool- ness of his teeth. Sashok knew how to behave with gilt; 5s Suddenly his hands loosened, and he darted aside. Nadya opened her eyes and choked with fright—Buz- heninov stood in the doorway... . His eyes had no pupils, his hands gripped the doorjambs, the hands were in dark blotches, the shirt also. Sashok took a silent, headlong leap at Buzheninov, knocked him off his feet, and dashed out into the court- yard—slammed the gate. All this took place in a few seconds. Nadya dived under her blanket and rolled into a ball. Somebody shouted and there was the stamping of feet—she was under the blanket, under the pillow, her eyes closed, her hands cver her ears. and under what circumstances the box of matches found its way into International Publishers. Copyright, 1929 jamb, felt for the hook and lifted it. | AZURE CITIES 4 STORY of LIFE in the USSR |ticles, He broke some things and threw them about, then leaped into the kitchen. The awakened flies buzzed in the darkness, He struck stove, and grabbed a small pressing- iron in the dark. When he felt the weight in his hand he swore vul- garly and ran into the street. As he ran, he remembered clearly that there were matches in his pocket, |they rattled in the box. Ce Sek INVESTIGATOR: You affirm that “ until the moment when you fol- lowed Zhigalev with the iron in your hand, you had no thought of the fire? Buzheninov: Perhaps. I had said before: “It would be well to burn this town.” I did say... Investigator: Does that mean that even then, your thoughts circled about the fire? Buzheninov: 1 from an inner conflict, that is, from a conflict between myself and the away all that was rotten. But after my talk with Comrade Khotyaintsev By ALEXEY TOLSTOY his knee against the corner of the |I suffered much} is not in my power. All the fluids | of life revolted in me. I don’t know what glands, what toxins, poisoned my brain... Perhaps, anyway ... don't know, I am not a physiolo- gist... . They were tearing a woman away from me, tearing my flesh and blood,—a woman I loved so that I was not even conscious of how much I wanted her. The revolt began, and I was no longer in control of myself. I ‘struck Utyovkin with a stone, and found relief. I do not know whether the poets write the truth about love—I did not experience it. I burned three years in the Civil War .,.I burned and tortured my- self two years in the school of archi- tecture,—and saw azure cities in my} dreams. . . . Perhaps that was love, | too...I do not know ... But when| the stone pierced Utyovkin’s temple | —I felt relief for a moment ... If that is love, if that comes from love, then curse your love ... Ex- cuse me, Comrade Investigator, you want to find out all the time how it happened that the matches got | into my pocket . . . When I saw in my eyes, I saw red... And when I ran after Sashka, after the defiler. inational Relief. light. “We find James Paisley, owner of | the Valley Camp Coal Co. at whose | mine in Kinloch the explosion took | ibility and is trying to hide the criminal negligence of the coal com- pany and the state of Pennsylvania mine inspectors who claimed that the condition of the mine was satis- it was known to all the miners that it was known to all the miners, that | the pit was unventilated and full of gas. Militants Get No Red Cross Aid. “The members of the N. M. U. who were injured in the explosion as well as the widows and orphans | of the miners killed, are not receiv- ing any of the so-called relief which is being distributed by the Red Cross and other capitalist agencies. “The duty of aiding the widows, orphans and injured miners, is the task of the Workers International Relief. “All those who want to come to the assistance of the Kinloch vic- tims should rush funds to the Work- er’s International Relief, room 604, “One Union Square, New York City.” Rose Pastor Stokes, acting secre- tary of the Workers International | Relief since the recent resignation of F. G. Biedenkapp who took up work in the nounced last night that Alfred Wagenknecht, recommended for the position as secretary by the W. I. R. International Executive Commit- tee at Berlin, has assumed the Na- tional Secretaryship of the Amer- ican Section of the Workers Inter- “Hereafter,” Mrs. nature of Alfred Wagenknecht, Na- tional secretary, and be stamped industrial ‘field, an-| yayon workers in Happy Valley, Tenn. All these strikes occurred | | within the last three weeks. | to Satisfy the Demands | Made by the Clericals | PARIS, March 28—The Chamber] lof Deputies today adopted the last | nine of the government’s proposi- | The Russian “Last Laugh” A tremendous tragedy of an old man torn in his devotion between the Whites and the Reds—caught in the changing tides of the Soviet Revolution says Moissaye Olgin, Says Melach Epstein of “The Freiheit.” —Michael Gold. Surrounded by a distinguished program of outstanding films film guild cinema 1632 MARKET STREET (between 16th & 17th). — Phone, SPRuce 5258 Contin, Performance—Pop. Prices—Daily 1-11—Box Office Opens 12:30 tions for the restoration of privi- leges and the legalizing of the so- journ in France of exiled religious missionary orders. The vote, which was on a ques- tion of confidence in Premier Ray- mond Poincare, was 329 to 242. The chamber then took up the question of restoration of seized property of the orders. The value | of the property to be returned under the government’s proposals is al-| most $4,000,000. The’ Poincare government is de- terminedly behind the measures which will reinstate the exiled re- ligious orders in France and permit | them to recruit novices during | adolescence. Working hand in hand | with the clericals, the government has aided the bills to pass the cham- ber. | AAAAAAAAAAAL Your Chance to See New Serials in DAILY WORKER —— VVUVVVVVVVVVIVVvVVvVVvVY “BILL HAYWOOD’S BOOK” (EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS TO REPURB- LISH BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE INTERN. PUBLISHERS) —AND— *_ * 8 environment into which T had fallen. ree Stokes continued, “membership cards 4 ¢ 99 pat to friends and sh what w: Nad a i iiad by oes Zhigalev, Nese point which the investigator |1 had had only one school—war. I Tanna ene a poe pide in the W. I. R. (issued only by the Z | RE Aa 1s youtie bladplat the tohes, > regarded as so important: When| thought: like a soldier: to sweep| ¢, impart it to you: things danced National office) must have the sig- STORIES OF N Be tah B SOVIET Ca aes | the pocket of the non-smoking Buz- |! calmed down. I began to work,| With the iron i if with the official seal of the Amer- @ Vv | E T On HE WORKED (Continued from Yesterday.) keninov, was not cleared up. Buz-|®nd tried to submerge myself. 1) tho matches ae a the hoa ican Section of the Workers Inter- 2 keninov himself answered in two did not succeed in this. If I had " national Relief. Without this sig-| oe ye ALEXEIEVICH was not home. Matryona slept on the cehlar trapdoor. Nadya hooked her dofor, undressed, and sat down on vgr bed, resting her chin on her ttle fists. Strange light from the half-moon fell through the window. Nadya looked at the hook and a slight tremor ceaselessly ran up her spine. It was not in vain that the town laughed “they mixed her ‘rains up with an umbrella.” After, a little while the gate grated. Somebody touched the door in the vestibule and entered. Nadya growled: “TI won't let you.” Somebody scratched on her door with a fingernail. “You mustn't,” Nadya murmured. ways—the detail had slipped his memory, Although he well remem- bered the half-moon—low in the window—in Nadya’s room... and Nadya and Zhigalev in the deep shadow on the bed. (He did not even realize at once who was on the bed.) He remembered how he cried: “I killed Utyovkin.” (Neither Nadya nor Sashok heard this.) He could not tear his hands away from the doorjambs, and later fell on his face, knocked down by Sashok’s head which struck him in the ab- domen. He even remembered how the word “defiler” passed through his mind, and it was this that.threw him into further action. Tt seems that he did not at once get out of the dark corridor ob- been told then: “Cease to exist, for that is necessary fro society, the revolution and the future,” I would not have trembled. . . . But I was caught with bait. Investigator: Clearer. Buzheninov: One can crush the fear of death in himself, vanity, the thirst for life... Animal well-being +». All you wish . .. The will is stronger than all... I proved that with my life, Comrade Investigator. But no matter how much I might will—my heart would beat as it it- self wills ... The life of my body, everything, to the innermost of its secrets, is not in my power... ‘When my heart and veins are torn out, everything flies to the devil. 7 passion turned into a thought,—to burn everything that very instant . +. Ah, yes, you still want to know about those matches. The devil | knows from where they came... I suppose I picked them up on my way ... When he fell, his hand dropped loose, and in the hand was a box of matches. I snatched it up. Why? I lit a match and looked in his face for a long time, until my fingers were burned. Investigator: And so you affirm that you picked up the matches on the way with the purpose of light- ing up the face of Utyovkin, whom you had murdered,—your testimony . «+ You ask what was the bait I} fashok’s finger slipped into the | structed. by various household ar- | swailowed,,. Love... That which | is rather {mportant—and that you nature and seal,” she added, “mem- bership cards will not be recog- nized.” Fascist Non-Stop Fliers Land in Rio de Janeiro RIO DE JANEIRO, March 28 (UP).—Capt. Ignacio Jiminez and Capt. Francisco Iglesias, Spanish army aviators, landed here in their plane Jesus Del Grand Poder at 4:44 p. m. today, completing their long distance flight from Seville, Spain. The aviators flew here today from Bahia, Brazil, where they landed be- jeause of fuel shortage Tuesday did not have any preconceived pur- _ (Continued on Page Five) morning. They left Bahia at 8:20 } i, Noe mre (6:20 a me Be Se Ts) ges | RUSSIELA TOURS FROM $385.00 The Soviet government welcomes its friends and will put all facilities at your disposal to see everything— go everywhere — form your own opinion of the greatest social experi- ment in the History of Mankind at first hand. World Tourists Inc. offer you a choice of tours which will ex- actly fit your desires and purse, Don’t dream of going to Russia— make it a reality! Write immediately to WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. | 175-5th Avenue, New York, N. Y. Tel. ALGonquin 6656 TS CTS ET AO TI GE a TA AAAAAAAAAL ] START READING THESE SERIALS TODAY! IN THE Daily 32s Worker 26 UNION SQUARE, New York City ON SALP AT ALL NEWSSTANDS IN NEW YORK AND VICINITY Buy an extra copy for your shop mate and friend. 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