The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 24, 1927, Page 2

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Rockefeller Men Charge Communist Pickets (Continued from Page One) charged with disorderly conduct and were released on bail. Denounce Colorado Murders. marched to the Rock at 12:30 p. m., ca placards denouncing in the nam: all New York workers the killing wounding of strike pick in Rockefeller-dominated Colorado mine The picke' the rters of the Standard Oil olorado Fuel & Iron powerful of ations against h the mine: e are striking. a strike against this cor- ion that miners and women and n were killed at Ludlow, Colo., . but of the ., the richest and me Colorado in 1914, Picketed In 1914. The Rockefeller office picketed similarly in t Patrolman Timmens, of precinct, who was on dut 26 Broadway, used allow the pickets to re-pass the office building when they first arrived. He instruct- ed them to continue up Broadway. here were year. the first in front of No. 26 Broadway is not only | !! LUDLOW, began April 20, 1914.—Militia nd men withdrew into | the exception of Louis| : miner, who had acted | r in the tent colony. | vhite flag and the| ng. Advanging to , that ‘all the men| to the mountains, and uation of the gunfire | r illing and maiming women) and children. This infuriated Linder- | ed a gun from the] private militiaman and s over the head with it, | g him to the ground. After he} knocked down other militiamen abbed him with bayonets dead. | en the order to fire was again and the tent colony was swept | -gun and rifle fire for} nen it was over and the} came down out of the hills to what had happened that which merly been the Ludlow colony Out of | erved as a cellar for | ,& Iron concern. | Rockefeller, through | his publicity agent, Ivy L. Lee, gave the orders to Linderfeld to wipe out} the tent colony at Ludlow, which was situated at a railway intersection, a strategic spot for the strikers to in- tercept and try to persuade prospec- | way to the mines. Who Was Linderfeld? | Gained notoriety as a thug and| derer in the Cherry Hill district of New York City, he had sunk to the position of private detective for the} Baldwin-Feltz agency, and was sent} into West, Virginia as a “mine guard” during the strike in 1912-13 that was marked by the shooting up of the Holly Grove tent colony by high- power rifles concealed in an armored car that ran up and down on a near- by railroad track. So well did Linderfeld carry out the orders of the strike-breaking coal corporations of West Virginia that he was sent to Colorado soon after the outbreak of the strike in the southern coal fields. Forty-eight hours after he entered the state he How They Killed at Ludlow Wagner Murder Case Shows Troopers Are At Faults for Shots Lieutenant Linder-| tive scabs not to continue on their! BUFFALO, N. Y,, Nov. 28. — The | defense rested today in the new mur- der trial of Wilmot Leroy Wagner, : _ farmhand charged with, killing two the tent colony woifld only re-| gunman. From the vocation of Pan- | state troopers. The end of defense tes-| timony came after Wagner had been| on the stand in his own defense for | almost an hour this morning, continu- ing the story which he started yester- day. also would complete its case today, | and that summations: would be made! Friday after the Thanksgiving recess. | Captain Giles, War Ace, It was expected that the state Most of Wagner’s testinony tuday was on cross-examination by Distrist| Attorney Renwick, wko-Tailed to shake the 23-year-old defendant's story, _ Following a short recess the prose- cution called Charles Newton, New Haven, Conn., criminologist, to testify {n rebuttal of evidence given yesterday by “Albert -H. Hamilton, of Auburn, N, Y.,-defénse- expert, which was that | FREDERICK A. GILES Weather Expert Thinks Was Putting Over Bluff SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 23.—E. M. Bowie, of the U. S. Weather Bu- reau, today declared in connection with the attempted flight of Capt. Frederigk A. Giles, British war ace, from California to Hawaii, that Giles’ “apparent destination was not Hawaii ovine gg eat etianle i Oe Miner Pinned Under Rock, Saved After 10 Hours of Misery By ED FALKOWSKI. | SHENANDOAH, Pa. Nov, 23.| (FP).—For 10 hours rescuers tere} through the rock and coal that kept in his breast at the Turkey Run Col- | liery here. When they found him at} jlast, he was pinned under a fall of | |rock, and badly injured. Rescuers | feared tHey would not reach him alive. Yet miracles happen, even in} the mines. | While the high wages of miners! |ous booster meetings by mine of- ficials, not one of them ‘will ever ex-| perience what Jecken has experienced | in the 10 hours during which he was held down fast by heavy rocks, and; could not move. His lamp was out; | the crunghing of coal and rock and cracking timber was all he heard. In blackness so thick one can almost| Julian Jecken, a miner, imprisoned | | |have been notably discussed at vari-| | ‘N.Y. Communist Comuitic Unanimous for Expulsion ‘Of Trotsky and Zinoviev | The plenum of the District Com- mittee of District 2 of the Workers (Communist) Party, at its meeting Saturday night, after listening to a report of Wm. W. Weinstone as represeniative of the Political Cors- mittee of the Parity, unanimously endorsed the expulsion of Zinoyiev and Trotsky by the Central Com- j mittee of the All-Union Commu- | nist Party, and the actions of the Central Committee in its struggle against the Opposition. The District Committee decided to hold section membership. meet- ings to explain to the Party mem- bers the issue of this Russian Op- position, It was the opinion of all comrades of the District Commit- tee that the entire District would | take a similar position of endors- ing the stand of the Central Com- | mittee. ye o— ZINOVIEV AND TROTSKY BUILT « rs took the bodies of | was placed in the uniform of a lieu- en who} tenant of the state militia and given therein. The|command o the troops in the , coming upon them, poured southern coal fields by the express | i gasoline upon them and| order of Governor Ammons, elected | into the hole,| governor of the state with the en-| On three occasions they attempted to return to the building and each ti they were turned back end several other policem thattime had arrived. Arrest Picket L Wagner could not have fired the shots’ | that killed the two state constabulary troopers unless they were advancing catch chunks of it in one’s hands, he| lay waiting for death which lurked somewhere in that black prison. | This experience is not at all un-} usual. A few years ago a Shamokin} miner spent 5 days in dark torture, but Hollywood.” Bowie made this declaration -upon |being told that Giles stated he had | to attack him, as he states they were.| been, caught in a strange air pocket | There has been a good deal of evi-| and severe storm 480 miles off the| dence at the trial implying that the; coast and after the weather expert | aders. ve Timmens then placed Milton Wic he re: ei oe ne sanau att e Samuel Gombers Stl He | troopers were actually shot by their! had examined his charts. |imprisoned by a fall of rock. He) ae st 359 S. Second St., Prooklyn, RBG FEDRED (OR CNS WiSHORENS BNC!) AT ereae seh erate meres? companions in their rear. It is ap-| Giles said that the contact with the |communitated with rescuers through | Julius Fleiss, 6115 19th’ Ave., Broo confirmed by the report oF the | Ta Oe eee ructed Ivy Lee to | Parent that they launched their at-| pocket caused his plane to upset in along pipe which they had driven in- lyn, who were leading the line, under | “ ion on industrial re-| Rockefeller instructed Ivy Lee tol tock upon Wagner, who had been act-|the air, and he lost instruments and|t¢ his chamber to bring him air, and| é ud . Walsh, chairman.) |relay orders that the Ludlow tent}, ah sees ; ? 5 rs - | - Ras z | —— arrest. ? . jing queerly, without notifying him|charts, barely saving his plane from|Send him liquid nourishment. For| le massacre at Ludlow |colony be wiped out. The massacre | au Bees S, y ‘ig J pian | 4 7 . aie 10 A rf * Crowd Grows. “oe Wis direct orders of | was ‘the alee result of this order. they were police, and that he fired in disaster, and being forced to abandon | days qi bey aoa ie yee ppar atus Tho i ae rt re as aaa bs fase ae gems a ;|a panic, induced by their actions and/his race. ;get to him before he should perish, | By ieee hie emrers ie ohn D. Rockefeller, Jr., the psalm-| Since that time Rockefellex as had | Fe oye emotlonal tastabity, | Pees * ‘Artes Has the sainer tol Ws expert. | Members of C. P. ‘b ieee Bn Reece cal aeie: , Sunday-school teaching bil- | attached to his narhe the odious vee Evidence that Wagner had periods | : ences to” interested audiences from | ‘ fices for lunch an e crowd grew, | ]jor who owns the Colorado Fuel | thet, “baby burner |of temporary insanity while in vrison| COMpany Justice In |theatre stages. | MOSCOW, USSR, Nov. 23,—It was passing forward into the street and| oe pha gel llel pae | Remus’ Prosecutor Senator Capper Hoe . Charged by Witness Resolution for Six |was brought by the defense, also evi- |dence that he’ wes tantalized and tor- | mented by his jailers, who laughed at | his antics when they placed his to- bacco out of reach, and threw fire- | erackers into his cell, Pennsylvania Strike’ Must Go Back to Risk. jaenganeed today by the Pravda organ A similar aecident occurred in the|f the Communist Party, that Kus- h fe Hill eolllery, & few years ago | bom tee scerevee Ne oa Pie | when a young Irishman was caug! arty, has issued a state- i then and stab api shoot other scabs / fas: beneath a rock and could hot | ment exposing the factional and sec- and prostitutes ’ ‘ranken squabbles /escape from under a cracking roof |tarian activities of the Trotsky oppo- within the stor » oF attack union | which threatened to flatten him to a/|Sition. arrests the picket line was able (Continued from Page One) break past the officers and resur its march in front of the Rock building. : ar pes oes Want, gt the first | men. | ge _, ed the pancake. Rescuers did not dare to| Kusnovnikov’s revelations clearly sinct, en arrested Sop * = ‘ 5 ‘. | constable wit ng 2 “to stop! get too close, thinking it better one} show that the opposition had secretly 58 W. 115th St. and ) it \ | carrying a tr ais work at man should perish than many. But/| organized an illegal party to the Com- | 2700 Bronx Parle East i , imi 10 | the Pit minal Coal Cor-|the man was rescued after a few | munist Party of the Union of Socialist Organize Assault Squad. poration es oe and was not even seriously in-| Soviet Republics, with its own appar- ite tine ket Se re i ine Two Children. jured. i ork : ees fe tne Heche! alice | CINCINNATI, Nov. 23—George| WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 23—| he ne Te te a athikiig® chitwciadstic of | (i ee executives had been able to organ 1 | tie Wid lite foe dee | sR : : | A few days ago Edmondson also| se that th it the mines “f | ploying secrecy and having a secret squads for the assault. Women were | | 7 a asec seed A resolution by which Congress would | fined toa alten af tockedeat Dav: aie? eee Sa Phi Tien code for correspondence. treated as roughly as the men. Many fary ane lake lost | call for the state department to nego- | erdale miners, 10 and i2 of RES: | rant aobincather the Goxmke that hal Until last year there existed dif- sae driven into office entrances and Z tiate a set of arbitration treaties like | |for picking coal off a slate pile. |would never enter a mire again. But| ferences between various groups in veaten. arguments by attorneys for | those made by Bryan and: violated as | Regarding the other justice of}. sey months later he was around the | the Trotskyist party. Zinoviev’s ad- Militant Slogans. Ww teat th : : the Cel the peace whose decisions have been ne looking for h “We protest the murder of the Col- reversed, A. W. McMillan of Car-jand ig still wor s old job again,| herents had their own political plat- Judge Chester R, Shook | soon as the world war broke out, is Sere ‘ g. Such is a|form, maintained their own organiza- these rul | introduced into next session by Sen- de orade strikers,” one of the placards carried by the pickets said. Other slogans were: he workers of New York pledge support to the He ruled, first, that the state could not introduce testimony to sup- |port an alleged conspiracy unless the ‘ ‘ re state first proved there was a con- Colorado strikers”; “John D, Rocke- ; feller gunmen will nét break the solidarity of labor”; “Labor demands ator Arthur Capper, (R) owner of | farm papers in Kansas. | The Capper resolution approves of the feeler thrown out last Aprik by jnegie (Pittsburgh Coal, Carnegie | pinor’s prosperous existence! Steel, United States Steel) the min- | ers of Logals 797 at Carnegie and | |2105 at Federal have issued a leaflet tional centres within the illegal party. Trotsky Won Over Zinoviey. Before the 15th party conference, \bitterly denouncing his hostility to- \ward the miners and undisguised ac- | Hearst Lumches “With cameney ands titeviny hectauat li v7 ; | whether representatives of the Oppo- Coo dge O er Mexico | sition should speak at the conference. even as Pittsburgh Coal Company | (Continued from Page One) aga however, having the major- “So the People May Know the | The articles in the Hearst press |j1¥, ni adr age eae oh ie Truth About the Coal Strike and | Which allege Mexican aid to Nica-| ee) ere sa igh xtig a ied |motion that the Oppositi st Andy McMillan—Justice of the | a4 anon? the right to strike”; “Withdraw the | tiee of George Klug. France and the United States, and trogps from the mines”; Impeach | Remus’ chauffeur, Klug, on the | disregarded by the Coolidge adminis- Governor Adams of Colorado.” witness stand this morning, said the | tration. raguan liberals have been issued with | Prosecution Wants Delay. Prior to the arraignment of the four arrested pickets Detective Mur- phy of the bomb squad confer private with Magistrate Stern. Weiss King, defense counsel, protest- ed against the adjournment and asked Detective Murphy why he would not! proceed at once with the case. The officer would give no reason for his demand for delay and the adjourn- ment was granted by the court. Motion pictures of the demonstra- prosecutor had sought to force him to make admissions and when he would not, jailed him as a material under $10,000 bail. witness de. ° LAUNDRY WORKERS TOIL OVERWORKED AND UNDERPAID; UNION VITAL NEED | Klug \land, Germany, Japan and France. e the “death car” in which Revs By inference it would be an alliance The Capper resolution, however, goes further and proposes a six power compact to include U. S., Italy, Eng- against the rest of the world. AMIDST FOUL CONDITIONS, give us your helping hand HE DAILY WORK- ER is fighting day_ | the Hanava Congress in view, ob-| Peace. i < * | Then, after a de- | S¢rvers in close touch with the situa-| : tion believe. } begins the leaflet. | | scription of the way in which “the| | Pittsburgh Coal Company has thrown peaceful and law-abiding communi- ties, including Carnegie, Tom’s Run) “* Fs et and vicinity in western Pennsylvania, | P?incipals in the counter-revolution. into industrial and civil strife by rea- | 8tY Plot to assassinate former Presi- sort of the importation of more than|@ent Alvaro Obregon, by throwing a/ 60,000 strikebreakers...coupled with |bomb at the automobile in which. he |the activities of about 400 gunmen | Was riding Nov. 13, were shot by ad Jand thugs, known as Coal and Iron | ‘iting squad here today. Execute Four Fanatics. | MEXICO CITY, Nov. 23.—The four | speak to encourage the adherents of the Opposition. The results of the party discus- sion so far have given 572,506 votes in favor of the theses of the Central Committee and 8,000 votes or ap- | proximately six-tenths of one pet cent against. Cutters Mass Meeting Saturday at 2 p. m. = of the law limiting jand more predominating in the New| | police and ot! ize...” the Those executed for hurling two} tion and the arrests were taken by king hours is common in| York city laundries. But their fluc- | after day.... never SS Ean peed et bombs at the automobile in which! The Cutters’ Welfare League of one or more syndicates. power laundries. The | tuation, in the city for winter, out for stopping. The DAILY | Guotag dhe Mavietesd |General Obregon was riding were|the International Ladies Garment Frac Renee a state labor devartment’s special bul- summer, and shifting from one laun- WORKER can continue tye hag is hes Wig jLuis Segura, Vilchis Humberto, An-| Workers’ Union will hold a mass i Hughes Plans for women’s hours and dry to ‘another make unionization i hé Laon’. - W. McMillan, justice of the | tonio Tirado and Augustin Juarez, all) meeting.Saturday at 2 p.m. at Stuy- | _ ms the work difficult. egular mass meet- | its battles for t bd or peace of Carnegie, to whom all (of them believed to be members of | vesant Casino, Second Ave. and East | Control of Lake + for the ings are being held and a steady in-| | Movement, but financial etek naehah their ees or |the reactionary “Catholic League of | 9th St. i nsoguea lerease in union membership is re-| iffi i ed sympathizers, ar-. | Defense.” A ; } _ Bese INGION, Nov. 2 Gin eek I ncrtad. F Rpeig brs io rested se Siva oe onae oe 4% | Ride er ie anid Oy | . Hughes, acting as ec! 8 od | PRIS 5 on complaint of either importe i rf * for ad United edhe eagiohie court, rk City 18 percent of the | = <. becoming agreater news- strike-breakers or by Tike of Rg age The | cloakmakers, recently released from today recommended that the city of We ered by the state labor de- Bratianu Fall Likely paper—of greater use- the company, state police or deputy | inj, vee fe Sanu ah\haken Bi ee eee oH Chicago and the state of Tlinois be partment inyestigation worked more Ss ‘ll fulness to fighting La- sheriffs, are brought for trial, has <a Spe ener Hid Ne eae! ns saul ig ck ae Ema een, yestrained from unrestricted diver-|than the legal 54 hours in the week | oon, Says Manoilescu th repeatedly shown marked bitter {?°7S0S implicated in the plot to as- fe, dieieameer ear eget, een | BEE wilisy deca Lake Micnnag: lof etMe’ study. Upptais Ab parent) | bor. We do not, want to prejudice in thé interest of the sassinate former President Alvaro | Joint Board; Ben Gold, manager of i but he also recommended that they |Worked illegal overtime. Two big! ROME. Nov. 28—The convention | conduct financial cam- Pittsburgh Coal Company and Obregon, Colonel Jose Mascarra, we Foe eee Joint Board, be permiited to continue to withdr power laundries were chief offenders, | that the Bratianu regime in Roumania | paigns. We need the against the striking miners as chine of the Searot, poling. of: the ted oh k nD oe art Tain oe water under permit from the war de- Many of the women worked three | Wa8 waning and would soon be de- space to fight the boss “bums” and “loafers”; stating bees SL raat today, bE pe esi oie Ania decedent partment. hours up to 10 over the 54, and some stroyed was expressed today by M. A d plainly also that pickets, strikers eae added that the case against the | TSAR CPS tans q Se) LIN) EN eae even iore. But when the laundry ,Manoilescu, recently acquitted in Bu- are to De Oe ee or sympathizers have no right to SathOUE Legale. of Retanie’ I cee Rabbi's Meeting Here il ag. = Ee worsers’ union sent state labor in- charest of having conspired to bring news—information about be around the mines, and that were plete. | My trike Strategy at spec round, women workers were Prince Carol to the Roumanian the Labor movement— he, (McMillan) an officer, he would Maria Montes de Oca, niece of the| Endorses 5-Day Week | ‘Union Forum Saturday *id to admit violations of the law throne. and other good features. arrest them on sight.” late Archbishop Ignacio Montes de) | = by their employers. Manoileseu was interviewed at the aw And that “I Oca, of San Luis Potosi, was among By Federated Press ase | : Mid at We ask only this much n the light of his un- | 4), ; i (By ) Strike strategy will be the subject) While there is illegal overtime, ,;Acaui Spa, in Piedmont, before he from every reader: fair, bitterly prejudiced and insult. |{ROS® mentioned in connection with Organized labor’s stand for the of a talk by William F. Dunne cf there is also perfectly legal under- |left for France. Ca DAG dng. attitude, “50 ‘plainly: aud em-. [om eee enue Maier Miguel | a cocgay workweek recived the ens. | The DAILY WORKER. before the time, which cuts the workers’ earn-| It is understood that Manoilescu Pledge yourself to give Phatically stated in hearings of Juares, who was arrested two days Gr eonk of the orthodox vewiin open forum of the Architectural Iron ings down considerably. The majority will have a number of conferences only as much as you can strike cases, A, W. McMillan stands ba Pei characterized a Cheep rite rabbis’ convention here. Spreaiiant and Bronze Workers’ Union at the of women workers in power laundries |With the former Crown Prince in and won't miss—every | convicted as an avowed enemy of |P#!, “intellectual author” of the plot./ Winiam Green of the American Fed. union’s hall at 7 E. 16th St. next/are scheduled to work 60 hours a Paris and will make a detailed report week. You won't miss it | the United Mine Workers and or- Cotenel Meneame seis Hey Aa atae eration of Labor addressed the ase, 7 | Sunday at 3 p. m. week, says the state report, but 39 0” the political situation in Roumania, _ 7. ganized labor in’ general. In face |°° nected kagwlodae of ther attempt semblage. wv lee ent of the women actually worked | especially as it was affected by the | and The DAILY WORK- of his denunciation of pickets, strik- ied General Obregon . life he proceed: | MAYOR AFTER FUTURE VOTES. under 48 hours in the week studied, Collapse of the government’s treason ER can live on it! | ers, and sympathizers, coupled with ed to interrogate Antonio Tirado, who | " CHICAGO, Ill, Nov. 23. — Mayor Throughout the year the time lost Charges against Manoilescu himself. | | his denial of our lawful right to (“8S being detained at police head-| Postpone Action on Wm. Hale (“Book Burner”) Thomp- and the tremendous turnover of labor | | e peacefully picket... a fair trial quarters, and Laberto Ruiz, wounded | i gon has issued to the city schools a cut earnings way down. ‘Bulgaria and Roumania | Tk lap +«—=«soanndd justice for us ard our people in |in the attack on Obregon. | 3 Injunct ion Cases list of American revolutionary offi-| The average weekly earnings came | a his court is unthinkable. . . .” | According to Mascarra, the con-|’ cers of the German, Polis to $14.67. While this is higher than | Friction More Intense Pled Y Hl The peace officer, constable, squive | SPiPators shook dice to determine who. Action on an injunction requested nativity, with’ an expla that for paper box, candy, shirt and| ledge Your Support or sheriff, who does not toe the mark! “25 t© be selected for the attack ©n| by the United Hebrew Trades pro- these names have been dep collar, and tobaeco workers in New! g sedae 09 WH Today! is apt to find himseif out of a job. At Obreson, Those chosen were Luis Se- | hibiting the Retail Grocery and Dairy proper emphasis in school histories by i york state, these yearly catnings, SOFIA, Bulgaria, Nov. 23.—¥ric- |the Provident mine in eastern Ohio, |S Vilchis Humberto of Juarez, | Clerks’ Union from carrying out its “Anglicizing elements.” The elector- j.owever, are under $800, and that for tee fa developing between Bulgaria belonging to the Clarkson Coal Com. | Sntenia Tirado, Arias Antonio, Met-) union activities has been postponed ate in Chicago is largely German, |tne one-third who worked a year in| eet reports today of | MY PLEDGE |pany, the sheriff and coputies do not | 042%! Echave and Laberto Ruiz. | py Justice Richard May in the Brooke Polish and Irish, |Roumanian attacks against Bulgari- | k ‘i ee . gee 7 one place. Few make up to $1000 ans in Dobrudja. | to the: Ruthenh s he together with the mine guards | Wissen an ey court until Saturday of —_— — nd very seldom One re | i e ptween pick- | 7 : BANDON FOG HALTS TRARFIC.|*"4 Very seldom ono makes over that.) oi, owner of 3 Bulgarian newspa-| 0 ers Bana ~ lets aittiins Gai, qian Pie) Fetal for More Profits (~°""". maf! Sai LONDON, Nov. 23. — The worst | Frightful Conditions. |per is reported to have been beaten | & " [previous day for stealing frmniture| Moves Southern Bos i eelugetions, penhibigae Ak gd fog of the season descended on Lon-| In the larger and more modern'to death. Many Bulgarian residents | Fill out the following blank | from an evicted miner's ase, S' ‘eriff | w bi é ses ga i 7. oe i we ee : don today dislocating traffic and mak- | steam laundries, conditions are some- | of Dobrudja are fleeing into Bulgaria. and mail it to Hardesty sent in his deputy, qosegh To Stop Night Work deat aS a; a, Pe Biahk cowiby | 5, ing it necessary to turn on the street | what better than they were because| A huge anti-Roumanian mass meeting | DAILY WORK: |Baker to quiet things down. i One of wali degels court. i } i lights at noon. of new equipment and plant, though |is being planned here for next Sun-| THE RKER a |the guards tried to draw his gun, and| CHARLOTTE, N. C., Nov. 28.— i fo |) ' eR tr et | nay ig low. i aaa eee eas day. LB em will be taken | 33 First St., New York, N. Y. | the deputy struck out at him. "The | howe progtte is ‘the ‘east avgument MILK CONVICTION UPHELD * dries are in old lofts, or in dark base-|to prevent disorders. | en mine guperi t fi 3 - A - 7, W. L Membership Meet | ments, where ventilation in either case | ——— BaanGMet Reese © pledae \Reabull Romous becerned dp: oer elias b i lates ine Sass ti gerien aM gag te A Binh | tae ; ee - | is poor, drainage haphazard and dan- SPORT CLUB GROWING. I will send you $......+44. uty, and the coal company immediately | Textile Bulletin claims that cotton tical f th Ne ¥ Se Cit TBeahtot A general membership meeting || gers to -health great from dam ‘ d th oy of the New Yor! y Boat P (ge 1 g P+} A basketball team for the winter ” issued the following statement: manufacturers have been stupid in op- | Health, for conspiracy to permit the | of the Young Workers (Commu-! | steam, overheating, and drafts. Hand ‘ . Overy “WPeS: “We hi di e i i: ? ip tecy Pp igi) Le ill be held Frie| | Lid ng, season is being formed by the Red Ve have discussed and are dis- |erating their equipment day and) sale of diluted milk, has been upheld | = be eae wi ee ilies dl jcontact with filthy clothing adds to) sta, Sport Club, 29 Graham Ave, Nanth ite ace Erie cussing the advisability of sooking |night. | The $1 saved in overhead re-| by the Court of Appeals. j Casino Maly 9 Ask aaa fe. oth St. |the disease danger. f __ |Brooklyn, it was announced yester- ea the removal of Sheriff Hardesty. | duction, runs the argument, would be} "Kehoe’s arrest and conviction grew Giun Willemsen, gow. district On| Laundry wagon drivers are partial-|day, The club meets the second and Soha: RU Tee Le ee We have been unable to secure pro- multiplied in the wider margin of|out of an investigation of alleged ganizer, will report on the recent | |(¥ °*anized and their co-operation in| fourth Saturday of the month and Mie eek Wh tection from his office and we feel | profit if the mills let demand get fur- | irregularities in the New York City : ational convention, organizing the inside workers is be-|new members are wanted, according that he and his deputies are partial | ther ahead of the supply by Tanning | Halts Department regarding the ii ing sought, Colored workers are more |to the secretary of the club. | _ State ...... to the United Mine Workers.” days only. sale of milk. 5 4 \ y ‘ A a

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