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Page Two FALL AS THE FRANC DROPS Poincare Threats Ignored by Finance Commission (Special to The ily Worker) PARIS, Mar. 9.—The French Foreign Office has issued its long awaited Yellow Book, with documents showing the French negotiations for her se- curity, during and after the peace conference. The documents show that France envisaged detachment of the Rhineland from Ger- many and creation of an inde- pendent state, under the League of Nations. Despite the utmost efforts of the government to uphold it, the franc crashed to new lows as the money market opened here Saturday. At 10.20 a. m., dollars were quo- ted at 26 francs 80 centimes each and the pound sterling at 115 francs, both new low records for ~French paper money. There was wild excitement as buy- ers and sellers scrambled in the market and quotations fluctuated rapidly. Ignoring Premier Poincare’s de- mands and threats the finance com- mission yestetday decided by a vote of 18 to 7 to recommend rejection of several degrees in the government financial project. This is regarded as a serious blow to the Poincare government. The premier declared Friday he would resign, unless the senate commission approved the decrees before Tues- day. Premier Poincare summoned the eabinet to meet immediately to de- cide upon its course of action, Premier Poincare appeared before the senate finance commission this afternoon and demanded it report out the financial projects exactly as they were voted by the chamber in time for the senate to discuss them on Thursday. Otherwise, the premier said, the eabinet stands to resign. Poincare re-affirmed the necessity for the senate’s voting the financial projects as quickly as possible to halt .the fall of the franc. Voting of the projects will im- prove the money market immediate- ly, he said. “The premier previously demanded that the commission report out the financial program by Tuesday, but the senate adjourned until Thursday. The sub-committee of experts un- der Owen D. Young of the United States met yesterday and resumed discussion of the question of allied control of German industry and transportation, in connection with the general program to determine German ability to pay reparations. The main committee continued un- official discussion of the plan to create a German bank under allied supervision. It was believed final touches to the scheme will be com- pleted Monday or Tuesday. Ludendorff’s Friends So Insulting That Prosecutor Quits MUNICH, March 9.—The trial of General Ludendorff, Adolf Hitler and eight others for treason, was broken off spectacularly as the state secutor declared he would no longer put up with attacks and in. sults such as those to which he’ had heen subjected by attorneys for the defense. It was finally agreed to continue the hearing tomorrow, altho the prosecutor had at first declared he would not continue at all. So many challenges to duels have been hurled at General Lossow, for- mer head of the Bavarian army, as a result of his alleged treatment of General Ludendorff, as told by wit- nesses, that Lossow is unable to ac- cept them all. The general was charged with having been in sym- pathy with the beer cellar putsch that failed last November and with deserting the cause. Protect the Foreign Born! BUSY TONIGHT? Volunteer workers are needed at the office of THE DAILY WORKER Phone: Lincoln 7680 and say you'll be up tonight to help THE DAILY WORKER 1640 N. Halsted St. THE DAILY WORKER Make His Feathers Fly! OBERT M. BUCK, editor of The New Majority, official organ of the Chicago Federation of Labor, speaking to a body of striking garment workers last week, declared that Robert E. Crowe, state’s attorney for Cook County, whose office is in the Criminal Courts building, should be “on the other side of the partition which separates his office from the County Jail,” meaning that Crowe should be behind the bars. Mr. Buck said: “In 1908 when I was one of a com- mittee investigating election got enough evidence on this penitentiary for a stiff term. The “Committee of Fift frauds in the 19th ward, we blackbird to send him to the ” een” appointed by the presi- dent of the Chicago Federation of Labor to investigate Robert E. Crowe’s conduct during the strike should lose no time in exposing his record to the workers. That his shady reputation is not one of recent origin is indicated by the statements of Editor Buck. What are the crimes committed by Robert E. Crowe for which he should have been placed behind the bars? It is up to the ‘Committee of Fifteen” to throw the spot- light of publicity on the record of this agent of the Chicago Chamber of Commerce and the open shoppers. The’“‘Committee of Fifteen” should bring to light the facts concerning State’s Attorney Crowe’s use of armed sluggers against the dress makers in this strike. They should ask why Mayor William E. Dever, alleged friend of Labor, placed Captain John Alcock, notorious Cossack, at the head of the large force assigned to strikebreaking work, Captain Alcock was retired to the record department on Mayor Dever’s assumpti trotted out to lead the strike ion of office, but he is now police. ‘ Since this strike was called it is quite clear that all the officials of Cook County, including the state’s attor- ney’s office, the office of the Mayor and that of the Chief of Police were in a united front against the striking dress makers. The workers of Chicago, who are misled into vot- ing for these capitalist lackeys, should know the facts. It is the duty of the committee to give them the facts It is no exaggeration to say that the without any delay. success or victory of the strike depends to a great degree on the vigor with which Mr. Fitzpatrick’s committee will prosecute this investigation . The rank and file of the workers of Chicago are prepared to rally behind the strik- ing dressmakers. They know that defeat for those on strike today will mean a defeat for them tomorrow. They want a lead. They expect the “Committee of Fifteen” to give them that lead. Every hour counts. The bosses have the capitalist press, the courts, the state’s attor- ney, the mayor and his police on their side. depend on organized labor for assistance. labor movement of Chicago The strikers It is time the should throw itself whole- heartedly into the battle and prove to the bosses that the workers know how to put up a united front as well as they can. LET THE THORO! LET US HAVE INVESTIGATION BE QUICK AND ACTION! SECOND WEEK OF GARMENT STRIKE GETS UNDER WAY Citizens to Talk to Mayor Today (Continued from page 1.) present to the mayor. He cannot escape responsibility. A Dozen Investigators. “All last week a dozen representa- tives of the committee have given their time to a study of the strike facts and the civil liverties’ issues in- volved. They have been on the picket line every day as impartial observors. They have seen girls walking quietly along placed under arrest. They have seen gcts of brutality against strikers. The attitude of the police is aggressive and disagreeable to visitors to the parts of the city where the strike is going.on. “The worst conduct by the regular police force has occurred on West Adam street in the vicinity of the Weiss company. Here policemen, of- ficers attached to State’s Attorney Crowe’s office and numerous thugs of private detective agencies are con- gregated and several acts of brutality have taken place against the strikers. The Weiss company zone has al- ready been shown up by the DAILY WORKER. Here the bosses’ Crowe has been paying his political obliga- tions to Weiss by concentrating on breaking the strike in pis factory. Second Week of Strike Begins. The beginning of the second week of the strike of garment workers this morning will see the return of 350 workers to 21 shops which settled with the union Saturday. This makes a to- tal of 54 shops employing more 900 workers which have settled. The workers who have returned to work contribute 10% of their wages to the strike committee for carrying on the strike, Injunction Failed Boss, The truth of the union motto, “In- junctions Won't Sew Clothes,” be- came so evident to the firm of Jack Shure & Co. yesterday that they told | the “union officials that they would sign up today for the return of their | Shure | & Co, was one of those for which | Dudley Taylor had procured an in- employes to union conditions. junction from Judge Denis Siillivan. They told Perlstein that the strike the last charge was a bill for $5,000 ices in trying to break the strike. of 33 S, Market street. sociation, pendent shops, Boss Attacks Girl Striker. 317 So. Market street. in an auto with a girl. chine and tried to talk to her. of the head. knocked out. Goldberg. She was taken to the §S. Florence. disorderly conduct. was released. Keep Tab on Mayor Dever, this morning. who was also arrested Saturday morn. ing, will be arraigned this morning. told to behave b a result of the vi Labor. The union learned yesterday that J. — CABINET NEAR Pipwe Is a Blackbird! was proving too expensive for them: which Taylor sent them for his serv- Another firm which settled today was that of Matthew Amsterdam, | Florence Corn, one of the strikers, will appear in South Clark St. police court this morning to ask for a war-| rant charging assault against Leonard Wolman, who owns a dress shop at K Saturday morning Wolman drove up to his shop Florence Corn who was doing picket duty walked up to the girl as she got from the ma- Wol- man sneaked up on Miss Corn and struck her a vicious blow on the back | She was completely When she came to she was being hustled into a patrol wagon with Elianor Sadlowska and Emma Clark St. police station where the of- ficer who had arrested her said that she had beaten up Wolman and the girl-with him. He admitted that he had not seen Florence beat anyone but that he had seen Wolman beat The charge against Emma Goldberg and /Elianor Sadlowska was that they had been with Florence. Be- cause Elianor had been arrested sev- eral times before for picketing she and Florence Corn were charged with Emma Goldberg The case against both girls will njcome up in §S, Clark St. police court Sophie Altschuller, Because picketing was only done for a half a day Saturday the strikers have no idea if the police have been Mayor Dever, as it of a committee of four from the Chicago Federation of NEW SINCLAIR, DOHENY ROLE IS TO BE EXPOSED McLean Tries to Shield Cal Coolidge (Continued from Page 1) ill health and that no one would blame him if he changed his attor- ney general.” President Coolidge replied, accord. ing to Bennett, that he did not want Daugherty to resign because he had, “several Important cases pending.” Who Is “Principal?” Bennett’s testimony was forced from him after Senator Curtis had taken the stand and denied that he was “the principal” mentioned in the telegrams from Bennett to Mc- Lean in Palm Beach. Recalled to ex- plain further following Curtis’ tes- timeny, Bennett insisted he had two or three conversations with Curtis which the senator had not told about. He at first declined to reveal them. on the ground that he did not want to spread scandal but when he was ordered to tell, he said he first con- sulted Curtis, on instructions from McLean to get advice about how the Washington Post should handle the oil scandal in its columns. Says Bennett Is Here. The outstanding mystery—who is the principal mentioned in the tele- gram exchanged between Edward B, McLean in Palm Beach and his agents in Washington during the early stages of the oil probe—remains as much a mystery as ever following yesterday’s hearings of the senate committee. Senator Curtis, republican whip, testified under oath that much of the testimony given by Ira EB. Ben- nett, editor of McLean’s Washington Post, was either false or misleading and Bennett sought to refresh the ‘|senator’s memory on conversations which the latter said never occurred. Mystery Deepens. Out of the maze of conflicting ut- terances—Curtis seeking to show he couldn’t be the “pringipal” and Ben- nett endeavoring to demonstrate why Curtis was the “principal’ the ques- tion of who really is the “principal” remained unproved in the minds of the committee. 4 Daugherty Refuses Names. Attorney-General Daugherty refus- ed to give the House the names of the two members of Congress involved in charges presented to a federal grand jury in Chicago. In a letter to Speaker Gillett, Daugherty said it was incompatible with the public interest to make pub- lic the identity of the men involved. Such a move, he said, would tend to hamper the investigation the Départ- ment of Justice is making of the charges. Republican leader Longworth, af- House, moved that the whole matter be referred to the judiciary commit- tee. Get After Daugherty. Stirred to indignation by the re- fusal of Attorney-General Daugherty to give it the names of “two congress- men involved in charges presented to a Chicago grand jury,” the House or- dered its judiciary committee to re- Eighteen of the shops that settled |port at once what should be done to Saturday are members of the North | bring the names and thus clear sus- ‘| West Side Dress Manufacturers’ As- The other four are inde- spicion of all members who are not in- volved. Daugherty in a letter to Speaker | Gillett in response to a House resolu- tion refused the names of the men, on the ground to make them public would hamper the Department of Jus- tice investigation of the charges. Haul Him In By Neck. Reading of the letter caused a storm of protest in the House, in which it was suggested that Daugherty as “creature of Congress” be haled be- fore the House and forced to reveal the names. His special assistant John W. H. Gyim, who presented evidence to the grand jury, also was assailed, on the ground he had spread the names of the two members about Washington by telephone. Chicago League Ce'ebrates Commune; Engdahl, Minor, Shachtman, to be Speakers The fifty-third anniversary of the glorious page in proletarian history, the Paris Commune, is to be celebrated in Cheiago by the Young Workers League. Altho the bloody hangman of the bour- geoisie, Gallifet, thought that he had obliterated all traces of the Commune by the wholesale mur- der of the workers, the revolution still is the banner of the workera of the world. The Chicago meeting, to be held March 16, 7:30 p. m., at the Doug- las Park Auditorium, Ogden and Kedzie avenues, will be one of the best yet held in this city. Among the speakers are such well known comrades as Louis Engdahl, editor Bob ter Daugherty’s letter was read to the | 1 have settled: Milwaukee Ave.; Resnikoff and A Ave; waukee Ave.; Weinber, 1355 Milwaukee Ave.; Ferdinand & Co., waukee ‘Ave.; urers association. The following, berg, 600 Blue Island Ave; Faginholtz, Ss. cerns, The following concerns with the union during the last week: Isman & Walens, 172 W. Adams St.; Ave.; Langman & Wolkowitz, 327 S. Grenn, 1318 Milwaukee Ave.; Phillip wr & Guss Dress Co., 1259 Milwaukee| Market St.; Feldman-Hirsch, 822 W. Nathan Alexander, 1879 Mile & Brandon,! roner & Fin-| Dress Co., 702 Roosevelt Rd; Nat gerruth, 1351 Milwaukee Ave,; Sobie & Davis, 1524 Milwaukee Ave.; L. A. 1379 Milwaukee Ave.; Nu Stile Dress Co., 1875 Mil- Hart & Lang, 1826 Milwaukee Ave.; J. Goldbarth, 1391 Milwaukee Avg.; Brown Garment Co., 20835 W. North Ave; Harry Greenberg, 1375 Milwaukee Ave., and Joe Levy, 1270 Milwaukee Ave.; all the above are members of the North West Side Dress Manufact- Coppersmith & Shoulder, 115 S. Market St.; H. ane 1507 Milwaukee Ave.; and the Dependable Dress Co., 141 S. Wells St., are the independent con- settled J. D, Garment Co., 1370 Milwaukee Monday, March 10, 1924 one RATS NCEA RE RT NE ER TS Doctoer and Redman, 1324 Milwaukee Ave.; G. & S. Dress Co., 1855 Iberts, 1324 Milwaukee Ave.; Terry Strand Dress Co., Van Buren S8t.; Washington 784 W. Madison St.; Cohen & Co., 228 S. Market St.; Pro- gress Cloak Co,, 1418 Augusta St.; Victory Dress Co., ‘1111 | Roosevelt Rd.; M. Goldstein & Co., 224 S, Mar- ket St.; Sunshine Dress Co., 304 W. Madison St.; Gelbert & Zechman, 12 N. Market St.; Libby Dress Co. 12 N, Market St; G. & S. Dress Co., $83 S. Market St.; Doff Cloak Co., 1250 N. Paulina St.; Miller Bros., 702 Rooseveld Rd.; Fuchs & Geller, 12 N. Market St.; Yesler & Kaplan, 12 N. Market St.; M. Miller & Son, 702 Roosevelt Rd.; P. Lyons, 1711 Roose- velt Rd.; Sherman & Berman, 212 S, Marget St.; Sophie Dress Co., 1246 Milwaukee Ave.; Lerm & Cable, 12 N. Market St.; Knee Bros., 327 S. Market St.; Vogue Garment Co., 1529 Milwaukee Ave.; Florence Garment Co., 12 N. Market St.;, Bushman & Savit Dress Manufacturing Co., 825 W. Adams St.; Gross & Wasserman, 329 S. Market St.; David Steinholtz, 734 W. Madison St., and Samuel M. Weiss and Co,, 1832 Milwaukee. Ave. FARMER-LABOR FORCES MEETING IN MINNESOTA Big Demand for the May 30th Conference (Continued from page 1) such other matters as it may choose to consider. “The said convention shall consist of delegates from the several counties of the state, chosen as hereinafter di- rected. Each county shall be entitled to one delegate at large and in addi- tion thereto, one delegate for every 1,000 votes, or major fraction there- of, cast in 1922 for the farmer-labor candidate for governor, as shown by the accompanying schedule. If there shall be present in the convention at any time from any county a number of delegates less than the number allowed under this call, the delegates who are present from such county may, by majority vote, cast the votes who are absent. Otherwise each del- egate shall have one vote and there shall be no proxies.” Many Meetings Planned. Other meetings planned during the week are the following: : Women’s Non-partisan clubs, state convention, Minnesota Daily Star building, Minneapolis, March 11 and 2 The Non-Partisan league and the Working People’s Non-partisan Politi- cal league state conventions; the first in the Star building, the second in | Richmond halls, March 13, In addition the republicans will have a series of conventions this week and the democratic state central com- mittee will meet at Ryan hotel, St. the latter meeting is to make arrange- ments for the democratic state con- vention, and the preliminary arrange- ments for the presidential campaign activities. Democracy Means Nothing, German PARIS, March 9.— “Democracy with us means nothing,” says Fritz Thyssen, steel magnate of the: Ruhr valley. in an interview granted to the correspondent in Germany of the Journal des Debats. Thyssen there- fore argues that France can only obtain favorable terms from Ger- many if it will tolerate a Right, that is, a reactionary government. Such a government, would, in the opinion of Thyssen, make the work. ers labor for longer hours. “Our people must work more than ever to liberate themselves,” he says. “It was a grave mistake of the repub- lican regime in Germany not to tell the workers that work 4 an impera- tive national duty, now more than ever.” It is significant that men like Stinness and Thyssen who, more than any other, urged Cuno on in his reck- less policy of passive resistance, and who at the same time flattered the workers into thinking they were do- ing a patriotic duty by offering re- sistance, now are the first to give interviews in the French press, de- nouncing the republican regime and pretending that under their guidance things could have been done much better, Stinnes Gets Cold Feet in Deal for Yankee Coal Fields § BERLIN, March 9.—The oil deal |% made between the German capitalist, | 4 Paul, Tuesday. The main purpose of Steel King Says Only Babe When He Left Russia Levine Faces Deportation (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, March 9.—Harry Weinberger, attorney for Morris Le- vine, who completed a 5-year sen- tence in Leavenworth pfison as one of the Chicago I. W. W. group of political prisoners, has appealed to President Coolidge to stop the de- portation of Levine, which has been ordered by Secretary of Labor Davis. Levine was only 8 months old when he arrived in this country, and he now has a wife and 4-months infant —he having been married since leav- ing prison and whife released on bail and conducting a small business in New York City. Secretary Davis has admitted that the case is one which deserves sym- pathy, but insists that under the laws evine is an alien and must be de- ported to Russia. Levine speaks only English, The board of review at the immigration bureau, of which T. V. Powderly is a member, ruled that Levine has no right to remain in the United States. War Veterans Now | ' May Have Insurance in Lieu of Bonus WASHINGTON, March 9.—A cash payment and paid up insurance sol- dier bonus bill policy was adcpted ty beg House ways and means commit- ee. By a vote of 13 to 12, the commit- tee approved a bonus plan providing for $50 cash payment and paid up life insurance to veterans of the world war. The eleven democrats on the com- mittee voted against the proposal. They were joined by Representative Crowther, New York, a abi, agora A bitter dispute betweeh repub- lican Isaders on the committee arose over the proposal to put thru a special resolution giving a 25 per cent reduction in personal income taxes on 1923, Thaw Halts Lumber Work in Wisconsin- Minnesota Fields SUPERIOR, Wis., March 9.—Lum- ber companies in various parts of Wisconsin and Minnesota report that hauling operations in many places are practically at a standstill. The unusually mild weather recently has melted the snow, breaking, the iced roads, therefore crippling activity in this district. Unless more snow comes the cut logs will have to be left until next winter in places where summer hauling is impessible. This will mean a log shortage this summer in the sawmills and phenplormie The early cessation of lumbering in many places has added to the present unemployment problem in Wisconsin, according to state employment bureau reports. More. Jobless in Austria, VIENNA, March 9.—-Unemploy- ment in Austria is risi Between November, 1923, and January, 1924, the number of workless mounted from 75,800 to 95,000, The govern- ment explains this development by the stoppage of Liar thru snow- falls arf cold. In Socialist quarters, the growing unemployment is con- sidered to be an integral part of the industrial crisis, prevalent thruout central THE DAILY WORKER, This Bunch of Garment Bosses Have si pie’. Brains Enough to Admit Defeat BOK HUMBUG : Here is the latest list of the bosses who have had sense enough to know that the union has won a decisive victory in the present strike. They KICKED BEFORE CHICAGO CROWD Leads to War, Says Villard in Debate “The League of Nations is based on war and leads to war,” declared Oswald Garrison Villard in an attack ‘on the “Great Bok Humbug”, which endorses the League, before a large jaudience which gathered in Stude- baker Theatre yesterday noon_ to hear his debate with James J. For- stall, Chicago attorney and disciple of Woodrow Wilson. -The debate was held under the auspices of the Rationalist Univer- sity after an introductory talk by Percy Ward, who urged the audience to read the DAILY WORKER. The admirer of Wilson made a plea for America’s early entrance into the League because it “was a step for- ward”, tended to stop war, created a feeling of “good will”, thru its con- ferences and gave America a chance to inject her “ideals” into Europe. Russia “Peculiar”. Nearly all nations are now-in the League, stated its’ propagandist, ex- cept Germany and Russia where “conditions are peculiar”, and Turkey, Mexico, America. In two years Amer ica, Germany and Turkey will be in he prophesied, saying nothing about Russia, “ The Editor of the Nation riddled all these arguments. Accepting the League meant accepting the Treaty of Versailles, “The most infamous document ever devised by man”. The League “legalizes” the insti- tution of war 4nd makes war com- pulsory, he continued. In all its years of existence it has never taken a courageous stand on any vital issue, He flayed the League’s surrender to Mussolini in the Corfu incident where the Fascist dictator was allow- ed to get away with 50,000,000 lire from the Greeks after his bombard- ment of the Island of Corfu, Tyranny In Saa Tyranny in the Saar was cited by the pacifist editor. In that region under the domination of the League there are laws fixing penalties up to five years for speech or writing “casting discredit” on the League and its member nations; “insulting” the League; “criticising” the governing commission or the League in the Saar and adding the furthér pqnish- ment of withdrawal of certain civil rights and pension privileges. Train Robbing Is All That’s Left to Mexican Fascisti (Stat 4 outs Son Sera tise ao rat ress) MEXICO CITY, March 9—The rebels have cleared out of the oil zone, according to the official report of General Gutierrez. e says that Death Curve, Cerro Azul, Zacamixtle and Potrero del Llano are under fed- eral control once more. This victory will release a goodly number of troops to fight the remaining fascisti chieftains. It ends the fascist drive on the oil fields. The fascisti troops are breaking up into small guerrilla bands to see if they cannot better their luck in plun- dering. Their main sport is holding up and robbing trains, But the Obregon government is not sleeping on the job. According to orders the National lines have changed their sckedules for trains going to Laredo and El Paso. These passenger trains will leave in the mornings now, instead of at night. Night travel will be avoided altogether. It will be slower, but safer. American Socialist Engineer Heads Big Kuzbas Chemical Plant (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK, March 9.—A report reaching this city states that the large chemical plant, organized by the Kuzbas colony of American workers in Russia started’ its first roductive activities this week. The Teasing of the coke ovens the occasion for a celebration, attended by delegates of the government. The capacity of the factory is estimated at 190,000 tons of coke a r, a corresponding amount of tar, am- monia, benzol and naphtalene as by- products. The engineer in charge is an American Socialist and chemist, Dr. William Mahler. : Our Advertisers help make this Paper possible. Patron- ize our Advertisers and tell them you saw their Ad in The Daily Worker. ‘ eapot Special’ —— 1640 N. Halsted St., ge | Hiller, of the Graceline Dress Co.,|| of The DAILY WORKER, Hugo Stinnes, and Harry,F. Sinclair, | J Chicago, Illinois. i KANSAS CITY READERS, NOTICE! who is president of an association of || Minor, editor of |The Liberator, |) when the latter was in Europe last J , i | dress manufacturers that was formed || #2d Max Schachtman, editor 0 y ‘cr “from. the Teapot |f °. Send me...............copies of “The Teapot FIRST ANNUAL BALL Se ea ese rerun for the parma || ‘Phe Young Worker, " With such || hor wearin son has resulted in |@ Edition of the DAILY WORKER, to be dated ys an array of speakers, no one can afford to miss this meeting, espe. cially since there will be an ex- cellent musical program and the admission will be free, no charge. Come in masses to this meet- ing! Young workers and old, fill wp the hall and help to commemo- rate the first workers’ revolu- tion, the Paris Commune! * \of fighting the union, has been bank- rupt several times. Hiller’s associa- | ion retained Dudley Taylor, infamous union baiter, to get an injunction for them from Judge Dennis Sullivan. One of the officials of the union said: “In Hiller the bosses have picked ja fine leader. If he can’t lead them to victory over the union his expe- the withdrawal of Stinnes as a pros- ective purchaser of American coal elds and his concentration on the oil business in the United Stat ery te reports here, Stinn said to have cancelled his off certain Alabama mines. His agree. bent with Sinclair provides that his boats shall call at New Maha} and Given by the ENGLISH BRANCH, W. P. OF A. Kansas City Local SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 8 P. M., 31st and Holmes Streets ADMISSION 50c—Ladies with escort free NOTE—Educational meeting to which any one who is interested the werhore, struggle is invited, will be held at 1:30 p. m, same March 17, at the rate of two cents per copy; $1 for 50; $2 per 100. I want to he!p the workers and farmers — learn the real meaning of these great revelations against the social system that is oppressing them. ; ADDRESS ......cssccsrsnnsecsessnnce erseeeqacsteconsssseusnanacenenses —same i rience should make it easy for him to Texas ports and transport oil to i silead them to bankruptcy.” ; Hamburg. : SNS . . ; } ' * vn ‘ anya Dah 4 « YM AMAA RETIN tS ARREARS LL em