The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 26, 1929, Page 1

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gary. derstand These The Rand School of Social Fascism Tried to Turn a Neat Trick on Behalf of the Bloody Dictator, The Workers Begin to Un- Capitalist Political Horthy, of Hun- Bootleggers of “Science” biishee daily except §: toe. 26-28 FINAL CITY EDITION SUBSCRIPTION Must are facing machine-guns of state strike-breaking gangs of the U. M. Lewis, and the police. The miners are battling for: a off or fines, the six-hour day and speed-up, dangerous conditions, dis and young miners. They demand unemployment relief to be pa It is imperative that every cla: States, in the coal fields or @sewher self into the fight to help the’ coal mine most desperate struggle of their existence! These mine workers—one of the very best The Illinois Miners’ Strike Ais to Attack TEXTILE Win! conscious worker in the United should immediately throw him- of Illinois who are now in the sections of our class— troops, armies of private gunmen, W. of A., Fishwick, Farrington and $35 minimum wage, no more check- five-day week, and abolition of all crimination against Negro w 'S 1 for by the bosses or the state and equal rights for the Negro coal miners. The winning of this fight by t portant victory of many years for spreading of the new great union tl he workers will mean the most im- our class. It will mean the rapid hroughout the coal fields of the en- tire United States, and its early extension to cover the metal mining fields.as well. A successful struggle in Illinois will very soon make possible a general struggle throug’ hout the coal mining states of the whole country—with unprecedented gains for the American working class cause. Every worker in every industr ry in the country is directly or in- directly involved in the victory of the Illinois miners. There is no doubt that the new revolutionary industrial union movement under the Trade Union Unity Lereue will sweep the country and gather under its banner sooner or late. ti ers, -But victory in line, . movement and will greatly hasten t! active majority of the American work- will-give a tremendous impetus to this he time of its success. The capitalist class and its instrument, the state, together with the socjal-fascist allies of the mine bo: , are fully conscious of the significance of this fight. They are already using almost every method to beat the workers down, and other methods will come. prison. The need for legal aid and The workers everywhere must Many are in e relief is mounting fast. give their wholehearted support to 8 the Workers International Relief, to enable that organization to give aid to the strikers. The International Labor Defense must be sup- ported so that it can take care of the court cases of the great number of arrested miners and union organizers. The best defense’ is a further attack of the mine workers against the scab mines! Keritucky is a big advance that mu: The immediate winning of the miners of Indiana and st be completed at once! Help the National Miners’ Union to win this fight! Strengthen the Communist Pai Mass Ficketing Shoe Shops Today! In reply to the strike-breaking action of the Department of Labor, which called upon’ the shoe manu- facturers of New York and Brook- BUREAU AZ Out! Soviet Union at Naval Meet WASHINGTON, Dec. 25.—One of the central features of the London race-for-armaments' conference to be held Jan. 21, is the organization of DIRECTS FORCES FOR SILK STRIKE Mill Committees in All th ‘apitalist for inst the So- yi ] harris th lame ae . | Mills, Shop Bulletins, | This is especially shown in the} Prepare Struggle | maneuvers to incorporate the Kel- logg “peace” pact into an agreement, backed by naval armaments, and directed against the Union of Social- | ist Soviet Republics. s MacDonald in the House of Com- ‘mons yesterday tried to cover up this fact when he said the Five- Power Conference would consider naval strength only, and would not take up policy. Germany is being drawn into the naval armaments meet in order to) | (Continued on Page Two) TUUL GALLS FOR “WILLINERY FIGHT Fifth Ave. the N.T.W. | uphislbateaute a body: of:tiverta.te constantly within call and to hold frequent meetings and direct the igeneral organization work of the | union between the monthly meetings lof the executive board. It is made up of president of the Executive Board, Jim Reid; secretary of the bi ; i ®, \Executive Board, Clarence Miller; oe vin, Muha ese tguevine EAAS OS ohio ne Melvin «Rappaport end Hall, at which John Schmies, as- [ieh, secretary of the Trade all shops out on strike as well as all those shops that have broken ° |their contracts will be picketed in Fight Pay Cut, Speedup) mass this morning, the union states Sinage: ;While meetings of striking shoe Orders District Meets; | workers will be held during the day. Yj | Meanwhile the union is preparing a Places Organizers | program of action for the organiza- |tion of the thousands of organized Active preparation for a strike in| shoe workers. silk mills, and rapid distribution of| A‘ concert to raise money for | Ha building of local {Strike relief will be held under the SISNeT ae gue auspices of the union and the Work- leading committees in all the most | ors International Relief at Central important centers of present and/ Oper House, January 5. impending struggle in the ‘textile | industry occupied most of the time SOVIET R E J F CTS and at the meeting Tuesday night of the bureau of the executive commit- | tee of the National Textile Work- RUMANIAN NOTE | ers Union, The meeting was at 104 ‘Punctures Dignity of , the National Office of Ue French Ambassador BERLIN, Dec. 25.—Reports from Moscow recite with some gusto how the Soviet foreign Commissariat. j headed by Litvinoff, resolutely re- jected the note of fascist Rumania, which, not having a minister of its own at Moscow, gave its rather moldy adherence to the discredited ‘Exposes Zaritsky, All to Picket Fairway BULLETIN. All needle trades workers are urged to attend the meeting at ant Wage Cuts and Speed-up. lyn to break their contracts with the | Independent Shoe Workers Union, | rty, which furnishes the backbone | 1 “Kellogg Pact”-Stimson war threat “SOCIALISTS” 1 N DEFEAT ON TRICK TO USE KAROLYI Anti- Fascist Speaker Bans Date Made by Social Fascists Demagogic Scheme Hit “Rand School” Forced | to Cancel Meeting | The the party of social fascism in Amer- so-called “socialist” part ica as in Hungary and other coun- tries, received a slap in the face when it attempted to hide its fas- jcist face behind an anti-fascist mask | | while at the same time it is fight- ing the fascists of the Anti-Horthy League. | | Karolyi had associated himself | with the Berlin Anti-Fascist World | | Congress. ing the fascist regime of Horthy, the murderous fascist dictator of Hungary, in which country workers particularly Communists, are bein viciously against anti- He is known as oppos- tortured to death in prison with tl enthu: tance of the cialis has just cable from Europe his refusal to sped a meeting arranged by the School of Social Science,’ actually a part of the social-fascis “socialist” party, at which the so tic as RATES: In New York by mall. $8.00 per year Outside New York. by mall Price 3 Cents MINERS BUILDING RANK AND FILE COMMITTEES TO LEAD ENLARGED STRIKE Refuse to Let Gunmen and Militia Drive Them Back to Underground Slavery; More Arrests Call Whole Working Class to Save Corbishley, Threatened With Long Sentence for Activity WEST FRANKFORT, IIL, Dec. 25.—Organizers of the ational Miners’ Union and committees elected by the strikers ding firm against every variety of terror practiced by itia, deputy sheriffs, mine owners and United Mine Workers gunmen and strikebreakers, are penetrating the U.M.W. locals and un-struck sections of the Illinois coal fields with bundles of the second strike call of the Grievance Committee of the Dlinois District of the N. M. U. They are working rapidly to organize rank and file com- mittees, elected by the miners, organized and unorganized, N. Si ae eee *M. U. and U. M. W. members, Jobless to Lose Even These committees are the : + |strike leaders in all localities, Snow Shovelling and “Spread the Strike” is the main slogan, These leaflets of the N. M. U. also call upon railroad workers and truck drivers to refuse to carry seab coal, and urge miners and all workers to rally to the “Don’t let the sheriffs, militia, or Lewis and Fishwick gunmen break the strike,” “Spread the s' |“march from mine to mine,” | n y League, will lead a : : EE St a reat | cial fascists had advertised him tc mass picket lines,” “elect rank and of leadership in this important struggle! Ha Recetas ett the new |o.rte, Paterson organizer, Kushin- ito the Soviet, through the boiled- | speak. ile ‘icine. com nitheset eae discussion on ‘at are the new Isky, reported to the bureau in de- (Continued m Page Two) f a eicias vss. 5 pee ie Ve rey nonaitioeie: i to silk The dirty attempt of American strike,” say the leaflets and the or- functions.of the T. U. U. L. jtail on conditions in that big silk rl y : i Pees octaves thee oe jmill center. Wage cuts continue social-fascism to repeat the tricks & : Y 80. ILD AIM TO GAIN MARINE LEAGUE: se cx su iesiny sso of the Trade Union Unity League and unemployment grows rapidly, argely because of the present pol NEGRO WORKERS IN ORLEANS BUSY Membership Drive Un- I.L.D. Secures Release. til March 18th | A minimum of 2,000 Negro work- | ers among the 50,000. new members, of the International Labor Defense, | the quota set for the membership | dtive which will continue until | March 18, will be one of the prin-, cipal aims stressed at the Fourth National. Convention of the Inter- national. Labor Defense in Pitts- burgh, Dec. 29, 30, 31. A number of Negro workers are» to be placed on the national commit- | teé of the I.L.D. and all districts | are'to be instructed to add Negro} members to their respective ee committees. At least one Negro na- tional organizer will be chosen to| head this work among the Negro! masses. The formation of branches and de- fense committees in the shops, fac- tories, mines anf mills, as a guar- of All Arrested NEW ORI FANS, La., Dec. The last meeting of the local branch of the Marine Workers League here showed active crganization work and preparations under way for the Gulf Coast Conference of the League to be held here January 18 and 19. This wili be the third of Such regional conferences, preceding the calling of a general marine workers’ convention next April at which a real industrial marine work- ers union will be established. Reports at the meeting showed; seamen and longshoremen lining up. The Negro organizer of the league reported that he had been threat- ened with violence by the police at the docks and watchmen on the ships for talking organization to the Negro longshoremen, of which New Orleans has thousands, or going PROTEST HAITI- -— AFRICA MURDER \Colonial Massacres | Branded in ILD Call One hundred Negro newspapers in ithe United States today received a call to protest militantly against the {imperialist murders of British and American interests in South Africa and in Haiti, The call was sent has issued the following statement ity of the companies to force work- on the Fairway Hat Shop strike, and |S to handle twice as many looms | the millinery workers’ struggle gen-| Per Worker as before, and then to ie Tis all to struggle for fire those they no longer need. SUCRE TERE ce hee VOLE Haye Uhfenboriihe Tats the “The conspiracy between the Union office, 205 Paterson St., and “Fairway Hat Co.” and the Zarit- (Continued on Page Three) sky machine in the Cloth Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers’ Union PLAN DEFENSE i which resulted in the discharge of the best paid operators -in the shop 1 from the national office of the In- Conference Jan. 19; to ternational Labor Defense. jand in the replacing of them by | others who work for smaller wages, * * st | The latest reports that at least | Aid Mineola Workers | oty-rour Negro workers were till | |proves conclusively the open be- | trayal of our unscrupulous officers. ed in Southeast Nigeria, British! West Africa, and the news that the “In a brief period the Zaritsky |clique has betrayed the strike of slaughter in Haiti by far exceeded the “official” twelve reported killed, (Continued on Page Two) has brought fourth the following | 10 WIN ELECTION anger, through the transpar-/ declaration from the International | jent atempt to push through the con-|T nor Defense: 1 |viction of William Shifrin and the| “urs iey in far-flung. sections ot| called the Shifrin ease and the Min- | Petialism steeped in the blood of The blue coats of Tammany, in cordial alliance with the yellow so- cialist misleaders, has provoked the masses of New York workers to mil- jof their European ilk, of making loud noises “against” fascism to de- ceive the working class, while all their effective actions are turned |violently against the anti-fascist workers, was crystallized in the ar | rangement by the “school” of a lec- |ture by Karolyi under its auspices (Continued on Page Three) MURDERER RUBIO. FETED BY HOOVER 'Gets Praise for Abject Servility to U. S. | WASHINGTOD Rubio | Ortiz, president-elect. of the Mexi can government, which increases its abject servility to Wall Street, by | torturing, imprisoning and deport-| ing Mexican and Cuban revolution- | ary trade unionists, will be received with open arms by the Hoover im- perialists. A. reception and entertainment SIX-HOUR DAY Blow to Fascists. The Illinois miners’ strike has hit j|hard the plans of the A.F.L., of which the U.M.W. is a part, to let {the employers walk rough-shod jover the workers during this period |of industrial crisis. It is the first {great flare back to the Hooverian |program of a grand fascist council t corporation heads and labor rs to put through the wage cut- iting, “rationalization” schemes of jemployers. It is the inspiration of ;countless thousands of unorganized workers, everywhere, suffering and exploited, and in constant danger of unemployment. The National Mi- ° In past years only a few of New| ore York's army of unemployed succeed- | ed in getting jobs shoveling, snow, after waiting in the cold for hours. In the future, even these few thou- sand unemployed will be deprived of « day or two of work by the in- |vention of a new chemical form of \ners Union feels confident that the removing snow. PLASTERERS ASK workers will support its struggle, and that they will send funds to the National Miners Union, 119 Federal St. N. S., Pittsburgh, to win this | strike. The miners fight for a number of (Continued on Page Three) “Socialists” Ask Ethics Bosses Refuse Timid In Mayor’s Pay Raise; Plea Allowing Cut “savor Strike-Breakers antee of turning the International aboard ship. The companies are; — 4 eola case almost simultaneously, | colonial oe, ey, Hee Of more elaborate and extensive than | The building slump has. throv sine with its functions an a Labor Defense units into a real mass | trying to scare the longshoremen al-| The Trade Union Unity League and the united front of social- fripaialien Manske Nase eee oe ee for kings and poten-/ out of work practically half of th third capitalist party, and bidding organization is one of the proposed s0, threatening them with all sorts | section in the Brotherhood of Paint-/ fascists and Tammany, has brought A set dn sie F dee seca heteast Will be accorded the bootlick-| 19.099 plasterers “in New York. |for the place of official loyal oppo- changes to the constitution. of things if they listen to the jers, Decorators and Paper Hangers the mass protest of thousands of conditions I) Htdey tectiee ORE ing fila oe CHI he ar- These men have been working the sition in the ranks of American | The resolution on organization de- M.W.L. of America urges every rank and | needle trades, food workers and mil- 3 ington Thursday. lig clares that not enough attention has been paid to organizational work. “Seldom were the local persecutions | used for the purpose of popularizing | the International. Labor Defense | among the masses and to build the, organization locally. The fact that | during the last few months when | some attention was being paid to organizational problems there has been a steady increase in the dues | payments, shown that with a correct | policy the I.L.D. can be. built into a real mass organization, if suffi-| cient attention is paid to the organ- izational problems.” | The resolution declares the LL.D. | as made considerable progress in| sing its collective membership. | e LL.D. has now in its ranks | ‘such important militant organiza-' tions as the National Miners Union, , with a membership of approximately | 19,000, the National Textile Workers Union, the Hungarian Working- | men’s Sick Benefit and Education | Federation and many others. | Since the third convention the, I.L.D, has’ succeeded in establishing itself in at leas 19 new states, There | present six states where the | is yet to be organized. | eee Poe PITTSBURGH, Pa., Dec. 25.—A caravan of workers, four automo- | biles full from the South—busses | trains bearing worker delegates from all sections of the United All Arrested Are Free. Stephen H. Allison, secretary of the local International Labor De- fense branch, reported to the meet. ing that all of those, recently ar. rested and made the center of a big “Red Raid” by the ship owners, po- lice, mayor of the city, commander (of the American Legion and federal dled | detectives are now released, charges es dropped, and bondsmen freed of all obligations. This was accomplished through the prompt attention of the I.L.D., and of their attorney here, R. A. Darling. Those released from jail are Victor Aaronson, William Davids, Leonard Brown (Negro sea- man) and John S..Morgan, MW.L. organizer. The Marine Workers League Hall here, 308 Chartres St., has been painted white and blue by the M. W. L. organizer, John S. Morgan, and a banner and signs are being displayed. It seats 150. Seamen and longshoremen are beginning to drop in and discuss their problems. The local branch has sent to the M.W.L. national office in New York for 1,000 copies of the Marine Work- ers Voice, for literature in Spanish and Greek, for Labor Defense and Labor Unity, and is distributing 3,000 copies of the call for the Gulf Coast Conference. |file member to go to the meetings | itant workers in other industries, bY the Marines of Wall Street. In | Friday, and vote for the*candidates| A Shifrin-Mineola conference, British West Africa, forty-three wo- | Who follow the militant program, January 19, in Irving Plaza, at 11,/™en and one man, at least, have the candidates ‘proposed by the rank |a. m.; a mass meeting for defense |been murdered by the British troops | and file groups. |of Shifrin and Mineola workers at /f the so-called ‘Labor’ government. | The T.U.U.L, section has issued a Irving Plaza the 24th; tag days| “Imperialism seeks profits and) statement sharply criticizing the |throughout New York, January 25|grinds them out in blood and sweat fake progressives in District Coun- | and 26th, are a few of the replies of millions of workers. | No. 9 union who have so han- | to the atack on the workers. “The imperialism of each of the) matters in their fight against | Shifrin’s case comes up February | leading capitalist lands is as bloody mer, the notorious employers’ 17 in Superior Court of Bronx. The ‘as the other. America has Haiti _tool, that Zausnerism and now Zaus- | Mineola case will be called in Janu-| and Great Britain has Africa. i ner's machine men ate much injary. These cases, dating back sev-| “The International Labor Defense | | power. The statement says: jeral years, both grew out of attacks calls on the working class, both | “The Left Wing has in the past | by right-wing gangsters upon Left- | white and black, to protest with all | |faithfully and energetically carried | Wing workers who defended them- |their available power against these | (on the fight to drive Zausner out of |selves, and who may, therefore, get |massacres. The Negro masses of | |effice. We thought that these fake savage sentences as the Gastonia de- | Ameriea are considered by their fel- step ond proceed with the cleaning | International Labor Defense is fight-|the most advanced economically and cut of Zausnerism as an institution. | ing both cases. politically, and look forward to them | “Events proved conclusively that | The metropolitan confer- for aid. | |was not their aim. The reactionary | ence of the. Trade ‘class collaboration _ policies have | _completed the work done by Zaus-!of the National Textile Workers |demand that Dollar terror and ‘La-/ area |The union has now become no more | all affiliated workers to fight for Cuban workers, Mexican workers, |than an adjunct to the bosses’ axso- | the freedom of these workers, |Haitian workers, white and Negro, | Union Unity| »“The International Labor Defence | C°'TUPt, A League and the national convention urges all workers, of all races, to | Mexican government can he found irst task on arriving in the United States was to closet him-} self in the offices of Morgan & Co., | and consult with Morrow and Lamont | on how best to run the Mexican gov- | ernment in the interest of American imperialism, Following hard upon this proc dure came’ the mass arrests of mili- | tant workers. The very soldiers and | marines who have been used in the | past to attempt to crush Mexican revolutionary movements will pay homage to Rubio on his arrival at the capital. The state and war department are co-operating to express the glee | of American capitalism with the Street regime instituted by Rubio, Calles & Co. No greater testimonial of the} lickspittle nature of the than the absolute agreement of | tev itali: i Init contract, ner, the weakening of the union.| Union passed resolutions calling on|bor’ government terror be halted. °Y¢tY capitalist agency in the United States in the homage and praise rendered to Ortiz Rubio, 40-hour five-day week, theoretically, | capitalism, the socialist party thru and for a union wage of $15.40 a/that crassest of social - fascists, day. When the building industry, | James Oneal, pleasantly smote the like all other industries in this per- | wrist of Mayor Walker for giving iod, began to decline, the bosses | himself a sal: raise to $40,000. took advantage of the situation to Oneal, voicing the opinion of his force some men to work under the | fellow social-fascists, objected to the _| seale and also to keep the number | “ethical” method of procuring the of unemployed as high as possible | raise. On principle, the Oneals are by laying off men while others were |not against such raises—for does not made to do overtime on Saturdays. |the future promise such plums in Rank and file pressure has forced |the capitalist administration to the union officials to demand a |these very social-fascists? six-hour day, but they do it in their They have no scruples about sully- own way. Monday, at a conference {ing their palms with the blood-money of building contractors, Michael} wrung out of the workers. Aren’t Gallagher, president of Local 60 of | millioaires, exploiters and general the plasterers, appeared with not a|blood-suckers of the working class |progressives would take the next|fendants for the same deed. The! low Negroes of the colonial lands as|t¥P@ of reactionary and pro-Wall | demand, but a request that the em- |freely invited into the socialist party ployers “try out” the six-hour day| ranks? But Oneal wants these to give work to some of the thou- things done legally, in a good capi- sands of unemployed and with full |talist manner. permission to the employers to cut, “Common decency,” pleads Oneal, the workers’ wages by 25 per cent. “requires that a man should not vote The plasterers have a three year|for an increase in his own salary.’ | Above all things the socialist party Even this decidedly modest plea | wants to appear decent in the eyes was immediately and flatly refused |of the capitalist class. Do these ciation, are being murdered by Dollar ter- | The reception to be tendered to|>y President Tierney A. Rourke of Rubio is announced to exceed that | the employers’ association. The ex- | things decently—make war, cut wages, jail Communists—but do it “The Left Wing made a cardinal | inistake last year by withdrawing! lits candidates ‘from the field on a |plea from these fake progressives. “The minute Zausner’s man, Mc- (Continued on Page Two) “Land of Soviets” (“iyorkers of all races, by union, Seeks U.S Aviator °° halt these murders! De-| mand the withdrawal of military : rule from the colonies! Carry on a BERLIN, Dee. 25.—Dispatches re-| powerful protest, day in and day port that a Soviet airplane has been’ out and force Wall Street and the sent in search of Ben Eielson and |‘Labor’ government to halt the mur- Borland, American aviators .der of workers, whether white or from Philadelphia and New York— ; War Preparations Speeded by States are heading toward Pitts- lost for six weeks off the coast of burgh ‘to the Fourth National Con- Siberia, and two other Soviet planes | Negro!” . ice African workers are being shot | “4” Shestakov, Pilot of ‘down by the so-called Labor govern- | Which met Ramsay MacDonald, al |ment forces, | resentative of British imperialism. Send Greetings to the Workers | in the Soviet Union Through the | | Special Printing of The Daily | Worker in the Russian Language! | Crisis Sharpens; Big Future penses of the plan proposed by | Gallagher would be born entirely | by the workers, but the bosses will) have none of it, for they are rely- in a legal, decent fashion, is the song of the socialist party. And in order to add a little radical spice to his bald and unconvincing ing on the presence of masses of | argument, Oneal at the tail end of unemployed for a smash at thejhis “criticism,” actually declares union wage scale in the near future. |that the “poorly paid city employees got no increase.” The consideration |of the socialist party for the work ers is really touching. The bulk of the “poorly paid cit; that Oneal / employees” and the socialist party are interested in arc _ their friends, the strike-breaking — police. The socialist party and their — Decline; Jobless Wav Up bicia | right wing union leaders feel grate The crisis of capitalist economy |pronouncements for the future. But | ful to Whalen and his club-wieldi "i ‘s sharpening and constantlygrowing | the facts point to a long, and severe strike breakers for their yoem jdeeper, With all of Hoover's bally-|depression with no upturn in sight. | service in helping the bosses jhoo conferences, not one thing has! Several weeks ago the New York) strikes. Better pay for their been accomplished to stop the tempo |TYtmes financial section carried the rades-in-arms, the strike-b jof decline which is going on at a/annouiivement that the car loadings | police was one of the main dem steep rate. for the first weeks in December | of the socialist party in their may Capitalist newspapers and econ-! would tell the stovy of what capital-! alty campaign. omists do not deny the severe nature ism is to expect ih the coming} The road of social-fascism c ¢ of the present depression, They months. If there was a vontinued | broad avenue along which tra’ where Eielson and Borland disap-|merely smear the pages of the capi-/ drop, the future was indeed black, staunchest upholders of the peared six weeks ago. 4 italist shegts thick with optimistic! (Continued on Page Threep jist system, vention of the International Labor Defense. Capitalisis as Crisis Intensifies have been ordered to join in the | BossEs’ search. | Semyon Shestakov, who piloted the e ticularly that of the “peace pact” |“‘Land of the Soviets” on its suc- | qustrial plants in the United States, Hoover-Stimson government: cessful flight from Moscow to New employing 1,324,000 workers, it is “To make out that this provi- York and who returned a few days | estimated, Employers’ greed is the sional agreement is an essential ago to Moscow, has been selected to cause of many deaths of workers, step towards the diminution of |command the rescue expedition, He : naval armaments, is sheer mys- | Will be sent at once in an airplane tification. jot the type of the “Land of the | “The agreement between Great | Soviets.” Britain and the United States is hardly more than a concerted Program of nayal construction (Continued on Page Three) GREED ENDANGERS WASHINGTON (By Mail).—Dust xplosion hazard exists in 28,000 in- MINERS NEED AID. E. Varga, in his report on “Econ- The following telegram was re-| omics an] Economic Policy of the | ceived yesterday by the National| third quarter of 1929,” points out Office of the Workers International that the growing crisis of world Relief from Henry Corbishley, sec-| capitalism is driving the imperial- retary-treasurer of the Illinois dis-| ist nations to increase their war trict of the National Mine Miners | armaments. ms Union: \ He quotes the “Economist” (Sept. “Many miners victimized. Need 21), one of the most reputed organs | relief at once. Rush funds.” of the British liberal bourgeoisie, in | . Workers. are asked to reply to a blast against the pacifist prop ; this call at once. | ganda of the capitalist powers, par- | Eielson was searching for a safe landing place. | Shestakoy and his fellow aviators | Reports from Northeartern Si-|in the “Lhd of the Soviets” flew jberia state that the trading ship only a few miles from the section Nanuk had heard the missing plane | circling overhead, It is thought that |

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