The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 25, 1924, Page 5

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‘in eleven other cities, came in for ad- January 25, 1924 THE DAILY WORKER Page Five WILD CHARGES |Foster Denies Lurid Charges BEST HUGHES’ [of Hughes’ Anti-Russ Agent AGENT COULD DO}... eo Rule in Ru KlieforthCouldn’t Back Special A ent, A. W. Kli Claims with Facts charg. 8 follows (Continued from page 1) Your Union Meeting Every local listed in the official di- rectory of the CHICAGO FEDERA- TON OF LABOR will be published under this head on day of meeting free of charge for the first month, afterwards our rate will be as fol- lows: Monthly meeting—$3 a year one line once a month, each additional line, 15c an issue, Semi-monthly meetings — $5 a year one line published two times a month; each additional line 13c an issue. - Weekly meetings —$7.50 a year one line a week, each additional line 10¢ an issue. y of the Trade Union Educational League, ub-committee of the Senate foreign r Departmen ement denying Klieforth’s orth. ‘Foster's effect that I have received $170,000, or some such sum, are unqualified and deliberate lies. 1 challenge him to prove them. A. Losovsky, secretary of munist Party” which he said were co- “The books and accounts of the Trade Union Educational League are existent, tho the Communist party] open fer public inspection. I ha Workers Party remaining as the sole| their opportunity to audit our books. And the Department of Justice will FOURTH FRIDAY, Jan. 25th, 1924 representative of the, Third Interna-| fail likewise. If the latter had proof of any such'money being sent me, | No. Name of Local and Place of Meetin “The statement made by Mr, A. W. Klieforth, special agent of the the Idehoan arrived, he talked glib- the Red International of Labor Unions, has never been in this country in officially went out of existence in| pers, Lewis, Woll and other react: ios have retailed the manuf tional. why did they not produce it at my recent trial in Michi Pari erect Ome. Cont. 2498 We.” Bacon state department, before the senate foreign relations’ committee to the ly about “Workers Party,” and “Com-|™* life. America nearly a year ago; the charges now being reiterated by Klieforth, they failed to take adv: charges agsingt ms are but.one more chapter in the Department of Ju wan Re 77 Rear Ra ab *: Peltsh Workers Greet “The Daily” : Conference of the Polish branches, of District No. 2 (New York), Pol- h section of the Workers Party, was held on Jan. 20, at Newark, New y. The delegates from seven branch. Soviet Republic. DAILY WORKER.—(Signed) JOSEPH DYIAK, Sec’y.; A. Chairman, Children From Arms of Letters to ‘The Daily’ Congratulations. to “The Daily.” To The DAILY WORKER: Con- gratulations on the advent of the DAILY WORKER, The more papers printed by and for the workers, the better! The capitalist press of the coun- try is in the last stage of the pro- gression expressed in the observa- tion, “Journalism, once a profession, | then g trade, now a crime.” This situaton has created a demand for a labor press—a press for the mass- es. This demand must be met! As n, distortion, coloration of exp! their welcome to the our sincere and real organizer of in the struggle to establish an American The conference promises their full support for THE LAPINSKI, ¢ phe BY %S Ss, and near and_ straight ncrease, so should the truth- telling papers like the DAILY WORKER increase, all over this Communists Accused of Snatching| ever, it is quite possible that advice| country. As the capitalist press ig regarding the work among workers’| the greatest and most effective children is en route from the Young | enemy of the workers—be they hand Communist International, the inter-| or brain workers—so the labor press “Mother”—Church, By IDA DAILES, ac ee $30 Blacksmiths, 5445 S. Ashland Ave. : pdkeoe rit BS ; Couldn’t Explain Difference, pst: ; 429 4 Another example of the “efficiency” | national organization of working|is their greatest and most useful Later, when asked by Senator Pit- long record of criminal Cae Sanaa) Wititkie = bostes * 434 and “reliability’ of capitalist’ news youth. friend.—Blanche Watson, New York fo scone Shia oi ba It will be interesting to await any action of the Borah sub-committee| 298 . {Service is furnished by an. article However, even if this is the case, any ee ee ae difference between the Workers Par- in investigating the books of the Trade Union Educational League, that .| which recently appeared in the New| the advice is not that which is stated ty and the rickogbreyt§ nese mes The senators let the loose ‘ about the two parties go by, but consistently refused to touch. when, Klieforth began to beat the i : verbal tom-tom about the presence| ness, expressed itself as greatly Electeetypen 175 "W. Washington, in America of John Pepper, revolu-] shocked at a speech of John Reed is Youth Views ngineers By HARRY GANNES Sam Gompers, John L. Lewis, and other reactionary labor leaders have so cers (L.oe.), Madison and Sacra- mento. conor Paige i a said, rea a to sion byt seek iie arge Firemen tm pibeseien: tak Wee) here arch, 23, and issued in-] Congress o! n i - wor ve, structions in the name of the Com-j national in Moscow, in which he Per w ker ‘ munist. International the senators graphically described the gallant 118 Hea. Dalcieen Neve’ halon Ga ates asked him for proof. resistance that bo mage i iy Cb, us ‘i offered to race rioters, killing three Sedator Pepper, was partionjarly whites for every negro who fell. He anxious to get the documentary facts : : * told of, the appointment of special about the Communist who shared his tithes. 46 deal! with, ‘the: nakero name, and Lenroot, Swanson and Pit- oheation aibcinted e€ the. 1922 con man showed their interest by asking pie ‘aod ag the Fourth Congress ih hh to clinch his statements Claude McKay, William D. Ha: “or Pigg tee tie 1G wood, Rose Pastor Stokes and . sail’: area Shara hy Albi daingarid ‘apanese Communist were on one 0: But the Department of State wit-jthese committees, the witnes stated. ness realized that he had got into a} He offered a picture showing Rose hole. He rummaged around his pa-| Pastor Stokes in the centre. pers with embarrassment, but with-| ‘Object to Farmer’s Propaganda. pus a pode ag Soally ssl Aig he! Communist plans for propaganda would produce the proofs about Pep-| 7). among the farmers were luridly| can be fooled, cajoled or browbeate: Railway C 11405 Michi A bevy Se ee aie, oe ee referred to but not enumerated ex-| into military ‘trainings a gig: tried ‘armen, > ag ad make peed at ante. Klieforth quit. lained, the witness preferring he Last year stinking food kept a Railway Klieforth quit on that tack but|chirson hues, of imagination to the} food many hobos out of the train-| Sf Ballvay ¢ rambled off on another tangent by cold rays cf logic. ee babe ing camps. Somehow or other, the] 301 Watchmen” “iageck Necasinetis hean saying that 15 Americans attended with the meer fe Wor ee of the youth didn’t and wouldn’t respond. ates . |. Hal- the sessions of the Fourth Congress Pore cree eae. barely. Seteeres ‘0-|'The army heads literally tore their] _ (Note—Uniesw of the Communist International. The Rhye Pt aed: aioe, gee hair, Here were long, carefully-laid | *"* ** § >: ™) _ AW ho Weve thesh Ammeriéarel? dsks| eee oe se aay an Dict! plans that were to make the Amer-| The Daily Worker for a month free ed Senator Swanson, checking the shied ‘Which ‘ite gc we Ae "State democracy a well-drilled nation. | to the first member of any local union flow of blather. ‘ bee Aa glthmr 6s dennis ean adage | siphaed er and men be gor saed in change of date or place 0 a & sit iE ‘ obbed up. The pl: didn’t work. |of meeting of locals listed here. Klieforth didn’t know but said he} The Workers Party’s desire that’ Many of the capitalist sheets car-| Please watch for your local and if could get them—later. aliens become American citizens is} . : ii n ; Only Momentarily Checked. not for patriotic reasons! Klieforth| Tied ie of rotten food and ar- net la Font leper goa giving od But the blather was only momen-| ¢mphasized, but for the sake of draw-| 2 ay Page Biomed alg A ale Be this daily anno rd rie ne pe “ti tarily checked and visitors to the| ing them into political life, ‘The| Scandal. Thereafter the advertise-| 20g Ouyy ,gonouncement complete aanete chambers had their ears as-| liens, he insisted, are the backbone arte esi oie enee eerie ; sailed with a ‘windy monologue| °f_the American movement. “a age hg and the hungry| On Tuesday of every week we ex- agsinst the Young Workers’ move- Putting Communist thesis into von wer ge ‘ : “a Pect to print display announcements ment, As one of the visitors said,|PUbli¢ libraries, organizing sport nash the citizen's military} of local unions. Rates will be $1 an ees ee cada aoe teen As clubs to further propaganda, issuing training plan will not fail because inch, 50c for half aninch card. Take i h lan’? het, Aq leaflets denouncing religion as the! of bad food. Mistakes like this will|this matter up in your next meeting. ae ers, or he wouldn’t hate them opium of the people and approving PapPen, in a pointy a et ding very npc mere a weekly dis- : j the execution of Russian. priests,—| ing. imperialism is builton%a|play card as well as the running an- 5 Preparing Now For “Citizen” Army. _ Soon the sign-boards will be yo'l- ing, “Join the Citizen’s raining Camps. Get a Free Vacation.” Plans have already keen formulated for an energetic campaign to re- cruit the caliow youtin for a month’s training in brutality rnd_ scientific murder. Behind the sche:e are the “test” military minds, in the country. Girded on by the failure of the last two years, the militarists in the United States are going to strain Plumber: a F ge oa Py every nerve beginning this spring - 7 gh to prove that the Renerions pie 3 land ian ere are i Garment Worke 8 W. Van Buren St, Laundry Workers. Machinists, 113 8. Ashland Blvd, Machinists, 113 8, Ashland Ave. lasted Sts, . E. cor, Lexington and » Joint Board, Western. Machinists, 53d Pl. and Halsted St. 6 Metal Polishers, 119 S. Throop St, inters, School and Sheffield Ave. Makers, 119 S. Throop St. Piane and Organ Workers, 810 W. Harrison St. Plasterers, 180 W. Washington St. rmen, Blue Island, Ill, 2d and Re tated all meetings York Times, ing with news affecting the working class and the radica] section of the organized workers, the story sounds ‘plausible but ‘the facts are garbled almost beyond recognition. ing is the text of the “news” item: “REDS USE SUNDAY Communist Youths Here In- structed to Seek Converts .at RIGA, Jan, 12.—American Sun- day schools are to be invaded by youthful acording to instructions which wiil be sent to the New York Central headquarters International Youth, which junior organization attached to and supported by quarters in Moscow. According to a copy of the Mos- cow Pravda of Jan. 5, Serial No. 4, which arrived here today, the Executive Committee of the Com- munist International Youths held a meeting in Moscow to report on the development of the Young Com- Young Communist movement has its branches in sixteen American cities, with a membership of more than 1,000 children. passed a resolution instructing the Secretary to send a letter to the New York headquarters with fur- ther directions for spreading the movement, that the children be instructed to converts in We will pass over the inaccuracy of names and places. Workers’ 4 headquarters in Chicago has receivedThe Daily Worker. nouncement under date of meeting. no such communication as yet. How-'secription at once. Proposes Fight On Intervention. The “Sunday schools” referred to| suggest that the DAILY. WORKER are organizations of working class} immediately start a campaign of and people of various shades, of| senat the sending ef warships, to Foing. clase ,consclousmesy, site| Mexico without the consent of the works within these organizations to| People of the United States. | Ove nia pf al Vanugosner yagi has introduce such resolutions in all or- ing class education. The jultimate er veg agen ome of a trade union * that we need such a campaign in who have established these Sunday a schools—the education of, workers’| °F Press—Bert, Miller, New York. children to become fighters for the * Wants Trade Union News. establishment of a workers’ and ‘ farmers’ government. The difference ions Rimes wee ae Ret of space for trade union material years, some of them as long as thirty and news.—Michael Rosenberger, years, and their methods have New York City. * ¢ scarcely changed in all that time, as a result of which their achieve- ments have been almost nil; on the other hand, the Young Workers’ League, able to study the experiences of the past and coming to the prob- lem with a fresh point of view, have developed new forms and methods, which, even in the short time they have been applied, have already pro- duced results, The principle work of the Young Workers’ League among children is to organize Junior Sections, the work in the Workers’ Sunday Schools be- | > As usual, when deal-|in the above article. rollow- SCHOOLS” Churches, American Communists, of the Communist is a the funds of the International, with head- * For Daily Installments, To The DAILY WORKER: I be- Heve it is desirable to have the novel, “A Week,” printed in daily installments to make the daily pa- per more interesting —Al Hufnagel, Chicago, Ill. Get unity thru the Labor Party! Movement in America. states that already the After the dis- closed, the committee MAX BLOOM'S RESTAURANT 3546 ROOSEVELT ROAD Telephone’ Crawford 2450 ing only a small part of their task. Let us be grateful for our work- ers’ newspaper, THE DAILY WORK- ER, where the working class point of view may be expressed without | distortion by capitalist editors and reporters! j especially suggesting the Sunday The Young ” “« » League of America, with Mn De 6 "eh Dat suppertan et Send in your sub- ivi will give the youth fairl; a food; 38009;—he-conjured \tip-40F- petivitine Mr. Klieforth next testified! il! y ly Roo 3 Ge eemce te at ‘ phone be ‘officers will act al- ie committee the apparition a The Society for ical to! it human; the camp sites will be|¢ Moscow organizer, who, he said, Bc-| soviet * teprgh eas gape Poc as| ideal; and every trick known to tually appeared before the conven-| 5 pro-Communist agency and Klie-| the advertising art will be used to tion. From there he went on to tell| forth then enumerated the prosecu-| Swell the citizen’s training camps. “how the “Young Worker” of April,| tions of Communists in various} American imperialism must have an 1922. used scorching words against! states, - army, active as well as dormant. the Young Men’s Christian Asoscia-| Alleged documents said to have| _ To the workers, we point out many tion, Young Men’s Hebrew Associa-| been taken “in the Bleecker street| dangers in the citizen’s military tion, Boy’s Scouts and other institu-| raid show that the Communists pro-| ‘taining which is but a small part tions catering to immaculate adoles-| pagandize the army and navy, .said|°f the all-inclusive militarization cence, the witness and an. quoting, “Com- munists have to be acquainted with the technique and strategy of modern warfare. Every Communist must’ know how to handle a gun and form a fighting line.” Never Do to Give Proof. project of the U. S. War Department. In.case of strike, what is to preven’ the use of these “citizen soli ” from scabbing on the workers? Why can’t these boys, while under the domination of U. S. officers be used in the case of a re-currence of a| $4 nation-wide anti-strike injunction? Klieforth said it would never do to! While the young fellows Sy in thes give proof regarding the authenticity] camps they are subject to the same of the documents about training in) discipline as pealac! soldiers in the 4 ei a Hag oy work a auc U. S. Army. verse comment. * ssions an was agreed that t! in be Here Mr. Klieforth actually pro-| committee would consider this in Pig gy turer Bagerih oe duced some leaflets and foreign lang- executive session. injected into the heads of the young wage publications as evidence of the| Klieforth could not give the facts! fellows while in these camps. All fact that the foreign-language Com-|on the collapse of the Kolchak and] feeling of solidarity to their fellow munist press. was doing business, Denikin Yudenich expeditions.| workers, all sympathy for men striv- Borah who had inst entered, asked| Borah insisted and the committee ing to make a better living, all re- -him if all these publications were not| adjourned to meet on call, gard for human life, is crushed in going thru the mails with the per- r mission of the United States gov- Failed to Respect “Fourth.” In short, the “Young Worker,” said Mr, Klieforth with an air of righteous indignation, incited against all authority, civil, moral and relig- jous and even failed in one article to show the proper respect for the Fourth of July. Lenin College, Chicago, and,schools be crowded this suinmer. io can say that the unemployed young work- ers would not welcome a chance to Many Greetings to THE DAILY WORKER from The Radical Inn The place where you can enjoy an interesting discussion while having a special Mrs, Smith’s own cooked meal or drinking a Russian Tchei- nick (pot) of tea with Mrs, Smith’s own home made cake. ieeamnatione end ‘an made at any time, Mrs, Smith's Tea Room , 1481 8. SAWYER AVENUE d Phone Rockwell 0202, they were. No Substantiating Evidence. be , Weakest of all Klieforth’s sallies Heart at 2,500 $40,000 from Russia for the Trade| Miles Distinctly if they do have to stand brgph beh Union Educational League and later —- While hyp! would dread the idea of got $90,000 more and again $35,000} A heart beat almost inaudible at| Joining the because has been transmi Citizen's Hughes’ witness, asked the commit-! 2,500 miles across the continent and| "Military training camps are a dang- tee to believe because the state de-| heard di: . erous weapon in the hands of the partment believed the inf ei pica Morgan L. , director of| American imperialists, evi- dence was offered to substantiate, the microphone of the transmitting this back-stairs, William J, Burns' set to his chest, sending the record rumor, of his heart beat over the ether, broadcast the mining fields of West Virginia,| that all who heard it write him a Klieforth said, the department be-| letter, That was more than a week lieved from evidence seized in a raid} ago. * - : dic it attempt to read the all reer ata il peste of tie not at vr ie lence. Communist activity, country, telling of hearing his heart ‘orth, consisted in inciting bee j3s SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ernment. Klieforth admitted that Radio Transmits was his assertion that Foster brou be fed for a month or so (even at Bridgman, Mich. This Mr.|elose range, tted| Of the length of servitud wag reliable radi tion KYW, Chi Se ete ‘ MF I OSNbOS OE Che eet] The Land for the Users! That Communists were active in| the same time he @ request in Bleecker street, New York, but he| Tuday Eastman at Reed's Speech, BY MAIL— The state department, thru its wit-' rh Well- , Known ' _ Insurance ¢ Salesmen a rs HAMiio Vossces 2645 Potomac Ave, | Office: 737 W. ROOSEVELT ROAD SSDOSSSSSSHAHDARAAEEAAARAAAAAA ADA Attia ts tctetods otetvtetntctetnd.tetecsts 4| Res. Phone Crawford 0331 Violin Z| Office Phone Rockwell 0112 Teacher %| Music Furnished for All Occasions Z|Members American Fed. of Musicians 1218 8, LAWNDALE AVENUE Chicage, Ill. S. M. HORVITZ 1263 N. Hoyne Ave. Phone Roosevelt, $SOOSEC OSES ZES COS COLES If you are a worker of discriminating tastes and have an understanding of your own interests you are reading THE DAILY WORKER regularly; If you have the interests of the working class at heart you are, and if you haven’t sub- scribed you will do so at once; If you want to see THE DAILY WORKER reach out into every section of the working class you will be boosting THE DAILY WORKER every day; ,lf you are a réak:REBEL you will not only read THE DAILY WORKER, not only boost THE DAILY WORKER, not only subscribe yourself, but you will get a new sub- scriber today, tomorrow and EVERYDAY. There will be no IF S nor BUTS nor WHENS about THE DAILY WORKER. THE DAILY WORKER will be now and forever THE ORGAN OF THE ADVANC- ING WORKING CLASS. 1 year ......$10.00 1 month ....$1.00 “EVERY READER A SUBSCRIBER” FM 994OHOO45HH4HHHHHOHHHHHHHHHOOHHHHSHHHH|H}}H}HH}SSSOD OD bopbAaSD Ob dDbA AA Adi 2 AND AND BUT THEN Sc ce ies | THE DAILY WORKER, 1640 N. 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