The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 8, 1924, Page 5

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_—— February 8, 1924 eeerneeraeeme amen ot A A A te ARRON ts eerie en Children of Worker’s Family | Bring Home Undesirable Picture PHILADELPHIANS HOLD OVERFLOW LENIN MEETING Many Become Members of Workers Party (Special to The Daily Worker) PHILADELPHIA, Pa,—The Lenin Memorial Meeting held here will long | be remembered by the 2,000 who jammed the Musical Fun An overflow meeting had to be started, but even that could not ac- comodate the hundreds who came-too late and were turned away by the police. The Memorial Meeting was one of the most impressive that Philadelphia ever saw. When the chairman un- covered a huge portrait of Lenin at the opening of the meeting and the Orchestra began to play Chopin’s Fu- neral March, the whole audience rose gets /as one man to give last honors to their dead leader, Even the police were impressed by. this demonstration, ‘There was many a workman’s hand that wiped away tears that could not be suppressed, ‘ The chairman read the proclama- Hall, | ¢ THE DAILY WORKER To THE DAILY WORKER: | I have en a workingman all only remedy for devoting my life. great_ movement. reason I sent them to the Socialist row their friends had more in- fluence over them than I did. Recently something occured that strongly convinced me that I could no longer endure the animosity of my. children, On coming home from work one night, I found a picture of Harding on the wall, “What's that?” I asked, “How does his rare oep pen to be in my house?” In reply son told me that he and his Wands had organized a Harding Club, and that he wanted the honor of having Harding’s picture on the wali. I cannot describe in words the anger this answer provoked in me. “Aye there no greater characters that have done more for humanity than Harding? Have my feelings no value to you?” My children, as usual, started to ridicule me, I could no longer control my anger, I pulled down the picture and tore it, My | children reproached me for the ac- tion, which they said was one of a tyrant and despot. My wife sides with them. I am writing this letter to you with the | request tnat you answer it in the columns of the Daily Worker, resent ‘evils is communism, the cause to which I am gardiess of the fact that I did not have the advantage of an education, I have done everything else within my power to help the Now, my only wish was to have my children share my ideas. For this my life and am convinced that the Sunday School, but to my great sor- ism. The children are generally left in the care of the mother whose duties are of such @ nature that she has little time to devote to. public questions. Her environment is nar- row and her outlook is limited, Her experience and her struggles with life do not tend to give her a more , aa point of view. Her in- uence on the children is reaction- ary. They are urged to look out for their own personal interests and let the rest of the world do likewise, The leaders of bourgeois society take every precaution to psychologize the minds of the children in favor of the present system. They have preachers, teachers and a multitude of organizations with bands, gym- nasiums which offer attractions to the children of the working class not. to be found in the homes. They have publications which teach that boys and girls with ambition can rise to hieh positions provided they are am- bitious, go to church,shun radical- UNIVERSITY RUN BY JUDGE GARY BARS NEARING Northwestern Cancels Invitation to Economist By CARL HAESSLER (Staff Correspondent of The Federated Press) EVANSTON, Ill. — Pres. Walter] Dill Scott, the advertising expert who heads Northwestern university, has banned Scott Nearing, radical economist and lecturer, from the campus platforms, Neither in class- room nor in university meeting hall may Nearing lift his voice to up- hold the newer economics and tne newer sociology against the doc- trines sanctioned by University Trustee Elbert H. Gary or University Trustee R. W. Campbell, Gary’s son- in-law, the president of the North- western board, : The steel dictator’s son-in-law sig- nalized his accession to the head of the board table by announcing that the Northwestern campaign commit- tee engaged in getting donations from the big fellows in industry and business had obtained so far the sum jerime among the Youth Views By HARRY GANNES Crime and the Working Youth, Fat widows of dead business men, retired churchmen and professional capitalist social workers and reform- ers find common employment in pro- tecting the youth and children from lives of crime, This is the safest kind of diversion. At the twenty-second annual meet- ing of the Illinois Juvenile Protec- tive Association, a prize collection of old maids, pepless preachers and paid social workers, the growth ot youth and chil- dren wag discussed from the point of view of sex and religion. The proposed remedy for the advance in the number of youth criminals ‘was —recreation! On thing is positive in crime: the lower the wages of the parents, the more apt are the children to become criminals. Is the remedy for this recreation? When a bunch of kids are forced to live together like a herd of cattle because their father does not get enough even to buy them enough to eat, or because the father has been killed by the in- dustrial machine, what mockery it is to invite the children to recreation as a panacea for their affliction. Every child in the juvenile deten- tion homes in the city of Chicago is the child of a wage worker. To Page Five Lodge Launches — Frail Craft to Salvage Denby (By The } d Press By LAURE TODD WASHINGTO. ’s lynch law, that’s. what it is, Senator Lodge, furiously, protesting in the senate against the resolution de- manding the resignation of Secre- tary Denby. “It is an outrage on every principle of justice and fair play. It is a proposal to deprive this official of the right to be heard; it means of defense; it gives him no opportunity to avail himself of the rights that are granted the mean- est _skulking thief” Nobody had called Denby a mean, skulking thief. He had merely been charged, and proven by | muth testi- mony, reviewed for enate by many of its promi members, to have known the unanimous pro- test of the naval officers against his giving away control of the naval fuel supply to Fall. .He had been shown to have taken part in this lawless and indefensible betrayal of afterward to abyssmal_ ignorance, and finally to have written a letter saying that if he had the chance he-would do it all over again. Then the_Robinson resolution had called for his resignation. Trammell had offered the same resolution, as an would strip him of all the ordinary | public interest, and to have testified | FIGHT FOR ALIEN WORKERS WAGED BY JEWISH REBELS Yellow Labor Leaders Spurn United Front | ly | The movement initiated by the Jewish Federation of the , Workers | Party in New York City for the | protection of the foreign born against discriminatory laws is spreading with great success, At the conference held on ‘Saturday, Jan, 26, to plan a campaign, commit- tees were present representing the Jewish Federation, and workers of I the following nationalities: German, Russian, Lithuanian, Ukrainian, Fin- nish and Polish, The invitation to this conference was also accepted by the left Poale Zion, but was re- | jected by the right Poale Zion and the Jewish Socialist Federation, The United Hebrew Trades held ; their own conference on Sunday, | Jan. 27, with the purpose of starting | a similar campaign, altho it was | known that thousands of workers were entering into the united front } movement initiated by the Jewish Federation. But Max Pine of the tion of the All-Russian Congress of | of $7,217,470.71. ism, k hard and tice thrift. Soviets and then introduced the nat Weck. cOnditigtio te fe aot aa Now, I want you to answer the find a pretty bourgeois kid in a penal amendment, to the Walsh resolut-| United Hebrew Trades and his cro- ¥ speakers. The meeting was ad- dressed by Feinstone in Russian, Lud- wig Lore and W. F. Kruse in Eng- lish. and Shachho Epstein in Jewish. Not a single person left the hall until the orchestra ended the International and the chairman declared the meet- ing adjourned. An appeal for funds, to aid in the Defense of the Communists who were in jails because they propagate the on for which Lenin worked, netted LTT, Many people approached members of the arrangement committee and filled out application cards to join the Workers Party, the per, that propagates the ideas for which Lenin stood, The meeting was a grand tribute to the man who has become an in- spiration to all true revolutionists. | Letters to ‘The Daily’ What He Thinks of Us, To the DAILY WORKER: It's damn little radical literature I read— I'll buy it but I'll be damned if I'll read it—but while laying around wondering whether or not I’ll have to have my appendix chopped out, I happened to start to read your ar- ticle “Our Party—Three Tendencies” —and hadn’t got very far before said, “What the hell!” for it was the first time I had ever run against anything as easily understod and comprehensive. But alas, and also alack, I commenced to flounder at the top of the third column and from there on muffed about half of it, and my idea that it would make one fine and dandy circular went glimmering. You had ought to do something about it for the first half of the ar- ticle is the very thing that is needed to enlighten the workers as to what the Party is—I never knew before —it’s been a mystery to me. d, as I am above the average of intelli- fence, it’s hardly to be expected that the ordinary run of humanity would know either. And you sure need some such circular—not for the mut element—you can hardly get it down to their intellectual level and at the same time say anything, but for us— well, what I call “minor intellectu- als.” Also 'T don’t think it should be en obvious propaganda circular if that point can be avoided, But here I am again trying to tell the untellable radicals something! I am an optimist all right. Still you fellows seem to be a damn unusual sort of an outfit—I was remarking today a friend to whom I handed my copy of the DAILY WORKER that it was the first radical paper I had ever, seen that printed interesting news items in Americaneese. You are unusuai all right!—J. A. N., Los Angeles, Cal. Stilt In the Ring. 4 ‘VWASH'NGCTON, Feb. 7.—Hiram Johnson today announced definitely that he will not withdraw. from the presidential race. “I consider it a contemptible trick that statements are issued every few --deys from Coolidge headquarters in- \ timating that I wil: withdraw from the race,” said Johnson, “I want to say once and for all that I am going to put up a brave it and am going to stay in until the end.” . . Lenin Portraits Show your loyalty, love and respect for the greatest leader of the revolutionary workers and adorn the walls of your room, clubs and meeting halla, with a portrait of Nikolai Lenin, The price is within anyone’s reach: Single copy, 8x11 inches 25 cents. Single copy, 14x17 inches 65 cents. Radical discount for quantity orders, Agents wanted. Literature Dept. Workers Party of America question I will put to you, the an- swer to which my children will read: Are the feelings and thoughts of my children so superior to mine that they could heartlessly do everything in the attempt to shatter my ideals, while I am not allowed to do any- thing?—A Disappointed Father. Problem Deserves Attention. Our Answer—The above letter touches a problem which deserves at- tention. It has been the experience of many radicals to see their child- ren spurn the ideals for which their parents sacrificed so much and be- come active or passive 3 Ferri of the capitalist system and all its works and pomps. The. reasons for this are many. Most radicals endure hardships which are shared by their families owing to their opposition to the capi- talist system and their children who come under the influence of capitalist schools, read capitalist papers and associate with children of capitalistic- ally minded parents. Capitalist papers judge the: radical philosophy on the basis of its effect on their con- ditions and not being sustained by idealism prefer to follow the line of least resistance and place personal gain ahead of the collective good, Radicals as a rule ao not take the necessary steps to see that their children are acquainted with the philosophy of socialism or commun- GERMAN CENSUS GIVES 26,000,000 ADULT WORKERS Proletarian Elements in Vast Majority By LOUIS P. LOCHNER ital Correspondent of The Federated Press) wi statistics have been produced by the “Annual for Economics, Politics, and the Labor Movement,” published by Carl Hoyn, Hamburg. In the year 1920 Germany had a total of 59.4 million inhabitants. The adult population included in this total fell under the following categories: Agriculture and Forestry. 9,825,000 Mining and Industry..... 14,510,000 Trade, Traffic and Hotel Keeping ..... ), Personal Service oe Public Service and Free Professions ..........+ 2,440,000 Without Profession ...... 1,700,000 Total .....+.4++++++ 488,865,000 The term “without profession” in- eludes people living on their in- comes. In the above classification, bosses and workers are thrown together, so that it is not clear how many pee belong to the possessing and many to the working class. ‘This’ relation becomes evident from the following classification. In the same annual, Prof. E. barr a noted Russian economist now living in Berlin, groups the lation of Germany as follows: Semi-proletarian elements. 3,500,000 Workers and this paper, give it to another worker. Let him read your copy for a few days. Then get him to subscribe. THE DAILY WORKER from ' The Radical Inn || The place where you can enjoy an | interesting discussion while having i Smith’s own cooked a Russian Tchei- pot) tea with Mrs, Smith’s own home made cake, Arrangements for services for par- guiberiugs mode at any tine. Mrs, Smith's Tea Room 1431 8S. SAWYER AVENUE BERLIN, Germany, — Interesting i . « 5,000,000) 22 380,000 Under such conditions it is not sur- prising that our comrade’s children should bring in the picture of one who showed less brain capacity than perhaps any other man'who ever sat in the White House chair. The child- ren are not taught that the develop- ment of the mind is important ex- cept in so far as it aids in the main consideration of bourgeois society, that is, the accumulation of wealth. Our correspondent may tear Hard- ing’s picture and tear his own hair if he has any, but that is only a de- spairing indication of impotence. Children spend more of their time outside of the home than in it. Com- munists should take care that the environment of their children should not be anti-radical. “The Workers Party of America thru the Young Workers League and the Junior Sec- tion of that organization offers a solution of this problem, Radicals should have their children join these organizations, attend the classes, athletic groups, socials and other functions under their direction. The children will grow up in an environment that will help to develop their intellectual faculties. They will be able to meet the jibes and sneers of the putty-headed produc- tions of the bourgeois schools and if they bring home any picture to hang on the wall it will be that of some intellectual giant like Lenin and not a mental nonentity like Harding. | Your Union Meeting Every local listed in the official di- rectory of the CHICAGO FEDERA- T:ON OF LABOR will be published under this head on day of meeting free of charge for the first month, rah yea our rate will be as fol- 10" Mi WS: Monthly meeting—$3 a year one ine once a month, each additiong] line, 15c an issue, Semi-monthly meetings — $5 a year one line published two times a month, each additional line 13¢ an jue. Weekly meetings—$7.50 a year one line a week, each additional line 10c an issue. 5 SECOND FRIDAY, Feb, 8th ‘No. Name of Local and Place of Meeting. 237 Bakers and Confectioners, 3420 W. Roosevel! it Road. . Blacksmiths, 64th and 8S, Ashland Ave. Boiler Makers, 105th and Avenue M. Boiler Makers, 55th and Halsted. Boiler Makers, 62d and Halsted, Building Trades Council, 180 W. Wash, Carpenters’ District Council, 505 8, State St. ¢ Carpenters, 4339 S. Halsted St, Commercial Portrait Artists, 19 W. Adams St. 9 Electricians, 2901 W. Monroe St. 182 Electricians, 19 W. Adems St, 683 Engineers (Loc.), Madison and Sacra- mento. Engineers, 180 W, Washington St. Firemen and Enginemen, 5428 Went- 122 429 434 533 00 14286 845 674 45 WUT 84 us 7 4 113 199 429 m6 «28 13907 16857 2 N, State St. aschinen. (She x Verde), 3749 8. Hal- (Note—Unless otherwise stated all meetings are at 8 p.m.) The Daily Worker for a month frei to the first member of . not listed let us know, giving time and place of meeting 80 Z ae keep this. daily announcement complete "On Tuesday of every week _ On Tuesday of every we ex- pect to print La | of local a bag inch, 50¢ for half an this matter up in ‘our local should announcement will be $1 an Wong Sel aE After the Dough With Gary and Gary’s son-in-law on the university board, a begging campaign for big money in progress and Scott Nearing wanting to talk at the invitation of the College Lib- eral club, Advertising Expert Walter Dill Scott saw his way without any difficulty or hesitation. Let a rad- ieal spouter spoil the golden harvest by giving the Northwestern unde- sirable advertising among the con- servative and affluent alumni? Not while Expert Scott knows his duty to Gary and the board, So the Northwestern Liberal club did ndt hear Nearing on the camp- us. Nearing Spoke Anyhow But he talked in Evanston just the same. The Garrett Biblican Institute Discussion group had arranged a meeting for the unorthodox econ- omist, and there he spoke, listened to by many Northwestern students with the added zest of enjoying for- bidden fruit. Scott of Northwestern knew that this might happen. He took steps to prevent’ it. He wanted. the Gar- rett Biblical meeting stopped. Evi- dently they have no Garys on the Garrett board and no son-in-law of! Gary and no advertising expert as president of the institution. | Nearing talked and the next meet- ing of the Garrett group will listen to a radical with a prison fecord, no matter what the effect on the Northwestern campaign for millions. BIRTH OF NATION, K.K.K PICTURE, -STILLON SCREEN Judge Gives Verdict on Case Today The anti-negro, pro-Ku Klux Klan motion picture, “The Birth of a Na- tion,” will continue to be shown here until after today, when further argu- ment on a motion to hold Chief of Police Collins in contempt of court will be heard before Judge Sullivan. Yesterday the judge spent the entire day hearing arguments on the law jin- volved in the case and continued ‘the hearings till today. Negroes in Chicago are indignant at the delays in stopping the picture. They say that the picture plainly vio- lates a law passed in 1917 and aimed at the “Birth of a Nation,” which says that any picture inciting to race hatred cannot be shown. “The Klan is behind this picture,” said Lovett Fort-Whiteman of the staff of the Chicago Defender, a negro newspaper, “and they are try- ing to find loop holes in the law that ill permit them to show the picture as long as they can. They know thai they will finally lose out in this Aight, but they are trying to delay. e picture ridicules and defames the negro. It should be stopped at once.” Chief Collins ordered the picture stopped because he held that it wio- latea the law of 1917, ihe exhibi-( tors went vo court and asked that he be cited in con npt because he had violated an injunction obtained in| 1915, forbidding interference with showings of the picture. The | argument wss all concerned with issue wheticr the law passed in 19 set aside the injunction. Judge Sul- livan erday held that it did and said tho on!y question was whether or not the picture violated the law by inciting to race hatred. Monday night police stopped the re for the second time. After the stopping of the picture the first time Sunday night management of the Auditorium theater announced that they would continue to show it till their case was decided in court. Monday afternoon the picture was shown, but the police stopped the evening showing. Yesterday for the third time they defied the es by running the picture, The police have indicated that they will permit the picture to continue till they get a ruling from the corporation counsel on the law as it stands since Judge ts | Sullivan's di Watch the “Daily Worker” for the first installment “A \ber Oo of the Russian Ertl oun an wer Tury . : institution is as rare ‘as discover- ing a Lenin among the gocial demo- erats. Juvenile institutions were built for the workers’ children. That is why they are so rotten; that is why they are schools of crime and perversion. With overcrowded schools, in- creased employment of children and young workers, lowering of wages, a jump in the number of young criminals is inevitable. The Juven- ile Protective Association reported 3,060 complaints last year, with all their “recreational” remedies we pre- dict about a 25 per cent increase in business in the next year for them. The standard of living of the par- ents is an accurate index to the amount of crime among the youth. To decrease crime, increase wages, strengthen the organization of the workers; to eradicate crime, destroy the capitalist system which looks at everything thru the spestacles of profit. Recreation and social ac- tivities are important problems for the youth, but to try to solve them within the capitalist system is like operating around the region of the heart with a rusty saw. The tragedy of criminality among the youth is that after the young have fallen into the hands of the authorities once, for some real or fancied misdemeanor, their career of crime is assured. They are thrown into some juvenile home with expert teachers of crime, not only among the inmates, but among the “guards.” WITH THE JUNIOR SECTION Information for Parents and Children’s Leaders. Juniors Tell It To the World The Communist Children’s Move- ment thruout the world has estab- lished a system of International Cor- respondence between the children’s groups of the various countries. Thru this medium the Juniors of America are telling the world of {their rapid progress. The following communication should prove of inter- lest to cur readers: “Children of the Proletariat of America: Dear Comrades: We, the children of the proletariat of Soviet Rus- sia, are sending you this letter with the greatest joy. In the name of the group of the (Young Spartacus) we are sending you our heartiest greet- ings. In this letter we wish to in- form you about everything that is going on here. How we live, how we work, and how our group is get- ting along. We live in the Ukraine, in the City of Kherson, in the children’s e No, 7. * ae are living pretty well. We are being clothed and fed and edu- cated. Our teachers are treating us very nice. We all live like one united family, We would like, comrades, to ac- quaint you with the life of our group, how we are being educated in the Communist spirit. The leader of our group is a member of the Young Communist Le: We are having gatherings, readings, and discussions on revolutionary subjects. We are also having excursions and ‘Poster Newspapers.’ (Note: poster newspapers are written by the chil- dren. They also draw cartoons for it, and then paste them on the walls in the city.) ' We would appreciate if you would ‘write us about A chore and your life. What are the relations of the elder comrades towards you? How are you being educated? How are your Communist Children’s Groups? How are you spending your time?... We must correspond more fre- quently, in order to establish closer contact between us. Frequent cor- respondence between the children ot a‘ countries unites us in one strong family. Long live the close contact be- tween the children of the world! Long live the children of the Pro- letariat and the Communist Groups of America! ; City of Kherson, Odeskaia Guber- nia. Young Pioneers Children’s Home, No, 7.” oe @ For all information on the Junior Section of the Young Workers League and its official organ, aot hoe ” address: JUNIOR 1009 N. State Bt, Room 314, tion ordering suit to recover the oil| nies in that organization don’t be- lands, and declaring their transfer from the navy illegal: Admits Denby Wrong Lodge admitted, with much re- luctance, that Denby had been in the wrong all the way thru, but argued that there was nu “proof that he is not an honest man.” Maybe he had shown incompetence. But that was the worst that could be said of him. On the other hand, Lodge begged the senators to remember, this de- mand for. resignation’ of a cabinet member was a direct invasion of the prerogative of the executive head of the government. It violated the plan laid down in the It is a dangerous move. Borah indicated that he, too, thought congress had no right to dictate resignations from federal of- constitution. fice—it could only impeach, Pittman asked why the senate, which had exercised its constitu- tional power in confirming Denby’s nomination to the office he holds, was not equally entitled to notify the president that it had changed its judgment as to Denby’s fitness to hold pubiic office. He agreed with Borah, however, in asking Tramm<@! to withdraw the Denby resignation measure as an amendment to the to let the senate deal ‘separately with it, Trammell consented. More Raw Justice Wanted “Let’s have less| of refined justice and a little raw justice right here,” was Senator Howell’s proposal. He offered a substitute resolution on the lease cancellation issue, where- | by the government would proceed to | seize the naval oil lands, expel the | Sinclair and Doheny companies, on the ground that they are trespass- ers, and then bring suit to recover the price of all oil thus far taken from these reserves. The senate de- feated this plan without a roll call, just before it adopted, unanimously, the Walsh resolution. During the morning of this final day of debate on the cancellation measure, President Coolidge had, for the first time, called to his of- fice, any of the Democratic senator: Walsh, with Robinson, the minority leaders, saw Coolidge for a few minutes, and talked over the pros- ecutions which congress is now com- pelling him to begin. Republican leaders were also consulted by the president, separately from the Dem- ocrats. The game seemed to be one of sidetracking the resolutions de- manding that Denby resign. The town was full of reports that Cool- idge had arranged for “voluntary patriotic” resignation by Denby and Daugherty, but had found them dis- inclined to get out unless he should publicly guarantee their characters. A. F. of L. Hits Daugherty The A. F. of L. News Letter has come to the support of the movement aimed at forcing Daugherty out of the cabinet. It contrasts his haste in attacking the railroad shopmen, thru injunctions, with his utter disregard of kis duty of law-enforce- ment in the Teapot Dome case. There is now no press statement from Daugherty, such as he fre- quentiy gave out during the shop- men’s strike, as to how he would protect “government by law,” The suggestion is made that a few in- dividu: in this case may be made scapegoats, but that the higher-ups will go free and keep the swag they have hidden. Know a worker who needs a working class education? Get him to read THE DAILY WORKER. oil lease cancellation resolution, and | | lieve in a real organized fight for the protection of workingmen, A | committee representing the united front movement proposed to the con- | ference of the United Hebrew Trades {to enter into the united front of | thousands of workers who are intent upon starting a tremendous cam- paign. against the exception laws being planned by the government. But Max Pine delivered a lengthy speech the long and short of which was that the United Hebrew Trades , is the whole universe and can go | it alone, that it doesn’t want to go into partnership with anyone. And the conference of the United He- | brew Trades sustained its hero, Max Pine, by voting down the proposal to really do something. ‘Frozen Anti-Toxin ’ Makes 25 Students Ill in Massachusetts | BOSTON, Mass., Feb. 7.—Twenty- five students at the McElwain school, | Bridgewater, inoculated with frozen “toxin anti-toxin,” have become in- fected and are ill at their home, it was learned today. With 19 students already ill at Con- cord Academy, Concord, the treat- ments appeared rapidly assuming the | Proportions of a scandal. Doctors were making a feverish in- | vestigation as reports of additional cases camein: *~ Get unity thru the Labor Party! MAX BLOOM'S RESTAURANT 3546 ROOSEVELT ROAD Telephone Crawford 2450 tots + | shegeetecteteetecteatocdetoadoodeeeeteetenteceatenteedetedeteaeont 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 1453. Stationery, Music and all Periodicals. Come and get a Debs calendar free. Res. Phone Crawford 0331 Violin Office Phone Rockwell 0112 Teacher HENRY MOSS ORIENTAL JAZZ BAND Music Furnished for All Occasions | Members American Fed. of Musicians 1215 S, LAWNDALE AVENUE Chie PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK DENTIST Rendering Expert Dental Service for 20 Year 645 SMITHFIELD ST., Near 7th Ave. 1627 CENTER AVE., Cor. Arthur St. Phone Spaulding 4670 ASHER B, PORTNOY & CO, Painters and Decorators PAINTERS’ SUPPLIES timates on New and Old Work MILWAUKEE AVE., CH Est 2619 SECOND FEB. 16, 8 Van Buren RED REVEL ASHLAND AUDITORIUM ANNUAL O'CLOCK and Ashland

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