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7 Page Four TH E.DAILY WORKER Tuesday, March 11, 1924 FREE SPEECH TO WORKERS PARTY Foster to Speak—Was Arrested Before (Special to The Daily Worker) NEWARK, N. J., March 10.—The police of Newark will not interfere, “by threats or otherwise, with meet- ings held in Newark halls “for law: ful discussions,” acéording to a let: ter from Assistant Corporation Coun- sel Joseph G. Wolber received re- cently by John Larkin Hughes, New- ark attorney for the, Civil Liberties Union. The letter was sent follow- ing a conference of the Newark Law department with Directer of Safety Brennan. “You can rest assured that the constitutional citizens to assemble and freely speak, as defined by the New Jersey courts, will not be disregarded,” the letter declares. Foster Will Speak. As a result of this promise, Wil. liam Z. Foster, who was arrested to- gether with Bishop Paul Jones while speaking at a meeting in Newark on Jan. 11, and was later denied per- mission to speak at any time, will speak in that city within three weeks, it was announced today by the Civil Liberties Union. The Foster meet- ing will be held under the auspices of the Labor Defense Council. The free speech conference of the Newark officials was an outcome of the recent trial of four members of the Workers Party who were arrest- ed following the breaking up by she police of a Lenin memorial meeting on Feb. 1, and of the arrest of Fos- ter and Bishop Paul Jones followi the breaking up of a Labor Defense Council meeting on Jan. 11. Suits for False Arrest. Suits for false arrest were filed against Newark police officials by the Civil Liberties Union on behalf of Foster and Bishop Jones. The four Workers Party members arrest- ed at the Lenin memorial meeting on Feb. 1 were fined $20 each. They were Dr. Alexander Trachtenberg, former instructor of economics at Yale; Ludwig Lore, editor of the Volkszeitung; Constant Chriss and David Kaplan of Newark. During the trial of the four men on Feb. 14, Police Judge Horace Grice said he was “glad this case has come up, for we don’t know where we stand on free speeth in Newark.” He suggested a confer- ence among Newark officials and the Civil Liberties Union attorney to arrange for an amicable settlement whereby meetings. similar to those “halted ‘by the police might be held in public halls without official dis- turbance. Corporation Counsel Wolber’s letter to Attorney Hughes was the result. | Workers Pay More to Live Than They Did One Year Ago WASHINGTON, March 10.—Cost of living increased during the year period, Feb. 15, 1923, to Feb. 15, 1924, in 21 cities as follows: Peoria, 8 per cent; Newark, 5 per cent; At- lanta, Buffalo, Detroit, Kansas City, Louisville, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis, 4 per cent; Baltimore, Minneapolis, New Haven, New York, Philadelphia, Rochester, and Salt Lake City, 3 per cent; and Boston, Portland, Me., St. Paul, Richmond, and Washington, D. C., 2 per cent. These facts are shown by the United States Depart- ment of Labor bureau of iabor stat- istics. As compared with the average cost fn the year 1912, the retail cost of food on Feb. in Washington, D. C.; 53 per cent in Baltimore and New York; 52 per cent in Buffalo and Detroit; 51 per cent in Pittsburgh; 50 per cent in Boston; 49 per cent in Philadelphia; 48 per cent in New Haven and St. Louis; »47 per cent in Newark; 46 per cent in Minneapolis; 45 per cent in Atlanta; 44 per cent in Kansas City; 37 per cent in Louisville; and 25 per cent in Salt Lake City. Protect the Foreign Born! and legal rights of| Conferences were held and! , 1924, was 55 per} cent higher in Richmond; 54 per cent | ] that lawyers, doctors, preachers and national guard. “Is there any way this loss of these men,” the organ asks. then?” The answer is obvious and easy. That would relieve the lawyer argues. “A well equipped state police force on the job all the time. are well paid, well fed, well housed and who make protection a profession.” Chamber of Commerce Is Reopening Fight for State Cossack Bill “The Illinois chamber of commerce continnes vigorously its campaign for a state police,” declares its official organ. In a recent editorial it says other guardsmen lose a lot of time and money every time they have to shoulder guns and march out with the time and. money can be made up to “Certainly not in the wages they receive, the chow with which they are fed, the hard beds on which they lie. How Men, who and doctor and preacher rookies and let them get back to upper class chow and soft beds, the open shop organ speeches made, If the authorities interfere from continuing, if counsel ad- vises that by such a course a clear-cut issue of free speech can be successfully raised. That issue can generally be raised successfully if the inter- ference takes place on private property where there is no technical violation of laws as to admission fees, fire regualtions, ob- \struction of traffic, and the like. It jis important to bear in mind that |police orders are not law nor are the | |edicts of officials other than courts or |judges. When injunctions are issued or legal proceedings pending, no step | which may give rise to a contempt pro- ceeding should be taken except upon |the advise of counsel. For in con- |tempt proceedings the legal question is often as to the existence of the judicial power rather than as to the Propriety of its exercise. A person who thinks that he has raised a big | question of fundamental rights by |Tisking punishment for contempt of a | Wrongful court order may often find that he has merely raised a side issue. 2. No speaker should submit to |preliminary censorship by the police jor other authority. No authority has |the right to censor in advance what he has to say. Speakers should how- jevery bear in mind that the usual purpose of test meetings is to estab- \lish the right to speak, not to test the alidity of laws penalizing certain |kinds of speech or advocacy. They should refrain from predictions, |prophecies or suggestions which hos- tile interpretation might twist into violations of criminal syndicalism and sedition statutes. 3. Im case the police close the hall and thus prevent scheduled meeting from taking place, efforts should be made to secure another meeting place. Even if it involves having a much |smaller audience. At any rate, the newspapers are going to run the fact that the hall was closed by the police, and if the publicity man is on his job, all that is said at the smaller meeting (even if it is held in a private house) can be given to the newspapers and will get space. The important point is to show that even in the face of un- Inwful police opposition, those who believe in free speech are determined to hold their meeting at whatever cost. Before resorting to another location, every effort should be made to get the police to open the hall and rescind their orders. 4. If the meeting is stopped after it starts and the police attempt to ad- journ it without arresting any stwak- er, an arrest should be forced, unless |it would involve danger of disorder by others than the police. The best | way to force the arrest is to keep on |speaking. If the police refuse to ar- rest but endeavor to molest the speak- ers by putting hands on them, it con- stitutes a case of assault. Witnesses |should be secured and a case brought against the offending officers, or, if \possible, their responsible superiors. Whoever has charge of the meeting should refuse to adjourn upon the or- ders df a police officer if the officers jrefuse to make an arrest, so that the |issue can be tested in the courts. If |the officer attempts to disperse the audience, he may advise the audience to stay in their places unless there is risk of disorder and violence. Per- sons wrongfully arrested should, wpon Marxism (every Monday) FIRST ANNUAL REGIST WORKERS’ SCHOOL «.« Street and Union NEW YORK CI History of the Three Internationals Ludwig Lore, Thursday, March 13 % History of the American Trade Union Movement, Solon de Leon (every Wednesday) SPRING FESTIVAL At TAMMANY HALL, on FRIDAY, APRIL 4TH Remember the Date juare) ER NOW Night and Morning If they Tire, Itch } Ben Borne: Die YOUR ) Murine if Sore, Irri- Inflamed or oS Refreshes, Sere, So tateros Adale. Atal Droggion. Bye Remedy Co., 0 Kast Obic St., Chicago Suggestions to Speakers at Free Speech Test Meetings 1.—The most important point to bear in mind is that free speech can be won only by speaking. When unlawful obstacles are placed in the way, the meet- ing should, if possible, be held notwithstanding, and the unlawfully, it may be desirable for the speaker to continue until arrested or forcibly prevented their release, bring civil suits against the officials responsible. Theoretical- ly, of course, the public authorities ought to proceed against law-break- ing officials. Experience has shown, however, that they are unlikely to do so and that when they do they are apt to.conduct them faint-heartedly. In England notable vindications of civil liberty have been obtained by private suits. 5. It « speaker is unlawfully ar- rested and the meeting allowed to proceed, see that a red-hot protest is made against the conduct of the police and send a committee from the meet- ing to police headquarters to make a protest and to see if something can- not be done to get the speaker re- leased without further proceedings. Send the committee to the daily news- paper offices to give an accurate ac- count of what happened. Otherwise the newspapers will get the story from the police. 6. Where meetings have been in- terfered with by official lawlessness, state a protest meeting for the earli- est practicable date. At that meet- ing make the subject only that of the right of free speech, repeating in substance what was said at the pre- vious meeting as an evidence of ex- ercising that right. Get persons not connected with the meeting and as of great prominence as possible in the community either to address the meeting or to sit on the platform. |Get a signed protest from prominent ministers, lawyers, officials and other sympathizers and see that it reaches the newspapers. Have a written resolution adopted at the meeting and signed by as many of those present jas possible. Have this transmitted to the police and to the newspapers. °7, Publicity. Wherever there is any issue of free speech or assem- \blage, it is important to get the news- papers to see it. To that end it is essential to furnish them with copy. Get to the city editors directly either with a clear statement of the facts thru someone who knows how to talk to @ newspaper man or thru state- ments written out in advance. The best thing to do is to employ a local publicity man who is familiar with the local newspaper (and with the wire services out of the community ‘whenever any issue of more than local significance is involved.) It is im- portant also to see the chief writers of each of these papers quite inde- pendent of the news story, so that they will understand the facts, and not base their editorials upon biased hostile reports. 8. In all cases where arrests are likely at a free speech meeting, an able attorney should be consulted in advance and engaged to be present. His advice will often assi< the speak- ers and managers to raise in a clear- cut fashion the definite issue of free speech which officials (under cover of unevenly enforced local ordinances as to traffic, permits, collection of funds, safety appliances, etc.) are often astute to prevent. Bail should be provided for. The attendance of dis- interested and responsible witnesses should be procured. Germany is Willing To Enter League With Soviet Russia BERLIN, Germany, March 10.— Germany is willing to enter the League of Nations provided there are no specific conditions for adnyssion, according to a speech delivered in the Reichstag by Gustav Stresseman foreign minister. Stresseman does not want to sub- mit Germany to any further appear- ance before a tribunal composed of allied nations and do penance for the crime of having started the world war. He will insist that Russia be asked to join at once, ~ It is stated that Germany is tied to Russia by links forged at the Go- neva conference when the two out- lawed nations patched up a treaty which left the allies sucking their thumbs in dismay, Britain displays considerable ner- "| vousness over the thought of a res- toration of German productivity on the basis of Franco-German or Ger- man-American co-operation, The militarist spirit is gubwing rapidly in Germany and this can be noted in the increasing militancy of the speeches made by the Berlin gov- ernment officials. Get unity thru the Labor Party! RUSS CLOTHING SYNDICATE SHOWS PRODUCTION GAIN Industrial Progress Is Told by RAIC NEW YORK, March 10.—The board of directors of the Russian- American Industrial Corporation at its second annual stockholders’ meet- ing on Tuesday reported a satisfac- tory year’s business in rendering eco- nomic aid to Soviet. Russsia. The report shows that the activi- ties of the corporation have been con. fined to its investment in the All- Russian Clothing Syndicate, Inc., the perfection of facilities for forward- ing dollars to Russia thru the Amal- gdmated Bank of New York and the Amalgamated Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago, the purchase of some $50,000 worth of machinery and supplies for the Russian clothing factories, and services performed fgr other Russian businesses, chiefly in supplying information on trade with America. Emphasizing the importance of the transmission business the report shows that some $3,000,000 have al. ready been transferred to Rusian citizens by friends and relatives in America. The present rate of trans- mission is now over $20,000 per day. Where the Factories Are. The All-Russian Clothing Syncicate has factories at Moscow, Lenin- grad, Kharkov, Kazan and Nizhni | Novgorod; and district sales depart- ments at Moscow, Kiev, Rostov, Sa- mara, Ekaterinburg, Novonikolay- evsk and Irkutsk. Other branches of the selling organization are at Kharkov, Poltawa, Bachmut, Kras. nodar, Tzaritzin, Astrakhan, Oren- burg, Ufa, Simbirsk, Syzran, Bugur- uslan, Omsk, Perm, »Petropaviovsk Kustanai, Tomsk, mipalatinsk, Krasnoyarsk, Vologda, Viatka, Ekat- irinoslav, Kaluga and Tchelabinsk. Important agencies of the syndicate are also in Baku, Kursk, Odessa, Tashkent, Nikolayev, Cherson and Tiflis. The branches are growing both in size and in number. The director’s report quotes Brick- er, the head of the Leningrad Cloth- ing Trust—‘the production per man has gradually increased in the last two years and a suit can now be made in just half the time it took pre-war.” The manager of the syndi- cate is quoted as follows: “The qual- ity of work in Moscow has been raised to the level of the average quality of ready-made clothes in America. The labor cost to make a man’s suit or overcoat amounts at present to not more than 7 gold rubles.” Your Union Meeting | Second Tuesday, March 11, 1924 Name of Local and Place of Meeting. SECOND TUESDAY, Feb, 12th 3 Boot and Shoe Workers, 1939 Mil- waukee Ave. Bricklayers, 912 W. Monroe St. er and Gay Wkrs, Paving Inspectors 166 W. hington St. oo Joint Council, bt. No. 514 W. 117th Carpenters, Diversey and Sheffield. Ca ers, 1023 E, 75th St. Moose Hall, Chicago Heights Witten's Hall, Highland) s, Springfield and 26th. Clerks, Grocery, 59 W. Van Buren St. Condueti Sleeping’ Car), Capitol Production Increase. _ Referring to the production pro- gram for the present year the re. port shows that the syndicate’s fac- tories will produce 25 per cent more this year than last. The plan of the syndicate .for the coming year in- cludes the purchase of $12,390,000 worth of made-up goods from the clothing trust working under it and the furnishing of raw materials to the trusts up to the same value. The production program of goods to be furnished by the syndicate during 1924 by the famous Moscow Experi- mental Factory and the Leningrad and Kharkov trusts includes 883,200 pieces of underwear, 394,100 special working garments, 239,650 peasant shirts, trousers and jackets, 279,050 pieces of civilian clothing and 78,250 fur garments, making a total of 1,874,250 garments, a considerable increase over the output for the same units during 1923. Thjs, of course, covers only a part of the goods produced by all the syndicate’ factories which will total over three times this amount. Co-operative Marketing The Russian-American Corpora- tion’s directors report dealt also with the great improvement tn the distribution end of the syndicate and the new system of direct sales to co- aperatives in factories, mills and mines. At present more than 50 per cent of the clothes made by the syn- dicate are marketed thru these chan- nels. All the clothes made by the syndicates are sold in Russia. Summarizing the operations of the syndicate the directors’ report shows terprise amounted to more than 10 per cent of the invested capital. +____... General Von Lossow May Be Tried for Beer Cellar Revolt MUNICH, March 10.—General Von Lossow was called to the stand as the trial of General Eric Ludendorff and others accused of fomenting the abortive “beer cellar putsch” of last November was resumed here today. Von Lossow, who was a military commander in Bavaria at the time of the outbreak, proved an unwilling witness and was ited permission by the court to refuse criminating questions. The ju ruled that while Von Lossow is not yet a defendant in- vestigation which is perhaps li- minary to his arrest has been insti- tuted against him. Industrial Disease Dangers. NEW YORK CITY, March 10.— One out of every thousand wage earners in New York 1 kill- ed in the last fiscal year while at work or died from injury or disease suffered or contracted at his work, that the profits of the Russian en- l pensation law requires Corte: 7: | magne m. i 05 8. State St. » 741 S. Western Ave. Engineers’ (Loc.), 5058 Wentworth Av. Engineers, 180 W, Washington St. Engineers (Loc.), 2433 W. Roosevelt Road, Engineers (Loc.), 2647 W. 35th St, Egg Inspectors, 418 N. Clark St, Federal Emplo: «4 Ww. Federal Union, 3046 W. Firemen and Enginemen, Taylor. Hatters (Trimmers), 166 W. Washing- ton St. kers, 777 W. Machinists, 2548 S. Homa Machinists, 4126 W. Lake St. pages 6234 Prineeton Ave. Musicians, 175 W. Pp. m, Nurses, Funk’s Hall, Oak Park. Painters, 20 W. Randolph St. Painters, N. E. cor, California and Madison. Painters, 6414 S, Halsted St. Painters, N. W. cor. State and 56th. Painters, 220 W. Oak St. Painters, Trumbull and Ogden Ave, Plasterers, Monroe and Peoria Sts, Plumbers, 1507 Ogden Ave. Plumbers, 180 W. Washington St. Plumbers, 4111 W. Madison St. Railway Carmen, Odd Fellows’ Hall, Blue Island, Ill. 7:30 p. m. Railway Carmen, 11037 Michigan Ave. Railway Carmen, 5324 8. Halsted St. Railway Clerks, 549 W. Washington St. Railway Clerks, Moose Hall, Chicago Heights. Railway Clerks, 5438 S. Halsted St. Railway Clerks, 509 W. Washington St. Railroad Trainmen, 3859 W. Madison, Teamsters’ Dis. Council, 220 8, Ashland 17358 147 180 184 Bivd. 727 Teamsters (Auto), 220 S. Ashland Blvd. 67 Tile Layers, 180 W. Washington St, 7 Waiters, 234 Randolph St, (Note—Unless otherwise stated all meetings ere at 8 p. m.) Clothing Workers Give Last Concert of Winter Season By ALFRED VY. FRANKENSTEIN. Concerts given by the Amalgam- ated Clothing Workers came to a close with a packed hall at the Carmen’s Auditorium. Alexander Zukovsky, violinist of the Chi- cago. Symphony Orchestra, directed a small ensemble of some sixteen Symphony men, and there were four soloists, Jacques Gordon, violinist; Joseph Brinkman, pianist; Ivan Dne- proff, tenor of the Russian Opera Company, and Herman Eck, flutist. The orchestral part of the pro- gram brought to performance two important works that have not been heard on the regular Symphony bill for some time. The first wag the Mendellssohn overture, “Fingal’s Cave.” The other was the move- ment called “In! the Village,” from a suite of Caucasian sketches by Ip. politoff-Ivanoff, the Bolshevik direc- tor of the Moscow Conservatory of Music. Celia Goldman, a “juvenile classi- eal and athletic dancer,” as the pro- gram described her, won consider- able applause with her jumps and leaps and steps. Mr. Dneproff. has a magnificent voice, and the songs he sang, some operatic arias in Italian and Rus- sian, made his audience go wild with approval. It was most interesting to hear how this big voice of beau- tiful quality overcame the tricky and ungrateful acoustics of the Ash- land Auditorium and filled the hall. A critic of one of the large dailies recently said, with perfect truth, + | When the police catch a hobo down .|up over the cruel death of Martin CAT-O-NINE-TAILS USED ON CHAIN GANGS IN SOUTH Greased Lashes By JACK METTE (Staff Correspondent of The Federated Press) CHARLESTON, S. C., March 10.— In the good old’ south we send our prisoners, especially those who have a family and cannot pay the usual $25 fine, to the chain gang to build roads, The judge smiles when he sentences you to the gang and says he hopes it will make a better man of you. here, if they cannot find something serious to charge him with, they ot him to the gang for 90 days for luck, Build Road With Blood, It has not been so many months ago that the country was stirred Tabert at the hands of a Florida chain gang whipping boss. Did that stop the whippings? It did not. In North Carolina and Alabama condi- tions are worse than in the old salt mines of Siberia.» North Carolina has good roads but it took the blood and strength of her prisoners to do it. If a prisoner is sick and unable to work the boss has a good cure. The that there are no more bad pianists or violinists. So to say thi a Brinknfan and Mr. Gordon are fine musicians is bromidie, Both Played some of their own work, Mr. Brink- man some of his compositions, Gor. don someof his arrangements. And when pianists and violinists are ca- pable of writing as well as perform- ing as Gordon and Brinkman do, they are deserving of all the approv- ing adjectives in the critic’s yocabu- lary, be they ever so bromidic, | us closed the fifth season of concerts given by the union. And concerts are only a part of the gen- eral scheme workers’ education carried on by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. Wanted! Volunteers to Help Bazaar of National Defense NEW YORK, March’10.—The Na- pene Defense Poe ou the ‘following appeal to unemployed com- rades for volunteers needed for the Third Annual International Bazaar, to bbe held “April 10-18, at Central Ouse: Clerical—10,000 letters must be out by March 15. Any one out of work can help any time during the day, including Saturday -afternoons and Wednesday evenings, " Dresemiakers pines to make dresses and other a, 1 for the " ma‘ peng trom donated for Milliners needed to make hats. Also committees to solicit materials acinar ce at ith Room 434, | Stuyvesant 6616. ng my aa ¢ Ne lash soaked in salt guease to the tune of 50 strokes is the usual dose for all sickness, One of the North Carolina camps is at Fayetteville. The six-foot ig- norant chain gang boss is allowed to knock young boys (some of them under 16 years of age) over the head with pick handles and to whip them with a cat-o-nine-tails until they can- not stand on their feet. The same food is provided day in and day out. Syrup and corn bread for break- fast. Peas and corn bread for din- ner. Syrup and corn bread again for supper. Saw Beating. Last summer I talked with many of the prisoners. I checked up on their stories and found them to be true. Young men. whose only offense is riding a freight train are thrown into these filthy holes with men suf. fering from terrible diseases and are forced to bathe in the same water. Ten men, four colored, were forced to bathe in a small tub of water with- out changing the water. I saw a young Jewish boy hit over the head and back with a pick handle. Alabama has the same rotten sys- tem. They hire the convicts out by the day to the coal trust to dig coal for the company for a few cents ‘a day. Conditions are as bad if not worse than those existing in North Carolina. Greek Cabinet Quits; Regent Offers Job To Republican Leader , ATHENS, March 10.—Greece is looking for a cabinet but it is not easy to find a man willing to take the job. Tho several statesmen have been out of work for some time, applica- tions for the position of premier are conspicuous by their absence They have a habit here in Greece to bring out their shooting irons on the slight- est provocation and once a statesmen is indicted, he stands as much show of an acquittal as an American com- munist before a 100 per cent Ameri- can jury. “Shoot them first; try them ‘after- wards,” is the popular way of hand- ling out justice to unpopular Greek cabinets. The Greek cabinets are growing more responsive to pressure than they used to. The last one quit when an army corps appeared and offered it an ultimatum to resign or fight. The cabinet jumped out the windows. The army is sick of the king and wants a republic. Venizelos is going to leave the country. British Soap Magnate Wants Black Men to Play Donkey Role SYDNEY, New South Wales, Mar. 10.—Protests have been made by all sections of political thought, as by commercial and industrial interests against suggestions made by Lord Leverhulme, the head of the British soap making industry, that black labor should be introduced into Aus- tralia to do the “donkey work.” Leverhulme said he had he he blacks in his employ in his various plantations thruout the world and they suited him right down to the ground. He also claimed that the Negroes in the h in the United States had proved a boon to the em- ployers. Friday, March at 225 VALENCIA STREET | Musical Ni r Pt $%i SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., READERS, ATTENTION! in CALIFORNIA HALL, Corner Polk and Turk Streets collect clothing to HELP THE STAR] RMAN Re. ; Saturday Night, March 15, 8 ‘O'Clock , PARIS COMMUNE CELEBRATION Speaker—MARVIN SANFORD of Oakland Y. W. L. jumbers—Dancing—Refreshments Mormon Solon Peate House Tax Bill Wiil Not Meet U.S. Needs WASHINGTON, March 10—As the Senate Finance Committee recently sought sources of $100,000,000 more revenue in the new tax bill, the House Ways and Means Committee prepared to report a soldier bonus ill, Chairman Smoot of the Finance Committee believes the tax bill as passed by the House will fall $100,- 000,000 short of meeting government expefises next year, even if a bonus bill does not become law. What sources of revenue will be tapped are yet undecided, he said. Four Plans Up. Winding up its hearing on the bonus bill, the House Ways and Means Committee, plunged into con- sideration of four plans, as follows: 1.—A straight cash bonus. 2.—A straight paid up insurance bonus. 8.—A cash bonus with a paid up in- surance option. 4.—A four fold plan with option of $50 cash, deferred payment certifi- cates, vocational training and home and farm aid. Senators Watson, Indiana, and Moses, New Hampshire, today began a poll of the Senate to determine sen- timent on the tax bill. A “horse back” survey by leaders indicates the Democrats and Progressives may join to restore the Garner plan with a maximum surtax of 44 per cent on $92,000. RUBBER STAMPS AND SEALS IN ENGLISH AND IN ALL! FOREIGN LANGUAGES INK, PADS, DATERS, RUBBER TYPE.Erc. NOBLER STAMP & SEAL CO. 73 W. VanBurenSt, Phone Wabash 6680 CHICAGO MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY “ATTENDED TO——— Cleveland, O., Readers, Notice SECOND ANNUAL Entertainment & Dance At GRDINA’S HALL, 6021 ST. CLAIR SUNDAY, MAR. 16, 3:30 P. M. Rosinthal’s Union Orchestra. Entertainment—Refreshments— Supper ADMISSION 50 CENTS Auspices WORKERS PARTY. S. FACUNA Gentlemen’s, Ladies’ and Children's HOES REPAIRING A SPECIALTY Every Shoe Bears the Union Label 2018 W. Chicago Avenue Phone Humboldt 0485 GRIGER & NOVAK GENTS FURNISHING and MERCHANT TAILORS UNION MERCHANDISE 1934 W. Chicago Avenue (Cor. 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