The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 20, 1924, Page 6

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Page Six .. THE DAILY WORKER Thursday, November 20, 1924 THE DANY WOBKER. |. =iee-n-D@ the Elections Promise Prosperity? by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING Oa |¢/evate her guns allegedly in violation of the com- announces that his first efforts will and the substance of question num-|a candidate proceed to boost the mar- By ISRAEL AMTER. ; ing shells 1118 W.. Washington. Bivd., Chicago, I, pact. . Perhaps these. guns may. be.shooting.s 1 (Phone: Monroe 4712) at Japan one of these days. After that if England to relieve the “plight of the farmers.”) | ber 3. The Annalist of Noy. 3 points |ket, and fleece the unwary. For as the gets too impudent, the United States.can then |{({-JIGHLY SATISFACTORY,” “Wall| In the months of September and {out that altho elections have some Annalist has pointed out “the funde- ON TES ‘ October, a change took place in the | effect on capitalist investment, insofar | mental conditions of business ha ‘ mourners! a elevate her’ guns and make more new ones than] II streot miated," “Prosperity farming situation, There has been ajas the administration inspires “confi-| undergone no change whatever if, 96.00 per year $3.60 % months $2.00...8 months | ngland can. Ahead,” etc. These are some of the | partial failure of crops in other coun-|dence” or hot, nonetheless, the vital] consequence of the elections and have By mail (in Chicago only): The United States is flirting with the British’| expressions appearing in the capitalist | tries: Argentina, Canada, Australia, |element is the economic situation. The | not. changed materially from what 98.00 per year $4.50....6 months $2.50....3 months colonies. Australia and New Zealand have a “ ‘Jap- dailies indicating the satisfaction of | Roumania, Germany and Soviet Russia department of labor published.a report | they were even two or three weeks big capital with the results of the THE DAILY WORKER and England are made of sand. These colonies are| elections. . hi i -| before.” Th a ‘i ai dress 6il mai! and make out checks to anese problem.” The bonds between those colonies cannot supply the world market as|on wages and employment in Septem- | before. ere are serious dangers $118 W. Washington Bivd. Chioago, Milnele |} very important factor in pushing the Mother] Some workers are inclined to accept before. There was a shortage of grain | ber, 1924, compared with September, of this inflationary exchange “beom” on the market and the American farm: |1923. In 6,400 establishment, 2,219,000 | being followed by a collapse, ‘such ag Prager ; aaa ers who reaped big crops this year.|persons were employed in 1923, com-| took place in. 1920, z .. ‘ the election results as an indication & LOUIE ENGDAEL | uate. Lope ee an Ane nari alanee ‘yoth - that, if’ Davis or LaFollette had’ been WILLIAM F, DUNNE nm United States. “If Britain doeg not adopt'an ‘anti-| siected,-a'miore tavorable'period for'|sepdrt, by ane bilton donee This | there was a reduction in the amount|Dlacing orders for rails, locomotives MORITZ J. LOBB........meeneBusiness Manager Japanese policy, what is to prevent the colonies|them would have dawned. Other|has been heralded as the beginning of | of payroll of somewhere over 14 per|and cars, which were held in. abey- discovering that the United States was once. a| workers labor under the illusion that|a new era of prosperity, if not of a|cent. ‘The Commercial and Financial |ance pending the outcome of the eléc- colony of Great Britain? Y he bb as are have a Hsia boom. Chronicle of Noy, 1 states that “There a Building plas Ne held a x . ‘. i lous influence on the economic. state Now Business is Booming. is no denying the fact that trade, after|]on the same grounds, Even tho the The United States is preparing for the next: War |of the country, And still others, im- Steel production has risen and has | the sharp partial recovery of the late | railways. might have feared adverse This time it will not be a laggard, coming in at|pressed by the big stock boom that now reached the figure of 66 per cent |84¥™mer, has latterly been slowing up| legislation in case radicals were the heel of the hunt. It will be the first in the ring. |followed immediately after the an- of capacity. Textile mills, especially |49ain. ... . No business boom is in| ¢lected to congress, nevertheless such There is no longer any attempt to hide the purpose|2°¥Ncement of the election of Cool-| i) Nowy England, which have. been idle | Prospect. holding up of orders is also an eleos of. Wall Street’s war preparations., Japan. is the Fe a beet usted meas for months, have opened again. The {Conditions Not Better, Says Annalist. Fiabe inlay It is a repetition of next victim of this capitalist Moloch. And the un pegetesiman piked upon a new period traflways have reached record loadings,| On. Nov. 10, after the elections, the the wieecrahat uid ie hie vag “ P 3 Ys due chiefly to the movement of grain. | Annalist writes: “The two outstanding | ticket a eh Yahi Oe vi ee, thinking masses will respond even more readily Coolidge Bosses’ Man. Exports in October attained the high | features of the post-election situation | bcs tn tp soe enne the “wrong” to the slogan of “Down with the yellow peril”) ‘The contention of the first group of | total of $527,000,000, the highest since | are: First, that the confidence follow- Sri a ia of losing their jobs, The than they did to “Down with German militarism,” |Workers reveals that they do not|1921, leaving a balance of $217,000,000| ing the election is not based on Posi- | aj eke Soren tn we ConOniainny eae, . e 1 ’.|understand the “power behind the}over imports, This is the highest | tive economic changes in the business a eere iain, the problems and ie in 1917, when the mountebank Wilson ,pulled. off bd fe rospects of busi C , throne.” The controlling’ group re-|trade balance since 1919, the year of| prospect, but on the failure of an ph THEY nae ee ee his mask. < garded Coolidge as their gnan; Davis “prosperity” in which the workers and | apprehended political change for the hs} pynend hd Raikitd Pade While the capitalists of the United States are|represented the “Solid South” and a|farmers of the country launched the| worse actually to take place; second bei hare 0 getting their battle weapons and. their alliances in different set of capitalists, but the | farmer-labor party. that what are loosely called the ‘fun- Ae pt edehaet of the Dawes * * power of Wall Street is so complete These are the economic factors that | damental conditions,’ of in ba y ica gieemasmendica zood order for the fray, Japan is not idle, and the »” of business have | capitalists t th 7 8 & ry, Jap , if id over the country that it would have|act despite elections and because of undergone mo change whatever in fi 4 al €reletembidebshaiddu es Stan human race will see another international slaugh-| controlled Davis as well as Coolidge | their nature this year inclined the consequence of the election and have es serials ie Hae the country reiterate ter feast, with the workers of the world the pawns|and could block any “progressive” | voting population to convervatism—to| not changed materially from what | with the noc aie, Cutting of wages. in the game of capitalism. legislation on the part of a democratic} “letting well enough alone,” as Mark] they were even two’ or three’ weeks of the y ayer ance ofthe assistance ‘Against this. or: of murder the cries of pacif- congress. In any case, Wall Street|Hanna said. These factors led to the before.” The farmers are not buying | Coolia: 8 pied game BER ORS aa §i sy hep did not fear Davis and therefore dis-| defeat of Davis and LaFollette—aside | much. They- ai pe A jawes, not only the * shy ne : . y are-paying the interest y bi its will rise in vain. There is only one power on | regarded him @uring the election cam-| from the threats of discharge made to/ on their Mortgages and putting the we ree ee eee ste Oltice personnal earth that can stop it and that is the power of|paign. Nor did it fear LaFollette or|the workers in case they supported | rest by. Those who are buying motor | “i Rave to face the issue of foreign labor, consciously organized to abolish capitalism | threat to throw the election into| the “socialistic schemes” of the pro-|cars, are purchasing used. cars. “The | omPetition. Longer hours and lower and establish the rule of the workers. in its. stead. The only organized world movement willing ,and capable to lead the working class to victory against capitalism, its wars and its attendant horrors is the Communist International. are benefitting by it. Their buying | pared with 1,931,000 persons in 1924,] The “boom” seemed to be justified capacity has increased, according to|a reduction of 13 per cent. Similarly|by the fact that the railways were tered as second-class mail Sept. 21, 1923, at the Post omse at Chicago, Ill, under the act of March 8, 1879, <> 20 Advertising rates on application Nationalization Progressing Backwards The American Federation of Labor’s executive council is seeking out every measure which smells of progress and wiping out of its program. At El Paso, the executive council retreats from the position of the Portland convention of one year ago, where it expressed itself favorably toward the government ownership of super-power, and says, “Industry must solve its own problems or we face the alternative of state intrusion which must in- evitably lead to bureaucracy and breakdown.” Outside of the ironic situation of the union bureaucracy sitting in the midst of a brokendown labor movement solemnly condemning bureaucracy and breakdown, there are other elements of this report of the executive council deserving of com- ment. Particularly in the mining and railroad trans- portation industries of this country, the system of private and corporate ownership produces limit- Jess chaos in production and ever increasing mis- ery to the workers. Through private capitalist ownership of the coal é a mines the non-union fields are being used to break Capitalist Honesty the union in the organized fields for the benefit of cS the operators in the organized districts who are,} A master in chancery handed down a decision unquestionably, in league with and supported by | that Governor Len Small owes the state of Illinois the operators in the non-unon fields. one million dollars. While that’ versatile gentle- The cry “competition is closing the union mines |™@0 was treasurer of the state, he lent money to down” is pure buncombe. The mine operators, un-|the meat packers at 8 per cent and pocketed the ion and non-union, are in a conspiracy to wipe out| ‘lifference between that rate and the 2 per cent the U. M. W. of A. And John L. Lewis is quite paid by the banks to the state for the use of its agreeable to this program, or the U. M. W. of A. | funds. ¥ i would do some real fighting for nationalization of| That Small is a crook there is no doubt what- ie minim. soever. But what is capitalism anyhow but a In the railroads the workers are continually and |¢T0oked system? While the capitalists rob those loudly harangued by the companies, their repre-|™arked out for robbery, i. e, the workers, their sentatives in congress and their propagandists |2¢ts are quite ethical. Only when they rob one an- everywhere, to the effect that the poor corporations | ther or plunder some state institution ‘of capital- are barely making both ends meet and that theism outside the regular way is there a big ery starving widows and’ orphans who have “invested | "ised. Robbery then becomes a menace to the their hard-earned money” simply cannot afford to] System, and the law of self-preservation compels grant wage increases. Indeed, they can be saved| the bulwarks of capitalist society to seek punish- from the poorhouse only by reductions in wages. | ™ent for the miscreant who rocks the boat. Yet who is so simple minded and so unmindful| This is the milk in the cocoanut of the Small of the the history of how the railroads of this coun-|¢8¢. His enemies are just as corrupt as he is, but try were built and are maintained as to swallow | they are more disciplined and rob ‘according to this piffle of invested capital and poverty? The|!@w. At least if they stray beyond the preserves railroads of America were built at the expense of| they take care not to get caught. the public treasury or the public land or both, and Charles Gates Dawes, vice-president elect of the were handed over on a platter to bankers of Wall United States was implicated with the notorious Street. These worthy gentlemen have played with Lorimer in the operation of a crooked banking them, ruined them, got the government to repair business. Even the supreme court found him guilty. them at public expense, hand them back and Yet he was elected. He helped to rob the poor guarantee profits on “re-organized” capitalization people who placed their Savings in Lorimer’s bank. with whole oceans of watered stock piled onto the} Albert B. Fall and his criminal associates’ who backs of the railway workers. Yet the railroad|@re being prosecuted, after a fashion,’for selling unions have not only failed to fight for nationaliza- the naval oil reserves made, the mistake’ of tamper- tion, they have even given up the mild demand for|i"g with a capitalist institution. They will not application of the Plumb Plan. be punished but had they stolen property from the The Trade Union Educational League has raised | Indians or robbed a savings bank, nothing would the banner in these two basic industries for na-| have happened to them. They would not be even tionalization of mines and railroads, providing |imconvenienced to the extent of having a warrant that such nationalization be undertaken under | Served on them, strict control of competent miners and railroad| Former Governor Warren T. McCray of Indiana, workers and will exclude bureaucratic commis |8°t away with millions from the bankers of that sions of lawyers and capitalist politicians. state and he is-now serving five years in Atlanta, Tt may be that some protest will be made against | Prison. He should have known better. than to the house, for when the bogey of “con-| gressive movement. The workers and| fact remains that th itn ter, the oes forces in fiscation” or “socialism” is raised, |farmers, acting under the good influ- purchasing Ducee ee a ae Prensa ii ee Wall Street knows that congress is|ence of the monetary situation, voted | has. been expected has. so fap failed Bee are unve to compete witty ti still too “sane” to yield to the temp-|to preserve the status quo. to show itself decisively in increased oa, ae een io Ci ly ot tation of “radical” measures, (See the Boom Only Temporary. demand for Goods, and there is no they ate pies iti ae usages) 4 flasco of the MacDonald government The big’ capitalists of the country other definite area of buying power thereby vobvitie the ons odemitre eos in ince in neiceraey were not bothered about the outcome |t® Which business can turn with clear area of buying power to which gtd hive Ge ee ee cen of the elections. They knew the eco- the nannies Greater, markets,” says} ness can turn with clear prospects of nomic condition of the country, and “ greater markets.” pad eg *ahdagie stand pers the threat of LaFolletteism did not] Exports, which are. adding con-|” Workers should not be fooled by the tion of the country. During the Wilson | W°'TY them. In spite of a temporary |Siderably to the country’s “pros-| “poom” which has set in on the stock regime, a vast unemployment wave |T¢lief in the farming situation and a|Perity,” depend upon the outcome of | market. They should not be misled swept the country ‘and was inherited nb Phe bait cam " song shea in Bitty al a ‘the by S chenbe of captialiat nsec | t predict the dawn of re. 1 a slice of the|tion. The example of Ge a by Harding. Harding did. not solve ely seonperity, On Noy. 3, just world’s.market, the leading exporting | in thi ‘i vorpal <4 . . ri B,. " ie hands of the si boaieg chase pa eat org ba before the elections, the New York|24tions, including the United States, of England in the hands ee ton eae pO Ms pilin nig pis t a sa Annalist published reports from dif- will suffer, : Should walls be erected party, of France in the hands of the pehivea Peg ig a Oaticda ferent parts of the country. Detroit: |to Germany’s penetrating the interna- radicals, should convince them that and the Hast. This stabilized the] 0Ca! automobile companies as aj ‘onal market, the European markets, | capitalism does not depend primarily market and led to a ‘period of pros-| “Hole are buying less steel than they| Which are counting upon their re-|on “confidence” in thely capitalist gov- poacher ord ig neseee were a year ago.” Duluth: “I believe | habilitation thru the restoration of | ernments (which even these soctal- aria: by a slight rise in the past] 2dUStry im general is sitting tight at| Germany, will collapse. The export democratic, labor and pseudo-radical cnmer, nUEAET belek icuce ae: this time.” Kansas City: “There igs| trade of the United States, which gees |governments are), but on sterner pret pia tithe “sitting tient” or | ome hesitancy about booking ahead | chlefly to Europe, will suffer a fearful economic factors. capital, are not due to the ithinat e- very far on dry goods lines, and coun- Pe hoa owe hg Phos yb fund these economic factors hegre. tient ‘ot: Oodle ebeente eine try merchants continue their policy of | *Mects of the Dawes plan.) These are | with slight ups and downs, are leading poser ter “rca Rees won siege buying as they need.” Detroit: ‘The | the external taetors militating against to the permanent doom of capitalism. only open the channels of government | T4UStrial barometer of local condi-|@conomie prosperity in the United|rnis will force the workers into assistance which enable the cepitaltets | 28. Says election week will open | States. : struggle against greater exploitation. iS erat peak rng pdrarar situa. | With 2,000 less men employed than Unwary Fleeced. It will lead them to conflicts with the tng ‘ was the case the first week in October,| Disregarding the conservative atti-| capitalist government, which will use a Fs “ and the majority of industries are not tude of the Annalist, wild speculation |every form of force to crush them. Inemployment in 1924, hiring men.”- Against these state-|on the exchange ensued on Nov. 5.|This will lead the ‘unpolitically and In the early part of 1924, thtre was|ments were others indicating in-| Railway and industrial stocks rose less politically minded workers to an a positive drop in employment, the | creased buying power of the farmers,| With a boom. Millions of shares understanding of class political action. country seeming upon the verge of an| the opening of the New England tex-| changed handsevery day. On Nov, 13,|This is the prospect not of mote immediate crisis. The condition of|tile mills and an increase in the | 2,000,000. shares received new owners, day, but of the lemmas fu the farmers was acute, hundreds of] operations of the steel mills. Coal] Fifty stocks were at new highs. This This is the prospect es ft lyri thousands went bankrupt, hundreds of | operators, on the other hand, reported | was a “boom” such as had not been “$5 Pie kekoae thousands of farm‘ houses were aban- man workers alone, but of the Ameri- lower diggings. witnessed since 1901. One occurred |can as well. M doned (and still are), millions of the Trade Slows Up Again. in 1920, after the election of Harding. | their pias ‘dota ca ae a nak farming population went to the city.] Did the elections alter matters? | Speculators taking advantage of the Coolidge and Dawes will supply the (And even today—Nov. 16—Coolidge* This is a part of question number 2° vote of “confidence” ‘cast ‘in favor of ! governmental force. sy Russ Harvest Permits Exports, . MOSCOW, Noy. 19. — The Russian export of agricultural products, in Spite of the had crop failure affecting the southeast, will not be less in value but greater than last year. The grain crop is nine per cent less than Iast (Spéeiat to the Daily Worker) year, tho the acres sown were seven MOSCOW, Nov. 19. — The cost of pe en gd The total harvest is ibook whiehtion hat tha okecarnaraet hei sny' Bi ee poods (one Publishing house is hardly more than |pou', 56 1P8.) or 240,000,000 less than in pre-war times and discounts are|/**t Year. But the harvest in other made to workers, peasants and teach- | ‘TPS has notably increased, es : production-for-profits system. Pruette ers. The result of lower hook prices, be Gehan d ae ee a makes an interesting, serious, scien- with the improved economic condition ; Yaa gore the tific sketch of the problem of the so- | , raced haem SS te of the country, has been a tremendous |!¢ather. Despite these e: gh called new woman who desires other 4 increase in the book trade. In place |f@mine areas will be cared for. activity than the half-time job of which Pruette’s book on Women and of 300 book trading organizations a : f : Rees keeping house. She studies the occu-| V@i8ure recommends by condensing year ago, there are now 1,100, of | Next Sunday Night and Every the retreat in the struggle for nationalization by |™ake too free with his fellow capitalists. That is|pations into which women have gone which 350 operate in country districts. |day Night, the Open Forum, the A. F. of L. Certainly if the convention at|how it goes. It is well, that the capitalists.give|—the less than 60 ‘per cent who are i , El Paso does not act in favor of nationalization of !Such excellent, examples of their deprayity. (.. gainfully employed—and asks «group 7 y railroads and mines the workers in these industries| We are not interested in cleaning up capitalist Polhag onload OE ns WOR | recta coven. ty a insre pondlar and REV OLU TION AND AC TUALI TY will be betrayed once more by the labor bureau-|Corruption, We: leave that Sisyphus task; to-the|” she finds from questionnaires an- tical Bacon ot yp ieraneaes cuss eracy. ; socialists.and. the reformers. We are out. to, clean |swered by 347 adolescent middle-cla silghet Wages uta weaved aoa te ‘dis.| _ Editor's Note.—Bvery day until . up capitalism. Small can plunder the capitalist |#"4 working girls, that many have ips ee ahcore publication has been completed, the ip cap) n Pp e capital ambitions for careers and activities |CTCP22CY between wages and cost of DAILY WORKER will publish a treasury until he is as rich as a boss -bootlegger outside of the home.’ She: makes a |Yins is told. Statistics are made in- new chabtar’.from the bas ppg for all we care. Gshiseg «| splendfa appeal for-freedom to adven-| ‘Testing by interspersed personal in: The Great Strategist of the The workers have nothing to gain from clean Class War,” by A. Losoysky, secre- tary of the Red International of . tories of women in industry and a ture, for toleranee@’in allowing women thet capitalist governments. They. can, only, gain-fvom | to seek new flelds of work Sot new baad ti pg rane rps anal having clean workers’ governments, And, their. job een cot Forfa escaping ee: ecm This book and other valuable pam-| L#bor Unions. The seventh chapter ie sede Poms inch 5 ag ‘ is to get that by first getting. rid of ,capitalism. | foremost in all interests of the mother |Phlets may be obtained free from| 18 entitled, “Revolution and Actual- lution into an empty phrase.” Soviet Russia has blazoned the way, . oo) [and acts as the “greatest ¢ Pyaraidy ditto a, mista Be ah eee Altho Lenin knew quite well experimentation by women. printing Shoat gov ENIN conceived of the revolution |T@¥olutions are not made to order, True, she sees that a mass of as of something that was moving |‘"@ Success of a revolution dem Calvin Coolidge is liable to have, as much trouble ; — ‘ with the next congress as he had with, the last. ae married women cannot} ‘The daily struggle for life of the|right upon us, and not as something |°°T#n deep-going historical ¢ WOMEN AND THE HUMBLE Three Federated Press Reviews By ESTHER LOWELL. Women and Leisure, Dr. Lorine Pruette’s study ‘of social waste, only hints that the focal point of infection of society is, as Veblen has shown, the but those who can dream of creating a new and better social order, who can believe in their vision enough to dare the dangers which beset every road to adventure must not be stopped by the firing squad.” Women and Leisure, a Study of Social Waste, by Lorine Pruette; E. P. Dutton & Co., New York; $3. - Books at Pre-War Cost. the radio lectures broadcast by Mary N. Winslow and Mary V. Robinson, of the editorial staff, women’s bureau, U. S. department of labor. The sub- “ tions for an armed insurrection. Ac: cording to their conception the er of gravity would lie in the sphere propaganda, of arming the minds. the workers. To this Lenin's reply was: “He who refuses technically to. prepare for the insurrection ultimate. Britain and Japan The British government had an alliance with thé Mikado up until the time of the Washington con- ference, when the so-called four power naval pact was agreed to but not carried out. One of the gains made by the United States government thru that conference was the dissolution of the Anglo- Japanese alliance. That disharmony is taking the place of the for- lal B nevertheless he insist mer friendly relations between Japan and Britain] Cal does not trust anybody who is not a million-|market, to fall chi F into unakilled contr ont pe lec wetlnneniatee of this fngebariyein grgomtte a that | em of the revtition Is not is growing clearer every day. This was manifested] aire, so he made,it known that Willi , occupations. She argues for education | tation ig exquisitely and sympatheti-|we must. ‘ourselves daily for |!eal but also the br aang during the active stages of the recent Chinese civil] Butler, his campaign manager, wou 80, be Jhis | #24 ownpe unde opt algense cally told in the stories of Julia Peter-| the rev: Re en politically and reeble pag : war; it was evident at the opium conference in| mouthpiece in the senate. The other G. O. P. baby |\1,°an's prided, acing ana sane little volume, Green Thursday. technically, ‘The political prepara- revolution must be considered Geneva last week. Even the traditional Oriental] elephants don’t like it a bit seeing that William is| word puzzles for hall-time tacters tata eee, battle with the soil and |tions consisted in training the masses secant {cussion club rather than the leader’ a newcomer on the scene. .. [and we protest at their efforts to do ple rade iy Sant Masinsbtd great ain’ Sam op othe most ~ & revolutionary class, No matter hd be ea ay vente dcotitimcne: Growth of the Soil in which nature re-| portant thing 48 to bring the massos | iMeult. this Fup bige aed Chiet of Police Collins is running true to form |, ius, (oes, Mots eusgest, higher sponds more kindly to the pioneering | In patie iy wie Motrin (oer Ao lclass must be organized in ord these days. He announced that in his opinion the | ions of women alt Altho the theme, method and setting | period of time.” ‘The revolution con-|%°!V° this problem. Thus we see murder of Dean O’Bannion was solved or would | ployed which it are entirely different trom Walter F.| fronts us directly with the problem of |!" Lenin the revolution was be solved within twenty-four hours. That means | satisfied eine White's recent powerful novel of the| armed insurrection. And to speak of |°°MCtete problem of the day w: Suaveness was not strong enough to camouflage the bitterness existing between the Japanese and Brit- ish delegates. The United States and Britain are trying to reach an accord on an anti-Japanese policy. It is not clear how Britain can feel too happy over this development, except insofar as beggars cannot tliat hue he again normal. She ignores the é new southern negro, The Fire in the| this without proper ‘prepara: ot times comes close to us and dhe ; ho are re Flint, Mrs. Peterkin’s book shows| tions, is merely empty {Moves buck into the distencs, be choosers. The defeat of Japan in the Pacific by + oye. were bs opaetie t wet WOR, ke k be vases. ‘Ww! pending upon the situati the United States will leave the latter in a position| John L. Lewis is reported as having said that herp i idee NeaOiet Deine ke Brody ni nye d mods rerrelation of fore a bat they want to, She y older Negro of the more remote plan-| must systematically prepare for it the . tation districts. Her work gives power | broad messes, who will, in the process and endurance to Killdee and Rose | of Lares ei create the necessary ‘Aired. Knopt, New Yorks 280" » but always naing the acute problem of the movement, of domination. Britain knows that, but the old|he is not going to El Paso with the intention of mistress of the seas is caught in the grip of fate. running against Gompers for the presidency of The Washington conference was one of the most| the American Federation of important steps taken by the United States in its pickings are even better in C

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