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Organize $50,000,000 MASS ARRESTS FAIL TO BREAK WULGAR STRIKE Police Terror Against _. Tobacco Workers ra “ SOFIA, Aug. 14.—The strike of | 8,000 tobacco workers in Stanimak | and Raikov is going on. In Jampol| the mill workers, in Burgas, the metal workers, in Rusea, the bakers are on strike. In Stara Zagora lea- | ther workers, and in Varna, cloth- ing workers have struck work. The leadership of all the strikes is in the hands of the Red Trade Union. The demands put forward are: wage increases of 30 to 40 per cent, shorter working hours, no re-| striction of the right of coalition. (The Bulgarian employers are try- ing the “open shop” game.) In Sliwen the strikers, besides their economic claims, also put forward political demands such as a full am- nesty for all political offenses and the revocation of the ultra-reaction- ary Defense of the Realm act. The police are attempting to ter- rorize the strikers. Mass arrests are being effected and the arrested men 5 brutally ill-treated. The rage of the Demonstration police is specially directed against | ; (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) de Ui 7 | Vie eer race oe | PRAGUE, Czecho-Slovakia, Aug. 14.—Sixty soldiers and numbers of § SWISS GET AIR-MINDED. — workers were arrested yesterday in LIBSON, Aug. 14—The three | Budweis following distribution of Swiss aviators who are planning to | anti-militarist leaflets. fly the Atlantic to New York tested| The arrest of the workers and the their plane on the beach yesterday distribution of the leaflets brought in preparation for their departure | about a spontaneous protest move- Sunday. | ment among the soldiers. “The Right of Asylum”’--a ° Joke to Fascist Nations BERLIN (By Mail).—The record former president of the U. S. influence with the Hoover admit growers trust. ARREST SIXTY Police Beat Deputy at found the courage to declare that of unscrupulous infringements of |this principle is no longer valid, the right of asylum has been Cop EMU CR ae already beginning with the | riched by a fresh instance through | second half of the nineteenth cen- the Paschin case. The Latvian and|tury the application of the princi- Polish police have in cordial co-|ple was dependent on various more operation perpetrated a crime up to/or less reactionary clauses, In the now unparalleled in character. | international treaties and in the do- The Latvian police arrested Jan | mestic legislation of the bourgeois Paschin, a Polish Communist, pass- States the principle of non-extradi- ing through the country on his way | tion of political offenders is still to. the evict Union, laid down as a matter of course. ‘After detaining him for several | But the fear of the growing revo- days the Latvian. authorities gave | utionary working class movement | z "i ;_|ever more frequently compels the | ties without any further procedure, |DOUrEeois governments to infringe | withougantofficial demand for ex. | this principle in their practical con- tradition Having been put forward |@uct. The history of the post-war | by the Polish government, without !period records numerous flagrant | any megbbiatiolie’ between. the two | infringements of the right of asy-j| governments, |lum but the Paschin case is unpar- . jalleled in sheer unabashed and cyn- This action of the two police or-| ica] impudence. The Polish as well ganizations which flies in the face| as the Latvian authorities were per- of all ideas of international law | fectly aware that they committed an is an illustration of the cynical dis-| jjlegal act, in arresting Paschin and regard not only of the right of|that is why they at first attempted asylum but of a whole series of |to surround the affair with a wall democratic conceptions of legality | of silence. Even the fact that Pasch- in general. in’s arrest had taken place in Lat- Jan Paschin never and in no man-|vian territory was denied. When er whatever trasgressed the laws/the working class press was already " DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, Fruit Growers Trust Former Secretary of Agriculture Jardine and Julius H. Barnes, Chamber of Commerce, who, by their istration, facilitated the organization of the $50,000,000 United Growers of America, the new huge fruit CONFLICTS RAGE CZECH SOLDIERS AT HAGUE MEET Postpone Conferences To Prevent Open Rift THE HAGUE, Aug. 14. — Con- flicts between the diplomats and fi- |nanciers of the imperialist powers here today raged so fiercely that the political commission decided not ‘to meet again until later in the week, probably Saturday. While the move was cloaked under pre- |tense of “satisfactory progress,” it was announced that the decisive mo- meeting tomorrow may be post- poned. In this connection Briand, of France, and Snowden, of England, are reported to be preparing for a |“quiet meeting” to discuss the sit- | uation. Plans to prevent an open break in the conference of world imperial- some of the British demands at the expense of the smaller powers were discussed today. France, Italy and (Belgium may be willing “to compen- jsate” the small powers, it was in- timated today, but the form which such “compensation” will take was left indefinite. The specific plan as discussed today and yesterday is to meet the British demands for a share of reparations payments by using the $7,500,000 of the un- conditional annuities which is still undivided. BOSS’ SQUABBLE ON WOOL TARIFF WASHINGTON, Aug. 14.—A sec- ret alliance of Pennsylvania wool manufacturers and agricultural in- terests forced the 200 per cent in- crease in duty on wool rags, it was charged in the tariff debates yes- ment, scheduled for the commission | ists and compromise with at least | SOVIET INDUSTRY. CHIEFS ARRIVED INUNITED STATES '200 Experts Here at) Present Time B. Kuritzin, Chairman of the So- viet State Machine-Building Cor- | poration, M. Nikiforov, Chairman of the Rubber Trust, W. S. Matlin, Vice-Chairman of the Electrotechni- cal Trust, N. Levchenko, Vice-Chair- man of the Donugol Coal Trust and |45 other Soviet executives and en- gineers have arrived in the United States during the past week, it was announced by the Amtorg Trading Corporation. | Among the new group of Soviet | |industrial representatives who came | }to this country to study the Ameri-| can industry and in connection with | the several recently concluded con-! |tracts are 20 engineers of the Auto- stroy (the Automobile Plant Con- struction Corporation) who will par- ticipate in the work of designing an | automobile factory to be erected at| Nizhni Novgorod with the technical |assistance of the Ford Motor Co.| | Others represent the electrical, coal, |chemical, agricultural, machine building, construction, metallurgical, |rubber and transportation indus- | tries, and the State Institute for the | Designing of Metal Works. | A total of nearly 200 Soviet exec- |utives and engineers are at present | |in the United States on various busi- |ness missions. William S. Matlin of the State Electrotechnical Trust will organize a technical bureau to be located with the International General Electric | Company at Schenectady. This bureau which will have a staff of six or seven Soviet engineers is be- ing formed in accordance with the technical assistance agreement re- | cently concluded -between the Soviet Electrotechnical Trust and the) American concern. A similar bureau | of American engineers is being created in Moscow. The Soviet | bureau will study American methods jof production of various electrotech- | |nical products. Several more repre- sentatives of the Soviet Electrotech- New Imperial Envoy Eric H. Louw, minister of the new legation of the Union of South Africa to Washington. He is noted as a foe of the South African work- ers, has aided in keeping the native workers oppressed, and has always served British imperialism in the Union of South Africa as a de- voted servant. “SOCIALISTS” TO EASE RETURN TO, REICH BY KAISER Workers Indignant at Action BERLIN, Aug. 14.—The interview given by the German Reichminister | of the Interior, the social democrat Severing, to the Berlin correspond- ent of the Paris “Ocuvre” has caused great indignation amongst the work- ers’, The proletarian regards Severing’s declaration as meaning that the German Government intends to place no difficulties in the way of a return to Germany by the ex- Kaiser. In the law for the protec- tion of the state which has now ex- press | chemical es HEAVY PRISON TERMS GIVEN TO GREEK STRIKERS Anti-Fascisti Spirit Is Growing ATHENS, Aug. 14.—Thirty work- ers arrested during the recent af- fair at the Piraeus fertilizer works have been tried and eleven sentenced to 16 months with hard labor, The charge was resistance against the state authorities and assault against police officials, but this charge had to be dropped as it was shown that the injuries of the police officers | had been caused by the bullets of | the factory guards and not the strikers. The strikers were sentenced in spite of this evidence on other] charges, * * * | ATHENS, Aug. 14.—In the} chemical industries discontent has | been great for a long time. The majority of the operatives in the) works of Kanapoulos| (chiefly fertilizer mills in the Pir-| aeus) laid down work. Beside the demand of better wages and work- ing conditions the main reason for | the strike is the terroristic enforce- | ment of an open-shop policy and the persecution of organized workers by the employers. The chemical magnates of Greece allow no organized men in their works, and specially no men organ- ized in the revolutionary unions. This attitude of the fertilizer manu- facturers is easily explained by the fact that their plants are destined to play a most important part in| case of a war. | The owners maintain special armed | guards to enforce their wishes and | the strikers have had occasion to convince themselves of the practical value of these private troops on the very first day of the strike. When the workers decided to stop work, the owners guards first attempted to | prevent them from leaving the} plant. They blocked the doors and} allowed no one out. The majority | of the workers succeeded, poweNess | in leaving through an unguarded Page ‘Inree Mid-Atlantic States, “PLEBISCITE” BY Are Rocked by Quake; | Windows Shattered A M NS Earthquake shocks centering F § | EA around Buffalo rocked all of New York State and parts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and On- ers here swayed slightly and work- pA ers on the streets at 6.25 felt the sys carth shake under them, but no re-/More Atrocities Are ports of serious damage were re- Revealed ceived. Pictures and crockery in homes ROME, Aug. 14. — The recent tered toe the floor and windows in|form of a plebiscite, with an open Buffalo were smashed by the force!yote, have resulted in an immense of the shocks, which lasted about! fascist majority. The methods by 30 seconds while chimneys in Attica| which this result was brought about and Batavia, near Rochester, were |is shown by the following facts: shake ndown. In Mantova, as everywhere, the indirectly in the quake. Gus Merle,|death anybody daring to vote “no” a farmer living near Attica, N. Y.,]at the plebiscite ballot, i. e. against was reported to have been milking | the fascists. a cow in a field when the shocks} Domenico Vitali, a working man, occurred. he stately bovine was s0| thought it his proletarian duty not upset by the tremors she promptly to give way to the threats of the milk pail. The farmer suffered a|t. his conscience. The fascists rec- wrenched back. orded every vote, of course, A resident of Grand Island, N. Y.,| 4 few days after the plebiscite was shaving when the tremors un-| several fascists broke into Vitali’s steadied his razor hand. He suf-|house in the middle of the night, fered cuts about the face. |made him get up and took him to a w |into the thicket an buried him alive lup to the neck. Vitali remained in this position for three days and three nights and was only saved by FROM J § CORP }a miracle. Children hunting for 1 Us lexhausted condition and brought "AS |help. His wife and three children Exchange Ore; ‘Aid to|nad already given him up for dead. 5-Year Plan |__ Vitali was taken to a hospital as |his condition is very serious. Huge purchase of manganese ore | More Fascist Atrocities. from the U-S.S.R. Georgian Man-| 4 4oifo Bellodi, an agricultural s+ Steel Corporation was yesterday : ild: had b ith= confirmed by high officials of the |‘he of six children, had been with corporation and representatives of | a, reputed to be opposed to the the Amtorg Trading Corporation, | fascist regime and the podesta, a purchasing U.S. agent for the /sascist official had taken care that Soviet Union. | nobody dared employ him. He could buy from 80,000 to 150,000 tons of| elsewhere either, as the new fas~ manganese annually during the next | cist laws require the permission of five years, reports state. At a rate| ino podesta for such a change of of $15 a long ton, this would give the | residence. Some days ago Bellodi Soviet Union $2,250,000 a year for! met the podesta in the street and the concession which will enable the | caid that he had no right to starve U.S.S.R. to get continued supplies of | hig six children to desth. The con- tario yesterday morning. Skyscrap- throughout the affected area clat-|“elections” in Italy, carried out in At least two persons were injured | fascists had openly threatened with sat down on Merle and upset the|fascists and voted “no” according ood near the town, dragged him USS I|berries found him in a completely ganese Trust by the United States|1.0¢, of San Felice sul Panaro, fa- The steel corporation intends to! not leave San Felice to seek work American steel to push the five year |temptuous and derisive answer of terday. Speaking for the New Eng- land cheap clothing fabric manufac- turers, Senator Walsh held that the of the Latvian republic. The objec-| sounding the alarm in several coun-| tive of his journey was the Soviet |tries on account of this arrest, the Union. It was not his intention|correspondent of the “Express Po- nical Trust, including some of the principal engineers, will arrive in the United States shortly. | Aside from the 28 engineers and | executives of the Autostroy at pres- ‘ent in this country, 40 more techni- pired, tere was a paragraph pro- hibiting Wilhelm II returning to Germany. After the law for the protection of the republic which was used with unconscionable severity against the workers, fell through, leal men are expected. ‘The en-. 282ins 3 eee gineers of the Autostroy will par- | ooo ne ee ats aoroached the ticipate in completing the designs |°°cia! democrats, approached the |for two assembly plants to be built | German People’s Party, according to at Nizhni Novgorod and Moscow {he social democratic left-wing ‘and then will take up the work on| X/assenkampf. the preparation of plans for the con-| The social democrats declared | struction of the 100,000 cars at Niz- | themselves prepared to drop the so- hni Novgorod automobile factory. | called Kaiser paragraph, if the Ger- | A number of the Autostroy en-|man People’s Party would agree to (gineers will work in Ford factories. | vote in favor of the other para-| Mr. S. Dybbets, Chairman of the graphs. A unification upon this | Autostroy, stated that the Nizhni, basis was achieved and the new Novgorod assembly plant will be| draft of the law for the protection | |Teady next December, while the |of the republic which Severing in- | Moscow assembly plant is scheduled tends to place before the Reichstag, for completion in April, 1930. These plants will at first assemble cars from parts imported from the United States. The Bureau of the Autostroy is located at Dearborn, thisiia Mich, Representatives of the Khimstroy action. The “Rote Fahne” points out that | not the first time that social democrats have assisted the Hohen- | exit and tried to liberate their com-| plan. rades held back on the premises by| While U. S. Steel gets much of its the armed guards. These, however,|ore from its own mines in Brazil, received the workers with a volley | India, and undeveloped deposits in of rifle-fire and mills bombs. The| South Africa, none of these ores is guards occupied the whole plant in| equal to the Soviet Trust product, a regularly military fashion and in| which contains from 53 to 55 per a few hours the plant was turned | cent of the metal. into a regular battle-field. When | Amtorg announces that large vol- the police arrived on the scene the umes of steel products have been situation was so doubtful that the| brought from the steel corporation commanding officer was forced to| for shipment to the U.S.S.R. during promise that the workers imprisoned | the last few months. in the factory would be released. pode employers were not satisfied, Communist Campaign owever. They needed bloodshed in order toicow the workses: Suideny Managers Talk woo eeting on Friday and without the least provocation The political issues of the elec- the police began to fire at the crowd of strikers. The owners’ guards, en- | couraged by this conduct of the| tion campaign, the program of ac- police, also attacked the strikers, | tivity for bringing the Communist mills bombs at the strikers. | workers’ organization, ways and |the podesta made Bellodi lose his | head and he uttered a threat against |his tormentor and made as_ if to | strike him. The podesta called for ‘help; several blackshirts standing near came up, seized Bellodi and strangled him on the spot, in “self- defense.” ee ROME, Aug. 14.—Professor Um- berto Cosmo of Turin, for “many years chief politicaf®contributed to the “La Stampa,” a leading Liberal organ up to the advent of fascism, has been arrested and deported to Ostica Island because he signified his solidarity with Senator Bene- detto Croce in the Lateran Agree- ment issue. ‘ | Benedetto Croce is the greatest | philosopher of Italy and a former j will be without the one and only |Qne of the managers who was also | program before the masses of work-| Cabinet niinister, but in Mussolini’s |Paragraph directed against the re-|the commander of the troop threw ers in shops, trade unions, and| Country it is a crime to endorse his | views. Lazzard was an anti-fascist This was the signal for a general onslaught. They were shot at un- till it was too dark to see wherever means of raising the $25,000 Com-|@nd said so in the chamber of dep- munist campaign fund, and general | Uties of which he was a member to campaign tasks, will be discussed |his death, so his widow must be left at the city-wide meeting of all units | by his friends to starve nor his desire to stay any longer|ranny” wired a declaration of the in Latvia than was necessary to/ Polish Embassy in Riga and of the pass through the country. He could} Latvian police that “the whole in no fashion whatever constitute |Paschin affair was pure invention.” | a danger to the order of government; The Latvian Home Secretary La-| in Latvia. minsh, as recently as May 7th, that | The fact that Jan Paschin was is ten days after the extradition wanted by the Polish political po- of Paschin, unblushingly declared lice was sufficient reason for the|to members of the Latvian parlia- Latvian police to arrest him on the|™ent that the arrested man was in} train passing through Riga to the Latvia ahd that he had the possi- | Soviet Tnion. | bility of traveling where he wished. Several persons knowing the Po-| Such subterfuges only prove that | lish language who were by chance the Latvian police strongly inclines present when Paschin was examined | towards the hushing up of all traces in Riga immediately expressed their /°f this sinister affair. But in this conviction that he would be trans-|it will and must not succeed. The “republicans are willing to wipe outs (Chemical Plant-Construction Cor- 1°. °"": See yeramnens press un they showed themselves and chased ported to Warsaw in chains, These fears were not unfounded. Paschin was in fact taken, without much ado, to Demgal railway station and there given up to agents of the Po- lish political police already waiting for him there. It is indisputable that the Lat- vian police in this instance acted by the direct commission of the Po- lish political police. By playing the part of a subordinate organ of the latter the Latvian police voluntarily | Latvian government must answer | the questions which were most di- rectly put. We have small confi- dence in the petition commission of the Latvian seym which is chetged |with the‘investigation of the Pasch- in case, But there are far more |serious forces at work which will \not allow this shameful misdeed to pass unnoticed. It is quite clear that the Paschin affair is not merely a high-handed act of despotism on the part of the degraded itself. It has thus proved te the whole world and shown up with all desirable clearness that all the proud declarations about “de- mocracy,” “political independence” Latvian police authorities. The Paschin affair much rather points | to the possibility that the coopera- tion of the two police forces is the outcome of a secret military con- and “sovereignty” are not worth the paper they are written on.- When the persecution of proletarian revo- lutionaries is in the balance the bourgeoisie never hesitates to tram- ple on its own laws. No obstacle ean hold back the bourgeoisie from giving way to its blind class hate. In such a case the “Warsaw police- men” can consider themselves quite at home in the territory of the “independent Latvian republic” and the entire government machine of Latvia is at their disposal. The conduct of the Latvian au- thorities in the Paschin affair is a pregnant example of the manner in which the bourgeoisie, if need arises, tramples underfoot the same liberal principles it proclaimed in times past in the sphere of international law, Ever since the era of the French revolution the theory of practise of international law has made a dis- tinction between political and com- mon offenses. Somewhere around the thirties of the past century the principle that persons persecuted for political offenses are not given’ up has been universally accepted. Bourgeois Rot up vention of these governments, That Poland for the last few years has spared no effort in or- der to win the Baltic states for a military alliance again-t the Soviet Union is no news to anyone, The coordination of the police activities | between Poland and Latvia permits |us to conjecture the degree of mu- tual understanding existing between the two general staffs and the mil- itary authorities of both countries. This instance clear], shows how the traditions of international law are disregarded by the bourgeoisie in the fight against t’ revolutionary working class. We see the develop- ment of international cooperation between the fascists of all coun- tries for the purpose of robbing the revolutionary workers and peas- ants of their rights and preparing ‘a war against the hated Soviet Union. The toiling masses must in in- ternational solidarity do their ut- most to tear Paschin from the clutches of his would be butchers and to declare war unto death against _ international fascism, gers and their against the imperialist war eigen Labor Defense and other mil- an entire industry.” Raw materia for the fabric (which Pennsylvania virgin wool manufacturers seek to keep out to insure demand for virgin wooi) are imported from Europe, made into shoddy clothing and sold for 520 to underpaid workers. Even Walsh ad- mitted that “they are cheap clothes, but they are all the poor man can afford to purchase,” in order to strengthen his fight for the New England shoddy mills. Majority members spent most of the day ir secret caucus over the tariff on hides,. leather and shoes. The schedule is expected to be com- pleted by Senator Smoot tomorrow, after which the sugar fight between U. S. beet growers and Cuban and Philippine Sugar interests will be renewed. Boston Halls Bar Sacco Meet; Workers’ Bodies Plan Militant Memorial BOSTON, Aug. 14.—Two years after Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were burned in the electric chair, the Massachusetts ruling class is still so fearful of the mem- ory of the two great working class martyrs that no church, synagogue, theatre, private hall, or public building can be secured for a Sacco- Vanzetti memorial meeting August 23. John L. Englert, superintendent of public buildings recently refused the Sacco-Vanzetti Memorial Commit- tee permission to use Faneuil hall. It is thought that the pressure ex- erted by city officials also induced 35 churches, synagogues, theatres, and halls to whom applications were made, to either refuse flatly or ig- nore the application, This despite the fact that the Sacco-Vanzetti Me- morial Committee is composed of very mild liberals and “socialists” and their meeting would be attended by strictly “respectable” people. While the committee is naively seeking some action by the courts — the same courts that ordered the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti — the workers of Boston a@ prepar- ing to attend the memorial meeting ‘being arranged — ban or no ban— by the Communist Party, Interna- itant organizations, cece — sell der the control of the social democ- racy 2 Wilhelm II the richest |man in Germany by the compen: poration) have arrived in this coun- try in connection with the technical assistance contracts with the Nitro-| tion of the former princes and W gen Engineering Company and Du-| holm received 600,000,000 marks. Pont de Nemours Company. The oe delegation of the Donugol Trust, ar which has technical assistance con- Imperialists Warm Up tracts with Stuart, James & Cook + re F and Roberts & Schaefer, will study FOr War in British Air Races; Wall St. Enters the American coal industry. ANNAPOLIS, Md, Aug. 14.— & < | The navy seaplane with which Lieut. | ‘Crime Drive’ as Stunt Aivord Williams hopes to capture | 4 pes) for Yankee imperialism the Schnei- |To Hide Inefficiency Pe air races soon to be held in Eng- Flash, 1 = {land will be given its first test to-| ashy police uniforms, parades | morrow. Williams is confident that! ana eee, men fail) the races, a further expression of| 0 cover up Police Commissioner | i : ims! |Whalen’s inability to the rivalry between the great im. “i eames gras loctiis wave,” ‘assonding tone, ine | perialist powers, will improve the [based on the records of the Medical Prevent. Mine tocor of Agee Fecal Office and the offices of go, engine capable of developing | bovouchg attorneys and the four 1,259 horsepower and was built for I wali cas appointed to office, the, impending imperialist war at a ‘ice, |to the accompaniment of a wide.|°°* be SON, peerage ‘spread press chorus of praise, for| The English air contest, in which Figures Show Whalen Germany and other capitalist coun-| | The Red Aid of Greece |to their lodgings. Sixteen seriously injured and numerous arrests are the results of this brutal outrage of the state police and the private gun- men. There is every reason to suppose that two workers of the number de- tained in the factory have been murdered by the thugs. They are missing and nobody knows what be- came of them. imme- diately organized a campaign of as- sistance for the courageous strikers who continue their fight and ap- peals to all foreign anti-Fascist or- ganizations for support. and section campaign managers this Friday, 8 p. m., at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union Square. This. is the first general meet- ing of campaign managers. In ad- dition to unit campaign managers, members of the election campaign | committees chosen by the various language departments of the Com- munist Party must be present, as the industrial groups. As far as I am concerned, I can’t claim to have discovered the ex- istence of classes in modern soctety it one another. economic physiology I have added as a new contribution the following proposi- t 1) that the existence of ex is bound up with certain en of pradection) 2) ie iy di proletariat; 3) that thi tatorship ix but the transition to the aboli- MAIL PLANE DOW SCRANTON, Pa., Aug. 14.—J. Webster, of Hadley Field, N. J., nar- rowly escaped death early this morn- ing when he was forced to land his mail plane, bound for Buffalo, in an orchard near here. Build Up the United Front of | well as the campaign directors of| the Working Class From the Bot- | tom Up—at the Enterprises! Take Your Vacation —at— the specific task of “solving” the| |murder of Arnold Rothstein, dope |ring profiteer. Ridden with graft |and corruption in spite of Whalen’s boasted “cleanup,” the Tammany tries will also participate, will serve as a saber-rattling occasion for the jingoes of the respective powers and at the same time will be utilized to) whip up “patriotic” fever at home., m of all classes and to the cre- | ntton of a society of free and equal. —Marx, Press Carnival Sunday, Aug. 18. Let's go. | Unity Camp Me police department still confines its \efforts to slugging strikers and| breaking up workers’ gatherings, | |while allowing rich bootleggers and| organized grafters to continue un-| hampered. | The records show that 148 per-| sons were violently killed in the first six months of the year. Forty-four jonly of those who made the attacks |are under arrest, leaving virtually |the same situation in the police de- partment as under Whalen’s prede- cessor, Warren. Meanwhile, Tam-| many continues to discuss the “fight | against the crime wave” while work- | ing hard to combat Communist | Party working class representatives and secure re-election of its own sup- porters who enforce conditions which produce the “crime” they “fight.” — United Brotherhood ef Carpenters and Joiner of America, Local 2000. — Gyfléseit tartja minden csitirt. este « Labor Temple-ben, 324 E. sith St., shol uj tagok is felvétetnek. 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Grand Celebration at Opening of New Library ' This Week. | Bathing, Boating, Fishing, | Dancing, Singing and Fri. 6:30 p. m.; Sat. 1:30 } p. m.; and Sun. 9 a. m.| ’