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Tuesday, July 8, 1924 [es EDUCATORS’ HEAD DENOUNCES CAPITALIST INFLUENCE OVER SCHOOL SYSTEM OF NATION (Special to The WASHINGTON, D. C., July 7.—The ferment of revolt against capitalist domination of society is beginning to work a little even in the conservative mass called the National Education Associa- tion, which represents some millions of teachers thruout the United States. Miss Olive M. Jones, in her presidential report read here to the convention of the N. E. A., clearly attacked the business interests with special propaganda courses Cet ile innit Ate dena arabs which are burdening the schools and at the same time holding up and cutting off appropriations and preventing the necessary progress of educational work. Miss Jones criticized Nicholas Mur- ray Butler, president of Columbia University, and others who claim that the schools are becoming “lawless” and are béing the agents for the spread of radical ideas. She laid the blame on other social institutions of the country “whose opportunities for influence on the morals of young peo- ple outweigh the school two to one.” Pray, Let More See Light! “Why is it taking us teachers so long to see that the very people who shriek against the failures of educa- tion are identically the same people who are hampering and obstructing education appropriations, in plans to remove illiteracy, in the extension of teacher-training, in legislation aimed to remove positions of the top ranks from unethical influences?” asked Miss Jones. Then she showed that in the teach- ing of history, people who have a pub- lication to sell persuade school boards and principals to throw out history: texts and use “current topics.” (The infamously unfair “Literary Digest” is one of the magazines which has forced this upon the schools.) Miss Jones pertinently demanded: Denounces Propaganda. “What right have they, or you, and I, to shape the social, political, or religious life of children on the basis of a study of issues and occurrences, whose reporting is of doubtful accur- acy and even more doubtful impar- tiality, when we ourselves change our point of view in regard to some of them with almost every issue of a newspaper?” ‘ The president continued her report with an attack upon the “low motives” which are prevalent in’ the applica- tions of vocational education. She said that the aims of “making a liv- ing and the needs of industry” were “selfish and debasing” as final aims. Industry has no right to demand children trained for its engulfing maw nor have ignorant parents the right to push children into that maw tog soon, altho the profits system which gives them so little to live on forces that action. Mis Jones agreed that organized labor was justified in ob- Jecting to vocational education which is guided by industrial “needs” and the hope of making an immediate living. Miss Jones has administered her office largely in the interests of the classroom teachers of the organiza- tion thay, so much in favor of control from thé top by principals, supervis- ors, superintendents, and school offi- cials who too often have ruled the N. EB. A. Five Million Illiterates! The startling disclosure that there are nearly 5,000,000 illiterates, of whom over 4,000,000 are native-born Americans, in this country, was made by the Illiteracy Commission of the N. B. A. More than 4,300,000 of these illiterate persons are entitled to vote in the November elections for presi- dent, vice-president, and members of congress. Illiteracy of parents was asserted to be one of the main bars to school attendance of children. The delegates were offered a resolu- tion which would pledge the N. E. A. to determined efforts to have states ratify the child labor amendment passed by the last congress. A resolu- tion calling for a national code of teaching ethics has also been submit- CAPITALIST PRESS PETS PATRIOTIC “PROGRESSIVES” AT CLEVELAND By ERNEST ETTLINGER, (Special to The Daily Worker) CLEVELAND, O., July 7.—It is Interesting to note the different reception given this convention of the Conference for Progressive Political Action as compared with the Farmer-Labor Party Convention at St. Paul. The Farmer-Labor Convention met in an atmosphere of vilification and -abuse by the entire capitalist press. No sland inst the men who met in St. Paul to form a real ¢lass Farmer-Labor Party. But In Cleveland the atmosphere was entirely di friendly to the conve: men and women might be, they were guided by shades and complexion w: ‘matter how mistaken thei Dally Worker) . JAPANESE STREET GAR WORKERS’ STRIKE TIES UP OSAKA-KOBE LINES (Special to The DAILY WORKER.) OSAKA, Japan, July 7.—Transpor- tation workers, particularly those here and Kobe, are on strike and employed in car service between feeling against their employers and the government. which supports them is running high. Street ear service here is entirely tied up and there is no service in this vicinity on the Hanshin line. Drivers, con- ductors, and other employes are out in the strike. ted and a resolution to remove school administration from politics. Boost Rural Education. Over 5,000,000 teachers of all over the world are now enrolled in the World Federation of Educational Or- ganizations, founded last year, and which will hold its next meeting in Edinburgh, Scotland, in July next. A national campaign for extension of rural education is to be launched by the committee of 100 of the N. BE. A. and special attention will be given to the proper subjects for rural schools, N. Y. Moralists Use Bum Judgment Again as Censors (By Federated Press.) NEW YORK, July 7.—A dangerous precedent in censorship has been es- tablished by the decision of the New York state appellate court upholding the convicted under the obscenity statute of Manager Harry Weinberg- er and twelve members of the cast of Sholem Asch’s drama, The God of BRYAN'S ‘RED MENACE’ SPEECH MOST EXCITING TIME IN JACKASS MEET By JAY LOVESTONE. (Special to the DAILY WORKER) MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, New York, July 7.—“Russia has a class government, England has a la- bor government and France has a socialist government” was the key- note of the speech made by William Jennings Bryan in behalf of McAdoo and against John W. Davis. This address still stands as the high watermark of excitement In this convention, The unexpected strength shown by the multimillionaire, John W. Davis forced Bryan to take the ros- trum in behalf of his sturdy steed, McAdoo. Bryan minced no words in tell- ing the delegates that the nomina- tion of Davis would kill their chano- es of playing “progressive” in the coming election. Of course, pro- gressive pretensions are the bed- rock of democratic political strategy for the coming few months, Mr. Bryan raised the bugaboo of Soviet Russia, England and even France in order to force Wall Street itself in line. The object of his ap- peal was to convince Wall Street that in its own interest it ought to slow up with Davis and let the con- vention go ahead with picking some- one whose reactionary hide was not so thick. The great defender of the Klan went ahead to declare that the nomination of anyne who could not be labeled a progressive would be disastrous in the sense that it would insure the rise of a third party to upset the two-party system on which American capitalist govern- ment structure is based. N.Y, WORKERS SCHOOL OFFERS GOOD COURSES (Federated Press Industrial Editor) NEW YORK, July 7.—The Workers’ School is giving a number of courses this summer which should prove of great value to the movement and the individual members of the party. A party training course will be con- ducted with the aim of strengthening the party organization by providing the active comrades with an opportun- ity to study American social and eco- nomic conditions and the history and tactics of the international Commun- ist movement. Comrades who have Vengeance. The first trial was in May, 1923, when the star Rudolph Schildkraut, referred to as “Germany’s greatest actor,” and the others were fined $200 each. Civil liberties advo- cates, ministers, editors and actors joined in fighting the conviction, which is the first on record in which a trial jury convicted actors and pro- ducer of violating the law on “ob- scene, indecent, immoral and impure” plays. While indecent so-called girl shows are allowed to flourish by the police, this serious drama supported by the literary and art world, has been suppressed. _ These Lady Actors Need a Union for Real Minimum Wage TORONTO, July 7.—A minimum wage for female employes in theatres and amusement places in Ontario has been fixed by the minimum wage board. In Toronto the minimum is $12.50 a week, unless employes work less than 40 hours, when the wage must be at least 30c an hour. In cities over 30,000 outside Toronto the rate is $12 a week and 27c an hour under 40 hours. In the rest of Ontario the rates are $12 a week and 25c an hour. No working period is to be reckoned as less than two hours. The order ap- plies to ushers, cashiers and cleaners. How many of your shop-mates read THE DAILY WORKER. Get one of them to subscribe toda: id lie was too vile to hurl rent. The press of all jon, pointing out that no sincere ideals and were patriotic, earnest American citizens, and not like those “Reds” at St. Paul, who would undermine the foundation of American elvilization. Why the difference in the attitude of the pitalist press. Because St, Paul was a danger to the supremacy of capitalism in this country, while Cleveland was not at all dangerous. It was “sincerely patriotic.” According to the Chairman about eight hundred de! ites were present. “Altho the Chairman announced that this was a convention of the producers of the United States, the farmers and warkers were conspicuous by their absence. This convention was a “Ilberal and progressive one” irrespective of ites were mostly liberals, professionals and miscellaneous Labor was officially represented by the various of Labor were olass, and the d petty bourgeois elements, International union officials present, but the representativ: part of the official Gompers’ machine, presidents, secreta: the various unions, who have no intimate contact with the rank and fil ) de not understand or want to understand the struggles of the masses, bene been too busy in the movement to follow the more general problems of communism will thus be able to clari- fy their ideas and equip themselves for greater usefulness in the move- ment. Two Courses. There will be two classes in the training course, one on the Interna- tional Communist Movement and the other on American Social and Eco- nomic Conditions. These courses will be given on Monday and Wednesday evenings at party headquarters for ten weeks’ ending September 15th. The class will be organized as a study and discussion group. Each session of the class will discuss a special subject un- der the direction of a leader who has carefully prepared the facts and material for discussion. Among these leaders will be comrades Lore, Gott- fried, Weinstone, Brower, Trachten- berg, Nearing, Simpson, Moreau, and others. Instructiog in spkaking and writing English and in methods of reading and study will also be given to those at- tending the party training course. Students will be admitted to this course only through their branches and will be responsible to their branches for regular attendance and serious attention to the course. No fee will be charged to individual students but the expenses of the course will be met by a $10 fee to be paid by every branch. Each branch has the right to designate three students to attend. All who wish to attend the party train- ing course should make application to their branches, The first meeting of the students will take place Wed. nesday, July 9th, at 8 p. m. Speaking Class Tuesdays. The Public Speaking Class is al- ready in successful operation with about fifty registered. Training is given in voice production, diction, Eng- lish, preparation of material for speeches, current events. The class will be divided into two or three sec- tions according to speaking ability and command of English, The members of this class will ve sent out us speakers for the party as rapidly as they quali- fy for this work, All active members should enlist in this course which is of the greatest importance for the party. The PUBLIC SPEAKING CLASS will meet every Tuseday evening at party headquarters beginning with Tuesday, July 8th. The Workers School is taking over the first floor of party headquarters for office and educational use, There are excellent accommodations here for a library and reading room and office and lecture room. The new headquar- ters will be opened with a lawn party in the back yard on Sunday, July 20th, in the evening. There will be music and dancing and Japanese lanterns, Don't miss it. _ Send in that Subscription Today. [2euistane, THE DAILY WORKER “FIGHTING S.L,P,” REPRESENTED AT “BOB'S” POWWOW Its Delegates Very Silent Observers CLEVELAND, (LaFollette’s Con- vention) July 7—Three meek men ap- peared and looked around furtively for the credentials committee. “What are ye lookin’ for?” demanded a bur- ly attendant who was ready to “at- tend” to any thing that looked cap- able of creating a disturbance. ‘The three passed before his critical eye. “We are looking for the creden- tials committee,” declared the spokes- man, after the three polled each other on who should answer the specific officer. “Who are ye from?” was the next question. “We represent the Socialist Labor Party of America, the only revolution- ary constitutional party in the United States and our symbol is the uplifted ‘arm and hammer’,” said the spokes- man. “The fightin’ S. L. P.,” chimed in the most life-like of the remaining two. He will probably have a column and a half of an argument with the cop in the next issue of the Weekly People. Cop Suspicious. “Never heard of him” said the cop, “but if you are talking about fighting around here, you are in the wrong box. I'll do all the fighting that’s to be done. What's that you said about revlushianurry? Sounds like Russian.” He looked them over again with awak- ened suspicion and asked, “Perhaps you are Communists?” All three then spoke together: “Oh, no! We are against the Communists, In fact, we came here to help the Socialist party fight them,” ; “You're alright if that’s the case,” said the cop. “My orders are that Communists can pass only over my dead body.” He led the three patriots to the’ credentials committee, where George Goebel of the Socialist party, stood guard at the door. The three S. L. P. men presented their credentials and Goebel looked them over. “From the 8. L. P.” he muttered. is this possible?” The 8. L. P. delegation again be- came vocal and insisted that they were not going back on their princi- ples, only adopting a modern version of the United Front tactic. The Com- munists, they said insisted on uniting with the workers; the S. L. P. decided to get into the fight this year and help the small capitalists beat the big ones. * Goebel’s Gizzard Touched. “Well boys,” said Goebel, “I thot I would be glad to see you come to this, but I'll be damned if 1am. How- ever, I'll let you pass tho I hate to see you sink so low. Do you think you can retain your purity in such company?” “It does not make much difference,” the S. L. P. spokesman said, “whether we lose our virtues or not, our purity is getting us nowhere. Virtue by it- self is nothing to brag about. The fact is, misery loves company and we feel that is the real basis for a unit- ed front with the Socialist party against the Communists. We came here to. help you keep them out.” “By combining our weaknesses, we would be able to accomplish that ob- ject,” said Goebel. “Wait a minute, I must make my report.” Goebel walked over to the commit- tee. “There are three S. L. P. men at the door, with credentials proper¢ ly signed,” said he. “Who do they represent?” asked the chairman. “No- body, but themselves of course, just like the rest of us,” said Goebel. “Al- right, then let them in, but tell "em to keep their damned mouths shut or else they'll hit the ceiling on the way out. Get that?” “Oh, yes, yes,” gasped Goebel. The S. L. P. men got the news, and nodded assent. They sat quietly in their seats as regular delegates, ant swallowed LaFollette, pompadour and all. It is tickling. Producing Bosses Lose Injunction in N. Y. Equity Fight (By The Federated Press) NEW YORK, July 7.—The minature company union of actors and the open shop producers are fighting a losing injunction battle against the 10-year contract between the Actors Equity Assn., American Federation of Labor, and the majority Man ‘8’ Protec- tive Assn., providing for 80 per cent Equity casts. Upholding the decision of the state supreme court, the appellate division has dismissed the temporary injunc- ‘tion granted the die-hard producers, Decision has been reserved on a sec- ond case brought by the open-shoppers in the name of their company union, the Actors’ Fidelity league. Child Labor In Louisiana. _ A 9-hour day and 54-hour w for children under 18 and for women em- ployed in factories, stores, laundries, restaurants, etc., fs proposed by a bill favorably reported in the Louisiana legislature. Under this bill, if passed, children between 14 and 16 would be required to complete the 5th grade and to have a physical examination before they received work permits. At pre sent children may be employed 10 hours a LA FOLLETTE SEEN CHOICE OF BROTHERHOOD CHIEFS SINCE MAC BROKE DOWN DONKEY By JAY LOVESTONE. (Special to The Daily Worker) MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, New York, July 7.—I have just learned from unimpeachable authority that the last biennial convention of the Locomotive This decision has been kept cause it meant a complete re- pudiation of the policies of the Grand Chief who has been the mainstay of the LaFollette movement. In accordance with this decision, the convention, despite the deter- mined opposition of President Warren S. Stone, chose Mr. Wills of the Brotherhood'’s Washington office to operating here, Try to Hush It Up. The adherents of Stone and LaFol- lette have done their level best to keep this matter a secret in order to save the prestige of the labor leader in the brotherhood. But the feeling amongst many of the railway officials is running strong. They bitterly resent this attitude on the part of Stone. One who has been highly instru- mental in rounding up labor union of- ficials for McAdoo and who has been materially helpful in launching the McAdoo boom has told me that there are many labor men who are aching to spill the beans against Stone, and that it is only their fear of the dangerous factional strife in the union that such @ move might cause that has prevent- ed them so far from making public the action of the last convention of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gineers. it is this situation that accounts for the failure of the Cleveland confer- ence leaders to take vigorous steps against the moves made in behalf of Doheny’s counsel by some labor offi- cials here, There is no telling yet when a presi- dent will be nominated by the Demo- cratic circus. Plums Far Off. But no matter who will be nominat- ed, one fact is certain. The Demo- cratic party has been seriously hurt, organizationally and in its election chances, by the way the convention has been going. The party stands much less chance of cleaning up in the coming election than it did before it got into the sickening sessions. For one thing the Democratic party has been shown up to be very much less of a united party than even the most skeptical of: its critics had thought it to be. The conflict of sec- tional interests is today more acute in the ranks of the Democratic party than it has been in a long time. It is (Continued on page 3.) men who now control 51 per cent of the stock of the oil trust, steel trust, | sugar trust, rubber trust, bank trust, beef trust, also control the Harvester trust.” “E. H. Gary, chairman of the Unit- ed States Steel corporation helped in the formation of the International Harvester company,” says the report of the Bureau of Corporations, U. S. department of Commerce and Labor. Merger Paid Well. When formed in 1902, George F. Baker, George W. Perkins, Norman B. Reams, who were on the executive committee of the United States Steel corporation, were also directors of the International Harvester company. George Perkins, partner of J. P. Mor- gan, was the man who dictated the terms of the formation of the Harves- ter company. The firm of J. P. Mor- gan was given three million dollars worth of stock as a commission for negotiating the merger which formed the trust, and Morgan’s firm invested almost five million dollars in addi- tion, besides disposing of an addition- al ten million dollars worth of stock for the company, much of it to J. D, Rockefeller. “The company’s exceptional finan- cial resources, including its connec- tions with J. P. Morgan and J. D, Rockefeller, constitute one of the chief sources of its power,” states the bureau of corporation of the U. S. de- partment. Rockefeller Got In. “Ten million dollars of the stock was sold for cash to Rockefeller and others thru the firm of J. P. Morgan and company,” states a Congressional report. George W. Perkins when asked who selected the board of directors of the International Harvester company, rier stated from the witness stand, “I did.” W. H. Green ‘testifying before a congressional committee in 1912, stat- ed, “So general has the knowledge be- come that the same men predominate in the directorate of the Harvester Trust, the Steel Trust, the National City Bank of New York and in the great transportation systems of the country, that I do not wish to tres- pass upon the time of the committee by repeating a fact so well estab- lished.” Another Morgan Man. At the present time Thomas W. mont, member of the firm of J. P. Morgan and company, is a director of the International Harvester company, a director of the Guarantee and Trust day and 60 a week in|company, and director in the Lehigh Valley Goal company, the Southwost- i} held at Cleveland went on record decisively for McAdoo. serve on the McAdoo committee now) HARVESTER TRUST MORGAN’S CHILD La;| uence in setting the tariff on farm Page Three AS SECOND Engineers Brotherhood recently a secret by the Stone forces, be- only the strong desire for grabbing off many political plums and the convic- tion that this year offers such an op-| portunity that has kept the delegates together. Then, of course, the klan issue has not helped he party spirit an iota.| |The animosity aroused by this matter | | will not blow over for some time, if it ever will. There is no doubt that this question got out of the hands of the bosses: They never thought that the anti-klan forces could marshal so much strength. One of the leading wheels of the Smith machine told the writer, on the eve of the klan battle, that he expected to lose from 50 to 100 votes. Had the leaders known that the vote would be so close, or had they realized that what was primarily a nomination fight would arouse so much feeling amongst the delegations they never would have allowed the fight to get to the floor. This test of strength has weakened the Democratic party substantially. The number of klan delegate members is now estimated conservatively at 243. Some say it is even higher. | How deep the resentment over this| matter is can best be seen from the| fact that many southern delegates| told me that if the anti-klan plank had carried they would be compelled to} knife the Democratic ticket and in| desperation vote for LaFollette. A} good number of these delegates still} say that if the almost impossible hap-| pens and Al Smith is nominated they will cut him in November and vote for LaFollette or stay away from the polls. Jackass Getting Tame. In conclusion, everywhere there is evident a feeling of listlessness in the ranks of the Democratic henchmen and Officials here. They have lost their fighting spirit. They have lost their confidence. They seem to have lost much of their elans or esprit de corps, as one would put it in the terms of military strategy. Whether this feeling of depression will stay with the Democrats thruout the campaign one cannot tell at this time with certainty. Yet its very ap- pearance during a convention is a source of grave weakness that will play its part in the decisions and re- sults of the coming months in poli- tics. ern Construction company, the Crow- ell Publishing company, the Chicago and Erie, and other railroads. ‘J. P. Morgan, who controls much of the stock of the Harvester company, and who is represented on the board of directors and the executive commit- tee of the International Harvester company, is also a director of the Pullman company and of the United States Steel corporation. Elbert H. Gary. head of the United States Steel corporation, whose trust allows liberal rebates on steel sold to the International Harvester company and who aided the formation of the Harvester Trust, is also a director of the First National Bank of New York. Baker In the Pie. George F. Baker, who is chairman of the board of directors of the First National Bank of New York, is also director of the following companies: American Telegraph and Telephone company (Bell systems which own the Western Electric and controls the Western Union Telegraph company) Big Four railroad, Erie railroad, First Security company of New York, chair- man board of directors, Lehigh and Wilkes Barre Coal company, Michigan Central railroad, New York Edison company, New York Central railroad, Pennsylvania Coal company, Pullman company, the United States Steel cor- Poration, and many other corpora- tions. His son, George F. Baker, Jr., is also director in the American Tele- graph and Telephone company, the Atlas Portland Cement company, Gen- eral Electric company, the Pullman company, the United States Steel | corporation, the American Sugar Re- fining company, member of the board | of managers of the Delaware Lacka- wanna and Western railroad, and di- rector of other corporations. Herbert F. Perkins is now a direc- tor of the International Harvester company replacing George F. Per- kins, deceased, who formed the Inter- national Harvester company for the J. P. Morgan company. Has 90 Percent of Trade. The International Harvester com- pany, which has a monopoly of ninety per cent of the trade in agricultural implements, aided by its financial con- nections, sets the freight rates charged the farmers, dictates the price of every agricultural implement sold in the United States, carries heavy in- implements exported, carried on un4 fair competition against independent competitors, thru its monopoly boosts the prices of farm machinery ‘unfair- LABOR HATING DONKEYS ASK GOMPERS’ AID Don Chafin Ducks Davis; Why Not Sam? (Special to the DAILY WORKER) MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, New York, July 7.—The long and desperate deadlock at the democratic national convention is causing some of the candidates to bid for the support of Samuel Gompers and the executive council of the American Federation of Labor. The A, F. of L. hierarchy, which saw its platform suggestions thrown into the waste basket, is now being called to by the candidates who need every bit of support, no matter how little it amounts to. Dark horses flesh is being pressed against Sam’s palate in the hope that he will find a tasty piece which he can recommend to such voters as he is able to influence. Sam Has Strong Stomach None of the candidates are at all embarrassed in asking the old gentle- man to accept their unsavory offer- ings. It is well understood that Sam and his associates have strong stom- achs, This has just been again de monstrated in the July issue of the American Federationist assailing the Third Party idea. This attack was published since, and in spite of, the re- jection of the A. F. of L. demands by both old parties. Prominent among the applicants for Gompers’ endorsement is John W. Davis, nominally of West Virginia but actually of Wall Street—Morgan’s counsel. Davis comes to Gompers fresh from Don Chafin, gunman sher- iff of Logan county, West Virginia, commander of an army of Baldwin- Feltz murderers of union men and enthusiastic rooter for Davis. Davis Was Coronado Counsel Davis, now génerally known as the Morgan attorney, was counsel for the Bache-Denham company in the fam- ous Coronado case. He sought to re- cover millions from the miners’ union after an Arkansas strike and fought the case before the Supreme Court when the unfon appealed. Davis has served as attorney for coal operators against union men in other important cases. To hide this record the Davis managers talk vaguely about some votes favorable to labor in the house of representatives and about alleged aid to Mother Jones and Debs. The opinion is general that Gompers will endorse Davis if he is nominated in spite ‘of his leading connection with antilabor cases. vis’ former record would be that he fought labor only as a paid attorney and not necessarily from conviction. Arkansas Labor Lynching Another dark horse who suddenly finds that the A. F. of L. may have some oats that will steam up his can- |didacy is Senator Joe T. Robinson of Arkansas. Robinson’s managers are confiding to Gompers’ agents some of the private opinions favorable to unionism which Robinson is alleged to hold. Nothing is said about Robinson’s failure to protest against the lynching of a railroad shopman during the strike nor against the astonishing action of the Governor of Arkansas in parolling two shopmen strikers on condition that their union officially call off the walkout during which they were arrested—tho these actions took place withing the last year. Nor has the question of Robinson's silence dur- ing the terrible Elaine county Negro massacre of 1919 been raised. This however, is not surprising. Gompers is not interested in Negro rights. “Agreement” Committee Meets The A. F. of L. executive council's influence is being most eagerly sought during the critical sessions of the con- ference committee, appointed Satur- day with instructions to get an agree- ment for a candidate over the week end. Davis and Robinson, among other candidates, have representatives in this committee and the claims of their ,favorites are being eagerly pressed. It is believed that the labor officialdom’s support would be a useful argument to present, in view of the official labor support which is being lost to the democratic party thrp the Cleveland endorsement of LaFollette and the rank and file loss thru the class Farmer-Labor Party. Send in that Subscription Today. RUBBER STAMPS AND SEALS IN ENGLISH AND IN ALL FOREIGN LANGUAGES INK. PADS, DATERS, RUBBER TYPE,Ere, NOBLER STAMP & SEAL CO, 73 W. VanBurenst, Phone Wabash 6680 CHICAGO MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY TTENDED ——al PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK DENTIST Rendering Expert Oontal Serviee {ibs MERRIE gas non ae Phone ASHER B. ly, and pays its employes paupers’ wages. ~ The excuse.for. Da: ___