The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 5, 1926, Page 5

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LOS ANGELES CLEANERS WIN THEIR STRIKE Bosses Grant Demands of Local 176 LOS ANGELS, Cal., Aug. 8.—“The most decisive victory of any trade union in Los Angeles since the world war,” was the way one labor official characterized the settlement of the cleaners’ and dyers’ strike in Los An- geles. One week after the men walk- ed out, tying up every wholesale plant in the city, the bosses association, which had nepeatedly refused to rec- ognize the union and negotiate with it, surrendered and met the strikers’ representatives. The chief demands of the strikers were conceded to them. They won the 44-hour week, closed shop conditions, recognition of the union, pay for over- time, equal division of work during the slack season, equal pay for/wo- men and men, and an increase in wages ranging from 5 to 16 per cent. The union is now beginning an or- ganization drive among the retail plants that were not called out on strike. It ds estimated 1,000 workers were out on strike. The strike was led by Cleaners & Dyers Local No. 176, This was the first important victory for the closed shop in Los Angeles for a long time, against the combined ap- position of the Merchants and Manu facturers Association, the Los Angeles Times, and the Chamber of Commerce, who exert all their influence to force bosses to repudiate agreements with trade unions and run their plants on an open-shop basis. The organized labor movement of Los Angeles must now use every effort to unionize the town and wipe out the American plan. Lithuanian Literature Society Holds Outing for Passaic Strikers The American Lithuanian Workers’ Literature Association will hold an outing in Jefferson Woods Sunday, Aug. 8. Take Milwaukee Gale cars to Central Ave. This outing is ar- ranged for the benefit of the striking Passaic textile workers, | WCEL Radio Program Chicago Federation of Labor radio broadcasting station WCFL is on the air with regular programs. It is broadcasting on a 491.5 wave length from the Municipal Pier. TONIGHT, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4. 6:00 to 7:00—Chicago Federation of La- \ks and Bulletins. i ing Moneak Quintette, Chamber Music. 7:30 to 8:30—Vaudeville Program: Frank Budner, Baritone; Theo. Turnqu' Songs and Monologues; W. C.. Anderson, Musical Saw, Ukelele, Banjo, Guitar, Mouth Organ. 8:30 to 9:00—WCFL Ensemble: Instru- mental Solos, Musical Comedy Shows. 9:00 to 9:30—Arthur Billquist, in Popular Songs; Pierson Thal, the 14- Year-Old Boy Pianist. 9:30 to 10:00—Request Hour—Popular Dance Music. THURSDAY, AUGUST 5. 6:00 to 7:00—Chicago ation of La- bor Talks and Bulleti 7:00 to 7:30—Ele; Chamber Music. 7:30 to 8:30—Vaudeville Program: Hazel Nyman, the Girl Wonder Accordianist; Jean Robinson, Female Baritone, ‘Clar- e Sullivan, Irish Teno! 10 to 9:00—WCFL En: mental Solos, Musical Co! 9:00 to 9:30—M. Gielow, Florentine, Popular So 9:30 to 10:00—Request Hour—Popular Dance Music. oneak Quintette, NEW YORK 10 WITNESS PARADE FOR SACCO AND VANZETTI ON AUG. 7TH NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—The parade that was to have been held as a protest against the execution of Sacco and Vanzettl on July 31 has been postponed, to occur on August 7, announces: the Brooklyn provi- sional committee for’Sacce and Van- zetti, an organization of Italian workers. The parade will end in an international mass meeting and will start from L’Unito Adornese Club at Wilson avenue and Stair street, Brooklyn, BAKERY WORKERS SEEK POWER BY AMALGAMATION A. F. of L. and Indepen- dent Negotiate NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—(FP)—Amal- gamation of bakery workers’ unions looms as an {issue for the Interna- tional Baker & Confectionery Work- ers’ Union convention ih New York, August 9. Already the union’s joint executive board for greater New York has invited the action of the Amalga- mated Food Workers’ independent un- ion on the question. The board ex- presses its desire that the ‘interna- tional convention likewise take up and act upon the amalgamation prop- osition. In replying, the , Amalgamated points out that it has always worked toward amalgamation which would bring one union in the baking indus- try. “The trend of the industry, the amalgamation of capital, the continu- ed introduction of new devices. in the production of the baking . industry have left’ no bakery workers in doubt of the immediate need of amalgama- tion of the bakery workers’ organiza- tions,” the Amalgamated states. The independent union suggests that its answer be considered’astate- ment to the international union's exe- cutive board and convention, inas- much as these are the authoritative bodies with which it would ‘have to deal in actual amalgamation proceed- ings. The Amalgamated has its great- e8t strength among the German and Italian bakers, while the International Bakery &° Confectionery Workers in New York are practically all: im-Jew- ish bakeries, dda Philadelphia to Have. Big Passaic Relief Picnic on August 8 PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 3.—The, Phil- adelphia relief committee for the tex- tile strikers asks every sympathizer and friend of the 16,000. textile strikers ot Passaic to do his share by attend- ing the big picnic on Sunday, August 8, at Flaxman’s Farm. All the proceeds will go to help feed the hungry children of the brave Pas- saic strikers. Let us demonstrate our solidarity, Rockaway 1.L.D. Branch Asks Members to Attend NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—The Interna- tional Labor Defense, Rockaway Branch, will meet Friday, Aug. 6, at 7:30 p. m. at 180° Beach 70 street, Arverne,. All comrades living in the Rockaway section are asked to attend this meeting without fail. pe a To All Members of Local 100, I. L. G. W. U.! This is to announce that election for local officers, delegates to Joint Board, United Hebrew Trades, Chicago Federation of Labor and Women’s Trade Union League will take. place on THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, at the union headquarters, 328 West Van Buren St. represent you! Come and elect the best capable members to Polls will be open from 12 noon until 7 p. m. Bring your book with you. H. ROSS, Chairman. M. TERRY, Sec’y, Local 100, | BROOKLYN, N. Y., ATTENTION! CO-OPERATIVE BAKERY Meat Market Restaurant IN THE SERVICE OF THE CONSUMER, Bakery deliveries made to your home, FINNISH CO-OPERATIVE TRADING ASSOCIATION, Inc. (Workers organized as consumers) 4301 8th Avenue Telephone Rockwell 2306 application. Brooklyn, N. Y. THE JEWISH DAILY FREIHEIT CHICAGO OFFICE: Roosevelt Road and Kedzie, Room 14 Manager: A, Ravitch All information about “Daily Fretheit” and “The Hammer,” advertising, subscriptions, ete., on Look Over These PRIZES for Worker Correspondence Offered to workers sending .in stories and news this week— winners to be announced In the issue of Friday, August 6. i Geass Wing Unioniem,” by David J. Saposs. A new study of radical tactics and policies in the American trade unions. A storehouse of invaluable in- formation in a splendid cloth- bound edition, os Moscow Diary,” by Anna Porter. A record of vivid im- pressions gathered by the author on a recent Visit to Soviet Rus- sia, A cloth-bound edition, "Class Collaboration — How to Fight It,” by’ Bertram D. Wolfe. A new booklet in the Little Red Library, just off the press— AND Eight other numbers of the Lit- tle Red Library already issued. SUBSCRIBE to the American Worker Correspondent (50 cents a year) to learn what and how to write. Muscle Shoals Realty Salesmen Spread Bunk to Gather in Suckers By DANIEL TOWER, Federated Press. NEW YORK CITY, Aug. 3.—(FP)— Workers with savings accounts here are being urged by smooth-talking salesmen to buy “city” lots at Muscle Shoals, where, according to reliable information, there is no likelihood of a city developing in the next 26 years. The lots are being offered particularly to laborers, women in domestic serv- ice, clergymen and school teachers. The real estate enthusiasts have im- pressively advertised a farm-land area with 42 voters as the “Pittsburgh of the South.” Lots there are priced clear up to $7,500 by the realty men, although the same lots have actually been assessed by the tax collector at $40 each. And the promoters picture a population of 100,000 to 300,000 springing up like magic. Not more than 2,000 men will be re- quired if the two nitrate plants are operated. Those plants are now lying idle, and will remain so until congress makes up its mind about their future, Besides these, the only other tangible industry at Muscle Shoals is the Wil- son Dam, which, even when all 18 units are ec, pea will require only about 100 employes. Investigation revealed little develop- ment in the “city” of Muscle Shoals beyond sidewalks running out of sight into the woods and a few fire hydrants and sewers, The spot called by one promoter “the very hub and civic center of the City of Muscle Shoals” turns out to be a meadow with a tele- graph pole and a farm house in the background. One so-called business center is on a densely wooded hillside 11 miles from the city of Sheffield, Ala. - I. L. D. Prepares for Big New York Outing at Pleasant Bay Park NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—With the an- nual outing on Sunday, August 8, at Pleasant Bay Park, the International Labor Defense will open its drive for the $10,000 special fund for the de- fense of the Zeigler miners, Papcun, Ruthenberg, Bimba, the Fall River an- archists, and many other cases which are coming up for trial or appeal this fall. The program for the outing will be- gin at 10 a, m. and continue all day. There will be games, athletics, danc- ing and music. Movies will be taken of the affair and shown later in va- rious halls in New York City. 1. L. O. Will Begin to Talk Two Years from Now About the Seamen GENEVA, Aug. 3.—(FP)—Regula- tion of hours of work aboard ship was the issue insisted upon by workers’ delegates and resisted by employers’ spokesmen at the recent conference of the International Labor, Organiza tion, dealing with legislation for sea- men. By a tajority of 67 to 26, the British government Welegates voting with the minority, it was resolved to THE DAILY WORKER Page rive SOVIET SUPREME COURT SENDS HORTHY AGENT TO JAIL FOR FIVE YEARS (Special to The Daily Worker) MOSCOW, U.S. 8. R., July 16.— (By Imprecorr.) — The supreme court in Moscow sentenced the agent provocateur Visny to five years imprisonment at labor .and confiscation of his property, It point- ed out that, according to Visny’s confession, he arrived in Moscow In October 1925 as the agent of the Hungarian political police in order to obtain faked’ proofs of an alleged connection between the Hungarian labor, movement and the Soviet gov- ernment, DICKS TOLD TO BEAT UP ’FRISCO TRADE UNIONIST Bosses Sought to Keep 4aa4|| ut this question on the 1928 Trouble Stirred Up SAN FRANCISCO.— (FP) — Declar- ing that “a bunch of millionaires is not going to Keep the poor and the homeless out in*the cold and rain all winter while #hese millionaires squab- ble over wha Kind of ticket a work- ingman must c@rry,” mayor Rolph of San Francisco has called a conference to investigate the holding up of build- ing materials by the openshop Indus- trial Assn. in the carpenter strike. The work on the new relief home has been stopped by the Industrial Assn. action, since it is being built by a union crew. The same applies to sev- eral new public schools which were to relieve congestion next fall, Violence has spread to the heart of the business district. Five former employes of @ private detective agency run by Wm. A. Mundell presented af- fidavits at am injunction hearing show- ing violence ‘against union molders and carpetiters at the command of the employers. Instructions to “get” stirred up, for-fear Blackjack Jerome would get the job otherwise;” the use of disguises, Maxim silencers, and buckshot substituted for bullets so as to make the victim “look like a sieve;” and a reported. conversation between Mundell and am official of the Indus- trial Assn., im:which the latter said he “wanted an agency that would put the fear of God into the strikers,” were among the revelations at the hearing. Waiters Forbidden to Wear Glasses; Detract from Their Servility NEW YORK, Aug. 3. —(FP)—Oc- casional dropping of whole trays of dishes in restaurants and hotel dining rooms is partially explained by the fact that the proprietors of many such establishments refuse to employ wai- ters who wear glasses, This is true, it appears, of almost all of the larger eating houses. “Men seeking jobs are barred by the headwaiters if they wear glasses,” says Nicholas Coulcher, president of waiters’ Union‘16. “They won't even let them wear moustaches, In the old days, a moustache was a sign of man- hood, But now the moustache is bar- red to us because the employers pre- fer that the waiters should seem ser- vile.” In many instances, it is explained, a waiter’s occupation is difficult because of the lay-out of his work-place, that weak eyes make the job a hardship. The barring of eye-glasses is based on the idea that they are a mark of dis- tinction and that patrons would re- sent their use, Philadelphia Hosiery Workers Facing Fight Against Injunction PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 3. —(FP)— Officers of the American Federation of Full Fashioned ‘Hosiery Workers, Lo- cal 706, Philadelphia Branch No. 1, are named in a pléa for an injunction made by the firm of Brownhill and Kramer, This firm contends that it is operating an open shop and that the union has interfered with its busi- ness by efforts td gain recognition in that shop, The union is affiliated with the United Textile Workers and the American Federation of Labor. Pat Harrison Wants U.S. to Play Santa Claus to Power Co. a WASHINGTON, Aug, 3—(FP)—Sen, Pat Harrison of Mississippi, demo- cratic party spokesman, demands that congress lease Muscle Shoals power Plant at the earliest possible moment to the Alabama Power Co. group, at an average of $1,100,000 a year for the first 18 years, The same company is now paying the government $1,524,000 4 year profit, under a temporary lease, Coca-Cola Unfair. ST. LOUIS—(FP)—The Coca-Cola bottling company of St. Louis has se- cured an injunction against the t sters, restraining them from advertis- ing this product as)unfair to organized labor. Trade unionists are calling at- tention to the fact that the St. Louts office discharged its drivers for join- ~ GARMENT BOSSES SLIPPING, DENY BIG SETTLEMENT Raise Red Issue; Want to Deal with Green (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK, Aug. 3. — In several ways the garment bosses represented by the Industrial Council, show that they are slipping and that the strike of 40,000 cloakmakers of the Imterna- tional Ladies’ Garment Workers’ union is winning. This is seen in the denial of the big shops settled, the attempt to split the alliance between the con- tractors and the union, and last but not least, the customary cry of “Com- munists” against the strikers. Would Be immeasurably Satisfied With Green, “The Industrial Council,” says Henry H, Finder, president of the bosses’ organization, “is not opposed 'to treating with labor, but it must in: sist that representatives of the work ers are men with the best interests of industrial America at heart, For that reason it would afford us im- measurable satisfaction if men of the stamp of President Green of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor were to identify themselves with the present crisis in the women’s garment indus- try in order to bring about a speedy peace, satisfactory alike to worker and employer.” Bosses Concerned for A. F. of L. Mr, Finder is very much worried about the workers in the I. L. G. W., which, he says, “is taking its counsel from William Z, Foster, Benjamin Git- low and others who have been repeat- edly repudiated by the A, F. of L. These men have been addressing strikers at their meetings,” he adds, indignantly. Despite efforts on the part of the Industrial Council of the manufactur- ers’ association to minimize the settle- ments being made by the Cloakmakers’ Union with inside manufacturers, the joint board of the cloakmakers was able to announce seven additional agreements, bringing the total settle- ments to date to 387, Several of those signed up yesterday are important shops employing a large number of workers, Louis Hyman, chairman of the Gen- eral Strike Committee, denounced as a flimsy smoke screen assertions made by H. Finder, president of the Indus- trial Council, in paid appeals to the strikers in the Yiddish press that only unimportant shops are being settled. Hyman charged Finder with commit- ting crimes of omission by mentioning in the association’s advertisements shops employing not over 30 workers. Many Big Shops Settle. “I want to brand as a brazen, des- perate attempt to befog our success the latest broadsides of the manufac- turers,” Hyman declared. It is extra- ordinary that the Industrial Council fails to make reference to the settle- ments completed with the Weinstein corporation, 1359 Broadway, employ- ing 92 workers; Faber & Hein, 625 Seventh Ave, 86 workers; H. Davis & Son, 114 West 26th Street, 70 work- ers; Dartmoor Coat Co., 17 East 22nd street, 68 workers; Henry Fredericks, 205 West 39th Street; Schulman & Hauptman, 224 West 35th Street; I. Weingarten, 550 Seventh Avenue; 8. E. S. Line, 229 West 36th Street, all employing over 50 workers. Must Meet Terms. “Regarding the smaller manufactur- ers with whom we settled, I want to say it is not our intention to drive legitimate manufacturers out of busi- ness, merely because they are small, Some of them on our list are makers of highgrade garments working direct- ly for the trade. There is no reason why they should not continue to exist. They meet every one of the union con- ditions in the new agreement and we are glad to settle with them. “Mr. Finder's argument would be valid if we refused to settle with large manufacturers, As a matter of fact, we settle with those applying in the regular order, irrespective of the size of their shops or the number of their employes, as long ag we feel con- fident they will abide by union condi- tions.” Jobbers Work As Contractors, Another breach in the ranks of the manufacturers and jobbers was seen yesterday at the offices of the joint board in the appeal yesterday by Ben- jamin Spinrad, an active leader of the Merchants’ Ladies Garment Workers Association, the jobbers’ organization, to the American Cloak and Suit Manu- tacturers’. Association, the organiza- tion of contractors who hi thrown in their lot with the strikers. The con- tractors have gone on record support- ing the demands of the workers for limiting the number of contractors for each jobber, feeling that they cannot survive the present cut-throat competi- tion among themselves, fostered by the jobbers, Yesterday Spinrad offer- ed the contractors an agreement re- cognizing the contractors’ “minimum cost of production,” in an effort to win them away from their support of union efforts. . Supreme Court Justice Crain, sitting in Special Term, Part I, hi stponed the injunction proceedings against the designers’ union, Insane Husband Shoots Wife WAUKEGAN, IL, Aug. 2.—Mrs. Jennie Kuznik, 40, died in a hospital here today from bullet wounds in- fiicted by her husband, Frank, recent- WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE, J. Arnold Ross, cll operator, formerly Jim Ross, teamster, Is unsuccessful In signing a lease with property holders at Beach City, Cal., because of intrigues of other operators and quarrels among the holders. While he is at Beach City Bunny, his thirteen-year-old son, meets Paul Watkins, slightly older, Pau His father is a poor rancher in the San Elido Valley has run away from home. Paul goes away to make his living on the road and who is a “Holy Roller.” Bunny goes about learning the oil business from his Dad who is bringing in a well at Prospect Hill, Dad was working hard and Bunny suggests a quail hunting trip to the San Elido Valley. Dad agrees and shortly they arrive at the Watkins ranch and pitch thelr camp. !n hunting for quail they find oil oozing out of the ground and Dad wheedies the sale of the ranch out of Watkins and also arranges to secretly purchase adjacent lands. Paul's e sister, Ruth, and Bunny become friends. Bunny starts to high school at ch City. With’ plenty of money and social standing he enters @nto the life of the school, He falls in love with another student, Rose Taint In the meantime Dad's oil business grows rapidly. The World War begins and Dad, along with other Capitalists, benefits by selling oil to both belligerents. Bunny arranges for Paul to come and live with Ruth on a nearby ranch. . ° e . “But son, it’s hot as Flujins up there in summer!” Bunny didn’t know where or what “Flujins” might be; but he answered that Paul was standing it, and a ow it was good for you to sweat, Dad was getting too heavy, and he could sit under the yougainvillea vine in a Palm Beach suit while Bunny did car- yentry work with Paul, and it would be a change, and Bunny would call up Dr. Blakiston and have him order it. Whereupon Dad grinned, and said all right, and he might jist as well adopt chat Watkins pair and be done with it. So they went up the Bascum ranch, taking their tent along —and Paul and Ruth insisted on giving up the house, and Ruth slept in the tent, and Paul made his bed in the hay-mow, Paul had hired a horse and plow, and had a f g vegetable garden and big patch of beans, and had set in awberries which he was tending with a little hand cultivator; they had half a dozen goats, and plenty of milk, and some chickens which Ruth took care of. ‘And most amazing of all, Paul had got the books from Judge Minter’s library. Most of them were still in boxes, because there was no place for them; but Paul had made some shelves out of a packing-box, and there stood Huxley and Haeckel and Renan, and other writers absolutely fatal to the soul of any person who reads them. But “Pap” had given up, Ruth said, she had got too growed up all of a sudden, too big to be “whaled”; and besides, Pap’s rheumatix was terrible, and Eli couldn’t heal it. Dad said that when they were ordering the lumber for the cabin they would get some stuff for bookshelves, and Paul could build them during the winter. Dad and Paul had another argument, and Dad said this was his house, wasn’t it, and he sure had a right to put some book-shelves in it if he wanted them; Paul could lend him some books when he come up here, and jist help him get a bit of education, even now, as old as he was. It was a happy family, and a fine place to be, because it took Dad’s mind off his wells, and his trouble with one of his best foremen, that had gone and got married to a fool flapper, and didn’t have his mind on his work no more. They got the lumber from the dealer at Roseville, and Paul was thie “boss-carpenter,” and Bunny was the “jack-carpenter,” and Dad kind of fussed around until he got to perspiring too hard, and then he went and sat under the bougainvillea blossoms, and Ruth opened him a bottle of grape-juice, that was part of the fancy stuff he had brought in. F : ‘And then in the evening they would drive into Paradise and get the mail, and there came a little local paper that old Mr. Watkins took, and Bunny began to look it over, and gosh almighty —look at this, Dad—a story on the front page, about the mar- velous meeting that Eli had held at Santa Lucia, and how frenzied the worshippers had got, and Eli had made the announcement that he had been commissioned to build the Tabernacle of the Third Revelation, which was to be all of snow-white marble, with a frieze of gold, and was to occupy one ent ire block in Angel City, and bé of exactly the dimensions which had been revealed to Eli in adream. The dimensions were given, and Dad said they were bigger than any block that Eli would find in Angel City, but no doubt they’d find a way to get around that, and call it a new Revelation. The Roseville “Eagle’—that was the name of the paper—was boastful of Eli, who was “putting the San Elido valley on the map,” out of the “free will offerings” at Eli’s meet- ings; but the old structure would be preserved, so that pilgrims might come to visit the place where the True Word had been handed down. And then came Mr. Hardacre, meeting them on the street. He said that Young Bandy had got tired of his idea that Dad was going to drill; he wanted to take his parents to the city and be a business man, so the family would take Dad’s offer. If it was still open. Dad said all right, to let him know, he’d come in any time, and they’d put it into escrow. Next day Mr. Hard- acre drove out to the Bascum place, and said he’d taken the escrow officer out to the Bandy place, and old Mr. Bandy and his wife had signed the agreement to deliver the deed; and so Dad and Bunny got into their car, and drove to the bank, and Dad put up four thousand dollars, and signed a contract to pay eight thousand more when the title search was completed. Then, when they were out of the bank, he grinned and said, “Allright, son, now you'can drill your tract!” Of course, Bunny wanted to go right to it—wanted Dad, to telephone for his head foreman, and get a road contractor ‘at work! But Dad said they’d finish the cabin first, and meantime he’d be thinking. So Bunny went back to work, nailing shingles on the roof, and he was happy as a youngster could be—except for one uncomfortable thought that was gnawing like a worm in his soul. How could he tell Paul and Ruth about their decision to drill, and would Paul and Ruth consider that Dad had got the Watkins ranch upon false pretenses? Fate was kind to Bunny. Something happened—you could never guess it in a thousand years! Only three days had passed since they put through the Bandy deal, and Dad was still thinking matters over, when Meelie Watkins came walking from her home —with a big blue sun-bonnet to protect her from the mid-day sun—and brought an amazing piece of news. Old Mr. Wrinkum driving in from town, had stopped by, and told Pap that a big oil concern, the Excelsior Petroleum Company, had leased the Car- ter ranch, on the other side of the valley, about a mile west of Paradise, and was going to start drilling for oil! Meelie gave this news to Dad, who was sitting under the bougainvillea; and Dad shouted to Bu and Paul, who were up laying the floor of the cabin. The two came running, and Ruth came running from her chicken-yard, and when they heard the news, Bunny cried, “Ex- celsior Pete! Why Dad, that’s one of the Big Five!" They stared at each other, and suddenly Dad clenched his hands and exclaimed, “By golly, them people don’t drill unless they know what they're doin’. Bunny, I believe I'll try a well here on our place, and see what we get!” “Oh, Mr. Ross!” exclaimed Ruth. “You ought to do it— my Uncle Eby always used to say there was oil here!” “Ig that 80?” said Dad. “Well, I'll take a chance then, jist for fun.” And he looked at Bunny, with just the flicker of a» smile, It told Bunny a lot, when he came to think it over; Dad had guessed that Bunny was worried and exactly what was his dilemma with the Watkinses; and Dad had had the wit to save Bunny’s face, and avoid the need of confessing. Dear, kind old ., Dad, that was anxious to do everything for his boy—that would . , even do his lying for him! How could any boy refuse to be ly released from the Elgin State Hos. | content with such a happy solution of his ethical problems?, ee me y pital a ’ hi Er (Te be continued.) Ps oa

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