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i y | pense of the state and e: forced collection of rent VOTE COMMUNIST FOR Unemployment and Social Insurance at the ex- ‘Against Hoover’s wage-cutting policy. Emergency relief for the poor farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; ex- emption of poor farmers from taxes, and no mployers, or debts. \(Section of the Commu Vol. IX, No. 200 oe Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N, X., under the act of March 3, 1879 NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1932 pist International) “* 4. suppression of the Against capitalist terror; against all fc @F VOTE COMMUNIS.. Equal rights for the Negroes an ination for the Black Belt. we political rights of Against imperialist war; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Un ion CITY EDITIO. | N____Price 3 Cents - MOONEY, ON SACCO-VANZETTI DAY, CALLS FOR FREEING CLASS WAR PRISONERS Mass Memorial Meetings Throughout Country Today Will Raise De- mand for Release of Scottsboro Boys t MASS FIGHT WILL WIN SAYS LETTER FROM PRISON, All| Demonstrations Over on Anniversary of Boss Crime “The best way to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti is to intensify the fight for the freedom of the nine in- nocent Scottsboro boys and the scores of working-class prisoners throughout the world,” said Tom Mooney in a statement issued from his prison cell at San Quentin, Cal. Tn calling for the workers to come out in masses to the Sacco-Vanzetti memorial meetings called in all sec- tions of the country to demand the freedom of the class-war prisoners, ‘Tom Mooney sent the following let- to the American workers: “Dear Comrades, and Friends: “This 22nd day of August mark: the Fifth Anniversary of the judicial murder of Sacco-Vanzetti by the capitalist class. “These two brave revolutionary working-class martyrs died beauti- fully, gloriously and courageously for their principles— Our great- est inspiration should come from their exemplary sacrifice upon the altar of revolutionary working-class struggle. “I shall never forget ‘Barto’ Van- zetti’s repeated declarations during the seven long years of his cruel im- prisonment: ‘If I am ever liberated, I will go to Tom Mooney and work for his freedom’ “This is a fitting occasion to call to the attention of the. workers all over the world .a’ similar monstrous conspiracy of capitalist justice against myself, because I a m amili- tant member of the Social Revolu- tionary working class. “The fight for my freedom is in- separably linked up with every phase of the entire working class struggle. I have become the symbol of militant labor in its age-long struggle against Fellow Unionists Calls for Fight to Free Scottsboro 9 ‘Tom Mooney, in a letter from ‘his prison cell, urges the American workers to make today, Sacto- Vanzetti Day, a day of giga@tic struggle for the freedom of the Scottsboro boys and all class war prisoners: SACCO-VANZETTI MEETING TODAY All Workers. Urged to Protest Terror NEW YORK, N. Y., Aug. 21—To- day, the fifth anniversary of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti by the ruling class of the United States, and the international day of struggle against capitalist terror and prese- cution, will be observed here by a series of open-air meetings under jthe-auspices of the InternatienabLa~ bor Defense. The meetings will be held in the following places: x 174th St. and Vyse Ave., Claremont Pkwy. and Washington Ave., Wilkins and Intervale Aves.; speaker, Frank Spector. Arthur and 184th Sts.; Carl Winter. speaker, Sortmncee Drutal, desperate, Swine) Allerton and Holland; speaker, Je- breath... . rome. “Long live the memory of Sacco-| Intervale and Wilkins Aves.; Vanzetti, judicially murdereq by the|SPeaker, Frank Spector. cold, dead, withering hand of capi-| 147th St. and Brook Ave. talist justice! All hail to the Inter- Brooklyn. national Proletariat! All hail to the : an’ : salidarity of working-class fellowship! Pesce ieee Aves.; All hail to the revolutionary struggle 23d and Areecnatd age speaker, for the freedom of Tom Mooney, the nine Negro children of Scottsboro, Ala., the two score doomed Harlan, Kentucky miners, and all other class- war prisoners “Yours for the Social Revolution, \ “TOM MOONEY-31921,” { 12 Trade Pacts End Ottawa Meet Hit United States and USS.R. Trade OTTAWA, Aug. 21.—After an all- night dispute involving particularly the British and Canadian delegates, the Imperial Economic Conference ended here yesterday when 12 sepa- rate trade pacts were signed aiming to strengthen the British Empire, weaken United States imperialism and deliver a blow to Soviet trade. The pacts entered into at ‘the Im- perial Economic Conference are not made known as yet, but “well in- formed” circles estimate that they involve a loss of from $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 for the United States. “Liberals” here are attacking the results of the Conference as being against the United States. They ac- cuse Premier Bennet of trying to secure “closer unity” of the Empire at the expense of the world at large, but declare that they will not refuse to ratify the ‘That the conference did not weld the Empire into an economic unit, as it was expected, is shown by the fact that while 12 separate agreements were reached hitting mainly United States and Soviet trade, no general agreement was possible at the Con- ference in view of the insoluble con- tradictions existing within the Em- pire itself. Practically all the agreements re- sulting from the Imperial Economic Conference mean, however, a lower- ing of the tariffs within the Em- pire, while calling forth an inten- epee in atten Heatte eee and United States imperial- ig, between United States and the various Dominions’ interests. The cost of this tariff war will be un- loaded on the workers of the coun- tries involved. The workers of the British Kingdom and of the Domin- ions will also be forced fo pay the cogt of the pueferences agreed upon at the’ Imperial Conference. « Bill Roberts. Eastern and Utica Aves.; speaker, Carl Brodsky. Manhattan 41st St. and Eighth Ave.; speaker, Sadie Shultz, 10th St. and Second Ave.; speaker, Carl Hacker, 86th St. and Lexington Ave.; speaker, William Simons. 132d St. and Lenox Ave.; speaker, Richard B. Moore. 110th St. and Fifth Ave.; speaker, Sol Harper, Yonkers. Main and Warburton; speaker, Max Stern, Astoria, - 18th §t.*and Trowbridge Ave.; speakers, D. C. Morgan. Police Attack Bakery Strikers Meeting JAMAICA.—A’ police attack ob- viously inspired) by bakery owners failed to halt the strike led by the Food Workers Union at the shop at 14402 106th Avenues The atack was launched against a meeting called at 118 Broadway Road when police rushed a crowd of workers, brutally beating two workers, Lopez and Schaff and threatening another worker, Jacobs, with a gun- The strike in the 106th Ave. shop is being carried on to force the bosses to give the workers union condi- tions. In this shop bakers were com- pelled to slave 14 to 16 hours under the most miserable conditions in a basement. To Mass Picket Palace Knitting Mills Today NEW YORK.—Striking workers of the Palace Knitting Mills of 275 Se- venth Ave. put a militant fight Fri- day against a heavy mobilization of police, detectives aid thugs mobilized to escort scabs into the shop. Josephine Brando, a young mili- tant member of the strike committee was arrested on a framed up charge that she beat up a scab. ‘The workers are determined to con- tinue with the strike to fight for their right to be organized and to fight against low wages. The Knitgoods Dept. of the Industrial Union calls upon all workers, union and non- mn. to come Monday morning, 7.30 a.m. to stage a mass demonstra- tion in front-of the shop. | COPS TRY TO STOP FIGHT ON GYP AGENCIES Break Up All Meetings of Jobless Workers On Sixth Avenue NEW YORK, N,,¥., August 21. — Tammany police, carrying out the wishes of the job sharks after the victory won by workers who had been defrauded of $800 by the racketeer- ing Eficiency Uneployment Agency, are breaking up all meetings in the job market, called by the Job Agency Committee of the Unemployed Coun- cil. ‘The police broke up meetings yes- terday at 40th, 44th and 48th Streets on Sixth Ave. and have refused per- mits for all meetings in the job agency area Despite the open support that the city government is giving to the hun- dreds of fake unemployment agencies which charge unemployed workers outrageous fees for jobs and then send them to “jobs” that either don’t exist or that last for a day or two. the Unemployed Council announces that it will hold another meeting today at 11:30 a. m. in front of the Efficiency Agency on Sixth Avenue, between 44th and 45th streets. All workers are urged to come to the meeting and defend the right of workers to meet in the streets and fight for their needs. Unemployed workers have answered the call of the Daily Worker for further exposures of the gyp job agencies by bringing in proof against a dozen of them. The Unemployed Council is now leading @ struggle to force three, the Crystal Agency, the Radio Agency and the Academy Agency to reimburse workers who ‘were ‘charged high fees for jobs that lasted for a day. The Daily Worker will continue the struggle to eliminate the job sharks and to force the city government to open free employment bureaus to be run by the workers at the cost of the city. Workers, bring your experiences with the parasites who own these agencies to the Daily Worker. 3,000 AT FUNERAL OF SLAIN WORKER Negro Woman Worker Is Buried in St. Louis ST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 21—More than 5,000 workers yesterday at- tended the funeral of Magnolia Boyington, Negro woman worker who died last Sunday as the result of in- juries she received at the hands of the St. Louis police at the unem- ployed demonstration here on July 11, when four workers were shot and scores tear-gassed and blackjacked as they demanded and won immedi- ate relief from the city government. Thousands of workers lined the streets through which the funeral cortege passed and three thousand workers were waiting outside of the Labor Lyceum to pay homage to the militant worker who had given her life in the struggle for the working class. \ The funeral of Comrade Boying- ton was the first Red funeral ever held in St. Louis. It marked a new stage in the revolutionary working- class movement here. Widespread indignation is mount- ing among St. Louis workers at the “liberal” St, Louis government which answered the demand for bread of the starving unemployed with bullets. Comrade Boyington is the second worker to have died as the result of injuries suffered at the demonstra- tion on July 11. 2,000 Workers Rally to Help Rent Strike at Bryant Ave. Houses NEW YORK. — Drunken police thugs and cars filled with police and detective broke into a meeting of 2,000 workers who, led by the Unem- |, ployed Council Bryant Ave. block committee and the East Bronx Un- employed Council had gathered at 752 Fox St., the home of the land- lord Mr. Krappel, of the houses at 1033, 1041 and 1049 Bryant Ave. At these houses many tenants had been served with a dispossess notice, at 1041 one of the tenants, Mr. Jaffe, had been thrown out after his Home Relief check was refused as rent. The tenants of this house then went on strike, and the tenants of the two other houses then are joining. ‘The houses are being picketed. All working class tenants in that vicinity are called on to assist in the picket- ing until the demands of the strikers, for the withdrawal of the dispos- sesses, the reinstatement of the evicted tenant, and the recognition of the house committee are won. x a | Oty iis acs: Chicago Cop Shoots Vet Fighting Against Eviction of Unemployed Worker John Pace and Benjamin to Speak at Mass Vet- Jobless Rally Fuesday | Local Conference ‘Aug. 28 Will Pave Way for| National Meet In’ Cleveland CHICAGO, UL, Aug. bonus) and unemployment insurance 21.—The fight for the veterans back wages (the has reached a high point here, with masses of veterans and workers rallying in struggle behind the Workers E-Servicemen’s League and the Unemployed Council. In a fight against an eviction last week, Bryant Moss, member of the executive committee of the ‘Workers: Ex-Servicemen’s League, was shot by @ police officer named West. Seven hundred workers had gathered to stop the eviction of an unemployed worker, Moss is in & hospital in a serious conndition. Mass protest meetings throughout the city will be held, under the auspices of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League and the Un- employed Council. John Pace, of Detroit, outstanding leader of the Bonus-March, and Her- bert Benjamin, National Secretary of the Unemployed Councils, who led the National Hunger March, which on Dec. 7 presented the Workers’ Un- employment Insurance Bill to Con- gress, will both speak at a mass meeting at the People’s Auditorium, 2457 West Chicago Avenue, on Aug. 23, at 8 p.m. Pace will describe the Battle of Washington, and@ tell how the gov-| ernment murdered three veterans of | the World War, and killed two vet- erans’ babies with tneir gas attac He will explain how the worke veterans expect to get the full pa: ment of the bonus, which the Illinois | Legion voted against. Conference Aug. 28 This meeting will occur only five | days before the Chicago Conference called by the Workers Ex-Service- | men’s League, on Aug. 28, at 1062} North Ashland Avenue, where steps | will be taken to further develop the | \fight for the payment of the bonus, and’ only a few weeks before the state Conference of the Unemployed | Councils, which has been called for Sept, 4, to prepare plans for the great effort that the councils expect to make this fall to get unemploy- ment insurance, , ROOSEVELT BEGINS | DEMAGOGY CAMPAIGN. Hypocritically Attacks “Concentration” But | Outlines Morgan Government Policy COLUMBUS, 0., Aug. 21—Governor Roosevelt, speaking here at the opening of his campaign on the Democratic Party ticket for president, cheerfully admitted that “two-thirds in a few hundred corporations, and of American industry is concentrated actually managed by no more than 5,000 men”, also, “fewer than three dozen banking houses are directing the flow of American capital within theé- country and to those ‘backward and crippled — nations’: on which» ‘the President built so heavily.” He admitted, and blamed the Re- publicans for, the industrial crisis in which millions are out of work, though there are 2,000,000 jobless in his own state. More Concentration. Then he shouted some phrases about federal “regulation” of the stock market which both the Re- publicans and Socialists propose. In a nine-point statement of policy, this man who was all through his early life one of Morgan’s lawyers, and always a political hack for Morgan and the biggest industrialists, who is even now in firm alliance with Ras- kob of General Motors and had him- self recently photographed in con- ference with Raskob and the million- aire Astor, proposed to™“regulate” ex- ploitation. He proposed in the first point, publicity on stock deals, which means hardly more than advertising at gov- ernment expense for watered stocks. In his second and third points he asked for federal “regulation” of ing. companies. and ».stock ex* changes. A Morgan Bank Plan, He proposed “more rigid supervi- sion” of banks—but this agent of the biggest banks, of Morgan, did not say how or in what manner. His plan will mean pressure on the small banks by a government run by the big ones. The fifth, sixth and seventh poin provide for “discouraging specula- tion” (how not stated) and for sepa- ration of investment from commer- cial banking. But he is careful to say | that investment (stock gambling) banking is “legitimate business.” Imperialist. Finance. vertisement of certain foreign loans | floated here, which is in line with American finance imperialism. He did not offer unemployment in- surance at the expense of the gov-| the Soldiers Bonus, he did not men- | of wage cuts, k Then he proposes government ad- | OPPOSITION IN INDIANA BUILT Great Mass Meetings Pledge to Fight Cut INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, Aug. 21— The Indiana scale committee has not been able to agree here to a | wage-cut similar to that which In- ternational President Lewis and Dis- trict President Walker of the United Mine Workers agreed to in Illinois. The reason they yet i are not accept as the vigorous fight of the min- rejection of the scale by the rank and file members of Indiana. The scale committee voted down the re- duction, and immediately the In- diana operators invited Lewis to par- ticipate in new negotiations, for the same reduction. Lewis has already |agreed to a cut from $6.10 to $4 a day, basic rate. Now, Timko and Lark, agents of | Lewis, are advocating a 6-hour day with wages at the basic rate of $3-75. The miners’ mass meeting just held in Princeton, and the meetings in Terre Haute and Clinton repudiate the wage-cut. The latter two meet- jings, with seven mines represented, |have endorsed the program of the Rank and File Opposition. This pro- gram calls for strike against any wage-cut, A Rank and File Opposi- j tion executive committee of 12 has jbeen elected, covering the Terre | Haute-Clinton-Dixie Bee field. The |commitiee is winning the support of |the miners here, is calling a confer- lence for strike relief, and is prepar- |ing a mass march on the Dixie. Bee mine, which has resumed operation. It_svas.at. this mine, that mass picke ets fought a two-day battle with rifles with the scabs and mine guards, with a loss of four mine guards and one young miner shot dead by the |guards. The governor called out the | militia to rescue the guards, who were defeated in the battle. There is an injunction against picketing, which has just been renewed and made permanent by the judge. order no scab coal hauled from the Dixie Bee. The unorganized miners of Evans- ville have organized—into a local of the National Miners’ Union, with a program of united front with the rank and file miners in the U. M. W. operators, against the U. M, wage-cutting officials and for unem- ernment, he did not offer to pay |Ployment relief. There is co-operation between the heroic Dixie Bee pickets. ‘Sit Took Me 1: Years to Save This Money for the Daily Worker’? “Comrades,” writes a woman worker. “I have been reading of the financial crisis It is unthinkable that our ‘Daily’ should stop publication, and I am sure the working-class men, women and youth in this country will never permit which threatens the ‘Daily.’ it to happen. “I AM SENDING YOU $6 FOR A SUBSCRIPTION TO THE ‘DAILY, TAKEN ME A YEAR AND A HALF TO SAVE THIS MONEY. OFTEN I HAVE NEEDED IT TO BUY FOOD WITH, I HAVE NOT TOUCHED IT, BECAUSE I HAVE ALWAYS HAD THE ‘DAILY’ IN MIND. “Comrades, my husband and I have four children. My husband is one of those part- We owe the grocery store on our block $180. We spend 20 cents a meal for the six of us. longer the store man will be able to trust us and I don’t know what we will do when he I AM SURE THERE IS NO OTHER WAY OUT FOR US SUFFERING WORK- ERS EXCEPT THE WAY THE ‘DAILY’ SHOWS. ‘Daily’ suspend. We must sacrifice everything to prevent this. time and no-time workers. always the same. stops. Fellow- fight together to keep our ‘Daily’ alive. Workers, redouble your efforts in support of the $40,000 “Sa Save your paper for the leadership of the struggles against the hunger and war program | of the Hoover government, and for a workers’ and farmers’ government in the United States. THE “DAILY” NEEDS YOUR HELP TODAY. DANGEROUS. Rush all-funds to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, New York City. * * * CONTR It HAS NO MATTER HOW Our meals are I don’t know how much workers, we cannot let the Fellow-workers, let us Comradely, J. B. G.” ve the Daily” drive. IBUTE NOW. DELAY IS I contribute $...........++.. to the $40,000 Save the “Daily” Drive. Name Street sae eeeees sone = eee reeeee against it, plus the enthusiastic | MINE STRIKE SPREADS © IN ILLINOIS: READY TO MARCH IN INDIANA 5,000 at Colbert Funeral; Struggle Against Wage Cut Sweeps Thru Fields But More Organization Is Needed In Southern Illinois Chief Wage Cutter International President Lewis of the U. M. W. A. draws $1,000 a month salary, orders the $1.10 wage cut, and threatens expulsion to all who fight it. He called on sheriffs to smash the miners’ march on Taylorville. FOSTER SHOWS UP ROOSEVELT AIMS, Against Workers” | COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug. 21.— | William Z. Foster, Communist nom- j\inee for president, and Roosevelt, the |Democratic Party nominee, spoke here, in different places, yesterday. Foster spoke twice, over the-radio for 15 minutes, and later ‘in the | evening, at 121 and a half East Town | St. In both addresses, the Com- | munist standard bearer put forward | the program of his party, for unem- | ployment insurance, against wage |cuts, for farmers’ emergency relief |withut restrictions by government jand banks, equal rights. and self- | determination for Negroes, and The Rank and File Committee is| against imperialist war and for the| demanding that the railroad unions} defense of the Soviet Union. He| |demandeg the payment of the sol- diers’ bonus. Roosevelt and Hoover | Foster was enthusiastically ap- plauded at the indoors’ meeting when he pointed out that the Roosevelt speech and Democratic Party program A. against the wage-cut, against the | were the same as the Republicans| W-/in their refusal to advocate payment | sharply criticized for their of the veterans’ | Foster said, bonus. Roosevelt, just like Hoover and | Thomas, supports the present cap-| tion any struggle against Jim Crow- |Rank and File Opposition movements | italist system. All three capitalist | Hershy brought before the me ing and lynching of Negroes, he did |in Illinois and Indiana; Illinois mass | parties have the same policy against | instead, the Rank and File Oppo not have any plan to stop the wave | meetings have voted support of the) the : Negroes. Rooseyelt’s speech | proves that Roosevelt and Hoover could serve in each other's cabinets without difficulty. ; Among the other speakers at Fos~ ter’s meeting were Chaefitz, Com- munist candidate for state treasurer, and Mac Harris, Trade Union Unity League secretary here. PROTEST ATTACK AGAINST SEAMEN Marine Workers Hit ‘Cuba Terror NEW YORK.— Approximately 5000 sbamen at a protest meeting, called by the Communist. Party, Waterfront Section, on Saturday, August 20th, Whitshall ang South St. militantly protested against the murderous at- tack by the Seamen's Institute thugs on the unemployed seamen, when sailors demanded their baggage but | Were unable to pay the charge. The speakers pointed out that the srafters of the Institute, who are col- | lecting millions of dollars in the name of the unemployed seamen are doing nothing to relieve the starvation con- ditions and misery that exist in the ranks of the workers and that only | by organizing into the ranks of the Unemployed Council and the Marin Workers Industrial Union and car- rying on a struggle will they be able to force the Institute to grant their demands, “The dock workers muSt start now to organize committees on the docks and refuse to accept the wage cut which the bosses are planing | to put over October Ist,” said the chairman of the meetin.g Workers at the meeting pledged | to support the Communist Party and unanimously endorsed a resolution against the reign of terror now be- ing conducted against workers in| Cuba. | VOTE COMMUNIST FOR Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination in the Black Belt, |“Like Hoover, Thomas} FRANKLIN COUNTY PICKETING BEGUN Close ‘Another In Northern F SPRINGFIELD. | While hundreds of t jing miners who | Taylorville mines last |there to picket, the marchers are swingin state to organize | Yesterday marchers = | stopped all work at in Alpha, in the | fields. Yesterday, also, me before the Peabody Co; | West Frankfort, Fr | the southern Illinois | Mine ld eid stor nor appeared Co. mir by local pickets, they the roads to the tipple hundreds from ente: these will join the str went into the mine, but will continue. Carrying of the strike Southern fields is of reme tance, as this is the heav production center in the sta Orient No, 1 and No. 2 r West Frankfort are the large world. in the 5,000 Honor Colbert Five thousand (by count of ca) ist press reporters) miners atte the mass funeral of Joe Colbert, sec- United |retary of Local 303 of the Mine Workers, one of the Ic ers who endorsed and supported 2 the proposals of the Rank and File | Opposition. Colbert was nan of \the meeting of 10,000 a Benld which voted to s the wage cuts. He was mu Jast..Wednesday. by three op gunmen, who found him Mushrooms in front of his house « deliberately shot him down. jcompany gun thug Sutton, who fired |the fatal shot, was afterwards ar- jrested, but has already been released. This mass outpouring at Colbert's funeral shows the sympathies of the miners of the lower end of the state with the demands of the Rank and | File Opposition. It is in the southern fi ever, that the Rank and sition is weakest in organization. |steps must be taken at once | remedy this. At the meeting of 10,000 over which Colbert presided, at Be! in the southern edge of the Illinois fields, the Must and the Trotskyite Jerry jof no real strike against w: |but a mere stoppage of wor! “an honest referendum can be | Program of strike against w under leadership of strike co: jelected in each local and b; | districts. | Allard, an expelled Commi |Party member, then dema: |attacked Hershy as a Comm The policy meeting at Benld, which reported to the Benld mass met had representatives of all sub- tricts except No. 2. It was under Ansbury, Musteite leadership. Clusk- (er, of Springfield, presented the Rank jand File Opposition program to the policy conference, but the Musteite chairman refused to put it to a vote. ‘The Rank and File Opposition pro. gram, however, endorsed the mass meeting. Workers Cheated ‘ “t at Hoover Dam by “Scrip” Payment LAS VEGAS, Nevy., Aug. 21—Work- ers at Hoover Dam employed by con- | tractors working for the government }are being cheated by being compelled to take their wages in scrip, it was |declared by Senator Odie of Nevada jin @ telegram to Secretary of the |Navy Wilbur. Oddie, of course, did not worry about the workers, who are compelled to pay exorbitant prices at the company stores as a result of this scrip system, but he made this complaint on behalf of the Boulder City and “Las Vegas merchants, who want the workers’ trade. Oddie also pointed out that thous | sands of dollars collected by the con~ |tractors from the workers for poll |taxes have not besn turned over to the Clarke County officials, who, Od- die states, ought to have the privi- lege of robbing the workers in this particular way. In answer to Oddle, Acting Secre+ tary of the Interior Dixon declared. only advance payments were made in scrip. GORGULOFF’S ‘EAL REJECTED BY FRENCH COURT PARIS, Aug. 21.—The Supreme Court yesterday rejected the appeal |of Paul Gorguloff, assassin of Presi- |dent Doumer and well known anti- Soviet intriguer. Unless a presidential pardon is granted him, Gorguloff must be ited wit } 4