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COUNTRY AROUND CORO, COLOMBIA BORDER, SEIZED Sandino Aid Leads One Detachment CORO, Venezuela, June revolutionary movement is sweeping over Venezuela. The forces of Gen- eral Urbina, in spite of government reports to the contrary, are gaining ground at Coro, where there is a Gomez-Peres government garrison. A report from the Colombian bor- der tells of mounted bands of revo- lutionists operating all along the international line. The Colombian troops are said to have been mob- ilized along the border. In the state of Miranda, 60 miles away from Caracas, General Borges is up in arms, and has issued a proclamation which is termed “radi-| cal” by the conservative press of Colombia, ete. Sandino Aid Revolts. In the western part, in the state of Monagas, news has been received that General Bartolome Ferrer and Colonel Carlos Aponte (who for a long time fought as second on the Liberator Army of General Sandino) have attacked with great success, capturing some small villages and plenty of ammunition. Workers, starved and overworked and reduced to a condition of peon- age by the bloody rule of Gomez, see no alleviation coming to them from his retirement and replacement by another of the same clique. They are joining the revolt, for a change of government. The Communist leader, Machado, has been wounded by the govern- ment during the fighting around Coro. There has been a general strike in Caracas, the nation’s capital, and the strikers were attacked by gov- ernment troops. A revolt of the students has also taken place. U. S. imperialists are responsible for the state of affairs existing in Venezuela with the absolute fascist dictatorship in full swing in that district. Any attempt on the part of the Washington government to in- terfere in the rebellion will be met with resistance. U, 8, TRIES BRIBE ON NICARAGUANS Canal Graft Splitting Nationalists American imperialists are aggres- sively driving ahead with their plans to build a second canal between North and South America as a part of their general plans for further political and financial penetration of Latin-America and preparations for imperialist war. This is creating a sharper differentiation in the ranks of the nationalist forces in Nica- ragua, The U. S, finance capital- ists are busy corrupting the petty bourgeois nationalists, many of whom have already sold out to the imperialists. The bourgeois politi- cians, of course, have long since been supporting Moncada, agent of U. S. imperialism. formation which has just been re- ceived by the All-America Anti- Imperialist League, an attempt is being made by Yankee imperialists to bribe even Sandino. Of course, such attempts have been made be- * fore and have been indignantly re- fused by Sandino. The building of the Nicaraguan canal involves graft and corruption on a gigantic scale, to insure the further political and financial pene- tration of Latin-America. The Manos Fuera de Nicaragua has just issued a strong appeal to all organizations of workers and peasants to uphold the banner of revolt and maintain militant resis-|. tance of Yankee intervention. Many anti-imperialist organizations thru- out Latin-America have pledged their uncohditional resistance to the plans of the imperialists, They have also pledged themselves to “send delegates to the Second Anti- Imperialist World Congress at Paris, July 20 to 81, which will 4 deal with this problem. ‘) A New York Anti-Imperialist \ conference has been called by the / All-America Anti-Imperialist League to be held on June 15 at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, at 2 p, m. where Latin- American delegates will meet to ex- pose the “fake “peace” between Bolivia and Paraguay made by America and the settlement of the Tacna-Arica dispute, in both of + which the American imperialists According to the in-| Big Revolutionary Movement Through Dd. oui Venezuela a Is Cap Worker Prisoners Held | jin. Rumanian Prisons | |Win a Hunger Strike BUCHAREST (By Mail).—After |a hunger strike lasting 19 days, the | news now comes that the authori- | | ties have released Irene Ortner. | Saim Pinkel and Doreanu Popescu, jand thgt the remaining prisoners |have received the privileges manded as political prisoners. de- | | = BONSERVATIVES IN BOLIVIA VOTE _ FOR“SOGIALIST” “ , “Republican-Socialist” ; Administration In LA. PAZ, Bolivia, June 12.—Dur- | ing the recent general elections to! the senate, the parliament, and the! | municipal administrations of Bolivia, jthe capital, La Paz, elected by! majority the list of the “republican- | socialist coalition’ against the Liberals. The “republican party” is |the name of the conservatives at/| present in power. In Sucre, the seat of the supreme court, the conserva- tives of the fascist opposition, fol-| lowers of the former dictator, Saavedra, were elected. Election Suspended. There was a “socialist” deputy in Bolivia in the former parliament, Ricardo Soruco, a lawyer from Cochabamba, who was elected in the | railway center of Oruro, without, op- |position by the conservatives, in jorder to prevent a victory of the| | Liberals. | In the recent election, however, it |was impossible to impose such a | ‘socialist’ candidate in Oruro with its |large industrial population, and the consequence was that during the| elections two workers were shot and several injured, and the election was suspended by order of the} governor. | | COMMUNISTS HIT - SOCIALIST LOAN \Fraction in Reichstag i Proposes Tax on Rich | BERLIN (By Mail)—The Com-| |munist Reichstag Fraction has in- | troduced a motion calling upon the government to abandon the 500 million inland loan of the social democratic finance minister Hilferd- ing and to put forward 2 law im-| posing a super-tax upon large for-| |tunes of over 500,000 marks. There jare in Germany 2,339 persons who, jeach possess a fortune over a} million marks, making in all 5,13 000,000 marks. Having this fact in mind, the proposal of the Commu- nists, which is enthusiastically sup- ported by the masses of the working population, is of considerable im- portance. The results of such a super-tax should be applied to rais- ing the unemployed workers allow-| ances, declare the Communists. The | |500 million loan of Hilferding has| also caused great indignation |amongst the petty-bourgeoisie, be- cause those who subscribe to the loan are exclusively rich bourgeois and are freed from income, property, jdeath duties and capital levy taxes jin connection with the loan. This abandonment of taxation and the loss of interest for the Reichs treasury means an annual cost of 50 million marks, in other words, 250 million marks extra taxation are to be squeezed out of the toiling masses during the course of the next five years, |\Cooperative Workers _ Aid ‘Daily’ by Giving | 30 Per Cent of Pay Communist Party members work- ing in the Proletcos Co-operative |Cafeteria at the Workers Center, 26 Union Square, donated 80 per cent of their last week’s wages to the \Daily Worker. As part of its program “to help the working class in their struggle to abolish the capitalist system of |society,” the co-operative recently reduced cost of meals to its mem- bers, It aims to build a large mem- bership which, “side by side with \the workers organized in the new industrial unions, fights for a new society.” : | Briand and Stresemann Decide on Conference ‘of Allies Over Rhine HE Polbureau is desirous T FOR A MASS CC The Section Executive Comm York) accepts and endorses the Daily Worker on May 20, 1929. The Section Executive Commi tral Executive Committee on the Co selves to fight vigorously against those who will oppose it, and we con- demn the splitting policy of Com will do all in our power to assist 1 the District Executive Committee of District membership of our section on the The Section interpreting the Address of the € part of it as a factional victory. abolish factionalism. Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address to the Communist Party of securing the broadest pos- sible Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Ad- dress and the immediate Party tasks outlined therein. Party members and particularly the comrades active in the workshops in the basic industries are invited to write their All IMMUNIST PARTY * ittee of Section 7, District 2, (New Comintern Address printed in the ions of the Cen- nd we pledge o ttee accepts all deci omintern Address, rade Lovestone, and Gitlow, and we he Central Executive Committee and 2, to unify the Party basis of the Comintern Address cutive Committee warns the comrades against Yomintern either as a whole or any Only in thts way will we be able to Our Party has done splendid work in spite of its shortcomings and we ar€ confident that our Party all Party members will cast away Bolshevik spirit to make our Par Americen Working Class. Down with Factionalism! will achieve much greater results if their factionalism and unite in a real ty a Communist Mass Party of the For a Communist Mass Party under the leadership of the Com- munist Internatienal!—Section Co: New York City. COAL MINERS ENDORS The Avella, Pa., Miners’ Nuc! mmittee of Section 7, District Two, E COMINTERN ADDRESS. lei of the Communist Party of the United States in its regular meeting of June 2, 1929, after the nuclei secretary read the new open Lette’ r of the Communist International to the membership to the American Party and the decision of the Central Committee of our Party, published in the Daily Worker May 20, 1929, adapted the following motions. “1. We, the Avella Miners’ Ni uclei of the Communist Party of the United States, fully accepts and endorses the open Letter of the Com- munist International. “2. We endorse the decision Party, and give whole support to of the Central Committee of our the Central Committee to carry out the decision of the Communist International.”—Avella, Pa., Miners’ Nuclei. FOR MASS COMMUNIS The motions passed by the Yor! T PARTY AND LEAGUE. kville (New York) Communist Youth League on the Communist International Address to the Communist Party of the United States of America follows: “We wholeheartedly agree to si upport, accept and carry out the Ad- dress of the Communist International to the Communist Party of the United States. “We greet wholeheartedly the unanimous motions of the League, District Executive Committee on the Communist International Address and Young Communist International cable and will fight against the splitters and for the unity of the P: war danger and increased class struggles as a prerequisite for the build- ing of a mass Communist Party and Communist League.” ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, The following resolution was ‘arty and League in this period of the 4 | opinions for the Party Press. | also will be printed in this se ing with this campaign to Comrade Jack Stachel, care Na- tional office, Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York City. ination of f. tionary *acti country es towards building We pledge ourselves loyall: orously oppose by every group or individual to the adoption Resolutions of Factory Nuciei ction. Send all material deal- jonalism which has hampered our Party in its revolu- a mass Communist Party in this ly to carry out these decisions and means any effort on the part of any and carrying out of these decision and any effort to bring disunity within the Party ranks. ernational, the World Party of th ainst Right errors, the organizati ef the Negra masses, the mo! ation against the war dan —We further pledge increasing loyalty to the Communist In- e working class, to the struggle ion of the unorganized, the rallying and the strengthening and Bolshevization of the Party as the only means to elimin tH) ate factionalism and the co lidation of the working class forces | under the Communist banner for the final overthrow of the imperialist powers and the establishment of a Soviet Republic in the United States.” CALLS ADDRESS DEATH The Textile Nucleus of Section mously adapted the following resolut BLOW TO FACTIONALISM | 4, District Two (New York) unani- ions on the address of the Executive Committee of the Communist International to the membership of the Communist Party of the Uniged Sta “I, We the members of the District 2, fully accept and indorse mittee of the Communist International, publi May 20, which is a death blow to right wing deviation in our Party. wae splitting actions in the United Sta‘ “3. We approve and support the Polcom for his unprincipled acti ternational Address, restrictedly wherever factionalism International will be noticed. ites of America: Textile Mill Nucleus of Section 4, the Address of the Executive Com- ed in the Daily Worker factionalism and a guide against We condemn Comrade Lovestone, Gitlow and Wolf for their tes of America as well as abroad. the removal of Comrade Miller by ion in regard to the Communist In- We expect the Polcom to use the same action un- or opposition to the Communist OTTO HALL FOR STRONG, UNITED PARTY. | 1 The Statement received from Otto Hall, director of the Negro de- partment_of the Trade Union Educatrowal Teague, on the Address of | the Comintern to the Communist Party of the United States of America, was as follows: “I heartily endorse the unanim: Communist Party of the U. S. A. in accepting in full the dec open letter of the Executive Committee of the Communist International ous decisions of the Polcom of the | ions and to the Communist Party of the United States of America and as a Negro member of the Party and supporter of the former majority of the Party for many years, I see what great harm the factional fight has done to the Party as a whole and particularly the Negro work. There- fore I join with the Polcom in calling on all members of the Party to give their wholehearted support to the Communist International decisions. The terrible conditions of the workers, black and white in the South, victims of the most intensive capitali ist exploitation in their present un- organized condition calls for the mobilization of all our forces in a united effort to strengthen our Party and The Communist International is pressed toilers to a complete victory ANIMOUS FOR LETTER. carry on a successful fight against world imperialism. adopted at a regular membership meeting of the Rochester unit with all the 27 attending voting for: “1.—The Rochester unit of the Communist Party accepts the Com- munist International decision as a means of correcting the Right wing errors and policies of our Party and as opening the way for the elim- fore as an important section of the build our organization in order to the only force that can lead the op- over the world imperialists. There- Communist International, it is our duty to support and build the Communist International by carrying out | its decisions in full and eliminate all factionalism and build a strong | Party. |” Yours for a strong united Party. BROOKLYN NEGRO CONGRESS MEETS Discusses Housing and Anti-Imperialism The regular meeting of the Brownsville-Brooklyn branch of the | American Negro Labor Congress, | held June 6, at the Brownsville Workers Center, 154 Watkins St., Brooklyn, was a very fruitful one. Thirteen Negro wokrers joined the branch and a campaign for the bet- tering of housing conditions in Brownsville was launched. W. Burroughs, representing the National A. N. L. C., delivered an excellent talk, She pointed out that one of the reasons why the Negroes have failed to make any headway in their struggle for emancipation up to the present has been the fact |that they have fought ONLY as an | oppressed race and not as part of ithe whole working class against their exploiters. She emphasized that the Negro workers must unite with their |white fellow workers and together |fight capitalism, the real source of Negro oppression. The Brownsville-Brooklyn Branch passed a motion endorsing the Anti- ‘Imperialist onference to be held in Paris, July 20, and the preliminary conference in New York, June 15. Makel, Krempel and Jones were chosen as delegates to the New York conference. A resolution was also passed con- in Alam, Tennessee. The resolution pointed out that the lynching was but another example of brutal mur- der constantly carried on by the capitalists against the Negroes so as to keep them in fear and subjuga- tion, | The last order of business was the housing question. Members of the branch spoke at length about the miserable housing conditions of thé | Negroes in Brownsville. Rents are ‘out of all proportion to wages. The stairs in the houses are broken, the plumbing bad. The landlord abso- lutely refuses to repair anything. ;Even the Emergency Rent Laws, | which granted but slight protection, | Indian Workers Protest Jailing of Leaders Thousands of Indian workers at Madras against the imprison workers by the Anglo-British im crowd is shown above. took part in a huge mass mecting | ment of scores of leaders of the perialist authoritie Part of the The National Office of the Young | Pioneers of America, which has is- sued a‘call for the sending of the Children’s. Delegation to the Soviet Union, has received a letter from |the Children’s Section of the Work- Pioneers Call for Aid to Send Childrens Delegation to USSR + |ready with relief to feed, clothe and | so aid and encourage the workers in their battles, Even though the |W. I R. is today engaged in so many fields of struggle and relief |funds are so necessary, we are send- | demning the lynching of Joe Boxly | jers International Relief, endorsing ing you this contribution of $25 to | |the drive for the delegation ani help send a children’s delegation to | |donating $25 to help make the dele-|the fatherland of the workers of the gation a success. world, the Soviet Union. ; The text of the letter follows, in| International working class soli- | part: \darity is the slogan of the Workers | Dear Comrades: \International Relief. We call upon The Workers International Re- | the workers to stand back os and jlief and its Chillren’s Section, the |S*Pport this Workers Children’s Workers Relief Scouts, are taking | Delegation. Let the exploited work- part in many struggles of the work- jets children of this country bring jers throughout the country wherever Bur. message of solidarity to the there are workers on strike fighting |freed workers and their children in for better living conditions—in the |e U. 8. S. R. southern textile fields, among New| With greetings of Yerk’s cafeteria workers, among the Workers International | fron and bronze workers, in Massa- |fred Wagenknecht, \chusetts among the shoe workers— |tary; |there we find the W. I. R. always idren’s |Report Britain Ready |Belgian Committée to |\to Open Negotiations Fight for Freedom of | |for US.S.R. Relations: Prisonars of Rumania solidarity, Relief; Al- national secre- Mary Himoff, secretary Chil- Section, W. I. R. » (Signed) OTTO HALL. LITTLE OIL. MEN FIGHT STANDARD Hoover Wants Unity | for Next War COLORADO PRINGS, Colo.,| June 12.—Feverish caucusing among the western public lands states with | the object of enlisting support for | their resistance to the Hoover-spon- | sored order forbidding prospecting for oil and gas in certain western states outside the control of the | Standard Oil group, marked the oil | conservation conference here yes- | terday. | The conference aims to unify oil | production to enable the United States to fight rival trusts in the next world clash, under Chairman Mark L. Requa’s plea of “absolute | necessity” of conservation. At the same time, because of its domination by the powerful Stan- dard Oil interests, the Hoover order hits western groups fighting for the modification or withdrawal of the oil permit of March 12 which cramps their scramble for profits. They were supported by the Oklahoma group which pusked a resolution de- manding “vigorous enforcement of the anti-trust laws” periodically dodged by their more powerful rivals. Even while they made this re- quest, 52 Standard Oil companies | were convicted of violating the Sher- man anti-trust law by pooling their “oil cracking” processes. The Uni- ted States district court in Chicago granted the government a perman- ent injunction against them. However, because of the power- ful strings which the Standard Oil pulls in every instrument of govern- ment, the decision is expected to affect thqm as little as the famous Judge Landis ruling which fined them $29,000,000. Subsequent liti- gation after the appeal dragged on for nine years, during which the corporation dodged payment by | splitting -itself into ostensibly “in- dependent” groups. FASCIST FLIGHT HALTED. 12 |The s ng M. 2 Argentine Socialist Parties Join to Save Their Remaining Votes The reuniting oft he two soci ist parties of Argentina, the “old socialist party under the leadership cf the deputies Repetto and Dick he | man and the senator Bravo, and th “independent socialist party” wh seeded from the party about two years ago under the di ion of Di Tomaso, is being di sed in the | pr nd the meetings of beth so-| h Territory BORNO, DICTATOR OF HAITI, PLANS VISIT TO THE U.S, Will Ask Hoover to Cancel Elections cialist parties and by the’ two so- A visit to the United States is cialist parliam ry fractions |now being planned by Louis Borno, The organ of the “old” sccialist | Wall Street’s dictator of Haiti, who party is the “Vanguardia,” while the| has imprisoned and tortured hun- new “independent socialist party” |dreds of militant Haitian workers at published the “L: All at-|the behest of the Wall Street gov- agai the ot socialist |ernment, party have ceased entirely in both; Expose Plan. newspapers and a certain coilabora-| The proposed visit of this puppet tion of the two groups was notice- dictator, who has aided Wall Street le lately in parliament, hough |in impoverishing the workers and in the municipality the “indepen- |; nts of Haiti, is attacked by the dents” support Irigoyen while the | H Patriotic League, a section “cld” socialists oppose him. £ the All Anti-Imperialist The split of the socialist party gue, as a visit to request Presi- brought about a considerable loss dent Hoover to avoid the legislative of votes and seats for both frac- lection from taking place, so that tions during the last elections, he can remain dictator without the bother of fixing the elections. The as Se oe ‘statement follows in part: “The people of Haiti are abso- B A ry lutely opposed to the proposed trip ARRESTS 1,000 ‘White Hand’ King Jails Croat Nationalists BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, June 12. ian military dictatorship struck viciously at the growing | Croatian nationalist and separatist | movement today, with the arrest of over 1,000 Croatians. Most of those arrested were stud- jents attending the university a Zagreb, which is the capitol of | Crotia. There also were seven out- standing lawyers—all Crotaian party leaders,—among those jailed, including Dr, Vlato Machek, Dr. Machek became leader of the Croatian peasant party after the! |death of Stefan Raditch, who was shot down in the chamber of depu- ties. His death was one of the im-| mediate causes of the break between of Borno to the United States and are utilizing all channels to protest against this trip to be made only a few days before the elections for president and legislature. Workers y for Visit. “It is reported that $6,200 was eppropriated from the Haitian treas- to finance this trip. He will be ur |xecompanied by Jchn H. Russell, the so-called U. S, High Commissioner in Haiti, and a few other Haitian and United States officials, who will go directly to Washington, D. C., to jinterview President Herbert Hoover and the state department. The pur- pose will be to ask for the support of the president of the United States and the United States state depart- ment for the re-election of Borno as president of Haiti. “Tt is said that Borno is going this time to Washington to ask Pres- ident Hoover to avoid the legislative election from taking place to impose kim again on the Haitian people, “Demonstrations are taking place in Haiti. Organizations and groups |are being mohilized to combat this the Croats and Serbs, who dominate | re-election, to prevent the trip and the triple kingdom of Serbs, Croats| asking the people of the United and Slovenes. States to help them protest against Dr. Pernar and Zanitch, outstand-' the traitorous sell-out of the Haitian ing Croatian leaders, also were ar-| workers and peasants to the ex- rested. The Croat nationalists withdrew |from parliament after the shooting | of Raditch, and most of them ap- plauded the “White Hand” dictator-| ship set up by or through King! Alexander some months ago. Savage attacks by the new dic-| tatorship on all Croat nationalist} organizations, however, are disil-| lusioning many of them. Receive New Supply of the Anniversary ‘Communist Intern’!’ The Workers Library Publishers, 43 E. 125th St., has received an ad- ditional supply of the anniversary issue of the Communist Interna-| tional, Number 9-10. Those who did not receive their copies are urged to duplicate the original orders at once since the demand is great and the number of copies on hand is very limited. The new issue consists of Num- bers 11, 12 and 13 and ‘is a con- tinuation of the Anniversary Edi- tion, The price of it is reduced to 15 cents. All literature agents are urged to send in their orders with- out delay. MEXICAN STUDENTS STRIKE. MEXICO CITY, June 12, — A crowd of about 2,000 university students invaded the university building tonight and demanded the resignation of Rector Antonio Castro Leal. The demonstrators massed at the front steps of the administra- ploitation of Wall Street. “CROM” SUPPORT FOR CALLES MAN Mexican Right Wing Is Defying Peasants ICO CITY, June 12. — The “Partido Laborista Mexicano” (P.L. M.), the political expression of the Mexican Federation of Labor (C.R. O.M.), announced that its presiden- tial candidate for the next elections will be Pascual Ortiz Rubio, the can- didate of the “Grand Partido Na- cional Mexicano” recently founded by Calles. This adhesion of the C. R.O.M. to the candidate of the Cal- les party came only after the elim- ination of Aaron Saenz, who was first spoken of as the candidate of the Calles Party. The leaders of the C.R.O.M. and the P.L.M. objected to Saenz be- cause he opposed all labor organi- zations, even the C.R.O.M., while he | was governor in the state of Nuevo | Leon. The C.R.O.M’s support of Ortiz Rubio will accentuate the an- tagonism between the C.R.O.M. and the various agrarian parties from the Communist National Peasant League to the “True National Agrarian Party,” which supported Valenzuela during the last military revolt. After every revolution marking a tive building and voted to maintain a guard of 100 students at the build-| ing until their demand is met. progressive phase in the class strug- gle, the purely repressive of the State power stands it im bolder and bolder reliet—Marx. MANIFESTO OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY By MARX & ENGELS 10 Cents New Edition translated by E. & C, PAUL HEADING FOR WAR By T. BELL 10 Cents A brilliant study of the present international situation and factors which are making for a new world slaughter. The role of reformism and the tasks of the proletariat. REVOLUTIONARY LESSONS | | | | MADRID, Spain, June 12.—Ger-| are now repealed. It was pointed have m&neuvered to strengthen their | | REYKJAVIK, Iceland, June 11.—| position. The terrorism of Machado in Cuba; the impoverishment of the , masses in Haiti, Porto Rico and other Caribbean colonies of Wall St., the new wave of revolt throughout Latin-America as well as the sit- uation in the colonial world’ will be subjects thoroughly discussed at this conference. All labor and anti- imperialist organizations are urged to send delegates. une (Parix fresks the modern OWer— Marks man Foreign Minister Stresemann | out that only through organized ef- and Foreign Minister Briand of fort under the A. N. L. C. can the | LONDON, June 12.—I¢ is report- BRUSSELS (By Mail).—Belgian | linevease after a sirike, . France in a meeting today decided that it was necessary to immediately call an international conference to arrange details for the Allies evacu- ation of the Rhineland, following the expected ratification of the Young plan. | CARPENTERS WIN DEMANDS. | PORTSMOUTH, N. H., (FP). | Negroes of Borwnsville force the landlords to lower rents, make re- pairs and install modern improve- ments. A committee of seven was elected to serve as the housing com- mittee. Concrete steps were outlined to make this campaign a, success. These included an immediate inves- tigation; exposure through the press —Daily Worker, Negro Champion, t for tts own Striking union carpenters won the ete.—open-air and mass meetings; 5-day week and a 5 per cent wage and the formation of a@ Tenants | League ed here that a cabinet meeting de-| intellectuals have formed a commit- | cided that Foreign Secretary Arthur tee to work for a general and un-| Henderson should in the near future | conditional amnesty for all political | approach Norway and with a re-| prisoners in Roumania. This com- quest that she take the role of ar-| mittee has now issued an appeal | | ranging a conference between Brit-| signed by A. Vermeylen, Van Oye, | ain and the U. S. S. R. to reopen Vercouilles, Planquard, De Kayser, diplomatic relations. British big | Balthazar, Jean Tousseul, Lambert | business. has suffered during the) Merlot, Leonard Melot and other | period of the breach through the prominent persons. The appeal de- | ‘taking of part of the Russian| mands a general amnesty, the cgn-| | market by Britain’s rivals. The cabinet also decided to push ithe ratification of the Young plan. | celling of all current processes and Continued reverses marked the at- tempt of the seaplane Sverige to continue today its trail-making flight to America by way of Green- land. The flight is to boost the fascist Swedish government which once sent its flyers against the U. 8S. 5. R. The fliers made two unsuccessful take-offs today and each time re- turned to their base here. At 10 a.m. (6 a, m. E. S St.) they were still ashore and it apeared that the By V. I. LENIN 25 Cents Contains some of Lenin’s most famous monographs written before and after October. Deals with the question of tactics. A theoretical study of bourgeois democracy, etc., etc, Workers Library Publishers NEW YORK CITY We carry a full line of Revolutionary German 43 EAST 125TH STREET the abolition of the court martials fox the trial of civilians, i 7 Y thi attempt might be delayed sevfral hours, Literature