The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 24, 1924, Page 4

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‘ % t i a Wi ote enewerd unl aftr ele |4eT fet the, Lane of Nations batead ale wat Bet ee ro eran ad wed ea | ores tang, recent rtd] | 7G TEXTILE WORKERS} | & Z reeavnte, Jim Watson’s chief ob- Rega tans sp ori pobir 3 THIRTEEN PICKETS anand Watnee in Se ge Communist International, and ge OUT IN FIGHT AGAINST Jewish Brownsville a : tgp inedhlieipegette- ie ‘Turkiah ‘governiient has given eid to IN UPHOLSTERERS’ July I mailed sample copies of the| "fh congress of the Communist In- CHANGE 10 Two LOOMS Member. Mtg. Sept. 19 som 119.35 Page Four KILL QUIZ ON CORRUPTION IN TREASURY DEPT. Couzens, Fake Liberal, Backs Water (Special to The Daily Worker) WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.— Unless the program set for the investigation of the treasury department by Senator Cou- zens’ committee, is upset, that inquiry will be a farce, and the biggest disclosures of fraud, THE DAILY WORKER ACTIVE SOCIALIST PARTY WORKER SCORES YELLOWS; NOW SUPPORTS Editor of the DAILY WORKER. in the U.S. contented.” I joined the socialist party was too “yellow.” So I re- mained out of the movement, tho working as an individual, until I came back t© Pennsyl- vania a year ago. I joined the socialist party of Pennsylvania and organized a branch in my town, feel- ing that I wanted to,do some election was a member until I went to California in 1917. in California because the party + TICKET OF FOSTER AND GITLOW| — By CHARLOTTE F. JONES. Dear Comrade: Chester County, Pa., where I live is propably the most conservative, and perhaps the most reactionary county It is what Steffens said of Philadelphia, “corrupt and I have undertaken the task of making it “red.” Way Back in 1910, of Seattle, Wash., in 1910, and I didn’t join Party Activities Of Local Chicago BRANCH MEETINGS. Wednesday, Sept. 24. SIX STRIKERS ARRESTED IN SILK WALKOUT Eastern Textile Field Threatens Strike (By The Federated Press) PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 23. —With strike clouds looming thruout the entire eastern tex- tile field Paterson is the focus of attention as the scene of the first conflict. |QU PROFIT FOR 71 (Federated Press This is the song the profiteers piled by Dow, Jones & Co., pub- lishers of the Walt Street Jour- nal. Over Eleven Percent. These figures show that in spite of the severe depression which began in April, these 71 corporations present- 'ed their common stockholders with a return averaging 5.79 per cent on the par value of their holdings. At this ARTER OF MILLION DOLLARS CORPORATIONS IN FIRST SIX MONTHS OF 1924 By LELAND OLDS. Industrial Editor) are humming after seeing the financial statements covering the first six months of 1924. Clear profits of $231,248,000 stand to the benefit of the common stock- holders in 71 corporations as a result of the half year’s opera- tions, according to figures com-* GENERAL CHANG’S TROOPS ARREST U. S, MISSIONARY Wednesday, September 24, 1924 (SOCIALISTS FEAR TO SPEAK ALONG WITH COMMUNISTS Jobs may come and jobs may go but profits pile up forever.|S, P, Candidate Out for . Foster and’ Gitlow WEST CHESTER, Pa., Sept. 23.— A farmer-labor picnic was held af Bonnie Brae Park near Spring City, Pa., on Aug. 31, 1924. Leo M: Harkins of New Jersey, executive secretary of local ‘Philadelphia of the socialist party, was invited to speak on the subject “Why LaFollette Should Be Elected,” but when informed that one of the speakers would speak in favor of the Workers Party ticket, Harking refused to speak. Darlington Hoopes, executive secretary of the socialist ° raft and corruption known in|work in this campaign. But when I U. EL, Local General Group}, The latest developments here ’ Suspected of Being a Wu irri) ot pa, was also asked to speak E i ion last |Northwest Hall, Western and North Aves. |include the arrest of six strik-|T@te the year’s return would be in sd party > iD the history of the country will]attended the state convention las’ mF. Dunne, just returned. from t trolling the sidewalks |¢X°e8s of 11 per cent. Pei Fu Spy and given an opportunity to sell lit- be either prevented or delayed |March, I was utterly astounded to h Congress of the C. I, will speak. |€rS for patrolling the sidewalks |“ w,, corporations chosen for com- erature, take subscriptions for the until after election day is safely |hear men calling themselves social- nglish Class, 722 Blue Island Ave.{in front of the Expert Silk com- past. Ditch Heney. . That is the substance of the Wictory won by Secretary Mel- Jon and President Coolidge thru the treachery of Senator King of Utah, corporation demo- crat, when King joined with Senators Ernst of Kentucky and ‘Watson of Indiana in defeating the motion that the committee employ Francis J. Heney of California to direct the invest- igation. Chairman Couzens and Sen. Jones pt New Mexico, voted to employ the famous prosecutor of grafters and beef barons, and with King’s help they would have been successful. (Heney would have ripped the lid off the odoriferous treasury department In the midst of this presidential cam- paign. But King went over to the ad- ‘ministration. He may get a job on the federal bench some day. : Soft Soap Mellon. * In place of Heney, the committee “has employed Earl J. Davis, who was one of Harry Daugherty’s assistants, to direct its search into the methods of Andy Mellon. Davis has two assist- ants, neither of whom has any appar- vent ability to handle the work. Mel- jon has been received by the com- mittee in star chamber session, and the has been given a promise that mone of the information as to person- al income tax returns, which he will make available to its staff, will be made public unless fraud or gross irregularity is indicated. It will be recalled that Couzens be- gan, last winter, a-dispute with Mel- lon over the Mellon tax scheme, and g@bat_finally he secured adoption in the senate of a resolution empower- ing his committee to investigate the methods of the income tax bureau. When he started to employ Heney to act as counsel for the committee, Jim Watson, then chairman, raised a row, and President Coolidge sent a message to congress declaring that il- legal proceedure in investigation of federal departments must stop. The senate stood pat, and finally Watson resigned as chairman of the commit- tee, after blocking for many weeks a* resolution which empowered the com- mittee to employ counsel of its own choosing. Passage of this resolution was generally understood as meaning that the senate approved the employ- ment of Heney to do the work. Then it was that Sen. King went over to Mellon, and, by securing a Harry Daugherty appointee as counsel, was able to make the inquiry a joke. Clever Couzens. Couzens delayed any action by his committee until the Michigan primary was over. Now he has held his exe- cutive session with Mellon, and is taking program in docile fashion. His questionaire addressed to Mellon, dealing with the personal income tax returns of the wealthier individuals who made returns in 1916 and since, gained—the facts as to Mellon’s con- nection with non-enforcement of the. prohibition law and the payment of hundreds of millions of dollars in hush money by the bootleggers will not be revealed before the ballots are counted. Fifteen million women vot- ers will not learn, before November 4, how much money was paid to Mel- lon’s subordinates, and to his poli- tical henchmen and cronies, to turn loose the hundreds of thousands of barrels of whisky which have been illegally retailed during the past three years. No, No One Does. As Jim Watson said, in his last- Stand speech to the senate on this _ issue, the point that Heney was ex- pected to bring out was that the pro- ists getting up and denouncing Len-|” in and the Russian government. A socialist making such remarks at a convention of the socialist party I be- longed to in Seattle would have been mobbed. Such behaviour simply wouldn't have been tolerated. I could scarcely believe I was attending a socialist convention. S. P. Conclave Final Blow. I have been in a confused state to know what to do ever since. But the climax came when the socialist na- tional convention endorsed LaFollette. As the only socialists in my county were working men who would not run as a candidate on the ticket for fear of losing their jobs, I decided to be a candidate for the state legislature, as I wanted to put a ticket in the portunity to do public speaking, and persuaded another comrade, who is a shoemaker, to be another candidate for the legislature. By great difficulty I succeeded in getting a candidate for all but one vacancy. To Support Communists. But I am now in the most awkward position I was ever in; this is the first time since 1910 that I cannot ap- peal for votes for the whole socialist ticket.. I simply cannot conscienci- ously acquiesce in the betrayal of the workers by supporting the presiden- tial ticket, and I am not feeling very enthusiastic towards the candidates on the state and county tickets, be- cause they are all supporting LaFol- lette and Wheeler and I intend to vote for Foster and Gitlow myself. NEW YORK CITY PARTY ACTIVITIES OPEN AIR MEETINGS IN NEW YORK CITY. Thursday, Sept. 25. Grand and Norfolk Sts.—H. M. Winits- ky, C. Miller, I. Siegel, in Yiddish. 7th Street and Ave. A—C. Brodsky, M. Millard, also Russian and Ukrainian speakers. 35th Street and 8th Ave.—J. Brahdy, D. Benjamin. 116th St. and Lenox Ave.—J. S. Poyntz, W. Weinstone, A. Markoff. 163rd Str. and 8S. Bivd.—R. Grecht, 8. A. Pollack. Echoes of Georgia “Revolt.” PARIS, Sept. 23—The Czarist emi- gres who make their homes in unoc- cupied cellars and reasonably habit- able sewers have grown tired send- ing out reports of a great successful rebellion in Georgia. As already re- ported in the DAILY WORKER, the so-called revolt was the work of pro- fessional bandits and a few crazy mensheviks who were deluded into believing that the League of Nations would be able to save them from the Red Army. Even the paid liars no longer have confidence in their prop- aganda. It is now generally known that the British foreign office, which is all the Georgian revolt. Find Wood for Airships. MOSCOW.—It is reported from Tomsk, Western Siberia, that large quantities of so-called aviation wood, i. e. wood to be used as excellent material for building the wooden parts of aeroplanes, have been un- covered in almost unexplored forests. field and this would give me an op-|D. and experienced teacher. South Chicago, 8715 Com- 2. » 1, 1825 8. Loomis Thursday, Sept. 25. Class in Trade Union Tactics and Con- duct, 722 Blue Island Ave. Ward Ita’ » 2439 S. Oakley Blvd. ndinavian Karl Marx, 2733 Hirsch Bh Scandinavian W. S., perior St. Scandinavian Lake View, 3206 N. ton St. . Cicero and Su- > Friday, Sept. 26. Scand. South Chicago, 641 E. 6st St. YOUNG WORKERS LEAGUE ACTIVITIES. Wednesday, Sept. 24, North Side Branch, 2409 N. Halsted St. Englewood Branch, 6414 S. Halsted St. Marshfield Branch, Hebrew Institute, Taylor and-Lytle. Shop talks. Every Thursday. Maplewood Branch, 2733 Hirsch Blvd. . E, Earley’s class in Three Schools of Thought. Every Friday. “Tlyitch” (Russian), 1902 W. Division Street. Rosa Luxemburg, Road. John Reed, 1224 S. Albany Ave. West Side, 3322 Douglas Bivd. Educa- tional meeting. Hersch Lekert, 2613 Hirsch Blvd. The History of American Labor Movement, M. Backal. Karl Liebknecht Branch, 1500 Sedg- wick St. The Branch and Its Tasks. Saturday, Sept. 27. Classy Communist Cabaret, Workers Lyceum, 2733 Hirsch Bivd. Dancing, re- freshments, Y. W. L. orchestra. Admis- sion 25c. Children’s Group Leaders’ Class, 321 N. Avers Avenue. Leaders. of all Com- munist Junior Groups and those inter- ested attend. Red Port on the Pacific Makes Best Record Since War (By Rosta News Agency) VLADIVOSTOK, Aug. 18. (By Mail.) —An official statement puts at over 34 million poods the cargo turnover of the Vladivostok port, of which over 30 millions were exported, during the first half of the current year. 2,320 foreign ships have visited the port during this period. Such a turnover Vladivostok has not experienced since the world war. As for the small figures of foreign im- ports, this is accounted for by the fact that goods have been brought to Vladivostok from Russia proper in an increased quantity and have partly ousted foreign competition. 1910 W. Roosevelt Japanese Militarists Busy. TOKIO, Sept. 23.—Plans were an- nounced today by the Imperial Aviation Association for a Tokio-London flight soon. If army- avitators and plans sought are not available, civilian flyers will be sent by public subscription. Strange Food For Babies. BISBEE, Ariz., Sept. 23.— Pouring lye down the throat of her four-day- old baby, Maria Ariel Zecaya mur- dered the child, according to police, who today placed the woman under arrest. Pedro Zecaya, the woman’s STRIKE ARRESTED BOSTON, Sept. 23.—Thirteen members of the upholisterers’ union were arrested while picketing shops in the North End district where the union is striking to enforce sanitary union rul U. S. BUREAU OF EDUCATION TELLS AMERICAN FARMER HE IS RICH AND EDUCATED GENTLEMAN! HOORAY! (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.—American farmers should all be rich, if the Wil-} that very practice. pany in spite of an injunction against picketing issued the same day by Vice-Chancellor Lewis. Hands Out the Bull. The vice-chancellor insists to news- papermen that he is not opposed to peaceful picketing but the wording of his restraining order is aimed atl Members of the! Associated Silk Workers’ union are forbidden to walk in front of the fac- tory and to ask strikebreakers to leave the employment of the firm. The injunction forbids strikers to ap- peal to strikebreakers either on the streets or at their homes. Legal opposition is being offered thru the co-operation of the Ameri- can Civil Liberties Union. The union is also conducting a vigorous local agitation for constitutional rights here, Robert Dunn, director of the union, and Charles Ervin, having aid- parison are in no sense the especially profitable ones. In fact the 19 rail- roads in the list include such car- riers as the Boston & Maine which has operated at a loss since it was wrecked by J. P. Morgan and his New Haven directors. The profits of these roads average far below those of the railroads of the country as a whole. The 71 companies, according to Dow, Jones & 'Co. were chosen indiscrimin- ately and comprise all the important companies for which they have com- parative records. Reduction Slight. The reduction in profits as compar- ed with the first six months of 1923 is very slight considering that the first half of 1923 was a period of pros- perity. In that period the 71 cor- porations reported profits totalling $250,929,000, or an average return of 6.39 per cent on their common stock. The comparative figures for the two years are: ed in the fight. The injunction battle | is not limited to the Expert Silk/ company. Five other manufacturers | had already obtained temporary re- straining orders and more are seek- ing the same assistance from the vice- chancellor. Hearings for permanent injunctions are coming up in a few days. Five Dollars Each. | While the injunctions were being) 6 Months profit for Common Stock 1923 Per Cent on Common 1924 1923 7.58 7.07 714 Industri Steels Olls .. Railroads Utilities 4, vm» 64, Automobile46, 2: 5.65 13.91 22.81 13.73 23.34 221 Coppers 3,00. Motor a Stores .. 13.64 14.36 Totals 5.79 6.39 The 11 automobile companies in the list were almost wholly responsible for the fuct that aggregate profits for 1924 were under those of 1923. Yet in 1.91 issued by Lewis eleven pickets were | spite of the drop of nearly $30,000,000 being fined five dollars each by Re- corder Force. These pickets are the first to be tried out of 107 seized in mass arrests earlier in the strike and out on bail since then. The Associated Silk Workers, how- ever, seem confident of completing the victory begun. by the winning over of many of the smaller. shops. Mar- ket conditions are in the union’s fa- vor, its officers declare. There is a strong demand for low priced dress silks. Premiums of 25 cents a yard are being offered for spot deliveries of black satins and crepe satins. The New York Journal of Commerce, com- menting on the demand for silk, ad- mits that some of the larger manu- facturers are considering an agree- ment with the workers and will be satisfied to concede a 15 per cent in- crease. The hitch comes over the union’s demand for the two-loom sys- tem. The union insits on this demand to safeguard the workers from over- speeding and to take up the slack of unemployment. | Views of Our Readers | A Correction and. . « - To the DAILY WORKER: Inyour issue of Sept. 5, 1924, under caption “The Views of Our Readers on Lite, Labor, Industry, Politics,” you publish a leiter signed Sam. G. Wallace, Der- ham, Minn, Let me correct the DAILY WORKER. Sam G. Wallace's P. O. address is Perham,~Minn., and not Derham, Minn, DAILY WORKER to every one I could think of and I happened to send Sam. G. Wallace one. the best in the U, S, A, for the work- ers. I was glad to see his name come under my eye. It cost me two ecnts to send him the DAILY WORKER, but look what it has done. It snatched him out of the old parties and put him into the Farmer-Labor Party. The people of Ottertail County, Minn., can do no better than elect Sam G. Wallace to the legislature. Proves (Propaganda Seeds Bear Fruit This proves what Comrades can do by propaganda. Mail out your DAILY WORKERS occasionally to your ac- quaintances. Sam I am the guilty one who sent This paper is|~ in their profits they showed nearly 14 per, cent on their common stock in 6 months or at a rate approaching of 28 per cent for the year. Higher Than 1923. The seven steel companies and 12 oil companies show higher profits than in 1923. Both groups are handing their stockholders a return in excess |E. of 14 per cent a year. In the case of the oil companies at least the true magnitude of the stockholder’s return has been concealed by stock divi- dends. Take for example the Standard Oil companies. The owner of a $100 share of Standard Oil of Indiana in 1912 now owns $9,000 worth of stock with out having invested an additional cent. Therefore a 7 per cent return for the half year really means a prpfit of 630 per cent on his investment. Similarly in the case of Standard Oil of New Jersey a half year’s return of 7 per cent means 35 per cent on the original investment or an annual rate of 70 per cent. While thousands of workers can’t find a chance to earn a bare living for their families, the owners worry about nothing more than the size of next year’s supertax. Pittsburgh to Hold Carlson Meeting on Friday, Sept. 26th PITTSBURGH, Pa, Sept. 23.— Oliver Carlson, member of the nation- al executive committee of the Young ternational, will speak under the aus- pices of the local Workers Party on Friday, Sept. 26, 8 p. m. sharp, The meeting will be held in the La- bor Lyceum, 35 Miller St, and Carl- son, who is an excellent speaker, will adress the workers of Pittsburgh on the issues in the present election campaign. All workers are urged to be pres- ent. WALLACE, OLD GUARD SECRETARY PEKING, Sept. 23.—The Shanghai defenders are still holding their own while the Manchurian forces under General Chang are engaging the fore- es of Wu Pei Fu, in heavy fighting. Reports would show that so far the advantage is on the side of Chang. The few ships, called a navy, that aided in the defense of Shanghai, have gone on-an excursion, some say to join the enemy fleet. It is prob- able that a little money succeeded in convincing the commander that right was on the other side. However, the defaction of the fleet does not mean much, Japan Backing Chang? Reports that Japan is backing Gen- eral Chang are persisting. In view of the fact that the United States government, Japan’s keenest rival in the Pacific, is on the side of Wu Pei Fu, it would be reasonable to assume that Japan would see what use it could make of Chang. According to a report. from Muk- den, Chang’s troops arrested an American missionary bearing a pass- port signed by Wu Pei Fu. Chang is of the opinion that the missionary is a spy. Po BURA eh ave ones Saat “What Price Glory."—A Review. By SYLVAN A. POLLACK. (Special to the DAILY WORKER) NEW YORK.—Of the new shows now playing in New York the biggest success is “What Price Glory,” at the Plymouth Theatre, by Maxwell Ander- son and Lawrence Stallings, the lat- ter who was a member of the U. S. Marines during the late war in which he lost a leg fighting for democracy. For a truthful portrayal of the A. F., “What Price Glory” is undoubt- edly the best that the American theatre has ever given us on that sub- ject. The mask is torn off and we see how the bunk of making, the world safe for democracy actually works. We live with a companyof U.S. marines during one of their engage- ments with the Germans, and war in all its reality is brought home to us, with the patriotic veneer missing. We see how the soldiers actually felt about the generals who were directing them from Paris, also what they think of war, before going into battle and also during the fighting. Plain words are used thruout the play and the marines around whom the story is written talk like regular people, not like stage and story book heroes of the past, but just like the ordinary man would under the cir- ; cumstances. Around the war activities there has been written a very realistic love ,| Story which adds much to its flavor. All in all, it is a play that all class conscious workers will enjoy. Even the middle class audience seemed to enjoy it, altho according to tle news- papers the gold star mothers are shocked by the stark realism of it. MYSTIC, Conn. Sept. 23.—One hundred and seventy-five woolen mill workers are on strike against the Mystic ~Manufacturing Company, which seeks to increase each woolen weaver’s task from one loom to two. The strike is under the Girec- tion of the “Amalgamated | Textile Workers’ Union. OF AGRICULTURE, JOINS MELLON AND HUGHES IN WAR ON RUSSIA ————— (By The Federated Press) state paper, and make announcements, but did not attend the meeting; Hoopes did not even’reply to the invi- tations sent him. The meeting was held with the idea of presening both the socialist and the Communist. ticket to the voters, so that the workers and farmers could decide for themselves which ticket to support. Wicks Speaks. Comrade H. M. Wicks, of New York City, and a candidate for congress on the Workers Party ticket spoke in fa vor of the Workers Party ticket and made a wonderful speech on the his- toric origin, principles, management and control of all the. parties. He held the audience spell-bound while ad- dressing them, and he probably never had a more appreciative audience since there was not more than six peo- ple present who had ever heard a so- cialist or any kind of a radical speech. Comrade Charlotte F. Jones, who is a candidate for the state legislature on the socialist party ticket, but who declared her intention of voting for Foster and Gitlow, spoke on conditions exi8ting in Pennsylvania and Chester County. There were about 200 people pres- ent, which was a good showing in view of the fact that there has never been any socialist or radical meetings held in Chester County, except a few socialist street meetings held in West Chester. Report of New York and New Jersey Fund for Campaign to Date The New York and New Jersey campaign fund has now reached the sum of $2,640.35. Expenses are still mounting very rapidly however, .and every effort must be bent toward raising the fund to the $10,000 mark. Following is a statement of income including Friday, Sept. 19: Gitlow Meeting Tickets ... Button Sales. Street Collections Section 1 .. Section 2 Section 3 Section 4 Section 6 Rose Stokes Mtgs at Gloversv, Albany, Schenectady & Utica English Harlem .. Poisner John: Ke English Bronx Ni Jewish Bronx No. 2 .. Jewish Bronx No. 1 .. English Wmsburg J. A. Mkyerovitch .. Lettish Branch Finn. New Roc! German Ridge’d German Passaic .. 4 Jewish Wmsburg German Yorkville .. German Bronx Lithuanian No. 1 Wmsburg .. English Coney Island Lithuanian No. 32 Ukrainian D. T. Lithuanian Boro Park Perth Amboy Hungarian German Nightworkers .. John Guttman . Newark Foster Mtg. Jewish Brownsville M. Golos EB. Eikwald Lettish Bran JewiskpD. T. No. 2 .. Jewish D. Ty No. 1 325.50 37.20 31.27 2.45 5.50 4.30 6.15 $3 3 co3SexbS ence bee en: ae ry Seow toaraciacSaaaconS SSSSSSSSRSSSRSSAasSSNssaassSs3ssss3ss Previously Reported .. Items of Income inclu in prev. total but not individually reported: Jewish D, T. No, 2 10.50 OOK ssssseee wees 15,00 Hung. Yorkville scene 37.00 Tewish Harlem sess 30,00 —— $2645.35 OUR WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.—Secretary of Agriculture Wallace has never forgiven Senator Broohart of his own state, for making the farm co-operatives a national influence affecting the department. Moreover, Wallace is a tool of Mellon and Hughes in the anti-Russian conspiracy. Hence this official statement from Wallace: “A study of the European demand for American cotton is to be made by Dr. A. B. Cox, agricultural economist of the bureau of agricultural economics, U. S. department of agriculture. Dr. Cox will spend a year abroad, studying cotton marketing methods, supply, : demand, and prices in England, Ger- many, France and Italy.” you that DAILY WORKER. I think propaganda is highly important,’ that is why I gave my last dollar to help start the DAILY WORKER, May its message cover America as it’ stoo) down to whisper in labor's ears “Workers of the World unite; you have notihng to lose but your chains you have a wold to gain.” Yours for the Revolution, GEORGE F. PARTRIDGE. hibition law had not been enforced by Mellon. Watson admitted that the law had not been enforced, but plead- ed that nobody expected it to be! Pressure from either the progres- sives or from the democrats would even now embarrass the fake inquiry which has taken the place of the real one for which the senate twice voted almost unanimously. figures published by “School Life,” official organ of the U. S. bureau of ed- ucation, are correct. “After 60 years of agricultural education, fostered by the national gov- ernment and state agricultural colleges and experiment stations,” says an article in its current issue, “great changes have been wrought. “The American farmer today expends less than 20 per cent of the labor in producing the nine principal crops of the country that his predecessor expended in producing the same quantity of the same crops 50 years ago. He produces 2.3 times what the@————————————_—_—_____ farmer of the United Kingdom pro-|the man of culture, not to be dis- Write aft Free Care” or “Eye Book Murine Co., Dept. H. S.,9 B. Ohio St., Chicago “CLEVELAND, OHIO A $500,000,000.00 GRAFT tram the” ulti ren ‘cat J only worthless tances, ny and habit-f given, and as a result, Noah ¢ more lives than War, | eatin Hughes blockade of Russian enter- prises, and because Senator Brook- Holy Smoke!.. Another! cine famine combined. duces, 2.5 times what the French/|tinguished from the brain worker in|? S- hart, who visited Russia last year,|responsible for about 70 per cent of the SPRINGFIELD, Il, Sept. 28. —|farmer produces, and 6.5 times what| bearing or in breadth of scholarship."| Lon live the DAILY WORKER} Soviet Russia has bought and paid) /o0" 1440 town farmers that fens.) imate of all insane asyfuma’® for $20,000,000 worth of American cot- ton this year, and is the biggest cus-|tions with the United States, this of- tomer for the American crop. Her| ficial statement ignores the biggest demand for American cotton is in- Buropean factor in our cotton export po be omresaive men and women have in: Pr herd card Louer OF & relle of the eunemai, tious t, and are ni Methods only.—-When i'seo = Natural Dr. J. J. SCHOLTES Would like to hear again Wallace, Perham, Minn. Subscribe for “Your Daily,” Parke Longworth, of Chicago, hag filed petition as independent candi- date for U. S. senator, it was an- ~ nounced at the office of Louis L. Em- the Italian farmer produce: The statement sets forth the view that the American farmer has been transformed “from the toil calloused, In short, the American farmer is an educated gentleman, slightly bank- rupt but consoled by the reflection that he is efficiently piling A wealth sia should be brot into friendly rela- _erson, secretary of state today. broken laborer, of Carlyle’s time, to] for someone else the DAILY WORKER. oreasing, Yet because of the trade, PR seed nara = : iii ' Oe a Pi . 4 J ‘4 i 7) oe didi

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