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Page Iwo THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1927 Striking Colorado COMPANY SHERIFF Mayor of Chicago REVOLT OF SMALL Bankers’ Convention Miners Protest to PROCLAIMS RIOT Drafts Lirarians TOBACCOFARMERS Admits Depositors Galles; Hit Cons! WHENEVER ASKED To Burn the Books GROWING RAPIDLY n Page One) cations and (Continued cause internati Makes Superintendent) lead to their His Deputy “Far Bette letter decle By A. S. Mexice fe AURORA, Pa. As an ported than t human and de: ing condi to endure xample of the a pany owned town and county officials have been forced in the mining regions of Pennsyl- mining towns of Colorado.” vania, the following proclamation The I. W. W. expresses itself as| might be considered: | believing “Your Excellency to be the|«proclamation by the Sheriff of pay highly placed official in state | Washington County, Commonwealth | power on the N ican conti- | of Pennayivanta.! | nent ha “ and the we Ignore Consul’s The only request Mexican president is fhe Mexican ar to] éease his activitie aker. | A | > 8000 or| more e I. W. W. led walkout fields are of cording to the ignored the consv and U.S. Supreme Court “Whereas, I, Ody C. Abbott, Sheriff Washington County, have been ied by citizens, industrial cor- porations and employers, that i tain mining communities of Washing- ton County there has been serious rioting, shooting and disturbances of the peace, threatening the safety of life, libert of and property .. .” These are the opening lines of the sheriff proclamation posted up at the Aurora mine of the Coke and Coal Company at Avella, Washington County, Pa., at the sta- tion and on the telegraph poles and all along the high stockade of raw yellow boards sawed off to points that shuts in the mine and the scab CHICAGO, Ot.c Hale Thompsor Mayor William Big Protest Meeting at ar against Great | ¥ Britain continued to hum on four def-) Winston Salem, e nite fronts toda With Napoleonic | vigor, Chicago’s mayor stalked at the} ad of his legions and aimed straight!94_The farmers’ revolt against the or the lion’s jaws. Meanwhile noth-|iobacco trust continues. Thirty-five |ing is being done to relieve a growing| hundred growers assembled in the |FS in banks during the last seven tension of unemployment in Chicago,| Liberty Warehouse in Winston Salem which even Thompson’s antics do not|foy a showdown with the Big Five hide. | Tobacco buyers who had been invited Carl B. Roden, head of the Chieago|to attend and explain why prices to Public Library and president of the|the farmers had been cut in half in| American Library Association, nounced he would give Mayor Thomp- an-|view of the record profits the trust WINSTON SALEM, N.C. (FP) Oct. | n cer-| Duquesne | | barracks. “Friend of Labor.” | It is said that Sheriff Ody C. Ab- |bott was elected sheriff of Washing- | ton county as a “friend of labor”. His “Decision Doubling Utilities Extortion jexample of how the “rewarding aie: Setneae, Hie ae ~.|friends of labor” policy works out. WASHINGTON, Oct... 24. — The| Abbott’s proclamation goes far supreme ing the “reproduction cost new” the ory of valuing public utilities for rate court's action in establish-| beyond the general formal proclama- tion issued by sheriffs in other coun- | strike proclamation is an interesting | |son every assistance in his drive to | purge the library of unpatriotic texts. | Ungrateful to McAndrew. The trial of William .McAndrew, suspended superintendent of schools, who is accused of furthering” pro- British influences in the schools, will be resumed today with Congressman |John J. Gorman in the role of chief prosecution witness. Gorman was ap- pointed by Mayor Thompson to in- vestigate the suspected school history | books. MeAndrew is as reactionary |as Thompson but belongs to another business group. Will Burn Books. Mayor Thompson today instructed | Frederick Rex, municipal reference | librarian, to clear his files of all pro- | British texts. | A similar drive, under the personal direction of U. J. “Sport” Herrmann, is in full blast at the main public rary and its branches. All of the |books he doesn’t like Mayor Thomp- son says, will be gathered together and taken to the lakefront where they | will be burned with fitting ceremonies. | made last year. | This is the second big mass protest of the farmers in a week. These to- bacco growers of the Piedmont are in great distress and many of them will |be sold out for taxes in the coming winter and driven to the wage earn- Jers’ life in the cities. Tobacco is the | money crop in this region. The sales jof Bright Leaf weed bring the credit |for the flour and groceries to carry the farmers’ family through the| winter; they bring the shoes for his school children and the fertilizers this exhausting crop requires. In poverty at best the farmers face disaster with their tobacco selling for only half to three-quarters of the cost of produc- tion, | Trusts Boycott Meeting. the Big Five came to the meeting. |Leggitt Myers, the Imperial, and the Export companies failed to answer; American Tobacco Co. said the mat- ter had been referred to its New York | headquarters; R. J. Reynolds & Co., makers of Camels and kings of Wins- ton Salem, promised vaguely to meet a committee of the growers at a later | But not a single representative of making purposes will saddle a bur-| den of billions of dollars upon the | American public if maintained in fu- | ture valuation Senator George | id today. production cost new” theory is to allow a public utility high enough | rates to guarantee a specific income | upon a fictitious property value, es- timated to be the cost of producing the utility brand new. Such a valua- tion, he explained, if placed upon | American railroads, would enable them to double their present freight | and passenger rates from one end of | the country to the other. | Anxious To Stop Resolution. Norris proposed legislation to for- bid use of the theory in fixing rates, despite the supreme court’s decision in the Indianapolis waterworks case. He admitted though that such legisla- tion might be held unconstitutional. “The only remedy then will be for the national and local governments fo own and operate railroads, water- works, gas companies, electric light plants and street car companies,” Nor- ris declared. “It will force govern- ment ownership or it will provoke a revolution.” Taft & Co. Take Rest. WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.—The su- preme court today announced a recess from October 21 to November 21. BUY THE DAILY WORKER ae. TH NEWSSTANDS The Life and Death of Sacco and Vanzetti By EUGENE LYONS ma which has world—are drawn that bite into memory acids, ackground—the peasant of the men’ childhood, the swarming in- dustrial centers of Mas setts, the stirring p: international protest real and vivid who move author with the from the beginning. He has gathered here for the first time all the essential elements of the case in a fast-moving narrative, It is accurate and complete and will remain as @ monument to the in of all figures in- volved in the case und cartoons from and foreign news- $1.50 THE CASE OF SACCO-VAN ZETTI—by F. Frankfu Cloth—$1.1 CARTOONS ON THE SAC VANZETTI CASE—Dby f rican papers. ANTHOLOGY OF SACCO- VANZETTE POETRY The DAILY WORKER Book Department 33 First Street, New York ties at the commencement of the lock- out. The sheriff makes no pretense at judicial impartiality, but speaks openly as the mouthpiece of the coal operators. Where the proclamation posted in the mining camps of the neighboring county, states that the sheriff has re- ceived notification of a strike situ- ation from both “employees and la- bor organizations” as well as from the employers, for the “friend of labor” only the “industrial corpora- tions and employers” exist. No strike or lockout situation is mentioned, and on March 31, the day before the lock-out went into effect, Abbott states that he has already heard that there has been “rioting, shooting and disturbances of the peace,” a deliber- ate lie, calculated to create prejudice in advance against the locked-out miners in the minds of the public, and serve as an excuse for company violence. The same menacing tone is main- tained throughout the proclamation. It declares that: “All peace officers | throughout Washington county until | the present emergency has passed are commanded to disperse and pre- |vent upon the highways or vacant |property of all populous sections the jloitering or gathering of three or| more persons ...”, a clause omit- ted in the other proclamations and an weapon of oppression effectively wielded at the Aurora mine. No Warning For Boss. | On the other hand, the Washington county proclamation completely omits | the warning to coal operators includ- ed in the Allegheny county procla- |mation, stating that: “All industrial | corporations, coal mining companies and employers are hereby admonished not to engage or permit persons | about their premises whose presence and conduct upon said premise or going to or from same, should incite disturbance of the peace; and also| that a special danger to-the=publie peace, life and property can be cre- ated by ringing inta particular | communities employees and~ other persons commonly known as ‘strike- breakers’.” Sheriff Abbott’s pro- clamation recognizes. no strike situ- ation, only a-state.of ‘rebellion of | slaves against the sovereign over- | lords of the coalfields, eo | The local enforcement of ‘the pro- clamation here at the Aurora mine jis in the hands of the deputy sheriffs. | Their appointment is approved by |*he sheriff, and their pay comes fram |the coal company. One of the two! deputies is merely an armed loafer! who will obey company orders. The lother is the superintendent of the | |mine, also one of its principal share- | holders, and general czar in the| | camp. i | | This “impartial officer of the | peace” not only enforces the terms | |of the sheriff's proclamation to the | | limit (the clause in regard to the| |dispersal of gatherings of two or more persons is viciously enforced), | but is also the active instigator of | all the coal and iron frame-ups and attempts at terrorization. Need Labor Party. Coal mining is the life of Wash- | ington county, and the miners form | |the majority of the populations If | the U. M. W. of A. took the lead of | campaign, the miners could get | candidates elected on a labor | ticket by a good margin. They could | have a union miner sheriff who would | |halt instead of inciting company vio- | lence in time of strike or lock-out, | |and appoint union miner deputy | sheriffs and have a union miner as squire, as well. In these sections where the class line-up is so very simple and distinct, the absurdity of workers putting in- to office men who are the direct agents of their enemies becomes ex- ceptionally obvious. oo A bill for an injunction to restrain | time. Gov. McLean of North Carolina Mayor William Hale Thompson, U, J.) turned down the invitation sent him. Herrmann, member of the library} Unfortunately no definite steps to- board, Corporation Counsel Samuel|wards organization of thé farmers Ettelson and Librarian Carl Roden from disposing of books which may be found in the Chicago public library |was filed in circuit court here this afternoon. Edward J. Boham, who | represented himself as a taxpayer and the father of three school children, | brought the action. Radio Monopoly for Biggest Campaign Fund in Elections | WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. — The | political party with the biggest “war chest” probably will monopolize the |took place though there was plenty jof denunciation of the tobacco trust. |U. S. Attorney F, A. Linney of Boone | \who addressed the gathering talked lof. prosecution under the Sherman janti-Trust Law. Linney brought | laughter from the farmers when he | said that if he were selling a spotted | pig to a market consisting of five | |buyers and he found that each one| offered him exactly the same price | jhe would be justified in thinking | they were in an agreement against | his interests. Raise Price a Little. | As to the Sherman law’ remedy some of the farmers remembered. that the tobacco trust had already been dissolved by a supreme court decree, and the units of the trust, the Big Five, worked together like a single organization against the tobacco farmer none the less, The result of the last week’s agita- air during the 1928 presidential cam-|tion, however, has been to raise paign, regardless of a provision in the | Prices a little. Weed averaging only federal radio law which ostensibly was | 18 cents a pound is now bringing 17 | aimed to insure equal broadcasting |cents—but this price is still below privileges for all candidates. jlast year’s and below the cost of pro- This Is the “Joker.” tS ae ihe e He If any station permits the use of its | Papp cg broadcasting facilities for a candi-|¢ et prota a tet eareoe & date it “shall afford equal oppor-|oaiition Ye nen Sere Ope 1000, in tunities to all other candidates for | F, git ‘Sen SS.00000) tax Befund that office,” section 18 reads [from the U.S. goverment, Ameri Bos ‘All You Want. 4 can Tobacco profits exceeded $22,000,- However, there is nothing Siie elie (000 and Liggett & Myers had nearly | ; , law to prevent the Republican or the pean ‘ sang aes ee ae Democratic national committees, or able other organizations, from buying all | i the radio facilities they want or can afford, for the broadcasting of politi: Unemployment Among 1 d behalf of ~ L6G <799 Se eae on behalf of any can- (Movie! Keettas ‘Gute Wage to 36c Average Also an individual who is not up for office may present the views of | LOS ANGELES, Calif., Oct. 24.— Thirty-six cents is the average daily candidates or arguments in their be-| half, and the broadcasting station | wage received by 18,000 Los Angeles |movie extras, or artists, during the from which the information is trans- mitted is apparently under no obliga- tion to give the adherents of opposing |Jast 6 months. | Here is the number of days aver- aged per week, for the last 6 months, candidates the right to use its facili- | ties, in the opinion of legal experts. Radio Big Factor. by some of the more fortunate girls Radio stations will be used widely | of the 6,000 registered with the Cen- in the 1928 campaign. Experts pre-|tral Casting Bureau: One girl, 5 dicted that several million dollars | days;; 8 girls, 4 days; 21 girls, 3 days would be spent by the political parties | work. and the candidates. Broadcasting was| Among the 5000 registered men, employed in the 1924 campaign, but | averaged 6 days a week; 2, 5 days; that was before the days when chain 20, 4 days, and 36 averagea 3 days hook-ups were commonly used to put’ work per week during the last 6 an audience of three quarters of the | months, nation within the hearing of one) These lucky ones are mostly “dress voice. extras” having “wardrobes more com- SEE prehensive than many stars have to To Ditch Mate for Throne _ maintain.” PARIS, Oct. 24.—Prinece Carol and| The daily payroll, is $6556, which Mme. Lupeseu will separate in order |is divided among 11,000 registered that Carol may be in a more favorable | and 7000 extras who are not: regis- position to win the Rumanian crown. | tered. z | HY NOT ADVERTISE | in the DAILY WORKER praney es OUR ADVERTISEMENTS. WIN CONFIDENCE They Bring Results. Rates Are Reasonable. -_--—_—————_———_—_» APPLY TO THE DAILY WORKER ADVERTISING DEPT. 83 FIRSTSTREET Phone Orchard 1680 NEW YORK,N.Y. Advertising Offices of The DAILY WORKER ; baecge blab gh ae HARLEM OFFICH— t Ist Street. 2119 3rd Avenue, at 116th Street. LOCAL OFFICE— BRONX OFFICH— Room 35, 108 Hast 14th Street. . 2829 Srd Avenue, at 149th Street, YORKVILLE OFFICE BROOKLYN OFFICE: 464 Kast 8ist Street. 46 Ten Byck St Lose, Hits Rivals | HOUSTON, Texas, Oct. 24. —While \eursing “gold brick” salesmen, their |rivals, the delegates to the American | | Bankers Association, holding its 53rd | | annual convention here, had to admit | |that from a half to three quarters of |a billion dollars will be lost to deposit- | years. | Dan V. Stephens, president of the Fremont State Bank, Fremont, Neb., |told the delegates that throughout the United States since deflation be- gan seven years ago there have been more than 4,000 bank failures, which have tied up more than one billion dol- lars in deposits, 50 to 75 per cent of which, he said, will be a total loss to depositors. Regular Business, “Gold brick financihg” tukes from the American public in excess of one billion dollars a year, Harry W. Riehl declared in his address today. Stock crooks utilize a highly or- ganized system to mulct the public of such a huge sum annually, he said, pointing out that they even go to school, that they swap “sucker lists” and that they learn the rudiments of gold brick financing through study and application of various types of fraud. They are psychologists, too. | “He's a Sweet Mooch.” “There’ is a regular business of gathering these sucker’ lists,” Riehl continued. “The names are bought and sold like cattle. Notations are made of the mental attitude, the tem- peraments, and other peculiarities of the possible victims. I have here some actual sucker list cards. One reads: ‘Hit this chap for a thousand shares—he owns a Packard.’ An- other says ‘Soak this bird for a thous- and shares — he’s a sweet mooch.’ Another says, ‘Handle this guy with kid gloves — he’s been burnt before.” Bitter Fight Over Which Business Is To Gain by Tax Cut WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. — The tax reduction fight in,the seventieth con- gress, which promises to be spectac- ular and bittery contested, got under way today with the assembly of the joint congressional tax committee to consider the various plans advanced. There are three principal plans: 1.—Sponsored by President Cool- idge and Secretary of the: Treasury Mellon which would limit the total cut to $250,000,000. Coolidge is now an advocate of bigger and better cruis- ers. 2,—Sponsored by Senator Reed Smoot (6) of Utah, chairman of the senate finance committee, which would hold the reduction to $350,000,- 000. | 3.—Backed by Rep. Garner, (D.), | which would push the reductjon up to’ |$400,000,000 or $500,000,000. No One Believes Treasury. Rep. Garner declared Congress will not follow the treasury’s recommen- \dations in tax slashing, “Because every business man in the country knows the treasury has been lament- ably inaccurate in estimating treasury | surpluses, and no one has faith in} treasury figures any more.” All the conflicting plans contem- | plate decreasing the corporation tax, | repeal of the nuisance taxes, includ- | ing automobile taxes, and cutting the intermediate brackets in the income taxes. No plan whatever is consid- ered which will reduce the burden on the poor. No reductions of tariff are seriously contemplated. California Chinese Go 'To Hear Browder Speak On Situation in China OAKLAND, California, Oct. 24.— Educational activities continue here, despite the fact that the nights are getting colder and crowds of workers are fiercely competed for by the Sal- vation Army and other spellbinders. ! On the 15th, Earl Browder, mem- ber of the Executive Committee of the Pan-Pacifie Trade Union Con- gress, and editor of “Labor Unity,” addressed a large audience on the situation in China, telling of economie and political conditions back of the Kuomintang movement and the heroic strikes of Chinese workers. Cali- | fornia is the heart of the Kuomintang jin America, the bay region of San | Francisco and Oakland has the larg- jest Chinese colony, some of whose residents came to hear Browder’s re- port. ‘Public Schools May Be Placed on “Unfair List” MASON, CITY, Ia. Oct. 24.—(FP) |—Public educational institutions are made liable to labor's unfair ban un- der a precedent set by musicians and movie operators who have placed the auditorium of Mason City High School on the scab list because the principal refused to listen to contin- ued warning from union representa- tives that unless union men were put in charge of stage and movie opera- tion work the school would come un- der the labor pall | INVESTIGATION United Front Mass OF PULLMAN CO, Meeting to Fight TO START SOON Jim Crow Schools - aq? 7 Ny hy, (By a Worker Correspondent) Por ters’ Union Charges} cyicaco, Oct. 24. At a united Violations of Law |front mass meeting called by the | American Negro Labor Congress, Chi- The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car|C@8° local, on October 20, to protest Porters announced recently the re-| the recent school strike in BErY, Ny . ceipt of a communication from the | TePtesentatives of wie ATODEGRD AG # pry | gro Labor Congress, the National As- Interstate Commerce Commission no- iati kod ies Advaniommaalie of tifying the union and the Pullman | Caton | for ita Usb Company that Friday, October 21st Colored People, the Chicago pride hasbeen tet as the debe Sahen briefs League, the Young Workers League should be filed in the case of the | 224 the Council for the Protection of sh “ Foreign-Born Workers, Two of the oon va. the. Poliman Com: hrs colored aldermen from Gary were also present. In a petition filed with the com- mission on September 8th, the Broth- erhood of Sleeping Car Porters charged the Pullman Company with |violating Sections 1, 2, 3, 6 and 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act, and called upon the commission to inves- | tigate the conduct of the company with a view toward compelling it to cease and desist from its alleged un- lawful practices. Investigate Violations. On September 17th, the commis-! sion notified the Pullman Company that it had twenty days in which to rectify the conditions or answer the charges of the Brotherhood. Accordingly, on Oct. 7th, the com- pany filed its reply in which the jur-| isdiction of the commission to hear| the petition was denied by the attor- neys for the Pullman Company; con-| sequently the question now before the) commission is its right to hear the evidence and correct the violations, if | found to be as stated by the Brother-j| hood, whose attorneys are of the opinion that the commission is em-| powered to act under Section 13 spe-} cifically and the entire Interstate Commerce Act. The Brotherhood’s brief is being prepared by Donald Richberg, attor- ney for the standard railroad unions | and co-author of the Watson-Parker Law, and by Henry T. Hunt, ex- mayor of Cincinnati and formér mem- ber of the old United States Railroad Labor Board. New Case. It was pointed out by officials of the Brotherhood that the case before the Interstate Commerce Commission is separate and distinct from the union’s efforts to present their case before the Emergency Arbitration Board, which they are compelled to do by the Watson-Parker Act if they are to maintain their position as a union. Kind of a Wife for a Cop. CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—Police Ser- geant Vernon Goranson was shot and instantly killed by his wife, Mrs. Min- nie Goranson, 44, in their home today. Mrs. Goranson summoned police and admitted she had shot her husband Russell, president of the Gary | branch of the N. A. A. C. P., stated | that the strike had heen clearly plan- jned by adults who used the students | for their own ends. | The most vigorous applause of the evening however, greeted the explan- | ation given by the Young Workers | League representative, that the plan- |ning of the strike was no accident, | but an example of the Steel Trust’s | determination to divide the white and Negro workers, in order that they |might not act together against the capitalist class, their common enemy. Plans were launched for a similar | united front meeting on a much larger | scale, to be held in the near future. | Jewish Colonies In Soviet Union Lauded by Expert CHICAGO, Oct. 24.The Jewish colonies in the Soviet Union, estab- lished with the aid of the Soviet Gov- }ernment, were lauded as highly suc- cessful in a report submitted by Dr. | Joseph A. Rosen to the relief confer- ence of the United Jewish Campaign. The number of Jewish families in Russia engaged in farming, Dr, Rosen said, increased from 15,000 in 1923 to 85,000 in 1927. The acreage occupied by Jewish settlers, he said, has risen from 400,000 to 1,000,000 acres. Starting a New Life. “But of far greater importance than these figures are the personal im- | pressions carried away by visitors |to the colonies,” he declared. “Those who have inspected the jeolonies during the three years and jhave seen with their own eyes how the new settlements sprang up in the wild prairies with thousands of families actually starting a new life, striking roots in the soil and turning the wilderness into promising farming communities, cannot help ex- pressing their admiration and calling with his service revolver as he lay in bed. She said the shooting followed a quarrel, the whole thing a miracle.” ‘BUILD THE DAILY WORKER! THE FOLLOWING NEW READERS SEND THEIR GREET- INGS TO THE SOVIET UNION ON THE OCCASION OF THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION M. Feldman Albert Erisson Geo. W. Struve S. Feinberg John. O’Connor Nick Polidori M. Dwoskin Victor Salmela E. L. Osgood H. Wolf Wm. Hill H. Holm Albert Langendorfer Sylvia Lindgren Gust Skandera Thomas Sweeny Waino Pelto E. A. Pysk Mrs. S. Veronick Robt. Olson . George Hajdu V. A. Carus Gust. Johnson Mrs. E. Vranger Dr. J. M. Rouf Isador Cohen Mearl M. Tobey L. C. Rigby G. Gustafson L. Bileggi D. Fryer Nat Prager ¥. Vratarie A. Konikow Betty Brody M. Bizjak Anton Bistricic Harry Woh) Matti Maki Andrew Semolic John Turko J. D. Bennett F, Kogan C. Hansen Louis Welhelm A, T. Harrington Frank Rabe Joseph Kolousek Chas. Bebrits M. Kegal Joseph Kaplan Aaron Weber Elias Miller Louis Long P. W. O'Donnell Con. J. Mueller John Biel A. Osols Temppelin Yhdistys A. Lindback Mary Younger Charlotte Weiss O. M. Satos H. Worgull Austin Lewis P. Dauderis Ve Elsie Sarin J. Feingold Max Houken i W. C. Heard G, Miel Carl Sklar } P. A, Smith Nestor Mattson H. Goldstein i Robt. Newstrom Mrs. Viola Chas, Anderson } V. Kivi George Duncan J. P. Reyskey i S. Winn Dr. J, C. Coleman George Dimitroftt J. Pavel J. E. Grooms S. Pober G. Piccoli C. Mikalacky Joe Kuharchik W. W. Quirt Th. Peteone Frank Baumholtz A. S. Arnstam Archie Victor John Cerwecuka B. Peskin Max J. Kay J. Pastorchi A. B. Hanson Ellen Kuisma M. Kapsha John Lavroff A, Sandelin E. T, Haskins Herman Ruthfuss L. Love M. Hermandez Samuel Lieb I, Ramiatala C. H. Mickelson J.P. Eil H. Greenstine Isaak Kettula Joseph Varadi Makis Ftergotis S. Lindersmith N, E, Adams Gust Manor Chas. Caraopeli Hans Pankrath Abe Lapidus Roy C. Mahoney Rudolph Hrozencik , Carl Rakoski ol. 0. Boyd * Harry Weiner E. J, Erickson Erie Terrace Sonia Merims Gus Daubenick F. P, Brill Thos. MeGriff Jack Woll A. Schnebelm H. G, Price M, Lewis W. F. Keeny J. Bukowick Leo F, Rowly Otto Zulauf Dorothy Sabroff Joe Shinner Aug. Gude S. Bieniasz C. Athas Nathan Galitsky Wm. Mathewson S. Dardich Fred Koehler John Balpadru Gabriel Rossow Wm. Williams N. Mariano» A. Newcomer W. E, Wilson Jennie Arnofsky Louis Cohen Andy Vienazindis