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5, 1929 | OUBT MANZO'S ABILITY TO END INSURRECTION ‘ederals Win Another Skirmish at Naco MEXICO CITY, April’ 14.—Con- ieting opinion is expressed by mili- iry experts here as to whether Gen-| ‘al Manzo’s offer to surrender the hole “rebel” army in Senora, stated y Manzo to be between 5,000 and 000 in number, can be carried out. ll agree that Manzo’s flight to U.) . and offer to surrender means that very considerable part of these ‘oops are dissatisfied, and will quit the first opportunity. The government’s answer to Man- » was that the surrender must be nconditional, and that the higher fficers must be prepared to stand ‘ial for treason, Press reports today said General rancisco Manzo, one of the “rebel” iiefs, had been condemned to death y the “rebels,” for his failure to apture Mazatlan, in Sinaloa State, | com the federal troops there. It ‘as said, however, that the rebel | oy. Fausto Topete of Sonora, had iterceded for Manzo and enabled | im to cross the border into the Inited States. * ers NACO, Sonora, April 14.—Gov- rnment troops yesterday defeated 00 rebel cavalrymen near that city. | hirty-seven of the rebels were re- orted captured and 22 killed. Four ederals were slain in the skirmish. The reactionary clerical forces be- ore this besieged federal town are onsiderably less, according to re- orts of deserters from the “rebel” anks who are steadily coming in to) ain the federals. One of the latest ) arrive is Captain Isauro R. Mal- onado, who walked here today with ive men, and stated that 4,000 men ° General Escobar’s army retreat- g from Chihuahua had passed thru ogales and were on their way outh to join the forces deserted by ieneral Manzo. Important detachments of General ‘opete’s army, lying before Naco, ave been sent south also, and a attle may take place in Southern sonora where these troops meet the dvancing federals, under the direct ommand of Secretary of War Jalles. Escobar, who now calls himself President of Mexico,” has appointed tovernor Topete commander-in-chief f his southern army, prefering him- elf to stay near the border in the vent of a defeat. The rebel gunboat. Washington sas routed by the federal gunboats ul Progreso and Montezuma today vhen it atempted to halt debarka- ion of troops from the government hips at Guaymas. The Washington fled after a short kirmish, leaving federals in con- rol of the situation at Guaymas, here they completed a strategic nove in putting 1,500 soldiers shore. The force is a decided men- Curtis Makes Publicity from Tribesmen Vice President Curtis, who boasts that he has “Indian blood,” hales a delegation of the Hopi tribe before him for photographic purposes. The Hopi’s are supposed to be pleading with Curtis to save them from their neighbors, the Navajos. There hasn't been an Indian war for generations in the Hopi country. United Fruit Co. Exploits Negroes in Colombia Strike ace to the rebels, both in Sinaloa | jand Sonora. Word of an encounter at San Blas indicated that the troops which General Topete took from his camp south of Naco had joined the col- |umn formerly commanded by Gen- jeral Francisco Manzo. | San Blas is south of Guaymas and General Topete apparently has massacre of the workers. taken up a position between two| I spite of the crushing of the federal forces, that of General Car-|strike and the imprisonment of jenas advancing from Mazatlan and jeaders and militant workers, a new that landed at Guaymas. strike movement was looming, ac- cording to press dispatches. To Although the Southern Pacific /P*¢vent this movement the United de Mexico Railroad Saturday night |Fruit Company demands permission \Grdered all its employes to leave |t© import Negro workers from Ja- their posts in rebel territory, tied |™aica, There is already great un- jup all its trains and severad ¢ {employment in Colombia and the re- ‘om- | ae nowy munications, trains carrying rebel |SUIt of this importation of Negroes ‘troops were still moving southwar ‘j|fvom Jamaica would be to drive from Nogales today. They were) BOGOTA, Colombia, Apri! 14.— sidering a request of the United uit Company to import 10,000 |English-speaking Negroes from Ja- maica to replace the Colombian jworkers on its banana plantations jin Santa Marta, where recently the great strike ended with a bloody Force Railroad Men. jaway all Colombian workers from |manned by either insurgent troops | the banana plantation districts and : railroad men forced to op-|t? destroy their organization. In bee a Pete se P| addition to this, the Jamaicans, who only speak English, will not be ac- cessible to the propaganda from the Cop Confesses Holdup Spanish-speaking natives and will and Squeals on Woman ini ee eR ulation. 0 f Poli a | The American sugar companies olice s 4S eae ah Wikien’s »#ineks” Patrolman OWS lio eee ene, wee tee ?. dncin Morel | they import French-speaking Haiti- ae Se enerun ys oad ‘rTl-ans and English-speaking Jama- jsania Court that he helped im a@licans, to prevent their unification |Bronx holdup that netted $25,000.| Sth ‘the native organized Spanish-| |Three_gutomobiles were held up by| <yeaking workers. Even in the Do- Blenk and his pals last January. The | vinican Republic and Haiti, where |policeman ngt only confessed, butt}, daily wages are not more than ’5 evi Y | : turned state’s evidence on a woman 99 cents a day, the sugar companies j accomplice. import for the work in the sugar jm Something else, however, must be |... i7ati aot Kia asia ot the other enemy of Bolshe-|£enization and forming of a native vism in the working class movement. | factory workers’ class. It is not sufficiently known abroad) The organized native white and | that Holshevinm afin tong, years of inestizo workers of Cuba and Co- | struggle against pore panegent® hex. |lombia are thus to be replaced by olutioniem, ag from, anarehism.—-v.|imported Negro laborers, who can |be expelled and deported back to All Class Conscious Workers at the!their island at the first sign ef un- Coliseum May First. rest or dissatisfaction. In addition, |The Colombian government is con- | ls Jamaicans, to prevent the or- | REACTION WINS IN COSTA RIGA: - JINGO ELECTED ‘Anti-Soviet Man Now Foreign Minister | SAN JOSE, Costa Rico, April 14 —Several charges in the personne] of the Costa Rican government were made recently. The conservative party, calling itself “Union Nacion- | alista,” remains in power with the difference that the former mild con- servative minister of foreign af- fairs, Rafael Castro Quesada, was replaced by a militant reactionary, the Deputy Roberto Smyth, who in May, 1928, during the debate in the parliament concerning the recogni- tion of the Soviet Union, opposed most violently the reestablishment of relations with the Soviet Union, | | proposed by a former president of the republic, the leader of the radical reformist party, General Jorge Vo- lio. Arturo Vilio, the former chair- man of the chamber of deputies, a mild conservative and relative of Jorge Volio, was »ppointed minister of agriculture. It is probable that Smyth, as for- eign minister of Costa Rica, will be more agreeable to the United States |than the former more nationalistic minister, Quesada, or his predeces- sor, Salvador Guerrero, who opposed | Hughes at the Pan-American Con- ference at Havana, 1928, and who | was later removed to a European diplomatic post. ‘Soviet Scientist Makes RejuvenationDiscovery LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R., (By Mail) —Dr. Avestissov of Leningrad has devised an entirely new method for rejuvenating the organism This method radically differs from worn all the previous methods, such as the | transplantation of glands, the in- jection of sperm, ete., in that it not glands and tissues of the body. In this way the entire organism is re- stored to normal activity which pro- longs life. The new method con- sists of the injection Into the organ- ism of the patient of products of the disintegration of the patient’s | own ‘glands, which stimulates the activity of the respective organ and of the organism as a whole. Dr. Avetissov is now continuing ‘his re- | juvination experiments under clini- cal conditions. unists fight on behalf of the ediate aims and working class. present movem, fending the ment.—Marx, ure of the move- those who remain after the crop sea json are in permanent fear of de- | portation and can be used as strike- breakers against the natives, whose ‘language they do not understand. True LAWBREAKERS « A STORY of LIFE in the U.S.S.R. ternational Publishers, Copyright, 1929 By LYDIA SEIFULINA Grigori Ivanovich Peskov (Grishka), a homeless waif who has been through the civil wars, is sent to a home for juvenile de- linquents in a Siberian town. His restless spirit finds the constraint there hard to endure and he be- gins to think of escape. The chil- dren’s home is next to a nunnery and there is a constant war be- tween the nuns and children. The addition of 50 new children to the home makes it necessary for the nuns to vacate and move to a house across the river. On the day when they are being moved a crowd of muzhiks ‘and peasant women gathers around them. soe * (Continued.) HE carts for the nuns were \ brought up. The big gate was pened. The sentry was placed at he gate. And the news spread uickly, as if by a secret wive, At nee crowds began to stream in in 1otley waves. Mother Evstolya Janced sharply from under her lack cowl. She halted at the gate, all and solemn. She turned delib- ately te the icon nailed to the te. She bowed down to the earth. sant women in the crowd began blubber. To cap the climax the Nother Superior, standing beside cart, bowed low to the four cor- | pis of the earth. Her face is like old scion. Stern. The nuns fol- ywed her like black shadows, They | peated all the movements of the fother Superior. The black figures, arply outlined in the blue spring + awakened a feeling of sadness. peasant woman rushed to the with a ringing cry: “Our mothers! Our interceders! orgive us, for Christ’s sake!” Another, after her, shouted more rilly stil! “Oh, where are they taking you » from God’s temple?” A third flung herself under the oofs of the Mother Superior’s — “Don’t hold this against us! Don’t complain to God!” The three raised a clamorous wailing. Scores of piercing female leries responded. At the sound of the lamentations, passers-by came from the streets. A mounted sol- dier, carrying an official packet, checked his horse in full gallop. He stood stock still, held by curiosity. A woman-peddler, Filatova, aban- doned her push-cart loaded with cakes, and rushed to the soldier. “Why do you mock the Christian faith? God will punish you! ... Just wait, He'll punish you!” The crowd stirred, aroused by the shrieks of the women, Men's voices began to rumble: “We won't let ‘em break up the convent!” “The nuns ain't hurt no one! Whom did they bother?” The church warden, a_ nimble, ecclesiastical sckool, popped up near the carts. He squawked in a cracked, raucous voice: “Where is the religious freedom? Where is the religious freedom granted by the government?” His cry egged on the crowd. “We ain’t got no rights!” “We'll complain to Lenin!” “An arbitrary act of the local au- thorities.” “Infidels! They didn’t lodge any- body at the sheeny Synagogue, did they? Sheenies, Christ betrayers!” “Ah-a! So! They let the mosque and the Roman churches alone! But they lodged the bastards, at an Orthodox convent. An Orthodox one—mind you!-—no other would do!” Cia Dee | ND the “bastards” had already run out of the yard in a noisy crowd. They looked at everybody with wide-open eyes. They were in- toxicated with the fun of the scan- dal. They got into everybody’s way, like sanseless ruvnies. Grishke for- orse. She even let go tis rooster nbraced in her arms. nl nL ebant hi gray-haired teacher of the former, ,Shone and his little head rolled glee- jfully from side to side. “Great! . . . The women are | yell look how red the muzhiks’ |mugs are! And the nuns are just like black dolls on springs. They’re |bowin’ right and left. They’ve |serewed up “their lips.” “Bet they’re sore!” Grishka filled his lungs with air jand full of rebellious chalienge, |shouted quite ‘close to the Mother Superior: “Black-tailed pests!” The peasant women responded in a wild concert: “He’s insulting our mothers, the bastard!” “He’s swearing at our interces- sor!” They would have mauled Grishka | badly. But the sentinel grabbed him by the neck and threw him back to the convent wall. The sentinel \himself had only just come to his |senses. He had been absorbed in watching the scene. Another sen- tinel also came to himself and shouted toward the yard: “Telephone for a detachment!” But the news of the commotion jhad already spread throughout the town. Mounted men were hasten- ing from all sides. “Disperse! . , . Disperse! . . .” “Citizens, those who do not be long to the convent, stand back— back!” One of the nuns shrieked and threw herself to the ground. A cavairyman rushed toward her: “Help the Mother to the cart... . There, there, take her under the atms.... So. ... Put her down. . + « Citizen Mother Superior, step into the cart, if it pleases you... . |Give her a life. Help her up!” | ae ee MERRY glazier, who was in the thick of the crowd, roared: “Look! A, military cavalier!” They caught him up quickly: “He-he! ... Ha-ha! ... Even the nuns like the cavalie’ : “Oh, they don’t hall i va walkl? 3 when they're “The damned opened their traps! mothers! “He-e-e! worth, aunti ten-spot. .. .” “Dirty dogs! dogs! They’ve Oh, our +. Our martyr ng us another penny’s I'll give you a Soviet Sons of ——-!" “Oh, stop swearing, please. Come away, Manya.” “He-he-he-e! Manya.’.. .” “Well, well! What a swell! Skirts [like bells—pockets both sides! La- idies, dear ladies!” | “Look, look, the nuns are packing their things.” “There they come with bundles, jthe whores. look at the coffers they're draggi: with them!” : novi “They found a kettle stuffed with jgold in the Mother Superior’s cel- \lar. “A hundred yards of cloth!” “Look at the martyrs! They’re ‘not being put out into the street. They can pray and fast in the other [place just as well. Isn't that So, Vasya?” “As a Communist, I approve of the action of the Gubispoleom” (Ex- ceutive Committee of Provincial Soviet Administration), “And I’m not a Communist, but in this case I understand them. |There’s no place for the children. I jean see that.” | “Sure: are the kids to croak, or |what? They want apartments and jettendants, but the children are to be left in the gutter.” “And the orphans? ,.. into the river, hey?” “There, there, disperse. . . . Citi- zens, citizens! Stand back!” The nuns lifted their trailing skirts. They hurriedly packed their ibelongings. They had lost their iconlike-air. The crowd stirred and rumbled. The sympathy for the nuns died out, judging by the re- jmarks, Grishka quietly stepped jaway from the wall and dived into the crowd. | (To Be Contin ‘Come away, Pitch ’em ec) TLY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 1 Viany Desertions 1n Mexican “Rebel” Army; Ca | only stimulates the activity of the) organism but also restores the equilibrium between the various Poverty-stricken! And | U.S, RECEIVER HAS DIFFICULTY WITH GHINA FINANCES Masses Spurn Feng Phrases; Turn to C.P. By YING-LI. PEKING, April 14—While Kem- merer and his Party of receivers are attempting to get the machinery in motion for taking over the fi-| nances of the Chinese nationalist | government for Morgan and Stand- ard Oil, the war lords awe maneuy- pital Celebrates Offer to ering against each other for control of the government itself, with Chiang Kai-shek’s position becoming more precarious eve Kemmerer, amba: dinary, has admi fi- the nances of twelve different govern- ments for Wall Street, extending |from Latin America to Poland. He | started for China with a Party of | financial advisors and state depart- ment cronies totalling one hundred. He arrived in China amidst rumors of a loan of one hundred million dollars, on the basis of the “stabil- ization” of nationalist currency. As an assurance in advance, the Chiang Kai-shek clique established last year the new Nationalist Bank with its central office in the British conces- sion, temporarily, at leas safe from the reach of the masses of workers and peasants. | Nanking Betrayers Bribed. | The arrengement was a simple one; the Nanking betrayers get |large amounts of money with which /to insure their hold on the govern- ment in return for which they allow Wall Street to plunder the natural resources and enslave further the Chinese masses. The one uncertain factor, how ever, was the unrest of the ma This uncertain factor is now mak- ing very difficult the planned ar- rangement. Japan in Retreat. The combined pressure of the U. S, and the Chinese Nationalists is forcing the Japanese to retreat (in Manchuria. The Japanese have | always supported the weaker gen- eral in the Chinese civil war there- by preventing any | Chinese government and using this as an excuse to keep their troops in China. Thus only three months ago they outfitted Chang Tsung-chng, who previously was completely de- | feated, and helped him to entrench himself in the Chefoo area where he now momentarily rules. Under pres- sure the Japanese must make a ges- ture at least at withdrawing their forces from the occupied areas of | Tsinan-fu and Tsing-tao. This they are willing to do because they know that the inevitable conflict between their running-dog, Chang Tsung- chang, and those of the Americen imperialists, Chiang Kai-shek, etc., will soon offer them the e: “protecting their citizens’ and thus again occupy the areas in- | volved. In this way they shall have made their gesture and yet lose nothing. Inner Kuomintang Situati Then the famous “myste! of Japanese polities must be consid- ered, namely, Feng Yu-hsiang. And with him must be considered the en- tire question of the inner-Kuomin- tang struggle. In order to pacify Feng, Chiang decided ‘to give him the area that the Japanese are to evacuate. It becomes clear now, however, that Feng showed up much more strong- ly at the Kuomintang Congress than | Chiang thought. Instead of to him he threatens to use these new footholds for greater struggle against Chiang and the ruling clique. This has so frightened to the uninitiated an astonishing thing. They approached Tokio on April 13, thru Dr. Wang, the for- eign minfster, and asked the Jap- |anese to stay in this area “tempo- rarily.”~ | In. the meantime Great Britain, not to be shoved ground, is intrenching itself by sup- porting the war lords in the Canton area, which is especially important | to Hong Kong trade. Famine Increasing. While this intrigue amongst the war lords and with the imperialist | powers is going on, the famine is increasing its extent and the misery of the general population is grow- ing. The masses are moving to the Left and the Communists are again gaining considerable strength. Feng, who poses as a “man of the masses” among the war lords, is now trying to capitalize the increasing revolu- tionary fervor of the masses by em- ploying “Left” phrases and shout- | ing against Nanking corruption. In the meantime the Communists are growing in popularity and strength among the masses. This fact is emphasized by the fear shown in the butchery of Commu- nists which has again begun on a |big scale. Reports have it that a thousand Communists have been | shot within several days in Canton alone. Th: movement, now more |intrenched, and schooled through participation in previous uprisings, is better than ever fulfilling the | hope that the international prole- | tariat, through the Comintern, has | placed in it. After every revolution markin, progressive phase in the clans xt aie, the purely repressive cha of the State power stands o bolder and holder relief.—Marx, in consolidated | man | The England and at Lengchamps, France. at Longchamps show instantly the Rationalization Even in Gambling “Totalizator” automatic bet counting machine used all over Forty-two electric calculato winning prices on boards outs How British Labor Party | Prepared for Coming War A “Blue Book” recent! ued by the admiralty makes clearer than ever the’ real importance of the de- cision taken by the “labor” govern- ment in 1924 to set about the build- ing of five new cruisers. For this “Blue Book” shows how much greater the strength of the British navy i is and was in than that of any other navy, | Taking the figures for Feb. 1, 1929, Britain and America are ap- proximately equal in battleship strength, if Britain’s four \cruisers are counted as equal to two e ships. But in ordinary cruisers Britain has 52, with 9 building and 3 pro- jected. The U.S.A. only possesses 52, with 8 building and 15 projected. Thus for three or four years thé number of British cruisers will re- main nearly double the American. (Cruisers take three years to build.) ‘ It was with this prospect clearly te be seen ahead that Mr. MacDon- ald, five years ago, decided upon a bigger cruiser program than had been thought necessary before or since. In another sphere also the labor igovernment of 1924 took a decision in favor of war preparation, namely, with regard to two great airships— “super-Zeppelins” — which will ready for flight this spring or sum- nier, having been four yeays plan- jning and building. Built for Bombing. The Zeppelins, as everyone knows, have never yet run a successful pas- |senger or freight vice, But, as everyone also kno’ the bombs they can carry will make a nasty mess of a town. In 1923 one of the biggest of the British Zeppelins broke her back; the crew were killed, The “Times” wrote last October, referring to a book about the building of the new “suner-Zeppelins” R-100 and R-101: | “It was ynecessary, after the loss of R-38 either to abandon airship development indefinitely cr to make an obviously risky and expensive experiment, and Mr. MacDonald’s government decided on the latter course.” A labor government would be a battle- be USSR INDUSTRY SHOWS NEW GAIN 1924, Smaller Than Jan. But | Beats 1928 Record Soviet industzial production suf- fered a decline during the month of |February from the record totals at tained in January, it stated b; Amtorg today. The decline in pro- duction was due both to the smaller number of days in the month and to the severe weather conditions, which interfered to some extent with the operations of certain industries. In- dustrial output was, however, con- \siderably gbove that of Februa 1928, according to cable repo ceived here. Coal production for Februar; 1929, totaling 3,236,000 metric tons, was 8 per cent above that of a year ago. The output of oil of 908,000 tons increased 12 per cent. Pig iron production amounting to 301,- 300 metric tons gained 14 per cent. | The cotton cloth output totaled 22: 012,00 meters in February, 1929 showing an increase of 64 per cent over February 1928. Soviets exports across European frentiers during February totaled 48,700,000 rubles and imports 37,- 400,000 rubles, making a favorable trade balance for the month of 11,- 300,000 rubles. The foreign trade turnover for the first five months of the current fiscal year beginning |Oc‘ober 1, 1928, shows a favorable | trade balance of 24,200,000 rubles, as lagainst an adverse trade balance of | 31,600,000 rubles in the first five ‘months of the fiscal year 1927-28. POSTPONES INCREASE | The Federal District Court has temporarily stopped the 15 per cent increase in phone rates granted the New York Telephone Co. by the special master recently, and has ap- pointed a statutory court of three judges to rehear the case. Page Three Surrender ‘SIMON GROUP OFF FOR HOME; HATED BY INDIA MASSES Backed Vicious Drive on Communists FEOMBAY, India, April 14.—The Simon Comr ion, sent by the tish Gov ent to inves e nd find ways and means of st gthening the position of British imperialism in India, sailed yester- dey from here. They left as a part- | | ing gift to the Hindu masses the proposed laws for the rut pression of the increasin tionary activities of the workers and peasants. dn a telegram a ed to Lord Irwin, the Viceroy, John Simon announced that the commission had “accomplished the first stage of our ’ This undoubtedly r mots to arrive greeme with the bour- Nationalists, who, scared by ‘the increasing strength of the Com- jmunists and other Left element |have been increasingly anxious [pris slight concessions from a better att the working | geois for the British government, which might br before the masse: “victory” and thereby \growing revolutionary fervor. That the commission has m ably failed to impress the mas with its phrases about “bettering the status of the Indian native ele- |ment” or its promises of “autunomy” jis clearly evident from the violently jhostile demonstrations they nave had to face and even more siguifi- antly from the of strength which was suffered by the pacifists and the non-cooperationists, organ- ‘ized in the Ghandi movement, who {have become more indentified wit! |British imperialism by their con- {tinual opposition to the militant | demonstrations of the workers, loss SEEK WIRE GRAB IN JUGOSLAVIA U. S.-Controlled Firm Extends Influence BELGRADE, Yugolsavia, April 14. —The $vedish-American Match Trust, cor lled now by capital, is attempting to secure the telephone and telegraph monopoly in Yugoslavia in exchange for an additional loan to the dilapidated governmient.:.. The Yugoslavia government has | already turned the match monopoly over to this tremendous financi organization of American and Euro- pean financiers. MEXICO BUYS THREE PLANES. | WASHINGTON, D. C., April 14, —Three airplanes, purchased by the Mexican government in New York, were ordered to proceed directly to |the western coast via Durango, it !was announced tonight. The planes being | pacified with the concessions made | Manking that they did what seems} into the back-| left New York today. rs war government. The British work- ers will show in the coming elections whether they want tht by press- ing forward—not only in those areas where Communist candidates are al- ready adopted, but in every indus- trial town—with preparations to op- pose all three of the employers’ par- ties. * THE CALL WITHIN By BORIS DIMONDSTEIN A Novel of the Russian Revolution PRICE $2.00 THE BOSTON GLOBE, »: “The Call moving novel “MME. X” CONFESSES | SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 14. --The senate, hearing impeachment proceedings against Judge Carlos B. Hardy, was told today by Mrs. Wise- man-Seilaff that the judge per- suaded her to commit perjury and say that she was the “Mme. X” with | Kenneth B. Ormiston, whereas Rev. | Aimee McPherson was really with | him instead of being kidnapped. | Boris Dimondstein—A swiftly- kes one through the fir: Revolut . There is a brevity of character ation and tumult ¢ events. The author ts to tell his tale and he has eschewed much that seems to be traditional in the nove but the work is, nevertheless, in its departure from’ accepted form, a’ valuable piece of fiction.” To be had at all booksellers, or direct from the publishers. BEE DE PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC., NEW YORK Celebrate the International Work- | ers May Day at the Coliseum, AAAAAAAAAAAA TT | | VVVVVVVVVCVV OS VVUVVVVVVVVVYT TOOLS DOWN! 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