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In the Day’s. News i REPORT TOKIO TRANSPORT TOKIO, Oct. 25.—Tokio. trans- portation workrs will walk out in a general strike tomorrow at noon im struggle against new wage-cuts ordered by the transportation com- panies. The strike is called by the Traffic Workers’ Union. The com- panies and the authorities have mobilized 10,000 guards for use against the strikers, Police have arrested scores of revolutionary workers in an attempt to break the strike. IRISH CITY REBUFFS PRINCE OF WALES NEWRY, Northern Ireland, Oct. 25. —The city council of Newry voted 9 to 5 not to present an address of welcome to the Prince of Wales when he comes to open the parliament of Northern Ireland next month. . 4 RUMOR DOAK WILL BE OUSTED WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—Even if Hoover is re-elected, Secretary of La- bor Doak will be dropped from the cabinet after the Presidential elec- tion, according to rumors circulating here. The man who is responsible for the deportation of many workers is referred to as “the outgoing Sec- retary of Labor.” a ie SEIZE $45,000 AT FORTIFIED PLANT NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—Five armed men forced their way into the forti- fied Kastenhuber & Lehrfeld Refin- ery of precious metals, at 32 Flush- ing Ave., Brooklyn, robbed a safe of between $25,000 and $50,000 in bullion and escaped with a rifle and revolver. Ten employees of the refinery were overpowered by the five armed bandits. ae eee) BRITISH POUND DROPS AGAIN LONDON, Oct. 25.—The British pound sterling continued its decline to $3.28, which is almost at the low- est level reached since the gold standard was discarded last year. so ee HUNGER MARCH ORGANIZERS SENT Conference to Be Held In N. Y. Saturday NEW YORK.—A preparatory com- mittee met last night at 80 Fifth Ave- nue, to make plans for the formation of a United Front Committee for Support of the National Hunger March. A call will be sent out today to all unions, fraternal organizations, cultural, sport groups, to send qele- gates to a conference, to be held Sat- urday afternoon at a place to be an- nounced later, where concrete plans will be made to involve tens of thou- sands of unemployed in the prepara- tions for the Hunger March, to ‘sup- port the march, and send delegates. Start ‘Three organizers have already gone ‘out, to help form the columns start- ing from Denver, from Sioux City, and from Buffalo, Additional organ- izers, for the eight gigantic columns of the march will go out within a short time. Five hundred thousand copies of the manifesto, calling for participa- tion in the H unger March ang 20,000 organization bulletins, will go into every corner of the country mobiliz- ing for the march. All workers are urged to secure supplies of this ma- terial for distribution from the Na- tional Office, Unemployed Council, Room 436, 80 E. 11th St., New York City. Send Funds Workers are urged to send contri- butions at once to push the work of this National Hunger March for- ward. Leaflets, magazines, organizers, are mobilizing forces for the masses _ of unemployed that will demand win- ter relief and unemployment insur- ance at Washington, December 5. Send all funds to the Joint Commit- tee for Support of the Hunger March, 146 Fifth ‘Ave. Make checks payable to Hunger March Committee. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: b Unemployment and Social Insurance at the expense of the state and em- ployers. Against Hoover's wage-cutting policy. Emergency relief for the poor farm- ers without restrictions py the govern. ment and banks; exemption of poor Dail Central farmers from taxes, collection of rent or debts and no forced (Section of the Communist we ) Vol. IX, No. 256 GE 2 Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N.¥., under the Ast of March Norker Rfaunict Party U.S.A. & 2 VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Equal rights for the Negroes a lf determination for the Black Bel Against capitalist terror; against al! forms of suppression of the poliitca) rights of workers. Against imperialist war; for the de- fense 3, 1879, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1932 CITY EDITION Callicotte, Who Says He Set Bomb for Which Mooney Was‘ Framed, to Speak at Big Meet New Witness, Whose Story Clears Mooney Once More, to Address Thousands of San Francisco Workers November 6 FRANCISCO, Cal.,! 25.—The confession of SAN Oct. tingly placed the 4&ponsible for the 1916 Prepar- edness Day explosion, ney frame-up and forms the basis for a huge mass meeting to be held at the Civic Auditorium in San ca cisco, on Noy. 6 at 2 p, m. Meeting Backed By Conference Plans for the meeting were worked out at a conference held Sunday, Oc- tober 16, in California Hall, San Francisco, attended by a large num- ber of delegates representing 58 la- TOM MOONEY and PAUL CALLICOTTE bor and fraternal organizations who responded to the call issueq by the Tom Mooney Committee. Prominent as supporters and participants in the conference were the International La- bor Defense and the Communist Par- ty, A. F. of L. locals and T.U.U.L. unions. Open Hearing for Callicotte The conference, was.informed that Paul Callicotte had agreed to return to San Francisco and appear at the mass meeting. In view of the fact that the San Francisco authorities re- fused the demand for an open hear- ing made by Callicotte and his at- torney, Irvin Goodman, it was de- cided that the procedure would be re- versed 4nd the Grand Jury, district attorney, chief of police, Governor Rolph and other officials would be invited to publicly question Callicote in front of the ten thousand or more people who are expected to be pres- ent November 6 at the Civic Audito- rium meeting. Callicotte’s story re- mains unshaken after four months grilling by police and attorneys and press. Prominent Speakers to Appear Among those who are expected to participate in the November 6 meet- ing are delegations of workers from all over the state. It is expected The- (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) surance at the expense of the state and employers, IW O Calls on Members to Back Election Rally Nov. 6 NEW YORK —The International Workers Order, with a membership Paul Callicotte that he unwit- | suitcase | has dra-| matically re-opened the entire Moo-| Unemployment and Social In- | of more than 30,000 workers, is mobilizing its entire membership to hurl a united and fighting challenge to the American capitalist class and its star- vation program by uniting with thousands of other workers in attending the huge final election rally which the Communist Party will hold in Madi- son Square Garden, 50th St., and 8th o—. OLGIN” PARLEY national Workers Order urges all the workers to jam Madison Square Gar- den on that date to hear William Z. Foster, Commuriist candidate for Over 300 active members and repre- sentatives of Bronx workers’ organ- izations including members of the Workmen's Circle branches gathered President, who will leave his sick-bed in order to address the workers at the rally. “The Madison Square Garden Rally should and must be a powerful dem- onstration of working class solidarity against the attempts of the bosses to starve the workers,” the announce- ment stated. “The Madison Square Garden Ral- ly will demonstrate that the workers are filled to the throat with the rot- tenness and lies of the Socialist, Re- publican and Democratic Parties, and that they are waging their fight against exploitation through the only party that represents them and is faithful to them, the Communist Party. . “All workers out to madison Square Garden on Sunday, November 6th. Demonstrate powerfully against un- employment, wage cuts and hunger and for immediate relief at the ex- pense of the rich.” General admission to the rally is 40 cents. 1,500 seats reserved at $1 each can be secured on the 5th floor, 50 East 13th Street. STUDENTS ON STRIKE SPENCER, N. Y., Oct. 25.—The students of the Spencer High School struck Monday demanding that a member of the faculty be replaced ~ because he slandered a girl student sctea i for her expulsion from the sckool. at the “Elect Olgin for Congressman Conference” which was held on Mon- day night at 1610 Boston Rd. Following talks by Amter, candidate for governor of New York, and Kiss, section organizer of the Communist. Party, Olgin, who is editor of the Freiheit, Jewish organ of the Commu- nist Party, took the floor amdist a wild demonstration of enthusiasn\, The crowd leaped to its feet singing the “International”. Olgin stated among others: “If 1 am elected congressman from this 224th District my free time will be spent among the steel workers, tex- tile workers needle trade workers and together with those exploited and op- pressed by the capitalist system we will force the capitalist government to grant our, demands.’ An intensive plan of activity during the remaining weeks of the election drive was outlined by Comrade Hor- watt of the United Jewish Workers Election Campaign Committee. The Plan includes a series of giant rallies in the open air a number of hall meetings, several symposiums, an Ol- gin banquet, torch parade, a! chil- dren’s torch parade and a wind-up Red Auto parade on Monday, No- Nicaea 7, the evening before the elec- ion. Workers’ Delegations Expected from All Over California; Grand Jurors Who Wanted Secrecy Asked to Put Questions at Meeting SMASH THE ing the explosives that caused at all that the California bos-¢ |ses are trying their hardest to hide the California Confession as they tried in the past to suppress and destroy the ‘photographs proving that Mooney was 9066 feet away from the scene of explosion; as they tried to suppress the confession. to perjury on the part of every stool and pros- titute they bought to help hang Tom Mooney. It is to the credit of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, that now Jeads the world-wide ‘struggle ‘for Mooney’s freedom, and-its"wlert representatives in Portland that the Callicotte con- fession is now an added page in the history's volumes on .the Mooney frame-up. Even the bosses themselves make no other pretense for keeping Moo- ney buried alive in San Quentin save that he is a “dangerous radical”, In the working class language, it means that Mooney is an incorruptible mili- tant fighter in the toiler’s ranks. It is this fact that makes the whole out- fit of the American Federation of Labor misleaders, Mooney’s sworn enemies and jailors. In his last de- cision of April 20, denying a pardon to Mooney, Governor Rolph with un- limited cynicism, revealed clearly that he denies the pardon because of Mooney’s militant labor record. As a militant fighter Mooney threw in- to the teeth of his jailors his reaction by stating, “This decision proves the utter impossibility of any militant worker ever securing justice at the |hands of capitalist-controlled courts, |governors and other politicians.” He continued to keep his faith tn the toiling masses by calling upon them to “close the ranks and raise louder than ever the demand that the plunderbund of California let go their victims.” As in the Mooney and Billings case, so in the Scottsboro the bosses re- sorted to the vilest-frame-up methods to burn to death the innocent Negro boys of Scottsboro, Alabama. The Scottsboro case is part of the savage oppression under which the Negro population has groaned since they were chained in slavery to the Amer- ican shores so that the white ruling masters may wallow in luxury and idleness. Today the Negro masses under the leadership of the Communist Party and the International Labor Defense are stirred to depths in efforts to break the chains of national oppres- sion. Mob and legal lynching, Jim- Crow and disfranchisement. The white American working masses are beginning to rid themselves of the vicious poison of white superiority pumped into their brains from very childhood by the common enemy of the white and black workers — the boss class. In every appeal addressed to the workers, Mooney does not fail to stress that in their struggle for his freedom they must also fight for the freedom of the Scottsboro boys. The International Labor Defense supported by the black and white workers succeeded three times in staying the executioners’ hands pre- pared to snuff out the lives of the Scottsboro boys, as it succeeded in get- ting a new trial for Orphan Jones and as it has now obtained freedom for three Negro workers in the Wash- ington, D. C., Logan Circle case, The International Labor Defense is arous- ing the black and white workers to continued mass pressure to compel the U, 8. Supreme Judge Court to grant a new trial for the Scottsboro boys which must see the smashing of the brutal frame-up. It exposes their political maneuvering to post- pone the decision till after the elec- tion in fear of the masses’ reaction to a murderous verdict, California Workers! Fill Civic Auditorium on Noy. 6. The Central Committes 4 San Francisco Preparedness Day Parade. ‘jof a mountain of evidence proving Mooney and Billings com- pletely innocent. i The working class does not need additional proofs to be convinced of Mooney’s and Billing’s innocence. diabolical frame-up stands completely exposed. FRAME UP! SET TOM MOONEY FREE! | Communist Party Central Committee Issues | Statement on New Evidence of Innocence Scottsboro Iynch Case Part of Frame-Up System Which Jails Mooney (Statement of Central Committee, Communist Party, U, 8. A.) Paul A. Callicote of Portland has freely and yoluntarily i|come forth stating it was he who placed a suit-case contain- the blast at the July 22, 1916, This comes on top The whole It is no wonder nist, Party, U. S. A, calls upon the California toilers from every city, town and village to converge upon the Civie Auditorium in San Francisco on November 6, for a tremendous protest against the frame-up of Moo- ney. In this demonstration the Cali- fornia workers supported by the toil- ing masses of every land will demand Mooney's freedom; the freedom for the Scottsboro boys and all class-war prisoners, On November 6 the California }workevs will combine the.demands. for. Mooney’s freedom with the celebra- tion of the glorious achievement of the First Workevs’ Republic — the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics— whose toilers through a pqwerful demonstration led by the Bolshevik Party in 1917 saved Mooney from the hangman’s noose, Every workers’ meeting throughout the country must raise again and again the demand for the uncondi- tional release of Tom Mooney, pas- sing resolutions and sending tele- grams of support to the meeting in Civic Auditorium in San Francisco. Through his 84-year old mother who now goes to the world congress of the International Red Aid in Mos- cow, U.S.S.R., Mooney sends his pro- letarian greetings to the Soviet Union workers saying in part, “Through my mother, I extend, through prison bars and across oceans and continents, my hand of solidarity and comrade- ship to the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. I glory in your success and look eagerly forward to still greater achievements. I call {upon the workers of the world to stand shoulder to shoulder, at all costs, in the defense of the Interna- tional Workers’ Fatherland, the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics!” The American workers and farm- ers are heeding this call! They are building an iron wall of protection of the Workers’ Fatherland against the coming attacks of rapacious world imperialism led by Wall Street. They are making the defense of the Soviet Union part of their bitter struggles against unemployment, starvation, wage cuts and speed up. Working men and poor farmers of America! Defeat the murderous crew the Re- publican and Democratic Parties! De- feat the bosses’ servants, the Soci- alist Party! On November 8—VOTE COMMU- NIST—for Foster and Ford, for bread and work against starvation! California workers, pack the Civic Auditorium in San Francisco on No- vember 6. Demand freedom for Tom Mooney! Demand immediate unconditional release of the nine Scottsboro boys! Smash the brutal oppression of the Negro masses! Free all classwar prisoners! USSR Beats U. S. in Cast Iron Production During the month of September the Soviet Union produced an average of 18,100 tons of cast-iron daily as comparetl with an average of 16,200 in August. In July the Soviet production of cast-iron topped the list for Europe and was second only to the United States. It is now ahead of the United States also, which produced an aver- age of 16,500 daily in September. In all other countries the produc- tion of cast-iron is steadily falling, whilst in the Soviet Union it is just as steadily rising. Since January, 1932 the production of cast-iron in the Soviet Union has increased by about twenty per cent. BUNDLE ORDERS FOR SPECIAL 15th SOVIET ANNIVERSARY EDI- TION MUST REACH THE DAILY WORKFR RV NOVeMRER FIRST! William Z. Foster (left) and the country to publish the facts of nage, revealed by John L, Spivak in Conditions Exposed in Book Are Typical, Says Foster By WILLIAM Z. FOSTER Communist Candidate for President The suppression by the capitalist press of the country of the facts con- tained in John L. Spivak’s book, “Georgia Nigger” lengths the ruling class will go to keep the workers from learning the full extent of its crimes. ainst them, ‘This. suppression invol ‘no ‘mete: question of ‘freedom of. the press.” It is a question of the right of 12,- 000,000. Negro. workers and {farmers to live like human beings, enjoying full economic, social and political equality; it is. a question of their right to establish in the Black Belt, where they constitute a majority of the the population, a government of their own; it is a question of their right to organize together with their white brothers to overthrow the en- tire system which breeds lynching, Jim-Crowism and chain gang tor- tures. To expose the conditions un- der which millions of Negroes are liv- ing is to raise these issues. Here is the crime! “Georgia Nigger” is not the work of a Communist, nor does it express the Communist program on the Negro (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) DENOUNCE BAN ON EXPOSE OF NEGRO TORTURE candidates for President and Vice-President respectively, who have joines in showing the real significance of the refusal by the capitalist press of Foster and Ford Score Capitalist Press Ban on _ Factsin‘GeorgiaNigger’ shows to what/i | | 73 | | | | Vets ki Asai Foe o Broadway, on Thursday at 3 p. m. t |the would-be “radical” nominee of thi | This man is traveling the coun workers, farmers, and all sections of votes. This man, further hunger of the workers, is ‘lagainst the bonus, is an enemy of |the Negro people and is a well-liked candidate of Wall Street. The New York workers will not for- jget how he, like Hoover, had the jhunger marchers clubbed in Albany | when they demanded unemployment |insurance. ‘The Negro workers will James W. Ford (right), Commw chain gang torture: novel, “Georgia jors the lynching of Negroes in this country and their disfranchisement in the south. The workers will not |forget that he, like Hoover, con- demns the bonus. | Garment workers will not forget that Roosevelt has endorsed for gov- ernor, Herbert Lehman, notorious for part he t against the struggles. Railroad workers will not |forget that” Roosevelt has promised jhe would follow the same Hoover {policy of wage cuts on the railroads, under cover of promising “higher wages if the railroads are able.” And all starving unemployed work- Jers will not forget that Garner, | Roosevelt's running mate, played a | big part in handing over billions to u the bankers through the Reconstruc- In response to a telegram from the|tion Finance Corporation, and also Daily Worker, inform: him of th jayed the chief role in putting over suppression of the facts contained in| the sales tax method of shifting the “Georgia Nigger” by the capitalist) hurden of the crisis on the backs of the “socialist”, Amer-| the workers, r and most of | ‘This tool of Wall Street, an enemy the bourgeois Negro papers, James W.| of the working class, must be given |Ford, Communist candidate for vice-|ihe proper reception by the 1,150,000 president, yesterday wired as follows | unemployed of New York, by the ebih Spritigtierh70.,. where he spoke | hundreds of thousands of Veterans, last night: | by the masses of Negro workers. “As native of South, All out to Hotel Astor, Thursday bama, know personally night at 8 o'clock. ‘Georgia Nigger’ hundred per cent | LYNCH VERDICTS vagrancy charges, railroading to chain gang or peonage farms. Boss WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 25.— Verdicts of first degree murder were preSs suppression in line with Hoo- handed down by a jury against three ver-Roosevelt-Thomas program of protecting capitalist lynchers, stifl- | Negro youths in the Logan Circle jcase last night. The three over ing revolt of Negro ma: Shame- | | whom death verdicts hang are Jo- ful participation of majo: press in suppression campaign proof | |seph Jackson, Ralph Holmes and Ir- ving Murray. They were convicted these Uncle Toms ready to do dirti- | of murder although their only crime Ford, in Wire, Flays| Suppression by Vegro Press born in Ala- facts in est work of white masters. Negro workers increasingly repudiating these miSleaders, turning to ‘Com- munist program as only way out. Georgia Nigger” is th \Nigger” is not used by * *NOTE. class term, \ | groes.—Editor. tunately compelled to use this term because of copyright requirements. | The author himself is not sympathetic to the term, but used it in order | | to bring forth the degrading system which operates against the Ne- | Congratulate Daily Worker for | was having defended themselves smashing conspiracy of silence, | against a murderous attack by Park publishing facts in ak book, Policeman Milo Kennedy last Au- fe name of a book. The white ruling | | 84*t- | The International Labor Defense, which has been defending the ca jannounced through its attorney: John H. Wilson, |inal lawyer of Washington, and Ber- nard Ades, that it would demand a the Daily Worker. We are | OPEN EASTERN DRIVE FOR BONUS, Trumble to Tour New| England States Harlem Negro and white veterans, members of the Workers’ Ex-Ser- vicemen’s League, will start a drive for their quota of 1,000 new mem- bers tonight, at a special meeting at 127 West 125th St., at 6 p.m. to be followed. by an outdoor meeting at 125th St. and Fifth Ave at 8 p.m, The meeting will be held under the auspices of the Harlem Post.of the W.ES.L. £1 we NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—A campaign to spur the war veterans of the north- west section of the U.S.A. into action for the National Bonus March to the capital, which will reach Washington Dec. 5, was opened today under the joint auspices of the Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League and the Na- tional Veterans Rank and File Com- mittee. Walter Trumbel, National Secretary of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League will leave here tomorrow for a tour of the New England States where he will speak at mass meetings of veterans to rally them to support and participate in the march. Mass March in N. Y. Meanwhile preparations are going apace for a mass vets march to city hall on Noy. 4 to demand immediate relief from the city government and that the city legislative body pass a resolution calling on Congress to pay the bonus. Emanuel Levin, National Chairman of the Workers’ Ex-Seryicemen’s League, in commenting on the recent drive started by Col. Henry D. Lind- sley, ex-head of the American Legion, against immediate payment of the bonus, said that Lindsley’s is one that would give the veterans the small sum of about $60 apiece in the 5 new trial. The conviction of these three Ne- gro boys is intimately linked with the jelection move by the United States | {Supreme Court to postpone an- nouncement of its verdict in the Scotsboro case until after election, and the new lynch verdict against | Buel Lee (Orphan Jones) in Tow- ‘3,000 MARCHERS OUTSIDE LONDON Make Demand Against All workers are called to a demonstration at Hote) Astor, however, supportsé—— | not forget that he, like Hoover, fav-| played in the bosses’ | shows that the United Europ garment workers’ | | noted Negro crim- of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. Price 3 Cents WORKERS PREPARE PROPER GREETING FOR ROOSEVELT, THEIR ENEMY, THURSDAY | Will Show What They Think of Democratic | Nominee Who Clubs Unemployed f Bonus, NegroWorkerg ll “Greet” Lynchers’ Candidate 45th and 0 “greet” Governor Roosevelt, who is e Democratic Party. try making glowing promises to the the population in order to get their Roosevelt Sold His Worthless Paper Money Whole books have been wri about Hoover's stock swindling op jations. Roosevelt is in the posi Hoover held before he was elected— |not many know of his business op- | erations, | But the accompanying picture an advertisement p:inted in the San | Francisco Chronicle, Oct. 1 1922, ean In- vesiors, Ltd. was selling German Marks then at the rate of $200 for a million marks. The mark was falling, and insiders knew they were already |practically worthless. Within a few |months, the price of a dollar in marks rose to astronomical figures. Very shortly after the advertisement was published, to get people to hand over dollars for marks, the mark be- came so worthless that it disappeared Monzys norhicy Hituruees Mark Options | One Million from the money exchange price lists And when United European In- yestors was unloading this paper for good cash, Franklin Delano Rodsevelt, now Democratic candidate for pres- ident of the United States, was pres- | ident of the United European Invest- rs, Ltd! Furthermore, Roosevelt now In his campaign speeches assails holding companies and pretends he wants “strict government supervision of holding companies.” | The very language of the adver- | tisement reproduced here, “organized to centralize the many billions of mark holdings in America, to par- ticipaté in the large earnings and dividends of German industries,” shows Roosevelt's company was @ of London, and thousands more are} ready to start from nearer points. The greatest National Hunger March ever known in England will reach its) Relief Cutting |son, Md. holding company. | LONDON, England, Oct. 25.—Three | ° . ie e eet aoe Djamgaroff, Fish ommittee re nites . enpdon, acai, ibs outskirts | J ilar, Ran Huge Skin Game NEW YORK.—George Djamgaroff, leader of White Guard Russian organizations here for years, bosom friend of Congressman Ham Fish; high point along with a demonstra- tion of 100,000 jobless Thursday, | {when formal entry is made to the] city ang demands for more relief,| and for abolition of the means test, | will be made on parliamept and the | national government, headed by the} ald labor traitor, MacDonald | | | A delegation of ten from the com- unions went {mittee and London trades and unemployed organizations to the London County couneil y jday and demanded the city pro |food, shelter and clothing to the job less marchers. The cquncil members | intimated they would refuse. The delegation ‘also presented the | demands of the march: 1.—Abolition of the Means Ttest. 2.—Reduction of rents. 3.—Free meals at school for the children of the unemployed. 4.—Free milk and 190 pounds of | coal for each family of jobless. | HELP HUNGER MARCH | Volunteers are wanted at the Na- tional Unemployed Councils office, Room 436, at 799 Broadway, to do technical work in connection with preparations for the National Hun-| ger March to Washington. year of 1945. “In 1945 the bonuses will be practically eaten up by the| interest due” | publisher of the “ABC News Service,” an anti-Communist slander sheet: pet of Mrs. Loomis, the sister in law of Secretary of State Stimson in all her world-wide anti-Soviet activities, star witness against Amtorg at the Fish Committee hearing and lion of¢ a hundred society functions—is in knows. how much Mrs, Loomis gan jand disgrace. There is no doubt that Djamgaroff | is an anti-Bolshevik. When the Fish Committee met here, George was ready with a big chart showing the oviet governmen one department the Russian Communist Party, the Comintern and the Red International as other departments, and the Com- munist Party U. S, A. as a depart- ment of the Soviet Government. Fish was trying to close down the Amtorg as a Communist institution, Dijamgaroff twirled his gold ded cane and blandly testified he | that Amtorg’s general manager, Ziav- kin, was a G, P. U. “torturer” who “slapped me in the face when I was a prisoner of the Bolsheviks in 1920,” In fact, Djamgaroff from his con- nection with the Whalen forgeries, |to his semi-official connection with members of Hoover's cabinet and with the red-hunting congressional committees, linking up with Ralph Easley and Matty Woll and the Na- tional Civic Federation, has given abundant proof of his hatred of the working class and of Communists in aa | particular, Btt it seems his price was pretty hich No one but those involved him for her international campaign to raise armies to invade the Soviet Union; no one knows how many thousands he got for his Anti-Red magazine but the world knows he |got $22,000 from the wife of McCor- mack, the harvester magnate, and |that he picked up a $7,000,000 widow of the Daly family who was lying around loose and might, some think, have better been mavried by a de- serving American social registerite, Djamgaroff’s greed made him ene- mies even among his high-born fel low Anti-Bolsheviks and an investi-+ gation started. ‘The result is the printing yesterday, of news that the Department of La- bor has a case against him, on char- ges that he isn’t a Russian nobleman at all but is really a man named Kourken Jamhar Koha:ound, of Con- stantinople.. He came here first in 1920 under his real name, disappeared and then came back again in 1924 as Djamgaroff, the Czarist officer, and started his Anti-Bolshevik car- eer, at the expense of the wife of every rabid anti-Communist million- are in the country. He also took out American citizenship papers without regard to residence requirements, and other details of red tape