The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 6, 1924, Page 3

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y February 6, 1924 ‘ THE DAILY WORKER SOLONS SHIVER AS EX-SLEUTH SLOAN SOUGHT IN PROBE List of Stock Sales to Politicians Wanted By LAURENCE TODD (Staff Correspondent of the Federated Press) WASHINGTON. — Class govern- ment, exploiting the many for the corrupt enrichment of the few, is on the defensive in Washington at last, and, as it retreats, step by step, before the enraged public opinion that is sweeping in from every quarter of the country, lead- ers of. the two capitalist party or- ganizations are in a state closely resembling panic. The oil scandal has engulfed so many of the po- litical marionettes of Big Business that they are terrified for the re- sult next November. Hardened old cynics concede that “Something must be done, and done quick.” Fall Fools Nobody Nobody is fooled by Albert Fall’s wefusal, on the day following the exposure of McAdoo’s oil connec- tion, to testify before the Senate committee, Official Washington has heard that Fall has been threaten- ing to “tell everything,” and before the inquiry gets off the front pages of the daisy press, he will probably follow that impulse. In the mean- tire the committee has prepared to tap the richest vein of evidence vet opened—the books of stock brokers in Washington, for the pe- riod just preceding and following the grant of the naval oil lease. If the truth is secured from these brokers’ records, the country will learn. whether a ring of “insiders” got a lot of the $100,000,000 of Mammoth Oil stock, and whether they made big moncy by selling it to the public at 60—before it dropped to around 40. Also, whether they manipulated the market, and with what result. ‘There is a gen- eral suspicion that the names of senators and members of Congress will be found on the books of the stockbrokers, not only for that par- ticular period, but later. - Sleuth Sells Stocks. Samuel Ungeleider, of Ohio, who opened a brokerage office here at the beginning of the Harding ad- ministration, and placed James Sloane, former secret-service guard to presidents, in charge, has been summoned to bring his books here. Sloane, Jast seen in Ohio, has also been subpoenaed. It is forecast that their testimony will prove as sensational as that of Doheny or Fall or Roosevelt, in disclosin the leaders of nativnal political, life, behind the scenes, gambling on the stock market, with the aid of gigantic private interests, whose ends “they were servin, er under salary from the n, Wooden Fire Escapes Threaten Chicago School Children’s Lives; 700 ‘‘Portable” Schools Big Peril The lives of Chicago school children unfortunate enough to be alloted to the 120 ‘‘branch school” buildings in use here are in peril. These “branch schools” are frame affairs that constitute a constant and a grave fire hazard. There are 700 “portable” school buildings in use. More than 20,000 children attend classes in these portable and branch school buildings, Those are facts established by the DAILY WORKER yes- terday. The name portable ap- plied to the buildings used as schools by the board of educa- tion is a misnomer. They are not portable and only in limit- ed sense buildings. Shack would be a better word to ap- ply to them. Schools Like Hovels. They are one story metal af- fairs looking and built like small garages. In. winter they are very cold because they are not built to be permanent. They are for the most part heated by coal stoves in the middle of the one room. They can seat fifty children. Often more are crowded in. They have no toilet facilities, the pupils are forced to go out into the yard and into the main school building. The board of education has said ‘that portable buildings are only temporary makeshifts. Yet in many places they have been in use for years. The board of education will not make additions or alterations on any school building which 1s not able to prove its need by the use of ‘por- tubles, Many of the so-called branch schools are even worse than porta- bles as far as sanitary arrangements and heating are concer~ +d, Some are heated by furnaces—theoretically. Almost all have in the various rooms large coal stoves to act as auxilliary heating plants. Wooden Fire Escape. A branch school that is in many ways better than most is Branch No. 1 of the Mayfair school at 4353 Lawrence avenue. It has three rooms ‘and 132 pupils. The*building is of brick and was erected in 1899. It has a wooden fire escape for ihe one Toom on the second floor. The boys’ toilet in the basement is even worse than most such toilets, It is dark, dirty and ill-smelling. The building stands in the center of a large vacant block and when cold north winds blow, such as were blowing yesterday, it is impossible to keep the place heated. Branch No. 1 of the McPherson school at N. Robey street and Win- nemac avenue is a more typical ex- ample of the branch school. Altho it has six rooms only two of them are in use. two lowest grades, The building is frame and has wooden fire escapes. The main floor is well above the street level. fact that only two rooms are used increases the heating problem. All the rooms and the large halls must be heated if the two rooms used and the halls are to be made warm enough to be habitable. Here, too, there are stoves in each room to back up the furnaces. It has been found necessary to use the stoves often this ‘winter in spite of the fact that there are three furnaces kept going. The entire basement is damp and ill-smelling as are the usual run of school toilets. Wooden Fire Escapes Again. The danger from fire is ihereased in this building by the fact that there are three and often five separate fires going at the same time. Then the pupils are very young childern vand_the “fire escapes” are wood. The building was érected in 18938 and is as dry as timber. There are only two teachers to 90 children. Fire Inspectors from the board of education were at this school last week and said that it passed their tests. They said in fact that it was one of the safest branches in the city. The DAILY WORKER will report on some of the branches that the fire insvectors think are worse than the McPherson branch school and which hey still pass, Must Have the Women INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb. 5.— Declaring the grand jury which in- dicted Warren T. McCray, was im- properly drawn because women were not allowed to serve, attorneys for the Indiana governor, charged with embezzlement and jorgery filed a plea in abatement today. Jugoslav Branch Meets. NEW YORK.—The Jugoslay Branch of the Workers Party held a successful mass meeting in Eat Hall, 341 W. 47th street, Jos®ph Berg, speaking on the aims of the Workers Party, and Charles Novak, on the political situation in Jugo- slavia. They are used by the; The ' good ‘CALIFORNIA AND IDAHO BACK DOWN ON PERSECUTIONS Syndicalism Prisoners Winning Cases (By The Federated Prean) NEW YORK. — News issued by the Civil Liberties Union here de- seribes the ups and downs of po- litical inquisition during the past few days, What is termed a “concession to sense” is cited in a recent decision of the Idaho Supreme Court in a criminal syndicalist case. Con- sidering Richard Moore’s applica- tion for a writ of habeas corpus, the Idaho bench held that the word “sabotage” in the state criminal syndicalist code docs not include “striking on the job.” Meanwhile, the first unreserved acquital of I, W. W.’s in Sacramento occurred lately, when Sam Oberman, Ed Higgins and E. McRae were found not guilty of criminal syndi- calism in the Superior Court of Sacramento county. The seamy side of political justice is shown in the caxe of Louis J. Morris and Bocho Kojuharoff, ar- rested last summer for selling I. W. W. papers on the streets of Los Angeles in violation of an injunction, They have just been sentenced to fines of $250 each, or ninety-day jail terms. Similar reports arrive from Shreveport, La., where E. L. Con- nelly and Joe Cherry, both I. W. W.’s, lost their appeal of # vagrancy conviction. The men, who. claimed they were merely traveling to New Orleans, were sentenced to ninety days on the parish farm. From Wisconsin comes news that Bronis- law Synzmaniak, a Russian com- munist, who has been fighting de- portation since his arrest in the 1920 “Red raids,’ was deported a few days ago. Couldn’t Find Good Landlord with Microscope NEW YORK. — In a show, now being produced here, one of the wags makes the following an- nouncement; “A meeting of all the New York landlords, who have lowered rents during the past year, will be held tomorrow at the Hotel Blank in the third telephone booth. Chicago’s Sub Campaign for Daily Real Communist Contest The subscription campaign to secure one thousand new readers for THE DAILY WORKER in Chicago is rapidly de- veloping into a veritable contest among all of the Chicago militants. Apart from the general interest that has been aroused amongst those who “want to make THE DAILY WORKER | grow” a real competitive spirit has been created and the drive will be a test to determine which among the Chicago militants can perform the greatest service to THE DAILY WORKER and to the militant labor movement. The working class will be the re- cipient of the real first prize in the strength which it will draw to itself as a result of the increment to the already rapidly growing DAILY WORKER circulation. However, those who participate in the campaign will have material rewards in store for them in the shape of commissions, for the subs they secure and valuable prizes for those who make the best record, The suggestion as reported in yesterday’s DAILY WORKER that the first prize for the individual turning in the greatest number of | subs be a portuble typewriter has/| been receiving considerable support. It geeme that there are many live | wires who are confidently expecting to carry off first honors and many | of these have stated that they would value a typewriter above any other prize of similar material worth. Tomorrow night, Feb. 7, in the! headquarters of the Russian Tech-| nical School, 1902 W. Division St., the campaiga will really get under | way, with a meeting of all of the| Chicago DAILY WORKER agents| and those who wish to participate in|} the campaign. At this meeting, de- tailed and definite plans and rules for the campaign will be decided| upon. | Governor Says Politicians Spend Hours with Eels (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK. — Notwithstanding the fact that financial affairs are doubtless the more slippery of the two, and the hardest to grasp, New York legislators devote more at- tention to eels and how to catch ’em than to the state’s budget. This is the burden of the caustic re- marks delivered by Governor Smith in a speech before the Albany cham- ber of commerce, “The members of the legislature,” declared the governor, “will spend two hours in debating a bill regulat- ing the taking of eels from some river, while they give the annual ap- propriation bill but a moment’s no- tice. Apparently, it did not occur to the governor that the intense con- cern manifested for the eel is due to the fellow-feeling of certain leg- islators for that fish. Our Advertisers help make this Paper possible. Patron- ize our Advertisers and tell them you saw their Ad in The Daily’ Worker. fattend this mecting. bagforeynencantehiipsieaneniniiaesamenn Lenin Memorial, in Gary, Steel City, Crowds Big Hall (Special to The Daily Worker) GARY, Ind. — Robert Minor spoke } in honor of Nicolai Lenin at a meeting that crowded Croatian Hall. Revolutionary airs were played by the orchestra of the Young Work- | ers’ League of Chicago. Minor drew the contrast between! Lenin, who represented the vigorous, rising proletarian movement and the late war president, who represent- ed the decadent capitalist class, The crowd responded with emotion to every mention of Lenin. The Workers Party is developing a vigorous movement in the steei city. | | | Y. W. L. to Organize in Cicero, A long contemplated undertaking of the Chicago League to organize a branch in Cicero, will be realizod Wednesday eve, Feb. 6th, in the formation of the Austin Branch, Y. W. L., Jat Seick’s Hall, 731 N. Cicero Av here it will meet every first and second Wednesday of the month. | The feature of this fi#t meeting will be ts address by J. L. Engdahl, on “Militant Youth Organization.” The jeago © Organization Ccmmittee irges all reaters of that district to Dark Rooms To Live In; Lot of Many Workers, Facts Show Centinued—from Page 1) misery, congestion, denial of “I wish I knew how to re-draw|the most elementary needs to and political map for the 1924 cam-|the children of the working paign, so that it would sta or a week or two,” said a veteran political writer, after the McAdoo sensation was sprung. “Wait until Fall has pulled the hypocrites into the oil tank with him, and wait until the stock brok- ers’ books are examined,” was the| put/class, disease-breeding condi- tions, and a break-down of the general standards of living. My own investigation only adds evidence of an unspeak- ble environment which must reply of a still older and more ex-| be abolished without delay if a di- perienced writer. “This thing may|sastrous calamity is to be avoided simply force the creation of a new for the working masses of Amer- party in the United States within|ica’s greatest city. a few months.” Populace Aroused Letters pouring in from Califor- nia, Arizona, Colorado, Washington, Texas, Iowa, South Dakota, Llinois —aill tell the same story—the coun- try is not merely shocked, it is distrustful of congressmen and sen- ators who have slept happily above this stink of corruption and crime in the federal government, heedless of La Follette’s warning its, peril to the national welfare. They are angry, and they threaten to leave the old parties. Facing these dangers, the party leaders may be expected to try to .Yeach an agreement to qui re- duce the scope of the inve: and to discover that the mate should get back to regular legis- lative activities. any such at- tempts will be resisted by the pro- gressive group in both ome and will be defeated. Somethi proaching a revolution atte oe thefts of public ae erty been started, and it not be stopped half way. “You know, the worst thing about this oil probe,” said a former Taft Neutenant, now serving as a reac- Boney. adviser at the capitol, “is that it makes the people lose all faith in their rnment.” — Conditions MHorrify Investigators. If one should walk thru a typical hall of the apartment houses inhab- itated by the majority of the work- ingmen or even lower middle class and “white-collar slaves’ hg is greeted by grime and soot. The hallg are dark; the paper is hanging off the walls. garbage piled deep in the ceilars, and unbearable stench are common in the houses inhabited by the work- ers in the East Side, Harlem, Chel- sea, Lenox, and many Bronx sec- tions. Baby carriages, broken fur- niture, and old clothes are very often. stored under the hall stair- I took a ride on the Second Av- ietty uae mec enue Elevated railroad and noted the tenements occupied by the workers. The fire escapes gave the impression of hailing scales of rust. They ‘were ai] loaded with the belongings of the people who could not find sufficient room in their flats. Jt seemed almost unbelievable how many human beings could occupy such abominable shacks, such fire- traps, Yet a vacant flat is at a| Hy premium even in this section of the city: What ‘They Call Homes. The writer visited a worker’s home at 193 Orchard street, in the heart He recalled that the Ballinger af-|of the working class section of, the fair was enough to make anyone} Lower |East Side. Entering Mrs. anxious; the affair of Lorimer’s| B—n's I found a dark, stuffy, hased election shook the Repub-| uncomfortable two-room flat. The machine; Ni was ceilings were cracked, The holes they could stand, even on the heels|in the walls were stuffed with rags of the 7,000,000 majority in 1920,|to keep the draught out. The win- Now, they had just off the|dows had no weather — and Ferbes eoandal in’ the Veterans’ Bu-| their ropes were broken, bed- reau to plunge head-foremost into|room floors were full of holes, Teapot e and the of| Going over to a tenement, 294- putations of “big men” in old} 300 Cherry Street, I entered a build- parties. ing gave one the impression Something should be done! The a | abandoned armory. people aes lose confidence in their fa iF interviewed Moe anal bre government made repeated vain ; to have the Tenement House De- Join the “I want to make THE| partment compel the landlord to end DAILY WORKER grow” club. _ pe carpe gh dio re udson Guild is intervening the tenant’s behalf. I found that ra i gi a filthy and the walls not been for years. In the toilets the not only had their plaster off but their boards were coming down. vaathar Oltavio Sylvester” of the Parish of of and a: Clogged dumbwaiters, | H. fore the Housing Commission, ‘told g. families unfold a picture of of the situation amongst the Italian workers in Brooklyn in these words: “The conditions are abominable, without light, without air, without anything; very small rooms where there are four, five, and six children some times, something terrible. The condition of Johnson Avenue, all of the rear houses in the same condi- tion, toilets in yards, no baths, no heat.” In picturing the housing condi- tions in Harlem, one social inves- tigator cited the following typical household 52 W. 112th Street): “When the tenant cooks, the pipes in the house are so bad that when the burner in the gas range is burn- ing, she cannot have the other one. When the party on the first floor is getting water, she has to wait until they are all thru washing and doing their work before she can get water.” And Miss Blackman of the United lebrew Charities, narrating her ex- periences before the State Commis- sion said, in part: “Mrs. K. lived in’ an apartment where the chief amusement of the two younger chil- dren, aged 10 and two and a half years, was to crawl thru the holes in the wall; Mrs, P. lived in an apartment where the gas jet fell ‘every once in a while and had to be dodged by members of the house- hold.” Landlords Stop Repairs, Since the housing shortage has become acute the landlords have be- gun to take advantage of the ten- ants and. have stopped ically all repairi of ‘the pidat houses in ich hundreds of thou- sands of workers are ‘compelled to re. “The present investigation ba sce ai Nae ge rai ip Me al ut no repairit is ne the land! . tenante, in all the blocks have to do their own repair- ing and renova from $25.00 to $150.00, and in a few instances even more, to make their apartments habitable.” ; The Housing Commission report then quotes a tenant: “We expect noth- ing from the landlord; not even a door-knob.” Contin its summary of the situation the Housing Com- mission pointed out; “When the plumbing is out of order, when the sink is broken, when the window panes are broken, when the plaster on the ceiling fi when the roof leaks so that it is impossible to remains or the tenant repairs it at his own expense, Even new tenants have had to move into an apart- ment which the landlord promised , and have spent| In the preliminary’ report Direc- tor of Investigations Gove brings the intolerable situation home very ef- fectively when he says: “The pres- ent investigation shows that houses and apartments in bad repair are not limited te the poorest blocks or to the old law tenements, From all blocks come reports of the landlords’ refusal to repair falling plaster and broken ceilings, bad plumbing, leak. ing pipes, floors rotting from leaks, broken windowpanes, walls and cei!- ings excessively dirty, leaking roofs. “The 1919-1920 report stated that the then, existing emergency was only partially responsible for the bad housing conditions. The 1923 investigation shows that a progres- sive aggravation of these conditions has been going on. The apartments are in a state of worse repair than they were in 1920. It is easy to trace the connection between the increase of bad housing conditions and the housing emergency.” Dangerous Congestion. The extent of congestion from which the workers are suffering is inestimable. Before the housing erisis grew to its serious present proportions, when Dr. Royal C. Copeland, now United States sen- ator, was commissioner of health, there were, according to , lat- ilies that had forced to double mp. Dr. Copeland then said: “We have one square mile in the city where live 500,000 A ot pt in the Lower East Side. ereyare thou- sands of families living there, twelve persons in three rooms, and four sleepi in the kitchen; and in hun of these homes they live in inside rooms without any light or vi .! congestion made b; we d na nm Ss de] “showed akuledvaly Nhat homes had been broken up, doubling up of families had resulted, the bs evil had increased by leaps and bounds, vacancies were few and far between, and the rent demanded Fidley7 dedmnyeath Awe pallor beyond reac] juir- ing homes, or a Wenaimeranie’ por- Se Gel ea ao st ir, mi use as habitations ahein: Tm ponaibae’” Miss Ethel Ader of the Fairplay Rent Association told the Commis- sion of a case where three related families lived in six rooms because Pim ire not any of them alone al the increase whic the landlords demanded.” Y Mr, Burritt, the genera} tions under which this family is per- director of Association for Im-| force living indicates not only a the of the Poor,| violation of all the principles of told State commission that his| decency and sanitation, but chal- wide led him to believe . Burrit further said:| ed or makeshift, In the small dark eae tr, of tener palvallecy lighted Pe gest age Pa houses been accentua' y}a small opening in wall, {a @ fs yg Bin been to go bad. is1 whidh sleep tivo ter’s estimate, at least 100,000; tam! fh = pte Soe se RB CAF BT. thai BES 2 ER ad bed DR BOS 8 iB BR, Ba Bt a IE ih Thc Shc a dls 0 3 to the small homes of their rela- tives, already overcrowded by the original tenants. Among our allow- ance families occupying three-room apartments, 20 per cent of those families number seven or more in- dividuals living in three rooms.” Mr. Burret told of many instances where eight, nine, ten, and even twelve people were living in three rooms. The Amalagamated Clothing Work- ers madé a survey of the housing conditions among 820 of its mem- bers. Mr. Harry K. Herwitz told the Commission that his investiga- tion showed 35 per cent of the clothing workers living in two and three rooms. In one case there were persons in three rooms and in two other cases there were six per- sons in two rooms, Crowding Widespread. A popular verse in New York runs: “The trouble with this town ig that There’s too much family to a flat.” The survey made by the State Commission covered ‘not only the poorest sections but also those blocks consisting of new law tene- C.| ments in which the better paid work- ers were living. Yet the commis- sion stated: “More than cold stat- istics confront the investigator as opens the door of an apartment. Here is a four-room flat at one end of which is a front room, get- ting dim light from a narrow street, at the other end a kitchen with one window getting light from a court. In between are two small dark com- partments called bedrooms. The rooms run consecutively, access from the front room to the rear being only thru the middle rooms, and in this amount of space covering, ap- proximately 250 square feet, lived ten people—four adults (two board- ers) and six children.” * Eat In Shifts. Director Gove thus completes the picture of life in this apartment: “They eat in the kitchen—in shifts. They sleep—father, mother and the baby sunder three years of age in the front room, the baby sharing their bed. There are two bedrooms left fon five children and two board- ers, The boarders demand a room for themselves. They pay $8.00 a month, hence the two boys and their little sister of five ae in one bedroom; and the two el rls of 14 and 12 must sleep in the kitchen. family is the kitchen pink.” able conditions of another apartment in this fashion: the details of the wretched condi- of Archimedes. The washing facilities for the whole The Report describes the intoler- “The narration of lenges the very principle of the law room boys of fourteen and ten and a girl of thirteen, To describe these con- ditions as ‘detrimental to the public health and morals’ is no idle phrase. These conditions mean being cramped in body and soul, they mean irri- tation and racked nerves, they mean contagion and infection. The in- discriminate sharing of rooms by both sexes and all ages, and the lack of privacy—these results of overcrowding are a menace to mor- ality. It is true they existed in 1920; they are aggravated today.” But perhaps the most complete} Picture of the dangerous housing | situation confronting the working| people of New York was made by| Dr. Haven Emerson in the Depart- ment of Health survey of conges- tion. Said Dr. Emerson: “Thousands and thousands of peo- ple in the city are sleeping and liv- MMW ANNAN MANNII, % SLIP COVERS Z % including: Labss agd Mapuiil Davenport - - $9.50 Chair - - - - $5.50 Satisfaction Absolutely Guaranteed Also a wonderful selection of imported Coverings at a tre- medous reduction due to our wide experience in the making of Covers, bling us to give you superior quality, Save 30% on your Automobile covers. Order direct from— % GOLLIN BROS. Formerly With Mandel Bros, UPHOLSTERING % done in your own home yery reasonable. 6006 SO. KOMENSKY AVE, 4 Call REPUBLIC 3788 BERNE The Office of the Representative of the RUSSIAN STATE PUBLISHERS (GOSISDAT) will accept Retail and Wholesale orders for magazines and books of various subjects to be filled from stock on hand, also advance orders to be shipped from Moscow. Address GOSISDAT 15 PARK ROW, NEW YORK Attend This Important Friends of Soviet Russia and Workers Germany Conference WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6, at WORKERS’ LYCEUM, 2733 HIRSCH BLYD., 8:00 P. M. COME ON TIME! Many Important Matters to Be Taken Up. Will Have a Good Speaker. VEGETARIAN HOME RESTAURANT 2nd Floor, at 2714 W. Division St. Is the center for the North-West 1 Side intelligent eaters. Strictly h ome cooking and baking fresh | daily. J. Koqanove. Proprietor. DO YOUR WORK AT . KAPLAN’S aa SANERS AND DYERS ~~ EXPERT LADIES’ AND GENTS’ TAILOR 3546 ARMITAGE AVE. Albany 9400 ‘Work Called For And Delivered People are judged by the books they read. All the best books, old and new, can be obtained from Morris Bernstein’s Book Shop, 3733 West Roosevelt Road. Phone Rockwell 1458. * Stationery, Music and all Periodicals. Come and get a Debs calendar free. NO RENT NO OVERHEAD HARRY E. GREENWOOD Mid-City Carpenter Shop OLD HOUSES REBUILT : Millwrights, Jobbing, Shelving, Flooring 508 IRVING AVENUE Phone Seeley 1888 CHICAGO ing in apartments so dark that gas- light must be burned all day; so airless that in summer the families are forced to sleep on the roofs; so foul-smelling because of garbage in the hallways, in courts and streets, and because of adjoining stables or factories, that one of fhe only two windows in the whole flat has to be kept shut. The tenants must climb five or six flights of staira to dispose of garbage, for the dumb- waiters are seldom in repair. Toi- lets for two to five families are in the halls or in the yards. The sanitary condition of the toilet is indescribable. There is insufficient water, neglected plumbing, no venti- lation or light—these tell the con- dition without further description.” (The Third Article wilt deal with the harmful effects the present hous- be difficulties have had on the children, the families, the social life, the health and the general standards of living of the workers.) Telephone Brunswick 5991 DR. A. FABRICANT DENTIST 2058 W. DIVISION STREET CHICAGO, ILL. Res. 1632 S. Trumbull Ave. Phone Rockwell 5050 MORDECAI SHULMAN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 701 Association Blidg.. 19 S. La Salle Street CHICAGO Dearborn 8657--Central 4945-4947 Cor. Hoyne Ave. PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK DENTIST Rendering Expert Dental Service for 20 Year 645 SMITHFIELD ST., Near 7th Ave. 1627 CENTER AVE., Cor. Arthur St, NEW YO.) “Proletarian education is a achieve the liberation '$ History of Revolutions (1789-1918 History of the 8 Internationales... American Imperialism since 1860. are now offering you. Only a WORKERS’ SCHOOL 127 University Place (14th St. and Union Square) Let us tell you how to make your money work for No Speculation, Gamble or Chance of Loss. Small monthly payments. Exempt from National, State or Local Taxation. Thousands have already made money on the proposition we Write to BOX A. A. THE DAILY WORKER. RK CITY formidable weapon to help of the working class.” NEW COURSES beginning week of FEB. 5, 1924 History of the American Trade Union Movement.....Solon de Leon ).seoeveeees Juliet Stuart Poyntz +-++.Ludwig Lore Dr. Chas, Brower COURSES CONTINUED—Marxism, Economics, Evolu-, tion, Literature, English—-NEW TERM begins Feb. 5, 1924.—Register at 127 University Place. you. limited amount still available.

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