The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 20, 1924, Page 4

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et Page Four THE DAILY WORKER Wednesday, February 20, 1924 CALIFORNIA PAPER HAS COLUMN TALK ON DAILY WORKER Finds It Hates Liberal! Capitalism There never was a paper started in America that attracted as much attention from as many different kinds of people as has the DAILY WORKER. Here is what the San Jose, Cali- fornia, News has to say about us in a column editorial, “A Communist Daily. “A daily newspaper which is avowedly devoted to Communist prin- ciples was established in Chicago on January 13 of this year. It is called the DAILY WORKER, and it is edit- ed by J. Louis Engdahl, one or tne American Communists who has sur- vived various prosecutions, “The newspaper is financed by the Workers Party, which is the name of the Communist organization in Amer- ica. This party has adopted tactics far different from those which have prevailed in radical organizations of the past in America, “The Workers Party, the organiza- tion of the American Communists, has adopted a new method which is really a combination of all the other methods. This group goes in for that education of working people in the principles of “strict Marxian Social- ism” which is the characteristic of the Socialist Labor party; for that political realism and dickering which is characteristic of the Socialist party; and for that strong emphasis on economic action thru industrial labor unions which is characteristic of the I. W. W. This determination to use any method that is convenient at the moment, this ability to “bore from within” any sort of organiza- tion, causes the members of this group to be active in labor unions, farmers’ organizations, and radical political parties of all sorts. It also brings down on these men the charge that they are sneaks and traitors and so on. But the leaders of this party seem to be as hardheadedl; realistic as oil magnates or Wall Street stock manipulators, and ‘bringing home the bacon’ is their one object. “These tactics have obviously been learned from Russia, where the Com- munist party has long followed such methods, and where the actual con- trol of government has taught them much practical shrewdness which they can pass on to their American fellow believers. “Their new daily paper will, of course, have a hard time of it, but Communists seem to enjoy hard times. Offers Liberalism as Remedy. ‘Assuming, as most Californians do, that Communism is a wrong- headed political doctrine, or at the very least that it is a desperate remedy, what is the best way to head it off? Most newspapers and or- ganizations in California seem to think that bitter denunciation and jailing of its leaders is the best way. We do not believe this. We believe that intelligent study of basic indus- trial and financial problems, coupled with a determined effort to improve the evil conditions to which the Com- munists noisily call attention, is the only sure way of meeting their propaganda. Liberal Capitalism, or Progressivism, is the only political doctrine which has any hope of meet- ing Communistic propaganda suc- cessfully. Pigheaded conservatism, standpatism, simply will not do the work. The Communists themselves r e this, and an examination of the DAILY WORKER shows that it hates and fears the Progressives more than it does the old-line stand- patters,” Ever see any labor paper in any part of the country drive the capital- ist press to devote a column to dis- cussing it? There’s a reason. Silk Workers Get $8 a Week. WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Feb. 19. — Girls employed in the silk mills in . ‘School Board Seeks To Sabotage Fire Bureau’s Probe Into Firetrap Ss The board of education, after having whitewashed itself in the recent investigation it conducted into the fire hazards of the public schools, is now making every effort to stop the bu- reau of fire prevention from co: on firetrap schools. mpleting its independent report As was told in the DAILY ‘WORKER last Monday, the special investigation, manager of the board of educa- tion, was announced as com- pleted. It is now announced that the inspection will con- tinue until all the schools in the city are visited. In inspecting the schools, the board of education will use three men. One man will be from the bureau of buildings and one man from the bureau of fire prevention and one from the engineering department of the board of education. The bureau of fire prevention is short handed and when one man is assigned to special duty such as school inspection there are- not enough left to do the work of the regular work of the bureau. Frank McAuliffe who has been assigned to work for the board of education »was in charge of all school inspection work for the bureau of fire prevention. Recently the chief of the bureau in a letter to the mayor, said that his office was at work on a report of the fire trap schools in Chicago and as soon as it was completed he would make public the report and a list of the unsafe schools, together with rec- ommendations. McAuliffe was in charge of this work. The School Board’s Trick. Before this list was completed and made public the board of education had McAuliffe assigned to work with them on their white washing investi- gation of the schools. This effective- ly prevented the bureau of fire pre- vention from immediately complet- ing its report on fire trap schools. When the white washing investi- gation was announced as completed and McAuliffe went back to work on the independent report of the bureau of fire prevention, the board of education had him reassigned to work with them on this latest inspection. They are again preventing an official impartial report on fire trap schools being made public, There are more than 375 buildings used as public schools in the city and if each of them is to be thoroly in- spected it will be possible to keep the bureau of fire prevention from making its independant report for a long time. 31 Men to 450,000 Buildings. The bureau of fire prevention has 450,000 buildings in Chicago to in- spect with a force of 31 men. It is plain that with that force of men to do that amount of work, the desire of the board of education to delay their report on the schools can be eccomplished by keeping the man who is their school expert busy at another Job. The inspection of the thirty schools that was completed shows plainly that the board has the ability to whitewash itself by that sort of an inspection and that they will do the same thing in this latest attempt. Plainly it is the hope of the board of education to drag this latest in- spection out over a long period of | time and let the prctests that have been and up against fire trap condi- tions in the schools be forgotten. In the meanwhile thousands of children in Chicago are daily attend- ing schools where their lives are menaced and all efforts to get an im- partial official report of the condi- tion are being stopped by the board of education. P. O. Department Sabotaging Wage Query of Congress (Special to The Daily Worker) WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. — For more than a month the postoffice de- partment has failed to comply with requests from the committees of con- gress for data on which to judge this 100 percent American town are whether the postoffice wage scale is getting as low as $7 and $8 a week.| adequate. No explanation of a con- Mayor Hart and his friends, who at- vincing kind has been given for this tempted to suppréss a Lenin memorial | delay. meeting, view without alarm Amer- ican industrial conditions that @ maximum of $13 a week to workers except for forewomen. Most of the girls get the $7-$8 weekly rate. The hours are long. Toilet facilities are in many cases too filthy for des- The administration is silently _afford| blocking every attempt to give the girl silk] postal employes a wage scale in keep- ing with the advanced cost of living. Cicero English Branch, The Cicero, Ill., English branch of eription except in a health inspector’s| the Workers Party meets every third report. Work Daily for “The Daily!" NIST CUI Sunday in the month at 2 p. m., at Lithuanian Liberty Hall, West 14th St. and 49th Court, Cicero, Ill. A Why and How I Became a Member of ; child labor, and of capitalism. I the Junior Section By LEO GRANOFF, Age 11 I have w friend who works in a fur factory. He has to comb the camphored fur and gets sick ape help to air t the smell. He has very little and works under an electric light, $5 a week, This friena in my class in public the teacher always tells is a free country and man and woman has called reokown, the shatshnas of it yy to become rich and |; Sy stg Tle Pay of the Unit- a Boor the} about it members and I went America and 1) down oes city office, Local New out that the group wae or-| York, and gave in the youth of the working| addresses director. of “Sas branch was formed, was in Pennsylvania for about four months, and I saw chi! the ages of 10 to 12 years slaving in the mines as breaker boys for the simple reason that they had to cop up the family, because r parents did not make a liv- ing wage. I tried to join this organization, but found out that I was too “rr They informed me that I co join the Junior Group, but I found it there was no such group , the district in which So I made up my mind that I would form a branch. I got their names and and they sent a comrade euro unten ITIP iIdren from’ under the dirgction of the business THE THEATRE By D’FERRIER IV, Lenore Ulric, as “Kiki,” is ideal in a role, which at first appears to be actress-proof, but which effect, upon examination, is discovered to have been produced fully as much by the ability of the actress as by the good qualities of the part written for her by the playwright. She is a disturbing and perplexing creature, the gamin who makes her living as a member of the chorus in the music halls; but, at the end, despite her excited career of unre- strained insurgency, we are inclined to believe that she is, as she tells us, “a good girl.’ She is, in a way, universal arid not limited to one na- tion of city. She is the prototype of thousands of shop girls, chorus girls and other members of her sex, who have had to fight for their jobs, that they might be clothed and fed; their few tawdry pleasures, and even their characters. It is therefore perfectly logical that Kiki, used to making her own way, is willing to dare every- thing to win the mate of her choice— which is in brief the subject oz the play in which she is presented. “Kiki” is reported as having helped make theatrical history in France, from which country it was imported by David Belasco, one of the most sagacious of our own theatrical en- trepeneurs, and it seems that its reputation is well deserved. True, fidelity to character delineation is sometimes sacrificed to produce humorous effects, but this tendency to burlesque is not overdone, and it |remains a most live and moving story. ne The pathetic little figure of Kiki, jgaudily dressed, dishonest, under- nourished and compelled to be con-| tinually wary of the rest of the| world, is most human and appealing | when, with nose and eyes red with bitter tears and clad unbecomingly in pink underclothing, she sobs des- perately to the stage-doorkeeper her adoration of the unattainable theatre manager. i fi The staging of the play, wiich is presented at the Powers theaire is very well done, and the members of the cast, while none of great reput tion, do well enough by their presen: parts to forestall adverse criticism. “Kiki” is a play well worth seeing. Kropotkin Museum Opened in Moscow with Many Exhibits | MOSCOW, Feb. 19—A museum of | Peter Kropotkin has been opened here. The founders have contrived to give a complete picture of the famous Anarchist and writer’s life. They have been greatly handicapped by the fact that most of the exhibits are still in London, where Kropotkin lived in exile, until the Russian Re- volution enabled him to return home. Translations of Kropotkin’s works in all languages, including the Chin- ese and the Japanese are included in the Moscow exhibits. Besides numer- ous political works, there are also ex- hibited his geological and geographic- al works, which are well known in scientific circles thruout the world. Plan Supply Co-operative. When building material men try to boycott employers of union labor hereafter they are going to be met by a monster building supply co- operative controlled by the building unions and ready to supply fair em- RUSSIAN EXPORTS! DOUBLED IN YEAR, KRASSIN REPORTS Demand Elimination of Commission Agents (Special to The Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Feb, 19.—Much. inter- est ree srachel to Mr. Krassin’s re- port on Russian foreign trade in 1922-1923, delivered at the AlLUn ion Conference of Russian Trade Representatives, now. being held at Moscow. . The People’s Commisary of Foreign Trade accompanied his report with a statement of Russian foreign trade policy. Exports from the Union of Soviet Republics reached 210,608,000 gold roubles in. 1922-23, which. is more than twice the value of the exports in the preceding year. As for the current season, there is ample ground to expect that Russian exports will amount to at least a half billion gold roubles, The scheme of export- ing 220,000,000 poods of grain will be carried out in full. Credit In Corn Exports. _ The system of crediting operations in Soviet corn exports is being suc- cessfully developed: thus three con- tracts to this effect have been con- cluded with Russo-British Mixed Company for grain exports from Rus- sia, as well as contracts with a large French concern, an Austrian and a Dutch firm—all of which have agreed to advance credits on security of breakstuffs in Russian ports. Con- siderable progress has likewise been achieved in the export of timber, flax, oil and fur. While imports into Russia have de- creased in quantity, they have gained |in quality. The former circumstance —remarks Mr. Krassin—contributes to the trade balance being a favor- able one, and this feature will fur- |ther develop during the current year, while the latter cirgumstance, name- lly, the higher specification of goods |imported, is occasioned by a substan- |tial decrease of the imports of food- stuffs. The main tasks facing the union in the field of its trade relations with foreign countries are: a broader at- traction of foreign capital; the in- |tensification and large variety of ex- ‘ports; the elimination of all inter- |mediary and commission agents; the promoting of the organization of |mixed companies. Bar “Cheap Foreign Goods.” The Soviet Government, further de- |clares the People’s Commissary, will |not allow “commercial intervention,” |nor can it, having in view the very | interests of the peasantry, supply them with cheap foreign goods, in detriment to the resuscitation of Russia’s own industries. | Concluding his speech by remark- ing that “the economic construction of all great countries had always been carried along the lines of the participation therein of foreign capi- tal,” Mr. Krassin states his belief, that “the day is not far off when we shall receive a loan by foreign capital. It is most probable that in this work- ing year the Union of Soviet Repub- lies will, on some conditions or other, receive necessary foreign credits.” Women March, No Queues Seen, at Chinese Funeral NEW YORK, Feb, 19—When China- town was Chinatown they used come to Chin Tong Way and ask his service acording to the wisdom of their forefathers. That was before west clutched eg and taught it to jazz and type e. i! Chin os Way sat outside his general merchandise store puffing a mystically engraved pipe and sadly watched the passing of old Chinese customs. They chided Chin Tong Way about ployers with anything they need.|;eeping his queue but he would say That is the program launched by the | “jt has never been the custom for the Portland convention of the Ame, Federation of Labor and now being developed by committee of interna-|of wisdom has tional building unions. Election in Louisiana. NEW ORLEANS, La., Feb. 19— other state officials who failed to se- cure a sufficiently large majority in the first primary held Jan. 16. The eben i | contest is be- tween pes L.. Fuqua of Baton Rouge and Hewitt Bouanchaud, of Point Coupec, who has served as lieutenant governor during the John M. Parker administration. Oil Has Right of Way. WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.—Stand- atters and progressives are each try- ing to take comfort from the fact dal and deal with the disclosures. Measures for emergency relief of bankrupt farmers have had long dis- passage. Debate on taxation are still future. Against Labor for Young, WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 19.— Senator Shortridge, of California, proposed an amendment to the con- today to nominate a governor and i cussion in committee, but are not near|for the pui ; has not} abroad, will be pecans — Railroad hearings|the production in the gan |‘fox to cut his own tail.” Now Chin Tong Way at 74 years ae to the land of gold poppies. inatown sent him to his ancestors with the most splendid funeral ever seen in oriental New tringed instruments played the “dragon’s mourning ie . Contrary to custens, linen ‘women were in the procession and there was not a queue to be seen. Russia Will Spend 5,000,000 Roubles on Farm Machinery om Worker) (Special to The MOSCOW, Feb. 19.—According to that the senate is doing almost noth-|the program of the Government Pla ing but investigate the oil lands scan-| Committee five million rubles will be spent for building tractors and harv- est machinery, The money, which was assigned se of) pa tractors mn building up tractors in Russia, Most of the Fageirs. be spent, in organizing the building of at the Charkoff Locomotive Experts Meet in Paris. PARIS, Feb. 19.—Committee of orks, stitution that would prohibit perso: under under 8 years of age fom Jal ne nip ot General Ch _G. and to regulate conditions met today and discussed such labor, ciples upon which yd O’Henry’s Partner Dies. we * “4 rape dos a ie O'leney in, the pub of, the| for the “I-want-torn magazine “The Rolling Stone” at } L ITTLE by little we are being let in on the recommendations of “Hell-and- Maria” Dawes and the other American expert saviors of Germany. What we expected to happen is about to be announced as the accepted road to salvation that is to be forced upon Germany by the big international business interests, It appears that the Dawes program will have two out- standing features. The first is, the payment of German reparations not thru the medium of direct gold marks but thru the medium of German goods put on the world market. In the everyday parlance of the factory workers this means that the Allied imperialists are to have the German workingmen pay the reparations by working overtime and turning out sufficient com- modities which, when placed on the gold that the French and Belgian coyetously. This plan will not only save Ger world market, will exchange for the imperialists have been seeking so man capitalism but will strengthen it. At the same time the Dawes scheme will satisfy the big interests of) the victorious Allied countries. Should this program be put over, the German workingmen will be turned into coolies and capitalism will have a longer lease on the life of the vanquished and victors alike. The other basic feature of the D: lawes proposal is the establishment of a gigantic bank in Germany, This bank is to have foreign control, imme- diately issue gold currency to the amount of $750,000,000, and operate on an actual gold guarantee of 50%. Thru this arrangement Dawes hopes to have the Allied bankers be the dictators of German industry and control the very life-blood of the country, for under modern capitalist production the “control of exchange and credit unavoidably: means the control of the whole circulatory system of economic relatignships. In view of the huge sum of money needed for the establishment of the bank, it is clear that American financiers will have to step in and be the real receivers of Ger- many. This banking plan ties the German workers hopelessly to the chariots of the international capitalist imperialists. Every American worker and farmer and the working masses of every country in the world are menaced by this outrageous proposal to turn the great German working class into coolies. The enslavement of the German workers will tend to lower the livin ig standards of the workers of every other country. Such a sweeping victory for the capitalist imperialists over Germany’s toiling masses will make arrogant in their dealings with the ploiters to force new harsh terms on the employers of every country more workers and will encourage the ex- their own laboring classes, RUBBER AND OIL PREVENT FREEING OF PHILIPPINES Financial ‘Expert Frank About U. S. Game By SCOTT NEARING (Federated Press Staff Writer) Under the assumption that “gov- ernment should be the partner of capital,” Charles Hodges, assistant director, division of Oriental Com- merce and politics, New York univer- sity, writes of The Business Back- ground of the Philippine Question, in the Annalist for Jan. 28, 1924. The continued occupation of the Philippines is, Hodges declares “in dollar-and-cents terms a matter of investment.” On the one hand, the islands occupy a strategic position in the east. On the other hand, there are very large American investments in all of the leading business activi- ties of the archipelago. Islands Worth $5,500,000,000. The Philippines lie “at the cross- roads of the greatest trade routes of the future.” Consequently, they are exposed to. “aggression from. every corner of the earth.” As yet, the land is largely uncultivated; forests reserves of 64,880 square miles be- long, 99%, to the Philippine people; the total wealth of the islands, despite their - underdevelopment, stands at $5,500,000,000. “The crux of the situation,” Hodges writes, “is the titanic. struggle for raw material now being waged by the great industrial powers of the world. In it, the tropics have as- sumed a new significance. From the standpoint of the Americans on the firing line of this bitter competition n the orient for the essential products and strategic raw. materials, the Philippines seem to mean much to to | the future of the United States. “They see America virtually lack- ing tropical possessjons—but 40% of the tropics are independent; the European powers have extended their tropical dominion to roundly 59% of i the earth’s ‘heat belt,’ and the United States has under its flag not even 1%. Rubber, cocoanut oil, hemp, sugar, petroleum, become investments in patriotism.” Or, would it be more correct to say that patriots invest in sugar, petroleum and rubber? Why Independence Is Denied. But, whatever the wordifig, the facts remain the same. The people of the Philippines demand the inde- pendence which has been promised them by the responsible officials of the United States during more than 20 years—promised them verbally and thru the legislative enactment of the Jones law. — The answer is simple and direct: the islands contain certain essential resources upon which the business prosperity of some of the most er- ful economic interests in the United States must depend déring the next 25 years. Since these same interests are in control of the machinery of govern- ment and the decision of: essential matters of publi¢ policy, it does not take any great imagination to predict that the Philippines will never get any important measure of self. ernment so long as rubber, oil and sugar continue to dominate Ameri- can public life. Bryan On Stump Again. MIAMI, Fla, Feb. 19.—William Jennings Bryan went on the stump again today, campaigning for election eigh as delegate at large to the National ‘Democratic Convention. ryan, in a tour of the state, also will advocate the candidacy of Dr. A. Murphyree, president of the state uni- v id Bryan as a e! z candidaté for the Democratic Presi- general prin-| dential nomination: Against Higher Taxes. ST. PAUL, Mint Feb. 19-—Taxes will not go any pe he is Mer ied ier ete rox, in a talk before the SAXONY IN THROES OF HUNGER AND Misery and Militarism Rule Together By LOUIS P. LOCHNER (Staff Correspondent of The Federated Press) DRESDEN, Germany, Feb, 19.— While the military commander of Saxony, General Mueller, prides him- self on the fact that “law and order have been re-established in Saxony,” 40% of the population of this indus- trial state are dependent upon public charity, either governmental or pri- vate, for their sustenance, Saxony is, next to the Ruhr val- ley, the most closely crowded area of Germany, Almost five million per- Sons are crowded into an area of not quite 6000 square miles. One million are industrial workers, normally em- ployed in 38,800 factories. Some 650,000 Saxon workers are employed in the smaller towns (when there is employment), and only 380,000 in the | big centers like Dresden, Leipsic and Chemnitz. - Of the million or more Saxon worker, 308,685 are jobless and de- pendent upon meager government doles, added to which is the charity of organizations like the American Quakers. Some 295,368 are working only part time and must receive par+ tial aid from the government; and | 582,425 are part time workers- who |receive no doles, é | T was told by the millitary com- mander that 157,000 families were looking for homes. Over 4000 fam- ilies are confined to one room each; 36,423 families have had to take up quarters with relatives who them- selves have but one bedroom. The examining physicians for the public schools aid sing the same tune: the children are badly undernour- ished. In Dresden 90% of the school children are undernourished. When one considers this back- aes of misery and of poverty, the andbills distributed by the League of Saxon Industrials strike one al- most grotesque: “Law, order and security have re- turned to Saxony. Acts of terroriza- tion, plundering, forcible demands for higher wages, maltreatment of em- ployers have fortunately stopped since the federal government has in-| tervened.” Scientist Finds Active Intellectual ‘TRAITOR VARNEY’S "PAL JOINS HIM IN ATTACKING LABOR{ Minneapolis _ Workers Party DenouncesAuthor MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Feb. 19— Following. the publication of a pam- phlet here by one John Gabriel Soltis containing an attack on all progres- sive and radical elements, including the Communists, in the labor move- ment, the District Executive Commit- tee of the Workers Party of America has issued the following statement: The attention of the Executive Committee of District No. 9 of the Workers Party of America has been called to a recent literary abortion of J, G. Soltis, in which he launches an attack against many of the most active and influential labor men of | ments made in the pamphlet; the "LAW AND ORDER”) Minneapolis. It is not our desire in this statement to pass on the state- individuals concerned are well able to do that. But in as much as the’ name of our organization is used thruout the book, and in as much as he assumed to speak as a commun. ist, we wish to emphatically deny that he has any connection with our movement. We might also say that judging from his writings and speeches he has shown no understanding of the principles of tactics of communism. The Workers Party of America is a constructive force adapting its tactics to the realitfes of the struggle for freedom from capital- ist exploitation. We are working to amalgamate the trade unions into great industrial unions and to unite the workers into a class Farmer-Labor party. We have worked in the past and will continue to wor with all ele- ments who will support this pro- gram in the interest of the work- ing farmers and industrial workers of America. (Signed) District Executive Committee, Workers Party of America, District No. 9. Soltis is an ex-member of the I. W. W., an ex-member of the Socialist Party, an ex-employe of the Non- partisan League and was a close friend of Harold Lord Varney, the pseudo-intellectual member of the Industrial Workers of the World who became tired of contact with the workingelass and hired out as an employee of the department of justice some two years ago after launching attacks in the capitalist press on his former. associates. Amalgamation means strength! Russian Labor Will Publish Lenin Book on Trades Unions (Special to The Daily” Worker) MOSCOW, Feb. 19.—The Central Executive Committee of the Russian Trades Unions will publish a book, “Lenin and the Trades Unions.” Lenin’s writings on the trade unions and a complete explanation of his in- fluence on them will be included. Soviets Running First Street Cars in Big Oil Town (Special to The Daily Worker) — BAKU, Feb. 19th—tThe first street car system built under the Soviet regime began operations here on Jan. 20th. It took 11 months to build the system, When you have finished reading this paper, give it to another worker. Let him read your copy for a few days. Then get him to subscribe. ‘ . The Office of the Representative of the Life at Moscow (Special to The Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Feb. 19—Sven Hedin, Swedish explorer and scientist, an- nounces that he will do all he can to t the Swedish nation to recognize Le as soon as he reaches Stock- olm. ““We are neighbors”—he declared— “and we must live in good gaat Besides, both our countries are in need of trade and other mutual rela- tions established on a sound basis. Each of them is in a position to pro- vide much of what the other needs.” The famous Swedish explorer said an indelible impression was made upon him by his weekly stay in Mos- ps So the Mad he and as he inspected the city and visited various scientific institutions, phos rl egy gn the fact that scientific life has not been. discontinued in Moscow since the Revolution, Speaking of the Nobel prize, Mr. Sven Hedin, who is one of the teen academicians—members of marked that it would be “a great to’hhim to ase one. of the; Nébal pelts awarded to a Russian scholar, G 's Condit WASHINGTON, Febs tone: condition of Senator Frank Greene, of Vermont, seri ded Friday night by a let in a battle between prohi cnitien™ Tis phsicien Dr, Daniel L, Borden, announced. i Got-antty thra the Labor The L % Party! Fens cee ertemenetteatiinnnacladited = dmatseals beats at a wonderful] 9 leries, he deeply | ¥ the jury which award the prize, re-|¥ 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. KKK NNN NNN NINN IIE SLIP COVERS Including Labor and Material Davenport - - $9.50 Chair - - - - $5.50 Satisfaction Absolutely Guaranteed Also a wonderful selection of imported f GOLLIN BROS. Formerty With Mandel Bros E done in your own home dis

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