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Dies Six rt Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO, . 1113 W. Washington Bivd., Chicago, ML (Phone: Monroe 4712) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By mall: $3.50....6 months $2.00...8 months By mail (in Chicago only): $4.50....6 months $2.50....8 montha $6.00 per year 68.00 per year Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER 1118 W. Washington Bivd. 3. LOUIS ENGDAHL MORITZ J. LOEB ...++-svverveeonseseenes Chicago, Ilinele owe Dione siness Manager WILLIAM F. DUNNE Gntered as second-class mail Sept. 21, 1923, at the Post- Office at Chicago, Ill, under the act of March 3, 1879, —————————_— $$ | 290 Advertising rates om application Gas and Daggers in Geneva A strong odor of garlic and onions pervades the diplomatic atmosphere in Geneva. The garlicky exhalation comes from the general direction of the very excited M. Skrzynski, representing the Polish —=——_—<——_—_—«—X—X—KK§K§€<£Z;<—<— —<——=—_—_—_—____—_—_—— “THE DAILY WORKER | hat-he was a Communist was Debs himself when he said in Canton that’“Iam a Bolshevik from the top of my head to the soles of my feet.” We Com- munists never took seridusly this declaration as it requires something more than oratory to make a Communist. Debs is not a revolutionist, he is a°pacifist. He is not a Communist—he is a member of the counter- revolutionary socialist party, a part of the Second International with its Abramovichs, Scheidemanns and MacDonalds. His role at present is that of furnishing a semi- respectable front for the Hillquits, Bergers, Oneals and the Jewish Daily Forward. died in Atlanta before he fell into hands of the slimy crew that uses him to further their attacks on Soviet Russia and the world revolution. His jname then would haye been a source of inspiration to thousands of workers who knew him only in the old days when his sympathy for the workers’ sufferings made him their champion. He will pass |away soon now and be remembered only as one of the many leaders who could not recognize the revolution when it came clothed in the tattered garments of the workers and peasants, stained with blood and hewing its path to power thru blood delegation. The onion is a well known vegetable a a fine Z ‘ that sometimes brings tears. The French govern-|“" 7; er 7 q ment handed it to Poland yesterday. It represents NO, : be M ie Dele 200. Ate Rot e vom ; [ha new. Yeanch attitude towarde one of mart munist. You are just a confused old fighter who ; most. pampered clients. Diplomats are running around like members of an audience suddenly thrown into panic by the by its absence except insofar as everybody is a confidence man. But too much of a good thing is almost worse than a famine. What is taking place in Geneva is a new staging of the old comedy which was originally put on the boards at Versailles. It was a boxoffice fizzle but to jazz it up but the actors don’t pull together. They insist on hanging separately. The marauding powers of Europe need peace but they don’t want it. The big and little bandits are atempting to accomplish the impossible in tlie open but in secret they are doing the inevitable. Falcon- flying was an aristocratic sport in medieval d. Exhibiting the fluttering dove has taken its place in the open spaces, but behind the screens the rasp of daggers licking grindstones falls on the listening ear. The first thing a diplomat does on awakening these days in Geneva is to rub his hand cautiously over his windpipe to learn if the representative of some “friendly” nation has succeeded in carving that delieate portion of his anatomy during the night. This.is the mental attitude of the states- men who are gathered in Geneva to outlaw war. The Poles are worrying about the Danzig cor- ridor. So are the Germans. England admits she doesn’t care a hang for any other country but it - England. France thinks this is a bright idea and i warns Poland that she expects too much from her 4 wet nurse. This is the way the situation stands to- a . day. Tomorrow it may be different. And while the bankrupt capitalist diplomats babble like the guests in a nut house, Soviet Russia looks on with a business smile, The Red Army is not growing perceptibly smaller. Three News Stories Three stories on our front page yesterday furnish food for much thought. of fascism in Germany; the second of the protest against the recent lynching of two Negroes sent to the governor of Georgia and the president of the United States. agricultural tax in Soviet Russia, of the amnesty declared for the counter-revolutionists who took part in’ the menshevik rebellion in Transcaucasia last year, the sowing of an increased acreage of 1 per cent by the Russian peasants, and other item: that show efficiency, toleration and stability. : In this great capitalist nation black worke are are considering the emulation of Mussolini—out- right terrorisation and suppression of the working- class. : From Soviet Russia the news is of a mighty and even majestic character indicating rapid and ir- resistible progress toward a Communist society. In Russia the interests of the individual has been subordinated to the interest of the workers and peasautry—the great majority of the population. The workers and peasants rule thru the Communist Party, their party. They have passed thru the crisis of the revolution and the country and all its wealth belongs to them. There is no persecution of one race by another in Russia; there is no fascist army to terrorize the masses, the army is their army. Is it any wonder that every honest worker and intelleetual who spends some time in Soviet Russia is anxious to return? The capitalist press says otherwise but when we sean the list of thosé who denounce Soviet Russia and the Russian Com munist Party we find that none of them wanted to help build the workers’ and peasants’ republic but hoped for its destruction. Te Making It Clear to Debs In the weekly official organ of the socialist party dated March 7, Eugene-V, Debs explains that he has nothing in common with the Communists, He makes ‘the statement that “some unscrupulous propagandists” are trying to “diseredit” the social- ist party “by spreading the report that J am really with the Communists and a socialist in name onl If Debs thinks that the Communists are trying to make the workers believe that he is a Communist we hasten to tell him tltat he is mistaken. The only person that ever made the statement bursting of stink bombs. Confidence is conspicious| beggars can’t be chosers. The producers are trying) One tells of the menace} burned at the stake; in Germany the capitalists) could not use the new weapons of the workers and because of this you believed when the cunning yel- low liars told you the Communist International was not the leader of the world revolution. The Coolidge Star Sets | If you ask us about what happened in the senate | yesterday we will say very frankly, that “the strong | silent man” in the White House has been the victim of a frame-up. The redoubtable Dawes, the administration’s commissar in the senate, was asleep—or says he was—when the appointment of Clarles Warren to | the attorney generalship was turned down. He ar- |rived in the chamber just in time to give first aid | Up the floor, but too late to be of any assistance -/in’ the fray. We, as our readers are aware, are partial to the theory that Calvin Coolidge is slated for the scrap heap by the big capitalists who elected him. We know that. the defeat of Warren, the sugar trust lawyer, will be hailed as a mighty victory for the forces of democracy by all the “progres- sives” and liberals, but it is nothing of the sort. His defeat is the result of Calvin Coolidge, presi- dent by virtue of the ptomaine poison concealed in a dead crab, biting off more than he could chew. Nobody wanted Warren except Coolidge. The Michigan state republican organization was solidly against him. His record consisted of a large num- ber of spongy spots from which oozed a sickening slime that even most republican politicians could not see and smell without nausea. But he had been one of the original Coolidge men, was active at the republican convention and Cal had to have him. He did not get him, but to say that democracy has triumphed is to believe that men like Senator Bruce are champions of the masses. \ Coolidge is going to be obliterated in the most scientific manner. He is a nuisance to his sup- porters because it takes too much publicity and | vigilance to make him a popular hero. Dawes is |the type Wall Street wants and after yesterday | Coolidge probably knows that his star is setting. There have been frame-ups in Washington before, | but none so well staged. Coolidge, if it is possible \for him to think of anything except paying elec- | tion debts, might ponder for a few moments on the cases of Sacco and Vanzetti and Tom Mooney. The third tells of forty per cent reduction in the} | M ore Police—For What? | | The capitalist press and other agencies of the ruling class show much ingenuity in devising new instruments for the suppression of the workers and mers, The state police bill now before the Illinois legislature is an example. The state of Illinois, like every other state in the junion, is covered with law enforcing officials— | sheriffs and their deputies, city policemen, militia- men, prohibition enforcement officers, in addition to the squads of private detectives and “watchmen” maintained by private corporations. But the nervous capitalists are not content with this army of mercenaries. Not a session of the legis- lature convenes, but a demand is made for addi- tional armed forces. For what? To take care of criminals? It is to laugh. The forces of “law n’ der” grow like the green bay tree and crimes continue to inerease by leaps and bounds. Police- men do not try to wipe out crime. They encourage it as a guarantee of permanent employment. The only time all the forces of the state act wn- animously and with enthusiasm is when workers are on strike or engaged in some other form of challenging the power of the capitalists. In such periods no lowly constable is so humble as not to be ordered to the joyous task of clubbing. and shooting workers. The infrequent refusals of any of this ilk to smash skulls for the profit and glory of capitalism is eloquent testimony showing that they know to whom they owe allegiance. Who wants state police? The Illinoig chamber of commerce, This ought to be enough to damn the proposal in the minds of ¢very worker and farmer and to unite every section of the labor movement in resistance to the scheme to make easier the suppression of the workers, British imperialist diplomacy is not doing so well in Europe since the Soviet government set the fashion of publishing secret documents of that aril other capitalist goveruments. It is very hard for liars to achieve any reil brilliancy when the astute revolutionists that head a government of 150,000,- 000 people are checking up on them, to some of the wounded Warrenites who cluttered } It would have been far better for Debs nfa he [ THE DAILY WORKER SOVIET RUSSIA NEARS PRE-WAR COMMERCE LEVEL Foreign Trade and Production Increase WASHINGTON, D. C., March 11.— A compilation of official statistics of the Soviet Union made public today by the Russian Information Bureau shows that in spite of a bad harvest affecting about one-tenth of the farm- ing population, the Soviet Republic enjoyed a banner year in 1924 and made great progress. towards equal- ling pre-war productivity. In most lines of production the advances plan- ned were achieved or surpassed, and in the greater number of industries it is estimated that the pre-war level will be exceeded during the next three years, During the year Soviet financ- es were definitely established on a gold basis and paper isgues ceased. Trade with the United States passed the pre-war figures in 1924, The percentage figures of preduc- tion, prepared from official reports and documents, are for the Soviet fis- cal year ending October 1. The only commodities in which a decrease was shown from the year 1922-23 were salt, goloshes, tires, tobacco products and grain products, the last naméd having fallen off 9 per cent, Basic Industries Increase Output. The percentage of increase in some of the principal products over the 1922-23 figures were as follows: Timber 20 per cent, coal 40 per cent, petroleum 18 per cent, ‘marten- site 80 per cent, iron ore 112 per cent, copper 60 per cent, manganesé 45 per cent, textiles 35 to 50 per cent, flax fabric 35 per cent, matches 30 per cent, rolled iron 50, per cent, pig iron 122 per cent, steel 35 per cent, hides 3 per cent, raw sugar 40 per cent. The cotton crop showed an increase of 800 per cent in two years. Imports and exports Higher. Imports increased 100 per cent and exports 150 per cent. In agriculture the sown area in- creased 10 per cent and the gross value of the agricultural produce, in spite of the disappointing grain har- vest,- increased 4.5.per cent at pre- war prices, or 150. per cent at current prices, due to an increase of 20 per , Capitalist.Tools Busy in Minnesota (Continued from Page 1) convention, only 38 attended the Hen- trolled the party up until then. In nepin county meeting, two of whom the last election the candidates en-| Were unseated and several others left dorsed by the Communists in the | the hall in disgust, leaving little bet- farmer-labor primaries were the offi- | te? than 30 to elect the delegation, cial nominees of _the party, This|Of the delegation of 64 that were again made the reattionaries realize | Chosen, only three could in any sense the growing power of the left wing in be construed as members of the rank the movement. The result was an|#nd file or of having any progressive effort by all of these elements to unite their forces and tear down the progressive steps: that had been tak- en, They even convinced Mahoney, Cramer, Harmon and other centrist elements that®the farmer-labor party was becoming a Communist Party and that steps must be taken to block this development. Right Wing Gets Busy.. A few weeks ago this right wing sentiment crystallized itself into a conference in St. Paul. This confer- ence was made up of a hand picked group. composed of members of the state legislature, Mahoney, Harmon, farmer-labor party, and other similar elements, They decided+that the far- mer-labor federation wus too radical, that certain petty bourgeotsre ele- ments in the farmer-labor party could not continue to support the party if the federation continued to control. Mahoney Lies, This group, therefore, decided to call a “unity” convention to be held on the 20th in St. Paul. In order to appease the opposition sentiment that developed as a result of this confer- ence, Mahoney in a speech before the Hennepin county committee of the farmer-labor federation deliberately lied to get an endorsement for his convention. He told them that in Minneapolis, St. Paul, and Duluth where the unions were strongly sup- porting the farmer-labor federation, that these organizations would elect the delegation to the state conven- tion. As usual, his words meant. nothing when he saw that by permitting that procedure to be followed, it would re-, sult in the election of a left wing dele- gation so he, together with Buckler, issued a call for the Hennepin coun- ty convention ignoring the. county farmer-labor federation entirely. Workers ‘Framed On. Furthermore, this convention was called at 2:00 o’clock on Saturday. af- ternoon when it was utterly impos- sible for rank and file workers to be present. The convention was attend- ed by 38 delegates, all of whom were either office holders, business agents, or middle class politicians. The only cent in crops other than grains. Cat- tle-raising increased by from 5 to 10 per cent, hogs by 64 per cent. The freight turnover increased by from 20 to 25 per gent, the goods turn-\ over by 85 per cept, The money in circulation increased from 264 mil- lion rubles Oct. 1, 1923, to 629 million chervonetz rubles Oct. 1, 1924. By July, 1924, the currency of the Soviet Union was established wholly on a gold basis. During the first three- quarters of the fiscal year it was nec- essary to issue,»»180,000,000 rubles (gold value) of paper money unsecur- ed by gold to balance the budget. By July these issues had definitely ceas- ed and during theJast quarter of the year the government's finance showed a surplus for the first time.. The new chervonetz currency remained stable thruout the year, being quoted gener- ally at slightly aboye par on the Eu- ropeah exchanges... Nearing Pre-War Production, In 1924, the population of the Sov- iet Union was 75 per cent of the popu- lation of czarist Russia in 1913 (ow- ing to the post-war toss of heavily populated territory in the west); the area was 93 per cent. Heavy indus- try had reached from 40 to 60 per cent of pre-war production, light industry 60 to 80 per cent; in agriculture the sown was 88 per cent, grain crop 58 per cent, horses 74 per cent, cat- tle 90 per cent, ‘Taxation per capita was seven gold rubles as compared with 11 gold rubles before the war. Foreign trade.for the year, com: puted at pre-war prices, was 25 per cent of the pre-war figure. At cur- rent prices it would amount to over two-fifths of the pre-war figure. The foreign trade turnover amounted to close to $300,090,000 (pre-war valua- tion), with a balance of about $65,- 000,000, of exports over imports. About two-fifths of the trade was with Great Britain... During the year im- ports were limited by the policy of the sovernmegt to achieve a favor- able trade bajance. According \, the reports of the United States,department of com- merce the trade between Russia in Burope and the United States for the calendar year,.1924, was $48,280,896, as compared ho $45,000,000 in 1913. In 1924, over $40,000,000 represented exports from the United States. The trade turnov Showed an increase of nearly 900 per cent over 1923. The gain was largely due to.extensive pur- chases of American cotton by Rus- sian trade orfanizations. American imports from Russia in- creased by over 500 per cent. »The figures for American-Russian trade as compiled by the Russian trading agencies areyeonsiderably in. excess of the figu Compiled by the de- partment of fRommerce. They total $51,000,000 the first nine months of the calen year 1924. The dis- crepancy ma) attributed to differ ences in valution and the fact that the Russian # include purchas- for in America but from American ports. rank and file workers in the hall were Comrades Youngdahl, and ‘Stevens, ideas, Unseat Emme and Votaw. In St. Paul they “took a chance on a convention in the evening. This was attended by 68 delegates. The first official act of the convention was the unseating of Comrades Emme and Votaw.. There it took some clever maneuvering to put this over as their majority was shaky. The credentials committee in making its report, held up the credentials of about ten dele- gates as being! questionable, but re- commended that neither Emme or Votaw be seated, The zen delegites held up were all left wing votes and after they had unseated’ Emme and Buckler, the state chairman of the{yotaw, they then moved to seat the ten. A delegation of 33 was elected to the state convention made up en- tirely of reactionaries with the ex- ception of three 6r four who may fur- nish some little opposition. A nominating committee proposed the list to the'qénvenition and in the nominating committee the reaction- ary group stated that they would not recommend any/one as a delegate to the state convention who voted to seat Emme and~™ Votaw on the first vote. This eliminated’ 25 delegates from any chancé of-going to the state convention. The Acid Test. In other words, they figured that any one that would fight to seat a Communist in the county conyention was not the kind of timber that would help them destroy the farmer-labor federation and turn the farmer-labor movement over to a bunch of middle class fakers. The reports coming in from the various. county conventions thruout the state show that similar tactics were’ employed. The March 20th convention will not be a farmer- labor convention. It will be made up of the elenients that in the past have been the henchmen of the corrupt democratic ‘machine in Minnesota. These elements are the same ones that have pulled the chestnuts out of the fire‘for the democratic party in the labor movement in the past. Will $éll Out Workers. The rank and file workers in Min- esota shold ‘be on their guard against the! March 20 convention. The March 20 convention is going to sell out the farmer-labor movement. All local unions would do well to notify both of whom were unseated because | this convetition’ in no uncertain lan- of their membership in the Workers | guage that ‘they do not recognize it as Party. Watkins of the switchmen, | being representative of the movement another actual worker, was roughly | that they built and insist on the call- set in his place when he took excep-| ing of a state convention of the farm- tion to the procedure followed by the | er-laber’ federation that can give -ex- conference. Hennepin county was en-| pression to‘'the ‘desires of the rank titled to 64 delegates to the state! and file of the’Minnesota movement. AS WE SEE IT By T. J. O')FLAHERTY. (Continued from page 1) What is left for the Civil Liberties Union to do? Liquidate! Perish the thought. There are a few assassins, who tried to murder the leaders of the Russian revolution in Soviet jails. They were ready to throw the bomb or push the knife in return for foreign gold. Now, that Coolidge has returned this country to the ideals of “the fathers” and has transformed the de- partment of justice into a respect- able research bureau for getting in- formation that will enable the “people” to punish “malefactors of great wealth” Roger Baldwin and his army of knight errants, will measure swords with the Soviet government. 8s Ree may take comfort from the thought that the next time they find a witness on the stand against them, he or she will not be a horny-handed fink who. graduated from a sewer or a mine but a law school graduate. It will be much more satisfactory to the ego to take a “rap” under such conditions than to be railroaded on the testimony of a stool-pigeon who uses. the language of a Bowery bum. Roger Baldwin is hecoming militant. When pacifist get that way, they usually take it out on the revolutionists. Two Workers Party Branches in Contest for Subscriptions At last Tuesday night's. meeting of the North West Side branch, a chal- lenge was issued to the Mid City branch in the subscription campaign which the DAILY WORKER opens on March 15. ~ Several of the members preferred to take on the North Side branch, it being the largest Exglish branch in the city, and only the assurance that what the Mid City, lacked in numbers, was made up for in militancy, con+ vinced the members that they were entering into a battle with foes worthy of their steel, The North West Side ‘branch has ‘nvited all and sundry to an entertain. ment and dance which will be held next Sunday evening ; cents, metre eset oer: ‘8 p. m. to 1a, m, at the Workets’ Lyceum, 2733 Hirsch Blvd. ‘Tickets cost only 35 + OD AGL Lin Claim New Deal * ow, : in ‘Relations of A U.S. with Japan - BC WASHINGTON, March 11—Diplo- matic relatidiis° between Japan and the United States will enter into a new and’ interesting phase tomorrow with the arrival ‘in’ Washington of Tuneo Matsudaira} Japan’s new ambassador to the United States. Ambassador’ Matsuaira comes direct from the foreign office, where he has been vice-minister, to find Secretary of State KeHogg officiating where Charles Evans Hughes officiated dur- ing the interchange of notes regarding the immigration question. +». Insull Spreads Some More — FORT WAYNE, Ind., March 11.— The $20,000,000 Indiana Service cor- poration today passed into control of Samuel Insull, of Chicago, and his associates with the election of a new board of directors on which eastern interests have no place. a Big Open Shop Drive Gets Under Way in the British Isles (Continued from-page 1) sale cut to affect nearly 650,000 em- ployes. In the majority of cases the cut would amount to 6 shillings (1 shilling, (24¢) a week. The unitn demands, presented in December, include a flat rate of 16 shillings a ay for engineers, a mini- mum of 60 s niga a week for shop laborers, a guar; day and week for all empl ig aaa Ps at 60 Years of the serviée re- ‘before they receive “The government will start a revo- lution if they attempt to touch min- ' hours”, says Secretary Cook of the British Miners’ Federation. Cook is traveling thru the mining districts attempting, to clarify the miners’ ideas on the agreement which ter- minates this year. According to Cook, “Whatever may be the condifion of industry on the 7-hour day there will be no compromise.” - This means a fight sooner. or later, for the operators insist on a longer working day to meet. foreign compe- tition, Cook does not want a strike until bé can count on the other un. jons, Addressing a meeting at Ard- wick he said» “Because I sounded 4 DAILY WORKER AGENTS IN BIG — SUB DRIVE PLANS “Every Party Member at Least One Sub” (Continued from page 1) mittee wants to set an example fo: the rest of the party, Branches Responsible, Comrade Thurber Lewis, the. cjt; | DAILY WORKER agent, was instruct. ed to send to the branches every two weeks the expiration lists of the DAILY WORKER subs. These will be sent to the branches according to mailing stations and the branches will assume the responsibility for re- | newals. The meeting recommended that all branches instead of having two agents; one for literature and one for DAILY WORKER—should have but one to care for both. In branches of considerable size a committee should be elected to assist thé agent. The matter of getting to union meetings with the DAILY WORKER and other party publications was dis- cussed at length. This wok is fall ing off in the branches. Comrade Lewis was instructed to reassign to every branch in the city a certain number of union meetings to be cov- ered regularly by branch committees, Shipment of Books. The matter of new literature was i i taken up. The comrades were in. formed t a large shipment of new English oks had arrived—books that are of first interest to all party members and sympathizers and books that can be readily sold.. Also, the DAILY WORKER is getting out pam: phlets regularly now that must be circulated thru the branches. The pro- paganda committee assumed the joh of getting this new literature before the membership by visiting the branchés assigned to, them. ; The DAILY WORKER agents. were informed of what members of the propaganda committee are assigned to their particular branches, The committee has divided up the branch- es in the city so that each member will have a few branches to care for, They are to see that competeni DAILY WORKER Ierature agents are elected and that the branches carry on their propaganda functions. The division has been made as fol- flows: pe ‘ Bob Garver:—S. S. Englishy Engle- wood English, S. S. Scandinavian, S. 8. Polish, South Slavish. |,° Charles Erickson:—Branches in Ci- cero, Clara Gabin:—Douglas Park, Eng- lish; Douglas Park, Jewish; North- west Jewish, Russian No. 1. Nick Dozenberg:—Lettish, ‘Polish, N. S.; Hungarian, Italian Terra Cotta. Gertrude Welsh:—North Side Eng- lish, German, Italian 31st Ward, Ar- menian. Hans Johnson:— Finnish; branch, Scandinavian Lakeview, Ukrainian, N. 8. ‘ | Kitty Harris:— Mid-City . English, Czecho-Slovak No. 1, Lithuanian No, ¢ ate Paul Simonson:—Irving Park. Eng- lish, Greek, West Side Italian, Scan- dinavian Karl Marx. ry ‘ Morris Chilofsky:—Northwest Eng: lish, Lithuanian No. 3, Ukrainian No. Thutber Lewis:—Bulgartan, Czech Brookfield, Italian 11th ward, Lithu- anian No. 2, Lithuanian No. 5, Lithu- anian ‘No. 41, Roumanian, Ukrainian No. 5. . Because many branches have chang. ed their meeting. times lately or their addresses, branch agents and secre- taries are requested to notify Thur- ber Lewis of the time and place of their branch meetings. The new li- terature department and bookstore is at 19 S. Lincoln St. / Patronize our advertisers. SS a note of warning the press says I have been advocating a strike, I am going to do all I can before gury next to avoid a stoppage tnen. I want te test the solidarity of the trade unione before there is notice given.” Metal Trades Bosses Want Battle Metal trades employers have told the Amalgamated Engineering Union they will not consider an increase of 34.75 a week unless the unfon- will consent to changes in rules to lower fe cost of production. They claim this is necessary to meet foreign com- petition. The longstanding conditions these big employers insist on altering. in- volve output, hours, the ‘day night shift agreement, and payments for overtime, night shiff.and double day shift work. ps Whole Labor Movement Involved The way the entire labor movement may be involved is shown by a New- castle labor man not immediately con- nected with the negotiations: “We are not in this affair directly but w are all in indirectly whether we it or not, It looks to me as employers are going to show way by driving us all to the again where we will have to fight gether.” as ad ys for. an WY ORKE, rom your shopmate and you oe make another mem- — ber for your branch. , Ate eae ohne