The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 10, 1924, Page 4

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Page Four TRACHTENBERG IS | COMING HERE FOR ‘ MEETING, APR. 18; Now Covering Nation in Big Tour ” Alexander Trachtenberg's speak- ing schedule brings him to Chicago on April 18 to address the workers @ the “International Situation” in Soviet Russia and in Germany to- day. The meeting at which Trach- tenberg will speakiis to be held in North Side Turner’ Hall, 820 North Clark St., at 8 p. m., of Friday, April 18. Trachtenberg has just returned from Europe, where he divided his time between Russia and the Central nations, Germany, Czecho-Slovakia, France and Austria. Five montha he remained in Soviet Russia, at- tending the sessions of the Fourth Communist International while they were in progress. He was present at a meeting of the Enlarged Execu- tive Committee of the Communist International, the Twelfth Congress of the Communist Party cf Russia, the Constituent meeting of the Cen- | tral Executive Committee of the va- | rious Soviet governments which | formed the Union of Socialist Sov- iet Republics. In addition Trachten- berg attended congresses of various labor unions. After ~ traveling thruout Russia and, observing the life of the people under the New Economie * Policy, Trachtenberg went into Germany and was in Saxony at the time of the Communist-Socialist coalition government. He kept in touch with the German Communist party dur- ing the trying days of last October and November and later when the! party was outlawed and driven un- | derground. Trachtenberg is a graduate of Trinity College and Yale University, | and thruout the country has attract- ed crowds to his meetings, All in- terested in world affairs and the trend of the future will want to at- tend the meeting of April 18 ‘and hear Trachtenberg’s observations. Admission is twenty-five cents. Trachtenberg Tour Thursday, April 10, 7 p. m., War- ren, 0., Hippodrome Hall, High St., 3rd floor. Friday, April 11, 7:30 p. m., Cleve- land, O., Labor Temple, 2536 Euclid Ave. Sunday, April 13, 2:30 p. m., Cleve- land, O., Royal_ Hall, 5217 Woodland. Monday, April 14, 8 p. m,. Toledo, O., Labor Temple, Jefferson and Mich- igan. Tuesday, April 15, 8 p. m., Detroit,| House of Masses, 2101 Gratiot Ave.) Wednesday, April 16, 8 p. m., Det- roit, House of Masses, 2101 Gratiot Ave. (Russian Trade Unions.) Thursday, April 17, Grand Rapids, full details to appear later. Friday, April 18, 8 p, m., Chicago, North Side Turner Hall, 820 N. Clark St. Saturday, April 19, Milwaukee, full details to appear later. Sunday, April 20, Gary, Ind., full details to appear later. Munich Children 70 Pct. Tubercular, Pamphlet Shows A most frightful picture of the working class children in Germany is reported by the International Workers’ Aid in a pamphiet just issued. Dr. W. <A. Horsley Cannt, who was in Russia with the American Relief administration for the last six months’ investigating health conditions in Germany, is yuoted as follows: “The contrast between the health conditions in Germany and Russia is that Russia is just getting over her crisis while Germany has reached hers. I went into a half dozen chil- dren’s hospitals in Cologne and Dusseldorf. Three-fourths of the children were sick, not from any common children’s diseases, but from sicknesses such as rickets, The wizened, expressionless faces, nar- row che8ts, covered with skin so flabby that it folded over the bones like a cloak, their aetormed and twisted bodies often too apathstic and weak to cry, were characteris- tics present in nearly every child. In one hospita! in which there were 115 children, I saw every child and had their weights and ages record- ed, The average age was three years but the weight was that of a child twelve months old.” Seventy-eight per cent of the chil- dren are tubercular. A questionnaire sent out to the schools of four cities revealed the fact that in Munich 70 per cent of the children are suffering from tu- berculosis. In Dresden 285 pupils out of 1,200 were suffering from | curvature of the syne due to mal- nutrition. In Nuremberg, 6.000 out | of the 1,850 were undernourished. | The International Workers Aid is | bringing assistance to the German children. “All workers should sup- port their campaign, Telephone Diversey 5129 ED. GARBER QUALITY SHOES For Men, Women and Children 2427 LINCOLN AVENUE Zinoviev Reviews the Main Poi EDITOR'S NOTE:—Today we continue publication of the famous, report by Gregory Zinoviev, chair- man of the* Communist Interna- tional, made to the session of the Executive of the Communist In- ternational held on Jan. 6. Zino- viev’s report deals with the main points of difference in the Russian Communist Party, clearly crystal- lizing the discussion that has so far been published in the DAILY WORKER. In order that our readers may get a broader view of this discussion, we are publishing enlarged installments. This re- port is divided into seven sections, Today we} publish the third sec- tion. It is as* follows: Se g The Old and the Young. NOW come,to the third point in dispute, to the question of the old and the young in our Party, On this point, comrades, you yourselves already posses a certain amount! of experience, dating rrom the time of the earlier International; this aj plies especially to the comrades in the German labor movement. You know who were the so-called youth in Germany in'‘the nineties, This “youth” was very radical in gesture at that time, but in reality it was only a variety of revisionism Engels was ‘entirely right when he wrote at that time to Bebel: “I, the old one, and you, are in reality the only young ones in the party.” I believe, comrades, that our so- called: old guard of the Bolsheviki may lay equal claim with Engels to THE DAILY WORKER_ representing the actual youth of the Party. There is no question of old papas, anxious to foree~ their chil- dren to be good and obedient! The old Bolshevist guard is not so stupid as all that. But all the same it holds a place of some significance in the International, and has given suf- ficient proof that it is able to rear & Bolshevist party, The Youth in the Party. Then what is our conflict about? The two-fold current may be observ- ed among our youth. The whole youth of the working class is on our | side. This is an established fact. The working youth of Moscow, Petrograd, , Ukraine and the Ural, as also the working youth of all the | other industrial centers, nave joined the “old guard” without hesitation, | and have catgorically declared: | “Take care, these older ones are our | teachers!” * - The student youth, on the other hand, has immediately split into two camps, “ In Moscow there hag even been a majority against the old Bolshevist guard among the student youth. An| interesting and remarkable phenom- enon. Our,students include a great number of workers, but aiso many petty bourgeois elements. ‘lhe sym- pathies of the students have thus been divided between two camps. Whilst one party has supported us, another has opposed us. The latter party - immediately » issued the war ery of: Youth on one side, age on the other.: But we know no problem of youth or age, but solely a prob- lem of the political line, the one and only question which exists for us. Comrade Trotzky appeared with en article in a form which no one could have expected from a comrade like Trotzky, endeavoring to incite the youthful elements of the Party against the old guard in a manner which may almost be designated as vulgar, What caused him to take this step? Why Use Such Arguments? In my opinion, comrades, he only made use of the vulgar arguments because he had no better ones. Trotzky seeks support among those strata most easily accessible to his point of view, a point of view which has prevailed among us to a certain extent of late, and represnts in a cer- tain sense a revised Bolshevism. He needed a base,: ana found this among certain elements of;the Red Army, It need not be paid’ that we shall not let him;‘have even these minorities, but shall win them over for ourselves. This will, of course, take place‘ gradually. It will «take time. As Marxist education is not yet deeply rooted ~ among these strata, temporary * success is easily attained by demagogy. Preobrazensky, for instance, goes te the Sverdlov university and ad- | dresses the student somewhat to the following effect: “You are studying at the Sverdlov university, this monument of our. cultural advance- ment, and ars endeavorrag to gain a knowledge of Marxism, This is a very great and important task. But of what use will the study of Marx- ism be to you if you are not able to LETTERS POUR IN PRAISING DAILY WORKER All Sections Laud Our Militant Daily From all sections of this country and Canada letters are pouring in commending the DAILY WORKER on its fine work in rallying the mili- tant workers in the fight against capitalism. From out the prisons of California and Leavenworth, from the Texas range country, from Can- adian coal mines and Ohio pottery towns ccme letters declaring ap- preciation for what America’s first Communist Daily is doing. “The DAILY WORKER _ ought to penetrate the skulls of the Dubbs,” writes Louis Suikert from Cincinnati. “It is a humdinger”. “I like the per fine”, we hear from W. A. ‘alker of Centerville, Iowa. “It sure ought to jar the workers loose from the elephant and donkey parties.” Texas Represented. “You are certainly getting out a good paper,” comes word from J. Stid- ham of Anona, Texas. “It has the ring of militancy that should appeal to every worker who may chance to read it. Aren’t you doing a nice job on that patriotic oil crew at the cap- ital, as well as other patriotic fakirs posing as friends of the ‘dear people.’ Its time the people were rightly in- formed about the scandals emanat- ing from our ‘war for democracy.’” New England is not to be left with- out representation on our rapidly growing list of friends. Jim Lacey, of Roxbury, Mass., writes “The paper has exceeded my fondest expecta- tions. My copy is read regularly by seven people, each issue.” Canada On the Job. The militant workers unite in prais- ing their working class Daily. Sam- uel Manning writes us from Edmon- ton, Canada, “I just drop you these few lines wishing you the very best of luck with the DAILY WORKER. It is the best working class paper I have ever seen in this country. If the workers could only get hold of the DAILY WORKER I am sure they would wake up. Here’s hoping you keep up the good work and hoping that you double your subscriptions.” The DAILY WORKER does double service in some places, the workers passing it along to others. Eleanor Massey, writing from Kansas City, Mo., tells us, “You should see the squabble that goes on every night. Wages are low here so three of us read the paper every issue. I assure you We are not able to do without it.” Reaches Into Prison. “Lots of boys up here get ‘Novy Mir’ and ‘Molot’,” B. Schidekoff writes us from Timmins, Ontaria. “But we are not forgetting our Eng- lish friends. We are out scouting for subs to the DAILY WORKER.” A class war prisoner in the West- ern Pe ntiary at Pittsburgh, I. Blankenstein writes, “The DAILY WORKER is very fine. Much better than I dared hope to expect.” Crestline, Ohio is a little town, but it.has some real Reds in it, as we learn from the letter of William Long, which says, “Some blood thirsty red of discontent has sent me a couple of DAILY WORKERS. The damn things are worse than hope. Those two doses have taken such a hold of me that I can’t shake it off. Send me a three months trial tre ment, For humanity’s sake don’t weaken the doses, but keep on de- livering a little red pepper with each dese.” The workers are letting the DAILY WORKER know that it is their | paper, that it belongs to them and they appreciate it. How many new readers have you secured for THE DAILY WORKER? Near Halsted and Fullerton Ave. CHICAGO Get another today. IMPEACH COOLIDGE! | T# struggle of the militants in | 4 the» American labor movement and the needle trades in particular is becoming more bitter from day to day. In their efforts to maintain | their, power in face of the opposition |from’the rank and file, the officials | lof the needle trades industry have ften accused the militant left wing | |of disrupting the union. | | Three conventions of the needle} jtrades are about to take place. The |Needle Trades Section of the Trade | Union Educational League deems it | its duty to make clear its position tu |the workers in our industry and the ilabor movement in general on the j various problems confrontirig the in- dustry and the solutions we offer as | opposed to the policies of the official- }dom and their right wing supporters. | We are militants; they are Gom- perists. | We believe in the class struggle; \they believe in peace between capital jand labor. United Front Against Bosses. Hi We say that the working masses! must organize themselves so as to present a united front in their battle against the enemy; they say that the workers should organize themselves only for the purpose of collective bargaining with the enemy. We say that union officials must act as leaders of the workers in the struggle to win for them better con- ditions of living; they say that union officials must act merely as represen- tatives of the workers bargaining for favor from the bosses. We declare the workers must be organized in order to combat the organized power of the employers; they often try to help the employ- ers organize so as to be able to carry on negotiations between their joint representatives, We say that a campaign of organ- ization amongst the workers of the industry must be carried ‘on at all times; they regard the work of or- ganization as something “seasonal,” to be undertaken when the member- | ship is on the point of disintegration or when negotiations are about to be- jgin with the employers for new agreements. We hold that the rank and file of the unions must especialy be drawn jinto the work of organization; they | believe this work must be done prin- cipally by paid agents. We believe in the activity of the | masses; they believe in the diploma- \tic maneuvers of particular leaders. We insist upon rank and file con- trol of the unions; they believe the unions must be controlled by paid officials. Class Education. We say that the leaders must be bound to the masses by close ties of comradeship; they keep the leaders aloof from the masses, We maintain, that the workers must be educated and trained for the class struggle; they oppose this be- cause they do not believe any class struggle exists. We say, that the unions must wage a campaign to eradicate the evils from which the workers suffer; they try to reconcile themselves to all the evils. We say that the sweat-shop system in the needle industry must be eradi- cated; they keep on friendly terms with all sorts of organizations of sweat-shop bosses. We say that the activities of the union must be based upon the needs of the workers’ battle for better con- ditions; they hold that these activi- ties must be suited to the personal ambitions of paid officials. We stand for amalgamation; they stand for the craft unionism. We stand for the consolidation of trade and craft locals; they want to maintain the useless division into small locals. We say, that the workers must be- come active on the political field, and carry on independent political ac- tion; they fraternize with all kinds of capitalist politicians and beg fa- vors from them for the workers. We hold, that our unions must We and They | The Left and Right {Wings in the Unions wage a campaign that the unem- ployed should be guaranteed the necessities of life at the expense of the wealth created by the workers in the industry; they’are satisfied with the good promises of the employers covering an entire industry; they make different kinds of agreements in every craft. Lefts vs. Rights. We say that the unions must de- cide upon maximum standards so as to guard the workers in the shops from the speed-up system; they readily” accept minimum standards that tax the workers’ strength to the limit. We stand for week work; they do not object to piece-work. We demand democracy in the un- ions; they want to perpetuate bu- reaucracy. We demand proportionate repre- sentation on joint boards and at con- ventions; they want the small locals, which they can easily control, to overrule the will of the majority of the membership. We hold that union officials must first and foremost fight for higher wages for the workers; they are in- terested only in higher wages for the officials of the machine. We demand freedom of opinion for all tendencies both at union meetings and in the union press; they pursue a policy of suppressing the opinions of their opponents. We demand unified activity of all groups in the interest of the union; they persecute their opponents and expel them from the union. : We aim to build and strengthen our unions; they follow a policy of demoralizing and disrupting the or- ganization. We fight for the interests of the rank and file; they fight only for their personal interests at the ex- pense of the workers. We are the Lefts; they are the Rights. Your Union Meeting | Second Thursday, April 10, 1924 5 Brick and Clay, A. O. U. W. Hall, Dolton, Ul. rpenters, 113 S. Ashland Blvd. 6416 S. Halsted St. 1440 Emma St. South Chicago, 11637 Mich- igen 504 Carpenters, Orden and Kedzie, 115 Engineers, 9223 Houston Ave. 16836 Federal Labor Union, 2116 N. Robey. 499 Firemen and ‘inemen, Springfield i North Ay. jers, Harrison and Green Sts, 18 Ladies” Garment Workers, 328 W. Van Buren &t. Marble Polishers, 810 W. Harrison St. » 771 Giipin Ave. Couneil, 1446 W. 311 Painte Dai ‘sinters, Dutt's Hall, Chieago Heights. 26 Rulers, 59 E, Van Buren St., 0 p.m, 17301 Park Employes, 810 W. Harrison St. 774 Railway Clerks, 55th and Blackstone. Railway Clerks, 3124 8. Halsted St, 1844 Railway Clerks, Harrison and Green. 877 Railway Trainmen, 64th and University, are at 8 p. m.) Carpenters Refuse to Work With Scab Building Material PITTSBURGH, Pa,, April 9.—The carpenter's of this vicinity have de- clared war on the attempted domina- tion of their jobs py the Master Builder's Association, effecting a gen- eral strike of 4,500 men. Independent firms have already come to terms, agreeing to pay the carpenters eleven dollars per day. The strike is hold- ing up all construction work being carried on by members of the Master Builder’s Association. One of the main points of dispute is the insistence of the Association that materials used in construction coms from non-union firms, The car- penters refuse to work on jobs which require the use of scab material, nts of Difference Thursday, April 10, 1924 apply your scientific knowledge to practical life?” Preobrazensky can, of course, earn cheap applause for such words among a section of the students, who have perhaps studied Marx’s “Capital” for half a year, but have not yet ruled the country. This sec- tion of the students ig somewhat displeased with us because we do not offer them the immediate possibility of putting theory into practice. But such methods of agitation are noth- ing more nor Jess than mere vulgar demagogy. Preobrazensky’s _pro- ceedings, too, are simply explicable by the Jack of more serious -argu- ments, 4 Demagogy Must Cease. In a country of Russia’s dimen- sions,.in which there are so few Marxists, so few-peopie?who can read ; and: write properly, ‘in which there is such a tremendous demand for people possessing a real knowl- edge—to stand up before youthful students in such a country and to declare to them: After you have passed thru this university, you will find no opportunity for the app%ica- tion of our knowledge—this is mere vulgar demagogy. It is no great feat to attract by such cheap bait those strata of our students whose petty bourgeois ide- ology is still very strong. These methods remind us almost too strongly of the «similar methods practiced by the right wing of in- ternational socialism, I believe that I have no need to prove this, (To Be Continued Friday.) TRADE TIES ARE KNITTING ORIENT Commerce Thrives with Persia and Far East (Rosta News Agency.) MOSCOW, April 9—The Russo- Oriental Chamber of Commerce has been in existence a year. lt has done much to stimulate trading activities between the Union of Scviet Re- publics and the countries of the East. During the war other countries contrived to get possession of east- ern markets which had previously been dependent on Russian trade. ‘The resumption of large scale Rus- sian trade with the Eastern coun- tries is very important from the point of view of helping to save the latter from economic and even political exploitation by monopolist Western nations. ‘ Persia at Baku Fair. The chamber has been most suc- | TOSOVIET RUSSIA | A Jewish FRIDAY, 4» Minna Ysaeva, Soprano. THREE - GREAT - ARTISTS Will Take Part in the Majestic CONCERT. Given in Celebration of the SECOND ANNIVERSARY OF THE “FREIHEIT” APRIL 11th, 1924 At the = ORCHESTRA HALL 220 S. Michigan Blvd. Ivan Steschenko, Bass, Chicago Civic Opera Co. Ivan Dnieproff, Tenor Star, Russian Grand Opera Co. FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA 4 ‘4 Daily 5 a TICKETS: $1.10, 85 C To be obtained at the “FREIHEIT” Office, 1145 Blue Island Avenue; Cheskis Restaurant, 8124 W. Roosevelt Road; Ceshinsky’s Book Store, 2720 W. Division St. 2034 Notary D My the 8. Extracting a Specialty Gas and Oxygen----- X-Ray V. BERNAU REAL ESTATE ‘& and INSURANCE %:': consideration—11 same corner. DR. ZIM ts., 55 Cts., 40 Cts. following places: % of every kind = 33 fi N. HALSTED STREET Public Lincoln 3208 4 O NOT LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU— | Come to’my office and get my personal attention. | work and advice is absolutely best—My experience is worth years on the Prices reasonable. 10% to all readers of the IMMERN ERMAN ..DENTIST... 2000 N. CALIFORNIA AVENUE Frankenstein Gives Russ Singers O. K., Even.in Gypsy Role cessful in stimulating Russian trade with Persia. At the Baku fair, for instance, Persian exhibits totalled 2,820 tons in 1928, compared with 440 tons in 1922. Persian traders purchased $450,000 worth of Russian goods, 25 per cent of the total Rus- sian goods sold at the fair in 1928. At the Nijni-Novgorod fair, 76 Persian wholesale traders were rep- resented in 1923, compared with 29 in 1922, 20 in 1914, and 23 in 1913. While the total quantity of goods exhibited at the fair was 40 per cent larger inf 1928 than in 1922, the !amount of Persian goods exhibited was eight times as great as in the previous year. Business men from Eastern countries in general bought goods to the value of more than $500,000 at the fair. The establishment |the Russo-Persian Bank resulted | from representations made by the | chamber, which was also largely responsible for the organization of the Russian section of the Teheran exhibition, fo which 17,000 Russian exhi were sent. It has done much to stimulate trade with Bokhara, Khorassan and Afghanistan. Plans for the development of trade with Turkey are, now being considered, and a Russian delegation is about to be sent to Angora. Displace U. S. and England, In the Far East, trade with Mon- golia has been restored, largely at the expense of Chinese, British and American _ interests. Commercial relations have been resumed with Western China, which is an import- ant source of supply of many raw materials, Business men from West- ern China were prominent at the Nijni-Novgorod fair. There is a promising market for Russian cotton goods, sugar, oil, matches, goloshes and crockery. It is interesting to recall that in 1913 Russian exports to Western China amounted to 2,- 192,000 roubles, and imports to 5,129,000 roubles, During the working year 1922-23, Russian trade with Eastern coun- tries amounted to nearly 40 per cent of the pre-war figure, Russ Winter Crops Are Satisfactory; Acreage Increased in Persia of (Rosta News Agency.) MOSCOW, April 9.—The general condition of the winter crops is sat- isfactory all over the Union of Soviet Republics, according to the latest data collected by the People’s Com- missariat of Agriculture, Alone the middle Volga area gives rise to some By ALFRED V. FRANKENSTEIN. | Ivan Dnieproff, tenor of the Rus-| sian opera company, sang at a con-| cert held in Pilsen Hall under the | direction of Jack Pfefer last Sunday | night. Dnieproff, tho a Russian, | sings many Italian opera roles, and sings them with a spirit and fire) difficult to find _in many another | operatic tenor. He sang arias from | “Martha” and “Toschi” in a way) that leaves the tenors of the San; Carlo and Chicago companies far) behind. Dnieproff has been engaged ‘to sing Italian and French operas with the Chicago next season, where | he will fill the long felt want of an} adequate lyrical tenor, | Olga Pozello, Russian balladist, | occupied most of the program. Her | style of singing the sentimental songs she chose reminds one mich of the famous Isa Kremer. Tho her voice is a trifle ‘harsh in quality, her interpretation, which manages to stay away from the banal tho it is sentimental enough, makes up for that. Gabriel Krizanovski and Mme. Pozello sang for the first time in Chicago a duet arranged by theni- selves from. Russian gypsy folk songs. They were not what one ex- pects of gypsy songs, for they were of the lingering sweetness, long en- during sort of sentimental ballad. But the sweetness was not prolonged to the sour stage. The program was rounded out by Ida Divanoff, a violinist with a big tone, and dramatic qualities of in- terpretation, Australian Labor Leader Denounces 42 W. Harrison tae aed patel Se : frees Clark 118 S. Clark lerat ress) | SYDNEY, New South Wales, Apr. |°° W- Washington | 167 N. State 9.—In a special interview for the DAILY WORKER, Charlton, leader of the Labor Party in the Australian federal parliament, de- nounced the proposal to commit Aus- tralia to the building of a naval base at Singapore. He also protested against Prime Minister Bruce telling the world that Australia is behind the building of the naval base, when | the people of Aust e@ never been consulted. The Singapore naval base, planned by the late Tory gov- ernment of England, has been dropped by the MacDonald Labor government. Charlton said that Australia had always retained separate defense, brought into being her own navy, and had declined to contribute to- ward the cost of the British navy, Ws apprehension owing to the lack of sufficient snow or rain. The total sown area exceeds by 12 per cent last year's sowings. BURNS MUST GO! Don't be a “Yes, But,” supporter of The Daily Worker. Send in your sabi scription at once. IMPEACH COOLIDGE! Naval Base Plans’ ow, van pon | Specialties: Fine Soups and Fresh Made Coffee 1612 Fulton St. Rendering Expert Dental Service for 20 Toaw That second hand upright piano i: good condition and within Feast of fear Are you self-conscious about the impression you make on people? PERSONAL appearance has aloe to do with the way feel. Clothes count, of course. Bue sill there is one thing so many people overlook—something that at once ‘ brands them as either fastidious or | careless—the teeth. Notice today how you, yourself, watch another person’s teeth when he or she is talking. If the teeth are ij not well kept they at once become a ' liability. ' Listering Te ser Tes fet dom anc only 25 cents; at your drug- ist’s.—Lambert Pharmacal Co.,Saint | is, U.S. A. } 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-—— W. REICK LUNCH ROOMS Seven Places PHONES, HARRISON 8616-7 E. W. Rieck Boston Baked Beans and Brown Bread Commissary and Bakery: Phone West 2549 PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK DENTIST 645 SMITHFIELD 8T., Near 7th Ave. 4027 CENTER AVE., Cor. Arthur St HERE IT Is! ur purse, Write to Box A. C., Daily orker, for particulars. Phone 4670 ASHER .B, PORTNOY & CO. PAINTERS SUPPLIES” tes on New

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