The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 19, 1927, Page 6

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Paze Six Alaska’s Fish Rush THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1927 ° ° ° | LOST. AT SEA A Street in a Mining a | oe J be : . 2 Means Starvation | Village 33 | = By BILL O’HANAHAN. | some wage slave arived back in Seat- By VERA BUCH. on his fingers. “Me, my wife Mary, During spring months of the | tle with a few hundred dollars he will The hot evening settles down after) my four kids, Frank, Anna, Nick, Joe i year in round ttle many|tell you he worked long hours and the sweltering day. The sun is low) —and you, you four lazy boarders, st workers pre themselves to in-| suffered terrible from the cold weath- Pie re courage en See ee up at RY, beer,—I_ got vade Al s out with some ;er, heist a ete REG. Withee mee ce A Ripe bag ae ie a a ri ie pois Li Irie Hokia thin tava the wronteis to in which they simmered all day. The | ProsKa’s wife Mary comes in front ake. Thou-| Alaska every year are not so much mnppes hour is past, and now. the | the porch. She is young and hand- = pped from)|to depend upon and some of them | aden <n Na era lbdabd ait ees Him, robust and straight. ieee ge OS itaiecee te wiadin fovk teems with new life. The miners’) She carries in a huge armful of nose t | have a hard time trying to make p ai | * : is shacks have emptied upon the gravel| clothes; the sweat streams from her e heavens that | on their return, One worker that Wha GoNal ey . Rate : 4 : : roadbed their swarms of ragged,|face. She puts the clothes on the r the Alaska | made the trip this year said the meals | barefooted, whooping children, and| basket that is already overflowi e terrible and the bunks that they upon the front door-steps ‘their with the days wantin. “My God, I a ; had KS sleep ae would mare fellow weary, sweating adults. Now and! work hard today!” she exclaims, fan- z Tt have a long so lousy as a scratched ae coo so then a breeze wanders down the|ning her face with her apron, = out iys looking | bird. He was a happy fellow when | street, faintly. Everybody relaxes “What I keep you in my house for, or ¢ © harvest from during | his feet touched the Sea sho ‘ inie it. ¢ eee es ‘ ‘ ‘ f toh t f luring | his feet touched the Seattle shore and then, tries to drink it in... but be-/ woman?” her husband jokes with the son and the fish workers} his pipe dream of fishing in wonder- fore they can catch it, it is gone her, gently smiling “Only wash that travel to the north are | ful Alaska didn’t get him any further again. \ clothes for me, that’s all!” begin hould | way from starvation, and he felt like At the end of the street the col-| Mary laughs, This aoa not bother give up re is any- | going out “gunning” for the one that jliery. Towering into the sky, ten|her. She is her husband’s partner, gl thing f : aving for a got him to sien up for this unfruitful stories high, the breaker rears its|not his slave. She goes with him to th section of the country. | trip. Ba ad blackened, crazy structure. Upon the| his meetings; reads his books. She contact witt 3 All the Seattle capitalist dope sheets chute leading down to the ground,| was with him in Jugo-Slavia, comin; i have already , |arve spreading the news around in their now and then a miner appears, black|to America, in the soft-coal, ted w very few ch to show for their | papers about the wonderful oportun- | with soot, fresh from the bowels of| here. She will be with him where- M long hour ery on the briny s that are open to the workers iat the earth, with the lamp on his head| ever the Revolution takes them. Is ar deep. care to fish wher. the ice bergs melt still burning. Rythmie and loud as/it his fault that she must wear her- 7 In pas workers return- jn Alaska and the good wages that the sea, the breaker throbs and roars! Self out with housework?—That is ing had but this year it/are paid the fisherman. The well with the crushing of the coal. Here|the woman’s life. The women must is far differ the big salmon] paid kept-press prints anything to| i , 2 : ‘ too the culm-heap spreads its black| fight, the class-struggle too; like in runs that were expected fell below| make the workers think that they | A ae ue pera Blane named after the woman pousen gee pictured above, failed to reach its goal in and desolate mountain, cutting off| Russia, here too, they must make redictions, and the workers in gen-|are missing something when they le San: Prancisco-Hawall: air race, the horizon, like the end of the world.| themselves a better life. That is PI 4 | eral were at a big loss in their earn-|don't ship to Alaska to be commer-| - The children are scampering on it, Mary’s philosophy. SC ings. The alts they obtained this | cialized by the fish packers that are | like little gnomes, outlined against; Outside, on the broken front steps ti year will awaken them that they|in control there. ] acO eC ana er the sky. Around the colliery, the|of their house, hangs Joe, a four- a won’t be so anxious to sign on the| In the east they tell you to come| 9 9 little swarming mine village clusters) year old, Mary’s youngest. His bare o dotted line to ship up north again | west, while in the west they want the | as though dependently, always in the teet have been scrubbed clean with m next year, when the fishing companies | workers to go east but the same rot- : “a ei | shadow of that mine which gave it| soap; he is not supposed to get them Ww put out their net promising the work-|ten conditions exist in both places. | Gy a Progressive Worker.) the union spirit of the rest of the) not be imagined that when we say| birth, yet whose destiny it too, can|dirty again before bed-time. The a ers good pay to go to Alaska on their|Even the employment sharks in this| It is already twenty months since workers. These, militant union men that this union has a steady yearly) hold in its power. Now and then aj street, however, is a great tempta- F boats to catch some of the deep sea/city are shipping workers out every|Shiplacoff has become manager of|Wwere suspended so that the will and| income of $130,000 we talk fiction. belated miner comes from work, leay-| tion,—out there, the boys are play- S variety to reap a profit for the fish|day to the east for work and when |the Pocketbook Workers’ Union. sentiment of the membership voiced| In the union’s journal of December,| ing the first shift, bent, soot-covered, | ing. wa companies who have made millions of | they arrive the wage slaves find the| It is twenty months since Wolinsky |by these union fighters should not be} 1925, we find the following report his dinner pail in his hand, his lamp! Next door, Marion, pretty, fifteen- re dollar from the worker’s fishing ef-|same old method of slavery dealt out | was forced out of office, not by those |heard at the membership meeting. - | given by the membership committee: | upon his head. 4 Z year-old Marion sits sulking. Her b forts. } , |to them there. So back to Seattle, the heading the administration, but by Hold-up Tax. | “Qur membership is growing. In, Nearest the colliery is Proska’s | beau did not come tonight. All for Coin Workers’ Blood. worker hits minus the fee he paid|an outside investigation committee.| Enormous sums of money are be-|the year 1924 we enrolled 647 new heures proses ne miner different | nothing are her white, powdered q Suffering hardship from cold/for the job and his railroad fare./The members of the Pocketbook|ing spent to keep up a hierarchy of|members in our New York organiza- ith hi . ae e is sitting now | cheeks, her high heeled slippers, her weather with pow: accommodations |It’s a great life if you don’t weaken, | Workers’ Union thought, though the “powerful characters” to terrorize tion. The initiation fees of all mewn in he Eoeniere around the slim, soft body. Marion is a worker st for the fisherman it is not such an | but the way the workers here are so | progressive workers warned them to| the members, to block them from | applicants for the year 1924 amount-) :* hee ARES We ek nee He in a silk mill for seven dollars a te easy life veling to Alaska to make | willing to pay a dollar and a half for|the contrary, that with the absence of every form of resistance. jed to $13,736. A considerable sum te te ay io 2 ne ee 5 18) week. When you work like that, it d a few dollars for themselves. The|a job, it serves them right to fall for| Wolinsky they would be able to! Shiplacoff’s administration was so | indeed.” j j ba Se ory Nese hers ee ic is a big disappointment if your beau seale of wages that is paid the work-| the line of bunk that the employment | breathe freely. The progressive work-| certain of having the membership re-| Again. “The membership commit- Ae Shae iealist Boi eee 1S) does not show up on his night. Now a ers is getting less ev year and if! agency hands out to them. jers kept on stating that it was not (duced to total helplessness that it had|tee of the New York organization | 10 man Psi: Heist vadlistel she sits in the heat and trundles a r ‘enough that Wolinsky should go from) the nerve to propose a $60 tax, which was-also very active in 1925. For) ik the eee hs Bigas\h ” ae white, skinny, squirming baby. This th — — —————_—————yf|the union but that the whole clique|means a quarter of a million dollars the last eleven months we enrolled) ™ "0° mines sooner does he get a| vy ncr, ster the youngest of a brood Ww “ oy Agnineguemnriaemepenarnenr sep must go with them. to be taken from the members’ pock-|617 new members. The initiation 50) tan he is fired, driven ae e of eleven. A funny little baby, grimy Current vents By T. J. O’FLAHE | But unfortunately the clique did/ets. To think of the insolence of a/fees in’ all these cases amounted to/j,, ¢, post. He Bien. get up at ue and damp. and sickly, but) smiling st Sea jremain in office. It learned the trick labor leader to face workers with) $12,536.” Using these figures as a) in the morning now to reach the job nevertheless with an endearing little —— Reser na (abt er Sree oe eee eee ee of forcing itself upon the member-|such a mad tax proposition. basis we can safely say that the) that he has, far from this village. All ieee _ There ate plenty of babies h (Continued from Page One) HE bomb that partially wrecked ship. There were times when the Pock-| Pocketbook Workers’ Union has an/this Proska takes as a matter of one a, ate: two, of schein old ¢ Res apes agli heir ti the home of one of the jurors in For twenty months Shiplacoff has|etbook Workers’ Union carried on or-|income from initiation fees alone course. He is a soldier in the class- ee qeanlant c ree ans thie, AES rb find the socialists devoting their a the Sacco and Vanzetti case in Bos-| 2&? the mouthpiece of this irrespon-| ganization work. In. those days it/ amounting to $13,000 per year. | struggle,—must not a soldier fight? fe ah ene eat ae It is too hot le the See Galton is made the excuse for a tirade |Sible group, trying to break the back-/must be remembered the dues rate, We shall be most conservative; Where and when the struggle calls! pated bi rie : Mer oe aS, sea | he C Ee oe bekait oe eee aeainat the defense movement. Gov- | Pone Of koe memabaraliiy. Phere ak a ser auUbleeeemuen ean Mow. here SUN We /Bay tune ug ieiacthtanidel ga is ready and will go. All this) eaiaeee lite, in te ainiierviliage the ts 1 “3 7 : |been twenty months of misleading|were critical moments wh this| of that union is 6,000; 4,000 mechan-} shi i is fa an : ; Ck - ym -ow{ernor Alvan T. Fuller, praises the | © r iz 2 ca! 0. 8 en is | 000; 4,! h | shines out in his face, and also a a and Var | as rae sa fon mentermabig Hie vauty” and|™isrepresentation and ruthless sup-|union faced the outcome of negotia-|ics and 2,000 helpers and unskilled} touch of gentleness and tenderness, i uae ie ae fi a wm onkey wrench into the | plainly intimates his belief that sym-|P*ession of the membership. tions with the employers. , But wager | NOENEER: Mechanics pay forty cents} that comes tc him from his love of |home, quickly begotten, easily snuffed 1 ninery. oie th |pathizers for the doomed men were| Lined Up With Woll. in those times was such tax ever Bros| Bes week in dues, helpers 35 cents, his wife, Mary, and their four little} out, : Mee ek _|responsible for the outrage. The| Search however hard we may, we posed. bis | unskilled 30 cents. Figuring the dues | children. Twilight brings no 1 4 ) New York World of last Tues- blast. was also made the excuse for|cannot find a single act cotamitted The “organization” work carriedjincome upon a yearly basis, we see| All these miners came here recently | the das sky nines ete eal ; contained statements by Hey-|jnnosing a six months’ jail sentence|by this administration that should|on at present is not even worth men-| that the union receives yearly $83,200) from the soft-coal country. They had, over the village. The gas lamps are wood Broun, uipaers why he pac on Powers Hapgood for delivering a|Point to the welfare of the member. tioning. At present the union is two) from batman eae She fe enough of it there. After a year of | lighted on the strect. In their circle write for that paper and) oeoch that would not be out of place;Ship. Let us for a moment ignore|years before negotiations for a new|ers, $15,6 rom unskilled workers.| starvation, a year of living on “re-|the children play, the girls and fel- é Pulitzer, eae, ebay in a Quaker Sunday school. There is’ Shiplacoff’s connections with the Sig-|agreement. Why a tax? The side if we add together all the dues! lief”--on two dollars a week credit! lows flirt. : . ? orld was unable to accept|no doubt in my mind that the bomb-|man, Woll and McGrady bunch—-a|/swer is that the only attraction alincome and initiation fee we have: | for families of eight and ten—they Up the street, is a place known in oO 1 defense 0° Saceo}ings are part of a concerted conspira-/Toup whose reputation as labor fak-|wnion has for leaders such as Shipla-| $83,200 jfinally pooled their few resources, popular parlance asa “house.” Out- st Broun’s statement WARE | oy on the part of the enemy designed €?S and union breakers is admitted|coff and his kind is a big treasu: 18,200 took their children—there was noth-| side, just a cottage, a little bigger Vv uk. What could he pro ae : to injure the two victims of capitalist by every honest and class-conscious| With great sums of money at his dis- 15,600 ae eine {0 spate end came here to| and better looking than the others. s) capitalist paper except this kind of | injustice, \|worker. Let us see what’s doing in|posal he can play the rich uncle in Initiation fees 13,000 | the anthracite. as it any better| Inside, a bar-room, with drinks go- b treatment? Surely nobody with any | J ees a the packétbook ‘shops, the Jewish labor movement. The Sig-| Siew ie pene They ae a HUE suey ing fast and furious on this hot night; sense of” realism could hope that aj “ aes | Systematically and without any in-}mans and the Beckermans played|Total income per year - $130,000 took up again here the daily struggle | upstairs, many rooms with the shades r of the capitalist system | ee ob ise See that the «orference of the union representa-|their game quite well when they made | hoy Disks eark : that is all the life of the workers: the | always pulled down. Here the young G a York World would per- ah camile pripenlan heer goumeke ives the employers are reducing the|Shiplacoff the head of all the union ie aes Reece of| struggle to make a living, and the| fellows come as thick as the night whit its star writers to criticise in a ipa 4 “TS: | wages of the weck workers to a star-|breakers. But Shiplacoff can hold. is union has a steady | | struggle against the boss. Now they | moths that swarm around the street- nr i ; They want to discourage others who 8 * P | $180,000 per year. These figures are} talk b he ! fs ti damaging w the courts, which OF0 || Ti che! be inched: Ges eallowe ithe hard | Vation minimum. It is a well knownjhis own among those union breakers) : 5 nee. aaneidernic @ the oe ha wa} aout, bie unemployment lamps. Booze and vice .. + after T the most sensitive organs of the capi-| 444 of sacrifice for their class But | fact that the minimum wage for the|by having in the back of him a big fact sunt. the administration Siatens| sage See eer ne ar vie a seers Mee eee ae talist government. aie + ee lweek workers teed by the/|treasury. Otherwise he is a fail . ; . ‘amp death-threatening, reary 8 the official leaders of the trade union SuSteneer Wy bhe y bales eth I bersh: £ 7,000 in-| | mi " ‘ qi | t i all : evGa ae tok Bitdaleas to have a membership of 7, i ‘Last week I went to Bethlehem,”| mine; an hour of light and excite- ve i |movement are supposed to stand|@&teement is generally becoming the alte dicaretlig jase stead as it is being figured here, on-| one of them was sayin, ainfull t i : HE World's action: in the Broun| guard over the interests of the work-|™marimum. There is a silent: agrée- Plays Upon Sentiments. “ly 6,000. 1 fc |@delebig. the (Iglieh: words’ HERG vaeetor ‘laa te ee yee r case should be an object lesson to| ers and to protect the workers’ lead- |e ae Ae: SON ere not to/ Shiplacoff’s administration planned| The union has a regular expénse|for job in steel mill. There they lay|are like a long, slow night. An old u those who still prate about free|¢rs from the vengeance of their class |¢ngage a worker without the permis-/¢o take the membership by surprise, such as rent, salaries of the office off men too, take on only Mexicans, man totters out of the saloon door, § speech in the United States. There! enemies. j Sane joee ¢ ae Heaney employer. Should) tm the tax proposal they also included | workers, salaries of the officials and| terrible low wages. I go to Pitts-| snickering senselessly. Everybody ean be no such thing as free speech} a a ha er ne i a @ ralse|the proposition of buying a home for| minor expenses, amounting to $60,-|burgh,—same thing. Those they lay| laughs as he staggers home down the in any country .where class rule | YET during those long seven years | 0 een i ae _ to him, he soon/the union. Shiplacoff relied too much| 000 per year, ‘| off, they pick them up and take for| street, Never mind, he will be up b exists. F eech exists only for that Sacco and Vanzetti have been ne ieaeont E a jen td in the/ypon the workers’ sentiments. What| If we subtract 60,000 from 130,-| scabs to soft coal. I think, bosses,|again tomorrow, ready for work 0 3 capiti standing in the shadow of the death | aneen Bie ree and the brave. He|worker does not want a home? But/000 there remains $70,000. In other| they lay us off here fof this, keep; when at five o'clock the colliery it | chamber the bureaucrats of the Amer-|™ust either go back to his old place,| for the home only $35,000 are need-| words $70,000 remains every year,| US from help’ soft-coal strike, break | sounds its five long-drawn, deep- would| ican Federation of Labor have only we wey for Niet for another job./ed, Why propose a quarter of a mil- part of which goes for organization!‘ Up sooner:” ; | throated whistles. g rkers of | given the merest lip service to the pone has vai ats os lion dollars ? . purposes and the rest for the sav- aoe kids him along a little. Slowly sleep comes to quiet the ec In Russia the; movement for their liberation. Wishy-|tor weeks, he gives up the idea of a/ ‘The workers sensed the lie imme-|ings fund. But what do we'see. It is) ¥°% Sot nothing to worry, you| teeming warm proletarian life. The ‘ ts are the ruling] Washy, liberals and anarchistic ele-|Taise and contents himself with his! diately. At first, when the members| known that during Shiplacoff’s ad- single fellow,” he says with his soft colliery too ceases its heavy throb- : classes just as here the ruling classes| ™ents connected with the parce vans Beye wages. The officials knoW|jearned of this tax proposition, they| ministration no organization of any| S!Vie accent, smoothing off the cor-|bing; there is sudden silence as are the big, medium and little capi- aot defense placed more reliance on| that but do nothing to put a stop to/simply jeered at Shiplacoff and £0OK Inipowtande: was accomoliahed? Can} Nee of the words. “You only got; though the pulse of the village had c talists. Those who want a free press | CTY and Riieetrasta passed by | this sort of black listing. the whole proposition as a joke. The|a union of that size, even if it were pees for one, when | you no work,| stopped. All is still and sleep pre- with which to plead the cause of the|® Convention of the 2 F. of L. and Piece Worker Hit. first meeting called for the consider-|busy day, and night organizing the| ™® | 8°t worry for six.” He counts|pares for a new day of struggle. r oppressed should support The DAILY Heo ene ec or justice see The piece worker, barring the/ation of the tax question was a fail-|industry, and it is admitted by the "e Say, 4 WORKER and stop beating their] (1° cOPUe te press pian on 2 mighty /small framers section whose work|ure. Another meeting was. called,| administration that 80 per cent of the| NEWS FROM THE U. S. S. R. 4 chests over the intolerance of the|j 10) The cacitallte vay tele. hee on so easily be bought or con-|this time in Cooper Union. The ad-jindustry is already organized, spend| 2 : it f ‘2 pr | economical ? | tation. i t E bombs that are being hurled so rete sce [Seaton vated foucu asd aed fancy leather goods workers! When Shiplacoff came to office! Work in fa ail the Artema of ail Boake seeneties . the Ukraine: i romiscuously nowadays are sur- = : aati Rite hadith Stlth ayn Be a eirjhaven’t gone crazy -yet, proposed) there was in the treasury, according! Electric Power Stati Q ‘ . ah aoe th aide asauey that | THE Socialist-Lebor Party of Boston | backs to the wall and must choose through one of their agents to break|to the accountant’s report found in| is making ond Ecole alsa ot til lobe ee. the Uhigiay reminds one forcibly of the Wall|# which refused the use of its per-| °° of two things: Work for -prices! up the question in two. The question! the same journal, $128,000.66. Now) will supply power to the Rostov Dis-| were in the Russian langua: ona cs Street bomb explosion. Then the rea}| mit on Boston Common to speakers | the employers offer them or walk the! of buying a building, the administra-|only $102,000 is left in the treasury. | trict. The construction of the iron and enly 3 per cent inthe Uk sini x culprit was never apprehended, tho|fer Sacco and Vanzetti, is quite street. It does not mean that the tion suggested, should be discussed In other words not only was the twice | concrete building js nearing comple-| cording to leter fi "EBs gall me c the blast was made the excuse for a| Pleased because its speaker was al-| Manufacturers give up their business independently of the tax proposition. $70,000 spent since Shiplacoff is man-| tion. The electric and metallurgical! tion of books in Ulrainian is Rill ad L regular reign of terror against radi-| lowed to proceed without interfer- when bee prices are not accepted. | Whether the members voted down ager, for god knows what but a slice | equipments are produced in Soviet | creasing. é eal workers. The best guess as to| ence by the police, who broke up ihe aay a wet pepshera barb be balling: propomtot because they 0+ $26,000 was cut from the treasury. | factories, Ss ye eighise : the cause of that catastrophe is that| Meetings of the Sacco and Vanzetti contrachng, Cespite the |learned ‘the building is tls former Lo- On top of that there was a furriers’| The station will cost 10.500,000| USSR Delegati i 4 é a Dupont powder wagon carrying ex- pee Gunung wie on permits] fact Sahin bine popes BOER bho al Bo ie apy other eae ae and c.oakmakers’ tax amounting to! roubles and will be ready in 1989, LOA Cee Co. t losives met with an accident with|furnished by the Workers’ (Com-) tice during a time when their work-jfact is that the members voted! $59,000. Only $10,000 of this sum * # | i is ; ‘ a ERicadtrous results. In fact one|™unist) Party and the Socialist Party. |€vs are not fully employed. jagainst buying a building at the pres- already collected was given to the} Soviet ay Pl glenn ono } evening paper in its first edition af-|The Weekly People commenting on) | Aided Seab Nests. jent time. But such difficulties the |c\zikers, The: etionalisad oll” tnduskig: Gan (eobntnes” uniting $0" millone: ah oe ee ; the incident says: “....there was not| Shiplacoff may boast that dozens|chairman of the union can easily sur- What was d ith ei : La ld ety 4 50 millions share- : ter the bl ried a story attribut- ‘ A Fatt vadetahs § at was done with the other $49,-/j,00n restored to the pre-war level and holders ‘will be held in Stockhol 1 ic ing the accident to the dynamite com- the slightest attempt to interfere|of scab nests were organized during) mount. He simply announced a ma-'000? On what did Shiplacoff spend) jy. G tuft tien Lite Ran tani the (the middle of A Be tia sinc nati ( any’s wagon. Later editions killed| With the political meeting scheduled |his administration. The results of| jority in favor of the clique. The’ the remaining sum of $206,000? Can)... roznieft has even doubled. the’ ™ The. BOs ena R Ae Auli hate . in regular order by the Socialist La-|such organization work should serve|members on the other hand do not he explain t to an impartial in- i fra ENR eben kN: sabe (atatrae: she Baie have t 3 ; bor Party, which Proves again the | as a check upon the buying and con- recognize the decision and are deter- | vestigation committee? Think of this toe Ste ue a eet oe se tated) They vill bases Of: oF Bs ag correctness of our position. This | tracting evil. But those workers who; mined to fight for a reconsideration outrage; $206,000 squandered by | ait ft fa ; mate | ; fo eo see cas C N the eve of the first date set for) is a new one even for the Weekly |have suffered from this evil for the! of this question at the next mem- Shiplacoff’s administration and now /©°st..°©. Production and wholesale) : " ‘ ‘ Pp i OW | price Soviet Oil Good Quali 1 the electrocution of Sacco and} People. If police approval can be|last few years are still suffering.|bership meeting when the tax ques-'it comes for another hor OF 6 nice ce Soviet Oil ‘are lower: than --Good: Quality. of (Grain. i Odemes Vanzetti, explosions occured in two|t#ken as proof of the correctness of|Why? Because these “organized”, tion will be considered | million dollars qmamer Of & those of other countries: including the ; District, . New York subways. The newspapers| the position of a workingclass or-|scab nests remain scab nests with his 2 beat i United States. In spite of the fact that the harvest Sithadtate y attributed the blasts to|zanization, then the leadevshio ofl garhtlhatnrs Goh: conditions “never pate es Financial Rer lg : a ' But it seems the members of that | : ian, eit ay vin the Odessa District isynot yet end- t sympathizers with the, doomed work-| Woll, Green, Frayne and Sigman, is|entered there and never will as long mois 4 ae ah is ute ¢ union have not lost their heads. Ship-| Capital Investments in the Ukraine, | ¢d, new grain is already being gather- i ; Nobody but a lunatic would ex-| Correct, even more so than that of|as a union has euch irresponsible mY at not only a sixty dollars tax lacoff will learn this time that a| Preliminary figures show that 285|¢d. The Selskosoyus has Bik hat. xiything ould te sgaived the social-patriotic S. L.‘P. | Thadekohipaniirescianitistisere? itoyr ut even a sixty cents tax is a crime | union is not a gold mine for corrupt: million roubles will be invested this bought 50,000 poods of new wheat. € Petaiitis persecuted must by: jentare fil SESS | chat the phanertledderahip. will do against the membership. Do the otticlals. |year in Ukrainian industry as com- The quality is excellent. dising the lives of other innocent Bar Carpenters From Emblem. |nothing to prevent them from buying kia ey obs ine rai be oh The. pernbery, Dave Hot eat thelr! pared Srieh ed reli on HouNien saat ; Seite with’ Hombs.. Tndbed Iesaw-|. WASHINGTON. Aug. 16) CFE)... (AE eeeeactiiegts anbecbanlehi pre’ isan th eae dane ith bee eneh ‘ast word yet about this unheard of! year, The biggest investments are Foster High School Militarism. ing as we do the history of detective| Sole use of the Sonimibass’ and square duced in scab nests at the expense of year in and year Sat? ye The ei Pk it May ea mas 3 ee a pany era ERICA WASHINGTON, Aug 18, (FP. — agencies in the United States there|as an emblem is awarded the Masonic | Starving the “inside” workers, Pocketbook Workers’ Union has a evident that this time “the acute rc CS he mie iat Meh ihe Jn abs is reason to believe that all those| Order in a patent office ruling against Suspends Militants. steady yearly income from dues and |trati 1 Pe ott Sau Meee ee m : é 4 - ration r-esti i bombings are the work of detective|the Brotherhood of Carpenters and| Dozens of workers—honest con- fnitiatlon eee of about $130,000. foree. Nothing Shy e gitg nwa inion o Ring heaps 2,287 kiss roe A pte Aeesideanra lc Ty agencies and are designed to poison| Joiners. The Brotherhood’s Florida |scientious union men were suspended,|Where does this money go to? The oh ‘permit bee Tee cenmnenipnt Haye basi aa od the minds of the masses against Sac- fruit farms have been using deprived of their union rights and members slave for that money. Have tion of the union finances by an im- partial committee will satisfy the| with hooks were published in the Ukraine total circulation of 9,715,000 “honor high schools” for 1927. co and Vanzetti and render the task|bels as typical of the rs’ |privileges, so that the bosses may|th right to know what purpose|membership, If Shiplacoff uring: second quarter, idence ae eae 7 banat of saving them more difficult, union in merchandising their . |use their victims as a means to oun this fn or te lg Tass to? fer nes paoe geng egy y rtrd at te sabe of Bue published in the | /soldierly ‘iscoline oe f

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