The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 1, 1929, Page 1

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| GA) 1: rat | < ’ 70UR MORE DAYS TO DAILY WORKER FIFTH ANNIVERSARY; RUSH BIRTHDAY GREETINGS AT ONCE THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For the 40-Hour Weck For a Labor Party ly Entered an sccond-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Poa OTE TS FINAL CITY EDITION . under the act of Mar Vol. V., No. 311 Published daily except Sunday by The National Daily Worker Publishing Association, Inc., 26-28 Union Sa., New York, N. ¥. EW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1929 New York, by mail, $8.00 per year. by mail, $6.00 per year. SUBSCRIPTION R Outside New Yor! Price 3 Cents REVERSE MINEOLA CONVICTION; 7SET NEW TRIAL; JAIL Two Workers to Serve! 21% to 5 Years in Sing Sing Vas Flagrant Frameup snion Will Fight to| Free Victims Seven of the nine fur work- xs victimized in an anti-strike ‘rame-up by a Ku Klux Klan | judge and jury in a Mineola, L.I., court, were granted a new | ial by the New York Court of Appeals in Albany, it became known yesterday. The judges of the Court of Appeals refused to reverse the} conviction of the other two fur| workers, L. Franklin and M. Mal- kin, thereby sending them to serve prison terms of from 2% to 5 years each, | The workers who were granted a new trial are Jack Schneider, Otto Lenhardt, Sam Mencher, Joe Weiss, Oscar Mileaf, Martin Rosenberg and } Joe Katz. This case resulted in a flagrant conviction on the flimsiest evidence that stool pigeons and right wing provocateurs could manufacture. The | workers were found guilty by a jury | af bigoted business men. The judge, | tho throughout the trial ruled down | vhe defense attorneys, sentenced all to a 2% to 5 year stretch. | The decision of the Court of Ap-| peals was made after an examina- tion of the minutes of the long trial. They were unable to find} enough evidence to bolster up the conviction of the nine workers. The case grew out of the general . strike of fur workers in 1926. The | strike, a struggle for the 40-hour| week, was won by the workers., | Suddenly eleven members of the union, among them leaders of the organization, were accused of hav- ing assaulted some scabs in a shop in Long Island during the strike. Not only was 2 stool pigeon made to give the District Attorney a “confession,” but A. F. of ‘L. and socialist leaders of the right wing dual union came to court to testify against the accused workers. Leaders of the furriers’ union, which is now merged with the cloak and dressmakers union to form an amalgamated needle trades work- ers’ union, declared that the cam- paign to gain the freedom of the two workers will be continued un- abated. DUNCAN SCHOOL GROWS IN US.S.R. Dancers Will Perform | ; for “Daily” She was born in California in the days when women wore bustles and men muttonchop whiskers, when a leg was a “limb” and when women were considered a trifle superior and more useful than animals. Her early dancing shocked Victorian America and England and served to eee atize, the of the dance throughout the world. She traveled throughout Europe and America, went to ancient, Greece and found at last in the Soviet Union the en- penal ee cepiration to give permanénce to her work, She was msidered the greatest dancer in ne world. Her name was Isadora Duncan. can is dead. But the school lished in Moscow with the Soviet government lives on mar on the work which Duncan, | her place as direc- m 1001 is her adopted ughter and favorite pupil, Irma Ye - Thousands of working class children have been trained in the Isadora Duncan School The coming of Irma Duncan and prize pupils of her school to this try to take part in the fifth an- ary celebration of the Daily Worker means that the workers of New York City and vicinity will have the opportunity of witnessing’ one of the most remarkable dance recitals ever given in this country. A special program entitled “Im ‘the occasion. In addition to the ce performance, other features | be on the program. Speakers. elude Jay Lovestone,. William,| Foster, William W. Weinstone, inor and others. ly way to make sure of |Parchman, Miss., where it was be- | state prison farm, from which Shep- | HOOVER PLOTTING pressions of Revolutionary Russia, y has heen afranged by Irma Dunean | Center of Imperialist Clash The steamer Caronia, above wa: owned) line to the New York-Havi ipping board stated publicly tha S. shippers, and the British should keep out. Ward line its fastest boat, the Pre Cunard, and the Ward, United Fruit Co., and Munson line cut their rates below those of the British fi | | | s diverted by the Cunard (British- ana run. Immediately the U. t this was a monopoly of the U. The board loaned the sident Roosevelt, to compete with | rm. HAYWOOD MEMOIRS TO REVEAL HIS BOYHOO LYNCH NEGROES IN MISSISSIPPI One Burned at Stake; Another Strangled BULLETIN. CLARKSDALE, Miss., Dec. Charles Shepard, the Negro prisoner who escaped from the penitentiary farm a few days ago, was burned at | the stake near here tonight. | Some om CLEVELAND, Miss., Dec. 31—| The posse conveying Charles Shep- | ard, a Negro prisoner at the state | penitentiary who was forced by the | intolerable brutalities of the prison) regime to take a desperate chance | and flee, was late today being rushed by a lynch mob of a hundred men to) his death, The band started immediately for | | } lieved Shepard probably. would. be hanged and burned according to pre- viously announced plans of leaders there. He had been arrested after a four day search. Woman to Start Fire. Leaders said Shepard would be! taken before Mrs. Duvall, 55, wife of the slain guard, and that she! would be permitted “to start his ex- ecution,” | T. L. Fox, superintendent of the) (Continued on Page Five) IMPERIAL ROADS Hymns Sooth While He WASHINGTON, Dec. 31.—Dis- patches by wireless form the U. S. | Battleship Utah, conveying Presi- | dent Elect Hoover to Washington, tell of detachments of sailors sent to the Sunday preaching on deck to! cultivate the right atmosphere of sanctity by singing “Onward Chris- | tian Soldiers,” and “Nearer My God to Thee,” while at the same time) Hoover gave out the information on his imperialist projects. Aside from Hoover's interest in a bigger merchant marine to drive British competition from the American waters, and a giant airplane line project, to cover the Latin American countries with this modern, mechan- ical American eagle, and make easy | troop movements in case of inter- vention, he wanted immediately a railroad down the isthmus, and thru to the southern tip of South Amer- jea, for commercial and industrial penetration of the new U. S. em- pire. Tom Ray Se: _, “Please ive his Daily Work- ‘er campaign ‘list in the way of “greetings to help our ‘Daily’ to a living anniversary on its fifth year so that the struggles of the workers and the’ oppressed farm- ers can go on not only in Amer- vica, but all over the world.” There are the words with which ‘Tom Ray, of McDonald, Pa., one of ithe leading .nilitarts in the National Miners Union in ‘Pennsylvania, gins his letter enclosing a greeti list with many donations for the fifth anniversary of the Daily Worker. ' But this fig! miner doesn’t being ‘present.ab, this Unusual occa- on is to buy tickets at once at the 3 Worker, 26 Union | to think that such donations can begin | He was known by all as especially | MINER GREETS “DAILY” nds Donations tor Birthday One of the most noted of Ameri-| can labor leaders, “Big Bill” Hay- wood, was none the less a warmly human character, accessible to any- one and especially inviting and re- sponsive to the most obscure person who approached him, Much of the richness of his mem- oirs, known as “Bill Haywood’s Book,” is due to his insight into the lives of those about him. This could mean only that Haywood had that | peculiar quality of understanding | which gave him a comprehension of | others’ feelings as fully and keenly as of his own. In the book he wrote in Moscow, shortly before his death, he tells numberless incidents that reveal this quality. His early boyhood, spent in Salt Lake City and Ophir, Utah, in their pioneer days was no stranger to scenes of violence. Yet he reacted with horror when he first saw aNegro | lynched, and tells how his boyish | heart became heavy as lead at the knowledge that racial prejudice could reach suca abysmal depths. That experience was, probably, one of the factors causing Maysvood, as a labor leader, to actively and en- ergetically struggle against race prejudice in the labor movement. | welcoming into labor’s ranks Negro workers, or any of the so-called “in- ferior” races. | In the anniversary issue of the} Daily Worker, te first serial of Hay- wood’s wonderful memoirs will ap- pear on January 5. No other paper will publish these interesting ac- counts of a man who was both fa- mous and of rich human personal- ity; a revolutionist of international standing, who always had time for | the humblest worker who wished to | speak to him. | If you wish to be certain of get- ting all the series of “Bill Hay- tion in at once, so you will not miss | Ford, Promises to Give Jobs Out on Rotation; Six Men to Five Places | DETROIT, Mich., Dec. 30.—Un-| employment continues in this city,| but the Ford Motor Co., desiring to keep all of their former employces | around where one can compete on} the other, has evolved a plan for ro- tation of work, according to its an- nouncement. The men will be kept on part time work; five days a week, six men will be assigned to every five jobs. Two men will haye two consecutive days a week off, and others will be idle thruout the week. The plan af- fords, remarkable opportunities for | petty tyranny of the foremen in as-| signing the men to off weeks. | The Ford company, which has been running at the rate of 100,000 cars under produetion normal, will| “before March 1” according to its} proprietor, add 30,000 men, on this) part time plan. ican workers. ‘While this is by no} means sufficient,to repuy our Daily | Worker for the* service that has been rendered and carried regular- ly in the columns of the greatest of | all papers, I h to have more reach you from all sections of the’ country to keep our paper secure | for at least another year.” What about it, fellow-workers? Are you helping to keep your paper secure for at least another year? The “Daily” fights for you—send a_ birthday greeting and donation even if it means a sacrifice, in order to keep it fighting for you. Get your shopmates, your friends, your or- ganizations to do likewise, The time is short. Rush all greetings at repay the “Daily” for the role ri plays in the struggles of the Amer-|Squarel — ‘once to the Daily Worker, 26 Union Fa U.S. 5, RL ASKS POLAND AGREE TO OUTLAW WAR Deplores Slowness In Non-Aggression Pact | Negotiations Kellogg Treaty Unsafe mise j | 1 Plea to Preserve Peace of Eastern Europe WARSAW, Dec. 31.—The Peoples |Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of the U. S. S. R. has sent through| Assistant Commissar Litvinoff a note to the Polish government, pro-| posing that inasmuch as the Kellogg treaties were unsuitable for preven- tion of war, and in any case would not b: officially ratified for a long time by the nations which signed them, that Poland and the Union of} Socialist Soviet Republics agree on} a peace treaty, renouncing war as a) means of international relationship. |The note was handed Saturday to| Stanislaus Patek, Polish Ambassa-| dor at Moscow. Wants Non-Aggression Pact. { The note of the U. S. S. R. em-| phasizes the fact that the peace of| Eastern Europe needs protection, | and deplores the slowness in the | | negotiation of the Polish-U. S. S. R. non-aggression treaty. Proposes Peace Treaty NEEDLE TRADES UNION AMALGAMATION IS CARRIED OUT, DELEGATIONS MERGED; CONVENTION BUILDS NEW ORGANIZATION Sntrance of Furriers Signal for Stirring Scene; I DEAD VICTIMS | Choose Committees | OF LANDLORDISM Pat Toohey, Now Mine Union Leader, Greets New Needle Trades Organization Litvinov. Maxim Litvinoff, Assistant Com- ‘or Foreign Affairs of the R,, who has presented a note to the Polish government, asking for a treaty outlawing war be- tween the two countries, Gas Heat ‘Danger For New York Workers In a cheap flat of a moldy old house at Tenth St. and First Ave., a family of seven was found dea - BOLIVIA MASSES York landlords have, of furnishing n TROOPS, PLANES The amalgamation of the two great needle w orkers’ unions the cloak and dressmakers’ and the furriers, approved by a huge rally of the rank and file on Sunday, was consummated ® yesterday morning. A stirring scene, long to be remembered, was enacted when this took place in New Star Casino, where the cloak and dressmakers had begun their con- vention. The delegates of the former gar- ment union, and the hundreds of rank and file guests, were in the big hall, when suddenly the furrier for flats and furnished rooms where Ex-Socialist to Hono ian immigrant labor his wife, | r the poor live. Blackshirt Murderer ; Mary; with five children, Minnie, 17; Force Paraguay to Sign an a terday as a result of the habit 0 other heat but illuminating gas Joseph Rindone, a 37-year-old Ital- | Fiorello La Guardia has complet- | Ada, 15; Joseph, 16; Hari ed his development. He has gradu-| Gloria, 4, were the victim Two | Unfair Protocol jel ‘ a ee ated from the socialist camp to the | boys escaped. One, who was visit- Said th Aira penis te eer ate ae fascist. The good republican is one | ing a relative, and one, an older boy,| Spanish language papers in New seam Ho tae Then all York publish an Associated Press } dispatch dated Dec. 30, from Buenos Aires, and apparently boycotted by | Englash language capitalist press, to the effect that correspondents in |Asuncion, Paraguay, report power- ‘ful troop concentrations of the Bo vian army in the Gran Chaco di: \puted territory, with the imminent of the honorary committee to greet | who is in what the State of New the fascist murderer, Balbo, at ban-| York calls a “reform school.” quet here Friday, Jan. 4, together Poison Gas for Heat. with the most reactionary Italian! ‘The tenement is so old and unsani- elements in the city. tary that even for lower East Side The militarist Italian workers of | Poor it was unattractive. Only one this city are organizing a mass| Other apartment than the Rindone’s protest meeting for Thursday, Jan.| is occupied. ‘ 8, at 8p. m., Plaza Hall, 15th Street | In the bitter cold, the family had joined in a demonstration, hailing the new union. The furriers’ delegation then di- vided itself off according to terri- torial representation, and were shown to the tables around which sat their home town comrades repre- senting cloak and dressmakers. With this organizational task com- and Irving Place, at which they will been using a small gas heater and Litvinoff expresed regret that/| demonstrate against the bloody bru- | the kitchen gas stove to keep from Poland had not agreed to the re-| talities which Balbo directed and freezing. There was no other heating peated offers of the Soviet Union to sign a treaty of non-aggression be- {tween them. The Soviet Union re-} affirms that the Kellogg treaty is defective, he added. And the U. S. S. R. recognizes that something should be done, even though it be a mere expression of policy, such as the general statement that war be- tween the two governments is re- nounced. * * * aor WARSAW, Poland, Dec. “31 (UP)—Polish political circles were highly interested today in rt Litvinoff note. It was understood the note will be answered next week. PERSHING TELLS STORY OF ARMY Speaks Friday Night at Anti-War Meet George Pershing, who is to com plete a nation-wide tour with his ap- | weod ” : rips i x wood’s Book,” rush your subscrip-| hearance here on Friday night at Trving Plaza, where he is to speak | any one of these incomparable sto- | i i tine ey a -| together with Robert Minor and | ries of Haywood’s boyhood in the old | g-stt Nearing under the auspices of |Plans Troop Movement ¥°s* the All-America Anti-Imperialist League, revealed an interesting and informative history to the Daily Worker interviewer. He had first come in contact with militant labor in Minnesota, where e worked as a lumberjack for thé Backus and Brooks Lumber oe pany. In 1923 he participated in strike led by the I. W. W. As the result of the strike the whole lum- ber gang was blacklisted and the; picked their way through the back woods to Duluth in search of a job. There was no job to be had. Army Bunk Gets Him. “And here’s where the high-pow: ered publicity of the recruiting off cers won,” said Pershing. “I joinet the army in January, 1924, to ‘ge educated and see the world,’ bu chiefly to get something to eat. was in a citizens’ military trainin: camp in 1921 and I thought that th army would be the same way. So joined.” Pershing did not find the army: the same way., He was immediately, sent to Hawaii to help the America forces to hold the Pacific area for, U. S. imperialism. Fy The breaking-point came when he and four other soldiers tried to break up a .speakeasy-prostitute house, which was run under the pro- tection of the military police. “Many of the boys got syph here Many of them were highjacked, s we about decided we would put ai end to it.” i Railroaded. So the military police, who pro: Continued on Page Two New Year Ends Smit ButSameGang Stays In ALBANY, Dec. 31.—At midnight! tonight Governor Al Smith goes into the discard, future uncertain, except, that it will probably not be one of penury, for Al. served big business well, Another of the same party and) school takes his place, Franklin D, Roosevelt, He took the oath of of: fice tonight at 9:30, and will atten a celebration in his honor at noot) tomorrow. the | “| features participated in personally. | As a congressional nominee en- dorsed by the socialist party ticket | in 1924, the lawyer for the yellow socialist administration of the Amal- | gamated Clothing Workers’ Union, La Guardia meets with the Italian ambassador, the consul general, the teditor of Mussolini's “Il Populo | d’Italie,” and with the biggest Ital- ian bankers, builders, politicians, ete. {to greet these murderers of thou- | Sands of Italian workers and commu- nists. The workers of New York will take a stand on this reception in the | decisive manner it requires. They will show by their numbers and de- termination at their protest meet- lirig on Friday how they regard | butcher Balbo and his “socialist” |and “progressive” associates. | The speakers at the mass meeting | will be Vanni Montana, of “I] Lavo- | ratore,” Norman Tallentire, of the International Labor Defense, Wil- jliam W. Weinstone, of the Work- }ers (Communist) Party, Carlo Tres- ca, editor of Il Martello, and T. De- Fazio, of the Anti-fascist Alliance of North America. U.S. GAN'T BUY BRITISH SHIPS 'Wreck’em Rather Than | Help Rival Empire | LONDON, Dec. 31—A united \drive against foreign shipping by \British ship owners and shipyards jis a significant event here during \the last weeks of 1928, The U. S ‘shipping board’s determination to drive the Cunard (British) line from | the New York Havana run has} larmed British industry in general, | dand has intensified the feeling of| PARTY DISCUSSION V present industrial and commercial conflict between the U. S, and Brit- ish empires, with a logical conclu- sion whispered about and in some} quarters frankly and openly ex-} pressed, that the day of military | conflict is near. | Take Loss, Cut Competition | The review of Lloyd's List for |1928, which has just been published, three articles warning against the sale of British ships to) foreign, owners, unless the purchas- | ers prémise to junk them. It is! better for the British empire, all) ‘three authors agree, that shipown-| ers take some present loss in the |price of such ships, instead of sell- Hing them to strenghten competitors. | John T. Batey, president of the Shipbuilding Employers Federation, hopes the time is coming “when ship owners will realize the folly of such action (selling ships for use of competitors) and come to some ar-_ rangement whereby their ships will | ibe broken up instead of being ‘transferred to foreign competitors.” Major Marmaduke Lawther, presi- | dent of the Institute of Chartered | Continued on Page Four $3,500,000 LUMBER FIRE. McLEARY, Wash,, Dec. 31. (U.R)— Three million dollars worth of ma- chinery and approximately $500,000 in stock was lost today whey. fire destroyed the McLeary door faory. it arrangement, a typical New York custom of. landlords in the working class districts. But it was not from the gas fumes that they died, as many do, when the gas for one reason or another goes out and asphyxiates those who may be asleep. Th efamily was awake, apparently busy dressing, and the gas was not only on, but burning, even when the police broke in the door when a neighbor suspected something amiss. The deaths caniefrém carbon mon- | oxide, an ingredient of the cheapest kind of illuminating gas, which, be- ing cheapest to make, is most used. Need Tenants’ Organization. However, some cities forbid the use of this cheap gas with its high percentage of carbon monoxide poi- son, and require gas of less danger- ous quality with a smaller percentage |of this invisible danger which kills | instantly by robbing the blood cells | | of oxygen. | The tragedy only accents the ne- cessity of New York workers or- | ganizing a tenants’ organization to \fight the extortions and dangers }forced upon them by greedy land- | lords who have not the slightest con- ‘sideration for the lives and health of tenant workers. Suits Resulting From Queens Sewer Grafting SUITS RESULTING — Suit was filed today in the Queens ‘supreme court against 30 defend- ants, including Maurice E. Connclly, |to reclaim for New York City $10, |000,000 misspent in sewer construc- |tion in Queens. Seven of the defendants already have been served in the suit, as has |been Harry P, Snyder, who s at- terney for the defendants in the |action brought by Emory R. Buck- |ner, special investigator appointed by Governor Smith. Most of the defendants are con- tractors in ueens who sold sewer pipes to the city. prospect of another clash, “The heaviest troop movements seem to be near the Paraguayan town of Galpon, now occupied by Bolivia, and opposite Fort Vanguar- jdia, where the first battle occurred | some weeks ago. | Bolivian airplanes have been reg- | larly flying over the Paraguayan : port of Bahia Negro, at night, nd dropping flares. u 5 2 pte Force Thru Protocol. WASHINGTON, Dec, 31.—In a four-hour meeting today of the spe- ‘Gal committee on mediation appoint-| for the new union. ed by Secretary of State Kellogg from among the Latin American delegates at the Pan American con- ference, but with Charles Evans Hughes on it as American represert- lative and boss of the committee, Paraguayan resistance to some of the unfair provisions of the protocol for “arbitration” of the Bolivia- Paraguay battle of Vanguardia was beaten down, The Protocal will be signed Tues- ;day by the representatives of Boli- via and Paraguay, Diez de Medina, of Bolivia, and Dr. Eligio Ayala, former president of Paraguay and delegate to the conference, U. S. Empire Controls. The protocol provides that nine, judges shall sit on the case, two each from Paraguay and five from the U. S. controlled Pan American Ccnference for Con- ciliation and Arbitration. The points ue are only the battle and the ations that will be assessed repar against Paraguay for defending her territory against the Bolivian trocps taking their orders from American | bankers, The ownership of the Gian Chaco itself will not be considered by this committee, Meanwhile, mies disbanded because of arbitra- tion, Bolivia’s forces quietly assem- ble, «and new warfare is expected. TELEGRAPHERS JOIN UNION. ST. LOUIS (By Mail)—The Or- der of Railroad Telegraphers en- rolled 493 new members in October, lit is announced. Most Cities for C.E.C. by OTE Big Majority Returns from membership meetings of the Workers (Communist) Party in the pre-convention discussion of questions now before the Party for settlement show that the vote is overwhelmingly in sup- port of the Central Executive Committee of the Party. The returns as known to the Dai time are-as follows: ily Worker up to the present City CoE. C. Opposition Abstain New York 1153 573 48 Chicago 290 173 iy Seattle 1 2 Superior 1 gy Boston" uM 4 Pittsburgh . 19 3 Philadelphia 44 8 Detroit : 62 9 Minneapol 9 Buffalo 1 0 New Haven 19 0 Cleveland 21 1 Milwapkee 24 0 Paterson. 6 7 Worcester. 7 1 New Bedford 1 te, Waukegan Ct) 0 2 Kansas City . + 6 1 & CALIFO! A’S RESULTS (COMPLETE) ij San Francisco AL AT Lg Los. geles 96 2 alan yes 2 0 Santa *Chra BY GBebdBtricd) cial Total Calitorica and Bolivia, | with Paraguyan ar-)| pleted, the convention settled down {to the job of laying the granite blocks that will be the foundation | of the new union. All throughout the morning and afternoon sessions, the latter end- ing about 6 in the evening, floral baskets, bouquets, and telegrams of | greetings kept coming in, necessitat- ing the halting pf business, while | the accumulated greetings were read off. The delegations of workers from the shops were greeted with applause as they came in bearing their. expressions: af %2024.wishe. ‘When the ‘day | had ended all but the chairman’s | table was hidden behind a huge bank of fiery red flowers, the aroma of which made sitting at the press table increasingly pleasant. In a speech that moved everybody, Pat Toohey, secretary-treasurer o/ the National Miners’ Union, told o/ the heroic struggles of the worker: in the coal mines against the bosse: and their agents, the Lewis machin in control of the United Mine Work ers. After telling the delegates hoy the mine workers had gone thru th: same struggles thut they had face: and how they had decided to-foun their own rank and file union, hi greeted the new amalgamated unio: of needle trades workers and haile it as a brother-in-arms against th: common foe—the capitalist clas and its agents in the labor move ment, A picturesque illustration of th difference between the convention o militant needle trade workers’ or ganization and) the conventions 0 the old decayed bureavcratic ma chine controlled. by. the soviatist,of ficialdom, was presented in» yer graphic terms by a girl delegat from the recently built Baltimor local of the cloak and dressmaker: union, Describes Corruption. | She told the convention how th |old corrupt gang used to contr previous conventions in order t flout the will of the great majoritic of the membership. “Just befor each convention,” she related, * high official from the national o fice used to come into town ar spend a few days there picking o girls whom he later appointed < delegates.” These “delegates” wou be pledged to support the machir {at the convention on promise of | good time in the big city. “I wi: |such a delegate,” she said, addin \“but since I was shown what re | unionism means, I will go back the Baltimore girls and tell the | what we are build here.” She al |remarked satirically that it is f | better to sleep in the home of sor fellow worker than at the hotels t ruse fakers used to spend mon | for. Bring in Report. When the convention swung it | work they did so with a display remarkable efficiency. The Co mittee of Rules and Regulatio which was appointed earlier, ca ‘in with its report. Briefly, th recommendations, slightly amenc _after an exceedingly interesting ¢ |mature discussion, are that there |four more sessions of the cony tion, one more that afternoon ; |three for today, beginning with la. m. and ending at 10 p. m.; | Wolf Weiner, Boston, A, Luts |Los Angeles, M. Levine, Chic: jand A. Bert, Philadelphia, were | be chairmen of the sessions in « named. Vice-chairmen chosen H. Rosemond, _representi workers, Oswaldo Busepi, ~ Continued on Page 7

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