The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 10, 1924, Page 5

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| | Thursday, April 10, 1924 THE DAILY WORKER ANTI-MUSSOLINI MEETING HALTED {IN PENNSY TOWN Constitution Is a Joke in Mt. Carmel! (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK, April 9.—Interfer- ence with an anti-Fascist meeting by the officials of Mt. Carmel, Pa.,} brought a protest today from the American Civil Liberties Union, sent to Chief Burgess Walter Kozlowski, and the announcement that another meeting would soon be held there to test the right of free speech. The Union called upon Burgess Kozlow- ski to furnish police protection “so that the meeting may proceed in a lawful and orderly manner. in ac- cordance with American traditions of free speech and assemblage.” Court action will be taken if necessary, the pas declared. Protest To Giff. | A protest was‘also sent to Gov- érnor Gifford Pinchot, enclosing press reports of the case and requesting him to take such action as he could under the law. The press reports show that Italians supporting the Fascist government secured the co-operation of the mayor and the police depart- inént in pfeventing the meeting. “This is one of a number of recent instances of the sort in Pennsylvania,” the Civil Liberties Union declared in a statement issued today. “Pennsyl- vania is at present the one state in the country where such~arbitrary in- terference with meefi! is frequent. The mayor of Wilkes-Barre recently interfered with a peaceful meeting called to praise ons foreign premier; now the mayor of Mt. Carmel inter- feres with a peaceful meeting cailed to criticize another foreign premier. The Constitution guarantees to Amer- ican citizens the right to discuss their own government in any way they like. They have surely the right to discuss foreign governments. The action of Burgess Kozlowski and Chief of Po- lice Morgan is wholly without war- rant in law, public morals or common sense.” Youth Views By HARRY GANNES Number of Child and Youth Workers Still Grows. ; All available reports show a rapid increase in the number of youth and child workers. The thirty-eight per cent increase reported by. the United States department of labor in the past few months nowhere near gives a true picture of the situation of youth labor. Since the close of the war, the school attendance of the youth has become exceedingly lax, and with this the tendency to employ more and more youth 14 years of age and un- der is growing pronounced. No action has been taken on the pending useless bills in Congress either for the abolition of child la- bor or the passing of a constitutional amendment “with a view of prohibit- ing child labor.” Strong oposition has cep shown to any attempts to better /the con- dition of the working children right in the congressional committee Jn- vestigating the child labor constitu- tional amendments. There is but little chance of even these lip-service measures passing in Every op- portunity is given the capitalists and employers of child labor to talk and act against the bill while very little is being done really to get the facts of the exploitation of the children. Sena ‘edill McCormick, who pa- rades as one in favor of the constitu- tional amendment, announces that no more information is needed on the subject, while at the same time, hun- dreds upon hundreds of child labor employers. and their representatives appear before the committee in charge of the subject and urge that | the measure in favor of the children be not passed. This grim game of hidé-and-seek with the lives of the working ehildren will undoubtedly go on so long as the workers are limited in their expres- sion against the sweating of children to Gompers and men of his stamp. Before anything real can be done, | a farmer-labor party based on the real needs of the workers and farm- rs, must come into existence. The tation against child labor become: a strong point in the argument for a class farmer-labor party. To ex- pect anything whatever from Gom- “The Story of John Brown” This is “The Story of John Brown,” by Michael Gold. _ Pub- lished by the DAILY WORKER thru arrangement with Haldeman- Julius Company, of Girard, Kans. Copyrighted, 1924, by Haldeman- Julius Company. *"* * Hl. THE AGITATOR IN JAIL. OR in that month, John Brown accomplished more for aboli- tion than even the stern deeds of Kansas had effected. He had put by the sword forever, and now for a month took up the pen and made it as powerful a weapon. He wrote innumerable letters to Northern friends and they were published and . read everywhere. Their tone was Christ-like; no longer was Brown the militant captain in the field, but the sveet, patient martyr waiting for his end in. tranquil joy. In many letters he repeats the statement that he is glad to die; that his death is of more value to the cause than ever his life coud nave been. This wag no vainglorious hysteri- cal gesture with John Brown; he was calm'y certain of it; he slept peacefully as a child at night, and wrote his ietters by day, secure in his tranquil wisdom. Friends were -Planning an attempt to rescue him, but he forbade them to try, for he really felt that his death was, necessary. “I am worth now ‘infinitely more to die, than to live,” he said, He Goes To His Death. And in his letters he gave Americans. his last warning on the slavery question. He told them’ it must be settled; it could not go on. His letters were so strong, manly, and yet so touching, that even the jailor wept as he cen- sored them in the course of his duties. As Wendell Phillips said, the million hearts of his country- men had been meted by that old Puritan soul. With absolute equanimity, John Brown wrote his will, wrote his last few letters to his family, de- termined the coffin in whien he was to be buried, and the gst tion on the family monument, said farewell to his fellow prisoners and jail keepers. On the morning of December 2nd he stood ca.mly on the steps of the scaffold and gazed about him. Before leaving his cell he had handed to another prisoner the following last and uncompleted message: “I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without much bloodshed it might be done.” fi The Trap Is Sprung. Now, as he looked about, he could see massed beyond the fif- teen hundred soldiers Virginia had felt necessary for this execution, the hazy outlines of the Blue Ridge mountains. The sun was shining; the sky was blue, and his heart. was at peace. “This is a beautiful country,” he said, “I never had the pleasure of really seeing it before.” He walked with perfect composure up the steps, watehed by the eyes of the sol- diery and officialdom of slave- holding Virginia. They saw not a tremor in his face or body; even when the cap was drawn over his head, his arms pinioned at the elbows, the noose slipped around his neck. He had refused to have the solace of any ministers, for they believed in alavery, and he told them he did not regard them as Christians, He needed no man’s solace; he was braver than any one there. “Shall I give you the sig- nal when the trap 1s to be sprung?” said a friendly sheriff. “No, no,” the serene old man an- swered, “just get it over quickly.” Hugo’s Prediction, ; And quickly enough, it was all over for John Brown. The trap was sprung; his body hung be- tween heaven and earth. In the painful silence that followed, the voice of Colonel Preston declaimed solemnly, the official epitaph, “So perish all such enemies of Vir- ginia! All such enemies of the Union! All such foes of the hu- man race!” That was the verdict of the South, still infatuated and blinded by its slave system. But on the other side of the Mason-Dixon line such men were pronouncing a dif- ferent verdict on Jonn Brown, and on the other side of the Atlantic, the greatest man of letters in Europe, Victor Hugo, was saying: “In killing Brown, the Southern States have committed a crime which will take its place among the calamities of history, The rupture of the Union will fatally follow the assassination of Brown. As for John Brown, he was an apostle and a hero. The gibbet has only increased his glory, and made him a martyr.” (To Be Concluded Friday) (His Soul Goes Marching On) Are We For LaFollette? === =e Tas question is one which has re- _~ cently been presented to the Party in a very pressing form. One of the Party branches in the .West sent to the National Office an enthusiastic letter announcing that a “LaFollette-for-President” club had been organized and that the Party members had captured contro] of the organization. The branch further an- nounced that an intensive campaign to spread the ‘“LaFollette-for-Presi- dent” clubs over the entire city ana county would be undertaken. There may be other Party branches which have similar ideas in regard to our position in relation to LaFollette and it is therefore necessary to dis- cuss the matter thoroly in order to prevent other units of the organiza- tion from going off on such wild- goose chases as that of the branch re- ferred to. Economic Forces at Work. In discussing the conditions which made a proletarian revolution possi- ble, Lenin said that there were two conditions, the first being that the bourgeoisie could no longer rule and the second the will-to-power of the proletariat. The conditions which make it possi- ble for the capitalists rule are cre- ated by the economic forces devel- oped within the capitalist system. During and after the world war these forces -made their appearance in a more or less developed form in prac- tically every capitalist country. The war disarranged the whole capitalist structure of production. It created enormous burdens of taxation in ev- ery capitalist country. The conse- quences of this situation are that the struggle between economic groups in capitalist society has been sharpened tremendously thru each group try- ing to escape the sacrifices made nec- essary to pay the cost of the heavy economic burden created by the war. The result of the sharpened eco- nomic conflict reflects itself in the political struggle. In place of a more or less homogeneous ruling capitalist class, each economic group within the |capitalist system which has divergent economic interests, organizes itself for the political struggle. The result is that the centralized capitalist: rul- ing power bri up into many strug- gling groups, which, while they continuously endeavor to combine against the working class, find them- selves forced apart again thru the ressure of their distinct economic interests. The continuous changes from gov- ernment to government in Germany, the country which has to meet tne greatest burden, economically, on ac- ‘count of the war, represents this process at work. This situation in England is developing along this pers or the bunch of robbers now in charge of the lives and health of the little children is to hope for the im- possible from the enemies of the ing youth and chili laborers, For palm bensatayi-se | the Yi ers League er- fear eddrone Ti. Se 1009" N. State St., Chicago, Ill. ~~ UNCLE WIGGLY’S TRIC true interests of the American work- | Worki | Farr line, with the added factor that under the pressure of a growing revolution- ry movement the capitalists find i politically wise to permit a pseudo- class government to rule for the present. In the United St While the United States suffers least as a result of the world war, the sharpened economic struggle has become apparent here as well as in European countries. There is a grow- ing movement on the part of both the “Tk climb bell and get ggily! Ee (Cum lower middle class, the small business men, the shopkeepers and well-to-do farmers and on the part of the work- ing class to challenge the centralized capitalist ruling power in this coun- try. This movement expresses itself in the Third Party movement sup- ported by the lower middle class and the class Farmer-Labor party sup- ported by the exploited farmers and workers, ~ These two movements are not separate and distinct; they are inter- mingled with admixtures of Third Party elements in the class Farmer- Labor movement and working class elements in the Third Party move- ment. There is, however, one point of agreement between the two move- ments. Both center their hopes upon the leadership of LaFollette as - didate for president. Masses of ers and workers who are supporting the June 17th Convention. and who organizationally are for a Farmer- Labor Party are for LaFollette for president as well as the small busi- ness men, the professional groups, the aristocracy of labor, etc., which sup- port the Third Party movement. Our Policy. Our Party recognizes this situa- tion. It is endeavoring to fit its poli- cies so as to meet this situation. Does of the masses of workers, farmers, professional men, small business men, ete., who look to LaFollette as the Moses who will lead them out of the econgmie wilderness which the rul- ing capitalist has created for them. Certainly if we shared these illusions we would have no'right to call our- selves Communists. If circumstances develop so that our Party will find it- self supporting the candidacy of La- Pollette for ‘president it certainly will not be because we have any such illu {sions. It will not be because we be- lieve that LaFollette will materially change the exploitation of the eco- nomic lot of the workers and farmers fon what it is under capital to- lay. We know that LaFollette as presi- ident, with the capitalist system in ‘existence, would be the administr: tive head of a capitalist government. !We know that such a government would have to serve the interests of ‘the capital just as the Ramsay .MacDonald government in England today is ruling for and in the inter- ests of the capitalists. There might be some slight softening of the capitalist ‘rule, some modification of harshness, but there would not be and could not be any change from bai condi- _tions which would materially infringe upon the interests of the capitalist class. This in itself is an answer to jthe question, “Are we for LaFol- Jette?” We are not and cannot be for La- Follette because we are Communists, and when we say we are Communists, ‘we say that the road to emancipation ,of the workers and exploited farmers ;from the oppression and exploitation 1 JOIN THE JUNIOR SECTION For Information 1009 N. State St., Rm. 214 Chicago, Ill, that mean that we share the illusions, of capitalism is thru a Proletarian Revolution, Soviets, and the Dictator- ship of the Proletariat and not thru a LaFollette government. Our Propaganda. It is our duty as a Communist Party to openly say this to the work- ing class. We must tell the workers and exploited farmers now that La- Follette, as president, will have to serve capitalism and will not serve the workers and exploited farmers. We cannot recede a hair’s breadth from this position. Any other position on our part would mean that we would no longer be a Communist Party. Will We Support LaFollette If He Is Nominated? What has been said above, does, not, however, answer the question whether we shall support LaFollette if he is nominated on a Farmer-Labor ticket. Should that come about, and it seems very likely, then we will un- questionably support LaFollette in the election campaigns along with the masses of workers and farmers who are behind the Farmer-Labor Party movement, This is, of course, something quite | different from saying that we are for |LaFollette and from going out and forming “LaFollette-For-President” clubs, We are against LaFollette. We know that the political victory of the workers and exploited farmers lies over the dead body (politically), of LaFollette. We will say this to the working class of this country. If, in spite of what we say, the masses of workers and exploited farmers who are not yet Commun.}its, insist upon nominating LaFolleze and placing their hope upon him, we will not de- sert them in the struggle. We will go along with them and vote for their candidate, but at every stage of de- velopment we will point out that their hopes are illusions. A Difficult Policy. policy which difficult one. It not easy to strongly criticise and ‘give support at the same time. It is much easier to do what the western Party branch did, that is, to become an enthusiastic supporter of LaFollette and help to organize “La Follette-for-President” clubs There is a great danger that unless! our Party members clearly under- stand our policy in regard to LaFol- lette that other Party units will de- velop similar tendencies, Even tho the policy of vigorous criticism, of continual exposure of the futility of his program while at the same time we are part of a United Front movement and give our support to the candidacy of LaFollette, may be a difficult one, that is the policy we must follow. Let no Party member get the idea that we are for LaFollette because we may find ourselves supporting La- Follette as part of the Farmer-Labor United Front, Our central task is) not to be for LaFollette, but to di- vorce the workers and exploited | farmers from LaFollette. Every new DAILY WORKER reader | '16 SUPER POWER | Private TRUSTS LEVYING TRIBUTE ON U. S, 8,000,000 People in Grip i Of Biggest Combine By LELAND ULDS. (Federated Press Industrial Editor) Domination of the electric power industry by giaryt combines which levy tribute on millions is crowding ! ; hundreds of small municipal electric lighting plants out of business, ac- cording to reports of state public ‘utility commissions which furnish the private ownership advocates with choice morsels for propaganda. Sixteen of these privately owned power systems today reach out their tentacles to include communities with a population of more than 438,- 000,000. one-third of the entire country comes within their sphere of indus- tries. They are extending and com- bining to such an extent that within a very few years this most vital source of power will be entirely en- grossed by New Yerk financial interests, Control Workshops of Word. During March, Fresident H. H. Porter, of the American Water Works and Electric Company, an- nounced a new $315,000,000 super- power combine embracing the “workshop of the world.” This new- ly integrated system covers the area between Cleveland and Erie on the north, the coal fields along the Ken- tucky-West Virginia state line south of Charleston and a pojnt about 25 miles west of Baltimore, as well as the entire Pittsburgh district. Ac- cording to Porter the combine will mean cheaper power and fewer labor troubles. ed Th following table shows the 16 big private power combines and the population of the communities serv- ed by each: 1. Detroit Fdison Co.. 1,500,000. 2. General Gas & Electric Co., 1,250,000. 8. Insull Group, 7,976,900. | 4. Public Service of New Jersey, | 2,301,832. 6. Standard Gas Corp., 2.875,000. 8. Pacific Gas and Electric Co.,| 1,715,959. | and Electric | 7. Northern States Power, 1,213,- | 500. | 8. Consolidated Gas of New York. 4,000,000. 9. Brooklyn Edison, 2,000,000. | 10. American Gas and Electric, | 1,200,000. | 11. Stone and Webster Com- panies, 1,500,000. 2,800,- 12. North American Co., 0. 13. Cities Service Co. 2,500.000. 14. Southern California E:fson, 1,500,000. 15. Niagara, tario, 1,500,000. 16. American Water Works and | Electric, 8,000,000, | Such power units serve communi ties averaging 2,700,000 population. They extend their tentacles into every state of the union. Nothing remains for the isolated municipal plant which once saved consumers from the individual private plant but surrender to the greater econ- omy of combination. Municipal Plants Go Under. The metropolitan press hails with glee each surrender which it falsely treats as a victory for the principle of private ownership. Dealing with the abandonment of more chan 20 municipal enterprises in Michigan during 1923 the Wall Street Journal fairly shouts “Municipal Power Fails in Michigan—Referendums Show! Company’s Popularity.” Similar reports from Nebraska read “That municipal ownership once strong in Nebraska is rapidly losing ground is evidenced by the number of municipalities which have aban- doned their electric light plants and contracted with the Nebraska Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of the Continental Gas and Electric Corporation.” . The report of the New York state ommittee on public utility informa- ion stating that more than 660 mu- nicipal utilities have been abandoned or sold during the last few years gets the headline “Municipal Plants Disappearing Fast—Lower Produc- tion Cost of Privately Owned Power Stations Causes Abandonments.” But this New York report goes on to show that it is the economy of the larger generating units and not pri- vate ownership which really counts. The economy of such /lurge sys- tems to the consumer would be even greater if the enormous private profits of the present private own- ership could be eliminated, (The extent of these profits and the way in which they have been eliminated in Canada will be told in two subsequent articles.) means a new recruit in the ranks of Nit bor. —————— A LAUGH FOR THE CHILDREN Yes, Uncle Wig, let you Opponents of Fascisti Elect 160 Despite Black Shirt Violence (Special to The Daily Worker) ROME, April 9.—One hundred and sixty members of the opposition managed to break thru the wall of violence and murder which protected the Fascisti in the recent election, The new Italian chamber will thus have 375 Fascisti members and 160 minority members composed of 65 Socialists, 39 Catholics, 17 Liberal In other words, more than | ‘ culation of smal | vented the stabilisation of prices, as | raising of prices to be insured against | the depreciation of currency. Lockport and On- | | intervention”, operated on the market Robots in “R. U. 2.” Cannot Even Hear The Whistle Biow ‘aie eae Geen: ongng: | f | oy | © halls have 1 the new I, h street. There will als un performance in Stru : Production of present daring method used by in ite staging of | he taparturer, Zro yao Theatre G the play. No taiton with the au On the contrary, setting anh ydogeed ¢ will Ve compare standard get by the ‘ts purformacers Tho east has been arhing new | tay severn) woes, players | thamselves into | 1 Z| 3 ft | to to | | Heavy Corn Exports From Russia Affect | Agricultural Prices| (By Rost News Agency) MOSCOW, April 9—Due to a nota- ble rise of prices on agricultural | produce—which rise may itself be ex plained in part by the growth of corn exports from Russia, the buying ca-/} pacity of the rural population has| considerably increased during the last} few months. This, in its turn, has had _a favorable effect on the indus- trial turnover in towns. However, the lack in the broad monetary cir- units of small stable currency has up to now pre- the buyers wished by a fictitious Under such conditions, the State is now, in the interest of the financial reform which is actuaily being ef- fected, undertaking economic and ad- ministrative measures intended to stabilize and bring goods prices to | a lower level in an orderiy way. Ac- cordingly, the system. has been set up of regulating prices in the chief in- dustrial centers, in Moscow—where regulations have already been issued fixing bread prices, Leningrad (Petro- grad), the Donetz Basin, Baku (Caspian Sea), etc. At the same time, what may be called a “goods by the Government on broad lines, and the concentration in the several districts of large amounts of goods, are undertaken with a view to main- taining the index of regulated prices. This system of price regulating is being met sympathetically among both official and private business spheres, where it is expected it will ensure ths “success of the financial reform. Russian State Bank Ready to Handle Big British-Italian Trade (Rosta News Agency) MOSCOW, April 9.—The Rosta News Agency learns in competent circles that the British and Italian de jure recognition of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics finds the Russian State Bank we!l prepared for the enlargement of its foreign department business. It ig being re- marked, in this connection, that the foreign operations of the state bank have attained considerable dimen- sions during the last few months. The bank has established corre- spondent relations with a hundred of the largest banks of the world. Operations in “Chervontz” (10 gold rouble bank notes) are carried on more especially with organiza- tions and firms interested in the pur- chase in the Soviet republics of raw export materials. Accordingly, the largest share of “Chervohtz” sold by the bank falls to England, where about 80 per cent of the “Cher- vontz” have been sold; with the United States, the Scandinavian countries, Germany and others com- ing next. . Even Rotarians Take Wallop at Mars in Little Canadian Town (By The Federated Press) LONDON, Ont., April 9.—“During the war the church preached just as much Christianity as the state would allow. She found that, having sup- ported a military form in peace time, she could not effect a sudden change in the stress of war conditions.” This statement was made by Prof. A. G, Dorland of the University of Western Ontario at a meeting called to advocate the outlawry of war. The meeting was attended by representa- tives of the city council, the city 3 |evening, DETROIT PLANS — VERY BUSY WEEK, APRIL 13 TO 20 Ruthenberg, _ Trachten- berg, Dunne to Speak DETROIT, Mich., April 9.—The jeight-day period beginning Sunday, np i 13th, and ending Sunday, April ~ | 20th, is crammed with events of great interest to the Party members and sympathizers in Detroit and of vital importance to the Party. The importance of Secretary C. E. Ruthenberg’s speech on “The Deci- ve Stage of Our Labor Party ‘olicy” neds no comment. All mem- bers are instructed to attend and others who may be interested are + invited. Many Lectures, Comrade Trachtenberg’s account of conditions in the two republics, Russia and Germany, will be very in- structive as to the relative merits of revolutionary action and class col- laboration from the workers’ point of view. Altho Comrade Trachten- berg is a lecturer on social issues, his talk will be descriptive of the objec- tive conditions attained by the .work- ing class in the two countries, as a result of diverging policies. On Saturady evening, April,19th, “Bill” Dunne will preside over a banquet which has for its objectives, 1|first, to provide those attenting with @ sumptuous dinner and an enjoyable and, secondly, to defray part of the cost of a new and com- |plete banqueting equipment for the House of the Masses. Sunday afternoon Comrade Dunne will speak on “Oil, and the-Germs of a Labor Party,” relating the im- portance of the disillusionment of the people as a result of the expo- sure of our oily administration, and the drive for a Farmer-Labor govern- ment. All Attend. We urge all readers to attend these meetings. As.the meetings are held in various halls we caution all readers to note carefully the sub- ject, speaker, time and place of meetings so as to be at the right place at the right time. The meet- ings are as follows: “The Decisive Stage of Our Labor Party Poliey,” C. E. Ruthenberg, at Finnish Hall, 5963, 14th St., Sunday April 18th at 2:30 p. m. “What I Saw in Russia and Ger- many,” A. Trachtenberg, at House of the M 8, 2101 Gratiot Ave. Tues- day April 15th, at 8:00 p. m. “Banquet, Dunne, Toastmaster,” House of the Masses, 2101 Gratiot Ave. Saturday April 19th, 6:30 till midnight. “Oil and the Germs of the Labor Party,” William F. Dunne, at Auto Workers’ Temple, 156 E. Adams, Sunday April 20th, 2:30 Pp. m. Two Factions of Armenian Section In Boston Combined The first results of the Boston convention, Feb. 22, which was helt for the purpose of unify ng the two sections of the Armenian workers and branches of the Workers Party haye been gained in the city of Bos- ton. The Branch of the formor Armenian Federation of the Work- ers Party and that of the Armenian Workers Party there, met on March 24 and adopted the following reso- lution: “In conformity with the dects- ion of the Central Executive Com- mittee of Workers Party of Amer- ica in regard to the unity of the branches of the two Armenian Sections, the two Boston branches in a joint session ca City Central Committee on March 24, 1924, ar morial Hall, Boston, Mass., unan- imously declare the uni two separate branches into one unit.” The two branches will function hereafter as the Boston Branch of the Workers Party in tha Armenian Section. The example of the Bos- ton Branch should be followed by other groups of the Armenian Work- ers organization, St. Louis Bakery Workers Demand $3 to $7 Increase (Special to The Dally Worker) ST. LOUIS, April 9.—The 1,400 union bakery workers in this city are negotiating for an increase of wages. The union asks $3 a week more. It is also demanded that foremen in small shops draw the same pay as in larger shops, This would increase foremen in some cases $7 a week. Another demand is that shifts which begin work, be- fore 6 a. m. or work after 6 Pp. m. chall receive the night shift scale of pay, which is $2 above the day rate. The present wage scale ranges from $28 to $42 a week, class of work governing, The organized employers are fighting the union’s demands, declar- ing that to grant the increase would necessitate an increase in the price of bread, which the employers say the “public” would not stand for. To any one who may believe that story the union workers cite the recent indictment of the bread trust by Basil Manly, in which the bak- churches, the Kiwanis, Rotary, and democrats, and a few Repabiicahs and other small factions. The peasants party returned two members to the new chamber. Opposition leaders declare the Fascisti government sure- ly would have fallen if the Fascisti had refrained from supressive meas- ures during the election, Lions clubs, the Jewish people, and the Trades and Labor council. A resolution was adopted pledging the organization represented “to pro- claim the outlawry of war as a method of settling international dis- putes.” ery combine was shown up as guilt of flagrant profiteering nr hepa " How many of your sh d THE DAILY WORKER.” Get one af them to subscribe today, BURNS MUST Go! ‘

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