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bw Page Four °° 2S[sirm2: seus OMAHA'S LABOR FAKERS DIVIDE _ THEIR SUPPORT Hellava Mess with Bob, Dawes and Davis "(Special to the DAILY WORKER) OMAHA, Neb., Sept. 14.—As pretty a political stew as was ever concocted is now bubbling in the organized labor move- ment of Omaha, with the Amer- ican Federation of Labor offi- cially tooting the horn for Fighting Bob, A. J. Donahoe, who served as president of the Central Labor Union, tuning in for Dawes, and two other fa- mous fakers, George Norman and George Kleffner, hitting for the Democratic slate. At a time when trade union organization is about in the worst shape in its history, the labor skates are adding delusion to confusion on the. political field as a direct result of the fossilized policy of the A. F. of L. THE DAILY WORKER (Continued from page 1.) hensive as to the growing dis- satisfaction among the men on the B. & O. lines. He seemed particularly ‘nervous because the fate of his negotiations with the Seaboard and Canadian National Railways relative to instituting the same scheme of collaboration on these lines hangs upon the decision of the coming convention in Detroit. He made a bitter attack on the Com- munists for supplying leadership to the dissatisfaction of the rank and file. “However, we don’t fear these Com- munists,” he continued, “they cannot cause trouble. What we fear is the mass of ordinary workmen who join a union because it promises to get them more wages and better condi- tions. We cannot enthuse or in- trigue these men into this for any length of time. We must be able to show that the B. & O. program will yield them concrete benefits. This plan has already’ resulted in stabil- zation of employment, effective ma- chinery for settling grievances and welfare work. But the question of more wages is now being discussed by the men and is bound to cause trouble. We have as yet been able to find no solytion for this difficult problem of wages. The B. & O. Rail- tion of employment, for instance, -|turned ext to mean the manufacture of B. & O. locomotives in their own shops, which had formerly been manu- factured in outside shops. No more work was created, no more men were employed in the trade at large. Work was simply taken away from one group of men and given to another. Formerly the employers had trans- ferred the manufacture of locomo- tives, etc. from their own unionized shops to outside shops working under open-shop conditions because the cost of production was cheaper in these unorganized shops. Now the unions have guaranteed that their men would turn out locomotives more cheaply, ie, manufacture more product per dollar of wages, than “scabs”-in open shops. The employers accordingly have reversed the movement to the place of greater profits and are again manufactuirng in their own union shops. Beyer triumphantly pointed to the secret of success of his plan. It was that collaboration with the ma- chinists’ union to increase production was proving more profitable to Presi- dent Willard of the B. & O. than the company union scheme on the Penn- sylvania instituted by Atterbury. Just what Beyer’s alleged stabiliza- tion of employment really amounts to can be best understood from a story he relates with great satisfac- tion. The men in a certain shop “B. & O.” Scheme Is Exposed ions on the Canadian Pacific along these lines. Union officials are quick to permit reorganization for class col- laboration, but discover insuperable barriers in the way of amalgamation for class struggle. Beyer sneered at nationalization of railroads (Plumb Plan). The four years term for intér- national president and more auto- cratic methods of disciplining the membership are favored in order to guarantee to the employers a continu- ous policy of collaboration. Beyer indicated that it was only necessary to win over 10 per cént of the mem- bership, the keymen, to the B. & O. plan in order to put and maintain this policy over the union. If any worker is still doubtful as to the meaning of the B. & O. plan, he ought to listen -to the selling talk handed out to the employers by his union officials and their economic ex- perts, These schemes of so-called in- dustrial democracy are pictured to the employer as an improvement on the Taylor System, guaranteeing increas- ed production by labor without the old, brutality which actually hampered production. The best theoretical ex- pression of the employers’ viewpoint is to be found in an address, referred to by one of the lecturers, reprinted in the Bulletin of the Taylor Society of December, 1923. Robert G. Valen- tine, the author of the address, de- clared his complete agreement with BL SOVIET RUSSIA'S KIDS ARE HAPPY IN GOV'T HOMES American Money Helps to Brighten Lives (By the Federated Press.) BUZULUK, Russia, Sept. 14.—Am- erican money is helping to brighten the spirits and build the bodies of 140 children in the Talli children’s home in Samara, Russia. Ruth Stout gives an account of the home’s progress to The Federated Press in which she _ gratefully acknowledges the receipt of $1,275 from American friends and tells how the money is being used. Money to Good Use. ‘The home bot ten sewing machines for $150, thread $25, carpenter’s tools $50, repairs on engine, electric plant and mill $75, six cows $300, two sepa- rators and churn $75, school books, paper, pencils and crayon $100, a to- tal of $775. They still have about $500 with which to buy material for making shoes, tools for a machine shop, for cap making and a horse or two, if possible. Ten cows came from the Quakers. Surplus milk is made into butter and cheese and sold at the ss 1 GERMAN ‘DEMOCRATS’ ARREST EDITOR OF COMMUNIST JOURNAL (Special to’ the DAILY. WORKER) BERLIN, Sept. 14.—The editor of the “Rote Fahne” (The Red Flag), official organ of the Communist Party of Germany, has been arrest- ed on the charge of violating the law for the defense of the republic, He will be tried before the special jury in Leipsig. The newspaper it- self, which has been suppressed numbers of times, was not affected by this incident. It is noteworthy that the law un- der which the Communist editor ‘was arrested was enacted last year when It was feared that the Fascisti would carry thru their threatened coup against the nepublic. In prac- tice, however, the law has been used almost exclusively to the detriment of the Communists whose growing influence has aroused the bitter op- position of the social democrats. FORM SOCIETY TO IMPROVE ENGLISH- RUSS RELATIONS " Monday, September 15, 1924 DEMAND COOLIDGE CAN GOVERNOR OF VIRGIN. ISLANDS U<S, Eeagive Notions Do Not Please Natives A demand on President Coolidge to « withdraw Captain Phillip Williams as Governor of the Virgin Islands has been made by “native groups in the islands because of his appointment of George Washington Williams, United States government attorney in the islands, to the post of district judge “over the protests of the overwhelm. ing majority of the natives,” accord- ing to infcrmation received by the American Civil Liberties Union today. Natives Protest Appointment. Prior to the appointment of Wash- ington Williams, large protest meet- ings were held in St. Thomas and St. Croix. A mass meeting of over 1,500 persons held in New York City on June 22, under the auspices of the As- sociated Virgin Islands Societies sent a message to President Coolidge urg- ing him to intervene to prevent “the civic scandal and judicial disgrace” of the appointment. The American Civil Liberties Union also added its protest in the interest of the protection of the nation’s rights. in rewarding its friends and|;oaq has increased its profits to the| working under the B. & O. agreement|the principles of the Taylor System,| bazaar, to buy more material for in-|To Pyro mote Cultural Opposition to the appointment, ac- punishing its enemies. extent of $80,000 in the nut and bolt|were threatened with a “furlough” by|but opposed Taylor’s application. He|dustries. A number of cows had calves l cording to the report that Washington Dawes’ Labor Support. department alone. The company will|the management because of lack of|desired to co-ordinate the ‘Taylor|which. were exchanged for chickens, intercourse Williams is “an official propagandist When Hell-an’-Maria Dawes came here to deliver his speech, Gould Dietz, national republican committee- man in this state, realizing that Neb- raska might easily skip into the col- umn of another candidate on Novem- ber 4, hunted around for some labor support to Dawes. He conceived the brilliant idea that if he could get some prominent “republican labor leader” to team with Dawes while he was in the state, it could be used to show the vepublican’s love for the worker. ‘When the great day arrived together with Dawes, _ Dietz prevailed upon Charlie to take second place for once and had him photographed, in numer- ous poses, with the prominent “repub- lican labor leader.” This extinct dodo ‘was resurrected in the form of A. J. Donahoe, more familiarly known as Tony, who has been misleading labor in Nebraska for over a quarter of a century. A Perfidious Faker. Donahoe is a switchman, affiliated with the A. F. of L., and as president of the Omaha central labor body the best work he carried’ on was in the wrong direction. On one occasion the be able to pay its dividends and that is a good thing. The men have been given to understand that they were to share with their employers the fruits of itcreased production. We will have to show the worker that he is bene- fitted not so much by higher wages per hour as by more work per year. If we weren’t working under the wage system it would be much simp- ler to put the B. & O. program thru. However, we haven’t run out of things to tell the workers and keep them sat- isfied”—presumably up to convention time. Various lectures during the week developed the philosophy of labor's responsibility for increased produc- tion. Their selling talk to the work- ers consisted of phrases like “work- ers’ participation in the management of production,” “higher wages thru in- creased production,” “stabilization of employment,” etc. When analyzed it was discovered that these phrases | were empty and fraudulent. Stabiliza- HE FOUGHT FOR work. However, they were informed that if they co-operated loyally and drummed up more business for the company they would be kept at work. The men, accordingly, launched an advertising campaign in the surround- ing towns, addressed Kiwanis and Ro- tary meetings and gave exhibitions of their shop to business men. They succeeded in taking away business from the Pennsylvania Line, and “made” more work for themselves at the expense of machinists in the Penn- sylvania shops. Beyer and the union officials are opposing every form of action to im- prove the conditions of the men which might hamper their pet scheme of col- laboration. Beyer is against amalga- mation because “the present form of union organization into three feder- ated departments (transportation, maintenance of way and maintenance of equipment) is ideal from the en- gineering point of view.” Beyer is now engaged in reorganizing the un- System with the vital economic and social principles of private property, state socialism and syndicalism, Tay- lor overlooked two prime factors mak- ing for efficiency in production. These were (1) the consent of the work- ers and (2) their self-organization and discipline. For this reason co-opera- tion with trade unions in instituting plans for increased cheaper produc- tion was superior to the open shop or company union. Such co-operation with his own organization kept the worker ‘satisfied and gave him the feeling that he had equal power with the employer. Valentine, therefore, proposed to improve the Taylor Sys tem by substituting the organized consent of the workers in place of their individual consent and interfac- tory consent in place of factory con- sent. It is this philosophy which un- derlies the pseudo industrial democ- racy being peddled by the officials of the Machinists’ Union and of the en- tire Gompers bureaucracy. RENTS FOR WORKERS |AMERICAN GRASP. turkeys, geese, ducks and rabbits. Fifty additional beds have been made which gives a bed for each child, the only home in this part of Russia where there are not two or more children in many of the small single beds. The peasants of the village and the local government are tremendously in- terested in the electric- light scheme, and have been trying to collect enough money for the home to light the en- tire village from its plant. Children Happy. What impressed Miss Stout was the change of spirit in the children. Last October they were apathetic and hope- less looking. Now they look happy and talk with great excitement about their plans. Most of the girls have their rooms decorated with their own drawings. They love pictures. Even in their hopeless days some of them had milk can labels pinned on their walls. There is no duty to pay on books. If any American readers have books or. magazines to spare, with pictures, it will make the children very happy at Talli Children’s Home, Talli, Sa- (By ROSTA.) MOSCOW.—The founders’ meeting of the Society for Cultural Relations between the British Nation and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was recently held in London, under the chairmanship of Miss Davis, per interim Chairman~ of the standing committee. In her opening speech, Miss Davis expressed the hope that by restoring the bands that had been torn by years of war and revolution, the new society could promote the cause of social intercourse and the loftiest aims of civilization. A number of speakers followed, among whom Dr, Polovtzeva, represen- tative of the Russian Red Cross So- citey, told of the progress achieved in the Union of S. S. R. in the field of public health and also of the increase of popular schools. The speaker also submitted suggestions as to the best means by which the West could get acquainted with art and science in the Union of Soviet Republics. Pro- fessor Kryloff spoke of. cultural rela- tions between Russia and England, while Mrs. Vengeroff, a woman writer, for the naval regime which the inhab- itants are seeking to substitute by a° civil form of government. He has practiced gross abuses in the exercise of his judicial and administrative func- tions. The feeling between him and the natives has been so bitter that they fear he will use his new post to settle old scores. His appointment in the face of overwhelming opposition from the natives and their American sympathizers is an affront to the in- habitants of the Virgin Islands.” To Show Pictures of Russia and Germany in ’Frisco on 21st SAN FRONCISCO, Sept. 14.—The latest events in the struggles of Russia and Germany are protrayed in a new motion picture that has recently ar- rived in this country, and will be shown for the first time in San Fran- cisco, Saturday evening, Sept. 20, and Sunday afternoon, Sept. 21, at Califor- nia Hall, Polk and Turk Sts. This new film was taken in Europe “)“meat-cutters’ union went into the C. SHOW NO LIMIT T0 mara, Russia. made a survey of the development of|by an American cameraman, who L. U. to get a certain meat market DE Soviet Russian literature in the post-|traveled thru 15,000 miles of Russian put on the unfair list. Their case was ALTITUDE RECORD war period. and German territory to get scenes of just and the firm was declared —— GOT IT IN NECK THAT OF BRITIAN Short Items From Hobson for Close Relations. phe ey Pa ket chai yi pe | to organized labor. Donahoe presided. (By The Federated Press) . - . The resolution on the foundation of echnic ani ramatic interest, is | Bauer ae eet yg spear ead . NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—Land- oot S ouvtet Russia | the society was moved by Mr. Hobson, p ceblaag gpd -_ press t . L. U. ° . . * 5 . } coolly entering the unfair place where Seems Like Prosperity of | lords tightened up on the bp But Canadians Still Hold Russ Oil Output Grows. sa piles sigs ag a i per After the showing on Saturday eve- he got his meat. When accused of Cal Is the Bunk last year to the tune of a six per Whip Hand MOSCOW.—The ontpot of oil at|/Ruth Frey, Mr. Hobson remarked, in ning, which will begin sharp at 8 this piece of perfidy by a meat-cutters’ ee cent tone increase, the National In- Baku during the first eight months of |the course of a brief address, that the |P- ™» @ dance will be given. On Sun- delegate, the only excuse he had to By JOSEPH GIGANTI. dustrial Conference Board shows in (By Federated Press.) the working season (October, 1923—|CaUuse of international intercourse can day afternoon children will be admit- arer yes that be saw no Pag (For The Federated Press) a report just Issued. VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 14—The|May, 1924) reaches 169.7 million poods |e Promoted not so much by political resbbealod abe ig Seniors tacdirgbana A around the place; whereupon e de Their survey: was. of ‘cent costs Segue: "\which is 27.5 million poods or 19.3|0T economic measures as thru assidu- regular tickets of admission being 50 te accused him of having pulled] Frank Lapka a lad of 26 who fought British investors’ hold on the Domin- ts and 75 ti egate ‘ for wage earners’ apartments of per cent more than the production of |US study and understanding of other | Cents 4m oe the same stunt in another place, and/in the war for democracy is lying in t aa ‘ ion of Canada is weakening and the nations’ peyehelo Donahoe didn’t deny it. the Cook county hospital in this year|~four. and. Hive. rooms. with.. bath.| American investors’ grip is growing|Oll during the corresponding period )Ni) Ot Doyen t ey se, 1 f Coolidge-Dawes prosperity suffering relates to the period from July 1, |hut the native Canadian capitalist’s|of last year. The stocks of oil products essor obhouse, lecturer on a Omaha’s Red Raids. ol agit ltt nd | 1923, to July 1, 1924, for the indus- last ig getting bigger even faster, ac-|by June 1 ran up to some 68 million Sociology at the London University George E. Pashas A short time later the same Dona- from & mente q Tess s trial cities of the United States. ededtin to daeses gatnacek by H M. | poods. College was elected President, and hoe was the leading spirit in the fam- ee, Wraak ee He runes Average incr@ase since 1914 for | 5.:tholomew 7. ae Mr. G. D. May, Secretary of the Inter- ¢ O Z +. ous “clean-up of the reds” in the the aehy im very weak physical con- 187 cities is set at 86 per. cent. Cannel Supreme. Increase Shipping Service. national Co-operative Union, Treas- Omaha labor body. Someone had to dition he was forced to take the first Johnstown, Pa., in the heart of the The bulk of Canadian capital is| LENINGRAD—In ‘view of a large urer of the newly-founded society. be the goat for the rotten condition ljob he could find. It happened to be steel district, was cited as one com owned by Canadian investors, he says,|increase of the export via the port Among the members of the executive LUNCH of organized labor in the city under) he Peoples Gas and Idght Co munity where wage earners’ rent- and the percentage is on the increase|of Leningrad of goods, such as eggs committee were elected Miss L. Davis, Tony's leadership and so Tom Math-| With the Peoples "| als had advanced 150 per cent In : ‘ ‘Mrs. Ruth Frey, Ashley Dukes, Dr. : y i Math: |‘ their plant at Division St. and El-| the last ton years to a marked degree, This partly ex-|and meat, that require prompt ship-| NTs Ruth Fs 2426 Lincoln Avenue ws, a butcher workman was tnseated, | ion Ave. His work was hard and ¥ if plains the Canadian move for com-|ment and transportation, the Baltic |*°°0V“°™% ra. "Vengsrova and oth- if and David Coutts, a stonecutter, was! joming he was unable to rise . “as plete political autonomy within the|Shipping Board has decided to put|* One-half block from Imperial eraeree.” aitho this censure WSS lon bed. Promise of “Land British empire. four ships on the fast Leningrad- Hall never delivered. At that time Tony | bas: ate poe ~ Fit for Heroes t The ratio of British to American in-|London service, and these ships ac-| Dallas Movie Operators Strike. CHICAGO was emphatic in his loyalty to the A. r : a ad vestment in Canada was ten to one|tually ply twice a weck in each direc-| DALLAS, Tex., Sept. 14.—Motion F. of L. and would not tolerate any-} Frank lived with his parents and Live In” Just Ain’t] in i910, as scott Nearing has shown.|tion between the two ports. Picture machine operators are on thing that smacked of breach of dis-|little brothers and sisters in a three-| , in 1914 it was still ten to two, after strike in Dallas against nine theatres. , cipline of its decisions. jroom flat at 1444 Clever St. His par- Great Britain had been at war five Ask Russian Archives’ Safety. Twelve houses were originally involv- _ FOR INSURANCE OF Now he has sold out to Dawes, the jents immediately scraped ese LONDON, Sept. 14.—A one-armed|months, In 1923 England had given} MOSCOW.—In a Selon saearto: Ste ed but three have settled for $6 a week ANY KIND most outspoken enemy of organized |money together to pay for a doctor! toran arrested for neglecting his!way to Wall Street and the ratio was Herriot, the People’s Commissar of |D°T¢#8e on the wage scale of $25. : labor in America today. The last po-|but since the gas company refused to five children, proved so overwhelm-|ten to thirteen, favor America. Foreign Affairs, Mr. Chicherin, ex The additional sum is asked for work CARL BRODSKY litical job Tony thot he might like|give any help he had to be brot to ingly what his plight was in England| In the single field of mining, Bartho-| presses the hone tank Cie Wreaths piven done at two matinees each week. 1123 Broadway, New York Cit; was United States marshal in the|the county hospital. tuat Lloyd George had promised would |lomew finds that in 1922 British capi-| ernment adopt the necessary measures Picketing- is going on without inter- Tel. Watkins 3626. . Omaha district, but his desire was all F baad _ mri cae tire be made a “land fit for heroes” that |tal amounted to 18 per cent of thelfor preventing the imminent danger ference, ! " he got. Some years ago he got the jfamily ts ages er. He is paid $17.50 tno tables were turned and the court, |$769,256,108 total; American capital tolot iilegal selgure and robbing of tho| !itiiiiiuiiHHi10imiHniuHuuHnuunu nomination for sheriff on the repub-/@ week and must get up ab thr instead of punishing him, gave him/31 per cent, while Canadian capitallarchives of the former Russian Em- Mean ticket, the usual equivalent to|the morning to‘be on the job on time. some money in relief. held 54 per cent or more’ than half, Rides te Parle Fi t Ti . San FE ae election. The rest of the ticket was|/Rudolph, 14, has been looking for) piwerq Painter, the veteran, had|‘The central fact is,” he says, “that Replying today, the French prémier Set ime in oan FrAnclaco elected. Not so Tony. Two years ago|Wwork for three months. Se a been evicted with his family from|Canadian investors have responded to|informs the Soviet government that ~ he ran for sheriff again, this time on a receives the same reply. Not to- their home and could find no other |the needs of Canadian industry.” he will take up this question of the e @ “progressive” ticket and the same |@ay. shelter than an abandoned mail wag- Oily Proposition. Russian Embassy upon his return ‘to ussia and Germany tate got him. Food Comes—Occasionally. on with a leaky roof and infested with| At the same time the Canadian Na-|Paris, and that meanwhile he has Altho he wears a Buffalo Bill hat) Rose and Joe are twelve and ten,/vermin. A doctor who called found tional Raflways, a government enter-|already given orders that the question ‘ . and goatee, his activities are more |Thejr clothing is worn, Replacement |it surrounded by mud and in such an| prise, is floating a $26,000,000 bond|be gone into and regulated in ac- ih Teminiscent of Sitting Bull—or Stand-|is almost out gf the question. Food|{nsanitary condition that the only|issue in the United States, with prin-|cordance with, the rulings of interna- 0 wo e ll ics ing Bull, as you like it. comes at irregular intervals, and then|thing possible was to burn it down. |cipal and interest payable in gold in|tional law. mn bd Another Pretty Pair. of the cheapest kind. The children were left while Painter |New York City, and the National City] ' H The picture is incomplete without All this is happening in Gen. Dawes'| tried to convert his small pension into|Bank (Standard Oil) as the trustee.| Welcome Soviet Representatives, See German Workers’ Revolt—Hunger and Starvation f e story of the other leaders in the |own town. ready money in order to buy a house - MOSCOW.—! K i it against the “Reds,” George Nor- Laman Zeer ne ise where the evicted family paket live, Lose Heads in Excitement. brilliant Sandal webinrs wavutrvos See Russia's Reconstruction | man, a machinist last and politician Unemployment In Bridgeport. The judge acquitted him of the charge} CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. ‘14. —|at Djedda to the newly arrived Pleni- Eight reels of wonderfully interesting pictures i first, and George Kieffner, = pendageon BRIDGEPORT, Conn. Sept. 14.— pra ae shillings ($1.35) was ordered|—Despatches received here today potentiary Representative of ‘the y eP i carrier who has been caried on the | Bridgeport was given an opportunity |siven him from the poorbox, told of the sentencing to death of 56/Union of Soviet Social: t public pay roll ever since the “oldest |to guage its unemployment problem| Thus is England made a land fit for tse Shin mr in Tiflis and |at Hedjaz, Mr. biter Fi4 aoa TWO SHOWINGS ONLY § resident” can recall. These two politi-| when one of the stores here advertised | heroes. Batoum, where rebels have fought Let j cal high-binders -, rt persed fd plein ein entrance to the store Sub Ne ee Daily,” stubbornly for possession of the strat- Pinch Bank Sharp, FIRST SHOW— f° around this piece of territory round-|was borne down upon by“an army of ubscribe for our Dai egic Berbent Point, which would have|| ROME, Sept. 14.— 4 ing up the laa for the banca unemployed that took the owners by|the DAILY WORKER. id closed access to Trans-Caucasus. diindo Florani, laaes thas eae SATURDAY, SEPT . 20, 8 P . M. SHARP. y, at so much per roundup. surprise. Over one hundred appli- Hondi, on the charge } rth the fakers in Washington thot|cants were taken in person that day, e ° ‘\talse information, vas seat nae With Dance Following | they could line up the entire labor | besides the continuous ringing of the Edwards Speaks Tonight at N. Af English Branch as another attempt by the government Admission: 50c; Reserved, 75c f movement of the country behind Fad-|telephone. The lowest bidder natural- 4 to restore trading stability in the : Ait i ing Bob they reckoned without the les-/ly, was given the job, All the shops John Edwards, a delegate from the Workers Party, Young Workers | Bourse. SECOND SHOW. | “ttn pier pla vegetating gently seine te hren bes dag without | League and Trade Union Educational League to the Fifth Congress of the| Government authorities closed the ee Y fs ~~ Petty Rosia a from the Com- ccd “4 i Communist International has just returned from Russia, He will speak at|B@ndque Hondi and seized the books, SUNDAY, SEPT. 21,2 P.M. SHARP the North Side English Branch, W. P., tonight at Imperial Hall, 2409 N. Quit Ruhr Region Halsted Street. ESSEN, Sept. 14.—French occupa: Comrade Edwards is crammed with information of the lastest sort on tional troops today evacuated thi the revolutionary political and economic conditions in Russia, Germany and country districts around ere fcerd other European countries he has visited. In addition to being informed, he and Gelsen-kirchen, in the “ye arene? 77 EARN YOUR COMMUNIST MER. IT STAMP BY GETTING A NEW MEMBER FOR THE PARTY AND ANOTHER READER AND SUB SCRIBER TO THE DAILY WORKER. munists. The workers of Omaha are becoming gradually sickened with the political mess into which their “lead- ers” are trying to drag them and are throwing their support to Foster and Gitlow and the Communist platform. ' Admission: 500;Children, 25c Proceeds to German Relief, International Workers’ Aid \