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Page Fou sth S bed by the Comprodaily New York City, N. ¥. and mail cheeks te the Daily Worker, Publishing Uo, ine., Telephone ALgonquin 4-7 daily except Sunday, at BO &. 36, Cable “DATWORK 50 K. 13th St., New York, N. ¥ Dail orker Litvinov Rebuffs | British Effort At In timidation Tells Ovey at Case Is in Soviet Courts; British Ambassador Leaves for London BULLETIN LONDON, arch 30.—Sir John Simon, British Foreign Secretary, informed the House of Commons that Sir Esmond Ovey, British Am- bassador to Moscow, was leaving for London today. Sir John added that in the meantime he would refrain from fur- ther annour the British engi s on the Brit By N Special Cor MOSCOW, March 30. sh endeavor “rs arrested in Moscow on charges of sabotage to force Russia toe free BUCHWALD sspondent of the Daily Worker the official Soviet news agency, issues the following communique: Sir Esmond Ovey, Briti: Litvinov, Soviet Commis and stated that he had ¢ the British Government in- tends to take in case the pro- posed trial of the British em- not cancelled Commissar Li sould remove all di bassador’s mind at one formed him that the final dec ef the Public Prosecutor was at hand, stating 2 for a hearing in ture. Livinoy added tha Ambassador that decision British Gov he could ‘would come of it missar stated Mexico, but they were fated in ad- vance to fail in the USSR. After this ste did not in: contents measures. Judging by ish press, it these steps in obstacles to the di between the U. S. Britain or even the comp Churchill Warns India; | 1 Ambassador, visited Maxim ar for Foreign Affairs, on March 28 | yme to inform him of the steps that] 2 of all tri nish Investigation. ly announced that the cellat: It prelin of Vitvii hovsky, Gregory, | Gus: Zorin, MacDonald and the} other ineers charged with the crime of sabotage according to Ar-| ticle 58, Secs. 6-11, of the Soviet) The case will be submitted to me nin a few days. Members of Tribunal. case PD) The ding Justice; Director of the Thermo- Projecting tice: Zelikov, Centr: of workers, engineers and techni- cians in the electrical industry and Chairman of the central power stations, will act as} alternate justice. Vishinsky, Prosecuting Attorney of the Republic, will conduct the prose- cution for the State. he trial fs scheduled to com- on April 9 or 10. Threatens “Czarist Rule” LONDON, Marc in the House of Cx pression in In Churchill warned that future Vi “be autocrats like the Czar of Rus papier-mache Fed ernment. This is 30.- a mand nd peas: oppr FASCISTS BURN Churchill, outlined the British rule of iron re- oys and Provincial Governors would This is the mailed fist behind the ion planned for India by the British Gov- MacDonald’s reply to the millionfold de- nts for real freedom from colonial CONNOLLY HOUSE, DUBLIN COMMUNIST HEADQUARTERS Mob Attacks, Singi ng “God Bless Pope”; 14 Communists Defend Headquarters DUBLIN, March 30.—A mob of tionary Cosgrave organization, the Army Comrades’ Association, attacked Connolly Hall, Comm headquarters, here last night and set the build- | * ing on fire. The fire spread to adjacent structures and the entire block was burned down. Fourteen Communists in the building defended the hall against over- | whelming odds, seventeen of the at tackers being injured, as well as some Civic Guards drawn up in front of the building. The attackers marched on the hall, singing “God B our Pope.” The police made only half- hearted efforts to protect the wor ers’ property After driving of the building ished the entir erior set fire to the top floor Connolly Ha James Connol nist and leade 1916 Rebellion rialist rule. Me was shot Statement of the Irish Fascists, members of the reac- | fir ing squad after the crushing of the | uprising. | | The Irish Fascists are taking les- sons from the German Nazis, burning down halls and resorting to mob ler their efforts to check the f Communism thru- State. This terror timi the revolutionary Ireland, who are proceed- reparations for the found- Communist Party of Ire- fh is to be formed at a na- congress to be held next i To the Lettish Workers Central Committee of the CPUSA on the Position of the Lettish i Under the influence o: sedented economic crisi workers in Ame he entire working class o: which they are a par' more and more radicalized sincerely want to join in the struggles of the toiling masse to participate actively in the lutionary movement. Pressed by these workers, the lead- ers of the Lettish Federation have been compelled, in the course of the last. two years or so, to play with various unity maneuve the latest of these being an invitation to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the United States of Americ to send a representative their Boston branch meeting The Party knows the p these renegade leaders since 1922 Yet, distinguishing between these Yeaders and the rank and file of the Federation, the Party agreed to send its representative to the Boston meeting. At the meeting, when the repre- sentative declared the line and pro- posals for unity as identical with that of the Latvian Section of the Com- npr he Lettist ame as t of becom: The} ail and revo g | tk wition ot} Federation Leaders n “answer onest the i to | ta vian Section of the C, I, although| soviet electrical machinery is per-| the re atative of the Central! yectiy timed to coincide with Mac-! | Committee had warned the meeting|Donald’s support of the new Fascist| such a decision would give the/Kuropean Bloc. Sir John Simon Party fight for the destruction of the Fed- eration as disrupters of working- | ss unity and, objectively, as agents | of the bourgeoisie. | In this situation, the Central Com- | mittee of the Communist Party of | the United States of America ap- | Peals to the sincere rank and file | of the Lettish Federation and to the | Lettish workers in general to break completely with the leadership of the Federation, who for years have continued struggle against the Party and against unity the Federation members who sine want to join the Party should know that their first task is to repudiate this action and ask in- dividually for re-admission into the Communist Party, which has the right and the duty to examine each | applicant. | On the other hand, if a whole | group breaks away from the rene- gede leadership of the Federation and wishes to become « part of the gation in the cases | Criminal Code, is being completed. the upreme Revolutionary Tribunal, Su- } Court of the Soviet Union, | will be heard before a special session of the Supreme Court, | members of which will be Ulrich, nember of the plenum of the Su-| preme Court of the U.S.S.R., as Pre- Professor Martens, Director of the,Diesel Institute, and 1| Dimitriev, Trust, as Associate Jus- Committee of the trade union ader of the Die-Hard Tories, | no other alternative than to | ALLAY oop! | | SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.56; & months, $2; 1 month, We, ‘BrterdlANTEFASCIST ——IREVOLT OF THE RANK CONGRESS BURO. | ‘By ROBERT HAMILTON) The Disarmament Conference in Geneva has adjourned to April 25, | with the unspoken understanding that this interval was wanted by the Anglo-German-Italian bloc newly formed in Rome by Prime Minister MacDonald and Premier Mussolini. The openly admitted shift in em- phasis from Geneva and the League to the Foreign Offices of Rome 1 | London puts the seal on the virtual | | collapse of the Disarmament Con- | ference. Called after 12 years of procrasti- nation, and four years of so-called “preparatory work,” the Conference found ‘its efforts, to hoodwink the peoples of the world into believing that the imperialists powers really the start by the Japanese seizure of Manchuria. Silent On Soviet Union’s Proposals Litvinoff’s proposals, as chief Sov- iet delegate at the Conference, for complete disarmament, were passed over in embarrassed silence, for the | capitalist powers dare not disarm as | Jong as the system of imperialist ri- | valries dominates the world, as long | jas the capitelist system still e: . | Even the subsequent Soviet propo- | sals for a proportional reduction of | | armaments met with no response 1 | Since then, even the so-called “ti- | mitation of armaments,” which is nothing more than an attempt to| remain armed to the teeth but save | |some money in doing so, has met | with the obstacles inherent in the powers, Today, instead of so-called “dis- armament,” capitalist Europe is di- vided into two armed camps. One camp, comprising France and her allies: Poland, Czechoslovakia, Jugoslavia, and Roumania, includes most of the victors of the World wanted to disarm, paralyzed from | rivalries of the various imperialist | Two Rival Camps | cluded: 1. The establishment of a German Corridor within the Polish Corridor, extending from Marienwerder to Konitz. 2. The creation of an independent Croatia, centered in Zagreb. This would effectively cripple Jugoslavia, Little Entente member and Italy's Balkan rival, as a military power. Would Split France’s Allies 3. Lopping Herzegovina and Mon- tenegro off Jugoslavia and incorpo- rating them in Albania, which would be officially recognized as under Ita- lian protectorate. 4, Hungary gets back most of ‘Transylvania, inclu€ing ‘Temesvar, Grosswardein, and Kiausenburg, at the expense of Rumania, France’s ally and member of the Little En- tente. 5. Jugoslave and Rumania also hand back to Hungary most of the Banat region, thus giving Hungary control of both banks of the Danube from the Austrian frontier to a few miles north of Belgrade, Jugoslavian capital, Sow Rivalry 6. Austria is to be recompensed for its loss of the South Tyrol by re- ceiving Krain Mountain, as well as an outlet. to the sea in Fiume. This would effectively sow permanent ri- between Austria and Jugo- a, as Fiume is a thorn in Jugo- 's Adriatic coastline. see that these territorial te- visions would cripple both Jugoslavia and Rumania, making them wholly worthless as military allies of France, while Austria and Hungary, members of the new Fascist bloc, would become so strong as to resist German in- fluence at Anschluss. Anglo-Italian Four-Power Pact | Strikes At French Hegemony; | Cloaks Anti-Soviet Bloc Italy's whole policy for the past few years has been to combat the union of Austria with Germany. For this reason, it has supported the Legitimists’ efforts to restore Otto von Hapsburg to the Hungarian, and later to the Austrian throne. For this same reason, it has conspired with Austria to ship hundreds of thousands of rifles, as well as ma- chine guns and airplanes to Hungary, as recently revealed in the Hirten- berg arms-smugglieg affair. All of Italy's support has been predicated however, on no Anschluss. Hence Mussolini’s support of the Christian-Social Party of Seipel and Dolfuss against the Pan-Germans and Nazis in Austria. Munitions Plants Speeding Up All this shows us capitalist Europe on the verge of a new and bigger war. The lines are being drawn; the mu- nitions plants all over the continent are the only factories without any unemployment, working day and night. It most not be forgotten that in- cessant talk about “the preservation of peace” is the most effective way to mask preparations for war. The Russian Czar founded the Hague Peace Court in 1899 at the same time that Russia was borrowing billions of francs from France to build mili- tary railroads, munitions planis and @ bigger fleet. All this reckoning is done without consulting the workers and peasants of the So- viet Union, as well as the class-con- scious workers of the whole world. Any attack upon Soviet territory will be met by the the world-shaking reply — DEFEND THE SOVIET UNION! Rush Orders for War War, who gained territory peace treaties of Versailles The rival camp includes capitalist countries that lost territory | Italy, which feels that it was cheated \in the Versailes land-grab. MacDo- nald and Mussefini are collaborat- | ing in building this Fascist bloc of | Germany, Austria, Hungary and | Italy, with active support of “demo- | cratic” Britain. | The British are also motivated in | alding this new bloc by their fear of | continued French hegemony in Eu- rope. | Forging the Anti-Seviet Front, | What is more, the new British ef-| fort to intimidate the Sovies Union| in the case of the British engineers arrested in Moscow for damaging threatens the Soviet Union with a break in diplomatic relations, while! Mussolini and Hitler, MacDonald's | partners in the bloc, loudly proclairn the need for @ holy crusade against Communism. This is borne out by Mussolini's plan to recompense Poland for the loss of Corridor territory, Italy and Britain propose that Poland recoup its losses by seizing parts of Soviet! White Russia and the Soviet Ukraine, with the support of the new Fascist bloc. | The new alignment in Europe be: |@ pronounced anti-Soviet imprint.| Nazi threats against the Soviet) Union, the British steps in Moscow in the engineers’ case, and Musso- lini’s call for a holy anti-Communist war are all parts of one big anfi- Soviet front. | Pistol Aimed at France ‘The proposed Four-Power Pact, to include France, Germany, Italy and Great Britain, really is @ pistol aimed at Prance’s head. It uses the usual in the} those | as a result of the war, in addition to | | for Next Six Months; Bosses Hear War Near Munitions and Arms Lead Manufacturer Has Sold His Whole Stock By LABOR RESEARCH ASSOCIATION ISSUES APPEAL French, Czech, Other Union Centers Rally; Set Date Soon | COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Mar. 15 (By Mail).—The organizing bur- eau of the European Workers’ Anti- Fascist Congress has issued an ap- peal to the workers of the world to aid in the organization of the Anti- Fascist Congress, originally sponsored | by the German Revolutionary Trade | Union Opposition, the League | Against Fascism in Germany, the General Confederation in Italy, and the Revolutionary Trade Union Op- position of Poland. Other organizations have already signified their readiness to join in the congress, including the Confed- eration General du Travail Unitaire (the revolutionary trade union fed- eration of France), the revolutionary trade union federation of Czecho- slovakia, and the Seamen's and Dock | Workers’ International. On February 27th a meeting of 800 members of Berlin factory councils voted their support and approval of the Congress. Numerous local or- ganizations and branches of the A. D. G. B., reformist labor federation in Germany, have also promised their support. 1,500 Delegates Meet. An anti-war conference in London on March 5, with 1500 delegates pre- sent, inclffiuding 300 delegates from trade union locals, welcomed the pro- posed Congress, and pledged their support. Anti-Fascist Day. ees A special Anti-Fascist Day will be held throughout Sweden on March 24. The Norwegian Anti-War Com- mittee has issued a call for a Scandi~ navian Congress Against Fascism to be held in Copenhagen on April 15. A strong committee of opposition- al trade union officials, together with @ number of trade union local chair- men and prominent left-wing intel- lectuals, has been formed to conduct | the anti-Fascist campaign in Den- | mark. Send Delegates. All working class organizations are invited to send delegates to a pre- ‘iminary conference to fix the date for the Congress and to outline the continuation of the anti-Fascist campaign. All communications in connection with the Congress should be ad- dressed to the Secretariat of the or- ganizing bureau: Axel Larsen, Cop- enhagen, Yorkspassage A. No. 17. KILL COMMUNIST ON WAY TO JAIL Nazis Imprison 1,000 More in Labor Camp BERLIN, March 22 (By Mail).— The bourgeois “Vossiche Zeitung” reports that “several Communists were arrested by a Nazi storm troop detachment in the Socialist “Volks- zeitung” building in Loebau, Saxony. One of the arrested workers, Walter Boege, is said “to have tried to escape” on Monday. Nazi troopers fired several shots at Boege, killing him.” A Communist worker named Dres- ‘There is a strong impression in informed quarters that a European war within sixty days is far from improbable.” So reads a recent news item from a confidential news service for business men. To confirm the fact that imperialist war is brewing, the same source reveals that a prom- | European situa inent European lead producer is about to close his New York office after PG SERED LERNER RE LA contracting with a Japanese agent: for the company’s entire production during the next 14 months, ‘The Far Egst export department of the I. G. Chemical Trust in Germany is operating full blast on the manu- facture of war materials, it is re- ported. “The powder keg is all set for an explosian,” is the way the ion is summed up by this news servi U. 8. Ordering Munitions At the same time there is now pending before the Military Affairs Comunittee of the House of Represen- tatives a bill (H. R. 123) on “Rduca- tional Orders,” introduced by Rep- resentative Goss of Connecticut. It calls for @ $10,000,000 appropriation for five years to cover orders placed with private firms and government arsenals for the manufacture of guns, tion and other war materials, $ milar to plans drawn up in previous Congresses. Speeding Preparation ‘The idea behind all such proposals is the gearing up of factories in peace time for instant conversion to the manufacture of war materials upon receipt of telegraphic messages fol- lowing the outbreak of war. The Daily Worker has previously revealed the fact that some 17,000 factory allo- cations had already been made in “emergency”—war. Under the current “industrial mo- bilization” bill, as reported by a U. 8. Chamber of Commerce publication, “AS means of national defense the Secretary of War would be authorized to solicit bids” from war supply firms. And with the approval of the Presi- Gent, the Secretary of War could also arrange for manufacture of special ordnance at government arsenals. ‘The war plans of the United States capitalists thus continue unabated despite demagogic statements on “re- duction” and the like. Mexico Police Seize 20 Communists for | Protesting Daniels protest Roose- vent’s appointment of ex-Secre- tary of the Navy Josephus Daniels ibassador cher was attacked in his own home in Britz, near Berlin, by “unknown men,” who shot and gravely wounded him. Drescher is in a hospital in a critical condition. ‘The “Frankfurter Zeitung” reports that over one thousand Communist Officials have been arrested in Thu- ringia, They are now held in a con- centration camp. Numerous “Marxist officials” were arrested in Wurttemberg yesterday. Together with the Communists pre- viously arrested, they were taken to @ concentration camp on the Heu- berg. The press reports that this camp is-planned for 5,000 prisoners. Titulescu in Paris to Weld Opposition to MacDonald Bloc PARIS, March 30.—Foreign Min- ister Titulescu of Roumania arrived here last night for important con~ ferences with the French Cabinet. Titulescu. will confer with Paul Boncour, the French Foreign Min- ister, on plans for close co-operation between France and its vassal, the Little Entente, comprising Rouma- nia, Czechoslovakia and Jugoslayia, in opposing the new Italo-German- Austrian--Hungarian Fascist Bloc being formed by Mussolini with Brit- ish assistance. Program Is to Starve Out Palatinate Jews BERLIN, Mar. 30.—The Hitler Ca- binet has taken the first step in a methodical campaign to expel East~ ern European Jews from Germany. Hitler’s Commissioner for the Pala- tinate, near the French Frontier, has stopped the withdrawal of all bank or postal funds by Eastern Jews “un- til all their business obligations have been settled.” This measure is designed to starve the Palatinate Jews into leaving Ger- many without actually enforcing a deportation order. Threaten to Deport 62 CanadianMine Strikers been broken,” thus contradicting the AND FILE GROWING ! IN THE STAHLHELM Nazi Central Organ Already Warns Against “Attempt at Revolution” Against Fascism BULLETIN BERLIN, Mar. 22 (By Mail).—The Association of Ruhr Mine Owners announces that the wage dispute with the trade unions “has been set- ted favorably.” The existing wage agreement and working condition @re to remain in force until Sepiember 30th. The operators had demanded a 15 per cent wage cut, and had ter minated the old agreement, expiring April 1, but even the Fascist cen- sorship cannot conceal the fact that determined mass resistance of the miners has won @ great victory, smashing the proposed cut. * * * BERLIN, March 30.—The Nazi police today arrested two majer kead- ers of the Hugenberg Nationalist Party, Dr. Ernst Oberfohren, national chairman of the party, and Dr. Friedrich Everling, noted attorney for ex~ Kaiser Wilhelm It and member of the Executive Committee of the Na tionalist Party, charged with a royalist conspiracy to restore the Hohen- zollern dynasty. They were placed under “protective arrest” and their homes were searched. BERLIN, Mar. 80.—Reports from various parts of Germany prove that the conflict between the Nazis and the Stahlhelm is not “localized,” as Hitler and Seldte, Steel Helmet leader, both claim, but is raging over a large part of the country. - The Nazi Minister of the Interior for Thuringia yesterday | prohibited the enrolment of Socialists and Communists in the Thuringian Stahlhelm, while a similar order was issued by the Nazi State Government of Oldenburg. A number of local Stahlhelm leaders have been arrested in the Bavarian Palatinate, including the towns of Speyer, Neu- stadt, Zweibrucken, and Landstuhl. The leftward trend among the Stahlhelm rank and file forces the Voelkische Beobachter, Nazi central organ in Mune ich, to issue a warning to Nazi storm troopers “to nip any at- tempt at counter-reyolution in the bud!” FASCIST GOVERNMENT OFFICIALLY DECLARES BOYCOTT ON ALL JEWS Savage Attacks by Storm Troopers Multiply; Russian Music Barred from Orchestras BERLIN, Mar. 30.—The Nazi oificial anti-Jewish boycott, set for Sat- urday, April 1, started ahead of schedule yesterday all through Germany. In Breslau, the Chief of Police ordered all Jews and Jewish converte to Christianity te tum in their passporis to be stamped “not good for foreign travel.” The official Wolff news agency admits that “in the last few days, countless Jewish shop windows haveo— taken on undesirable forms.” This is obviously a pretext for a delibe erate governmental anti-Jewish cam- Nazi propaganda tales that no out- rages were being committed. The Hitler censorship only let this report through because it was officially stated that Nazi window-smashing was not hurting the Jews, “but the German insurance companies.” Burn “All Quiet.” Seven copies of Remarque’s war novel, “All Quiet On the Western Front,” were publicly burned in the central square of Kaiserslautern in the Rhine Palatinate. Bar Russian Music. The anti-Soviet trend of the Nazi regime {s shown in the following in- cident: A Borodin symphony was dropped from the program of the Berlin Philharmonic, Herr Hoerber, manager of the orchestra, stating in reply to musicians’ protest: “Don’t you know we have almost been at war and you cannot play Russian! music?” Hitler declared that the Govern- ment had to make the boycott offi- cial “because if it had originated as @ spontaneous movement among the people themselves, it might have paign, The news of the anti-Semitic boy- cott caused a small panic on the Berlin Stock Exchange, prices drop- ping sharply. Big businessmen fear that the boycott will react disas~ trously upon German foreign trade, as the result of foreign reprisals. | Rich Crawl to Hindenburg. The bourgeois Jews of Germany yesterday appealed pathetically to von Hindenburg to save them, saying “we are a purely patriotic group. We Jost 12,000 Jewish soldfers in the World War. Jews have always fought for their Fatherland.” This appeal to the class solidarity of the bour- geoisie throws striking light upon the true attitude of the rich German Jews to the Fascist Government. Hindenburg and Hitler conferred Jast night on an unannounced sub- ject, it was officially stated today, The Stahlhelm-Nazi conflict and the international repercussions of the Nazi terror were doubtless the sube Ject of their talk. PROTEST ALL OVER WORLD AGAINST FASCIST MURDER OF WORKERS, JEWS PARIS, Mar. 30.—Yhe Jewish Volunteers of the World War ‘will hold & mass mecting Monday in Paris's biggest hail, the Salle Wagram, to test against the ‘unrestrained violence ee ee Boycott in Salonica. SALONICA, Greece, Mar. 30.—The Jews of this city yesterday decided to boycott all German goods, includ- ing moving pictures, as an effective protest against the anti-Semitic out- rages of the German Fascist Gov- ernment, Parade in Philadelphia, PHILADELPHIA, Mar. 30.—Phila- delphia Jews today paraded to a mass-meeting protesting against the | Nazi anti-Semitic persecution in Germany. Prominent speakers de- nounced the Hitlevites for their out- rages agaicst German minorities. oe Te Binstein Renounces German Citizenship. ANTWERP, Belgium, Mar. 30.— Professor Albert Einstein, world- famous scientist, has informed the German Consulate in Brussels, that he is renouncing his German citi- zenship in protest against the anti- Jewish terror in Germany. Before accepting German citizen- ship, Professor Einstein was of Swiss nationality, and taught in the Uni- versity of Zurich. mae Protest to Roosevelt. WASHINGTON, Mar. 30.—A dele- gation from the Jewish War Veter- pro- of Hitler troops against German Jews’ cc a | ans of the United States today pro- tested to President Roosevelt at the White House against the maltreat- ment of German Jews by the Nazi Government. The ex-servicemen left at ths White House @ resolution condemn~ ing the behavior of the Hitler Gov- ernment and calling on President, Roosevelt to take action to “effec~ tively terminate these conditions.” ome New York Cigar Workers Protest. NEW YORK.—A resolution de« nouncing the Hitler terror against workers and Jews in Germany was unanimously passed at a meeting of | the 150 strikers of the Edwin Cigar Co., at their mecting Hall, 15 W. 12¢ Street. Cleaners and Dyers. NEW YORK.—At a joint meeting of drivers and inside workers be- longing to the Cleaners, Dyers and Pressers Union, which is affiliated to the United Hebrew Trades, a reso- lution against the fascist terror in Germany was passed, one copy being sent to the Hitler government and the other to the German consul. The workers paid tribute to the memory of the martyrs of the Hitler atroct- ties by rising and standing in silence for a few moments. MANCHUKUO FRONTIER GUARDS SEIZE SOVIET TRAIN ON CHINESE EASTERN TOKYO, Mar. 30.—Frontier guards of the Manchukuo Government today seized a Russian freight train at Manchuli, at the western end munist International; namely, com-| revolutionary movement led by the| Phrases of “cooperation for peace”| 1931 by the War Department. On wane ra prsferepece ponsibie| | VANCOUVER, B. ©, March 30.—| of le Aabeeringt vcqecpriadier = ga saiuager ihe healt ok plete repudiation of the counter-| y, then it should follow the pro- | to enforce the rearming of Germany, | May 18, 1932, the Daily Worker pub- for the boriberdiasnt’ ant’ alsune Sixty-two striking miners have pes rath poitiran peal ck Rito te Visdivostok. ‘The Jo begeaiarrd © eal ged home leader and of the Latvian Section of tie | Sa and enerts one ter seat ee one oe fae of the city. Vera Cruz by the Lepper agai giao Sie if MANANEHA. obarhe tliat: the Hecint. CloveLnORE ae Paiaerg Beh | $ unifieatior t he local ¢ ee umunist International ane ritorial revision of the ‘sailles | Department's map outlining the are: i= * tion of the Lettish Worke Alli-|the local organization of the Lettish | troaties into which the country had been di- ee iLmtian Cavett: cur- strike area, according to « telegram| thorized shipments of we materials” over. the Soviet-owned ratiroad. j ¥ ance;——these renegade leaders rose) Workers’ Alitance, the Lettish mass} According to » semi-officia) report, | vided for the purpose of securing war received today from Prince Rupert, i ) in slanderous attacks against the Let-| organization, which since its incep-|Mussolini’s proposals to MeeDonald | supplies. There also appeared a copy BG. ‘This anwarranied act Pe Bghinaor br Soviet sovereignty on the Chin- fh ¢ tish Buro and the Party | tion has followed the Party line andjin Rome envisaged far-reaching | of the Accepted Schedule of Produc- ‘The open role of the government of| ds Eastern Railway by guards of Japanees tate yf They succeeded in having a mo-| is actively participating in all the| changes in the map of Europe, ali | tion, « Signal Corps form to ascertain: ‘Write Colombia as an aid to the} Manchukno fe the Intest tink te the series of warlike = ie ‘som adopted, which reiterated their! campetgns of the Americar wewting| at the expense of France snd her! the production capacity of each com- Anyor sine and ome %| woled by the Japaness militaries, The Soviet eee ah srevions despicebly slanderom: and’ class, earthy months of the ee, fhe eke IE im ee tates. || ME net othe Genk meermentiog: ty ge mm 3 " ales The Mour-Power Plan te- pany during ah Co alg seenncncacnh | »