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Page Four i JHE DAILY WORKER , Friday, October 3, 1924 SILENT CALVIN Teachers Meet to Fight McAndrew ||PEACE DECLARED |OPPOSITION TO | |wannbi TrIBES RUN NEW YORK CITY COOLIDGE UNDER | scmcrmanan jam macro smevee| BY LEAGUE BUT) BRITISH RULE IN Men ear airs PARTY ACTIVITIES Always Willing Tool of| viser Obesr, gio orasient oh a receiving notices of meetings of or American Eaate Begins|Noble Lord Stumbles on stand of Hunecin' army before Mee 110th St. and 5th Alve.—J, S. Poyntz Illinois State Federation of Labor, ganizations. Another resolution of Mc- stand of Hussein's army before Mec- Jina 4. Markoff. ca, according to reports reaching 106th St. and Madison Avenue—J. 8. p HY ’ Poyntz and A. Markoff. the Bosses yatled to aypear at the last vase mest:|Andrew awallltig-sotion by: the board to Flap Wings Hornet’s Nest here, ianwood and” Eyospect Avenue~J. cia ra . ld make the, time of the teachers - + 4 arco ing of the teachers, or to send any | 0" Rid, Brooklyn. (By Federated Press) message expressing his views, althe|@ting every one of the twenty-four| ‘The fifth assembly of the League of By CHAMAN LALL. pg inh ne ets tr MU Me ete gant br ae et ARN WASHINGTON—Lynn Haines, in @}ne had been urgently invited to come, | H0Urs of the day subject to the whim|Nations today ratified the protocol Chari she. Hedsrayer: Epses:) le Nit ricarise ea Peippe (Ree aa stil lea <a ea a . y ad bei ; : . Gr Stone n Aves. —A Tra \- SEP ccrater of his Searchlight on Working: Glass’ Unley of the officials, and the document now will go before} siMIA, India—By skillfully weild- ate beak saerled wwby séy ane hare and ATO ee seat zie Hs '. Attack on Salaries. the respective governments. ing its limited power over its own ty fi . |, Rousiass and Pitkin—Ben Lifschitz an. Congress, demolishes the Coolidge} But the teachers know that it is hin The protocol had been introduced in Masia ts Soroiite the Labor gcv-| Cee and the inhabitants of inun- |g, ¥elshin. 5 i myth Taking the man from his col-}only thru unity with other working The certainty of the teachers that the. assembly. chiy. vaio Dametal on india: is forcing the 5 dated towns are fleeing to the high- 3 Union Hill, N. J. ’ & ey : 5 nd women that they can win|the attack on their councils would be v Lab A ys ernment of Great Britain to a show-} jongs _ Saturday, Oct. 11—Morgah and Bergen- Tege days and following his public}men a y followed by attacks on their salaries|/@sted only half a day. Ania ok Galt Aikerndianon. . ate Hind ave. Swrethatene: ‘ he present time,|their fight against business aggres- " elr 8a ‘Adoption of the arbitration and dis- tae. career down to t Bch ics Lalo has been justified by the letter sent In Bengal and the central provinces, MADRID, Oct. 2.—Bodies of 118 Course in American History. Haines shows him a furtive, indecisive | Sion. last week by McAndrew to the prin armament protocol is regarded as the} where the Indian Independence (Swa- RI? tribesmen: were left on the field machine-loyal creature of the late} That any hope for relief which the Murray Crane. He rose thru the mis-| teachers have in such representatives fortune of others and thru wholesale} 0f the present system as mayor Will- ™isrepresentation of evident facts to}iam E, Dever has been seriously mis- the White House. placed has. been amply demonstrated during the past week. Always evas- ive and indefinite on the very issue on cipals, asking that a committee be ap-| "st step towards calling an interna-|raj) party has captured the thajority pointed to revise salary schedules. tional disarmament conference. This|o¢ the legislative councils, the salar- That this attack on salaries, coupled | Wil! probably be done early next year. lies for the government officials have with the insistent refusal of the board|7T2® Protocol pledges the league to|peen refused by a close vote. In Ben; to abolish the custom of secret mark-|PTevent war or to stop war if it isigal it was 62 against 60, despite ings, isnothing more than an attempt | 8t@tted summarily. heavy bribe pressure brot by govern- A course it American History from \ the Marxian viewpoint will be given by Comrade Hoffer every Saturday at between Tetuan and Xauen, accord- |7'90 D. ms at 61 Graham Avey The ing to a Spanish communiqus issued Class“is under the auspices of the today. Three caids were among the Williamsburg section of the Young after severe hand-to-hand fighting in an attempt to cut the recently es- tablished lines of communication Even Opposes Union Stamp. Tn the Massachusetts legislature in| \ ion large proportion of the teach-|t® Te-establish the conditions under Election of non-permanent members |'ment officials on legislative members.| slain. Workers League. Admission is free. 1907, for instance, Coolidge voted]... of the city helped to elect Dever|Which the system was operated by of the league council for the coming /nis vote was the second succgssive sinter er ea er cesas eal 4 against a bill protecting the trade Fall, the mayor has now come out | Superintendent Copley — in which |¥e#" followed the adoption of the pro-|defeat of the government on this is- $900 A Year Average Wage. ilk Weavers’ Strike in. teachers were ruthlessly cheated out|t0col. Forty-seven states voted and a/sue, The governor ordered the coun- of their salaries—is the unanimous|™#ority of 24 was necessary to elect.| oj adjourned and the ministers hand- union stamp; in the same year he MELBOURNE, Australia— Accord-| NEW LONDON, Conn.— The silk voted for a special joint committee with a Gsdnite repadistion of any ing to the Ausfralian bureau of statis-| Weavers’ strike continues at Edward promises which he may have made to SARs tra ecg et to “consider the expediency of legis seh s opinion of the school teachers. The vote was: Uruguay,43; Brazil, | oq in their resignations. tics, the percentages on the value of | Bloom mill with other workers, warp- ad ations |("@ teachers by his open refusal to 40; Czecho-Slovakia, 40; Spain, 36; satiriadi.’ . ers and winders, operating half time. jlation with respect to the relations attend any of the protest meetings It is now quite certain that the ~ 5: " Death Knell of British Power. manufactured production in Australia } between employers and employes”to},nich the federatons have held. a|teaphers will send representatives to|Belsium, 34; Sweden, 27.5; Holland,,; ( p Das, the independence leader,|for last year are wages, 21.79 per| The strikers insist upon gaining the which labor was then ‘opposed; in), ‘i Springfield for help early next. year, | 15) China, 14. declares the vote is the death knell! cent; fuel and light, 2.65 per cent; raw} *BTee cents a yard wage increase. ¥907, also, when labor wanted the| ty 'tne gurpose of learning bie atand,| BUt the most effective and sensible| Following @ speech by President| ‘rine writish attempt to share the|materlals, 66.9 per centr margin, for Ee ie eet tpeation othe i State to establish old age pensions,| aa {action on these matters the teachers] Motta, in which he lauded the late| ing power to a limited degree. Hel profits, miscellaneous expenses and |°O™Pany's books, the weavers’ earn- si pari | were turned away without encourage. Woodrow Wilson and appealed to ings vary from $12 to $64 per week. ; _,he voted against it. In 1913, when} 1 one, of the schools have not yet considered. urges the Indians to capture all the| charges, 18.57 per cent. The difficulty is that the high |Jabor favored a “9 in 11” bill regulat- Opening Wédge There is no reason why the teachers,|%¢rmany and France to continue| ino, jegislative councils and bring] The number of workers in manu- ri Ay al 8 ceed \ ing the hours of street railway em-| : deprived of their “legal right” to meet | thelr efforts at reconciliation, the fitth| +, constitutional machinery to a|facturing industries in Australia at conte ce a ane Over; a summotent ployes, Coolidge voted against To an onteider, the uproar Over ChOs57 5 few: sinesohts af the ‘seboo) day | sembly meeting adjourned. standstill, forcing the government|the end of 1923 was 305,882 males|P°To¢ of the year. | He later voted against the passage|Westion of whether teachers’ coun-|+, discuss their school problems,|_ When the elections to the league |. ither to rule autocratically or togrant|and 106,528 females. The average of this bill over the governor's veto,| “ils are to be held on school time or! noua not take matters into their own|#8sembly were announced and the/n4 Indians provincial autonomy. wages paid per employe (all workers) | Booze! Booze! In 1913 labor had an amendment to|™ teachers’ time may seem like @|)anas dismias their classes at an ap-|Chinese delegates learned that China| wanatma Gandhi and the Inde-| worked out at $900 for the year. i put teeth in a legislative investigation|‘¢mpest in a teapot. Wide-awake| intea time, and hold their councils| had no representative on the assembly, hendence ‘party, formerly at tokger- ARTA AS, Everywhere at the . of the Lawrence strike; he voted | teachers of Chicago know that to re-| ong themselves, they took their departure, heads, are coming together on a pol- Doings in Hollywood. Bankers’ Meeting e against it. On four occasions he voted | fuse five hours of school time in the The famous Peace protocol is ex-|i-y yet to be worked out in detail] y, ANGELES, Oct. 2—Sui 1k freferendum on items of public|®Urse of a year for the purpose of D Fi pected to have hard sledding from the|1.¢ Which will permit a united front 08 hipaa tial tas (Continued form page 1) SSusiness. Whenever railroad intorests| allowing teachers a voice in the man- aut ight on the respective governments. against British alien rule. frag Singed | pa he Bard Ate ee piously breathed radceat the bankers were involved, as in the legalizing of [®&ement of the schools, while it may | You In the meantime the United States’ “ a radia nap caciager nn ay PME apn eG pte esesarlag A ing Workers League Lord Insults Women. be filed against the alleged “Peeping|turned briskly to a discussion of fore- ° . ° eagle flaps its wings and prepares for ¥ merger crowd, he voted with the rail-|the entering wedge whereby the busi- At Minneapolis, Minn. war with Japan, The country is in great excitement/Toms and eavesdroppers” on whose |Closing mortgages. Dr Sicanctors ness oligarchy that seeks complete | because of an insult to Indian women | complaints Jules Lebaron,. well known| “When a property is acquired under t F ; 4 ri ‘ - ‘losure by a conservative lender K control of the schools of the city can| (Special to The DAILY WORKER. . . offered by Lord Lytton. Several wom-| motion picture director and 19 other | forec Sie iahse atthe “teealitin ere gain its final ends. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. att Bankers’ Laon Were: ." Jen have. beot charges against the po-|persoris were arrested by Hollywood|it is usually possible to later resell Pioutenant ations Gnd governor. up| When William McAndrew this Fall| When the four Young Workers League Harry G. Keats, for fourteen years /itce involving assault. ‘The case 18|police on the night of Sept. 4, during |it at a profit,” Frank J. Parsons, U. S. assistant to the judge of probate * to September, 1919, when the police|began his attempt to prevent the|™Members arrested here for speaking our, Wie prams pgs 6d va bis still pending but Lytton declared he/a spectacular raid on a Laurel Canyon| Mortgage & Trust Co., told the bank. ‘ ian women jresidence, according to a statementjers who had just asked divine for- 4 i 4 teachers from holding councils during|0N street corners came before Judge | © _| Was surprised that Ind a : Caslmog sean agency school hours, the organized teachers|Gunger’ Nordbye yesterday morning epae ot — Painiltr oe os would concoet charges against theirjissued by attorneys for the defense|giveness of their own debts instead ot ‘tional i r predicted further aggression. theyfound that the case was practic-| Poo ae co cactstant emt oie own honor for political purposes. today. . ‘divine foreclosure. ional advertising, Coolidge was the d fat job as assistant trust officer of | 5... 190,000 men and women assem. / colorl nt of special privil The teachers predicted, for example, |@lly dropped. There were no police i bag cas j ; colorless serva: special privilege, : the Union Bank of Chicago. bled at Calcutta to protest against ; worming his way forward whil .|that if the councils were pushed out |Oflicers or Nabisco company officials FE ie eee led al D G ins t feasting no yikes . biti of the regular school program, the|@nywhere in sight and Judge Nordbye : . ; Lytton’s slander. It is resented the reetings to i . . Call in the Communists. '° * eae Strikebreaking Made Coolidge. superintendent would next proceed tc |the third judge in the case, informed , WORKER. re beceuaa ca! Lert ierosdrec THE DAILY WORKER Wisconsin Edition “Had there been no Boston police|# complete annihilation of the coun-|the comrades, Carl Cowl, -Morton| (Special to The DAILY WORKER.) {Lytton was a militant suffragette in iBtrike there would b Calvi .}eils as they are now organized, and an|Green, Jerry Pett and Leslie Hart,| “ATHENS, Greece, Oct. 2—The pres-|England and suffered barbarously i ould be no Calvin Cool- t Greek cabinet‘hasreslened after itish poll hile under Superior, Wis. George Laitinen. idge in national politics.” attempt to reorganize them in such a|that there would be no further trouble |°™t Greek cabine' can igned after|from the British police while w Janae Nohale. Coolidge was advertised, and 1,100|Way a8 to have principals, district |and no more arrests made if the|Deins in office only @ little more than jarrest. ; ae ee Aili Hiltunen. Policemen’s families were falsely |Superintendents and other officials of |league confined its meetings to two ihe anes keene Se ie ¥ jean oe Boe ta uae tae lattes Fat Pee Helen Heinonen, made a byword in the city their men|the system present at every gathering | Speakers. . io sit as members in ohn ler. Eero Searela. had served at a starvation wage. of rank and file teachers. The arrest of the three comrades |?20ulis, led to. the resignation. bodies. A committee is in session at} Mamie Wirtanen, Vivian. Vickberg. Bankers Make Ruling: from the Young Workers League has Balloons Wander Thru Skies. roasting a ee pel pineal Otto Ronkonen. 2 ‘, A stirred u m i R, isabilities. elm: onen, rm Fi Vote Communist This Time!| Already a ruling has been made by party’ aan: pts ae eat WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE,| The national legislative assembly,|. Anna Herrala. Aaro Kafpainen, i the bankers, the manufacturers. and feel the arrests had just the opposite Ohio, Oct. 2.—Word was being await-|which meets in Simla, is considering] Hayes & Co Tran Dante: 4 No tice ! Racine! heatigpostogy Rebu Shape gaepeocn effect desired—attracting the atten. | here today from points in Kentucky |several labor bills, including protec} Halonen & Co. Uno: Ronn, . 1e: . , tion and public sympathy to the party, |" Tennessee as to the direction tak-|tion of workers’ contract rights and] Henry Koski. Lydia and Aaro Katpainen. ; The DAILY WORKER adminis- tion, completely wiping vont the organ PSH aE eB AR en by three giant balloons which took|maternity benefits for women in in-| Matt Peterson. ‘Allina and Frank Flinkman. ; ie dethcr izations of many years’ standing and Oil. Trust After ‘Trad the air late yesterday, in an attempt | dustry. Sophie. Leoree. ¢ uthorizes Chas. Kiselis as |! permitting the superintendent to re ’ seh bib yegnig Ella Lahti. Leo Saari, Virginia, Minn. ‘ t for the DAILY NEW YORK, N. Y., Oct. 2.— The |t0 break the world’s air endurance ee Sa ae Guat, sl d : a 4 an agent for the WORKER || organize them as he sees fit. Standard Oil record. WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. Herman F. bacaing eran H. V. Nurmi, Virginia, Minn. in the city of Racine. Anyone who The teachers predicted that their} stans to facrbane tie eects Liga % wills saplialive seppsasntative have Prete Ny. x Richard Michaelson, Cloquet, Minn. wishes to transact business, call Mee had ce ge be the line prices here when local New Jer- Water High at Pittsburgh. ‘of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En- roangg Oncaea ag camek Like. iy sae is is evenings at 8 p. m., and Sunday searepiiaet yay ek pf ca sey dealers were authorized to meet| PITTSBURGH, Oct. 2.—After sixty|gineers, states that the Howell-Bark- Wisi Bistema. * tire Sth, Suitatinis thee ~ } } morning, 12 a. m., 1309 Mound Ave, Beat cece Ce ai tea ahs competitive cuts by other companies. |hours of intermittent rain in this dis-|ley railroad labor bill will be pressed] Rasi & Co, ; Honey Kelvist, Gilbett, Minn. nition Jeadéen out du tha Aineets ana Gasoline is now 13% cents in New |trict a flood stage of 22 feet was ex-|for passage in the House when that Timer Kauppinen. ~ T..R. Ranta, Brantwood, ‘Wien, 5 Jersey. pected in local rivers by afternoon. body meets in December. Matti Tenhunen. Peter Partan, Nipigon, Ont., Can. 7 Arnold J. Ronn. Helen Stenlund, Zim, Minn. it oy ae, Linnea Ekman, International Falls, ‘everi Alanne, Minn. - . lla Karra. id Pe * English Branch, Workers Party Superior Branch of the Young Lydia Hiltanen, CBhig error Hi Worker. Ss League of America Hilja Tarki. Kalle Aronen, Brooklyn, N. Y. i M leetings ‘ Esther Pesonen. Jacob Essila, Ely, Minn. " S Meetings Every Tuesday, 7 p. m., Albert Lanto. Walter Lefnonen, Angora, Minn. ; t the WORKERS’ HALL Andrew L. Lauri. Matt Syrja, Jr, Wentworth, Wis. > al ie : First and Third We dnesd: Mamie Lake. Bert Aalto, Covington, Mich. 4 nesday Junior Grou Martha Sulkanen. Arvid Salomaa, Maple, Wis. C. a P ue fgg bere Mrs. Maiju Koivisto, Detroit, Mich. te r ) ‘udolp! lelson. “ Jack W. Anderson East Lake, Minn. Hog of each month Meets every other Wednesday at 5 p. m. Tillie Rahko. Waino Komula, South Range, Mich. i Study class, gymnasium and program. jee Mantymaa. Emil Paven, Virginia, Minn. | ‘ . ° jam Birch. Theo, Maki, Brooklyn, N. Y. _ ¥{ Yes, youare, IF you are buying froma private John Kunte. ccc cf: | Ee Paes See ae 2 | Workers and Sympathizers in Superior! | Come and see us at our Bookstore—we want to get acquainted with you. You are always - welcome whether you buy anything or not. We Carry | an almost complete line of Stationery and books in English and Finnish. You may also get your copy of THE DAILY WORKER, THE LIBERATOR, LABOR HERALD, THE SOVIET RUSSIA PICTORIAL, and other workers’ periodicals at our bookstore. We are open daily from 8:00 o'clock A. M. to 5:00 o'clock P. M. Feri ite and legal holidays. On Saturdays we close at store when there is a Co-operative Store in your locality. A Labor Bank in Superior? Yes. It was organized in 1917. / Join your local CO-OPERATIVE STORE! BUY FROM IT! BOOSTIT! Remember—its profits are YOURS! Its purpose is to SERVE YOU! It has saving deposits _ It pays interest at the |} aoumnting to— rate of 4% on $166,000.00 savings. ' It makes loans on real estate on easy terms. It is located at 601 Tower Ave., Superior, Wisconsin. Perhaps all this is great news to you! Come in and let’s get acquainted. Why not deposit your savings here—many other com- rades have already done so? poeeneenceocun gap AAA EEUU EHU LeU ELLE U Ne aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaall When buying from a CO-OPERATIVE STORE always demand “CO-OPERATORS’ BEST” products, for they are sold to your local store by the co-operative wholesale: we The Workers’ Mutual Savings Bank Tower Ave., Superior, Wis, ; E THIS BANK YOUR BANK.” BAsseeseee Tyomies Society Bookstore At Tyomies Bldg., 601-603 Tower Ave., Superior, Wis. The Co-operative Central Exchange Superior, Wisconsin “Owned and controlled by workers!"