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— ily Enteree as second-cluss matter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., ander the act ef March 8, 1879. Published daily except Su: Company. Inc., 26 Uni (Vol. VI., No. 366 day by The Comprodaily Publishing mn Square, New York City, N. Y- 22 NEW YORK Masses Moving in India ESTERDAY 27 were killed and 100 wounded by British armed forces in India. Every day now pays its tribute of blood to im- perialist rule, Britain can maintain itself only by mass murder. What is in preparation is a deep-going mass upheaval, which can only end with the Indian masses, by sheer force of numbers and iron determina- tion, driving the imperialists into the sea. The warmest support and solidarity with the heroic fighting masses is given by the revolution- ary workers everywhere. 4} The miserable role of Gandhi, who ‘.ies by all means to hold back and divert the mass movement from its aim, is now bankrupt before the masses. He played his game in 1922, with the result of a dis- astrous defeat for India and for the toiling masses. He cannot repeat his betrayal successfully now. The masses are moving independently ; of Gandhi and against him. MacDonald and the Labor Party again expose themselves in all their nakedness as agents of imperialism. These murderous scoun- drels, who pose as saintly pacifists, do not hesitate a moment in shed- ding as much blood as may be necessary to “preserve the Empire” of the capitalists. It is interesting to see the “left” socialists squirm under this ex- posure of the logical results of a policy with which they are in funda- mental agreement. For example, yesterday A. J. Muste, leader of the “progressives,” issued a wail in the capitalist press about the ar- yest of Gandhi as “one of the major tragedies of our era” . . . “which leaves his (MacDonald’s) friends powerless to say a word in his defense.” But dear Mr. Muste, why is it only the arrest of the bourgeois lawyer Gandhi which leaves you “powerless” to defend your “friend” MacDonze‘ You were still able to defend him when he imprisoned 30 trade union leaders in Meerut, whom he has kept two years in prison without trial! After swallowing that camel with a smile and without effort, you should be able to get down the gnat of Gandhi's arrest! And before Gandhi’s detention in his palatial “prison,” you did not find it necessary to protest against the shootings of workers which have been weekly occurrences for years and daily for the past month! The explanation is clear. You agree with MacDonald’s policy. Only you cannot bear the exposure of its full meaning to the whole world. The only thing you advise MacDonald to do, is to “resign” and let the Tory party do its own dirty work in India—with the silent “non-resistant” participation of the Labor Party, Your “virtue” is composed entirely of an even deeper hypocricy than MacDonald’s. But the masses of India are shaking off the influence of its Gandhi’s, and of MacDonald, as well as that of that “left” Maxtons and Mustes. They are stepping forth on to the stage of history with their mass power. They will burn out the very roots of imperialist power in India. For the masses are now organizing, and their leader- ship comes no longer from the briefless lawyers of the Society of the Servants of India, but from the workers in the shops and factories and on the railroads, The working class will lead the masses of India to victory. Finding A Scapegoat EJECTING Hoover's nomination of Parker for the Supreme Court, the “opposition” in the Senate, composed of 17 Republicans and 23 Democrats, with Shipstead of. the almost forgotten Farmer-Labor label, took another step in its search for a scapegoat to carry off the sins of Washington and absolve “our government” before the discon- tented masses who are stirring under the blows of economic crisis and its consequences. How white as snow and without sin are the law- makers at the Capitol! See, they turned down the insidious nomina- tion of Parker for the Supreme Court! Now the Supreme Court thus protected is surely the palladium of liberties and the tribune of the people! The “Evening World” (New York) gives expression to this studied attempt to breathe new life into the dying democratic illusions, saying: ' “It is infinitely better that there be an occasional rejection of a nomination than to have a public clamor later on for drastic and even revolutionary measures.” So! Parker is a “sacrifice” to the forces which “later on” may be expected to be calling for revolutionary measures. We can accept this estimate of the “Evening World” as having more than a grain of truth. Of course it matters nothing to the working class what is the per- sonnel of the Supreme Court. The much-touted “liberals,” Brandeis and Holmes, are just as thoroughly dyed-in-the-wool supporters of capitalism as Hughes or Parker, and on all essential issues will follow the same line. Which does not mean, however, that there are no serious antag- onisms within the capitalist class. There are, and they find expression in these sharp divisions in Congress. Hoover represents the ruling circles of finance capital; his “opposition” is a coalition of all the subordinate strata of the capitalist class, taking advantage of the eco- nomic crisis and the resultant difficulties to press their special claims, cautiously using the weapon of hints about “revolutionary” “public clamor” if their demands are not met. Parker’s rejection, while a sign of dissentions among the bour- geoisie, is no “victory” for “labor” or the Negroes. Injunctions will continue to be issued, and the Supreme Court will not overrule them. Negroes will continue to be disfranchised and lynched, and the calm placidity of the Supreme Court will not be disturbed. No changes in the personnel of the Supreme Court, but its entire removal along with the rest of the capitalist machinery of class rule, and its substitution by a Workers’ Government—that is the only path to the realization of working class interests. NEW PROOF OF HILLMAN FAKERY Protest Meet Tomor- row, Hits 26 P. C. Cut More and more evidence accumu- lates to justify the mass protest Jeestos of all men’s clothing work- —— mated Clothing Workers. But the Amalgamated officials let wage cut after wage cut go by, let Friedman |use his open shop in New Jersey to | club down wages here, let him work all kinds of tricks.to cut wages by jlayoffs, and argument that wages | must go down or the shop will close, ‘ete, without making any effort to organize the New Jersey plant or fight wage cuts here, directly. Workers are beginning to see that there must be some underhanded agreement between the bosses and the Amalgamated officials. ers, called for Saturday at 1 p, m. in Stuyvesant Casino, where Ben Gold, Louis Hyman, D. Boruchovich, Sam Lipszin, Jacob Rabinoff and S. Hertz will explain such occurrences as the following, and what is to be done about them. The'firm of J. Friedman and Co., employing about 300 workers and manufacturing men’s clothing has just reduced its wages 26 cents a garment. This is the second reduc- tion this season. The same firm has a plant in New Brunswick, N. J., where it operates under the name of “Bond Clothing Co.,” and turns out 10,000 garments a week on a strict- ly open shop basis, Amalgamated Sell Out. * The J. Friedman shop in New York is unionized by the Amalga- Hillman’s Fake Convention. The mass meeting called for to- morrow meets on the date the Hill- man clique in the Amalgamated send their delegates to the Amalgamated Convention in Toronto, where there will be everything but planning to aid the workers in the industry. It protests, under the auspices of the Amalgamated section of the Trade Union Unity League, both wage cults and unemployment visited on work- ers by the bosses, and the help given these bosses by the fakers of the Amalgamated. “The tailors will have to smash the company union and build a men’s clothing workers’ section in the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union,” says a circular printed in row’s mass meeting. English and Jewish calling tomor-} HIDES WAR MOVE AGAINST SOVIET ‘Congress Committee in Decision to Press “Investigation” Wysbenpee wees ome we sree, Hoey Kenamepse. poe — 'Press Early Action |Whalen’s Forgeries to, Get New Airing | WASHINGTON, May 8.— The| |Rules Committee of the House of} |Representatives today decided to | {draw up a resolution for an inves jtigation of Communist activities in the United States, and to submit it to Congress for early consideration The meeting of the committee was secret. It had before it the resolu- jtion proposed by Congressman Fish |—who was one of the speakers at |the May Day fascist meeting against |the Communists in New York, and | another one by Congressman Under- PNR HA Too: Koumirepua. AND2owaTEtoc may MMODER NoxzD} Borj MMOD? mBxGE AKO ‘on-nK mu Fy rama pI oy . 0: mae! aew ah or Baars Be nommaer esas Pumanc ook meee | i KOMBKLADY eunx CCP » Bame pecno- | Chairman Snell of the Committec Encias Pen Be USore NA aera | said that neither of these resolution: Cenrrag acokenne socea ueeny lo Gnonmanen Seber | were considered as “adequate,” how (OR Caau coe ever, and the Committee would mect erate. been eyecie \later in the day to draw up its own TeSACusshys Mac ragnerpem jresolution.’ It is also said that, dif- Rexaspa 193 \<erent from the other resolutions, Ynoanouowenya icnozxour the one of the Committee will not crac Rada name “Russian Soviet organization: Berne: Loe be ihn connected with the Third Interna- Pe ieee PS Aes |tionale”—whatever that means, Bui xe: Yacuanpree eo SOS |the new resolution is aimed tc |“broaden the scope” of the inquiry, one report being that the Fish reso- |lution is endorsed, but the Commit- | tee is only amending it. Police Commissioner Whalen of |New York is to appear Friday be- fore the House Immigration Con- mittee with his forgeries of “doen- ments,” which is intended to furnish ;more fuel to the anti-Soviet drive Copy of ane of the many forg capitalist press as part of the war Soviet Union. A complete analys shows up its crudities. All of the forgeries ever issued against the l among hundreds of capitalist spol: ments are forgeries of the rane TP. fey deri ad ac TORR RET, WAX H 200 HOKE pectopaRe! D pas ‘AAKOBMN H NORCYA bei 60 SrMOUeANG x TODTOBN TaneY. rae fits caceh Eiredesu eg ey 20 ite 10} ANOMONSHENX, KOTOPNO ROSKN NOayUITh BO Opraunsauau nepsouafic. eT N= [eee eyes BAUR, KBSPTRDAU, ol oF PibtyR AOAPTRpoUN, Craacuye HW tenor box neletaxA wactomoro wananee gorexse*Z] 0 FINAL CITY EDiTION SUBSCRIPTION RATE! and Bronx, New York ar everywhere excepting S ents » countries, there S60 y ty and fo Price 3 C , FRIDAY, MAY 9, 193 Moor, 2 fren PRE EE SH “gene a 6. eB CEA B aaectae Pexcrsse, MO “AMUNNNCHPATHROR Wee TE i) ASAMUOSTA BXOLN? MTOAKSKRE KoCTANCD- + SOBMOOHON, CACELEXRK BSOERHIY oi EQOKOMES, PesrO Ry mucuaaticr’ topes Pesos oany Me exponezexnx cepar., Bu nozmny roopanixpoaats © tc th OPO No Rompocau, KoTOpa? poke EDEN D focToAMON CHABK © TOD. HOgMeRsoROE pascre, xa Teppn- cy Be 6 ornen: Apxxau io oenay cosonate ae Tze 6! ua PeROTC, KOTOPUA npo~ BONMUX RBMCHEKRAX NpOTpavae x, eries which Whalen peddled to the preparations campaign against the is of this forgery, printed below Whelen documents are the buldest WSR. Even the World, men, admitted that Whalen’s docu- type. New York \in which the United States is try- ling to take the lead away from Eng- jland and France since the Koutie- poff “disappearance” flopped and |the “religious” issue sort of fizzed ‘out. - i | Forgery of “Mandate” Is Proven to Be False e Document “Speaks for Itself” Only Too Loudly for the Purposes of Whalen TRY 70 LOCK OUT ™ | Food Industrial Union, ork sagely declares “speaks f | Blocks It; Meet Today does comfort, though doubtlessly his appearance before the Im- jeannot get away with locking out Migtation Committee of the | militant workers who take part in| House of Representatives in | May First strikes. The workers of | Washington today will be | the open shop Fifth Avenue Lunch~) marked by a new outburst of jeonette struck May 1, and found! . 4; ay ‘ | themselves locked out when they re-| #ti-Soviet phobia. turned to their jobs on May 2; the, But anyone who has an elemen- |Food Workers’ Industrial Union or- | tary education in the Russian lan ganized the shop, and today the, guage can easily detect the gram- jworkers are back—and the lunch-| matical errors. And certainly any ‘eonette is a union shop. Young Pioneer. not to mention any | New Head important worker in the Communist | Belen cn \International, knows how to write |_ The Food Workers’ Industrial) one of the oldest slogans of the | Union, which has just opened addi- | tional headquarters in Brooklyn, and the Bronx, where large num- | bers of workers are coming in every jday to register, is calling a series of bakers’ mobilization meetings, on Friday and Saturday, for the re-| port of the shop convention at which TONIGHT. the new union was formed and mob- i ilization for struggle for union con-| A memorial meeting for the Sov- ditions, with the eight-hour day, iet revolutionary poet, Maiakowsky, five day week as the central point, will be held tonight at the Irving which all bakers, organized and un-| plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. The organized are urged to attend. program will include talks by ner- The meetings will be held at|sonal friends of Maiakowsky, as Bronx Union Headquarters, 2994| well as readings from his poems. Third Ave., Friday at 7 p. m.; and | Mike Gold will be chairman, Saturday at 2 p. m.; Brooklyn . Union Headquarters, 16 Graham Ave., Saturday, 2 p. m.; and 96 Clinton St., Friday, 2 p. m. The Food Workers’ Industrial J { |Union has shown that the bosses say: “Proletarians of all lands, unite!” Yet the stupid forger who wrote this precious “document” for | (Continued on Page Three) MAIAKOWSKY MEMORIAL 1 Support the Daily Worker Drive Get Donations! Get Subs! The Daily Worker needs $25,000 pathetic workers’ organizations imediately! iseem to forget, however, that finan- Continuing regular publication, |cial support from the Daily Worker strengthening our paper, depends|must be a steady suppert, all the altogether upon very quick response | year around, if the Daily Worker is from you! to live and grow. One thing is definitely cstab- FUTURE 18 SRIGHT. lished in the minds of all our « The financial difficuliies of the rades and thousands of sympa-| Daily Worker will Jessen as our thizers. That is—the Daily Worker | mass circulation grows. However, ‘must live-—must just at this time|to enter @ campaign for inass cir- become ten times as powerful as it|culation requires several thousand has’ been. dollara for preliminary expenses. | ‘The Daily Worker must tive! But|To acquaint hundreds of thousand: jwhat are our comraces and sympa- of workers in the hig industries with thizers doing to keep it alive? our revolutionary organ is in itself Every — clasu-conscious == worker }a heavy financial burden. iknows that the revolutionary press! We printed nearly one mllion | | secures its’ financial support only copies of the Daily Worker io hel from workers and worsess organ-| mobilize masses of workers for th ‘izations. Our comvades and syin-|iarch G and May 1 demensicavions, uction given above: is ene of the Commissioner Whaien of New or itself.” This particular, and indeed peculiar, document certainly “speak for itself”’—and much to Cossack Whalen’s dis- TDEAD, 1 5 GONE AT ARMOUR BLAST, Charge Ammonia Tank Wrecks Factory ST. JOSEPH, Mo., May 8.—Seven known to be killed and 15 wor still mis ing at a late hour today. jan unknown number less seriously | tion, on shop n and fractions in mas ‘hurt, is the toll of speed-up reckless lack of care for the lives of employees in the Armour & Co. sausage factory here. Explosion of an overloaded am- monia_ tank simply whole five story factory. Fire fol- lowed, swept through the wreckage, and burned workers pinned beneath , vit, All ambulances, | nurses are on the ene, 600 DIE IN EARTHQUAKE. RANGOON, Burma.—Verified re- | ports place the total number of those killed in the earil ‘ruggles , Because of uncmployment, the ex- ‘treme exploitation of the workers, low wages, we had to extend credit to comrades in many cities, Phese |comrades will pay soon, bul we need money today to keep going! Our circulation nay inereased by vone-third in the last few monihs. (On the other hand, we have not yet nearly enough ceguies mail sub- \scribers to cut costs upon the bas of mass production. And deficit piles up. NEED IMMEDIA‘ We have tried Daily Worker—and have impro: it. We are under heavy exp. for telegrams comrades sand We have included piciu class eleugglie in greater 1 AID. to d | | ‘ +/tains the main political thesis, the | revolutionary workers, that is to with 12 more seriously injured and resolutions on the trade union ques- physicians anv! re at 600, ' imports MUST HAVE $25,000 FOR THE DAILY WORKER Circulation Increased One. Third, Great § Here, Must » the They want to know more about our improve the} “RED” PROBE STEP Expose Whalen Forgeries TWO PER CENT 9 Socialists in'{NDIAN TEXTILE FALL IN JOBS DURING APRIL Y. State Officially | Admits Collapse of | the Slave Market Conceal Census Figure Tour Starts Soon to Or- ganize Jobless A further two per cent drop in employment for the month of April, and a ten per cent drop in New York State since the spectacular October stock exchange crash forced the decline of industry on the at- tention of the whole world are the latest figures, released by the New York State Industrial Commissioner. Since the very first days of the; national census taking, which show- ed unexpectedly large numbers of all mention of the unemploy- res has vanished from the capitalist press. None of the fig- being given out, though all other information connected with the census is showered on the world. joble ment f Conceal Hunger. The only explanation is that the facts show such huge numbers of and hungry workers that the ment feels it part of its duty to its capitalist owners to conceal them. res officially proving 8,- 00,600 or more jobless would make Hoover's periodic Pollyanna proc- lamations look sick. The New York industrial com- ner’s statement points out that the usual thing, marking the end of one phase of the usual spring rus Hcwever, Francis Perkins, the com- missioner, aiso points out that this| year “the expected Spring improve- ment did not take place,” and the wo per cent reduction is a dead loss, falling below an employment. rate already far Iqwer than usual. | Organize Jobless. | Answering the flood of Hooverian prosperity talk and building a solid organization of the jobless, prepa ing for a great national unemplo: nt convention July 4 in Chicago, national secreta of the Cou of the Unemployed is preparing organization ta to start in 1 an Philadelphia, May 15 and 16, and to continue through Buffalo, Cleve- land, Toledo, and points west. JUST OUT: THESIS AND RESOLUTIONS OF PLENUM st off the press, the Communist Party has issued a 96-page book containing the Thesis and Resolu- tions for the Seventh National Con- vention of the Party, which con- |venes in New York on June 20. ‘This booklet is the product of the Cen- tral Committee Plenum, which tock ‘place March 31 to April 4, and con- | us work, on Party organizations, on work among the foreign-language groups and on the problem of keep- ing new memb It is a hand- book on all imp: nt phases of the wrecked the ¢lass struggle and Party work. The pamphlet is on sale at bookstores and Party headquarters at 25 cents per copy. ANGLO-U. $. RIVALRY IN ARGENTINA, OS ATRES.—The extension of tariff duties, to include hitherto unspecified articles, will affect American auto exports, which make up 95 per cent of all automotive here. BL Keep Going ; We have printed six pages as atten could, here is twice the mount of proletarian news iv the Paper today than there was a few) months ago, and to gather this news jis an adcied exp. . Here we are, face to ¢ with large financial obligations weich ndanger our central orgav. And the workers? We are in the midst of immense masses of them. | movement. Worker. ganization, Only one de “Down with the dé the Daily | We must rush to all workers’ or- | vanizations, ail sympathizers, lo the (Contimuca on Page Three.) They want the Daily ‘They are ready for or-| can be made, (and up with = necessary to take a different atti +|who addresses himself to his own jto say a word in his defense.” | is 50,000,000 m 27 ad REVOLUTIONISTS At the very moment when Pre- E mier J. Ramsay MacDonald of Eng- | sdlisates land is having his Anglo-Indian gov-| qy 4, ie es e 7 ernment fire volleys into masses of |SHOlapur Police Are demonstrating Indian worke s and | Driven Out After is moving all forces to effect a seli- a out of the British woolen strike, the | Fierce Battle American socialist party comes out | — hailing him both as an agent of| rsa] Empire and as a brother socialist. | Killed, 100 Hurt The New York state committee PU grea of the ean party, over te sig-|‘(Gandhi Enjoys Comfort nature of Herbert M. Merrill, its | . ; Pees state secretary, sent out on May/ Denied to Workers Day what it was pleased to call (in| ' ‘ villification of the Workers’ Inter- eee Bt He eh atin national Day of Struggle) “May| _-At London today the British. ney greetings,” to party members | Hey eee eee ee only. The “ tings” say: “Much | MEY s = F water has flowed under all the| away the Sudan to Britain as the bridges of the world since Karl} imperialist “Labor” government Marx and his associates organized| demanded in order to_ hereafter the First International. . . . May | ¢jaim it on that basis. Egypt now Day, 1930, finds a socialist premier | piims it; but adually, the Sudan at the head of the widest-spread | po Ons, (0 ne aD empire that the world has ever seen. | /"S!8¢- It finds socialists at the head of| the political administrations of | other great nations of the Old Bombay dispatches Thursday prove how little the capitalist cor- World.” respondents who Wednesday were t A , cabling that the revolution is Sere es Hepa veetaoe ate reLer “ended,” know about India. New ence to MacDonald, an eyident ref- erence to Zoergiebel, the Berlin po- lice chief, and his socialist party superiors in Germany, who mur- dered workers in the street with rifle and machine gun fire last May Day. battles flared forth, and at Shola- pur, a town largely textile, of 120,- 000 inhabitants 220 miles southeast of Bombay, the city was captured by revolutionists in a fierce battle. The “trouble” started Tuesday with a strike of the textile workers in protest at the troops shooting down the masses in other parts of India. The matter was added to by some of Gandhi’s followers picket- terday of a statement by Rev. A. J./ ing jiquor shops and cutting sacwn Muste, head of the Muste move-/ trees from which the liquor is made, ment, whose unions sell out textile|Qrdered to disperse by the magis. strikers at Marion, Elizabethton and| "(Continued on Page Three) Nazareth. Muste, having to deal PARA Es with and fool the workers, finds aT 0 DE GROUPS IN | | tines ‘Great Demonstration Muste’s Dilemma. Another tactic of the reformist forces came to light with the pub- | lication in the capitalist press yes: tude than the socialist bureaucrat, party members, petty-bourgeois and professional men, mostly. Muste says not a word for the freedom of India, but chides Mac- Donald for not working out there a “sound labor peace policy” (under the empire, obviously) instead of Tatortr putting in jail the priestly Gandhi,| @t Waterfront Sat. “a fellow pacifist.” He says Mac- Foe ee Donald has shown “an utter lack! EAE Rb i of vigor, imagination and original- | oe eae Regn st aceon cd ity,” and “it is not clear that even | f a a tory government could. have (0 trial for their lives in Atlanta, handled the situation more inetfi-| Ga on May 27, will be held Satur- ciently and shamefully,” also Mac- | ay. at 1 p. m. at South Ferry and Donald’s actions show “the break. | Whitehall St. The meeting will also down of an outstanding personality demand the freedom of 280 Commu- which leaves his friends powerless {nist leaders of Japan who have been condemned to death and life impris- onment. | oirhes All: ArmeclesAgeEIenerialice League and the American Negro La- bor Congress yesterday endorsed the demonstration and urged all their members to attend. International Wireless News | Preparatory Meeting SEE ms : | To prepare for the demonstration, BERLI ay 8.—The Reichstag} meeting will be-held Saturday at committee yesterday debated the|11.30 p. m. at the Workers Center, Reichswehr (army) budget, which 26- Union Square, fourth floor. 00 marks larger than the | 41] active workers must be present one for 1930. The Communist to dislolanake then tieioneteeien ae vealed that the Reichswehr is car-| cio, tying out courses to acquaint ex-| ailbicda? 1) Reatuol ten nda officers of the imperial army (mon-| ‘To raise funds for t ie archists) with modern military tech-| pono fons, or te efense of r r y Powers and Carr, also for William nical and tactical progress in the |, 2 ‘4 “; Z. Foster, Robert Minor, Israel Am- barracks of the Berlin guards’ regi- jter and Harry Raymond, jobless ment. The Reichswehr is maintai acute 4 ; idgedilkgall etl Ghrne ts Wale | spokesmen, serving three year terms Beets Pesenec see eo: Mat on Blackwells Island, who with Jo- ph Lesten go on trial on an as- jof East Prussia. The Reichswehr | S#U!t charge on May 14, also for all a other class war prisoners—the ILD |minister refused to answer se | I Z 5 lee eaniones 0 auswer these | ond the John Reed Clablill: present aaa a “Singing Jailbirds” on May 14, at Fascists Influence Saxony. ees) Py, As a consequence of the fascists |*P* Central Opera House, 67th St. withholding their votes the Saxon} "4 ee Hee Ceyrer BuKes Foe ve rael ea MDeReny eNO | Rascal mus peotuend gaat is able to form a bourgeois block| 7 sca, ard government, He will probably of- | New Playwrights Theatre will take |fer fascists a cabinet seat, whereby | the same part. a bourgeois fascist government! LF SEARED ~ will be established as in Thuringia, | MORGAN OWNS NEIGHBOR- Anti-Soviet Forger Appeals. | HOOD. | Orlov, the forger, appealing) J. Pierpont Morgan, the king of against his sentence of four months, | the boss class, yesterday succeeded |given him last July, had his hear-|in defeating the attempt of some g commence today. Orlov is siriv- lesser lights in the capitalist band, ing to prove that he acted as the organized in the National Demo- {agent of the German government | cratic Club, to make the neighbor- of Berlin in Leningrad. hood of Morgan's home a business Cie Was) area. The Morgan home, situated Jat 37th St. and Madison Ave., is ac- ‘tually a palace, Its surrounding Ciiirelane aah Iiatecorss) area is “decreed” by Morgan, PARIS, May 8—Doumergue, through the city government, not to president of imperialist France, has be turned into business use, but confirmed four of thirteen death | Must be kept as a residential sec- the conerete fortifications and emplace- |" jments on the Oder, on the frontier |” FRANCE SENDS COLONIALS TO DEATH. sentences of Indo-Chinese revolu- tion. tionaries. The other nine ere “eom- amt . muted” to life imprisonment at hard labor. Thirty-nine death sen- | To tences remain to be considered. 13 HURT IN WRECK. BOSTON.—Thirteén persons were hurt when two elevated cars crashed in a head-on collision. day in History of the Workers May 9, 1907—Trial of William D. ary of the Western Federation of Miners, on framed up murder ch at Boise, Idaho. ~Russian and Italian “FREE” ELECTIONS COMING. labor leaders arrested in Argentina TEGUCIGALPA, Honduves.—A for deportation as Bolsheviks. 1925 report has been made that oil ha: Fedor Paniza, Macedonian revolu- been discovered thirty miles south) tienist, killed by Bulgarian ages in of here Vienna, Hayweod, seci ¢ began STANDARD OI AND