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ay ¢ THE DAILY= WORKER U.S, UNIVERSITY STUDENTS VISIT “Page Two e [SOCIALIST VISITOR IS GUEST OF JUDGE GARY, STEEL TRUST HEAD Miss Tony Sender, German socialist, now visiting the United States and touring the country under the auspices of the Socialist Party, accepted an | POLICE CHIEF SUED FOR HIS FLORIDA STORM, Truth Is Trickling Thru} "paysoen poop ILLEGAL ACTS “Needed no Warrant” to Arrest Workers PITTSBURGH, Oct. 18.—(FP)-—Suit for $30,000 damages for false arrest invitation to visit Gary’s steel mills from Judge Elbert H, Gary, chairman of the board of directors of the United Steel corporation and outstanding open-shopper and union-buster in the United States, In a speech delivered before a typical socialist audience of doctors, law- yers, druggists, second-hand clothing vendors and half a dozen workers, Miss Sender devoted most of her time to asssuring American capitalists that their Buropean investments were safe. Brookwood Representa- tive Describes Trip (BLES)—The following letter has been written from Moscow, Russia, RUSSIAN SCHOOLS, “TNOR Christ's sake, tell him the in Spite of Every Effort of the New England Gang By J. LOUIS ENGDAHL. Thus the conscience-stricken, Feri PERSONS MOST Rich Homes are O. K., Plutes are Assured BALTIMORE, Oct. 18.—How the Poor bora the brunt of suffering in has been filed against Chief of Police #|by Thomas L. Dabney, a graduate of vi . 0 Hamilton Brown, of Aliquippa, Pa., a Brookwood Labor College. last year. | beta Telixas-Waiee, Ceparimade, Ut: Jubc | Seria saeees Marr Rne AIMAANeS., fe company town of the Jones & Laugh- | Tatisey te a andiibie ofthe Antero This appeal, in the dark of the | tice agent, writes to the Boston | graphically told by the Seaboard Air Dedham, Mass., jail to the self-con- | Globe, as reported in The DAILY |Line railway management in a full- lin steel interests, ed by 3 men arrest- ant while conduct- without a war MILLS USING OF OPERATORS, student delegation ‘to' Russia, Other colleges and univefsities represented fessed payroll bandit, Celestino Ma- deiros, came instinctively from the WORKER yesterday, verifying the affidavit of John Ruzzamenti, to the page advertisement in the Baltimore Sum, urging tourists to come back to ing a labor study class in Marxian by the 12 members of the delegation . economics, and later realised. | include Columbia, University of Pitts-| Ups of Nicola Sacco. efféct that the latter was to be used | the Florida hotels in December. The an Civil Liberties Union | burgh, Occidental CoNege and Wash- Sacco evidently thought that it | a8 a spy against Sacco. Thus the Hides Red Cross Exposure. and the International Labor Defense | ington, University, was the only kind of an appeal that net tightens about the department “Tt ty regrettable,” ep the S are pressing the suit thru attorneys | would get across to the convicted | of justice as it loosens about Sacco ye ys the Bea- : oat ae ae { serpent _—_— Mocyow, July 9. a board Air Line, “that the good faith George Shaffer of Pittsburgh and M 2 "5 The smembere! aeNGL Ammeriountane Tete Madeiros, who, at the age of | and Vanzetti, of cértain \publie officials ia. Florid Henry A. Wilson, of Beaver, Pa. lakes Many Jobless;|Coyle Replies to His i 26, stands in the shadow of death eos pare gap se Map ae Speed the Rest dent delegation to Soviet Russia were because of his part in the Wrent- Thus Attorney Thompson also has been questioned by a high official “ 99 Bootieggers Welcome, Radicals Flagrant Falsehood’ most cordially received on our arrival ham, Mass., National Bank robbery. | tells of an interview he had with of the American Red Cross because of | Barred, at Moscow Saturday, July 2. A large pouee the late Captain William H. Proc. |‘#elr statements Mmiting the storm i Aliguippa is one of the steel towns| GARY, Ind., Oct. 18.—So-called effici- (Continued from age 1) reception committeé of students met te tis tor, in which the latter sovaaied, de- |4amage to actual conditions... It is 1] in the Pittsburgh district where boot-}eney men are put on the job in all|want to operate their mines im the |US at the station with cars and accom. rage sa ttigoet ic rad Pag tails of the manner in which the |"fortunate that calls for money for - . a - q - | par he legging 1 e and freedom of | departments of the Illinois Steel com-|gojidty organized districts. panied us to our hotel. We were con and robbery that is charged against | Sacco;Vansetti frameup had been helping those in distress were not con- speech and nblage are unknown. For some time the town police and the special Jones & Laughlin guards have been keeping an eye on the barber shop of Peter Mnuselin, one of of the arrested men, and it is charged, warning customers away from his haircutting and shaving trade. . Muselin has been having friends from the steel mills at his home of evenings reading radical literature and discussing the problems of the un- pany. The mission of these effici- ency men is to eliminate all “super- fluous” help and devise more efficient | ways of carrying on production. The steel workers, even before the | introduction of the efficiency men, | were driven at top speed. This last | measure of the steel trust will drain the last remnants of energy that re- main in the men. Puts Scores on the Street, “We must educate our membership on the necessity of the nationalization fronted with cameras on every side. Pravda and other Moscow papers have of mines, the six-hour day and the five day week and a Labor Party, in order to hold our organization to- gether, Must Clean Out Corruptionists. “Furthermore, we must have honest elections and clean out the corrup- tionists in our union who are more The new efficiency scheme as ap-|‘tiendly to the coal operators than to the miners, carried news stories about the dele- gation every day since our arrival. Russian Students Eager. The students whom we have met are not interested in the educational problems of Russia but they are eager to get all the information they can on the problems of education-in America. I have never seen so many serious forward-looking students anywhere as Sacco and Vanzetti and for which they have been convicted and sen- tenced to death. Madeiros says Sacco and Vanzetti are not involved in the crime. But Madeiros has. so far refused to give the full names of those associated with him in the crime. William G. Thompson, attorney for Sacco and Vanzetti in their de- mands for a new trial, signs the af- prepated. Proctor said that a number of the government's Identification witnes- ses who subsequently identified Sacco as doing the shooting, had previously, in his office, identifled the photograph of another man as being the murderer, PROCTOR DECLARED THAT HE WAS SATISFIED THAT THE GOVERNMENT HAD GOTTEN fined to the directions in which relief was required.” With this rebuke to John Barton Payne and the Red Cross national convention for exposing the at- tempt of the, real estate and rail- road and hotel interests to stop col- lection of funds for families whose lit- tle homes had been destroyed, be- cause it “hurt business,” the railroad makes these assertions of fact: “Qnly” Poor Hurt, organized steél workers, the police | pMed to the machine shop of the Illi-|‘° ' I have seen in the three schools in| fidavit telling, of the visit with Ma- | THE WRONG MEN, AND HE HAD - say. nols Steel company works as follows: | “Jt {8 because of my firm bellet| yoscow-which we have visited. deiros on May 20, this year, The | $9 NOTIFIED THE DisTRICT | 1 At Mismi, dwellings and other “Ham” Raids The -Place Out of the 120 men comprising the | that the @bove named principles are| o,7 delegation has visited the first | Visit was secured thru permission | ATTORNEY BEFORE THE TRIAL. | Puildings of filmsy construction were night shift, 40. were laid off, the desire of a large part of OUT ywoscow State University, the T: .| granted by Prosecuting Attorney damaged to the extent of 70 per cent. July 29 a dozen men and women membership, and because of the wide ia tind x heiahpsad trea berrtsr ER M Proctor had declined to put this | Fotos and other modern built stru Kec Rchpecathoninad nhac ebtapadtor \ be port Engineers’ College and the Timir-| Ranney. Thothpsop urged upon Ma | statement into his affidavit, but said e- were assembled in the large room at the rear of the barbershop when the police rushed in. With his hand on his revolver Chief “Ham”, as he is called, shouted that they were a lot of Bolsheviks and under arrest. Muselin, Thomas Zima and Milan Resatar, the three men now filing suit, were among several of the group who were taken to the police station —some in handcuffs. There they were questioned two hours about their ra- dical and labor views and studies and released. Veterans Have No “Reputation” Chief “Ham” sneered that he need- ed no warrants. Later when the work- ers’ attorney pressed their case, his lawyer argued that the men had no case because as “disloyal citizens” they “have no reputation to be injured by being placed under arrest.” by the foreman of the machine shop | demand for someone to stand for these that the mills are in a hurry for the sult is that the same amount of work is turned out by the four-fifths of the men formerly employed in the ma- chine shop. Goes Ford One Bettér. Henry Ford conceived the scheme of having his men turn out the same amount of work in a five-day week, as they formerly turned out in six days. Judge Gary goes him one bet- ter, and has the men speeded up witk- out allowing them one additional day issues, that I have become a candi- work given out to the men and there-|date and it should be self evident that I am im no way influenced by those who are alleged by my oppo- nent to be working to destroy the miners’ union. The fact that certain Progressives outside the union may be sympathetic or write letters to their friends inside the miners’ union does not prove that those friends need or take advice on policies that might be given. Membership Wants Action, of rest. Strike “Settled,”’ But Firms Lock Out Union Tailors in New York “The fact is that my campaign is based entirely on the desire of that part of the membership who wish that | the principles that have been endorsed |time after time at our international conventions be carried out. The prin- |ciples recommended above and in my circular of September 24, accepting miners’ | jaseff Agricultural Academy. At each of these schools we were given a warm reception by an official of the school. Altho it is vacation time, a considerable number of students are still at these schools—some helping in repair work or general construction and some doing special school work. Questions covering the whole range of education were fired at us by stu- dents in each school that we visited. They are particularly interested in the fortunes of women students, the amount of technical training given in | American schools, the attitude of | American colleges to Negro students, |the extent to which scholarships are awarded to students and the prog- ress of workers’ education. Can’t Savvy U. S. Schools. Almost every group of students whom we have met asked us if we deiros the importance of disclosing the full names of his associates in the South Braintree affair, ‘This Madeiros still steadfastly declined to do. The loyalty of the under- world, that forbids one criminal to “peach” upon another, held as ada- mant, ti es ale. | o Thompson did the talking to Ma- deiros, The sole purpose of hav- ing Sacco present, said Thompson, was that he thought that Madeiros might be willing to make a full dis- closure if he were in the actual pre- sence of the man, Sacco, in danger of suffering from the South Brain- tree affair, with which Madeiros knew Sacco had had absolutely no connection, ‘ Thompson, in his affidavit, now on file with Judge Webster Thayer, he would be obliged to make it If put on the witness stand and ex- amined orally. It is just such tes- timony as this that the Sacco-Van- zetti defense forces wish to drive into the open at the new trial that is being demanded, Of course, the alliance of the Sar- gent-Butler-Coolidge department of justice with the shoe factory-textile mill owned local prosecutors, strives just as energetically to prevent the new trial because the promised re- yelations will do more than anything else to expose before the whole American workingclass the real na- ture of the criminal capitalist sys- tem, eee Attorney Thompson also reported to Judge Thayer an original state- tures were damaged only slightly, al- tho 85 per cent of them sustained some injury. 2, ‘fThe storm fell hardest on the poorer classes of the communities” and on 125 automobile camps in the storm area. . 3.. Rehabilitation is going forward rapidly, and the principal streets of Miami and Qoral Gables now give \ little outward evidences of the storm. 4. Polo, golf, tennis and other amusement grounds will be ready for the coming season including the race tracks. With these assurances, the railroad invites the prosperous classes to re- turn to the “world’s winter play- ground.” Goodyear Company ce joteonio f NEW YORK, Oct. 18—(FP)—Two |my nomination, are based on resolu-|were from trade union schools. At| who has the power to grant a new AN og baton Ur in Legal War Over Hat and Cap Makers hundred ladies’ tailors in the fashion-ptions frequently passed by the dele-| the Transport Engineers’ College the | trial, declares that the only contri- pagent Ray trial as a govern- Finance Juggling of Chicago Holding {able carment making establishments |eates of the rank and file-at conven-|students were particularly anxious to| bution that Sacco made to his talk | Doo” tints. nag orc apa ad Bie’ Meeting Tonight| 72%. Penat-therm sna Hickson |tous: 2t is heasans ofghet-vrogrem know whether students in. America; with Madeiros was a remark, tre | firey Soir. of «tony the Wop,” “| “AKRON; Obfo, Oct. 18—On October ig V eeting onig: found the strike that was supposedly |and this only that Iam a candidate. [had the opportunity of sharing the] quently repeated by Sacco to Ma- alias Anthony Paimisani)‘as the man |19, before Judge Kenflela in common A mass meeting will be held by ell the locals of the United Cloth, Cap, Wat and Millinery Workers union of Chicago on Tuesday, October 19th, 1926, at Douglas Park Auditorium, Ogden and Kedzie Ave., at 8:00 p. m. Brother John Fitzpatrick, president of the Chicago Federation of Labor will address the meeting. The General Officers of the Interna- tional union who attended the Ameri- can Federation of Labor convention, will be in Chicago in time for this mass meeting. Brothers M. Zucker- man, secretary treasurer, I. H. Gold- berg, general executive board mem- ber, Percy Ginsburg, general organ- izer and member of the general exe- cutive board will be the speakers. settled in victory a lockout when they attempted to return, to their work benches. The employers said they had no work, tried to stall that this is not a busy season altho the society women are just stocking up for winter affairs, and some said they hadn’t heard the strike was settled. The union signed an agreement with the Couturiers Association, which includes 18 Fifth Ave. and near- by fashion shops. Edwin Goodman, president of the employers’ associa- tion, is supposed to be striving ‘to have all strikers taken back into the shops. Send In a sub today? Miners’ Front Holds Against Heavy Assaults NOTE.—This Article on Pennsyl- vania is one of a series on the bitu- minous fields distributed by The Federated Pressi) By ART SHIELDS, Federated Press. CLEAFIELD, Pa. — (FP) — The miners’ union in the 14 hill counties of central Pennsylvania that’ form Dist. 2, United Mine Workers, is stand- ing up under a terrific hammering from openshop operators. Half its members are gone of the 43,000 of early 1922, and exhausting local strikes are being carried on along many scattered fronts. But still the union is a going concern, able in the recent Clymer explosion to pay out $13,880 in benefits and donations with- out a day's delay. No established section of the union ig more exposed than Dist. 2. It lies outside the central competitive field group of western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois that usually re- ceives first consideration in the na- tional policy of the organization, Ana it Mes directly north of West Vir- ginia, in the path of the nonunion shipments from that lost field. Still the union stands as by a mir- acle after 2% years of ruthless attack that began with the lockouts that fol- lowed the Jacksonville agreement. One by one the big operators have been violating the pact until now only the New York Central interests and a string of independents are paying the union scale and checking off dues and assessments according to written pledge. Most of the remaining union mines are situated along or near the of the contract-bréaking took place, for the Erie, against the Buffalo & Susquehanna Coal Co., closely related to Rockefeller’s Davis Coal & Coke of Maryland and West Virginia and Somerset county; against the Impe- rial and Irvona companies and against many smaller concerns, John Brophy, president of the dis- trict union, saw that the only hope of inflicting costly punishment on the contract-breakers and making an ex- ample that would deter others was to use new tactics. The Labor chautauquas did, the trick, They went into the unusually isolated mountain valleys. They gave them an understanding of union prob- lems and a jovial 3 days to a week of fun that created a spirit on which the operators had not reckoned. Paul W. Puller, director of workers’ education for the district, took charge. Into dreary mining villages, half dead from unemployment, where the operators were about to start the mines in violation of the contract, Fuller went with his speakers and en- tertainers, Gay layers of dancing and song, of recitation and band mu- sic from the volunteer entertainers that Fuller: has mobilized from all over the district ndwich the speeches that tell the disaster of non- unionism; of the faithlessness of op- erators’ promises and of the union hope of nationalization and high wages. In the Buffalo & Susquehanna strikes at Sagamore, Fuller became supply preacher at the Presbyterian church and got the church choir all winter long out on the picket line, singing songs to the scabs, after a The little flurry of extra work brought “I hope the minds of the member- | ship will not be confused, that the real issues will not be covered under the smoke screen of outside influences put out by my opponents to hide their failure to strengthen and preserve our union.” = Se Coyle’s Reply to Lewis, CLEVELAND, 0., Oct. 18, — Con- cerning the statements of John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, at the Detroit convention of the American Federa- tion of Labor, in which Lewis raised @ great hue and cry against his op- posing candidate, John Brophy, and sought to connect Brophy with others whom he labelled “reds,” including Albert F. Coyle, editor of the Loco: motive Engineers’ Journal, Coyle has issued the following reply: Lewis. Lies, “Mr. Lewis’ allegations that I am in any way connected with the Com- munist Party is a flagrant falsehood, all the more contemptible because he made it knowing that I was not pres- ent to refute it. “His assertion that the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers owns the Coal River collieries or any other mines is equally untrue, I can say emphatically that this brotherhood has no connection whatever with the collieries and does not have one penny in them. Neither the brother- hood nor its bank has any investment in that company or any interest in its management. Does Not Control Delegation, “Mr, Lewis’ statement that the dele- gation of labor union executives who contemplete a visit to Europe, includ-jrecent Interborough Rapid Transit ing Russia, next summer has any con- nection with the Soviet government or Communist Party is wholly and un- qualifiedly false, government of the colleges’ with the faculty. When I told the group that students at Brookwood were active members of trade unions and that they assisted in the strikes of their locals, one comrade asked the rest of our delegation: “How long will it be before your colleges will become schoos like your comrade’s?” Again and again I saved our delegation em- barrassment by mentioning Brook- wood and other labor schools. Bridging Gap. Russian students are eager to do what they can to bridge the present gap between themselves and the American students. They would wel- come the opportunity to exchange stu- dents with American colleges. After we paid a visit to Lunacharsky, a student told me that plans were on to send a student to Brookwood and they were glad to meet a representa- tive from Brookwood and find out something about the school. When- ever possible I have assured Russian students that the few liberal students in America are interested in the prog- ress of education in the Soviet Union and regard themselves as a part of the great movement of liberal students in all countries.—Thomas L, Dabney. (Continued from page 1) retary of the Emergency Labor Con- ference; Ben Gold, manager Joint Board of the Furrigrs’ Union; Jim Walsh and Ed. Lavin, leaders of the strike; Pascal Cos§rove, former or- ganizer of the Sho¢workers’ Protec- tive Union; James Van Prat of the Amalgamated Cigar, Makers’ Union; deiros, “For Chrisf’s sake, tell him the truth!” et @ But the appeal to “the Christ” is a common one, bantered hither and thither in murky places in jails and prisons, often spat upon. It fell, with no effect upon the calloused Madeiros, who evidently thought he -had already done enough to help Sacco and Vanzetti escape the elec- trie chair. Yet the ~convicted criminal, Ma- deiros, who made death for himself so much more certain because of the aid he has already given Sacco and Vanzetti in their fight for their lives, stands out sky-high against the grovelling politician, John Gart- baldi Sargent, attorney-general of the United States government, mem- ber of Coolidge’s cabinet, who even refuses to answer letters requesting that the government reveal secrets it has in its possession that would prove the innocence of the two Italian worker victims of New Eng- land greed, ~ Yet in spite of the New England gang,—Senator Butler, Attorney- General Sargent and Cal Coolidge ‘himself—the truth is trickling thru. to the striking cloakmakers by John Coughlin, secretary of the Central Trades and Labor Assembly of New York; Morris Sigman, international president of the Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union; Ed Lavin and James Walsh, leaders of the late subway strike; Ben Gold, manager of the New York fur workers’ joint board; Ben Gitlow and J, M. Budish, editor of the Headgear Worker, and others, 20,000 Cheer Defiance of Police Rule she saw in the automobile; that Albert Frantello also thought {‘The Wop” was the man she saw; that Messrs. Wade and Hans Behrisin selected a picture of Palmisani, that the witness Bostock selected the same picture, Thus even the government’s wit- nesses had failed to identify either Sacco or Vanzetti as members of the bandit party that got the payroll after committing murder at South Braintree. But the frame-up squad of the ‘New England gang, by various methods best known to themselves, got witnesses to perjure themselves in order to secure\the conviction of Sacco and Vanzetti. The courts still have the power to make this wholesale perjury stick and to send both Sacco and Vanzetti to their doom. Only the power of protest of labor can save them. Tomorrow — Government agents selit to interview Celestino Madei- ros are told by him that his state- ment absolving Sacco and Vanzetti from any part in the South Brain- tree shooting and robbery is true. labor. The active support of some prominent trade union leaders had contributed to his choice by the city over his opponents at the last elec- tion: It is, only less directly, an is- sue for Governor Al Smith, Walker’s political backer, Mayor “Out of Town.” The demonstration was to have ended in a march to city hall to inter- view the mayor, but his absence from “Tt is likewisé pntrue that I am run-|S. Potash and F. annie Warshavsky of ning this party, since it is under the |the Furriers; Rose Wortis, George responsbile chairmanship of L, B.|Tristman and G, Taft of the L L. G. Sheppard, president of the Order of|W. U. Railway Conductors, and will include| ‘The leading strike oMfcials were de- reputable executives of several of the | tained in a settlemént conference. brotherhoods as well as of unions} Thousands of pamphlets denouncing affiliated with the A, F. lL. Governor Smith as a strikebreaker Lewis on the Defensive, were distributed, “While I have no right or desire| A remarkable feature of the affair to comment in any way on the in-{Was the movement of five thousand ternal polities of the A. F. of L, since|from the square to the offices of the the Brotherhood of Locomotive En-|Frethelt and DAILY WORKER sing- gineers is not connected with that or-|ing the International and other mili- ganization, {t is perfectly obvious that | tant songs, where an enthusiastic and Mr, Lewis’ violent and untruthful at-]spontaneous demonstration was con- tack was motivated by partisan rea-|ducted, This was done despite the aons to bolster up his own political] rather mild attempts of the police to was cheered to the echo by an im- mense audience that packed the 17th street plaza of Union Square Park in the heart of the city. This demonstration, pledging anew the support of the other trade union- ists of New York, had been called by the emergency committee, selected at a recent conference of the central trades officers and leaders of more than sixty local unions, for the pur- pose of aiding the 40,000 striking cloakmakers, Adopt Protest to Walker, Police brutality was under a sharp fire as well as Justice Guy's injunc- tion against picketing. The mass ar- rests of strikers, sometimes amount the city caused that part of the pro- gram to be withdrawn, J At the close of the mass meeting, strike leaders resumed conferences with the representatives of the Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers’ Indus- trial Council. These conferences con- tinued thru the afternoon and talk of an early settlement of the strike has been given impetus by the additional evidence that the labor movement is standing firmly behind the cloakmak- ers and has adopted the policy of nullification of the injunction on which the employers depended, Scranton Plumbers Get $10 Day, ulously avoid taking any part what- By ART SHIELDS, Federated Press. This mass indictment of Mayor ment. pleas court, the common stockholders and the officials of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company will begin a battle over the future of the company. The question to be determined is, whether the re-financing plans of the Goodyear Company made in 1921 are valid. Suits ‘that were begun by Laura Weiss and which attacked the legal- ity of the re-financing plan are to be re-opened. At that time the manage- ment of Goodyear was taken out of the hands of stockholders and put into the control of bankers who fur- nished capital when Goodyear was bady in need of it. A few days ago, Paul Litchfield, president of the Goodyear Company, offered a compromise plan whereby $50,000,000 worth of bonds maturing in 1941, and bearing 8% interest, would be converted into bonds matur- ing in 1956 and bearing 5%% interest. Frank Seiberling, chairman of the voting trustees, and their spokesman —and also head of the Seiberling Rubber and Tire Company; a compet- ing concérn—led the assault that brought about the rejection of the offer, i Send The DAILY WORKER for ons ——<$zna BISHOP BROWN'S NEW ROOK “My Heresy” The autobiograhy of an idea. % Brown's book will do much to oben the minds of those who still accept the doctrings of supernatural- ism. It will help t i i ‘here are brisk local strikes against | by thg) British lockout cannot last. |ever in a bitter political contest that] NEW YORK, Gét. 18.—Disregard | Walker's police is a challenge to the ; the Peabody Coal Co, that operates | But the union will survive if possible. |is rending another organization.” i injunctions! ore ‘This message | mayor's claims to be a friend of |: BUILD THE DAILY WITH A SUB. 4 or = main line of the Pennsylvania in the | judge enjoined conventional picketing. |fortunes in his own organization, move the crowd on, , ing to hundreds a day, was flercely| SCRANTON, Pa., Oct, 18,--Scran- » stretch that connects Altoona and| ‘Phe problem is to hold till the expi-| “I am confident that I speak with %; Sie attacked by all the speakers and the|ton union plumbers have won their rl Johnstown, North are the large | ration of the Jacksonville agreement |the approval of the Brotherhood of Defy Injunctions Is mass meeting adopted a formal pro-| increase of 50 cents a day, making ‘ mountain fields running towards the/ Apri) 1 promises a more effective |Locomotive Engineers when I say test to be lodged before Mayor Walker |their scale $10 daily. Sheet metal f New York state line and here most/ ght than possible by local strikes.|that this organization would scrup- Appealto Workers on his return to the city. ‘ | workers will soon sign a new agree-