The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 22, 1929, Page 3

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- hiang, OT" AS EXCUSE IR-NEW TERROR msu Moslems Revolt, Famine Grows HANGHAT, April 21.—Captain Ito, treasurer of the Japanese y of occupation, was shot down the main street of the interna- al settlement in Tsinan-fu last at, presumably by assassins of ang Kai-shek, who is interested seeing the Japanese remain in ntung. be he Chinese authorities im- ately raised the cry of “Com- ist plot” and several alleged munists were thrown into jail, <ing the number of accused work- in the prison 18. ‘ater the workers succeeded aking jail, killing a police officer in Feng in Armed Truce, eee E “COMMUNIST, a= eae ers iP toe Photo shows Mussolini, whose fascist gove to starvation and tortured many t trained crops of butchers of workers, march Oppressor of Italian Workers Reviews ment has reduced on the reviewi Unrest is growi o death. Mu e recent farce “election.” DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK,’ MONDAY, APRIL 22, 1929 Page Three _ Pans Police to Attack = Trained Butchers POLICE PREPARE ‘Soviet Seamen’s Clubs Grow; .. Hamburg Club Led Strike TOBREAK FRENCH MAY DAY MEETS Entire Force to Be on “Special Duty” Scamen’s Club in Hamburg. |" In the narrow dirty port street, PARIS, France, April 21.—Extra- squeezed in between the inpropor- ordinary preparations are being tionately huge statue of Bismarck By A. ULANOFSKY | Apoet seven years ago a group of revolutionary German seamen, upon instructions from the Interna- tional Committee for Propaganda and Action of Transport Workers, organized the first International the Italian workers and peasants ng stand as the Alpine corps, a ng in Italy, as shown by 130,000 made by the Paris police for at- and the huge old church of tempting to smash May Day demon-j Michaelis, the new club had, it strations, it has been made kncwn. scemed, small chances for successful Under the: leadership of Chiaope,| competition against the nearby ex- the prefect of police of Paris, who cellently equipped Seamen’s House made himself odious to every French and Christian Missions, which were worker by his persecutions of work-| <5 located that they were in full ers during the Sacco and Vanzetti| prominance, right on the coast. demonstrations, the French police Nevertheless, despite all the diffi are being assigned for special duty culties for a stranger to find this yon May Day. little alley, and despite the far from A specially large contingent with attractive aspect of the old seven- reserves will be on hand in the Paris teenth century building in ~vhichythe }Red Belt, cordon rouge, of Commu-| new club had its quarters, the sea- |nist workers’ towns which surround men began to frequent it. the May Day ing class consciousness of the sea- men, and the increasingly growing hatred towards the reactionary lead- ers of the official seamen’s unions, soon forced several International Seamen’s Clubs to take upon them-| selves the realization of purely or- ganizational tasks. It is sufficient to recall, for in- stance, the recent successful strug-| gle of the German seamen of, th fishing vessels, conducted: under the | leadership of the Hamburg Inter- national Seamen’s Club, the. port workers’ strike in Bordeaux, the Marseilles seamen’s strike and a| whole series of other strikes of sea-| men and port workers, during the course of which the International Seamen’s Clubs either completely} put into the background the official leaders of the reformist seamen’s unions or conducted the . struggle | directly against the united front of hipowners, police and reactionary | trade union leaders. | | Demonsirations MONCADA LAUDS. U.S. INVASION OF NICARAGUA Praises Guard Famed for Atrocities MANAGUA, ‘Nicaragua, April 21. | —Reyiewing the Nicaragua. national uard, whose atrocities against the natives surpass, if possible, those of the United States marines, president, Moncada yesterday was lavish in his praises of ‘Américan imperialism’s dirty work in his country. It is significant that representa- tives of the American army of occu- pation stood at Moncada’s elbow thruout the review and his speech. The officers of the Nicaraguan na- tional guard are picked from Ameri-? can marines. Referring to the national guard, whose actions have been so atrocious AUDA Riod tO EEO ENE oneane (ee eee eee | the city on every side. Many of the. In 1923 during the mass struggles | Tmtiadiate ‘Tanke | that they have even found their way Soandite two others. This es- é ai m towns have Communist adminis-|of the German seamen and port! ‘The Fifth Conference of the Revo-| into the strictly censored press, Mon- e the Chinese and Japanese au- Beat Negro Worker | " |Green Urges Sabotage trations and "are, planning large| workers, the Hamburg International jytionary Transport Workers put be- |cada admitted that the guard “might rities, who cooperated in house to to Force “Confession” apee i of Militant Strikes lemonstrations. 1s iappe’s | Seamen’s Club was promoted to fore the international clubs the task| have made some ‘errors, bu' err se searches for the workers, are 2mpting to use as evidence of a mmmunist plot.” ‘he incident, as Chiang antici- ed, has increased the tension be- en the Japanese and Chinese ces and may lead to the former’s iaining indefinitely and thus pre- iting the troops of Feng Yu- ang from seizing the province. \ temporary lull in the struggle ming between Chiang and Feng s announced yesterday with a apromise which permits Feng’s ops at Taian, 45,000 men, to enter nan-fu within two weeks and to upy the Tsingtao-Tsinan railroad 125 miles from Tsinan to Weh- on, From there to the sea it will PINE BLUFF, Ark., (By Mail).— Charging that he was crippled and |nearly blinded by a brutal beating administered in an attempt to ex- tort a “confession” of a crime about which he knew nothing, Dick Cor. , a Negro worker, has filed suit against the officials of the Cot- ton Belt Railroad for $25,000. The beating occurred on a prison farm near Sherril, after the worker was accused of stealing cotton from the railroad. 3 New Zealand Blames “Foreion Sailors” for IS UP TODAY IN SUPREME COURT Auto Owners Fighting Higher Oil Prices April 21.—The two cases in which Harry F. Sin- ir has been sentenced to jail prob- ably will be before the Supreme urt tomorrow. The appeal of Sinclair from a! LOS ANGELES, (By. Mail).—A persona! letter from William Green,| policy of the French government in| fective international solidarity of | oonsciousnes reactionary head of the, American Federation of Labor, appearing in an issue of the Los Angeles Citi- zen, stated in effect that A. F. of .. members are called on to quit supporting strikes conducted under left wing leadership. | DIES OF HUNGER. LONDON (By | Mail).—Henry Herron, an unemployed + worker, dropped dead of hunger while wait- ing on a relief queue in Bermondsey. | WORKER BADLY BURNED. purpose to break up such demion- position of :n organizing centre for strations. workers employed in marine trans- | .It is rumored that in line wit the, port, a centre of organization of ef-| \arresting the entire Paris district) seamen of all races and all flags. | convention of the French Communist Number of Clubs Grow. | Party and arresting delegates and| During the seven years the Inter- | keeping the national convention un-, national Seamen’s Clubs have grown | | der strict surveillance, specially out-| both qualitatively and quantitatively. rageous sentences will be handed| The Fifth Conference of Revolu- | down. to all workers arrested for May/ tionary Transport Workers held Jn | Day demonstration, April 1928, summed up the activities In spite of the action of the police|f the international clubs. At the thé working class all over France is| Present time, not counting the in- | preparing for one of the biggest in-| ternational seamen 8 clubs in all the | ternational May Day celebrations in| ports of the U.S. S. R. there are its history. ‘Not only in Paris but) clubs in Hamburg, Rotterdam, Mar- in’ every city and village in the seilles, Bordeaux, New York, Phila- ‘country, the French Communist delphia, Copenhagen, Esbjerg and of organizationally reinforcing their| propaganda activities and the gen- eral growth of revolutionary: class. amongst the marine transport workers. The most important immediate task of the International Seamen’s Clubs in the ports of. eapitalist countries is the establishment of unity in the struggle of the Seamen is human.” The Nicaraguan president, who is kept in office by American bayonets, | declared that the United States for- ces. had not come to Nicaragua to | conquer the country, altho they are | now in absolute control of it. “The* United States has come to Nicara- |gua for ' peace,” was’ Moncada’s amazing discovery. and port workers. Being in the centre of the everyday struggle of this category of marine transport workers, the International Seamen’s Clubs already at the present time |are a most important factor in the united front and class education of the seamen and port workers. A ‘great future awaits the Interna-| Supplementing the national’ guard is the volunteer national guard made |up of business men and plantation |owners, whose brutalities against |the Nicaraguan: workers and peas- ants have been more terrible than | those of the national guard. | Le SE ae May Day—the day which began . ye Ak ts & : LONDON, (By Mail). — John A A Br ; s , 3 Fi | with a general strike for the S- occupied by Chiang’s troops. + ’ . six-month sentence for contemp* of > y a Party is leading the May Day Bremen. : | tional Seamen's Clubs in this work.| J/t® 2 wemeral stein eng is thus excluded from the Native Slaves’ Strike coun in jury-shadowing, with the|Lavers, a worker, was so severely’ prepsrations of the working olace,”| ‘The popularity of these organiza- | our day in the . and a state of armed tension appeals of three of his ates in| burnt in a blast at Charing Cross| : tions amongst the seamen is COl- | == CCS between the two warlords. Pee eee Moslem Revolt in Kansu. EKING, April 21.—Reports from nsu state that the Moslem: ain in revolt and have virtual 1 of the entire province, having ‘eated the armies of Feng Yu- | TOU i 77 ang. These have retreated into : | * ., 2 YOUNG WORKERS (COMMUNIST) LEAGUE eee ger able to endure thei slave con-’ senate contempt. This conviction "Much more important for the oil) Scores at ec! Before LOM. J RY Si ahaa See iilcacs we The famine in Kansu is now so “itions. ey were suppressed PY arose from his refusal to answer industry than Sinelair’s trial now is Workers’ mi nat y ee : ational Speakers. rible that thousands of peasants | {T0oPs. | questions of the Senate Teapot Dome the administration policy of assist- Ene es by 18,015 seamen. In 1928 the aver- Reunion of the Hawaiian Communist League » dying every day while the Mos- 1 soldiers sometimes go three days thout food. The peasants have LEICESTER, Eng., (By Mail). oil frauds, in which Sinclair took a ing. inist Party of Great Britain yester- George Pershing, Harvey Steele A 9 i, Jar. ~ vi re i 4 in i | The attendance of the club alone mm robbed of everything they pos- —Over 300 parents in the Nar- leading part, along with the rebelli- The high prize policy today met ga) Mert'h scatiine tele alle nd n itati s by the soldiers. borough district of Leicester, op-|cus head of Rockefeller’s Indiana oil opposition from the American Auto-|5) Cook ceeretary’ of the miners’ ©, Not Sufficient, of course, to serve Mass Recitation by YOUNG PIONEERS To add to the horrors of starva- n and military looting, the winter Kansu has been unusually severe, ow zero weather continuing for eks at a time. Cannibalism is reported to be on » increase. HOBART, New” Zealand, (By Mail)—The government investiga- | tors into the recent demonstration ; and strike of native workers at baul blame the instigation of the e on “some foreign colored sail- 's,” as their report reads, The natives struck about two months ago when they were no lon- 0} PARENTS IN SCHOOL STRIKE. posed to the “grouping” system put into operation in the schools, have declared a “strike,” keeping their children from school. May Day—the day which began with 2 general strike for the eight | hour day in the U.S. * the shadowing of Fall-Sinclair trial jurors in 1927, will be argued late in the afternoon. During the <>rly portion of to- morrow’s session, > decisions are ad, the court is exp. d to act cn nelai its dec’ upheld his three-month sentence for Committee in 1924. The exposure of the Teapot Dome company, has been repeatedly charged to the Rockefeller family’s desire to get rid of one of their rivals. It appears from the light sentence given Sinclair and the possibility Power Station that his clothes fell off him. after all, that it is not the intention of the Standard Oil trust to take any severe revenge on its defeated rival. "s petition for ve-hearing of The leases Sinclair got were long| ion of two weeks ago, which_ago cancelled, and the present cases | are mere “mopping up.” ing the oil trust to keep prices high by forbidding new permits for drill- mobile Association, which issued a statement declaring that while it _was in favor cf. “conservation,” it would fight the higher prices that | might result frort the policy of the | administration and of the American | that he may not have to serve it| Petroleum Institute. Tue LAWBREAKERS International Publishers. Copyright, 1929 lossal. The following few figures * gives a slight idea of the scope of the activities of the International Seamen’s Clubs: During the whole ef 1927 the Hamburg Club was visited by 9,593 seamen, The aver- age monthly attendance of this In- ternational Seamen’s Club in 1928 had already reached the figure of BRITISH CP HITS COOK'S TREASON age monthly attendance of the club | was approximately 2,000. Good Agitational Work. LONDON, England, April 21.— The Political Bureau of the Commu- : fare . as an indication of the extent of |union, now a traitor, in which they ork carried out. A great deal of {denounced his actions in fawning the activities of the clubs are con- jon the prince of Wales at a recent! jucted on the ships, themselves. Hun- |“tea for workers. dreds of ships nuclei and commit- At that time Cook said that the tees, organized by the clubs, with | prince, who poses as a friend of the \:hich they maintain permanent con- | workers, had “brought the crown’ nections, serve as a sufficient guar- and the populace closer together!” antee of the growth of influence of “The Political Bureau of the Com- the ideas of the revolutionary trade |munist Party in Great Britain ob-| union movement amongst the mass | | serves your treachery to the work-| of workers engaged in marine trans- | evs’ cause,” said the telegram whick | port. the Communist Party sent to Cook. * & 8% MASS DEMO of OPENING FIFTH NATIONAL CONVENTION Paul Crouch, Walter Trumbull, “STRIKE,” by Mike Gold Sports’ Exhibition—Labor Sports’ Union APRIL 26TH AT 8 P. M. ADMISSION 25c Central Opera House, 67th St. & 3rd Ave. Tickets on Sale at: Daily Worker office, Young Workers League, 26-28 Union Square, Young Workers League, 43 E. 125th’ St. NSTRATION the | “It reached a further stage at yes- J' the general system of Interna- | terday’s banquet in fawning adula-|I tional Seamen’s Clubs a special | tion of a typical repregentative of preety ‘ ; | he ti is occupied by the clubs in | the class which battenk tape WOT ao. . Teak. Ghikousands A STORY of LIFE in the U.S.S.R. By LYDIA SEIFULINA WORKERS OF THE Grigori Ivanovich Peskov Grishka), a homeless waif, es- ipes from a home for juvenile de- nquents together with a group of ther young inmates. They live y begging and spend their nights 1 acemetery, Here they are dis- yered by Red soldiers and taken » the Narooraz (local department > education). Comrade Marty- oy, an energetic man of incisive srsonality, comes in and decides » take ten of the children along ith him to his children’s colony. ‘ere the children are employed at arious tasks and become filled ith the joy of a new life. eee e ELL, everything is ready now. Milk, hot water. The girls have iced around the portions of bread. And the horn sings out melo- vusly but commandingly: ‘Tu-ru-ru-turu-ru-turu!” The shore soon became crowded th children. sorts of heads, blue-eyed, black- , all kinds. Splashing, tumbling, ittering. The boys hemmed and uted in their bathing place. The ‘Is were bathing at the landing. ey screeched in high, shrill voices. ey were short-haired, and jumped out nimbly. They looked like ys. The horn sang out for the second ae, The noise from the lake rolled ward the bungalows. ae naked torsos of boys glistened ‘the sun. All rushed to the porch ning-room, as if about to storm a rt. he voice of a little, dark-haired 1 rang out in the crowd: “Monitors, come for tea.” Grishka, clad in a gray kitchen-| angrily. The white) ddy-blouses of girls flashed by. her everything around grew still/had run back and | “Who scattered the bridles about? | Khny! Hey, you gapers, there are no servants around here. Petrukha, Fedyakhin, were you on night watch over the horses? Who else? You took ’em out for racing again!” He spread his legs and seemed to grow into the ground near the barn, The farm-manager standing next to him pursed his thin lips, complain. ing: “That’s the result of your not let- ting me hire some drivers, Nikolai is away most of the time. And \what kind of farmers are these? | They’ll do for all the cattle. They're | workers in name only.” “Ah, what’s a worker? They'll} learn. Peskov, why do you gallop ike a stallion with that boiling-hot water? Don’t you see the pot’s! splashing over? Khny!” | | It was‘because Peskov had no- itieed Anna Sergeevna. She enters, (tall, white, quiet. She puckers one All kinds of voices,| corner of her mouth at the children-) directions. That is her smile. | et | GRISHKA had never before loved anybody or anything. Things | and people had all been one to him. But at the colony he learned to love jeverybody. And .Anna Sergeevna |more than all. She is like sunshine. |The mountains, the lake, the woods —all very well! But the sun is bet-) ter than all of them. Why is she) sunshine? Because, Grishka did not know. Only, when he looked at| |more beautiful. When they were |on duty together, he would follow. her, carrying the pail of slops like an icon, Martynov-noticed it twice. | He hemmed: ~ | | “He’s growing, the rascal,” he said to himself, and added “khny,” Children’s Homes. not without wonder. “There, you see, Mother Nature and work! They’re cured. And what a crust of dirt the city had plas- tered over these children. But they've washed it off. Th are now growing healthily, as it should be.” He made one of his grimaces, slapped his thighs, and finished with the thought: “They'll give a good offspring in due time.” | Ce, ee Te broad porch is humming with life. The whole colony is here; the children, the supervisors, the | coachman, the baker, the laundress. | and the seamstress. It is difficult to spy the grown-ups. There are only nine of them at the colony, and a hundred children. After tea they formed into little groups and seattered in various’ One squad went to the woods to gather mushrooms against the winter. The horse walked slow- ly along the road dragging a wagon. Children tumbled about in the grass. | A Tartar boy, slender, lithe, stately as a young pine, walked ahead, | pointing the way to the best places | for mushrooms. There is no “hiker” like him in the colony. He knows all parts of the woods. Once, they hed gone to camp in the woods seven versts away, but had forgot- ten to take blankets with them. He brought the blankets. And after that, for a whole day, he had skipped tirclessly after the hunters. And now, too, he Martynoy walked as if he had wings cn his; back to help him. Suddenly he stop- ped and shouted: “Here's the spot! Come on!” was ‘carted lumber, carried stones, broke stones with stubbornly, picks. They worked + * * HEY hurt their. feet: to bleeding at their work, but ‘their joy was not extinguished by pain. Martynov | jlanned to build a hot-house there | for the winter. | They taunted . him at-the Naro- braz: | “Maybe you're planning electrifi- | cation of your colony.?” He smiled, rubbed his hands, “and said firmly: *“T am. I shall install a dynamo | by the winter.” @ They all laughed at him. But he| actuaily brought the dynamo from the city. At the Narobraz they said in as- tonishment: “He’s a marvel, that fellow!” And the children said: “Martynov is—khny!” ° And when Martynoy would start to tell how their colony would spread light all’ around, how it would scatter three, ten, twenty such colonies all around, the chil- cren believed him, And they laughed in a new way. Laughed’ for joy, as cne laughs when overwhelmed with breathless delight. Grishka thought: “I’ve seen all kinds: of people, but | never a man like him. He’s a brick!” Cr er THERE were all sorts of children at the colony. Some taken from poor parents. Some .from.the mines, Children from orphan asylums. And ‘awbreakers, like Grishka. The only | ones Martynev: turned down were weak and sickly chiidren. } “Sentimentality!’ The earth must he cleared. “Let the sick die. When | ° Z the Soviet ports. | es. . Such nauseating slavishness of foreign seamen annually visit the rouses nothing but disgust for you Soviet ports. Despite the lies of the in the eyes of all honest workers. yeformist and capitalist press wih This balderdash will deceive none. tegard to the Soviet Union, the sea- We brand it as contemptible lies.” men’s interest in the country of the Cook in a recent speech at Brad-' Soviets is very great. ford revealed that he had asked the; Naturally, the overwhelming prince to join the bourgeois social- | majority of questions put by the iBstaDarty seamen at meetings organized by Cook recently collected for a/ the international clubs in the USSR newspaper article he wrote on the ports, refer to the conditions of la- ptince in the Evening Standard. “I bor of the Soviet workers and the thanked the prince for his help and socialist construction being carried later’ we talked of many things,”) on in the Soviet Republic. The class Cook wrote in the Standard. educational work of these Interna- What price betrayal? The work-| tional Seamen’s Clubs is colossal. ers'would like to know just what The average number of foreign sea- ) wete'the “many things” they talked men who visit these clubs in the) about and how much the prince bid. Soviet ports during the year is about we 80,000. | ' BOOKS ‘ ‘imulated by. the attacks of the DER KAMPF UM DIE. GEWERK- reformist press, the police also do | ional Sea- \ SCHAFTEN, By Heinrich Farwig. not neglect the Internationa ea. Red International of Labor, men’s Clubs. Unions. Pi Not all the International Seamen’s Miedoat aa ‘Clubs are able to claim the same) Comrade ‘Farwig’s book is an im-| scope of work. Some international | portant addition to the. historical clubs were org:~‘zed but recently | literature on the development of the | (the Philadelphia Club (USA), or German. labor movement.. It traces the Esbjerg Club haye not yet the.oppositional struggle against re- gained sufficient experience and. formism and» social-imperialism in popularity amongst the seamen. | the ber mln from the 19th cen- | Pha pate | tury (from about 1848) to the world F A war and shows that the construction bd Agia ee : yiterna one) | of nuclei. of: revolutionary workers li ae hele mu . nbc nerd | Sat bia Deere, Nie AY SUG | Ae oe tha smnas, mioversant. {81 had, important | eae ee es Ber aerate, | Shown by the example of the New| tionary minorities against reformism | York Club, which has taken upon | and social-imperialism, | itself the task of mobilizing the sea- = men’s masses dround the question of -For that reason, the book is not the shameful loss of the “Vestris.” | only ‘of great historical interest, but The “experts” of the hourgeois-re- | a alge of great practical value. The formist press hastened to throw the | material with which it is crowded }lame for the loss of 111 passengers is very pertinent exactly at this and th the col time when. the class war between the of the gab peters Cee eee So they set to work. there is but one piece—give it to German imperialists, reformists and revolutionary. workers and the new, This time, thanks to the energetic WORLD FIGHT for the Work- ers Fight for the Building of New_ Revolutionary Unions For the Defense of the Soviet Union For a Workers and Farmers Government May Day Proletarian Have your name and your organization has Special mates printed in the Red Honor Roll. See that UNITE! AGAINST the Bosses Against Social Reform- ism ‘ Against Company Union- ism Against Race Discrimi- nation Against Capitalism Is A Day of Struggle! the names of your shop- a greeting printed in the l Edition. : . AMOUNT © | and widespread campaign developed | by the New York International Sea- | . The book also is very handy at| men’s Club, this attempt was de- | this moment in view of the intensive | feated. A whole series of mass | | discussion in Germany following the | meetings of seamen and port work- IV Congress of the R. I. L. U. since ers demonstrated their class soli-. it gives every worker the oppor-, dari at, shouted from the porch: ‘Hey, hey! sten: The horn blows gay-ly, Calling to tea.” dtochi growled in reply: | But later he understood it better. I made up a rhyme. Spring has come for Grishka, healthy, pute. His eyes are clear, junclouded. All the scaly crust of |the former wanderings has dropped joff. Not a trace of it. He is whole- Another squad went away, sing- ing, in a boat. They were going to the oppesite shore to gather bright- jzed sorb-apples. They must be gathered for drying before they are |spoiled by the early frosts, The | | ra | | the healthy. Make, way for the | Social-democrats* has sharpened. | \kealthy! If he’s a thief or a crook a, | —send him here. If he has a sound body he'll straighten out.” But not all of. them could be straightened out. - In. some the rot COLLECTED BY | A “Ves: | ‘ot tea, but coffee... .” ,_|fome. | Martynov brightened. lake is plashing at the shore, but stuck stubbornly deep .inside. They | tunity to distinguish, without pour- | tris” cawerathe Verses aby | onan nibh bprcbaieamme dr ware auayh er nd gaa right an ee spot, if ance Peskov, khny! not a ipple in the middle, What a/languished in the atmosphere of | ing thru large historical works, the | which brought into motion the wide " bs Ov. ie made a face and/ ‘e watched the others too, keenly. | day! constant toil. They lagged at theit| main struggle between the revolu-| masses of the seamen, at ; Address .........465 % 1g out in basso profundo, like a|There were some tender glances ex- ! retin once SOSESES SEES CHESS FONE O08 Be SR NRE Grishka is in a third squad. The biggest boys--they started out, sing- ing, for a farm about three versts |them back to the city. away. Martynov with them. He) He sent back many supervisors had won his fight for a new farm |too. eLney fox his colony, A whole estate. Con-| “You go cnd write instructions of what froquart-|siresticn-york wes going on there. |that’s what you're fit! for.” : built bern:, dug holes, | (To Be Continued) work and sulked ‘afterwgrds..Mar- | tionary minorities and the reformist | brought fi d Y | itynov would make a face and send SLIGHaD Hgasnen’CIGt ah tho eect leadéts, and to orientate himself | ternational Seamen’s Club as the or- I along an historical perspective to-| ganizing centre of the seamen in wards the situation at present. | this port. * Organizing Unions. At present the International Clubs have passed over the stage of mere eon: changed with the girls. The kids ‘Don't. give me: tea ‘to -swill, my/ teased Lysiaev. and big Niura, but w with coffee fill. Noble lords,| there was no premature, lustful de- n't you have some coffee?” icive. The boys were used to the wned everv-|citle. Their touch did not’ bara. already |There was nothing On May Day—we hail the Chinese revolution! Long live the

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