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Page Four SMALL BIZ IS VICTIM OF BOTH G.0.P. AND DEMS Falls Under Dictator- ship of Wall Street By LELAND OLDS. » (Federated Press industrial Editor) Republican normalcy is strewn with the wrecks of 1,688 banks and 72,839 commercial concerns, according to statistics of business failures reported monthly by the United States department of commerce. The total liabilities of these corporations which have failed since 1921 amounts to more than $2,700,000,000. Squeeze Small Business These figures show that the small business men has been subjected to the same squeeze play which reduced tens of thousands of farmers and ‘wage earners to greater dependence on the dominant financial powers. To a large extent these failures mean that the small banking, industrial and trade business are being more com- pletely subjected to the economic dic- tatorship of the New York banks. The republican-democratic contro- versy over the responsibility for these failures emphasizes their joint responsibility. The democratic ad- ministration allowed the financiers to finance the war in a way to produce a maximum of inflation with excess pro- fits. The democratic administration sponsored the federal reserve act which protected the giant financial in- terests in the resulting deflation. But the republican party also sanc- tions these financial policies which benefit the money power. It has shown itself unwilling or unable to save small business and the farmers from the tide of the failures which inevitably follow inflation. Both parties are com- mitted to the theory that the interests of the financiers who,control the coun- Ty’s credit are of paramount import- ance, Failures Increase. ‘The rapid increase during the last 4@ years in the number of business failures and in the labilities involved is shown in the table which lists the banking and commercial failures since 1913; Commercial — New Liabitities No. Liabilities (Democrati: 3918 «120 Sax 548,000 16,032 $273,316,000 1914 216 357,852,000 1915 132 301,272,000 1916 48 196,248,000 917 48 182,436,000 918 24 163,080,000 1919 48 113,304,000 1920 120 295,116,000 (Republican) 1921 «408 628,332,000 1922 276 623,858,000 1923 «576 2 538,620,000, 1924 428 1 5 304,460,000 (6 months) These figures show that the number of business failures has nothing to do with the mere fact that one or other of the old political parties happens to be in power but a great deal to do with the same rottenness in the ex- isting economic order which produces the unemployment from which labor suffers periodically. Same Under Both Old Parties If the Harding-Coolidge regime is responsible for the tremendous out- break of failures in 1921-1924 then the Wilson regime may be held respon- sible for the outbreak in 1913-1915. The fact is that both old parties which encourage and serve the con- tinuance of capitalist economic order are equally responsible and the table above is just an evidence of the rot- teness they are willing to perpetuate. It’s normalcy for the great capitalist, chaos for the smaller fry and the workers, Lured to the White House. (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 21. — Twelve nationalities were represented in the group of 40 business men actively en- gaged in the Coolidge campaign, who were piloted to the White House the other day to gaze upon Cautious Cal. In imitation of Mark Hanna's per- formance in the McKinley campaign of 1896, money raised for the G. O. P. 4s being spent in numerous excursions leading to a photograph with the White House as a background, and with a grateful speech by the candi- date as the crowning thrill. This ex- pense will not show on the books of the campaign committee, ENTHUSIASTIC TAG DAY RESPONSE New York Branches Undertake to Beat Quota HE final conference of Tag Day secretaries demonstrated that the idea Is being well received among the party membership. Branches are reporting excellent responses from the membership. The action com- mittees are all working well on the situations confronting them, and or- ganizations generally are being perfected. Volunteers will be provided with attractive arm bands, official credentials, and the beautiful Foster- Gitlow buttons for tagging. The English downtown branch reported that they had assessed themselves a quota of $150, fifty dollars more than their allotment. The English Bronx No. 1 raised thelr quota from $100 to $175. The Young Workers League branches accepted an allotment of $3 per member, which is fifty per cent higher than the quotas assigned to the Workers Party branches. Following is the list of allotments to branches: QUOTAS ALLOTTED TO BRANCHES FOR TAG DAY Section 1, English, Downtown, $100; Finnish, Jamaica, $75; Hungarian, Down- town, $25; Jewish, Downtown No. 1, $250; Jewish, Downtown No. 4, $50; Russian, Downtown No. 2, $50; Ukrainian, Staten Island, $5; English, West Side, $100; Finnish, Staten Island, $50; Hungarian, Astoria, $25; Jewish, Downton No. 2, $75; Oriental, $5; Italian, Corona, $25; Italian, Astoria, $25; Armenian, $50; German, Jamaica, $25; Italian, Downtown, $25; Jewish, Downtown No. 3, $75; Polish, Downtown, $5; Ukrainian, Downtown, $15; Italian, West Side, $50. Section 2. English, Yorkville, $25; Czecho-Slovak, $125; Italian, Harlem, $5; Greek, $100; Jugo-Slavic, $50; Spanish, $5; English, Harlem, $150; Esthonian, $50; German, West Harlem, $5; Hungarian, Yorkville, $150; Russian, Harlem, $25; English, Astoria, $15; German, Yorkville, $150; Finnish, Harlem, $500; Jewish, Harlem, $200; Scandinavian, Harlem, $15. Section 3. English, No. 1, $100; Hungarian, No. 45, $15; German, $10; Russian, $25; English, No. 2, $25; Jewish, No. 1, $300; Lettish, $200; English, Lower Bronx, $25; Jewish, No. 2, $25; Lithuanlan, No. 32, $25. Section 4. English, No. 3, $150; Jewish, $150; Lithuanian, No. 3, $15; Ukrain- jan, $5; German, Bushwick, $10; Lithuanian, No. 1, $75; Russian, No. 1, $25; German, Ridgewood, $15; Lithuanian, No. 2, $25; Russian, No. 2, $15. Section 5. English, $75; Finnish, Inwood, $25; Jewish, $200. Section 6. Vote Communist This Time: Lithuanian, Boro Park, $15; Russian, South Brooklyn, $15. Branch 1, $50; Branch 15, $100; Branch 18, $26; Branch 2 KEPT PRESS TAKES UP WORK WHERE GOVT. SAYS IT HAS QUIT (By Federated Press.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—Justice and state department officials have assured Roger N. Baldwin, director of the American Civil Liberties Union, that no attempt has been made during the past two years to interfere with the issuance of a pass- port to any citizen because of his po- litical or economic views or his po- litical or labor record. At the department of justice, Baldwin was informed that espion- age upon citizen and alien radicals had ceased since the resignation of Daugherty. No further espionage on radicals is contemplated. On the day this statement of pol- icy was made, the Washington Star began publication of the Spolansky “red plot” stories, which are being syndicated thruout the country as a campaign roorback. Twin City Radicals Give “Lawful” Plutes the Horses’ Giggle MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 21.—It was the horse laugh on the reactionary “law” and order” elements of Minneapolis when none of the conservative book- stores were found to have copies of the U. S. constitution in stock. The Well-Dickey Banking Co., which had promised to give away copies of the antiquated document was up a stump until it tried the radical book shop as @ last resort. This shop, the Modern Bookstore, run by Alexis Georgian, who is under deportation orders as an undesirable radical, had the stuff. Fifty copies, each with an advertise- ment of a defunct Socialist paper on a fly-leaf, were hustled over and dished out by the bank. Shady Banker Dawes please copy. Butcher Workmen Organize. PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 21.—An or- ganization drive conducted by Butcher Local No. 454, Amalgamated Food Workers, in Paterson is educating the public thru special advertising in the local press. A demand for union la- belled meat products from union butcher shops has grown up, WALL STREET JOURNAL VERY BUSY APPLYING WHITEWASH TO CAL COOLIDGE IN BOSTON BANK SCANDAL (By The ih Ralasaten Press) NEW York, Oct. 21.-—The Wall Street Journal, which came gallantly to the rescue of Charlie Dawes’ tarnished banking reputation when there “were none so poor to do him reverence, enters the lists again to cl ir presi- dent Coolidge of all blame in connection with the banking scandals ‘that flourished during his governorship of M achusetts, Thru the Boston News bureau, affiliated with The Wall Street Journal, tho Coolidge version of the scandal is given publicity, In brief, the defense for Coolidge is that former State Treasurer Fred J. Burrell, of Massachusetts, is a blackmailer and a liar. The testimony in court by Burrell that he deposited state funds in a shaky Boston bank in English, Boro Park, $50; German, $25; Jewish, Coney Island, $50; Scandinavian, $15; English, Coney Island, $25; Jewish, Bath Beach, $25; Finnish, $500; Jewish, Boro Park, $50; YOUNG WORKERS LEAGUE QUOTAS. Branch 5, $25; Branch 8, $25; Branch 23, $50; Branch 11, $100; Branch 27, $25; $100; Branch 6, $25; Branch 9, $50; Branch 12, $200; Branch 16, $25; Branen 21, $25; Branch 24, $50; Branch 28, $100; Branch 4, $100; Branch 7, $25; Branch 10, $100; Branch 14, $50; Branch 17, $25; Branch 22, $25; Branch 25, $25; Branch 29, $25. FARES RAISED IN PHILADELPHIA BY TRACTION TRUST Straphangers Are Hit by 20 Per Cent Boost (Special to The Daily Worker) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., —The street car company of this city raised the fare from 6% to 7% cents. This means an increase of 20 per cent. Hundreds of thousands of workers are affected by this action of the company whose yearly earnings reach into heavy millions. A feeble struggle is being put up against the increase by various business interests who fear that the high fare might have a det- rimental effect on their business. The mater has been once “inves- tigated” by court which ruled, as it was expected, in favor of the company. An appeal was taken and the matter again “investigated.” The cry raised this time is that it is the workers fault that the fare was raised. The workers, the business interests claim, are getting too high wages, for which the “people” are now asked to pay. Those familiar with the conditions of work in the P. R. T. know that one cannot get too fat on the wages paid by that company and that the com- pany now simply sees an opportunity to increase its profits. The new “in- vestigation” will undoubtedly. bring the same results as the first. It is up to the Central Labor Union of Philadelphia to demand that an impartial investigation committee be organized consisting of representat- ives of the Central Labor Union and of the working class political parties of the city. Only then will the work- ers be assured of getting the true reasons ‘why the company made its 20 per cent increase in fares, ~ Let the Central Labor Union resist this increase by all means at its dis- posal. It is within the power of or- ganized labor to stop this new grab of the P. R. T. at the expense of the workers if a serious effort is made. Half Million Join In Plea for Life Of Bernard Grant Appeals for mercy for Bernard Grant, now awaiting execution for his part in the robbery of a tea store, here, during which Patrolman Ralph Souders was slain, today passed the half million mark, the volume being swelled daily by communications, from all parts of the world. An en- tire corner of the office of Attorney Thomas Swanson, Grant's counsel, is heaped with letters on tne case, the majority of which cite the Leopold- Loeb life sentence in voicing their be- Nef that Grant should not hang. The writers hail from the entire range of the social scale from former Ambassador Gerard to persons whose writing is almost indecipherable. : THE DAILY WORKER SS ren TY GITLOW SHOWS THEM IN KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Puts it All Over Speech of “Wisconsin Boob” KANSAS CITY, Mo,, Oct. 21—Ben Gitlow made a splendid impression, here. He spoke at length on the re- cord and personnel of the three capi- talist parties, “Wisconsin Boob” had spoken the night before and it was a treat after his mulligan stew to have every ques- tion analyzed from one angle alone— its bearing on the workers and farm- ers. Gitlow talked in simple lan- guage on the cause of crisis— glut thru ‘surplus value. The LaFollette speakers had laid it down that panics come only from “wicked monopoly” —-and that there had never been any before 1898! A strong delegation of ‘“pure-and- simple” LaFollette men came and squirmed in acute pain as Ben dis- cussed the past of Boob’s “Angels”— Spreckels and Vanderlip. They—sweet souls—had thought LaFollette was financed by their dimes and quarters! ‘The Boob’s concept of honesty differs ‘rom the Communists, who believe as Trotsky puts it: “We must never de- ceive the workers. We can play a louble game with the enemies of the proletariat, but not with the proletar- iat itself.” MAN OF GOD IS INDICTED FOR SWEETIN MURDER Other. Clatitians Lead Him to His Father MOUNT VERNON, IIL, Oct. 21.— The Jefferson county grand jury to- day returned first degree murder in- dictments against Reverend Lawrence M. Hight, unfrocked minister of Ina, and his paramour, Mrs. Elsie Sweetin, confessed “love pact” poisoners of their respective mates, Mrs. Anna Hight and Wilford Sweetin. The ex-minister and Mrs. Sweetin will be arraigned in circuit coyrt here this afternoon. Following their plea, the court will set the trial date. Such was the interest in the case that before daybreak today scores of afrmers and Ina residents, with their families, camped on the courthouse steps, many of them bringing basket dinners along, Clothing Workers Raise Funds for Foster Campaign Local 54, of the Amalgamated Cloth- ing Workers’ Union is very active in its support of the candidates of the Workers Party. ‘In spite of the or- ders of the general office that all mem- bers of the union are fo collect funds for the LaFollette campaign the mem- bers of this local have endorsed the Workers Party ticket and called a mass meeting for the campaign. They have already contributed $100 and are now coming thru once more. The fol- lowing is a list of shops which have contributed to the Workers Party campaign. born Chairman List No. Shop ing Coll. Amt. 20207 Juskovsky Aleksaitis —$ 7.60 21561 Sullivan Jasulities 16,80 20218 Coll. by Bus, Agt. W. 20204 Kacenas “Baradaitis 1.75 21211 Kairis Vedegis 6.10 20210 Zarulis Masulis 4.85 20202 Karvelis 3.50 20219 Semenas _ Gerkus + 4.25 20205 =Maihofer Polinkoms 2.25 20213 Guzas Spuder 4.50 20208 Budrities _ Stephainities 11.35 20216 ~Ramoska 4.50 20196 Atkocaitis) Smelzuiras 7.55 20212 Miciulis Kivita 5.60 30197 Goldberg = Matulericius 4.10 20217 Stelmokos uskas 125 20214-18 Birsletig Buyksomzs 20.05 Total $119.75 This local has pledged itself to double this amount before the cam- paign is over. Members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union and other organizations! Follow the example of the members of this local and get on the job. Make a collection in your shop and turn the money in to the office as soon as possible. Money is needed badly to make the campaign @ success and we must have the ac- tive support of all workers. Try to Bridge Everglades. NEW YORK, Oct. 21,—One of the last remaining strongholds of jungle wilderness in the United States—that of the great Everglade swamp in Florida—soon will succumb to engin- eering science with the throwing of a railway across the swamp from Miami, on the east coast to Fort Myers on the west, it became known here today. | Court Upholds Monopoly. WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—The Sa’ Electric corporation lost in the su- preme court of the United States to- day in its petition for rehearing of its suit against the General Blectric com- pany, involving a charge against the latter of unlawful monopoly in the PROGRAM AND CONSTITUTION OF THE WORKERS’ SPORT ALLIANCE OF THE YOUTH OF AMERICA The purpose of this organization is te unite the now existing working class sport and athletic organizations of this country to work for the physical and mental development of the working class men and women on class lines, One of the main objects is the development of mass sports against individual sports. All workers’ athletic and sport organizations that accept our program are eligible for membership in this organization. Bach organization pays $2.00 affiliation dues. The W..S. A. of A. charges its affiliated organiza- tions 2c per capita tax per member per month The highest authority of this organization ig the national conyention held at least once every three years, The executive committee is empowered to call conventions at shorter intervals if necessary. Delegates to the convention are elected from the local central bodies of the organization on the basis of one for every 500 members or major fraction thereof; every local central body is entitled to at least one delegate. The executive committee is empowered to levy an asséssment of 25¢ per member three months before the convention is called; the convention expenses are to be paid out of the proceeds of this. assessment. The convention settles all matters pertaining to the past activities of the organization, and decides upon the future course to be taken by the organi- zation. It elects an executive board of nine; five of the, executive board mem- bers must reside in the city where the national headquarters are located. ‘The executive committee is the highest body -between conventions and is responsible to the convention for all its actions. The executive committee elects from among its members the national secretary and all other neces- sary officials, and is responsible for their actions. The executive committee supervises all the activities of the alliance and its affiliated bodies, and reports about them to the national convention; it also passes onthe appli- cations for membership that are tendered to it. The executive tommittee shall have power to make decisions in all matters in which a change in principles is not inyolved, and the decisions shall be binding until altered by the convention. Any unit that is dissatisfied with the decisions of the executive committee has the right to appeal to the convention. All members and units must refrain from taking part in the affairs, games or contests arranged by organizations that are antagonistic to the organized workers and their cause. (In case asmember or unit is engaged in such sport or athletics that they. cannot find any opponent inside the organization, it may engage in contests on the outside upon receiving special permission for so doing from the executive committee.) The executive 638 E. 138th St., New York, N. Y. committee has the power to suspend anyone breaking this rule. All comrgunications should be addressed to Emil Toikka,, secretary, (Continued from page 1) erators were excused for their viola tions of the “sacred contract”, The bureaucracy of the United Mine Workers of America are a privileged class. They have fortified themselves behind a system of patronage and have formed a combination of officials that is pledged to stand solidily united against the encroachments of the rank and file. It was this law of self preservation that forced the two hated enemies, Farrington and Lewis to bury the hatchet so that they could fight the progressives and save their own posttion. Shown In True Role The great rebellion in the ranks of the coal diggers of Illinois in the year 1919 reveals Frank Farrington in his role of strikebreaker and capitalist lieutenant. It was at this time that he beat all his past records for treach- ery to the workers and loyalty to their enemies, Before the war, four-fifths of the bituminous mine workers earned less than $600 a year according to a report made by the immigration com- mission. The commission modestly set the standard of subsistence of a family of five at $900 a year. Surely not an extravagant figure. When the war broke out in Europe in 1914 the coal industry was at a low ebb, but the war demand created a market for coal and production went up quickly. Owners Made Millions In 1916 the miners secured a slight increase, But the increased cost of living soon made the slight increase look ridiculous. In April 1917, the operators agreed to another slight in- crease. In the meantime the owners were making millions on war orders. The price of coal went up. The cost of living went up. Everything went up but the miners’ wages. Woodrow Wilson, by executive order created the fuel administration and placed his friend Dr. Harry. A, Garfield in charge. "Dr. Garfield was a good friend of the coal operators and succeeded in tying the miners up in a new agreement, which was to '_|last not more than two years after April 1, 1918. The following paragraphs in the agreement are significant. If they were written by Don Chafin or Warren S. Stone the scab “union” coal operator they could not be more in favor of the coal barons: “Whereas, stoppage of work in vio- liation of the agreement has become so serious as to menace the success and perpetuity of the United Mine Workers of America and our joint relations, this conference instructs the district executive boards to meet operators in their various districts for the purpose of agreeing on a pen- alty clause where none now exists, and if necessary meet to amend and strengthen existing clauses so as to make the penalty more effective in preventing strikes and violations of agreements, Bosses as Fine Collectors. “All fines provided for in all agree- ments shall be automatically collect- ed, and any operator failing to collect and forward to proper parties such fine shall pay a penalty of $2.00 for each employee subject to be fined, the same to be collected and retained in the miners’ district organization. And in no case ‘shall any fine be re- funded except by mutual agreement of accredited representatives of oper- atons and miners. “It 18 further agreed that where Wednesday, October 22, 1924 LAGUARDIA SAYS HE WILL DEBATE ‘W. P, CANDIDATE Forced by Pressure of Party’s Challenge NEW YORK, N. Y., Oct. 21.—Heart- ened by the moral support of the so- cialists and his gangsters, Congress- man LaGuardia has accepted the chal- lenge to debate the Workers Party candidate, Juliet Stuart Poyntz. A letter of challenge has been sent out by Harry Winitsky, Workers Party campaign manager, to Marie MacDon- ald, a socialist of long standing, and now campaign manager of the repub- lican, Major LaGuardia. After evading the challenges issued by the Workers Party candidate on a number of repeated occasions, the world war hero finds himself pinned down and at last he has accepted. The time and place of this debate will be announced soon, le It will be remembered Comrade Poyntz was arrested last week while in the midst of an impromtu debate with Maj. LaGuardia at an open air meeting on 111th St. and Lexington Ave. She was released at the station house as there was no one to press any charge. Altho it was the socialists anda gang of their hoodlums who disturbed the meeting, the police picked out the Workers Party candidate for arrest. After the arrest of Comrade Poyntz, this gang of hoodlums made an at- tack upon the audience around the Workers Party platform. LaGuardia speaks blandly and pretends inno- cence, while his gangsters are using the same terroristic methods as the fascisti of his native Italy. operator for the expense incurred on unt of such a suit. “This agreement is subject to and will become effective only on the condition that the selling price of coal shall be advanced by the United States government sufficient to cover the increased cost in the different districts affected, and will take ef- fect on the first day of the pay period following the order advancing such increased prices.” Coal Barons Got Everything It will be seen that in this agreg- ment the operators stood to lose nofh- ing. Even the paltry wage increase was made dependent on the govefn- ment advancing the price of coal: But the pact tied the miners up in a knot. Strikes were penalized and the bosses authorized to collect fines from the workers. In order to insure that the coal operators would diligent- ly collect the fines, a penalty clause was written penalizing the operators for a possible failure to penalize the miners. The operators were protected in every way from the coal diggers. The January, 1918,: convention of the United Mine Workers meeting in In- dianapolis, accepted the Washington Agreement. Dr. Garfield in the mean- time secured an advance of 45 cents per ton in the price of coal. The living costs of the year 1917 were made the basis for the 1918 wage increase and tho the living costs mounted rapidly no further increases were made until 1920. Appeals To Patriotism The miners were told that it was unpatriotic to ask for higher wages while soldiers were killing Germans at the rate of thirty dollars a month. Many capitalists were working in Washington for one dollar a year! It was afterwards shown that they were really “working Washington.” Charley Schwab, the millionaire steel manu- facturer who worked for one dollar a year, was spending $250,000 a month. The fat war contracts paid well. The .coal operators were making fabulous profits, In the meantime the coast of living continued to soar. The miners were tied up with an agree- ment that gave all the breaks to the boss. The year 1919 witnessed a slump in the coal industry. The war was over. lions and were out for a good time. The coal diggers were left sucking their thumbs. The labor leaders look- went down in the mines and dug the black diamonds had the dirty end of the deal, Morgan Had Won The miners were getting hungry and demanded a hew wage agreement. It was alright to talk patriotism dur- ing the war, but the killing was over, Morgan had and now it was time for those who did the dirty work to be given the consideration they were promised, But like the soldier who went to the front for Wall Street, the miners who toiled in the bowels of the earth to keep the wheels of industry moving, were left in the lurch. President Farrington, of District 12, every request for a new wage agreement. He even went so far as to take drastic measures to prevent the paying of premiums or bonuses above the wage rate stipulated in thé agreement. This seems to be un- believable but it is the truth. Farring- ton actually took steps to punish miners who managed to secure a high- er rate of compensation for their work The coal barons had made their mil-}| ed quite prosperous, Only those who], On a Labor Faker’s Trail til the war was over. They felt that once the horrible nightmare was past, things would be different. The hos- tility of their district officers irritated them. But tho the war was over the cap italist dictatorship was still going strong. The end of the war did not mean the end of the Garfield agree- ment and woe unto the miner who dared to strike with that pistol point- ed at his head. The miners discov- ered that according to the terms of that agreement as interpreted by the coal operators the war would not be. over until two years after April, 1918. The government, the coal operators and the union leaders kept jockeying rogation of the war-time contract un- til finally certain Illinois coal opera- tors, taking advantage of the situation started a move that looked like an attempt to break down union condi- tions that were secured after bitter struggles. The Fight Was On The battle opened around the Belle ville sub-district, where the miners struck the mines, in retaliation against the action of the operators. Another incident that helped to bring the insurgent movement against Farrington and his crew of boss spe- cialists to a head, was the Mooney protest strike. of the district: officials the miners of Illinois voted overwhelmingly for the strike, When the miners of Belleville, received their pay after the Mooney strike, tley found their pay envelop short from three to five dollars each. The penalty clause of the Washing: ton agreement was working overtime This was the spark that set fire to the powder magazine of the Illinois miners’ discontent and the batfle was on. How Farrington met this rebellion against his infamous co-operation with the coal operators will be told in subsequent articles. How of Be Healthy 4 bean have Veen from many "sicknesses, {f you are suffer- gg som any ail- La ‘office ont hel Ip yor ith use of medicine or an marmot oF DR. TAFT 1555 West Roosevelt rae gh 9 to 12 a, m.—2 to 5—6 to 8 Sundays and Holidays 9 to "2 a. mm TELEPHONE CANAL 3469 | Res. 1632 S. Trumbull Ave, Phone Rockwell 5050 MORDECAI SHULMAN , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 701 Association Building 19 S. La Salle Street CHICA! Dearborn 8657 Central ena JAY STETLER’S with the miners’ demand for the ab-. Despite the opposition - ri RESTAURANT excess of the legal limit, this at tho direction of Governor Coolidge, Ie ad-| tion “which hen moved ihe iene ety | sale of incandescent electric lamps. po Aig ty Teestenhahad eer Hes hot cg oc ated ng Established 1901 ; mitted, but declared false. Dates are cited to show that the Burrell story |nis hanging from Oct. 17, to January.| Open Forum, ight, Ledge|in accordance herewith the district Patience Exhausted 1063 W. Madison St. Chloage : “) apenas 16. nS aaa tee ose ‘organization shail muignene the ha eines as, ale Meee ‘i ee ¥ p 4 z 4 Caan > \