THE CATASTROPHE 99 to the mortality in various places in the south. In the settlement of Ust-Labinskaya the population had declined from 24,000 to io3ooo in the course of the winter; at Timishbek from 15,000 to 7,000, and at Dimitrievka from 6,000 to 2,000. Other settle- ments, such as Irbilnaya, Kainmenogradska and Losovskaya, were completely deserted. At Stavropol the loss of life was 50,000 and at Krasnoda 40,000. The terrible mortality in the latter place is confirmed by accounts given by employees of the German Drusag concession. The judgment of Mr. W. H. Chamberlin, the Moscow correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, who spent twelve years in Moscow, and is an undisputed authority on Russian affairs, is particularly valuable. In an article of May 29;, 1934, he wrote: "Some idea of the scope of the famine, the very existence of which was stubbornly and not unsuccessfully concealed from the outside world by the Soviet authorities, may be gauged from the fact that in three widely separated regions of Ukrainia and the North Caucasus which I visited— Poltava and Byelaya Tserkov and Kropotkin in the North Caucasus—mortality, according to the estimates of such respon- sible local authorities as Soviet and collective farm presidents, ranged around 10 per cent. Among individual peasants and in villages far away from the railroad it was often much higher." In his book, Russia's Iron Age, published towards the end of 1934, Mr. Chamberlin, while plainly anxious to make a cautious estimate, puts the number of victims in the famine area at three or four millions. That millions of people have died of starvation in Russia is a fact which, I am sure, no one can any longer seriously dispute; in fact, po effort to deny it is now made even in Moscow1. 1 The Ukrainian People's Commissary, Petrovsky, speaking on October 6, 1933, at Kharkov, stated that the population of the Ukraine in 1933 was 31,6873000. In 1932 the same mart estimated the poplilation at 32,122,000 j£F*$£y, November % 1932) and also stated that the increase in population for 1933 would probably amount to 622,000. Unfortunately, I am not in a position to print the contents of a document which I have had the opportunity of seeing, dated February I5> 1923.