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| | ‘ fense and members of the Commu- “ Nine organizations in © y # THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS a Workers-Karmers Ggvernmeni + Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist War For the 40-Hour Week P aily Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at Ne w York, N. ¥., under the act of March 3, 1879. Worker Comp: e, 26-28 Union Square Vol. VI., No. 214 Published daily except Sunday vy The Comprodaily Publishing New York City, N. ¥. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: York, by mail, 86.00 per year. <=>.. NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1929 Socialist Rivalry in Drive to Rush Daily Worker South w York Unit Challenges Other Workers’ Groups Socialist rivalry among the workers and peasants and their or- ganizations in the Soviet Union, Socialist rivalry in industrial con- struction in the first workers’ and peasants’ republic, is one of the big forces in putting over the Five-Year Plan for Socialist construction. And Socialist rivalry between the workers of the Soviet Union and the workers of the other European countries is an idea that's spreading like wild-fire among the European workers. The idea is for the Soviet workers to increase constructive work, and the workers in capitalist countries to intensify the fight against fascism, social-fascism and capitalism. And now here’s yet another form of revolutionary rivalry—in the “Drive to Rush the Daily South:” The members of Unit 7F, Section 3, of the Communist Party, in New York, get the credit for originating this dandy idea. They’ve pledged $2.50 a week to adopt the mill town of Green- yille, S. C., and see to it that the mill workers of Greenville receive the Daily regularly. And Unit 7F, Section 3, challenges all of the units of Section 3 in making collections so that the Daily Worker can be rushed to the southern workers! Snap into it, all Communist Party units, and all workingclass groups. Take up the challenge of Unit 7F, Section 3! Don’t stand by doing nothing while your fellow workers in the South appeal to you to rush the Daily Worker to them! Adopt a southern mill village, and see to it that the Daily gets to the workers there regularly! Below the coupons today we're printing the first part of the list of those who've responded to the appeals of the southern mill workers for the Daily Worker. * * + Daily Worker, 26 Union Square, New York City. Here's my part toward sending the Daily to the southern workers. Name ...ccsccccsccccsccsccecsesccetesteessecssceseesesegseneseees AMOR seis as <iaasstises desea City State Amount $..........e seer eee ———— eee FOR ORGANIZATIONS (Name of Organization) Address: .ounsseees City and State . Amount: Sam Sar Leff, Ne Julins I. Adeipte V John. Peek, N. Abraham Siegel, N. Papalexato: Section 3, Uni thas, Liberman. J. l. P., Flushi A. Rosenthal, N.Y, leveland, Pionee romholtz, ah Halpe Boston, Mass. ... Branch 11 and Ph Lithuanian Women's Worl Socie Hammond, Ind, jieger, Ph Pa ; zo, ‘I Little Rock 5 River Forest, U1 s . Brooklyn, N. Federenko, Hedgwich, ter Zopletal, N. Y. € Hammersmark, C s DB. Zini, d Re Wahlb: sam Ww. oss gs, 00 Mes, go, 11.13.00 Joseph, * ) 2.00 1.00 MAGYAR TOILERS 380 PERIOD DANCE LEAD LL.D, DIVE ON SATURDAY EVE Demonstrated Against 5,000 Workers to Aid Horthy in Cleveland | “Daily” Drive “Down with the Horthy terror,” was the demand raised before the Hungarian consulate in Cleveland, when the International Labor De- Are you going to the Dance of the Third Period, at Rockiand Palace, W. 155th St. and 8th Ave., this Saturday night? But what class “ . }conscious worker isn’t? nist Party held a demonstration. | ‘The affair will give a starter to The noon-day throngs formed so | the Daily Worker’s campaign for large an assemblage, that the} 5,000 new readers, which will be mounted police rode into the demon- | officially inaugurated in ¢onnection strators, and tore down the signs. |with the Communist Party’s drive Louis Sass, organizer of the Hun- for 5,000 new members on Dec. 10. garian section of the International| It will also serve to speed up the Labor Defense declared, upon his drive to rush the Daily into the return from Cleveland and a nation- South, from which section the ex- wide tour, that the Cleveland work- | Ploited mill workers are sending con- ers, especially the Women’s Club stant appeals! for the only paper and the Uj Blore Building Club were |aiding them in their fight to or- most active in the drive for 50,000 | eanize in the face of the terror new members for the I. L. D. ‘launched by the bosses and their He returned from a tour ef 15 Black Hundreds. cities with 300 signed memb ship Vive thousand is the mark set for cards, The Hungarian worke® are the Saturday “Third Period” Dance, leading the way in the drive for|Which, if successful, will go far to membership, many of them having help the Southern toilers to put a chosen delezutes for the Fourth Na: Period to the boss terror. Admis- tional Conference -of the Interna- *iM is only 75 cents, which is guar- tibnal Labor Defense Dec. 29, 30,| teed to make every worker at. and 31. 4 jtending feel like a million dollars. . | Tickets on sale at the Daily bu Sass reported new Hungarian | . ms pares iy branches of the 1 Le Dein ail, Nes office, 26 Union Sq. waukee, Gary, Hammond, Cleveland, 15 rt WHET A Wi . Tranbarc: Akron ‘and Yorngstown TERRORIZE BELGIAN WORKERS sown | BRUSSELS (By Mail)—In_con- feat Sth nection with the attempt on the life «lof the Italie 82 anti- ™ farriet workers | sted thoueh nothing ughi ast them. dosed the J. L. D. and send delegates to the cor > Clevelard. Sass reported a Philadelphia con. ference of all Hungarian branches to aid Gastonia. New. York Hun- ai to vitat citics & garian workers are establishiog a the biteenstionst 1 sehool for voluntary Hungarian ur- jas announ ed. crown prince, heon ar he can by organize Defense, ‘|Mobilize for Thursday | quart Further Exbose POE BREAK O ooney’ Frameup Wedel ARMISTICE DAY | Kin of Bomber Swear | MEET; JAIL 3. He Confessed “Job” | BELLAIRE, Ohio, Nov. 12.—That {Old Workers in Wash. | the bombing of the “preparedne: Incommunicado in | day” parade at San Francisco in i | Terror Drive | 1916, used to frame up Tom Mooney Cops in Brutal Attack | a | and Warren K. Billings for their | Penn. Workers to Defy labor activities, was the work of one | \Lewis Smith, was corroborated yes- | Steel Trust Terror SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 12.—A terday by his brother, A. L. Smith, | of Wheeling, W. Va. | Smith’s sister, Mrs. George Mon- | roe, her son Otto and Frank Stevens, of Dayton, had previously made af- | fidavits affirming that they were | i present in 1922 when Lewis Smith | demonstration of hundreds of Seat- confessed on his death bed that he|tle workers, led by the Communist set off the bomb that caused ten |Party, was broken up by police here jyesterday. Great brutality was dis- played by the police who charged into the workers who were demon- strating against the imperialist war plans. Thirty-five workers were arrested, and are being held incommunicado. fatalities. | Banners carried by the demonstra- The Wheeling man said that his brother also acknowledged the blame tors calling on workers to turn im- perialist war into a war against the for two other bombings and the | burning of a government building at | Montreal, Can. A number of years ago, Lewis was arrested for a job in Canada, but escaped by turning capitalists and pledging the defense of the Soviet Union, were confis- perialist secret service prior to the jcated by the atta¢king police. Among war. The latter once filled the fire | the workers arrested were Stein, extinguisher in a Canadian govern-|Perl Levitt, Laurie, chairman of the and has since seen all of the San|the House of Detention last night. Francisco Merchants Association’s| Habeas corpus proceedings on be- witnesses exposed as liars, has re-|half of the arrested are planned for informer against his associates, his brother declared. Smith said he believed his brother was engaged in the German im-| ment building with gasoline and | Anti-Imperialist League, and many then set fire to the structure. | others. Superior Judge Franklin Griffin.| The Young Pioneers, Direcloi, who presided at the Mooney “trial” | {mignon and Hobson were sent to peatedly appealed for pardons for |today. The International Labor De- Mooney and Billings, so far without |fense is defending the arrested avail, workers. CLEANERS CLIQUE ADMITS TRICKERY | Strikers Oppose Right | CAFETERIA SHOP DELEGATES BUSY Rally at Bryant Hall |” Wing Sellout Game “Every worker, a union member! Every union member, a union or- ganizer!” This is the slogan adopt- ed this week by the Cafeteria Work- ers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers, following one of the most enthusiastic membership meet- ings ever held at the union head- 133 W. 5ist St. In prepar- ation for the mass meeting Thurs- day night at Bryant Hall, when the The right wing clique in Local 8 jof the Building Service Employes 5 | U. yesterday shamelessly gave away part of the double bookkeeping game |by which they have been trying to |fool the workers. Local 8, under a militant leader- has been conducting a general str of 2,000 window cleaners which today enters its fifth week. | jize all other building service work: \ |Centralia Prisoners, ‘It has also started a drive to organ if Gastonia 7 in Letter to RAILROAD 112 Centralia 8 Hail Renewed Drive to MARION STRIKERS Release Latter \More Evictions as Attempt to Jail Workers Begins Prontising to do everything in their power to aid the release of the Centralia prisoners, the Gastonia prisoners have written them in con-| nection with the renewed mass cam-|Mjll Hands Aroused paign to secure the freedom of the! jailed Washington workers, The} letter follows: (Northern Exploiters | Seared by Militancy Charlotte, N.C. | Mecklenburg County Jail, = BULLETIN. If MARION, N. C., Noy. 12—First | steps in the move to exonerate Alfred Hoffman, U. T. W. organ- izer and valuable bossman, from charges _ legalistically brought against him were taken when Judge Cowper ruled Hoff- man cannot be tried on a consoli- Dear Comrade: It was with great interest that) we learned that a renewed campaign is to be started for your release. | With long prison terms facing us| and after having already been in jail| almost a half'a year we well realize | what the ten years you have served | rebellion meant. You like we, were “guilty”| dation of the charges. of two crimes, one that we were BULLETIN. workers trying to organize to fight | : ag ‘nst this damnable system of ex-| CHARLOTTE, N. C., Nov. 12.— |} workers in Gaston County and in Marion has effectively given the lie to these statements, With the con- .|sequent scaring off of northern slave-driving concerns desirous of coming here for low-paid labor. MARION, N. C., Nov. 12.—While the evictions of more families of the most militant of the strikers of the Marion Manufacturing Company plo**-‘‘on and that we defended our |The great militancy displayed by the (Continued on Page Three) mill workers of Gastonia and vicin- Scho, |ity under the leadership of the Na- Great Welcome rictierin'at te United texte | Workers Union fakers, has caused lg sharp decline in the number of | inquiries from corporations wanting |to move their textile mills and other | plants, or to establish new branches jin North Carolina. Lawrence and Boston |part of the North Carolina mill . |workers, the mill bosses of the North Workers Greet Him {haa tooked on the Carolina workers as docile sheep, incapable of resist- BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 12 —Five | ing their slave conditions. South- hundred workers, welcoming Fred |ern chambers of commerce had ad- |vertised widely in trade periodicals i jern exploiters of labor to come to the street, amidst cheers for the|North Carolina, stating that the Gastonia mill workers and Beal’s| workers here were “loyal, willing fellow workers facing long terms in|to work for small wages and long prison. |hours, and would have nothing to The workers’ welcome was spdn-|40 with labor unions.” Soted by. the International . Labor | Defense. Beal’s father came from a Beal, accompanied by the I. L. D. organizer, Zelms, received another great welcome on his visit to Law- rence, his home town, and the scene of long years of slavery in the mills for Beal. Beal and Zelms addressed several workers’ clubs in Lawrence. jtional Textile Workers Union, and Beal to Boston; carried him on their | : : 3 and financial papers, urging north- sick-bed in Lawrence to greet Fred Large mass meetings for the de- union’s new organization campaign |by the Marion workers despite the HisHomeT a ge | Previous to the rebellions on the shoulders through the station and/ in Boston. 6 fense of the Gastonia class prison- jhere were being made today, the The militancy displayed by the , opens, delegates from every union shop are bringing the message of unionization to the open shop. A shop delegate’s committee of fifty workers is doing most of the campaign work—distributing leaf- lets, recruiting members, laying the basis for shop committees. Special (Continued on Page Two) ers. Ex-Seab Leads Right Wing. B. Lash, who during the window cleaners’ strike in 1925 was a leader lof the strikebreaking company junion, Local 1, and who is now one lof the chief bulldogs of the right |wing, said at a strike meeting yes- |terday in Manhattan Lyceum he had ers are being arranged by the Inter- national Labor Defense in such tex- | tile mill centers as Lawrence, New | Beaton, Fall River and also in Bos- ton. * * Fred Beal and K. Y. (Red) Hen- dryx, two of the seven Gastonia defendants, are ready to greet the * first of a series of trials involving 119 mill strikers and some officials jof the United Textile Workers’ | Union began today. | Bosses Try Tricks in Trial. | In the attempt to railroad over |100 mill workers, two tactics of the One is the attempt to throw a cloak of seeming impartiality over the bosses and their courts stand out. | si- | been authorized to announce offi- | lcially that the American Federation | jof Labor officials would enter the |strike situation Friday and “fix things up.” | Asked who gave him authority to | HH WORKERS. HI deal with the of L. since he STRIKE IN PRISON. |is not an official of Local 8 nor even (Wireless By Inprecorr) }a member of its Executive Council, | HELSINGFORS, Finland, Nov. 12. | Lash was unable to answer. So} —One hundred and forty political overwhelming was the sentiment of | prisoners in the Finnish prisons |the strikers against this under-| went on a hunger strike today as a handed, strikebreaking action that) protest’ against the intolerable con-|even his right wing cronies hadn’t ditions in the prisons. the courage to defend Lash. What ern: Lash failed to announce was that, JAIL SAXON RED EDITOR. | jn addition to their dealings with the | BERLIN (By Mail).—The Ger-|corrupt A. F. of L. officials, the} man Supreme Court in Leipzig has | (Continued on Page Two) | sentenced the editor of the Commu- | nist “Ruhrecho,” Erich Birkenhauer IMPORTANT EVENTS IN BERLIN. |to one year’s jail and 100 marks! BERLIN, Nov. 12.—The Commu- \fine for “preparation for high nists won 2,000 votes in Luebeck treason.” \ |town council election, while the so- , pet We |cialists lost the same number. COMMUNISTS: DEFIANT IN | In Berlin proper, 9,000 unemployed COURT. 'workers, employed temporarily on a VIENNA, Nov. 12.—Reports from {job by the municipality, have struck Budapest state that four Communist |demanding the seven-hour day and b‘Iding trades erkers have been/| recognition of their representatives. sentenced to prison for “crimes | a directed to overthrow the state.” The HUNGARIAN SAW MILL STRIKE sentences were: Lukatch, 30 months;; VIENNA (By Mail).—The saw Kehlinger, 28 months; Kristof, 20 mill owners in Szegedin in Hungary months; Nagy, 12 months—all with | have decided to cut wages by 10 per hard labor. The prisoners, when| cent.’ The workers refused to ac- sentenced, shouted out: “Long live | cept reductions and 200 of them are the Communist Party |already on strike. NNISH WORKERS HUNGER | ‘Miller, One of Gastonia 7, Assails Liberals’ “Justice” They Would Coat Capitalist Exploitation With Sugar Pills, He Tells New Republic Clarence Miller, one of the seven| the intellectualist, “liberal” Gastonia defendants, writes from] proach of the New Republic. lis cell in Mecklinburgh county jail] ier’s letter says: to the editor of the New Republic] “As one of those convicted to im- | magazine, correcting som ious | prisonment of 17 to 20 years in the | | misinformation that magazine has tonia case, I would like to: use given out about the Gas- the correspondence section of your | ‘inagazine to answer some cf the editorial views expressed on our case in your issue of October 30th. | aps Mil- The letter, quoted in full below, lilustyates the charp eonflict be. a loader basis, workers of New York at the big mass welcome at New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave., Friday night, but whether any other de- fendants will be present depends on the workers of this city and the rest of the country. When the mass welcome ar- ranged by the New York District of the International Labor Defense, it was thought that all seven defend- | nts would be released on bail in | time to be present. But thus far | ibutions and loans have been sufficient only to free Beal and Hendryx. The $5,000 quota as-| signed to New York for the freeing | of Clarence Miller has not yet been | raised. All workers are therefore | tion of the collapse of the subway urged to rush contributions or loans | excavation cave-in at 14th St. and at once to the office of the New | sth Ave. in which four were in- York I. I. D., 799 Broadway, Room | jured Monday, five private detec- 422. tives from the Dougherty agency “Tf you want to hear the Gastonia | hovered close to construction work- defendants speak Friday night, pro- |ers endangered by the crash to make Continued on Page Three) CAVE-IN CAUSED BY CONTRACTOR Whitewashed; Police Prowl Round Men While police, inspectors of the board of transportation and contrac- tors collaborated on an investiga- vide the .noney to free them,” is the | sure they kept the real story of the | message of the I. L. D. to New |crash to themselves. York's militant workers. ‘ | The accident is being used by A. Working Women Push charges—common knowledge among 5: \the workers ordinarily ignored by Anniversary Plans the A. F. of L. officialdom—that the The 35 |Board of Transportation hired un- councils of the United | skilled labor for skilled work at Council of Working Women have al-' scab wages. ready started work for the sixth an-| One of the hurt is in a serious niversary celebration of the organ- | (Continued on Page Two) ization, to be held in Stuyvesant Casino, Second Ave. and Ninth St., at 8 o’clock Friday evening, Nov. 22. Each council will contribute to the program. The celebration will pay tribute to the militant record made in the past six years and will be| the signal for intensified activity on} The program will also include a) Ku Klux Klan and number of well known professional | performers. Tickets are on sale at the united councils office, 799 Broad- way, R-om 535. | (By YETTA STROMBERG) LOS ANGELES, Cal. (By Mail. JAIL WORKER-EDITOR, Hi tiariws Greaney —The case of the children’s s1 PARIS (By Mail)—The chief edi tee tor of the “Depeche de 1l’Aube, Charles Mitch, a sympathizer of the Communist movement, has been | conviction of six of the seven de+ sentenced to five years in jail and | fendants upon felony charges. One a fine of 600 francs for having) more link has been added in the ween the point of view of -ailitort “The views expressed can be Hialor. iepresenied by Miller, and | (Contmued on Page Two) lat the camp at Mailly, printed a series of articles on the! chain of capitalist justice. The treatment of reservists in training and the subsequent arrest of seven _F. of L. officials to strengthen their | American Legion Headed Active Forces of Reaction tor Flying the Red Flagin Cal. Beal Writes of West Coast Terror By FRED BEAL. For flying a Soviet flag at their summer camp, five Los Angeles ; women workers have been sent to prison. Three of them are mother One of the five, a 19-year-old girl, Yetta Stromberg, is sent to jail for ten years. The other four for five | yeai | California is the same state that | has kept Mooney and Billings in prison for thirteen long years—on ved, frame-up evidence. What California has done to Mooney and Billings, to the five women workers, |to scores of other workers is not Jisolated in the United States. North |Carolina can more than match it with the murder of Ella May, with |the murder of six Marion strikers, with floggings and kidnappings of | National Textile Workers’ Union or- | ganizers. Pennsylvania can match it with | Salvatore Accorsi, whose life is in (Continued on Page Two) GASTON-MINEOLA PROTEST TONIGHT Needle Workers Meet at Webster Hall | -New York needle trades workers | will voice their protest against the \class verdict railroading the Gas- tonia seven to jail for long terms of 20 years at a mass meeting called |by the Needle Trades Workers’ In- dustrial Union at Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St., at 7:30 tonight. At the same time, they will com- plete plans to extend their campaign to save the victims of the Mineola | frame-up. The speakers. will be, Ben Gold, union leaders, and spokesmen for the labor jury sent to Gastonia by the Cleveland convention of the Trade Union Unity League. | The two cases form part of the widespread state-aided terror drive against militant workers and their organizations, the N. T. W. I. U. points out .in urging mass, attend- ance at the meeting. “The right-wing misleaders have ‘thrown off their masks and are openly aiding the bosses to cut down the wages of the workers, establish the inhuman speed-up system, and destroy the unions,” th eleaflet de- | clares. BLEED GALVESTON, Texas — They’re paying only 40 cents an hour for {common labor, although the scale lis 50 cents, to Sumner Collit Co., | |laborers erecting the new. Outpatient |Clinie of John Sealy Hospital, con- nected with the University of Texas Medical School at Galveston. The men are unorganized. BELGRADE, (By Mail).—A_spe- cial court sentenced the machin Ferdo Hoffmann to one year | TERROR JAILS WORKER. | in prison for having distributed leaf- lets. The prisoner confessed that jhe has given to friends about 6 leaf- lets which he had found in his coat pocket. One year in the peniten- |tiary was the verdict. ‘For First Time the Women of Turkey Go on Strike — and Win (Wireless By Imprecorr) MOSCOW, Nov. 12. — Reports || from Constantinople state that— | for the first time in the history of Turkey—there has been a strike of working women. This oc- | curred when 2,000 women work- ers at Kastomoni, on the Black | Sea coast, struck, demanding || equal pay with the men workers. | Furthermore, these women work- | ers were successful in winning their demand. | Yetta Stromberg, Given 10 geo Pay Years Jail Tells ot Terror SUGAR PLANT, KHARKOV of those engaged in the establish- ment and maintainance of the camp is not separate and apart from the | against the working class. | Three weeks after the opening of | / the camp a raid was upon it headed | by the American Legion. Literature / (Continued on Page Vhyee) x In New York, by mail, $8.00 per year. BUILDING LABORERS. ie FINAL CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents START TRIAL TO Zen Years Jail REFUSES BOND TO RELEASE 5 GASTON JAILED Clerk eos Barnhill Ruled Cash Only; Judge Denies It South Hit by Slump Japan Labor Defense Greets Strikers CHARLOTTE, N. C., Nov. 1 —A property bond sufficient to relea the remaining five defendants in the millowners’ jail presented today wa rejected by the county clerk whe claimed Judge Barnhill ruled the bond must be cash. Barnhill, how- ever, stated he did not rule as the clerk claims when phoned long dis- tance by George Maurer, Interna- tional Labor Defense southern repre- sentative. This is the second obstacle placed in the way of the of the five by the bosses, their courts and the betrayers. i Cotton bo: meeting at Spar- tansburg, S. C., today announced cur- tailment throughout the South be- cause of overproduction and the Wall release Street crash that has already af- \fected industry. The Loray Mill, a eavy loser in the strike, has re- warded scabs with the four day week due to curtailment. The International Labor Defens¢ of Japan, fighting on behalf of the 700 workers arrested recently for membership in the Communist Party, today sent greetings to the Gastonia strikers. | Their letter follows: | “To the Gastonia strikers and th comrades in the U. S, A.: The heroic struggle of the Gastonia textile workers against the brutal American |capitalism has been reported to the (Continued on Page Two) WALL STREET 1S HIT BY NEW LOW Tammany Bank Dirt Hushed by Smith While stock prices crashed further yesterday to new lows, Tammany politicians were try ing vainly to hush up the scandal around the “suicide,” James Rior- dan, president of the County Trust Bank, of which Al Smith is a di- Also they were trying bj record | puffs to assure all and sundry that the bank’s accounts were | perfectly all right. But on the Stock Exchange the County Trust stock it 260 bid, 300 asked, comp: before yesterday’s close and 310 asked. As the scandal it, Medical Examiner, Dr. Charles Nor “SOVIET BUILDS HUGE 2 INDUSTRIAL PLANTS MOSCOW, Novy. 12.—Providing for construction of a chain of huge cement plants, grain eleva- tors, flour mills and factories for several industries, the Soviet gov- ernment yesterday signed a con- tract involving $110,000,000 with an Ame neering com- pany. Several million dollars of | machinery is included for equip- ping the plants. Five enormous flour mills with daily capacity of 2,000 barrels each will be built. our cement || plants will inerea production from 15,000,000, a 21,000,000 barre at present, to per year. Pay- ments will be made periodically | to the company in dollars. Forty- | will be engaged and the firm will train fifteen Soyiet engineers in | } | || five American expert engineers | | | America. | ‘positively that ti y’s recent andidate for Pr lent of the United Al Smith, had asked him to he report until the close of (Continued on Page Two) OPEN LARGEST USSR MOSCOW (By Mail).—In Char- | kov, the largest sugar factory in the |Soviet Union has just been opened. |The factory will produce 20,000 jewts. of sugar a day. The factory was built in one year instead of in camp at Yucaipa. Cal. concluded at | general trend of events, but is part {the two years originally planned, } the San Bernardino county court on| and parcel of the brutal, unceasing, |and in this way four million roubles Wednesday October 23rd with the | offensive campaign of the bosses | Were s Thy Krariatbrakita sit |Donetz Basin, the foundation stone of @ new gigantic metal works was laid in the presence of many thou- |sands of workers. ‘The works will ed | breaking up of the children’s camp|and general camp material was !be concluded inside of three years and will cost 75 million routers 1