The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 10, 1926, Page 6

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4 i ,. THE DAILY WORKER SLATE MUSCLE SHOALS STEAL HE DAILY WORKER Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING co. | 1118 W. Washington Bivd., Chicago, Ii. Phone Monroe 4712 | SUBSCRIPTION RATES me By mail (in Chicago only): By mall (outelde of Chicago): $8.00 per year $4.50 six months | $6.00 per year $3.50 six months $2.50 three montha $2.00 three months ‘Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 1118 W. Washington Bivd,, Chicago, Ilinols LD J. LOUIS ENGDAHL Béitors WILLIAM F. DUNN® f MORITZ J. LOEB ..Business Manager Ne, Batered as second-class matl September 21, 1923, at the postoffice at Chi- cago, lil, under the act of March 3, 1879. ———$__—_. to Pass Measure (Special to The Daily Worker) FOR APPROVAL \Old Party Hacks Unite WASHINGTON, March 8 — With r) 4 By MARY HEATON VORSE. PASSAIC, N, J., March 8 — “My house,” said the striker, “is a com- pany house.” We went in thru a tunnel of a hall. The door opened on the kitchen, It was as black as a pocket. It was to- tally without ventilation, My friend was finishing the children’s breakfast. Children swarmed over the place. A little baby toddled around, the older children getting ready for school. ‘| They were tow headed children with big blue eyes. The food that they were eating came from the strikers’ store. How: Textile Workers Live father makes $20 a ‘week; not enuf for nine people. The mother goes to ork in the mills. “I go to work when my husband comes home. We work all night long. At twelve o'clock. I have. fifteen minutes. _No time for dinner, Then I come home and get the children ready for school, but in the day time I cannot sleep much because the babies play around, Oh,” she says, “how tired I am, how tired I am! And now another baby comes.” »Her eyes filled with tears, ‘What are we going to do? And they cut us ten per‘cent!” Life a Nightmare. —$<$<$__—_ daecbitontaicat sth RSM trend ESOS" ‘Advertising rates on application. cere | The Lie About Foster For some time past a number of avowed capitalist hewspapers have been diligently peddling the myth that William Z. Foster is being held a prisoner in Russia, Now comes the International La bor News Service, the official news agency, of the American Federa- iion of Labor, with a repetition of the same story. It goes without | saying that this fable is just another of the malicious lies out of | whole cloth spread against the Soviet Union. Foster ‘is not now} nor has he ever been detained one second in Russia. Nor has there | ever been the slightest hint that’ there could possibly be any cause | for detaining him. The paid liars of the’ International Labor News Service who pilfer the white guard press of the world to obtain stories ‘they may | repeat in their campaign to serve the interests of the exploiters of labor in this country will have a difficult time explaining their charges that Foster is at one and the same time an American agent of the Russian Bolsheviks and held a prisoner by them. ,Of course, such profilic liars cannot be expected to make their stories jibe. Their mendacity is of interest only if we can detect their motive. The motive in this case is not at all obscure. There is a party lines eliminated, the senate was | prepared today for a final vote on the Coolidge resolution, creating a con- gressional commission to negotiate a private lease of the government's $150,000,000 Muscle Shoals project. Although the resolution is certain | up. of adoption, a real fight developed | when a progressive group, comprising both republicans and democrats, de- manded the commission be authorized to negotiate as many leases as it deems advisable and specifically to provide that preference must be given adjoining municipalities and states in the sale of surplus power, The administration-democratic com- bine opposed any instructions save those approved by the house for a single lease along the lines of the original Henry Ford offer, but with a time limit of 50 years. By a unani- mous consent agreement, voting on the amendments will begin at 3:30 o’clock to be followed by a fina. vote on the resolution. Under the terms of the resolution, the commission will have to report by April 1. Both the black kitchen and the lig) | tonnes, There were cretonne curtail and table cloths. Two large bunches of pap gay. This woman loved her home, Fear Winter. freezes and snows,” she said, ting bags on the floor, We cann keep dry.” Next to the kitchen, were two sli of bedrooms, one “totally dark, front room were gay with cheap cre- at the door and eretonne hangings In the front room, |a big skeleton double ped was folded flowers in gilded vases made the room “We are having a bad time here when it freezes ang, snows and “All day I am mopping re and put- these rooms seven peeple lived. The GREAT BRITAIN T0 SPEND HUGE SUM ht | On the wall there was a picture of this woman in her wedding dress be- side her young husband. How proud she looked and strong with her white wedding veil. This was what life had given her, The house with dark rooms whose walls sweated water. Night work at the mills, work that, never stopped. Work that went on thru the day and began again at night, Life that Was a maze of fatigue. The sense of beauty perfectly satisfied with the relations of her cheap pfint and with paper flowers, Life where the coming of a new child was such a tragedy that she could not speak of it without tears, “Every time I have a child,” she sald, “I go to work when it is two or ins er jot ts In three months old. I must. And pay fifteen dollars rent. That is muc’ fess than lots of people pay around here. We have been here nine years,” Nine years she had lived in this place with foul air in summer and damp walls in winter, glad to be here be- cause it was cheaper than many houses. . + Fears Loss of “Home.” As she lives, so live hundreds of the\ women in Passaic. These are the people whose wagés have been cut cen per cent, It is from such families that the rich millers have taken now 32.20, now $1.70 a week. Just then the friend with me pro- posed to take a picture of this house to show what sort of a place a com- pany house is, what kind of dark kit- chens,. what airless, and terrible ooms. But our host cried out, “What are you doing? You can't do that! You mustn’t have a picture of me in the paper! They would throw me out. Don’t you know this is a company house?” Need Relief for Strikers, The general relief committee, tex- tile strikers, has issued a call to all of labor to aid the hindreds of fami- lies who are destitute. Children need bread, babies need milk. Remittances should be sent to’ 743 Main Ave., Passaic, N. J. By ART SHIELDS, Federated Press, LOGAN, W. Va.—(FP)—One lone champion of civil liberties is_all the “Free Speech” in Logan County, W. Va. ——————_$_———————— . youth recently held their third annual conference in New. York: growing sentiment among honest trade unionists of America for a trade union delegation to Soviet Rus No possible argument, based upon facts, can be presented against this proposition by the capitalist flunkeys at the head of the A. F. of L. But Bill Green| and his cohorts in the service of Wall Street are resourceful. He | knows that if such a delegation goes to Russia his game will be exposed, so his pen valets repeat the capitalist press lie in order to scare those trade unionists, who might desire to go, with the} work the wives and children of co: hoax that they may be arrested when they get to Russia. |miners in nonunion southern Wei Next we will hear arguments that if the Communist, Foster, | is held prisoner in Russ ists fare worse. To such an argument we can reply by branding the official news service of the A. F. of L. as a propadanda, organ for | disseminating lies, an unreliable sheet that deserves nothing but | the contempt of the working class. | If that is not sufficient we will compel them to face Foster with their vile lies. | In any event this story shall be exposed. Instead of harming | the revolutionary movement, or interfering with the move to send | i a delegation of American trade unionists to Russia it will act as shat 3 : West Virginia; non-union territory a bommerang to discredit those in the labor movement responsible| half mile above sea level; for its repetition. Chamber of Commerce Bluefield’s chamber of in the New York Times: BUSINESS CONNECTIONS iy Anti-Dogmatic Worker's Eduication A group of dilletante, adventurers preying upon . the. labor movement and in charge of an organization known as the pioneer tas coal fields, producing world’s ing, progressive manager government. Their announced program is to teach workers’ children “in, accord- ance with workers’ ideals.” They announce that they do not teach any particular dogma; do, not engage in any propaganda. “for or against,” but simply “create an environment of intelligent inquiry.” This is the sort of thing that is extending its slimy. tentacles into every part of the labor movement under the guise of anti-dog- matic workers’ education. It supplements and glorifies the shame- ful practices of class collaboration and other forms of betraying the labor movement into the hands of the employers. Not satisfied with perverting the minds of inquiring workers it reaches into workers’ | W. Va. French and Belgians Seek to Buy Control (Special to The Daily Worker) usual Bourse activity on affecting principally anti-dogmatism. Instead of teaching them the revolutionary theory and practice of the working class—the only theory that ever has |#"d Belgian account. The shares 9. * the Creditual Minier and Industria or ever can benefit the workers—these children are taught to see the | pomana de Petrol, the most important “good points” in labor banking, B. & O, plans, arbitration schemes, | purely Roumanian companies, have all the other forms of betrayal practiced by |advanced from 1,700 to 2,500 and from 1,000 to 1,500 lei per share respec- labor insurance and the labor fakers. oy see i ie wactans fn There is no such thing as anti-dogmatie education. Those who Bespapsiere dis ce quatee : the minds of children and are agents of the bourgeoisie. | policy. struggle and teaches children other than revolutionary theory is ||rge proportions the governuient .w: against the workers and for fhe capitalists. | The Uplifters Purify Elections lates that Roumanians must own |majority of the shares. Creditu recent revelations the name should be changed to better graft entire output. association, as they have proved the ordinary rum runners, boot- Jeggers, gangsters, professional murderers and others of that un savory crew mere amateurs in the gentle art of shaking down pol- iticians. The B. G. A. gang is known to have collected $23,000 from the democrat boss, George E. Bernnan, on the promise to deliver some 150,000 yotes of the “best people’ in town. Then it turned around and tried to shake down Bernard W. Snow, a republican candidate. Many of these uplift aggregations live a parasitical existence off the spoils they can gouge from the politicians. The “better elements” advocating “honesty and cleanliness in government” have their B. G. A’s., and their Municipal Voters’ Demand Investigation between date for state’s attorney. |between Cook corruptionists. the Better Government The Coolidge administration is again busy trying to lease ture of nitrate will aid the farmers. the nitrates produced there that‘ean be used for replenishing agri- eviitural land are plentiful elsewhere. The “farm relief” propaganda | power.of Muscle Shoals. “Every class conscious wi ment, refused, ae i , to be effective in thé Iabor: iiove- fo obtain this knowledge ia in the Workers’ Schools. ground connections of the other. Advertises Miners’ | Women to Exploit) NEW YORK— (FP) — Putting to Virginia is the energetic ambition of | i 5 ii commerce a, why will not non-Communist trade union-| which inserts the following want ad 1500. GIRL WORKERS AVAIL- ABLE IN Bluefield, W. Va.; splen- did opportunity for hosiery, shirt, overall, silk or other textile mill; 1925 federal census gives city 23, 686; not a single industry employ- ing women; less than 2 per cent for- born; in heart of southern cool, healthful summers insure labor effi- ciency all year; adjoining Pocahon- of Oil of Roumania BUCHAREST, March 8—The un- the Bucharest the homes, seizes the youth and poisons their minds with the virus of | shares of the Roumanian oil companies jis due to extensive buying for French * ‘ F se MN | These two companies, along with profess to uphold such a system are in reality guilty of poisoning|steau Romana, are the principal en- Any form |terprises around which the govern- of teaching that takes other than a dogmatic view of the class|ment is developing its national oil If foreign buying assumes too |intervene, since the mining law stipu- \Minier crude production is now aver- In Chicago polities the initials “B. G. A.” have been mistakenly aging 15,000 barrels daily, approxi- -nderstood to stand for better government association: In ‘View of | mately 25 per cent of the country's of Vote Brokerage The 55 business men and clergymen that have lent their names to the Better Government Association to be used op its stationary are demanding an investigation of the charges. that $23,000 and $27,000 was given the association to deliver 150,- 000 votes for Hope Thompson, candi- 4 Paige When the Better Government Asso- Leagues, trying to peddle the apostles of piety to the politicians, | ciation introduced a petition before while the gunmen prey upon the foreign-born elements and the labor the United States senate demanding fakers for pelf, try to deliver the labor vote. |@ congressional probe of the alliance It is ubout time the workers organized a labor party of their Chicago gunmen, prac hip own and refuse to be “delivered” by any of the professional election \fcials who had paid large sums to ociation to have them deliver the “church-go- ing” vote, spilled the the beans by 5 showing that this group was not so in- Musele Shoals to private business on the pretext that the manufac: terested in a probe of the vice condl- This is a palpable fraud because tions as it was in creating a situa- tion where the candidate that had “come across” with huge sums to the rv % association could be nominated in the is the cloak beneath which the industrialists hope to steal the water {primaries against candidates that had | ‘The Better, Goverhitipht Association jaccused one set 0! js of having an alliance with” ers and gun- must be equipped withthe theory of the revolution; the only |men and tried toswhitewash ~ ON MILITARISM Increase Appropriation for Air Service (Special to The Daily Worker) LONDON, March 8.—Great Britain will spend approximately $558,000,000 on her armed forces this year, accord- ing to the estimates submitted by the various departments. Of this amount $292,500,000 will go tosthe navy. The army will be apportioned ..$212,500,000, and the air service, which is under a separate minority «will, get $80,- 000,000. The estimates are $10,000,000 below those of 1925 each, for the army and navy but an increase of $2,500,- 000 on the air departyent. The air service thru aditions,dast year now numbers 61 squadrons, ,with a force of 35,500 men. aoe ‘ The effectiveness of,,aircraft, Sir Samuel Hoare, minister, of air, states has been dem atrated, in ‘Irak and Somaliland and*in the, pynitive expedi- al st 'S | tion against the Mahsug) a tribe on the finest steam coal; excellent trans- portation facilities; unlimited elec- tric power at low rates; fast-grow- community, city- Address Chamber of Commerce, Bluefield, ‘northwest frontier ofpdndia in last March and April, Ingthe last few weeks aeroplanes have,;been employed against rebellious. natives in the Nuba mountains of the Sudan. The valiant British aviators have, rained deadly bombs on natives, destroying their villages and murdering, their wives and children, because,they objected to the exploitation oftheir country. To Reduce Irak Garrison, If— The British garrison dn Irak will be progressively reducedyy the minister declares, “provided there are no un- toward political develppmenits.” In other words, if the Turks make no further protest against being robbed | of that territory, the armed guard will be cut down. To stimulate interest in aeronautics at the universities it is recommended that a fund of $20,000 be appropriated | for student training at both Oxford) and Cambridge. At Oxford the chief aero instructor is a professor. Steaks for Higher-Ups, But— The government's idea of economy is shown in their decision not to serve the soldiers any mutton this year. During the past ey got mut- ton once a week ‘as 4, variation in their fare. Churchill @xpects to save $250,000 a year by cut, of ill a al Wages Will Vary With Philly Cost!of Living PHILADELPHIA-- (FP) —Pay for Philadelphia street ¢ en is to be based on fluctuating prices, the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co,, which controls all local ‘carljpes and many interurbans, announcgs, Changes in pay rates are not to,be made more than once a year, unlegs the purchas- ing value of the dollar, yaries 10 points or more from the market basket index and remains at a it beyond tht variation for 8 months,» Several market bagkets with fixed contents have been decided upon for basic computations, A specfal bureau will study from month to month the prices of the commodities. ‘Wages up to now have been deter- mined by the average rate paid in Cleveland, Detroit and Chicago, The new plan insures @ rough maintenance of the present standard of living~but not for raising this standard. Whether the wages of taxi drivers will be de- tevpmined in the same way is not stat- ed by the company, though it has bought out the Philadephia Yellow ‘Taxi Co, which operates the majority of the cabs in the city? atte class war prisoners’ aid in Eu- rope and America at the Inter. national Labor fense com: memoration of the Paris Com- mune at Ashland Auditorium on March 19. Mi middle class group of Logan can boast uring the 13 years of Don Chafin's rule. The man is Maston White, an insurance man, who when I saw him had just.had all his back lower teeth taken out as the windup of the last beating he was given by the sheriff's gang. The beating took place about three years ago after he had assisted the American Civil Liberties union to hold a free speech test meeting on the courthouse steps. The sheriff final- ly gave permission after White had offered to turn over his own front porch and adjoining lot if they could get no other place, The speeches were made while automobiles dashed about and horns honked at the depu- ties’ orders. Soon after, as White was walking down the street with four friends, he was set upon by eight men, including the chief of police and John Chafin, the sheriff’s cousin. They kept his friends away and beat him with blackjacks, fracturing his skull in two places, breaking his nose and cracking his jaw bone in several places. Then they left him for dead as they thought. Skull Fractured. But Maston White, of stufdy square shouldered physique survived, and two of the hard-drinking thugs who attacked him’ have since been lowered to their graves. “It was not the first time they fractured my skull,” said White. “See CANTON MEETING OF KUO MIN TANG OUTLINES POLICY CANTON—(By mail.)—The second national congress of the Kuo Min Tang reiterated the policy of the first congress for a continuation of the struggle against imperialism and its tools, the Chinese militarists. This involves an alliance of the workers and peasants of China with the revolu- tionary mass movements in the chief imperialist countries. For the effec- tive waging of the conflict, # is ne- cessary as soon as possible to form a national government which will truly cooperate with the people and the revolutionary army. The political reports of the central executive committee of the party sum- marized its achievements to ‘date: “In South China, the influence of Brit- ish imperialists has been eradicated; the compradores, insubordinate gen- erals, unruly soldiers, corrupt © and ayaricious officials, counter-revolution- aries have been cleaned out. A na- tional revolutionary army well trained politically has been organized and a nationalist governmént formed to unify the military, financial and ad- ministrative affairs of Kwantung and to strengthen the revolutionary base. The workers and peasants have been granted their political rights. Plans for economic development have been devised; at the same time Kwangsi, which has long been devastated and divided by bandit chiefs and rebel generals, is now unified. “In the north and central China the people have been aroused to activity, creating a@ new political situation, and causing the downfall of many militar- ists.” The congress expressed the hope that the Kuo Min Tang would increase its efforts to consolidate its conque: and to purify its own ranks. Lights and Phone In Tomb, © TERRE HAUTE, Ind., March 8.—A elephone and electric lights grace the:| hour. the motion picture of | interior of the mausoleum in which the body of Martin A, Sheets, wealthy stock broker, was. mbed. Sheets asked that his tom so equipped that 6 ays have unity to talk with the ide world Jf he should piacrto maria Jt hs : here,” and he had me feel a mark on his forehead, “They gave me this in 1913. I saw Don and two deputies beating a bricklayer, just because he had a union.card. I interceded for the man and they jumped on. me.” White was constantly . protesting and constantly being thrown . into prison. The Logan court even issued a special injunction against his visit- ing the nearby mining towns—said he stirred up the people. And the later injunctions against the miners union included him also. At that time he had a’ drycleaning business and the writs prevented his going out after trade into the county,, So for several years he turned to gardening. “Don Chafin usqitto say I was a fool; that I'é nett gome over with him and be one of the boys and I'd make a lot of money... might have been worth a half million,” he relates. Will Cleantogan County. Five years ago when White was in the county jailea;yniner was brought in for a six months term for possess- ing a razor. He had been enticed from Covington, Ky, by promises of big money miningoLogan coal, After two days work-hevsaw he had been duped, and leaving his wages behind he set out omthe road, only to be given six monthsyen the razor pretext. They worked himxoyt from the jail on the county road. But one day he was heard to complain against the injus- tice and that night he was kidnaped. Several months later his dead bod: was found. 98> my “But we'll cleansmp Logan yet,” says White, <p] Canadians Lose Jobs While the Government Imports Immigrants MONTREAL—(FP)—One day the Canadian government announced that it had undertaken to guarantee immi- grants from the British isles em- ployment for 5 years on farms or domestic service. The next it an- nounced, in response to the appeals of numerous municipalities for assist- ance in relieving serious unemploy- ment among Canadian workers, that it was prepared to help if the provin- cial governments. would also do some- thing. . Most of the provinejal governments have taken the stand that, if the mu- nicipalities are unable to cope with unemployment, it is up the dominion to provide relief, ag.it creates unem- ployment by subsidiZing immigration. The new immigration scheme guar- antees employment, but not necessari- lly employment with pay. If the immi- grants do not want to work where told —whether the farmers or others want to pay them or not—the government's responsibility towards them ceases. If they engage at any time during the 5 years in any occupation other than farming or domestic’ service, the gov- ornment's guarantee no longer holds, 't is a scheme to, @stablish peonage for British immigrants, Get your tickets mow for the Inter rational concert of the T. U. E, by Sat., March 13, at 8th St, Theater. Scranton Street Carmen Demand Wage Increase SCRANTON, Pa., March 8,—Scran- ton street car motormen and con- ductors want 11 to 17 cents more pay an hour, the 17 cents more for one- man car operators whose working con- ditions are particularly bad. The men get 58, 61 and 64 cents an hour, the 64 cents after one year’s employment, One-man car operators get 72 cents and motor bus drivers get 69 cents an . One-man car operators have to work 30 to 50 minutes” extra every night without pay in order to report at the office aving cars in the barn. ‘They Have no time to eat if they try to to schedule, so the pee pl er) wives ail FLECT MENBERS TO PRESIDIUM OF COMINTERN Chinese Delegate Greets Enlarged Executive MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., Feb. 17—(By Mail)—Following the opening of the sessions of the enlarged executive of the Communist international by Greg- ory Zinovievy the presidium and the secretariatyfor the conference were elected. In elections to the presidium the following comrades were elected: Zinoviev,; Bukharin, Thaelmann, ‘Se- mard,, Stalin, Geschke, Smeral, Genn- aril, Ferguson, Eremet, Samboru, De- roy, Kilbom, Katayama, Zetkin, Roy, Manuilski, Vouyovitch, Hayasi, Ferdi, Bogutski, Dimitrov, Stfan and Sama- oen. The following comrades were elected to the secretariat: Kusinen, Humbert-Droz, Kuehne, Piatnitsky, Jacob, Kornblum, Neurath, Brown and Pepper. Adopt Agenda. Immediately following on the elec- tion of the presidium and the secretar- iat the conference adopted the follow- ing agenda for this gathering of the world committee of the Communist International; (1) The report of the presidium and the forthcoming political tasks. (Speaker: Comrade Zinoviev). (2) The trade union question. (Speaker: Comrade Losovsky). (3) The report of the Communist Party of Great Britain upon its experi- ence in the work among the masses. (4) Questions affecting the individ- ual sections and the setting up of com- missions: (a) upon the work in China, Moroccé, Syria and India; (b) upon the situation in the, Communist Party of France; (c) in the Workers Party of America: (d) in the Communist Parties of Scandinavia. (5) A control upon the carrying out of the past. decisions of the Comin- tern; the plan of work for the execu- tive committee of the Communist In- ternational up to the time of the Com- intern; the plan of work for the Fourth Congress; the measures to be adopted for the strengthening of the influence of the non-Russian seqtions in the leadership of the Comintern. Humbert-Droz then presented the re- port on the work of the committee credentials. From the 43 members of the executivé,.23 are reported pres- ent; of the 27 candidates, 14. were oresent. Apart from the members of the executive, there were 93 delegates “epresenting 32 parties! Forty-nine of hese delegates received a decisive vote and 44 an advisory vote. The following sections have each three votes: Russia, Germany, France, Czecho-Slovak#a, Italy and the Young Communist International. The following each two votes: the United States, Great Britain, Norway, Bulgaria, Poland and the Ukraine; all other sections ‘have one vote each, The following commissions were unanimously elected: a political, an oriental, a trade unjon, an English, French, American and Scandinavian commission and further a commission for, drawing up a plan of. work, a @ commission upon credentials. Chinese Greet Execu ~~ Speeches of greeting then followed. Sufan, a member of the Communist Party of China and a delegate to the enlarged executive was received with stormy applause which lasted for sev- eral minutes at the end of which the International was sung. He spoke: “The Communist Party and the Young (Communist) League in China have 10,000 members. The revolutionary movement in China will give imperial- ism the decisive and final blow.” Huchama, a member of the central committee of the Kuomintang Party and a general of the Canton Army was greeted also with storms of applause. “The Chinese revolution is only a part of the world revolution. Sun Yat Sen placed the Chinese revolutionary movement upon the basis of the world revolutionary movement. The Kuo- mintang is thirty years old. Co-opera- tion with the Second International is out of the question, such co-operation is only possible with the Comintern, ‘The Kuomintang relies above all its own forces.” ~ tae Insthe name of the People's Revolu- tionary. Party of Mongolia, Jadamba greeted the assembled representatives of the working class in the west and in the east. “The Mongolian people were only able to free themselves with the assistance of the Comintern, and the People’s Revolutionary Party in Mongolia works in the spirit of the Comintern.” Jadamba requested the Comintern to support the revolution: ary movements in the east and above all in'China with ail its forces. ~ Comrade Brown expressed the pleas- ure of the Communist Party of Great Britain that its representatives were for the first time enabled to meet a delegation from China, The greatest efforts of the Communist Party of Great Britain were in connection with China, Brown pointed to the success at Se h and stressed the. cessity and Importance of solidarity amonggb all the oppressed peoples in- side the British Empire, Pal ons of the DAILY time at| WO. in your pocket when you go-to your union ig 4 Pe ys f v

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