Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Oil Interests By LUIS ORTIZ. The old dispute between Bolivia and Paraguay, about the Chaco Bo- real that had been almost forgotten for more than 50 years before 1929 and that in that year 1929 almost Wrought these countries into a war, has again brought a violent eruption: Cannons and machine guns of bot countries are sowing death among hundreds and thousands of workers and peasants who, blinded by the provoking and misleading cry of the agents of imperialism and the na- tional bourgeoisie: “An Outlet to the Sea”; “An Outlet to the Rio Para- guay”; “Bolivia Violates the Terri- torial Sovereignity of Paraguay”, etc., | throw themselves into a criminal war | for the exclusive gain of the imper- ’ jalists and their national lackeys. ‘The agents provocateurs in the pay of the Standard Oil Co., the Royal Dutch Shell, together with the agents of the gamonales (big Bolivian land- owners), of the Paraguayan landown- ers and the other agents of the na- tional bourgeoisie, actively carry on a, national-chauvinist campaign which tends to hide the inter-imperialist character of the war, which will bring to the workers and peasants of both countries nothing but death and misery unless the imperialist war conspiracy is exposed and defeated, The Fight for Oil, ‘The Chaco Boreal territorial dis- pute came to the forefront again as soon as the agents of the oil com- panies made the discovery that this territory has oil deposits. It then became a coveted jewel to the im- perialists and their national lackeys, who under all kinds of pretexts now incite both countries to wage a bloody war. The socialists and reformists of both countries add their voices to the general chorus of war inciters, although in a different key. True to the treacherous role of the Second International and the Amsterdam Refcrmists they come to the help of their respective bourgeoisie and im- perialist masters claiming that the Dolivia~-Paraguay war will end the crisis and unemployment; that an outlet to the sea will develop new industrial and commercial life for Bolivia, create more jobs, etc. But these worthy disciples of Mc- Donald, Vandervelde, Bauer, etc., “forget” to remember that there is unemployment and misery in Chile, Peru, etc., although those countries have ports, have “outlets to the sea.” Wer As the Way Out of the Crisis. When speaking about the Bolivia- Paraguay war we can not forget the historical moment in which this war is taking place. We can not separate this event from the general interna- tional situation, from the sharp strug- gle now going on in the whole world, trom the deep antagonisms between ji: imperialist countries and their truggle for redivision of the colonial and semi-colonial world. The Bolivia- Paraguay war gives us a clear ex- ample of the sharpness of the im- perialist conflict and a sample of the program of the imperialists and their national lackeys, and their way out of the crisis. Dangercus Tendencies. The Bolivia-Paraguay conflict has been taken rather lightly by very maeny of our comrades, as some event isolated from the general interna- ticnal situation, as some little war between two small South American countries, forgetting entirely that the smallest conflicts in this acute situ- ation of international crisis, of sharp alist rivalries may be the be- ginning of a world-wide conflict. Whoever takes such view takes the reme view pe'nt of the socialists at the en‘bresk of the werld war! This is to forget history, forget marxism end take the point of view of the l'beral and pecificts, actually in prac- tice to give aid to the imperialist. J this struggle the inyperialists ilize the governments under their groups, War Conspivaey in Chile. Sona time aso the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Bolivia made a sudden trip to Chile, where he held a number of secret conferences with the Chilean government. What was discussed in these conferences was ChiJe produces nitrate (a war pro- cuct) in great quantities and that the only inlet to Bolivia from the sea is through Chilean ports we can yeedily see what was taken up in these conferences. That Chile takes sides with Bolivia in the present war fs essential or at least the Boiivian oY alana must get a promise cf eutrality” from Chile, that will it them the transport of war “terials through Chile. rgentina plays a very important American Workers! Stop Munitions Shipmen From Ports of the U.S. A. e@entrol es well eas the oppositional . not disclosed but if we consider that | Anglo-American Rivalries Behind Struggles; Prime Mover ts part in the war and openly has taken the side of Paraguay. In this con- | conflict Argentina not only plays the | game of British imperialism but also comes forward to the defense of its | own special capitalist interests. gentinan investments in Paraguay | are next to the British and American and are very closely linked up with| British capital. Argentina has mob- ilized some of its troops on its front- iers under the pretext that they have to see that “there be no incursions into Argentinian territory.” War Mongering in Uruguay. In Uruguay, the “Batallista Party” which sides with the British war mongers asks through its press, etc., that the Urugayan government de- clare war on Paraguay and denounces the government stand in favor of Bolivia, The Uruguayan Minister in Bolivia in a public speech declares that his government will side with Bolivia. Such a tense situation has been created that the governments of Uruguay and Argentina have broken off relations. The Brazilian government took sides with Bolivia at the beginning of the conflict, undoubtedly due to obtaining advantageous positions in the railway that unites Brazil with Bolivia. In contrast with the posi- tion taken by the Federal Govern- ment the Southern rebels represent- ing the feudal-agrarian coffee in- terests which are closely connected with British interests, took sides with Paraguay and declared their opposi- tion to the pro-American policy of the Vargas Government. The “Neutral” Committees. Of course in all these moves and counter-moves we see a lot of vacil- lations in the positions taken by the political groups and governments, vacillations which are dictated by the force of the tremendous interests in- volved and by the active maneuvers of Wall Street and London bankers. A “Neutral” Committee has been formed. The committee is composed of the United States, Mexico, Cuba, Colombia and Uruguay. Obviously a “neutral” committee dominated by American imperialism. British imper- jalism has answered this move by the formation of another “neutral” committee, called the ABC-Peru, composed of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru, which, because of its closeness to the warring countries has “more authority” to settle the dispute. At the same time that this com- mitee is formed, the League of Na- tions continues its “neutral” activi- ties to “settle the conflict.” The Resistance of the Workers. A clear picture of the situation would not be given of course, if we were to ignore the serious resistance and struggles against war carried on by the revolutionary working class and its organizations. Reports in the capitalist press inform us that some time ago 8 Bolivian workers and in- tellectuals were court-martialled and shot because they led demonstra- tions against the war in La Paz, Bo- livia, Also reports in South Ameri- jean newspapers inform that 500 Paraguayan soldiers were diszrmed and punished because they refused to go to the front, A number of conferences against the war have been held in different countries. In Argentina an anti-war conference was held and was attended by 120 representatives of workers’ organizations of Argentina, fraternal delegates from the General Confed- political exiles from Paraguay and Peru. In this conference a commit- tee was selected to prepare a South- American anti-war conference to be held in Uruguay in November. September an anti-war conference was held in Montevideo, Uruguay. Also an anti-war manifesto was pub- lished and widely distributed, on oc- ,casion of the rupture of relation be- jtween these two countries, signed by the Uruguayan Confederation of La- ber and the Trade Union Classist Committee of Argentina. A similar manifesto was published, siened jeintly by the Trade Union Classist Committee of Argentina, the General Confederation of Labor of Brazil, the Workers’ Federation of Chile and the General Confederation of Labor of Uruguay and the Peruv- ian Confederation of Labor. Strengthening the Anti-War Front. The struggles and activities against the Bolivia-Paraguay war is being carried cn mainly in the border coun- tries and as yet has'not taken the wide character it should, This strug- gle is all the more important if we realize that in Bolivia there is no Communist Party but only small dis- connected Communist groups, and that the Paraguayan Communist Party is a very small one and was Ar- | eration of Labor of Uruguay and | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1932 id Page Three Against the Imperialist =————a War in Latin-America! WORKERS AND PEASANTS SLAIN IN ZOWARDS 15th ANNIVERSARY OF PARAGUAYAN-BOLIVIA CHACO WAR RUSSIAN REVOLUTION! Weissberg in Jail Says | Needle ConventionW a Soviet Union Strides Forward | in Field of Primary Education Capitalist Reports of About-Face In Soviet Education Refuted; New Decree to Extend Polytechnical Training i in Schools | tober Revolution. is another milestone | in the march toward a socialist, class- society. One of the most im- | portant features of this triumphant march is the great forward stride of education, to which the Soviet Gov- ernment devoted its utmost atten- | tion, During the past two years universal grades has been successfully intro- duced throughout the Soviet Union and has been extended through the calities, dren is expected in the primary as many as attended school in 1913- 14, and universal compulsory educa- tion is to be extended to all children u pto seventeen years of age, Unified System of Polytechnical In addition to the inauguration of universal compulsory primary educa- tion, the past two years have also been marked by important changes in the educational program. In 1930 the schools were organized into a “unified system of polytechnical edu- cation,’ designed to provide for all children, from the very beginning of their education, training in the fund- amental principles and processes at the basis of all labor, In furtherance of this aim, schools were linked up directly with factories and farms, the latter to be used as practical labora- tories through excursions in the case of the younger pupils and actual par- ticipation in the labor processes in the later grades. The program was expected to provide a real coordina- tion between theory ang practice, be- tween life in th school and the out- side world, In developing the new program the problem has been to achieve that correct balance between group and individual work which has been one of the chief concerns of all modern educators. In accordance with this the Communist Party has worked out @ program whcih does provide for improvements and greater flexibility in the application of the new prin- ciples of education, for greater at- tention to individual needs, more thorough handling of routine subjects and a greater degree of discipline, SAME OLD PARTY! The Social-Democratic majority of the City Council, including the Ma- yor, has resigned in the city of Rothau, in Western Bohemia. They chose this way out of an impasse oc- casioned by growing unemployment and misery among the Roihau work- ers, instead of organizing the unem- ployed to fight for adequate relief. Another Milwaukee—this time in Czechoslovakia. Sign up for National Daily Worker Tag Days, Oct. 14, 15, 16. Tag Day Stations anneunced later, founded not long age. The war between Bolivia and Pa- raguay places serious tasks before the Communist Party of the United States and the revolutionary work- ing class, Munitions have been ship- ped and are being shipped to Bolivia from American ports, The New York Times carried an article in its Sun- day edition (Oct, 2) in which it is stated that the Remington Arms fac- tory in ‘Bridgeport, Conn., has re- ceived a very large order of arms from Bolivia. Give Life to the Anti-War Pact, In the year 1929 a Continental Congress was held where the Latin American Confederation of Labor was formed. In this congress were pres- ent two fraternal delegates of the Trade Union Educational League (mow the T.U.U.L.) in which a pact of solidarity was signed between the TUEL and Latin American Confeder- ation of Labor. Mutual support was premised in the common struggles against imperialism, oppression, against war, etc, The actual war situation and the danger of this war spreading to many other Latin-American countries must arouse the most determined struggle against it in the ranks of the Amer- ican working class and specially in the Party and Trade Union ranks. We must make the Solidarity Pact of Montevideo something more than a document, it, must become a liv- ing reality of struggle against im- perialist war, DISTRICT 1—BOSTON, ?°3 Broadway, S. Boston £3 Scaniford St., Boston; Jo Clark St., Cambridge; 27 Sparhewk 8t., Brighten; «2? Wenonah St., Roxbury; ct Shawnut St. Boston; Tt Wildwood St., Dorchester *Malmati Hall, Quincy £8 Hawthorne St., Chelsea; ‘ 105 Shirley Ave,, Revere tf id 0) ry Other stations in cities below: Lynn, Chelsea, Peabody; Fitchburg; Gardner; Worcester; Lawrence; Lanesvilleffi Norwood; Rockland, Me.; Portland, Me.; Providence, R. 1.; Pawtucket; W. Concord, N. H.; Nashua, N. H.; Claremont, N. H.; Hanover, N. H.; Wilton, N. H.; Manchester, N. H.; Lebanon, N. H.; Barre Vt. DISTRICT 3—PHILA, 912 S. 3rd St; 326 ai Lawrenge § | 1829 St, Sth St.; 421 Quince St.; The 15th anniversary of the Oc-? 20,000,000 Children in Primary School § intermediate grades as well as in| industrial centers and numerous lo- | The number of children in| primary grades has increased during | this period by more than 50 per cent. | An enrollment of oyer 20,000,000 chil- compulsory eaucation for the primary [ | schools this fall—almost three times | The yard of the huge assembling department of the Gorkygrad, U. S. S, BR. (formerly Nijhni-Novgo- rod) automobile works, Here 30 trucks are put together every day. BUEDING AUTOS AND HOME Photo shows new workers homes near the textile factory “Melange Kombinat’ in Ivanoy-Wosnessenak, U.S. S. R. SHIPBUILDING CO. IN FAIRVIEW, N. J., CUTS PAY 15 P. €. Old Workers Get Hard Tasks as Excuse to Fire Them (By a Worker Correspondent) CAMDEN, N. J—The New York Shipbuilding Co., of Fairview, N. J., recently announced a 15 per cent wage cut for all employes. Wages now are $23.09, $19.72 and $14.96. The Manhattan, a beautiful boat, is gone. So are 1,500 employes. Old workers are given specially difficult tasks as an excuse to fire them. In this way the copper smith shop kicked out 20 workers, REPORT SOVIETS FORMED IN BARGA Japan to Seize Upon It for Anti-Soviet Drive A Soviet Republic was proclaimed in tle Barga province bordering on Morsylia, a dispatch from Peiping reported yesterday, Barga is inhab- itated by Mongols. In Peiping it is held that Japan will seize upon the reported procla- mation of the Soviet Republic. by the Barga Mongols as an excuse for Jehol section in this northern part of China, The occupation of Jehol by Ja- panese imperialism was described 2s inevitable in a dispatch from Chang- chun, Manchuria, quoting “well in- formed” circles to the effect htat Pu_ Yi, Manchukuo's chief executive and former “Boy Emperor” of China is relying upon this seizure to an- nex three more Chinese provinces to the puppet republic which would then be transformed into a monarchy. The seizure of Jehol appears therefore as being intended to fur- ther Japan's minister design of fur- ther’carving up China and increas- ing the provocatory activity against the Soviet Union, Worker Correspondence Troopers Guard Steel Mill Against Former Workers ° (By a Steel Worker) | CLEVELAND, O.—I am a worker at the Otis Steel Co. built a new continue millauiomatic work, which cost them $10,000,000, Bi fore this continue mill was built there they employed 1,000 men; now only 995 five men are employed in the place of this 1,000 men. men have been discharged, and I am one ef them. precipitating the occupation of the, Sa They have | The remaining ‘You cannot even go into th |because they have 40 state tr to watch it, with gu § in the belts. They also have ma one who tries to do anything not in the interest of the bosses. relief, and now they have a em | or of forced labor. If you don’t work | employed in this steel mill again, and | are blacklisted in all other steel mills. | see that | faucets are rusty | sanitary drinkin and toilets? The pipe lines and dirty, | The men must line up Wednesd: and wait 5 to 30 minutes for th checks, and then go to the mile a nd wait again. I hear a speaker from the Comr Party at noon outside the yard. If | 01 the Si s, Republicans and Dem- | ocrats Victories Recontiy A Are lomptentied to All Work: | | egroes, ers, But Must Do More Youth Women, Italian and Spanish Must Be Drawn In; Broader Democracy (Serving |. The NT.W.a | Star Casino, Trads industry. The fur worl struggle with their r: achieved what ered a brillia’ jin gaining better conditions, but also | feate d and down, |ship. As a result of the struggles, |they carry on shop by shop, they are ‘ovements ing imp The dressmakers, renewed their e! real united front movement, and are ew York, with reports of | Immediate partial improvements were By I. WEISSBERG a sentence at Marts tsland for Trade Strikes.) U, is coming to its N pal Convention, Oct. activities in Needle gained in some sections of the Needle ‘kers set a splen nks united, a justly con-f not only xample! hey carried on be may nt vi the jas defeating every attempt of- the|1I.L.G.W.U. are demo: |company union bureaucracy to de-|are not out yc and break their strike by|with the bosses a of terror and frame-ups | encies to break t t active strikers, jers. must e: The knitgoods workers in follow- |Party and the ro ing the example of the fur workers, |betrayals of the wor are c ‘ying on an intensive organi- jnot sufficiently expose a them he ation campaign on the basis of | fre. d front and rank and file leader-| We must imr establish orga every branch of 1 t in their con- . in the trades we (whitegoods better conditions. Union Paper. with more fforts to estab gor a Jin the midst of an intensive cam-|_The Daily Worker and Morning 1, organizing the dress mak | Fretheit are not able with the biggest uggle against the bosses against |°fort they may make, to actua for the improvement of their |Portray on their pages the detailed life and struggle of the needle trades ms. Can Do Still Better. workers in their shor We must Ginte taeeven t unseeeey coasts without delay organize blish a pointing out as |the tremendous weekly or semi-monthly sharply as we can, | should be turned into a powerful or- importance of these ee aniz achievements, to carefully scrutinize | 8°™2¢". Bs all of the mistakes and shortcomings Dressmakers’ Problems. jof our union. It is just because of This convention must hout in these victories, that we are in a b i position to see with more und ug and correct our shortcom- Negro Our union has confident to joir fight for t heir conditions, ur ranks, but n the struggle. d some to struggle jare subjected ‘to. d by us. their liz the mise We to exnose a er fake las the company bureaucracy, > of the Negro workers, the | er exploited section s. We found that wherever the | of-town problem. improvements in the ap- proach to the Negro workers, how- chine guns inside, ready to kill any- tae not enough. Youth, Women, Foreign-Born. We did not heretofore pay suffici- This year they gave a few months |ent attention to the Italian, er women workers. The struggle of the young workers for nothing or the measly relief they |of South River is an only too glar- want to throw at you, you lose your |ing example of how much we lag job and are kicked out never to be | behind the masses in their readiness against the misery they in New Yerk and elsewhere mt able conditions into mili- les for provement of their conditions. We have not sufficiently developed d group of leading in this dev s role of the Lo g@ any branch of center, pay special ne to the condi- ers in the dress It will carefully the least negle the industry or any attention at this t tions of the w trade of New Yor ze the pro are faced with j in the needle |ber-contractor problem and the out- Workers, not as yet gained the ere convinced of our n hands with them he improvement of | they not only joined took an active part There is to be not- the dress trade suffer the most mis- erable as operat: to $20 do! of the season; in the lower branches, such as finishers, cleaners. examiners, or floor girls earn as lit~ tle as $5, $8 a week, The speed-up is unberable. are being cut very regularly and ir- regularly. The army of unemployed is increasing daily. Spanish and mobilize the d a@ real mass struggle in makers for the coming season for the improve- ment of their conditions! The young workers t be} In order that the united front We must help them movement y draw in the broad dissatisfaction in we must ce ethen 1 the material im-| and file oppositior company unions. In. this we be able to more succe: rkers in | must by for mo: F the pr rolled Union, y $ of the workers. ‘ the interes NEW YORK.—A manifesto o 10,000 words, amplifying their recent statement in support of the Com- munist ticket, will be the first gun in the election campaign of the left intellectuals, now organized as the League of Professional Groups for Foster and Ford. The manifesto, published as a_ fiye-cent election | pamphiet, was released last night at the Foster and Ford dinner at Web- ster Hall, The membership of the League in| cludes such prominent figures in the literary and academic world as coln Steffens, Sherwood Anders Waldo Frank, John Des Passos, 1 edore Dreiser, Edmund Wilson, Me colm Cowley, Countee Cullen, Sidney Howard, Langston Hughes, Sidnsy Hook, Adolf Dehn and H.W.L. Dana. | James Rorty, writer and critic, is| serving as secretary of the League. A program of meetings and debates is being arrang2d and it is expected that at least two more election pam- phlets will be issued during the campaign, ogists of a “ruling ster and Ford, the Workers’ sponsibls greed and hop: Candidates pidity has by this t demonstrated; or w the Communist Party. They are | fulfill our own w . editors, painters, teachers, ey eae ; Eraengtay rvcfessional people who by this ac- deport yates th pea iereananee 7 ar2 definitely withdrawing their | ing choice when we repudiate the from the system which | system that stultifies us, and in this them, frustrates them, makes i ours ly s with their work ridiculous, and now after three years of depression, has made excellent. beginning at starving an or two excep- “the members of effort will in this election ed to and ¢: the influence of the radi ents within the various toward cl: ing ‘the n of t Hn relation to id st ers, William Z. ‘Foster and James W. Ford.” ONE NEAREST YOU IN YOUR CITY AND HELP MAKE THE TAG DAYS A SUCCESS! DISTRICT 3—PHILA, 744 8, 3rd SI 2222 Master St.t 228 S. 10th St.; 2295 w. Columbia; 725 Carpenter; 9539 Brown St.; NE Orkney & ‘Cambria: 1831 N, Franklin; 6023 Vine St; ‘715 N, 6th St; 708.N. 46th St.; 995 N, Sth St.: 1747 Wilton St: 2128 W. Orianna; 2225 W. Indiana; 1704 8. 21st St.; 2456 N. 20th St.; ‘11753 N. Slst St.; , 1137 N, 41st St. 8219 ‘Tinicum Ave.; DISTRICT 5—PITTSBURGH, Hill Sec., 2203 Centre Ave. North Side, 205 James St South Side, 82 S, 11th Si DISTRICT 6—CLEVELAND j1081 Auburn Ave,; 1973 E, 123d St.; 4309 Lorain Ave.; 2214 Woodhill Rd. 3204 Clinton Ave.; 807 E. 152d St. 10515 Madison Avell123 Buckeye Rd,; 5407 St. Clair Ave,14101 Kinsman Rd, |Sandusky, Coshocton, 13201, Union Ave.; | Cambridge, 1245 Prospect Ave.; | Mansfield, Marion, New Carl, Dayton 920 E, 79th St. 926 BE. 1ésth St.; DISTRICT 6—CLEVELAND 6215 Doloff Rd.; 2647 Central Ave.; 7404 Aetna Ave.; 3804 Scovill Av Other Cities: Erie, Columbus, Cincinnati, Kent, Salem, Wellington, Yell, poieon, Bucyrus, Hamilton, Miliford, ‘Warren, New Castle, E. Liverpool, Springfield, New Phila., Allianee, DISTRICT 7—DETROIT: Workers’ Club, 9148 Oakland Ave Ferry Hall, 1343 E, Ferry; Section A|Finnish Hall, ‘ headquarters, 4515 Hastings St.; Pol.|)Book Shop, 1981 Grand River Ave. Akron, Canton, Youngsctown, Toledo, |ish Workers’ Club, 5770 Grandy Ave.;|Greek Hall, 337 Monroe Avi Elyria, | Workers’ Club, 3945 Elmwood Ave.;|ers’ Center, 13-219 Mack Av Na-|Martin Hall, 4959 Martin Ave.; Pol- lish Hall, 3566 Club, 6551 Central Ave.; Vanderbilt Hall, 8419 Vanderbilt; Copeland Hall; 8890 Copeland; Blection headquarters, 3014 Yemans, 4503 Michigan Ave.; Workers’ Center, 3084 Leushner Ham- |tramck; Bayside Hall, 5969-14th ; Wo Elec- tion headquarters, 531 Clairpoint Ave. Magnolia; Workers’ DISTRICT 9—MI Oct, 14, 1825 Minneahah e.; Oct. 15, Glenwood Hall, 1317 Glenwood ve.; Oet, 22, Workers’ Cultural Hamtramck, Mich.;|Center, 1229 Logan Ave, a militant | av The workers in| Yemans Hall,| | International Notes GEORGE BELL t of the Second Five-Year Soviet Government is pro- e erection of the largest t in the world, with more e the available power of att The plant will be Angara River, which is connecting Lake Baikal the Yenisel and the Arctic The annual available power will more than twice total annual output. of and the Soviet Union and more than twenty at a that of as the latter is. The over extremely ances, will be operated at unprecedented voltage of 660,000 e kinds of coal deposits are le in the region: high—vola- rown and high hydrogen-con- nt coal. The region has rich min- 1 deposits close to the projected power plant: iron, silver, gold, lead molybdenum, zinc, copper, tungsten and aluminum. gh On Fascist Germany— q eee Commissioner of Police, , has suppressed “Volidampf,” n of the revolutionary rail- orkers, for a period of two , even forbidding publication reasons for this act of press From July 29 to Sept, 14, 1982, no 's than 63 newspapers and maga- ines, almost all of them Oommunist e suppressed by the Reich and Prussian Governments. are ae Two hundred Italian Communists, imr ed in the Civita Vecchia itiary, are on a hunger strike r hunger strike is a protest st the latest chicanery of Mus- Italy; while imprisoned in jails, they were indicted for solin: other the crime of “having organized the |! \a | | unist Party among Communists need as political prisoners.” The comrades charged with this plot were concentrated in the Civita Vecchia penitentiary to serve three months at ‘y confinement on bread and, water, without any exercise or Tead- \ing matter. The French Communist Party !s g instructive work in anti-mili- ist propaganda. During the huge army maneuvers held last month in Champagne (along the German fron- tier) the masses responded to the Communists’ call so effectively thas | the air maneuvers at Dijon were a {complete failure. At Marseilles, the |mas sprotest was so violent that the ir maneuvers had to be held in quasi-secrecy an elaborate militaristic display. The Communist protest at Rheims, al- though not as successful as in Dijon, |did prevail upon the population, to {keep the city lighted at night, thus nullifying the results of the mimic night air raids. The General Staff had planned for general civic par- | ticipation in the maneuvers, but the $s agitation in the factories was so effective that the Staff called off their general mobilization plans due to the workers’ hostility. After | Boncow the appointment of Paul , chief French delegate tothe League of ons and at present ar in the Herriot Cab- as Governor-General of Indo- a year or two ago, the French | Party was forced by rank protests to expel him for- rom the Party. But this was camouflage—today this Minister still one of the editors and of a_ French Socialist shed by two regional So- : Progres du Tarn Minister of W inet, the high morals of : Stephan Heller, one rominent leaders of the n Party and of the White ‘cr in Hungary, is now on trial on charges of embezzlement and fraud in the Criminal Court of Budapest. BACKACHES Not always due to Female Complaints brefaie doctor who | advises on care of kidneysand bladder nervous ‘bunees of the neys and bisdder are frequently the cause of 1 these pains.” However, ho condition can often he remedied quickly by Santal Midy Cap s, obtainable at most any drug C3 “Sentel Midy Capsules contain a tndinn extenct which soothes the, kid- eptic on the Blad- eys and bladder . A small amount . Get Santal Midy from your gist--today. WANTED! 10,000 VOLUNTEERS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY TO RAISE $20, 000 T0 SAVE THE DAILY WORKER ne is THE LIST OF STATIONS DURING THE TAG DAYS FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14, 15, 16! JOIN THE ARMY OF VOLUNTEERS TODAY! PICK THE DISTRICT 12—SEATTLE, Sattle, Portland, Tacoma, Astoria, Aberdeen, Hobart, East Hill; Tssaquah,, pokane, Yakima, Olympia, Polsho, | Bellingham, Anacrotes, Sedro Wolley, Mt. Vernon, Arlington, Wash. | DISTRICT 13--CALIFORNIA, |1164 Market; 1507 Eddy St.; 530 Val- encia; 1529 Powell; 830 Market; 20 Flint; 660 Jessie, Tm Oakland, the station will be at ‘21 Washington. In San Jose, 81 |Post Sacramento, 912 12th St, instead of furnishing: