The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 22, 1924, Page 4

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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER January 22, 1924 BRITISH, P, HAS BASIC PROGRAM FOR LABOR RULE Suggests Minimum De- mands to L.P. Executive (Special to The Daily Worker) LONDON.—That the Communist Party of Great Britain and the very powerful minority of the Brit- ish labor movement for which it speaks, the Scotch metal workers and the Welsh coal miners being an influential section, is determined to see that major issues are not lost sight of by Labor Party leaders if it les in its power to prevent such an occurrence, is evidenced by the text of the letter addressed to Arthur Henderson, secretary of the Labor Party by Arthur Inkpin on be- half of the Centra] Executive of the British Communist Party. The letter makes certain very definite sugges- tions ag a basis for a minimum pro- gram to be carried out within the framework of the Labor Party. The text of letter follows: Mr. Arthur Henderson, Secretary, The Labor Party. Dear Mr. Henderson: tral Executive Committee of the Communist Party wishes to ex- press its very great satisfaction at the success of the Labor Party in the recent parliamentary elec- tions. The seed sown by the pio- neers of Socialism is now produc- ing a harvest rich with possibilities for the working class. The Labor Party has the honor of gathering in that harvest, but it also has the very heavy and serious responsi- bilities of stewardship. In carrying out the obligations this stewardship imposes on it, there will be the ever-increasing opposition of the privileged classes to contend against. The Central Executive Committee of the Com- munist Party, recognizing this, de- sires to place on record its willing- ness as a working-class political organization to assjst the Labor Party to the utmost of its abiligy. We believe that the Labor Party, in taking office, if and when the opportunity offers, can defeat ev- ery intrigue of its opponents by a straightforward declaration of pol- iey that will unite the whole work- ing-class movement in support of Labor. Such a declaration should inelude: 1. Ful] trade union rates for the unemployed against the time when useful work will be provided; 2. Adoption of a national hous- ing scheme, restoration of rent victions Ro € 33 ; -s complete application of the indings of the Sankey. Commission, which involved nationalisation of the mines, with a minimum wage for miners; 4. Immediate and complete rec- ognition of Soviet Russia; 5. A conference of all nations, including Russia and Germany, for the settlement of all outstanding questions affecting the peace of the world, In putting forward these sug- gestions we are quite satisfied that the policy to be pursued is receiv- ing the serious and continual at- tention of the leaders of the Labor Party, but we feel it is our right and duty, at such a time, to offer advice which our very considerable experience of the workers’ strug- gle enables us to give. Please accept this as an earnest of the yery sincere desire of the Communist Party to help. We hail the present triumph of the Labor Party and will throw all our en- ergy into making that triumph a ig victory for the cause of the workers. ‘ Yours sincerely, On behalf of the Central Ex- ecutive Committee of the Communist Party, ALBERT INKPIN, Secretary. @ local Trades Councils and sup- ‘orted the Labor Pa: > f that organization, J. Walton Newbold, Communist aember of the House of Commons rior to the recent elections, attrac- ed international attention by his and a suspension which re- from his refusal to abide by narbitrary ruling of the speaker, The Land for the Users! PITTSBURGH, PA, DR. RASNICK. DENTIST endering Expert Dental Service for 20 Year 645 SMITHFIELD ST., Near 7th Ave. 1627 CENTER AVE., Cor. Arthur 8t, Ss. LIGHT 2445 LINCOLN AVE. Dry Goods and Men's Furnishings Best Qualities at low prices We Aim to Please Everybody Diversey 5129 ED. GARBER QUALITY SHOES For Men, Women and Children LINCOLN AVENUE md Fullerton Ave, \GO % Plan Farm- Labor The Communist Party of Great 3ritain, the English section of the third International, altho denied af- filiation as an organization with the sritish Labor Party, controls dozens e yy n the recent lections. Eight of its members were Iso selected as official candidates of he Labor Party by local branches cece cance emcemcemoem cen cemmcamet! BUSY TONIGHT? | Volunteer workers are needed at the office of THE DAILY WORKER Phone: Lincoln 7680 and say you'll be up tonight to help THE DAILY WORKER 1640 N. Halsted St. Party in No. Dak. at Feb. 6th Meet (Special to The Daily Worker) FARGO, N, D.—The Convention of the Non-Partisan League to be held in Bismarck, Feb. 6, will be the scene of a struggle between those farmers and workers in the state of North Dakota who are for inde- pendent political action as against the policies of the Non-Partisan League. At the Convention of the League the motion for the formation of a State Farmer-Labor Party was de- feated by a large vote, the conven- tion being controlled by the old Non-Partisan League machine. Since that time the action of the State Committee of the Republican Party, which is dominated by the Non-Par- tisan.Leaguers, in indorsing the can- didacy of President Coolidge has brought forth widespread resentment on the part of the farmers of the state and strengthened the movement for independent political action. In the last convention the fight for the Farmer-Labor Party was led by the members of the United Front Educational League. This group has now initiated a state-wide campaign for a decision in:favor of the organ- ization of a Farmer-Labor Party at the Feb, 6 Convention of the Non- Partisan League and it is expected that this campaign will bring to the Convention a majority of delegates favorable to the organization of the Farmer-Labor Party. Should the League convention, however, be under the control of the old machine and continue its pres- ent policy, the group favoring inde- pendent political action will organ- ize at the Convention for the organ- ization of a Farmer-Labor Party. From all appearances it is quite certain that North Dakota will soon be among the states represented by a class Farmer-Labor Party on the political field. Real Labor Organ HERE'S STORY OF | “HAPPY HOME” HOUSE DRESSES)’ But the ‘Happy Homes’ Are State Prisons “Happy Home house dresses and aprons, Buy Happy Home brand!” Yes, that’s an ad—one that union families should know something about. Get the name, Happy Home. You probably think this brand of dresses was named by some senti- mental employe who is long on “wel- fare” work for his employes and longer on their “individual rights” under the open shop American plan. You are wrong. Isadore Taradish picked that name—Happy Home— and Isadore is na_ sentimentalist. He's a humorist, You wouldn’t know he is a humorist because he disguises himself as a mere business man, president of the Sterling Co., Chi- eago. The clothing shops of this funny man are unique in some re- spects. For instance there are bars at the windows. One of his shops is in the Iowa ‘state reformatory at Anamosa. Four hundred workers there, who have somewhat less freedom than em- ployes elsewhere, turn out from 150,- 000 to 200,000 garments for him every month. He pays them on an average of $6 a month, That is deducted from $7,000 to $10,000 he pays to the state, which acts as a kind of assistant to the Sterling Co. by feeding and sleeping the men and “keeping up production.” Of course he also has his own bosses directly over the workers. The state of Iowa considers the system a great financial success. Mr. Taradish feels that in his system he has solved the labor prob- lem, He started his “business” at Anamosa two years ago when there were five million workers unemployed in America, Tho full credit should be given Taradish: as a humorist for that name—Happy Home _ brand!—the business credit should be divided be- tween him and the vice president of the company, Milton F. Goodman. Goodman is better known as presi- dent of the Reliance Manufacturing Co., makers of men’s shirts in va- rious Happy Homes commonly called state penitentiaries. Pouring More Oil on the Troubled Will Tabo |Place of VV 66e 2 eerew =m Wee ~~ B. C. Federationist VANCOUVER, B. C.—A genuine labor weekly, developed from the Vancouver longshoremen’s Strike Bulletin, will take the place of the moribund B. C. Federationist, which after 15 years of service to the labor government of western Canada, fell into financial difficulties and passed from the hands of the labor group to the control of a printing concern which publishes it to pay the printer’s bill. The Vancouver Trades and La- bor Council has withdrawn the Feder- ationist and given it to the new pub- lication which will be known as the British Columbia Labor Bulletin. The editor is the veteran labor editor and speaker, W. A. Prichard. CANADIAN WORKERS PLEDGE SUPPORT TO McLACHLAN FAMILY MONTREAL.—One hundred dol- lars a month to support the wife and nine children of J. B. McLachlan, deposed secretary, District 26, Unit- ed Mine Workers of America, now serving a two-years’ sentence on a seditious libel charge in connection with the Nova Scotia strike last July, has been pledged by the Cana- dian Pacific Railway System federa- tion in Montreal. The bulk of the money jis understood to be sub- scribed by the men at the Angus shops. The payment is to last as long as McLachlan is in prison. At the same time the district lodge of machinists is sending a petition to the minister of justice asking for McLachlan’s release. A branch of the Nova Scotia Defense committee has been organized here. apiece __Expel Hendin and Gruss . NEW YORK’ CITY.--The effort to create a factional movement inside of the Workers Party, initiated by J. B. Salutsky, who was expelled from the Party for failing to fight for the Party principles at the Confer- ence for ‘ive Political Action in Cleveland, when the Party was under attack, has come to a sudden stop thru the expulsion of L. Hendin and L. Gruss, who supported Salut- ag | ae pe i ‘alutsky called a meeting in New York for the organization St a Com- munist Educational League, evident. ly intending to use t in a fight against the Workers P, . . Gruss and Hendin signed the call for the meeting, By instructions of the Cen- tral Executive Committee of the Workers Party they were informed before the meeting that if they ticipated in it their oxpulsion from the Party would follow, Both ome Bong oe, and ing the policies of the Party. Th Party, of which they were bers, and in each ante the "branches voted to from the Party. ee ee Political Waters WASHINGTON.—A division of public attention from the Teapot Dome and California naval oil lands scandals is being attemfited by Sec- retary of the Interior Work, at the moment ‘when Albert Fall, his pre- decessor, is caught in perjury as to the source of the mysterious $100,- 000 with which Fall arrived in New Mexico after having sold the naval oil reserves to Doheny and Sinclair. The diversion is a spectacular dash for the Arctic shore of Alaska, “in the examination of the navy’s largest petroleum reserve.” Work explains, in a five-shet press handout, that he is sending geolo- gists and engineers of the geologi- cal survey to the naval oil reserve lying between the Yukon and Point Barrow, and occupying an area larg- er than the state of Maine. He does not say that there is much oil there, but the expedition must go in from the Yukon in the winter, by dog- team, in order to be on the ground *|long enough this year to do much exploring and mapping. There seems to be no doubt that bear, moose and muskox are to be found in the reserve, but its early development as a chief base of fuel supply for the navy is not anticipated by practical oil men, SPANISH WORKERS AS WE SEE IT By T. J. O'FLAHERTY. The Chicago police department is presented with a very serious prob- lem in‘ the arrest of two prominent detectives, one of them a former business manager of the local Wil- liam J. Burns’ Detective Agency, and the other a “shadower” for the Pinkerton agency. There is no evi- dence against these fellows except that they admit robbing wealthy Chicago women of approximately $75,000 in jewelry. Outside of thie they are all right. .* @ Aiding them in their laudable efforts to rise in the world were some deputy bailiffs, who assisted the dicks in getting rid of the swag, not of course wilfully aiding in the commission of crime. Oh no! They were just trying to favor gentlemen who were suppressing crime and perhaps putting) down revolution. Are the wealthy women going to prosecute the stoolpigeons and thus destroy whatever shred of public confidence is left in these human vermin? Or will they grin and bear their losses for the glory of Chicago and to help preserve the good name of capitalist society? Hell-and-Maria Dawes is in a hell of a fix over in Europe. He went over there to show these lazy Euro- peans how a real full-blooded Amer- ican could do a job that baffled the best brains on the continent since the signing of the Versailles Treaty, that is, to bring the cape sys- tem back to normaley, Accompanied by two bankers Dawes went to Paris to show the Europeans some speed. But instead of fighting with the “General” they took their golf sticks and began to make holes around Mr. Dawes. This being the custom in Europe he cannot make a diplo- matic issue out of it, so. the only weapon left to him is swearing. He may swear them out of the golf links but the prospects are none too bright just now. & ae oe The press takes almost as much pains to preserve the honor of an amorous clergyman as it does to suppress the thieving activities of detectives. Dr. C, D. Case, pastor of the First Baptist church, Oak Park, is accused of tampering with the affections of Mrs. Albert R. Leland, one of the pillars of his church. According to Mr. Leland, the pastor was eminintly successful. But the press and religious leaders are now. attempting to prove by a brand o! science somewhat related to that hawked around by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle that the lady is suffering from hallucinations and that her stories of intimacies with the reverend cler- gyman existed only in her imagina- tion, a ee It is generally agreed that the capitalists need not fear anything} the C; froy: the policies of Ramsay Mac- Dontld. Several Lords are among his most active supporters and it is frank'y stated that the Labor Pa,ty will stand less aggravation from the radicals, than did the To-y Party. The British Labor Party wiil introduce measures that can be eas- ily supported by the Liberal Party and even by the Tories unless fac- tional politics will prevent their co- operation. In fact some people say that the Labor Party is permitted to form a government partly for the reason that it is the only party in England that has sufficient support among the masses to warrant engag- ing in a stern French policy. see @ British capitalists are thanking their stars that they have not a bunch of communists on their hands instead of MacDonald, Henderson, Thomas and the rest. Those who have puzzled over the difference be- tween the communist and socialist ositions could follow the situation in England to their interest and en- lightenment. The socialists are re- formers who believe they can grad- ually free the workers from wage slavery thru reform measures achieved within the framework of capitalist government while the com- munists believe that the workers can JEWISH DAILY FORWARD HELPS THE MILK TRUST Mum on Strike; Accept- ed Scab “‘Ad”’ The Jewish Daily Forward is the Yiddish stronghold of yellow social- ism in America. It is the principal purveyor of anti-Soviet lies in the country. To its other crimes against the workng class, it has now added that of strikebreaking. Before it had finished fighting the Newsboys’ Union the milk strike broke. The Daily Forward did not give a line to the milk producers’ side of the case, but ran the following paid advertisement from the Bowman Dairy Company, a branch of the Milk Trust: “An Answer from the Bowman Dairy Company.” “The Bowman Dairy Company is ready to deliver, without interruption or restriction, clean certified milk, which has been approved by the Board of Health, The Bowman Dairy Company does not receive its milk, from sources or districts, which are not authorized or completely ap- proved by the health commission of the City of Chicago. The greater part of our supplies comes from the , same places from which we formerly | received it. ; from the old source was made good with milk from other nearby places, with milk which is just as good and which has been approved by the Health Commission. There is not and will not be a scarcity of good wholesome milk. Put out your bot- tles as customary and you will find your milk as usual. BOWMAN DAIRY COMPANY hs The above advertisement appeared in the Jewish Daily Forward, Jan. 14. Further comment is unnecessary, Canadian Labor Puts Eight-Hour Day up to Premier OTTAWA.—An eight-hour day and repeal of the salés tax were the two chief legislative proposals made to the dominion government by the annnal deputation from the lominion Trades and Labor con- deputation, which was headed b® President Tom Moore, asked fur- r for an amendment to the bank to insure depositors against loss for an amendment to the Brit- North America act, the written, + emallon mart af tha Canadien constitution, to curb the power of senate to reject bills Passed by the house of commons. In his to the deputation, Premier King intimated that repeat- ed action by the senate in rejecting’ bills passed by the popular cham- ber might strengthen the argument for curbing the powers of the upper house, which in Canada is appoint- ive. He had previously veferred to the bill to amend the industrial dis- putes act, which passed the com- mong last session and was thrown out by the senate. He announced that this bill—the chief purpose of which was to prevent railway or mining corporations from reducing wages without a hearing by a board under the industrial disputes act— would be introduced again at the ses- sion which opens Feb. 28, King claimed credit from labor for having appointed Tom Moore as a representative of labor on the board of the Canadian National rail- ways and for having arranged for the yment of pensions to Grand Trunk railway employes who took part in the strike of 1910. Mellon Supporters Rally, WASHINGTON.—Because the sen- ate has ordered investigation of Propaganda of the Mellon tax scheme, original plans for driving congress into enactment of that The partial restriction Franc and Pound Take New Tumble as* Market Opens (Special to The Daily Worker) PARIS.—The French franc was slightly lower today, being quoted at 22.80 to the dollar. French financiers professed amaze- ment at the new decline of the frane, saying that its depreciation was inexplicable in view of the gov- ernment’s financial measures, The franc slumped right from the opening, which was 22.47 to the dol- lar, 57 centimes lower than Satur- day’s close. LONDON. — The pound sterling sank to a new low level for the year ' today, falling to $4.21. The decline | was attributed to the railway strike | and the uncertainty as to the policies of the coming Labor Party’ govern- ment, When Cal Was Wet. | WASHINGTON.—Calvin Coolidge, | when vice-president, made a “wet” ! speech to the American Bar Asso- ciation. This was on Aug. 10, 1922. The Association Against the Prohibi- tion Amendment is printing copious extracts from this address, For instance: “The attempt to reg- ulate, control and prescribe all man- ner of conduct and social relations is very old. It was always the prac- tice ‘of primitive peoples... . large part of the history of free in- stitutions. js the history of the peo- ple struggling to emancipate them- selves from all of this bondage.” | i OBREGON DECREE SOBERS SUPPORT GIVEN FASCISTI They Cheered When Labor Was “33d” MEXICO CITY-—-Announcement by the government that the famous ar- ticle 83 deportation clause of the Mexican constitution would be in- voked against any foreigners taking part in the counter-revolution or sub- sidizing it with funds has consider- ably sobered some of the more: ex- alted portions of the foreign prop- ertied interests here. The idea of being “thirty-threed” in case they gamble on the wrong horse, thus terminating their oppor- tunity to make money out of Mexico, has noticeably slackened their gam- pling instincts. One of- the last acts of Obregon before the revolution broke out was the “thirty-threeing” of General Man- ager Leach, Tampico Light and Power Co., for antagonizing the workers, promoting class conflicts and violating the labor safeguard clauses of the Mexican constitution. When Obregon was using article 33 to expel Communists and others the same interests that are now cursing the famous article were loudly ap- plauding it. What Mexican Workers and Farmers Expect From The Daily Worker It can be said that hitherto the Central American workers. way, viz., he stood up f the bourgeoisie. Without much Federatign of Labor.. Wherever went, and wherever of the natives, the trad tion of Labor thrived also. The British navy and mercha ment of British colonial domination. can men-of-war are the means by which American industry will ac- quire new markets and American finance capital new opportunities for investment. The American bour- geoisie is getting ready for a new period of their policy of expansion. Trere is no doubt whatever that their orientation is southwards. The ad- vance on Mexico has already begun. In this connection armed intervention is not by any means a necessity. Americans are adepts at conquering backward “nations without such vio- lent means. . And Gompers—what will he have to say to it? Will he have anything to say about it at all? Certainly nat! He will behave as if nothing the interests. o: s igo ado Gompers organized the Pan-American American capitalists went, Gompers American capitalists thi e union bureaucrats of the only Gompers has concerned himself about Of course, he did it in his own peculiar the workers in the interests of rived on the blood and sweat Pan-American Federa- thant fleet were the means for the establish- The American dollar and the Ameri- —_——— working class, while the defeat of this policy halts tantamount to American workers’ success. The appearance of the DAILY WORKER is a very important event for all American workers and peas- ants. The DAILY WORKER is to be the leading organ, not only of the U. S. A. proletariat, but also of all the proletarian class organizations of Mexico and Central and South Amer- ica. Our internationalism is not an empty phrase, but community of, in- terests and struggle. Our interest is the proletarian Revolution and we must struggle against everything which places itself between it and us. lied happened, as if everything were | Our struggie must pe conuaucveu cour- {for the best in the best possible | ageously, but also cleverly. world. Even if the negroes in Cuba May THE DAILY WORKER be a are clubbed into submission, Moros | brave and wise champion of the pro- are done to death in thé Phillipines, | letarian world revolution. Columbia’s trade is ruined on the A STIRNER, New York Exchange in order to get} Member of Executive Committee command subsequently of the fin- of the Cothmunist International. ances of this country, if coups d’etat are manufactured in Central Amer- ica and revolutions set on foot in Mexico, even then Gompers will find that everything is perfectly alright. Thus it is a certainty that Gompers will not say anything at all. But events will speak for themselves with all the more clearness. The policy of the U. 8S. A. in the Mexican ques- tion spells the conquest of Mexico. In 1920 the American capitalists sup- ported Obregon’s revolution, namely the left parties against Carranza, with the object of downing the na- tional bourgeoisie which is dependent on Great Britain. At present at the end of 1923, when trade and indus- tries are mostly under American con- trol, the capitalists are supporting and furthering the revolution of this same bourgeoisie against the parties of the petty-bourgeoisie and against the organizations of the proletariat. In Mexico the position of the bour- geoisie on the one hand and of the petty-bourgeoisie on the other hand, is as follows: The national bour- MAX BLOOM’S RESTAURANT 3546 ROOSEVELT ROAD Telephone Crawford 2450 Ee Birthday Greeting to The Daily Worker PATERSON, N. J. nly be freed by abolishing tha boon to millionaires have been aban-| e0isie can only assume political LEARN UNITY NEED italist forms of prcencnt ot por fonsd, Now comes. the National power if it throws itself into the Hag einer ag tablishing the workers’ rule thru a| Citizens Committee in Support of| &™ms of American capitalism, while ls UNDER FASCIST RULE dictatorship of the working class, |the Mellon Tax Reduction Proposal, | the only chance of the Mexican petty-| M, G itz are mith Mader Genera’ “Oftyan ies |powgenste awuming poli pomer| B. Lieb ; » ith a long list of H. Kafman BARCELONA, Spain.—One of the| , Mr John Bromley of the British | ¢chege president of workers and peasants. . results of the increasing rigor of |. po pel ra ign cm it reapectability.. St oer Hence, Mexico's future inevitable} Z. Pitkevitz the fascist military government in|? 8 der the embarrassment of Privy| Nicholas Murray Butler, A. Law-| Struggle against the U.S. A., will be its treatment of the labor movement Councillor, 3; "Phonan suffi-| ence Lowell, Harry Pratt Judson, |® struggle of Mexican workers and L. Milder is a growing unity among the work- gat Panel: Sie atlas a the | Charles W. Eliot, Irving Fisher and| Peasants against capitalism and} wy Wackman ers, This is especially manifest in centenah stten rar vt Newell Dwight Hillis are cheek by |gainst the relics of feudalism.. Geller Barcelona where a new daily has | Sinn Mr. MosDoneld was aiiunt jovi in this reg ges with Irving] But the question of U. 8. A. domi- 1. appeared, “Lucha Obrera” (Workers' succeeding in keeping the workers| 2; Bush, Lindl . Garrison, Otto | nation in Mexico is not only a Mexi-| ‘Apel itruggle) edited jointly by anarchist, énd capitalists dn tine und. -convine: H. Kahn, Ab I. Elkus, and|can, but above all, an American ques-| LL, Geller communists and syndicalists (union- ing both that he could ‘then Babson. Former tion. The working class of the t Ss. R. Pillitzes -ohsd a per the Catalonia: porn Mr. Bromley throws a tsp Al of Kansas, Festus J. Wade|A. must be aware that the success of M. N who pa an autonomous regional into Mac Id’s lap and and A. Wheeler likewise speak|the American policy of expansion + Newman rt mavenent ty Ll ene 2 | fellow ce tre hie hand. Herwiti |1F the business interests, would spell defeat for the American| G. Wenzowsky nations in their weekly, “Justica So- Brahe t oe ae ect nee : RUSSIAN BRANCH, ng the bosses, But the British work- Sol). s].,?? 6“ oi aah CHICAGO, ILL. As an indication of what the mili-| ers did not know. They will not e t ' tary directory in Spain has done to| wait long for disillusionment. S yf nan elian the = press fe Spain, 2 Sp BP _* * # Pp. revolution anniversary num| Tribun . i » Milalychak Batalla of Barcelona is eioguuate “uae Wregery. ted States Se How Sak tcitty fis Fo Peat setae 4 = Svetlow principally by its silence. Over four| jg making a laudable effort to tran- DEAR COMRADE ENGDAHL: I think you are getting out a s. ane fod hg more than seven com- quilize Mexico and make that be- wonderfully fine paper, The first issue was great and the rest are Svetlow ems have heen Set aut bythe | ugha coun ane the Heasngy of] ening wp te the same high standard i Devyalkin censor, Even the titles were wiped polo i zation. bhi You should have been at the demonstration here in New York, > Versinchule out with the exception of the title of | broke ‘the ie ihited o pt last Sunday. It was a most enthusiastic meeting. I intended to i < egyr a: ber read: pag of! paign for the invasion of Mexico, It write it up, but I was sure that was taken care of, J. Chararie h pede il Wane aloes Pars til bei fuddent halted, evidently having From all appearancecs THE DAILY WORKER will have splen- Hy — one word of the article under 4¢ re: ry pre ey seaed ~ anencanae did support from the start, It is so wide-awake and full of vitality Eda Zashlaysky i plomatic p Bi rang 7 yesterday's is- and vigor that it will catch wherever it goes, Keep it up and we Geo. Mirk Across the whole pa one may| sue it praised the administra’ for will back you to the ond of the bloody system and till we enter the read the big legend: “This number | following in footsteps of the coming Workers’ Republic in America, oo Wi has been revised by the military cen-| “Mother Country” (7) and nas tn a while dedi N. sorship.” The paper, scheduled for| seemg fairly satisfied to ve the id slip you a thought, and if you care to G. ‘ Hor. de boasn, the date line Nov. 33, conduct of the campaign to bring use it do so, otherwise throw it away. e announcement: “ y jour Southern ni under the With all my best and with Communist tings, I Phon due to the editorial f Seid tak tall Ge tere sor being in| dollar sign in the hands of the Sec- Y in the Movement, | Got unity thre the Labor Party! retaries of War and the Navy. —_— | Amalgamation means strength!

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