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ARTY RULES FOR LEAVING COUNTRY TOLD Must Get Permission of , National Office The National Office of the Workers Party is receiving from time to time Tequests from members of the Party for credentials authorizing them to transfer to the Communist Parties of other countries. It is the rule of the National Organ- ization, established by the National Convention of 1922, without first securing permission from the Central Executive Committee of the Party. Apply To National Office Party members who desire to leave the United States in an organized com- mune or individually, should write to the Nat. Organ. or to the Dist. Office for an application blank. This blank must be filled out in. complete form and must be éndorsed by the branch of which the applicant is a member and by the City Central Committee and’ District Executive Committee and for- warded, thus duly certified to the N tional Organization to be acted upon | by the Central Executive Committee. In regard to emigration to Soviet Russia, the Union of Socialist Sovi Republics has made a very strict rule that workers desiring to come to that country must come as part of an or- ganized commune. This rule is intend- ed to promote the Socialist basis of the economic system in that country. In- dividuals are permitted to enter Sovi Russia only under special conditions and no individual can enter the country without first having receiv permission of the Soviet authorities. Russian Rule Strict Party members who desire to enter the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics will, if permission is granted -by the Central Executive Committee to leave the United States, be advised as to how to proceed to secure permission to enter Soviet Russia, As stated above, however, such permission can only be secured in very exceptional cases for individuals and no individual who is a Party member will be able to secure such permission without having first secured consent from the Central Executive Committee to leave the United States. What If Bankers Press? MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., August 3.— Farmers of the northwest should not «sell wheat for less than $1.75 per bushel this year. They will receive that much or more if they are not too quick to sell? according to T. H. Hagen, Dakota County “Farmer,” member of the Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce and formerly manager of the U. S. Grain Growers’ Sales Com- pany. Mr. Hagen is decidedly bullish on all food products and particularly wheat, rye and corn. Send in that Subscription Today. that no Party member may leave the United States alate st Leopold, Jr., and Richard Loeb rich murderer out of the hos- pital for the insane. The law- yers’ choice fees were not men- tioned. Harry Thaw, fabbit-biter, did not have such a brilliant gallery of psychiatrists and mental disease spe- cialists as the two debonair young millionaires. The Loeb-Leopold de- |fense has gathered from all over the |country the most respected (and most expensive) men in their profession. These doctors have tested and exam- ined the nonchalant slayers in every way, mentally and physically. Wanted to Use Dough. Harry Thaw was trying to prove himself sane so that he could come out in the world and enjoy the mil- lion dollars that had accrued to him during the seven years of his incar- ceration in the insane hospital. His yearly income from Just two trust estates belonging to him is $60,000, besides which he has securities of $700,000, according to his /trustees, - | Walter Riddle and Howard Irish, Dr. Hill, chief medical expert |called by Thaw, will get more than |$2,500 and other alienists employed |will get between $1,500 and $2,000 each, Six Famous Doctors. In the Loeb-Leopold defense there are at least six internationally known American alienists who will testify, when Clarence Darrow,. leading de- fense attorney wins the.court fight now on between State’s Attorney Robert EB. Crowe, Judge Caverly and Darrow. The “millions for defense” will undoubtedly win a hearing for the young murderers. There are other medical experts who have spent considerable time examining the boys and whose findings were incorporated into the general report issued by the defense on the mental state of the boys. It won't take the exploited workers who are making the “millions for defense” of Leopold and Loeb long to figure out that the blood money of their toil will go into the pockets of a lot of alienists and lawyers and maybe into official hands that shouldn’t be mentioned so that the two degenerate boys who had too lit- tle to do may live, even tho behind the walls of an insane hospital or be- hind the bars of the penitentiary. Quiet departures from such cloisters can easily be arranged after a lapse of time, for wealthy victims. But workers know that never such a chance comes to them. The workers who are making the RIVERVIEW RAIN OR SHINE August 10th --- Sunday Press Picnic Day WITH THE (CONDUCTED - BY TH Definite results and great experi life of the Chicago workers marked the reports given at, the city convention of the Young Workers League of Chicago, held here Sunday at the Work- ers’ Lyceum. The report of the organizer, Comrade Peter Herd, showed that the league here had taken part in every important strike in the city and vicinity; that it had taken the important first steps towards the organization of the league on the basis of shop nucle; and that they were getting out among) independent league campaigns among the youthful workers of Chicago. Wherever mistakes were made and| wherever shortcomings could be found, they were bluntly disclosed and criticized in order that future work would find the league in a po: tion to make good use of the exper- fence gained in its various fields ot activity. The campaigns of the league and its official organ, The Young Worker, in the Pullman,strike, the Western Elec tric, Bunte Chocolate Co, and Na tional Biscuit Co., were reviewed. It was pointed out that the s and minds of the membership were being slowly but surely turned away from the direction of routine internal work and that it had participated also in the young workers who feel the bitter lash of exploitation in the factories. The report of the district organizer, Barney Mass, was received with en- thusiasm. The short time of the exist- ance of the newly organized district mecutive committee had already Proved its worth in initiating the various economic campaigns. Espe- pleased were the two-score of organization of the heater boys who are still striking out in Hegewisch. Manuel Gomez, in reporting as fraternal delegate from the Workers Party, local Chicago, indicated that the two local units enjoyed about the best relationships in the entire coun- try. Successful joint work was re- corded, especially in the trade union and political campaigns of the party. It was pointed out that the relation- ships would have to be cemented - | heated, WORKEDS NG WORKERS LEAGUE ence gained from participating in the —— Jeven more strongly. “We are two | essential wings of one movement—the Communist movement of this coun- try,” said Comrade Gomez. An interesting debate was aroused by the industrial organizer's report, in |which many delegates participated. | Many misunderstandings were cleared up, and tho discussion was at times it helped-to clear the at- |mosphere of incorrect tendencies in lthe organization. Plans for further industrial work were referred to the incoming city executive committee. The report of the representative of the junior section; the educational director and other officials were ac- cepted by the convention with prac- tical unanimity. It was also decided unanimously to appeal to tho C, E. C. of the Workers Party to reconsider its action and to permit the publica- tion of a Jewish youth organ. It was also recommended to the district ex- ecutive committee to hold @ conven- tion of the district Young Workers League in October. The following city executive com- mittee was elected: Al Schaap, or- ganizer and publicity manager; Val- eria Meltz, secretary; Charles Erick son, financial secretary; R. Garver, industrial organizer; John Harvey, educational and research director; H. Kabanovsky, litefature agent; Austra Sungail, junior director; Frank Buck- ley, social and sports; and a repres- entative to be selected by the local Workers Party. The new city executive committee has already met and laid out plans for future activity which will put Chi- cago in the position where it will more than hold its own for actual work than any other two loéal organ- izations of the league. he aaa | HARRY THAW PAID ALIENISTS | $15,000; HOW MUCH WILL GO | FOR LOEB-LEOPOLD DEFENSE? The battery of alienists employed by the defense for Nathan will eat well into the “millions for defense” if the Harry Thaw specialists’ bills are an indication. The trustees of Thaw’s estate have just turned in their account, showing that $15,000 was spent for alienists alone to get the “millions for defense’ see their wages diminish as the defense bills pile up; see their hours lengthened; see improvements in the places where they work vanish. And all to save two parasites who might have used their superior intellects and training for the welfare of all under a differ- ent society. ANTI-WAR NEWS SPREAD BY N.Y, PARTY MEMBERS NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—The distribu- tion of the anti-war leaflet, “Ten Years After,” by the party membership in New York City has been a splendid demonstration of the enthusiasm with which the comrades are now getting into party activities. In every section of tle city, the call to branches to elect committees for the work of distribution, met with a fine response. A house to house dis- tribution was organized in important centers which proved the most suc: cessful one yet arranged in the city. Even Kids Help. Over three hundred comrades re- ported at the headquarters of the Har- lem section on Sunday, July 27, where the various branches were assigned tne territory to be covered. A com- mittee of 50 represented the Finnish branch. Almost the entire member- ship of the Scandinavian Branch re- sponded to the call, which is all the more significant as this branch has been rather inactive for some time. The Italian Branch, lately organized, showed its eagerness to take part in party work by coming down almost in full force. In fact, not a single branch in Harlem the biggest section in Local New York, failed to participate in the distribution. In Williamsburg, a much smaller section, the response was equally as good, more comrades reporting for duty than at any previous distribu- tion. Brownsville also, gave evidence of the new spirit of activity within the ranks. The English and Jewish brariches of the Workers Party and the Young Workers League have each been assigned an evening for distribution. Even the junior section of the Y. W. L. has been enlisted. All Sections Work, Other sections, the Bronx, Lower Manhattan, and South Brooklyn all reported success. Credit for organ- izing the distribution must be given to Comrades Nemser, Nessin, Levy, Belle Robbins, Cohen, and others ac- tive in. building up the section com- nittees. Good co-operation was also given by branches of the Young Workers League. The unusual turn-out of the mem- bership for the distribution evidenced new life within the party organiza- tion. A spirit of enthusiasm and willingness to work is manifesting it- self in all branches. The present po- litical policy of the party and the pro- gram of action have caused a gener- al waking up thruout the ranks. They can be depended upon to put their utmost energy into making the coming election campaign a success in New York City. Philadelphia to Hold Huge Anti-Capitalist War Meet Wednesday PHILADELPHIA, Ja., Augst Som The Workers Party of Philadelphia is calling a huge mass meeting on Wed- nesday, August 6, 1924, the tenth an- niversary of the great world war. Ludwig Lore, the well-known edi- tor of the New York Volkszeitung and speaker of national reputation, will head the list of splendid speakers who will address this great demon- stration. The meeting will be held in the Machinist Temple at 18th and Spring streets, Wednesday, August 6, 8 p.m. Those who have heard Lore at the famous Lenin memorial meeting will THE DAILY WORKER 30,000 WORKERS OF WASHINGTON GAGGED BY LAW Civil Service Employes Can’t Talk Politics WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—When old Washington Gardner, head of the Pension Bureau, some two years ago discovered that one of the clerks in his bureau had confessed to being a Socialist, the man was brought be- fore him, lectured on his “lack of patriotism,” and dismissed, on charges of political activity. But when the press room at the White House, at the start of the presi- dential campaign, sends out over the country an account of how President Coolidge had a political conference with Inspectors J. P. MacArdle and Joseph Bromley of the safety appli- ance bureau of the Interstate Com- merce Commission, not a single whis- per of protest is heard. MacArdle is a former active member of the Order of. Railway Conductors, and Bromley was formerly active in the Locomo- tive Engineers. McArdle has been under the protection of the classified civil service law for 10 years, and Bromley for 15 years. They were quoted at the White House as having ‘jassured Coolidge that lots of the rail- road brotherhoodmen are for Cal. Favored May Speak, ‘When their bureau chief was asked whether these inspectors would be disciplined, or whether the political gag was off the entire staff of the Interstate Commerce Commission, he anxiously denied that they had been given permission to talk politics. Cer- tainly the gag was on the rest of the staff, and would stay on. “Mr. MacArdle is in charge of the Massachusetts district, and is ‘a friend of Mr, Coolidge,” he explained. “His was a purely personal call and Mr. Bromley, who has the New York district, accompanied him.” Mr. Clark one of the secretaries to Mr. Cool- idge, is a special friend of Mr. Mac- Ardle, and I assume it was in that way that the political story was given out.” Praise Cal Only. Fifty-five thousand government em. Ployes in the District of Columbia are forbidden to talk politics, under th« civil service regulations. “But any body who can say anything favorabl to the unattractive and colorless in. dividual who now holds presidential power will henceforth during the campaign feel safe in applying the Daugherty principle. They,. try to qualify for better paid jobs regardless of law. BERLIN JUNKERS CROOK A KNEE SOVIET REPUBLIC Make Good Damages|=¥:: for Embassy Raid BERLIN, August 8—The German government made a complete and un- conditional surrender to the demands of the Soviet- government over the raid on the Russian trade legation, which resulted in the Soviet govern- ment breaking off relations with Ger- many and closing up all its trade offices in that countr, The pretext for tHe raid was the alleged escape of a prisoner escorted by German police into the Soviet, le- gation. But the police who went to look for him, instead of making an effort to find the missing prisoner, ransacked the Soviet files and carted away thousands of documents and arrested several hundred employes. Great indignation was felt in Mos- cow over the incident., The’ Prussian police official who instituted the raid was dismissed and the Prussian Ger- man government disavowed the inci- dent. The Soviet government was not satisfied but demanded reparations for the damage done and the estab- lishment of the right of extra-terri- toriality for Soviet embassies in Ger- many. These demands have been met by the German government and both | 6ist Lett governments have agreed to rush work on a commercial agreement and not fail to hear him egain. This anti-war mass meeting is a part of the great world-wide dem- onstration staged by the workers of all countries against the imperialist wars of the past and the great world war of the future that the imperialist powers of capitalism are preparing even now while we have hardly recovered from the last deadly debacle. Comrades and fellow workers, while your attention is being ab- sorbed by the daily struggles to earn a livelihood, the capitalists of the world are scheming a new and dead- lier war than the world has yet seen and your lives and the lives of your children will be but so much cannon fodder when the signal for the great slaughter is given. Protest against the imperialist war that is coming. Demonstrate your sol- idarity with the workers of the world. Come to the great anti-war demonstra- have it concluded if possible before the end of the year, © The German surrender coming shortly after the recognition of the Soviet Republic by China, is further proof of the growing power and in- fluence of the workers’ government. Daily Worker Music Critic Writes from Europe About “Scoop” | The music critic of the DAILY WORKER staff, Alfred V. Franken- stein, has sent a card from on board the 8. S. America on which he is is to Europe. Says Frank- “Aboard is Herma Menth, a wonder- ful pianiste, whose Chicago concert the only person to review. Frankenstein will tind special ar- ticles of interest directly to the tion, Hear one of the foremost op- ponents of capitalist wars. f, DAILY WORKER during his Buro- | pean travels. (Continued from page 1) After early training in mercantile un- scrupulousness as a free lance soap box salesman he hit upon a neat scheme to do the buyer thru the mails. Country folks sometimes got wise to him when they saw him face to face: Sears thot they might fall for writing. Working the Expressmen. His first mail order ventures in- cluded the sending of fake gilt watches to false addresses. The watches would cost Sears about thirty-eight cents each but the express declara- tions would be made on a basis of fif- teen dollars a watch. By and by the expressman would write in that there was some mistake and would ask what he should do with the package. Sears in reply would generously of- fer to let the expressman—poor sucker—keep the watches at five dol- lars apiece. Rattlesnake Oil. Quickly Sears was doing a national business. With the capital by this chicanery he went in for more bunk stunts. The rural population was his chief meat. His glowing advertise- ments lured farmers in Kansas, Mis- souri, Wisconsin and Indiana to try his electric belts, rattlesnake oil and above all his patent-medicines. There were speedy panaceas for every kind of ailment: lost manhood, lost stom- achs and lost kidneys were to be re- stored at a dollar and more a bottle. “Corporation Finance.” The. mail order business grew apace: as it grew the business began to adopt more and more the methods of regular merchandising, depending for its profits on low costs rather than the cruder flim flamming of earlier days. Finally about 1903 Julius Ros- enwald—an experienced merchandiser —came into the enterprise and thy company was reorganized on a huge watered-stock scale. Thirty million dollars of preferred stock were floated, with one share of common stock given away with each share of preferred. Thus the $30,000,- 000 common stock in 1903 is seen to be pure water and the $150,000,000 common stock of today is just five times that amount of water. This is pleasantly called corporation finance, not common robbery. Albert Loeb’s Influence. Richard Sears eventually died. Al- ert Loeb’s influence in the Sears- Roebuck combine grew more and nore powerful until he gained the eadership in the board of directors. The business got on what is called a sound management basis in place of the looser methods of raping the pub- lic that had prevailed earlier. The patent medicine swindle game was FARMERS SWINDLED FOR LOEB | continued however until a few years ago when numerous journalistic ex- poses of these poisons made their sales less profitable. The reorganized mail order business found that the big money lay in lower costs. So the management set itself to getting control of the factories where their medicines, pants, furni- ture and the thousand and one other items in the mail order catalogs were produced. Getting the Factories, A small manufacturer who wanted customers would be approached by the big mail order house. They would agree to take his entire output, on a cost plus basis that kept his profits down to bare wages. When the manu- facturer’s machinery wore out Sears- Roebuck would give their contract elsewhere. He was scrapped like a worn out worker. Sometimes a manufacturer, whose sole market was the big mail order house, would find at the termination of the contract that he was at Sears- Roebuck’s mercy. His old customers were gone. There was nothing to do but accept such terms as the mail or- der management offered him, which often meant that he had to sell them his concern at far less than its origin- al cost. The Taylor System. The corporation eventually got pos- session of factories in every part of America. In all these factories the one aim of the management was cheap goods. To cheapen the cost of production strikes were broken, child labor was used and a speed-up sys- tem was introduced. the numerous producing shops and mills of the company and in the big mail order branch houses in Chi- cago, Seattle, Philadelphia and Dal- las something akin to the Taylor sys- tem is in use to sweat all possible profits out of the workers. When a worker is worn out by speeding he is scrapped, just as the contract manu- facturer whose machinery had worn out. Loeb’s Secrets of Success. Sears, Rosenwald and Loeb knew the secrets of American financial suc- cess. It consisted for them of doing the worker who made the goods and the buyer who bought them. By such means they have been able to issue stock dividend after stock dividend until the parasitic beneficiaries of this exploitation were able to rear that flower of idleness and debauch- ery whose hope lies solely in the fa- mous “million dollar defense.” But Albert Loeb is an honorable man, so is Nathan Leopold, Sr.; both honorable men by capitalist stand- ards, Party Activities Of Local Chicago BRANCH MEETINGS Monday, August 4 Enlarged Executive Committee—Room 303, 166 W. Rs dome eos St. Federation Secretaries’ atten Douglas Park, “ onglish—3922 Douglas North Side, English—2409 N, Halsted Cicero—1402 8. Fiftieth Ct., Cicero, Ilinois. Nineteenth Ward, Italian —~1103 8. Loomis Street. Tuesday, August 5 City Central Committee Meeting—2733 Hirsch Blvd. ben to be tal ‘The Details na "the: w. P. Election Campaign. 2. Ret icles of various language units ene prob! Industrial registration. pit on arrangements for the Press jenic. Czecho-Slovak, Town of Lake—Bohe- mian Prolet School, Whipple and South Slst Street. Wednesday, August 6 Roumanian Branch—2254 Clybourn Ave. eee Park, Jewish-3420 W. Roose- velt eat the Cotta, Italian—2707 N. Marsh- Czecho-Slovak, Chomso~aiamnar' ik School, 57th Ave. and 22nd - Cleero., Mid-City, Eni sah emmett “Memorial Hall—Ogden and Taylor Stree: PE is adie English—6414 S. Halsted ree! Czecho-Shovak No. 3—2548 S, Homan Avenue. Thursday, August 7 flr appanage Hall, 2409 N. Halsted sioventh ‘Ward, samen Street. South oa momenta S. Wabash Ave., Chic: Russian No. taiso2 W. Division Street. BI so 5 Cumbia Karl Marx—2733 Hirsch y, August & i—South Chicago, ae ‘Thomas Street. Cre lovak, Hanson Park—Bohe- mian “Preethink School Rovnost, Mans- fleld Ave. near Grand. Saturday, August 9 Daily Worker Agents’ Meeting = 3: 30 p.m, at 1113 W. Washington Press Picnic Committee eeetini—166 W. Washington St., Room 307, 3 p, m. BOSTON PARTY ACTIVITIES 8 p. vel at ‘shirley and Wal- Harrison Avenue and Davis Biect South End, Wednesday —Chambers and Spring Streets, West End. Thursday — Blue | Hill Avenue and ‘Woodrow, Dorches' prises, ne "sau, Roxbui ry. acura Hill Avenue Lawrénce, Roxbury, 641 EL and Hughes With Belgian King. BRUSSELS, Aug. 3, — Secretary of State Charles Hughes, who is visiting England, France, Belgium and Germany, will dine with King Albert tonight at Laeken summer palace. Hughes will leave for Berlin tomor- row. CANADIAN LABOR MINISTER HATED LIKE JIM DAVIS Workers’ Convention Readyto Razz Him TORONTO, Aug. 3.—If the Canad- ian minister of labor ventures to show up at dominion labor conventions he will get as hostile a reception as Coolidge’s secretary of labdr, James J. Davis, got at the miners’ conven- tion in Indianapolis last January and at other conventions since. Both of these unwelcome figures carry union cards, James Simpson, a former official of the Dominion Trades and Labor con- gress, made a vigorous attack on James Murdock, minister of labor in the federal cabinet, on the floor of the Toronto Trade and Labor coun- cil. “Murdock is the greatest misfit that ever entered the labor office in this country,” declared Simpson. “He has done more harm and thrown the la- bor movement into the dust and dis- Itallan—2439 8. Oakley | --ace more than any man with a un- Thirty-first Ward, Italian—511 N, San-! ion card in this country. He is not fit to enter the halls of a labor or- ganization. If he shows his nose in the Trades and Labor congr in London (Ontario) and I have the honor to be a delegate, I will create a scene there that Murdock will re- member as long as he lives. Simpson has been elected a dele- gate to the congress, Send in that Subscription Today. Monday, August 4, 1924 CANADIAN FRUIT FARMERS IN GRIP , OF TWIN COMBINE Governinent ‘Stalling in Secret Probe BY SYDNEY WARREN (Federated Press Staff Correspondent) VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 3.—The Canadian government has a special committee to investigate the machin- ations of the fruit combine in British Columbia but it is tholding all its ses- sions in secret. The fruitgrowers charge they are at the absolute mercy of the fruit and vegetable jobbers represented by two companies—the Mutual and the Growers’ Sales agency, who, they charge, operate un- der different trade names thruout the prairie provinces and in Minneapolis, Under the arrangement the growers are kept in ignorance of their crop returns for months after the fruit has been shipped and for the past two years apple prices have barely brot the grower the cost of growing the fruit, One grower who has the best 10-acre orchard in Okanagan valley, as well as growing the best grade of apples, received for his crop last year $632. Another man who spent all his savings and borfowed capital amount- ing to $10,000 has been forced to sell his rights to an orchard for $1,000 quitclaim and return to the city prac- tically penniless. Orchard men who are hanging on in hope of better fruit prices this fall have had to work out at odd jobs to make ends meet as the banks have refused to make any ad- vances whatsoever on prospective fruit crops afld the wholesalers have compelled the local merchants to re- fuse further credit to their customers. The dominion investigation is re- garded by many as a political move in view of the impending federal elec- tion. i Russian Export Plan Succeeding Despite Great Difficulties (Rosta News) MOSCOW, Aug. 3.—At ‘the recent national delegate conference of the “Exportkhleb” (Grain Exporting Syn- dicate), Mr. Prigarian, General Man- ager of the organization, reported that “Exportkhleb” had overcome all the numerous difficulties standing in its way and had managed practically to carry out the export plan. Thus, by the ist of last May there were 183.5 million poods of grain con- centrated in the Soviet ports, which was nearly 100 per cent of the export programme, while by the 31st of that month about 170 million poods, or over 90 per cent of the entire program had been sold to foreign purchasers. As for the various descriptions of grain products destined for export, they were as follows: rye—81 million poods; wheat—35 million poods; bar- ley—18 million poods; oats—9 million poods; maize—7 million poods; oil cake—17 million poods; various other grain priducts—16.5 million poods, Sun Yat Sen Blamed For Strike Against White Domination WASHINGTON, Aug. 3. — Sun Yat Sen, founder of the Chinese republic and head of the radical movement at Canton, is credited here with having encouraged the Chinese servants in the foreign quarter at Canton to strike against the arrogant race discrimina- tion which has been imposed upon them by the foreigners there. Sun's influence has always been behind the formation of trade unions in China, the refusal to acceptr white domina- tion, and the plan for ultimate sup- planting of all whites by Chinese in public service, commerce and the professions. “Law 'n’ Order.” . ST. LOUIS, Aug. 3.—“Law 'n’ Order is saved again, for a “Law and Order League” has been forfhed here. One man listed as an officer says he knows “nothing about it” and will give no information. The application for membership gives as the aims of the organization, “upholding and maintain- ing the Constitution and ideals of the United States.” A similar group sprang into being here last year, made considerable noise for a time and gied suddenly. PHILADELPHIA READERS, NOTICE! ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATION 10th Anniversary of the World War WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1924,8 P. M. at MACHINISTS’ TEMPLE, 13th AND SPRING GARDEN, PHILADELPHIA, PA. LUDWIG LORE, Editor of the “New. York Volkszeitung ( and other prominent speakers will expose the ienperlalist conspiracies for the next world war. ADMISSION FREE. Auspices, Workers Party, Local Philadelphia. ’