| Railroaded to ‘Pen’ Eugene Dennis ASNT (left), general secretary of the Communist Party of the Unit/>d States of America, of the 11 Communist leaders indicted and Irving Potash, another under the Smith Act for advocating the doctrines of socialism, start for the federal peni- tentiary at Lewisburg, Pa. an additional six-mont’ jail With them went five others. sentence in New York this week was ‘Handed : Frederick V. Field, secretary of the Civil Rights Congress Bail Fund, for refusing to reveal names and addresses of workers who had advanced bail monev for the Communists. USSR mechanizes its huge lumber industry by new methods Rapid mechanization of the Soviet lumber industry is MOSCOW successfully Meeting the ever-rising demand for timber needed in the USSR’s huge Program of socialist construction, ulletin states. an article in USSR Information In the Urals and other important lumbering areas, all arduous 8nd labor-consuming jobs have £en electrified; including felling, SKidding, loading and transport- ng of timber. This results in Rotly greater production of tim- er, In the major lumbering dis- fricts, camps are served by the °entralized state power grid, © in remote areas electric Power is furnished from mobile Stations mounted on special Tucks, in cars. of narrow-guage "ailways, or on tractors. ew Soviet electric saws are de- “ribed as ‘light (about half. the Weight of a typical power-saw used Canada), convenient and pro- Uctive, Skidding of timber, that is, failing if trom where it is felled by “ne loading point, is performed —_‘lectric hoists and tractors. A new Soviet skidding tractor has all devices required for mechan- ized loading and unloading of lumber ‘relieving. the workers of arduous manual labor. This trac- tor can traverse terrain where roads are lacking, It uses wood chucks for fuel. Mechanization of felling, skid- ding, loading and transporting of timber in the USSR has paved qhe way = for production-line methods of work. Seasonal oper- ations is being eliminated and year-round production is. being introduced. Mechanization has led to a sub- stantial increase jin earnings of Soviet woodworkers,. These higher wages go still farther due to the four post-war price cuts in the USSR. ltaly must hold new elections says Togliatti ; ROME The general - secretary. of the Italian Communist party, Palmiro Togliatti declared that the _Com- munist Party will advance a de- mand that new political elections be held in Italy. The Communist leader made this statement to newspapermen in the parliament building shertly after De Gasperi presented the resignation of his sovernment to the House of Depu- ties. : Togliatti affirmed that the Ital- ian people, through new political elections, must be called upon “to express its judgment on the gov- ernment and on the policy it has so far conducted.” \“According to ts,” Togliatti de- clared, “the new Government must be entrusted to a man above party interests.. THe grave crisis which has opened in the ranks of the party which has the majority in Parliament is the consequence of a policy full of errors. De Gasperi’s own party has realized that the country is tired of a policy based exclusively on the Atlantic Pact, | rearmament and antit-Communism.” An official Communist party statement demanding new elections is expected to be issued. The man- date of the present Parliament does not expire until the spring of 1953. : ? U.S. supports Chiana’s beaten army in Burma PEKING American imperialism is creating »disturbances on Chira’s borders with the remnants of Chiang Kai- shek’s forces that fled to Burma. Chiang’s forces in Burma are operating under the command of American 161 espionage group, with headquarters in Bangkok. Since January, America has ac- tively maintained an ammunition supply ‘line to Chiang’s forces, which have recently begun to con- duct border raids. Twelve California working class leaders, woman who polled 600,000 votes for st tion, were arrested last week by taneous raids in three cities. : $ Operating without Warrants, the FBI men office of The Daily People’s World and kicked in the door of a private U.S. District Attorney Erne a vast force of FBI in Los Angeles of the séven men is the first move in a program the West.” The government’s weapons were to be the orbitant/ bail. FBI terror raids jail 12 in U.S. SAN FRANCISCO including two editors and a ate superintendent of public instruc- agents, who staged simul- i invaded the San Francisco to arrest the executive editor at his desk home to arrest'a woman leader. st Tolin, who will handle the prosecution and five women, trumpeted, “This to destroy the Communist party in Smith Act and ex- Initial reaction indicated, however, that the terroristic arrests would evoke an unprecedented storm of protest. The 12 arrested were: @ William Schneiderman, 45, in New York. His bail was éet Communist paity secretary, arrested at $100,000. @ AI Richmond, 37, executive editor of The Daily People’s World, arrested at his desk. @ Philip M. (Slim) Connelly, 47, Los Angeles editor of The Daily People’s World, former state CIO president and nationally known union leader, arrested just after leaving. his home. @ Rose Chernin, 48, Los Angeles executive ‘secretary of the Com- mittee for the Protection of Foreign Born, arrested at her home. @ Ernest Fox, 47, San Francisgo Waterfront section organizer for the Communist party and veteran union leader, arrested at his home. @ Dorothy Ray Healey, 36, Los Angeles county Communist party chairman, arrested at her home. @ Albert J. (Mickey) Lima, 43, East Bay Communist party leader, arrested at his home, @ Carl Rude Lambert, 54, Com- munist leader, arrested at his San Francisco home. @ Loretta Starvus _ Stack, 38, Communist leader, arrested at her San Francisco home by agents who broke down the door. @ Henry S%einberg, 38, Los Angeles legislative director of the Communist party, arrested at his home. @ Oleta O’Connor Yates, 41, San Francisco Communist leader, ar- rested at her home. @ Bernadette Doyle, vetieran Com- unist leader, who polled 600,000 votes for state superintendent of public instruction in 1949, arrested at the office of The Daily People’s World. Miss Doyle was arrested at. 2 p.m. No warrants were produced. The agents revealed, when pressed, that “you are arrested for con- spiracy to violate the Smith Act.” It was estimated that more than 100 agents were involved in the raids. None of the six was allow- ed to phone either to friends or attorneys. Mrs. Stack went to the door when she heard. first “pounding upon it at about 8 a.m. She was home alone at 1136 Green Street, with her two children, Joseph 8, and Mary Margaret, 3. “I asked them who Whey were and what they wanted,” she Byes of negotiations i D fing St People expected. } new obstacles to prevent a . aI The Photos above show (left) a curious Yankee soldier scraping the mud off €re, as the Kaesong cease-fire talks seem to be successful outcome of the talks. ¥ g asked by ordinary citizens making far heavier weather From day t> day the United States negotiators attempt still going on; high. a captured U.S. jeep while an amused North Korean soldier looks fighting line and the (right) wounded GY Korean hospital. said. “They refused to say. They continued to kick and demand entrance. When I said I would not open the door until they told me their business, they broke open the door. ° “I was holding Mary Margaret and she was crying. “I told them .I would go with them if they would show a war- rant. I also asked that I be al- lowed to make arrangements for my children. “They refused to do so.” “ Richmond was seized at his desk at the paper at 590 Folsom Street by some 20 agents who Swarmed over the premises. Car- loads of agents patrolled adjoin- ing streets. A burly..agent stood over the swifchbeard and told operator Sue Fairchild curtly, “No calls.” Nazis stooges now want uniforms in Ike's army BERLIN A spokesman of a former para- troopers’ organization in West Germany proposed to General Dwight D. Eisenhower to raise 14 divisions, well trained and exper- ienced, out of the 140,000 West Europeans: still “wasting their time” in Western prisons for col- laboration with Nazi Germany. The proposal was made in an in- terview given to the West German press. The spokesman pointed out that these prisoners have been con- demned for “the same thing, which the Americans are now demanding ‘of West Europeans:. fer fighting on the side of the Germans against Soviet Russia.” on; “Now maybe we'll get home,” they say, in an aitempt to discover what outfit it originally came from, (centre) the approximate present 88th parallel, with arrows showing where the main fighting is Ss celebrating news of the truce talks in a South hoisting a nurse shoulder- PACIFIC TRIBUNE — AUGUST 3, 1951 — PAGE 3 RARER H RE mone) RR NCS OL 2 i RE