The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 23, 1924, Page 3

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Friday, May 23, 1924 CALL MILWAUKEE |* LABOR TO ELECT FL. DELEGATES Meet June 5; Support St. Paul Convention (Special to The Daily Worker) MILWAUKEE, Wis., May 22.—The labor movement of this city has been invited to join in a conference on June 5th, at 8 p. m., Freie Gemeinde Hall, for the election of a delegate to the St. Paul convention, June. 17th, of the national Farmer-Labor party. The Madison conference for prog- ressive political action demonstrated the futility of the proposed Cleveland convention on July 4th, according to the workers who have issued the call for Milwaukee labor men and women to join hands June 5th. The call is signed by C. T. Donovan, secretary of the “Provisional Com- mittee,” member Cigarmakers Union, Local No. 26; Earl Sovenson, Local No. 15, International Union of Hle- vator Constructors; Robert Sprague, Building Laborers’ Union, World War Veterans; Henry Kaplan, Workmen’s, Circle, No. 166; Chas. Kuzdas, Paint- ers’ Union; Sam Papovich, Interna- tional Association of Machinists, Local No. 66; John Schlitt, Carpenters’ Un- ion, Local No. 1053. Philadelphia Acts May 27 For St. Paul Farm-Labor Meeting PHILADELPHIA, Pa, May 22.— The Farmer-Labor Party Conference called for May 27 in Machinists Tem- ple is expected to be a big success. Five local unions are represented on the arrangement committee. In addition delegates to the conference were so far elected by Machinists Local No. 159 and by District Council No. 21 of Painters, Paper Hangers and Decora- tors. Several branches of the Workmen's Circle of this city held a conference, and after a long discussion elected S. Glusman as delegate to the St. Paul Convention. A committee of nine was elected to secure the necessary funds for the delegate’s expenses. Nine branches, with a membership of over 1,000, were represented. Several more branches are expected to join and help finance the trip of the delegate. More than 500 copies of the call were mailed to the various labor or- ganizations of this city. New York Taxi Union Wins Recognition And New Wage Increases NEW YORK, May 22.—Victory on the industrial‘and legal front has been won by the union in the New York taxi war. Union recognition, 40 per cent of receipts for day men and 35 per cent for night drivers with half the receipts above $90 a week, are terms of the new contract with the Mogul Checker Cab Corp., which runs until Noy. 1. i Fleet owners of Mogul have with- drawn charges of ‘ extortion against officials of the union, the Brother- hood of Taxi Chauffeurs of Greater New York, an independent organiza- tion. At the same time the judge exonerated the men. Tho the contract covers only Mo- gul Checker employes, about 4,000, the union claims that about 600 of its members working for the Premier and Luxor companies are receiving the union scale following the strike. The American Yellow concern, which has ‘the patronage of the city admin- istration and the police, continues to pay its drivers 33 1-3 per cent. Sick Workers Lose Millions, Commons Tells Officials Aipoeidan: workers rhera lose $750,000 a year for sickness, asserted John B. Andréws, secretary of the American Association for Labor Legislation, at the convention of the Government Of- ficials Association in the Hotel Con- gress yesterday. : Andrews said that $200,000,000 of this sum could be saved by extending workmen’s compensation laws to make them cover occupational diseases. Ac- cident compensation has tended to prevent accidents, said Andrews, by the introduction of safety devices, and disease compensation would spread hygiene measures in industry. “A meeting Daily Worker Agents! of all Daily Worker Agents will be held this , May he auth, at the Daily Worker office, 1113 THE DAILY WORKER WAR LORD BURNT AILROAD LOBBYISTS USE CODE AND UNDERGROUND TACTICS TO KILL THE HOWELL-BARKLEY LABOR BILL By LAURENCE TODD (Staff Correspondent of The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, May 22.—Passage of the Howell-Barkley railroad labor bill was assured, and the most daring tactics to obstruct and cheat legislation known in the House in many years were doomed to failure, when the first rollcall in the second dis- cussion of that measure on the floor of the House resulted in 203 in favor, 180 against. This vote showed that two weeks of nationwide intrigue, wire-pulling and lavish expenditure of money openly and in secret by the railroad companies and the anti-labor forces of big $e business had not succeeded in driving a majority of the repre- sentatives to commit political suicide. The House voted to go into committee of the whole for the formal debate on the bill and amendments. Johnson of South Dakota made the first tricky move in opposition, by raising a parliamentary question and permitting the railroad crowd to con- sume half an hour in a quorum call. Then Longworth and Sanders of In- diana—the same Sanders whom cer- tain officers of the United Mine Workers have endorsed for the fed- eral judgeship at Indianapolis—began new obstruction. When the House voted to take up the bill in committee of the whole, this pair loudly an- nounced that there could be no agree- ment as to division of the time of debate. The meanness of their at- titude was so evident, however, that Longworth presently yielded, and the rebate began. Winslow, chairman of the interstate commerce committee, opened with a general denunciation of the bill and of the methods used by organized la- bor to call to the attention of the country the votes cast by the indi- vidual members of the House, on May 5th, for or against the cause of the railroad workers. Reading a let- ter which was issued by the federated shop crafts on the Pennsylvania lines—the strikers who have been out for two years because the Rail- road Labor Board betrayed them— Winslow bellowed the opinion that “That letter means ‘Hands up!’ That’s all.” Representative Nelson of Wiscon- sin, chairrhan of the progressive group, took the floor immediately after Winslow, and presented docu- mentary proof that while the labor elements have openly and sincerely been pleading with Congress to pass this remedial bill, the railroad com- panies have been using underground influences and secret plotters to coerce Congress to save the rail mag- nates once more at the expense of the workers. More Fall Fruit. He offered first, in code, a telegram sent by M. L. Countryman, general counsel for the Great Northern rail- way, on April 23, to H. E. Judge at Si- oux Falls, S. Dak.: “House bill intro- duced by Barkley abolishes labor board and puts national labor unions in very powerful position as against ilroads. Under new rules, bill has been called out of committee for con- sideration by House and comes up on or about May 5th. Please confer with other railroad counsel in your state and see whether thru cooly Plaster and mattings in your stroll abide by leach craft cars drunk time rebuke chide. ... At conference of railroad counsel today all agreed if any useful results are possible they will be obtained thru remit stoles thinly by sex filch.” 3 A week later, April 30, the Sioux Falls Press reported that Mr, Judge had addressed the local Traffic Bureau on the previous day, denouncing the Barkley bill, and charging that it would add $1,000,000 a year to the taxpayers’ burden. Resolutions were unanimously adopted, to telegraph the |" South Dakota congressmen urging them to work and vote against the measure. Individual members of the bureau were likewise pledged to send telegrams to Washington. On May 5th, all three South Dakota members voted with the railroads, and one of them, Royal Johnson, opened the fight with a filibuster game. Nelson offered in evidence a circu- lar issued to all local surgeons of the Santa Fe system, by W. P. Waggener, general attorney for the road, dated March 7th, notifying them ‘to pro- ceed at once and secure letters from business men, farmers and others, di- rected to the congressmen from your districts,” opposing the Barkley mea- sure. A list of suggestions for the text of these protest letters was in- cluded, with a promise to refund] necessary canvassing expenses. ‘Then there was the telegram sent May 6th by A. H. Mulliken, chairman of the legislative committee, Railway Business Association (which is the combine of railway supply companies that “milked” the railroads of vast sums in inflated prices on contract work), to the head of their member- ship committee, saying that 100 new member firms must be enrolled at once, to impress Congress with the opposition of business to this bill, “In House or Senate or White House,” he said, “this bill must be beaten if possible.” } California Cattle Men Profit By Hoof And Mouth Hysteria LOS ANGELES, Cal., May 22.—No state in the union surpasses Califor- nia in silliness whenever hysteria of one kind or another 1s on. At pres- ent tourists have to have camping outfits fumigated, must walk over medicated sawdust, and drive their cars thru medicated slop; very much as they had to keep a piece of cheese- cloth tied over their nose during the flu epidemic. Back of these things there is the psychology of officialdom rampant and back of this there is a more or less carefully concealed graft. “Whatever the origin of the epide- mic, it is well known in Los Angeles that it is being used by the big cat- tlemen to get rid of stock which they cannot afford to carry over the dry season and to kill off their competi- tors, the independent cattle men. Be- yond question, the public authorities are paying for a lot of cattle ruth- lessly sacrificed to the scare and the cattle monopoly in California suggests large possibilities in the use of such a scare for the benefit of certain well- known monopolists. Idea of Hearing Old Story Makes “Dennie” Real Sore at Strikers Smiling faces make “Dennie” Sulli- van sore. Yesterday when fifty girl garment strikers faced him in their usual smiling good humored way he looked fierce and put their cases over till today. Quite apparently he doesn’t relish the prospect of hearing the same witnesses for the garment bosses tell the same story he has heard scores of times. The girls were walking on the streets and the poor judge must sit and listen to a half dozen witnesses say that over and over again fifty times, Yesterday’s postponement of the contempt hearings was about the tenth postponement of their cases and the prospects are that the hearing will be set over again today. Foell’s Feet Also Cold. Judge Foell, altho not faced with as hard a job as Sullivan, was no more willing to go thru with it. He set the cases of the two girls who came before him yesterday to be heard Friday with the prospect that he would then. delay the hearings further. Cops Seize Opportunity. Bernice Nawrocki, a striker, was ar- raighed in S. Clark street police court yesterday to answer to disorderly con- duct because she talked to a scab who was on her way home. The coppers, who are still doing strike duty and having a soft time of it, seized the op- portunity to make an arrest. For weeks now they have not had the chance to do anything against the strikers and for their friends the bosses and they were glad to see opportunity walking down the street. Bernice took a jury trial. New York Dress Bosses Break From Peace Talk With Union; Strike Sure NEW YORK, May 22.—Negotiations between the. International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ officials and the Cloak Suit and Dress Manufacturers’ assotiation were broken off here yes. terday. Sigman, president of the I. L. G. W, U. has set all machinery for calling and handling a strike June Ist, in mo- tion. The strike will involve 60,000 workers. The bosses refused to de- baté the demands of the union for a raise in wages and the forty-hour CITY THRICE IN AERIAL LECTURE Midience Hiswled’ Por More Gore By C. A. MOSELY. Federated Press Staff Correspondent. In the opinion of the Illinois Manu- facturers’ Association as voiced by C. A, Livingston, assistant to the presi- dent, there will be another war. He spoke in the La Salle Hotel to. the National Aeronautic Association. “We have,” he added, “some pacifists here in Cook county, but of course there will be war.” The peace school of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom is in session here. The chief speaker of the aerial mil- itarists was Rear Admiral W. F. Ful- lam. The admiral was pessimistic of getting adequate preparedness for the next war out of a pacifist congress. He hopes to build up a large fleet of commercial aircraft, which can be mobilized when needed for defense. The admiral’s talk was illustrated by several reels of motion pictures, in which commercial uses of aircraft were alternated with Barling bomb- ers, dropping of bombs and torpedoes, and spreading of poison gasss. The admiral’s pictures showea tne metrop- olis successively destroyed three times by explosion, flame, and poison gas, reminding one of the verdict of the coroner’s jury, that the deceased came to death by a blow on board ship, was thrown overboard and washed ashore and froze to death. Admitting the squandering of vast sums on airplanes which never reached France (he put the figure at $300,000,000, cutting the actual amount in half), Fullam laid the blame on the people who had prevented prepared- ness, evidently believing that it was too much to expect honesty of profit- eers during national danger. “Every red-blooded American,” he said, “should wish to see America su- preme in the air.” His sentiments were shared by an audience composed most- ly of young men,—a few aviators, many textbook flyers, and beardiess youths with aspirations to be lords of the air, No one suggested resolutions in- dorsing the Women’s International League for Peace and Freed6m. And by some oversight the national an- them was not heard. The aeronautic association sells life membership at $500. Congress Considers Farm Relief Bills Before Adjourning WASHINGTON, May 22. — Con- gressional leaders today saw but one obstacle to adjournment on June 7, and that was enactment of a farm relief measure satisfactory to middle western progressives. Confident that the tax bill as re- vised by the conferees, will be signed by the president, the dictators of pol- icy of all factions agreed to disregard the clamor for other legislation and get away for the summer. Progres- sives will aid in this move by drop- ping their fight for repeal of the rate- making section of the present rail- road law. The demands of the Ford Muscle Shoals group; the world court group’s announced intention of forcing a vote upon that issue; and declarations by numerous senators that they intend to call up their special bills, are dis- regarded by various group leaders in their plans to adjourn. OLE HANSON, RED-BAITER,. | "REAL ESTATE SHARK, 1S NOW A HORSE THIEF LOS ANGELES, Cal., May 22,—Ev- ery radical from the Mexican border to Seattle was laughing his head off today, after reading in the papers the cheering news that Ole Hanson, the grafting real estate shark and patriot- ie faker was at last arrested for horse stealing. He was released on $1,000 bonds. Unfortunately, the old California |*- law, making horse stealing punishable by death, was changed so that Ole may get away with his life and per- haps, without any punishment, as all the capitalists and panhandling pa- triotic societies will be back of him. Ole distinguished himself after the big Seattle strike in 1919, by claiming |;, *‘|to have blocked the movement to es- tablish a Soviet Republic in the Unit- ed States. He toured the country un- der the auspices of Rotary Clubs and Chambers of Commerce and made vio- lent attacks on the radicals for their indifference to the laws governing |1. the rights of property, but after he THE POWER COLUMN LAST WEEK OF DRIVE PROVING GRUELLING CONTEST FOR LEADERSHIP Toledo, after Brilliant Showing Gains Undisputed Hold At the Top. Only three short weeks remain to the first big subscription drive and any one of a score of cities has more than a fighting chance to be at the head of the column before the last bell rings. DAILY WORKER boosters are finding this campaign tremendously more exciting and inter- esting than any they have ever before entered into. Their interest is evidenced by their strenuous activity and is recorded twice each week in the Honor Roll for those who read THE DAILY WORKER to become acquainted with those who are making the paper a success, Toledo Gains Well Earned Honors. _ There is one city, or more exactly one group of militants who de- serve more than passing mention. A small group, captained by Com- rade A. W. Harvitt has put Toledo on the map as far as the labor move- ment is concerned. To be sure these young militants have been men- tioned before in this column, but their achievements can well be noted again so that others may have a mark to strive for. With no left wing movement of any size in Toledo on January 13 when THE DAILY WORKER was born, with practically no readers of any radical journal, in a few short months these hustlers have been able to secure hundreds of readers for THE DAILY WORKER. There is much to be expected from Toledo in the future not only for THE DAILY WORKER but for every activity in the revolutionary movement. Toledo has worked hard and consistently and it is no wonder that it has at last gained the envious position from which it can look down- ward at the rest of the country. Others Are Coming! South Bend, Ind. another little city of which little or nothing has been heard has also covered itself with glory. The comrades there claim they have no intentions of remaining at even figures and expect to reach at least the 150 per cent mark before June 15th. Pittsburgh, Pa.. and Kansas City, Mo., are still among the climbers and the comers, the former threatening to give Toledo a run for a banner and the latter still making its claim for cities with less than 100 quotas. Miles City is still waiting at the brink. Portland, Ore. another bright spot in the far west is also slowly but surely pulling up. Warren, Ohio gained an- other notch but seems to be waiting a while for the pack to pull up before taking another spurt. There Is Still Time for the Rest. Three weeks!! That is not a very long time, but Elinor Glyn made lots of things’ happen within its span. If a word slinger can do it, there ought to be a few thousand militants who deal with deeds instead of words who can do as well or better. There is still time for every city on the list to wipe off some of the low figures and replace them with more respectable ones. There is still time for the rest. Let each militant make it his personal business to use each day for the benefit of THE DAILY WORKER and the working class, for his own honor and that of the labor movement of his city. TOLEDO, 0. 140 162 129.6 AMBRIDGE, PA. 15 17 19 126.2.3 SUPERIOR, WIS. .. 50 55 63 126 REVERE, MASS. 15 15 100 SO. BEND, IND. 25 100 PORTLAND, ORE. 30 93.1.3 25 92 50 PITTSBURGH, 150 KANSAS CITY, MO. 50 CONCORD, N. H. 15 TURTLE CREEK, PA. 25 DENVER, COLO. .. 25 OAKLAND, CALIF. 30 DULUTH, MINN. 50 NEWARK, N. J. 25 SPRINGFIELD, ILL. 25 BROOKLYN, N. Y. 200 CANONSBURG, PA. . 30 McKEESPORT, PA. 30 PHILADELPHIA, PA 00 MONESSEN, PA. 15 ROCHESTER, N. 50 WORCESTER, MASS. 7 READING, PA. 15 ERIE, PA. ... 15 NEW YORK CITY - 500 PROVIDENCE, R. I. 25 NEFFS, O. ... 25 GALLOWAY, W. VA. 25 CLEVELAND, O. .. 250 YOUNGSTOWN, 0. 30 CHRISTOPHER, ILL. 25 8 MILWAUKEE, WIS. . 100 33 SEATTLE, WASH. 50 15 ELIZABETH, N. J. 15 5 MARSHFIELD, ORE. 15 5 5 BALTIMORE, MD. .. 30 7 10 BOSTON, MASS. . 200 51 66 HAMMOND, IND. 25 8 8 DETROIT, MICH. 400 114 127 CHICAGO, ILL. 270 292 ASTORIA, L. L, N. Y. 25 7 7 JOHNSTON CITY, ILL. 25 7 7 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. 25 7 7 PATERSON, Ne J. sews 25 7 7 W. FRANKFORT, ILL. 15 4 4 MENANGA, WIG. .... apt 4 4 LOS ANGELES, CAL. 100 24 25 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 200 48 49 ELY, MINN. 25 6 6 ST. LOUIS, 125 26 30 SAN FRANCISCO, 100 18 21 BESSEMER, PA. 15 3 8 CINCINNATI, 0. 25 5 5 CANTON, ©. ... 50 9 9 BUFFALO, N.Y. 150 21 25 ‘ST. PAUL. MINN. .. 100 13 1 DAISYTOWN, PA. 15 2 2 ST. BERNARDINO, CALIF. 15 2 2 WAUKEGAN, ILL. 3 5 5 ZEIGLER, ILL 8 8 10.2.3 NEW ng © 1 Exner 1, ap a 1, J. Amis, ie 1 M. Weiner "a deo. Micitier Ie eimncAGo, 1 TLL.:—C., Lieberman 2, W. jofte 1, Christopherson 2, H. P. Clau- sen 1, Gus Barilett 1, G, Kovacs 1, J. Surinies 7, M.. Bull BT. P, N. MINOT, D.:—W. A. Beardsley, 5. MEADOWLANDS TA: M. Lone: SoyEnes, COMER: Sir coi LIVINGSTON, IL! Johnson, . Ercul, T. MINN. :—F, 3 ne! . ic 1. . u.| HOUSTON, PA:—L, Dusie, 1. pale PRANCIBCO, ChuitlS tas, a SUNCOOK, N. H,;—Oscar Ohlson, 4. DETROIT, MICH.:—H, W. Mikko 1, W. Mollenhauer 6. if) ae ole ag PA.:—L. Rosenthal 10, A. B® ATTLE, WASH. :—J. M, Boan 1, Matin Hamsen 2. —P, Allen, 1. Y.:—A. Granville, 1. MASS. :—Geo. « J." C. “POWELL, | ILL, SCOTIA, N. CHESTER, BE tm et Foe soovee 1, Lin- oon LOUIS, MO.:—C. Gensberg 1, Pete SCHENECTADAY, N. ‘W. Nummi, TOLEDO, OHIO:—A. W. Harvit naN Woon, L. L, N. ¥.:—Emil Pursti- fist De Fe 3; G. re Ms 3; W. et 3) 2H. 4 r “GARDNER, MASS.:—A. Koski, 1. oP Ves eg ath Wieck ah [I CRO! —Hohn Shiftar, } ‘ ich,’ 1. WW. CONCORD, '. a ANCHESTER, WASH.:—H Daniels, LTIMORE, MD.:—! co CARIsTOPHin. TLL: 'S. alate x penned WASH. :—F. Altshuler, LOS ANGELES, CAL. 1 AMBBRIDGE, PA.:—Geo. Maich, 2 AKRON, OHIO:—D, Hajnal, 1. NEWARK, N. J. itzman, 1. PORTSMOUTH Py sonelets, 2... NANTICORE, BA.: Bt ZALISHAS, '2. seUUNNSTON, W. VA.i—Rovko ‘An- IRWIN, GANNONSBURG, "PAs! sok Lalvala, GLi BLUM, WASH, John Lekse, 1 novie 1; Abe 5) gihacuse PAs. Bucketer1 uf : pocket a. CREAN: OO reas Davy 33) McKBESPORT, PA.-Wi Mikades, 1 J. Rane Har anaee ies ye ct,» CAMBRIDGE, MASS.:—C. J. Carlson, BOSTON, MASS.:—P. Kaminsky, 2; R. McKELS ROCKS, PA.;—Aug. Bartsch, HARTFORD, CONN.;—Jacob Rosen- Nightingale Sings for Radio. W. Hoffman, 1. LIBERTY CENTER, OHIO:;—D. Lert- JOUNGSTOWN, OHIO:—Wallace Met- GREAT ALLS: MONT C.F %. TUR’ CREEK, PA.:—Joseph Rays Bitapeuem, PA.:—Thos. J. Davis, LONDON, May 22.—The sweet song of a nightingale was broadcast over the radio last night, enabling many Page Three SENATOR NORRIS : OFFERS PRIMARY DUEL TO 6.0. P, Would Race Old Guard In Special Vote By LAURENCE TODD. | Federated Press Staff Correspondent. WASHINGTON, May 22.—Senator Norris of Nebraska, renominated by an overwhelming majority in the re- cent primary in his state, in the face of a violent and vituperative cam- paign, made against him by the Cool- idge-Daugherty-Lockwood organization of the old guard, has challenged them to a political duel, He has replied to a demand made by the reactionary Republican organization chiefs in Ne- braska, that he get off the ticket, by offering to enter a recall primary with every candidate and every mem- ber of the state committee who is seeking his withdrawal. Norris’ name alone will go on the primary recall ballot. If he loses, he will resign; if he wins, all of his enemies will re- sign. He does not anticipate that they will take up the challenge. Shows Up “Cal.” This act on the part of Norris throws into high relief the critical sit- uation which the Republican party has reached, due to Coolidge’s ceaseless warfare against the progressive ele- ments within the party. In every quar- ter of the country his emissaries and job-holders are controlling conven- tions or conferences which ignore or attack the progressive and semi-pro- gressive members of the House and Senate, while adopting resolutions en- dorsing the hard-boiled who surround the ‘White House. Endorsement of Denby and denunciation of Couzens in Michigan is a fair sample of this war of extermination which Coolidge is waging. In Iowa it is an almost hys- terical feud against Senator Brook- hart; in Nebraska Norris is its target. Bankers, railroad attorneys, chambers of commerce, reserve officers of the army, all of the special privileged groups that join in mobbing labor rad- icals and political heretics, are enlist- ed just now in “purging” the Republi- can ranks of the men who have re Pudiated Taft, Hughes, Harding, Cool idge, Fall, Denby, Daugherty and their associates. Norris specified that the primary be held 30 days after the adjournmeni of Congress, since he would not returr home until his work here was done. At the same time he presented tc the Senate a 20-page list of busines: firms acknowledged hy the Nationa Republican to have bought qua... of “subscriptions” to that faseis propaganda publication in the 192i campaign. Harry F. Sinclair, for hi: oil company, paid $1,096 on Januar: 26, 1920, while hundreds of lesser con cerns, covering most of the manufac turing industries in Massachusetts Wisconsin, West Virginia and othe states, paid less sums. The Republi can national committee bought abou $10,000 worth of the papers, up t September 23, 1920, the last date ir cluded in the report. Norris said that this publication wa “reading out of the party most of it good men.” Young Workers Hold : Popular Open Air Meet At Irving Par’ What has the American worker do with the worker of Germe France, England, or any other er try? Isn’t the American worker ter off than the European worker you see workers in Germany r to work in automobiles? Why s’ an unskilled worker get the sam A. Pollokl, ‘gune——_—_*__ 8 __ as the skilled ‘worker? Is tb country that has a better educ; 1./system than the United States? and many other questions wey at members of the Irving Par? of the Young Workers’ Leagy day night, after Peter RocHEst bn, MINN. Geo, F. Part-|talk at an open air meetin CkbE BRETON, CAN.:—Jas. Nearing, }Comers of Irving Park an: avenue. After making clear that P is another attempt on the ; capitalist class to keep th today in ignorance, the viewed the events of the | pointed out that the only come the system of wag: justice and inequality un are living, is for the w world to unite against foe—capitalism. He al fact that the Work Young Workers’ Leag: organizations in the which are working to The big crowd whi speaker and membe: 1.| was loath to dispers to attend the meet next Tuesday ev: Drake avenue and « sion there. Severs bers were signed number of the Y blatt, :—J. Hramiloveh, 1.. |People who had never heard the bird | sold. W. Washington ic ehhaaae Yay, SN eee mits Dive oy in Se diruia yattors to pect |... WARREN: cuss. Re Beatl-|to listen to its song. The birds were Matters to be taken up: » employment insurance. workingmen, his stocks fell consider- MEM COBSON, MINN.:—P. M, Lundin, 1.|tempted to sing at the right moment S. P. Resen’ oliciting ‘ The union is still in negotiation |ably and*he was driven out of Seattle| MADISON, Ibi feo. Sodoroft, 1. |, |by the soft notes of a cello played by| CHICAGO, Mi ae — Hl with bosses not represented by the|to the orange groves of California, |Kramen te 0” *}a musician in Surrey wood. A micro-|raft’s annual § (2) Sale of Dailies at shops, ete. ; ‘Jassoctation. ‘The association bosses| where half a dozen suckers arrive ev- TRANEAR Cery, MO tasty puns [Phone and amplifier were used to|side trom steel (3) Securing of renewals. jare the biggest in the city manufac-Jery minute, Ole was out to catch |Sorensen 1 % if ay Rctesma ing’ Boson to the London|him by Andre; Teeter chews Sitlose oak aabinelbe Shins’ gt iad’ bo: Na see eROk, WARS ela, 3 Byoia weunine palermo ; e role o lociety, } “all Branch Agents saat attend this meeting and Riwmind Inst turn on the public stage before |, (ADIANAPOLIS, IND.:—Wm. Schu-| Jog Raaky Ie converted to the gaso-[ofice, which their ‘The recent convention of the I. I.|he dons the striped uniform. ©, ie 4 I—J, Bg nl oy line engine. While Joe was giving|tion, The Sog U. in Boston authorized the call- } BULA, OHIO:—A, i his two horses a rest, police arrived | $15,000 a yer a strike in New York and Phil-] Every new subscriber increases the By WN, N. re 1 a, and discovered many barrels of beer jury for his | i ; influence ew a DAILY WORKER, =}? Wiracus-BARRE, PAL. Iaaacs, 1, [19 his truck, be enough t?

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