Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Two 12 SRR ANSARI MUNDELEIN GETS TITLE FOR MUDD; FISHY COGNOMEN! Boss Is Now Knight of St. Gregory Cardinal Mundelein went to Rome with a lot of money and returned with @ lot of decorations. No, brothers and sisters, those decorations were not for humble toilers in the industrial life of the nation; not even for labor fakers whose st achs are calloused from crawling on their bay windows before the powers that be. n whom those honors ome suspicion of ntempt that is those gentry, ex- The pope, tr flow, has iprocated by cepting those of them who are high up in th co s of the ku klux klan and th masonic order. But even they are cautious and. will’ not tickle a mule’s'} is proven deceas thority, The prince of the church, who can address the emperor of Swat ag his cousin, returned from Rome with glad tidings. Last Sunday he presented F cis X. Mudd, with the title of Knight of St. Gregory in return for Mudd’s contribution of $100,000 to the priestly incubator known as St. Mary’s of the Lake Seminary, at Mun- delein, Miinois, a town called after the cardinal. Producing the Dough. The name of Francis is no longer Mudd. The workers who toil in the mud for Mudd produced. the dough that was kneeded into a title by the organ grinder on the Tiber. Munde- Iein, in presenting the title explained that the workers alone are not able to support the church in regal fash- jon. Strong priests, husky spiritual Policemen are needéd to keep the sheep in the shambles, see that they reproduce their kind in large numbers and out propagate flotks of the reli- gions shepherds in competition with the catholics. Therefore, donations from big business are required. Big biz comes across in return for the use of the shepherds im keeping their wage slaves contented, patiently. wait- ing until they called to their last slum- ber, while their masters on this very real earth make the welkin ring with sounds of revelry. Ramsay MacDonald had the king of England confer a title on a tory biscuit manufacturer in return for an endowed automobile, the endowment being for the purpose of providing the auto with gas and Mac’s chauf- feur with Bass Ale. The title cost Alexander Grant $150,000 of a per- Sonal contribution to the socialist MacDonald, and quite likely another donation to the treasury of the Brit- ish labor party. Muda should come across again and there is no doubt but he will. Peru Will Reject Coolidge Arica * Award, Note Hints “WASHINGTON, D. C., unless the animal d by a competent au- March 30.— Peruvian d sfaction with Presi- dent Coolidge’s finding in the Tacna- Arica award, which first manifested itself in demonstrations before the American embassy at Lima, culmin- ated today in a sharp note from the Peruvian government containing de- mands likely to prove extremely em- barrassing to the American govern- ment. Hinting openly at rejection of the award, the Peruvian note demands that the United States send civil au- thorities into the disputed province to replace the Chilean officials now in charge. Peru has charged Chile with de- porting Peruvians and instituting a reign of terrorism in the province in advance of the plebiscite which is to determine whether the territory is to go to Chile or Peru. This plebiscite is to be supervised by General John J. Pershing, who was appointed by Coolidge. Peru is dis- satisfied with the appointment of military commanfiers to act on the dispute. Colninad ‘Atlin Is Urged Against Bankruptcy Ring ST. LOUIS, Mo., March 30,—Startl- fmg evidence of a “bankruptcy ring” headed by former Referee of Bank- ruptcy Charles B. Thomas, co-defend- ant with Federal Judge English in the congressional invesegation of the judge’s official conduct, was introduc- ed before the special subcommittee today by federal agents. The report, recorded as evidence, described Thomas, close friend and financial bulwark of Judge English, ag surrounding himself with persons whom he placed in positions of trust and that these persons were permit- ted to collect fees in excess of those fixed by law. Testimony has shown Thomas fre- quently advanced Judge English large sums of money and that Judge’ Eng- lish had ordered Thomas to pay him- self as high ps $1,000 monthly in handling bankruptcy cases. The report also declared that the former referee who retired under fire was the recipient of many lucrative assignments from “Judge Dnglish, we ® Cops Drape Selves Around Hall at ana JAIL SOLDIERS Bulgarian Red Dant e A score of uniformed police and plain clothes men stood around at the entertainment given by the Bulgarian branch of the Workers (Communist) Party at 777 West Adams St., Musi- cians’ Hall,'and got in the way of the dancers. The police brought their own booze, and after imbibing, were more in the way than ever. One policeman sprawl- ed on top of the lunch counter, until ordered to move away by the enter- tainment committee. Before they left, the police tried to plant some of their booze behind the lunch counter, and threatened to ar- rest several of the Bulgarian com- rades. They finally left, however, with- out any casualties, The Bulgarian branch of the social- ist labor party had objected to the Bulgarian Communists’ affair, and had tried to induce the hall owner not to rent the Communists their hall, it was reported. It was rumored that the police came to the affair at the be- hest of the S. L. P.'ites. A large crowd was on hand to see the artist Konoff, draw cartoons, and to hear the singing of M. Popvcky. PRINCE’S TRIP WILL EAT UP ONE MILLION BUCKS While Irish Peasants Are Starving LONDON, March 80.—The com- mercial trip of the Prince of Wales will cost at least one million dollars. British business believes that the re- sult will justify the outlay. The South American market is slipping, the burghers of South Africa have not much love for the empire that used their bodies for target practice in 1900, and the workers of that colony have not yet forgotten the wounds in- flicted on them during the Rand strike, when their leaders were shot down, “with the song of revolution on their lips. Can Stand Punishment. Altogether the old empire is in a shaky condition, but it is an old and seasoned empire and will stand a lot of punishment. While the business interests of Britain spend a million dollars on a ‘princely junketing trip, there is a severe famine in Ireland,}. still a part of the empire. But the British parliament has not made an appropriation to relieve the famine in the west of Ireland. Only a short time ago, this same parliament appropriated $12,500,000 to support the relatively large army that the Orange.government of Bel- fast maintains as a garrison to defend the empire’s interests, should the south of Ireland attempt to take its freedom seriously. Working Mother Has Weak Babies, Scientist Says NEW YORK, March 30—Dr. Max G. Schlapp, professor of neuro-pathology of the New York Post Graduate Medi- cal school and director of the New York children’s court clinic, took up the question of birth control from a different angle from the one taken by all the previous speakers before the sixth international neo-malthusian and birth control conference. Contrary to those sponsoring birth control to the extent of ascribing all the misery in the world to lack of knowledge of birth control and those presenting the otlier side who insist that the world is going to the dogs solely because of a knowledge of birth control among all classes of people, he made his attack on the strenuous lives women live today. He declared that inferior children are being born as a result of married women and mothers having to work for a living. “Women should stay at home ‘and make it a fitting place for their hus- bands and children instead of going out to work, becoming overwrought emotionally, fatigued physically, not living a normal life and consequently bearing inferior children,” he said. In his position he probably knows where- of he speaks but his speech was in- complete since he did not point a way out of this dilemma. He did not tell working men to diréct their energi to abolish a society that ma’ drudges of working men and women and cripples of their children, Prof. Ladislas Haskoven of Prague in his address made a plea for health certificates which would show freedom not only from veneral infection but also from other taints and diseases which would endatiger the health of the coming generation. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, March 30,—Great Brit- jan, pound sterling, demand 477%; cable 478. France, franc, demand 5.27; cable 5.28%. Belgium, franc, de- mand 6.12%; cable 5.12%, Italy, lira, demand 4.09; cable 4.09%, Sweden, krone, demand 26,93; cable 26.96, Nor- way, krone, demand 15.74; cable 15.- 76, Denmark, krone, demand 18,26; cable 18.28, Germany, mark, unquoted, ro ad Taol, demand 74.60; cable . TH FOR DEFENSE OF SOVIET RUSSIA Wrote Views to Paper Before Arrests HONOLULU, March 30.—Part of the “evidence” against the soldiers who are now being held by the United States government in Schofield Bar- racks on charges of “being members of the Hawaiian Communist Leauge,” are letters written to the newspapers by the Communist soldiers defending Soviet Russia against unscrupulous at- tacks, Altho one of the charges against three of the soldiers is that they “be- longed to a secret organization,” the red soldiers expressed their views openly in the columns of the news- papers, Russia Has No Strikes, “If this country were ruled by a Communistic government there would be need for such a thing as a strike,” wrote Comrade Roderick Nadeau, 21st infantry band, in the Feb. 15 issue of the Honolulu Advertiser. “The Hawaii- an laborer is practically a slave, Thru the Communist form of government there will be no need for poorhouses and mock charity balls,” Crouch Faces Life Term. Paul R. Crouch, of the headquarters of the 2ist infantry, office of the sup- ply department, who faces a sentence of life imprisonment, if the charges of “plotting to overthrow the govern- ment” are taken seriously bya court martial, wrote in the Feb, 14 issue of the Advertiser: “Your position in regard to strikes has been on the side of those who be- lieve in the sacred (?) rights of private property. The workers have a much better right to the ownership of the land upon which they work than the parasites who live on the suffer- ings of other men.” - Comrade Crouch then replied to an attack of the paper on Soviet Russia, based on statements of Emma Gold- man. “As Communism is the real danger to capitalism,” he wrote, “capitalists can join hands with anarchists in their mutual opposition to the Red flag. “Out of the large number of indi- viduals deported to Russia, Emma Goldman was one of the few who did not like conditions there. The ma- jority are living in’ a prosperous col- ony in western Siberia known as Kuz- bas. This colony is a success from every viewpoint. “The editor says the watchword of ‘bloody’ (?) regime of the Soviet gov- ernment is murder and that Russia has gone mad with slaughter. Mr. editor, no well-informed man could read such statements without laugh- ing were it not for the serious harm that they may do. If the editor would read an article by a correspondent of the San Francisco Examiner in Rus- sia he would learn that children car- ried several thousand dollars in gold (for official purposes) as there were practically no holdups in the Soviet republic and a conservative writer in the Saturday Evening Post admits life is even more safe in Russia than in other civilized countries. “Perhaps the Advertiser gets its in- formation about Russia from the same source as a writer about Communist propaganda in the.Saturday Evening Post, who said that the ‘Young Work- er,’ official publication of the Commun- ist youth of America, is a daily. In reality, it is‘a seml-monthly and will become a weekly on March 1.” Replies to Anti-Soviet Lies, Walter M. Trumbull, another soldier stationed at Schoffield barracks, wrote: “As far as the stories of oppression, imprisonment and brutal murders in Soviet Russia, no one would believe them if he had a knowledge of the fundamental principles of Commun- ‘sm. Communistic principles do not in the least respect allow idleness. All must do some sort of work and are given their preference, when possible. There is no possibility of one man owning millions and another being destitute. There is no possibility of slaughter since the government is the people (the working people) and their wishes are carried out.” Crouch was atrestéd on Feb. 19, charged with violation of the 96th ar- ticle of war. The last time he w: heard from was being confined in the prison hospital from digestive troubles brought on by brutal .treat- ment while in the guardhouse, Seven other soldiers have been arrested on similar charges. They are said to be without legal aid. Use Church as Fort. MEXICO CITY, March 30.— The troubles here between catholic priests and the church members wishing to secede from the vatican, brought on another battle. Three soldiers were shot from a catholic church, held by the catholics under the leadership of The priest the priest, Vicente Girau. was later arrested. $50,000 Fire in Danville DANVILLE, Ill, March 30—A fire im the business district of Watseka early today gutted the Iroquois coun- ty public service offices the plant of he Iroquois Times Democrat, West- rn Union office and two garages and atened their buildings before as- ce from nearby cities arrived. loss will be more than $50,000. ‘|ness in the coal industry. the government going mad with} te Workers QOkla., March 30.— tioned at the scab pmpany at Schulter, union men who come near the ie even if it only to get their pif clothes or on some business with €he office. Henry Pai and employ of the’ B. & A, was seveyely beaten up by these thugs. Fred Burd and Charles Cor- nelius came t@ Okmulgee to protest to the county afttorney that two of the guards threfitened to shoot them if they came Wear the mine. They went to have thgir time sheets corrected. The B. &fA. is making attempt to operate open shop mine. Out of the regulag 90 men working staff only four reported. () “ OKMULGHB, Armed guards B, & A, Minin; attack and bea Miners Daughter Dies MURPHYSBORO, March 30.—Mr. and Mrs, H. N. Wilson, tornado suf- ferers, who are now living in a tent here, lgarned that their 18 months old daughter was operated on in an Evanyton hospital, for compound fracture of the lower jaw. Another daughter of the Wilsons, four years old; lied in a St. Louis hospital, The cougle are destitute. PRESIDIUM OF C. |, OPENED UNDER ZINOVIEV (Special to The Daily Worker.) MOSCOW, March 14.—(By Mail.)— In. preparation of the extended plenary session of the Executive Committee of the Communist International, the presidium of the latter met today under the chairmanship of Comrade Zinoviev in the Mitrofanovski Hall at the Kremlin. There are present al- realy delegations of various countries representing twenty-five sections; other delegations are still under way to Moscow. In order to prepare more thoroly all the questior jpthat are to come before the extend , #Plenary ses- sion the opening of the séssion is fixed for March 20. The order of the day is fixed as follows: i 1, Report of Zinoview on the poli- tical situation and the next duties of the Comintern with regard to the Bol- shevization of the parties. (Reports and views on this subject will further be given by comrades from Germany, France, Italy and Czecho-Slovakia, as well as a comrade as representative of the youth) = 2.. The peony oa unity of the trade union ite t. (Report Lozovski; co-reporters as about under 1 and a Polish comrade.) 3. The peasant question, a, Theoretical analysis of the ag- rarian question in the various countries. (Reporter Bukha- rin). i é b. relation of the Communist par- ties to the peasant movement in the various countries, 4. Report on the'discussion in the R..C. P. 5. Report on the Lenin Institute and the Marx-Engels Institute. For the purpose of clearing up the situation of variousmational sections, like the Czech, Yugoslav, American, committees have been appointed. Miners Hold Meetings Today in So. Illinois to Discuss Industry HARRISBURG, Ill., March 30.—Pre- parations were being completed to- day for the April 1 holiday conference of the United Mine Workers here Wed- nesday, when 8,000 coal miners will gather to discuss the present uneasi- Saline, Gallatin and White counties will be heavily represented at the conference at which some definite light is expected to be thrown on re- ports that a number of mines will close down after the holiday. Masn meetings are also ;seheduled thruout southern Illinois for that day. Compromise Vote Bill Disfranchises Japanese Workers TOKIO, Mar, .30.—The compromise suffrage bill, granting four million men the right to vote, passed both houses of the imperial diet. The ori- ginal bill granted the vote to 14 mil- lion men, but. the ¢ompromise bill, ex- cludes from the franchise, “those who, owing to their poverty, are depentient upon public or private assistance for their livelihood,”’ amd many other workers, 4 Hayfever on Increase. WASHINGTON, March 30.—Hay- fever;—a malady which incapacitates more than 1,000,000 Americans from six to eight weeks annually—is on the increase, the United States Public Health service announced today. Doheny-Standard Oil Combine. Merger of the, interests of the Standard Oil Co, and the Doheny oil croporation in the ,Golumbia oil flelds, are near completion, it was annou! ed, following the , rn to Chicago of Col. Robert Stewart, chairman of the Standard Of1 gompany of Indiana. ay ‘ DAILY) WORKER’ struction of a wireless station in Tur- key and orders for submarines from Turkey for French concerns. cans were bidding for these orders. Bouillon was sent to Turkey by Pre- mier Herriot to promise the Turks French support against the British claim to Mosul in return for promise from Turkey of the security of Syria, and Turkish: support of the French in.North Africa and the near east, TAMPA, Fla. March 30.—After a stormy voyage of more than two weeks, the West Chetac, freighter, with Lieut, Osborne C. Wood aboard, will drop anchor in quarantine here late tonight, unless it is detained by rough weather, according to a wire less mes: from the master of the ship to agen! Start Te HARTFORD, Conn., March 30.—The first direct evidence against Gerald Chapman, million dollar mail bandit, that he killed Patrolman James Skelly during a robbery of the Davidson and Leventhall department store here was given today by Officer Alfred B. At: the DAILY WORKER? Ask Ford and Rockefeller: Both Spawned by the Same Capitalist System By J. LOUIS ENGDAHL. ODAY, there is much discussion of the profits exc eding $100,000,000 taken by Henry Ford last year. It is said this huge profit indicates that Ford is the richest man in the world, Taring finally eclipsed John D. Rockefeller, and left America’s other great multi-millionaires, George F. Baker, the Wall Street banker; and Andrew Mellon, secretary of the treasury, far in the rear. Ford took a profit of $47 on every car, truck and tractor that the workers in his factories produced in 1924. This is $10 higher than the $37 profit per unit that was reported for the ten months ended Dec. 31, 1923. This would indicate that the Ford hunger for profits ts on the increase; develop- ing in harmony, it seems, with the tremendous expaasion program that during the last year added nearly another $100,000,000 to the total assets of the Ford corporation. * *e @ But one of the alleged phenomena that has the financial writers worried, especially those who hover about Walt Street, is, as they claim, that the masses do not have the same hatred for the flivver king, Ford, that they have for Rockefeller, the czar of oil. It is argued that now that the profits of the Fords, father and son, far exceed those of the Rockefellers, father and son, that therefore the Fords should be hated more than the Rockefellers. They wonder why this is not so. * * * ° It is not difficult to explain this phenomenon. The Fords arrived late in the field of American exploitation. Ford found that he could get more out of his men working them eight hours than he could working them ten or more hours. In the pre-war days, before the tremendous increase in the cost ' of living, the wages Ford paid were considered comparatively good. This was all hailed as a “Ford Idea” that was thoroly - exploited in books, newspapers and magazines, in one of the most widespread propaganda campaigns this country has ever seen. The “Ford Idea” was even accepted in for- eign countries as one way of settling the labor problem. There have been no big strikes as yet in the Ford plants. On the other hand cheap tractors and flivvers won Ford’ many supporters among the farmers until a demand of Ronis consequence arose last year in support of the “Ford for President” boom. : t Then there is the name of Rockefeller, like that of Car- negie, linked with some of the bloodies¢ battles against labor that this nation has seen. The words “Rockefeller” and “‘op- pression” have come to be synonymous. Rockefeller entered the field of American exploitation a long time ago, and he built the Rockefeller fortune out of the blood and ny of America’s working class. Large masses of work know this. The name of Rockefeller is anathema to millions, * *# @ @ r But that does not mean that Ford will not soon, appear in the arena of the class war as an open enemy of the work- ers. The Ford boom among the oe farmers burst. when the flivver manufacturer came out, ‘oolidge, the enemy. . of the farmers, for president. Cheap flivvers and cheap tractors have little at to poor farmers who cannot.even afford to buy these. They are beginning to study what is the real trouble with the Ford-Coolidge social system.: * . we PA It is not true that the Ford slaves are contented. One of the most militant sections of the American working class is made up of those tens of thousands of workers that pour daily in and out of the Ford plants at Detroit, Mich. Yet, so, far, Ford has managed to hold them helpless in. gr They are part of the huge Ford machine; exploited to the last drop of their energy; thrown on the scrap heap before their time just as much as the workers in the oil, coal, ste or any other great industry. They are helpless. They have no union. They have not yet turned to the leadership: of the American Communist movement. But the hour of revolt will strike. Then-the whole capitalist system, with all its brutal oppression, will stand behind Ford just as it has ne ted Rockefellerin all his struggles with labor. Then the Ford myth will vanish. The workers will realize that they must organize to expropriate the wealth of Ford, just as much as they must take the wealth stolen > the Rockefellers, the Mellons, the Bakers, the Garys, the Morgans and all the rest. These capitalists are all part of the same social system. The capitalist system alone permits the Fords to transmute the energy of great masses of workers into a golden stream of profits that counted $100,0000,000 in the year 1924. The capitalist system must go. And with it Ford. Capitalist apologists may depend on it that the workers will show no discrimination between the different members, of the plun-/ derbund ‘in the final struggle for power. Turko-French Alliance at Work. Straw Votes Show: ¢ . PARIS, March 30.—Franklin Bouil- D C Bill Will lon has received an order for the con- ever Car DL Be Beaten Tuesday Mayor Dever has practically sus- pended all routine work of the’ city administration and the personnel of the police department, the staff of cor- poration Counsel Busch, and all de- partments at city hall have been sent out to speak and organize for the Dever-Brennan traction steal. ' Despite the campaigning of the De- ver officials for he ordinance, which would give the bankers control of the city traction lines for/at least forty years, several straw votes taken in different sections of the city show that the traction bill will be defeated in the election next Tuesday if the votes are properly counted. Fire Burns Two Aged Miners to Death When Shack Is Destroyed BUTLER, Pa., March 30.—Jess Kil- doos, 60, and Willfam McPherson, 66, veteran miners were burned to death early today when fire destroyed the small house in which they lived at latonia, near here, Coroner J. Charles Bengler of But- ler county, 18 conducting an investi- ation of the deaths. ) GET A SUB AND GIVE ONE! rae: Ameri- Expect Wood Back. of the vessel here today. imony Against Bandit. one of the state's star wit Does your friend subscribe ‘to’ ‘| bassy.” OMMUNISTS IN DEMONSTRATION . « AT WASHINGTON Picket Polish Embassy for Lanzutsky WASHINGTON, D. C., March 28.~ (By Mail,)—At 12:45 the ambassadora and their entourages of the various governments of the world were sur- prised with the appearance of a group of Communists carrying dozens of banners protesting before’ the head- quarters of the Polish legation against the death sentence imposed upon Stanislav Lanzutsky. The procession was headed by Com- rades Jakira and Wicks, carrying a large banner with the inscription, “We protest against the plot of the bloody government of Poland to murder Stan- islav Lanzutsky.” They were followed by other comrades walking three abreast, carrying banners reading: “Hail the Communist Party of Po- land”; “Stanislav Lanzutsky must not die”;) “Down with the Polish bour- fra. protests against the murder of Lanzutsky”; “The Young Workers League Demands Freedom ‘for Lan. zutsky”; then other banners of a similar nature signed by the Workers Party and others‘signed by the Inter- national Workers’ Aid. The procession concluded with a second large banner alike in size to that at the head of the line reading: “Down with the bloody Warsaw flunkeys of French imperial- ism,” Amabassador Leaves by Back Door. The embassy closes at 1:15 on Sat- urdays and an auto drew up in front of the place, a luxurious mansion on 16th street, N. W., “Ambassador's Row.” A door opened slightly, but no one emerged. Then the machine drove around to the back entrance, and as the parade, consisting of about one hundred were just turning the corner when two men were seen to hastily run to the machine and speed away. Servants and office help peered hesi- tatingly from slightly drawn curtains. Soon the street was full of auto- mobiles and pedestrians watching the picketing demonstration. Reporters and cameramen began to arrive on the scene—but no policemen were in sight. After picketing the place until 3:30, it was decided to leave the place as most of the embassies were closing. After the banners had been removed in machines waiting for that purpose the commissioner of police of the Dis- trict of Columbia and a number of policemen arrived and asked to see those who had been in charge of the picketing. Comrade Jakira was re- ferred to and the commissioner asked him, “What is the disturbance here?” Jakira replied: “There was no disturb- ance; only picketing the Polish em- Then the commissioner as- ed that it was not the proper thing to embarrass foreign ambassadors to Washington and that they were sup- posed to be furnished protection from annoyances of that sort. 3 Press Carries Scare Heads. The evening papers of Washington were soon on the streets with scream- ing headlines, “Polish Legation Is Picketed by Communists” On the front pages were conspicuously dis- played the pictures of the picket line with the banner reading: “Down with the bloody Warsaw flunkeys of French imperialis: According to inside information re- ceived after the demonstration the po- lice were so harrassed by numerous telephone calls and personal visits that they decided to make a pretext of action and arrived at the scene of the demonstration just a few min- utes after the pickets began to leave the line. The demonstration is to be fol- lowed by a mass meeting in Wash- ington to protest against the pro- posed murder of Comrade Lanzutsky, with Comrade H. M. Wicks and A. Jakira to address the audience on this burning international question, eee ; Milwaukee Has Protest Meet for Lanzutsky MILWAUKEE, Wis.. March 30,— |A tremedous meeting of protest a- gainet the white te ror in Poland and condemning to death of Stanislav /Lanzutsky with Comrade Thomas ‘YFlaherty as the principal speaker ‘as held here. The following resolu- tion was adopted by the meeting: ‘WHEREAS, the bloody capitalist dictatorship of Poland has caused the arrest’ of the Communist deputy Stanislaus Lanzutsky for delivering a speech in the diet calling attention to the crimes committed against t! working class by the Polish bourge- geoisie and under the reign of terror now prevailing in Poland, Comrade Stanislav Lanutsky stands in danger of execution, and WHERBA: Comrade Stanislaus Lanzutsky is a loyal soldier in the international army of labor, there- fore be it RESOLVED, that we condemn the Polish government for its murderous attack on Comrade Stanislay Lan- zutsky and call on the American work- ers to make their protest known to the Polish ‘ernment through the’ Polish ambassador in the United RESOLVED, that a copy of this resolution be send’ to’ the labor press. eae ‘| States, and be it further —