The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 15, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Two is Bas OL eT DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 193 aeeiteeeeieadinics seman SNOWD EN WANTS MOR WAR ARMS FOR BRITISH IMPERIALISTS WAR USE Big Increase in Budget Is Reported, But No Increase for Jobless NDHI FINISHES SALTTAX STUNT Aids British Bosses Against Masses BOMBAY, April 14.—Gandhi ‘ended his futile circus stunt of salt- | ‘ Try to Shift Burdens of Crisis on Backs of} making today with a meeting at the Workers LONDON, April 14.—Admitting | that a large part of the huge ex- penditures proposed in Parliament today would be used for “new arm- aments in preparation for another possible war,” “labor” chancellor of he exchequer, Philip Snowden re- ported on the 1930-31 budget. He vas greeted with cheers by both} the labor and conservative sup- porters of British imperialism. hile not prov W ing for an in- nt insurance, e rapidly growing army of less in Great Britain, Snowden’s budget paves the way for tremen |dous armament additions, especially to the air forces. The budget pro vides for over $5,300,000 additionai to be spent on bombing planes and general air armaments. |the Bombay beach. Thus far he has |Car Porters, were postponed today | When the U.M.W district agreement had the co-operation of the British imperialist authorities, who let him play at the water’s edge making ‘nedible muddy salt, as a trick to | citing to riot by the police, and the| the wage cut and long term con- mislead the growing revolution: temper of the Hindu mass Gandhi has not stated what next move will be. He is disap- 's /conduct against each. ,Harper-Kelley Case Is Postponed to Thursday Workers Rally to Aid The cases of Sol Harper, organ- izer of the American Negro Labor Congress, and Rose Kelley, a mili- tant white woman worker who tried to defend Harper when he was at-| | tacked by the police after rising to, peak against lynching at a meet- jing of the Brotherhood of Sleeping | until Thursday in the 157th St. Court. Both are charged with in- Randolph clique in the B. of S. C, P. | wore out complaints of disorderly | | Asplit has developed among the | Several slight raises in income pointed because the British officials |B. of S. C. P. members, many con- | tax were recommended by Snowden, as well as increased taxation on beer. The entire budget amounts to | $3,909,545,000, and will inerease the burdens on the workers. The finan- cial yeat ended with a deficit of | $70,000,000, when the “labor” gov- ‘ernment had expected a surplus. Hypocritical Revision of Baumes Law Pretending to yield to the uni- versal condemnation of the New York law condemning to life im- ling. A “fourth offender” will, un- jder the change now suggested by Baumes, be allowed parole when he 4 pa _» | has served as much time as would prisonment all “fourth offenders’ be the aentence for the fourth of- no matter how slight the charge on/fense, But this is a life time par- which conviction obtained, | ole, which changes again to life in Baumes, still head of the crime com-| Prison whenever the required week- mission, the life of which was ex-|ly bribe to the patrolman or parole tended by the last session of the Officer fails. Baumes also proposes legislature, proceeds to make the/ to increase the age limit for “juven- law worse. \ile offenders” from 16 to 18 years. A “cat and mouse” angle is to be | Juveniles can be held in prison un-| inserted, so that juries will have/til 21 for offenses that might get a was } have not arrested him. They con- sidered his actions as very helpful to them against the masses. . * ALLAHABAD, Bombay, India, April 14.—Jawaharlal Nehur, presi- dent of the bourgeois All-India Na- ; tional Congress, was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment on the charge of violating the salt law. A widespread campaign of propaganda is seeping through the petty-bour- | geois controlled native press, but it is directed as much against revo- lution by the masses as it is against British imperjalism. The petty- bourgeois are trying to force the British “labor” government, which s acting for British imperialism, to unite with it against the Hindu | workers and peasants who from day to day become more revolutionary. ‘A and P” Slave I Drivers Scared at the Call for demning the officials for prosecut- | jing, and the Negro press is also | divided. The sleeping car porters’ | | officials yesterday attempted to withdraw their charges as a result. | A meeting is being arranged by the A, N. L, C. and the Interna- | tional Labor Defense in Harlem |this week to protest the Wilkins | IN HARD COAL Every Member of Gang Is Out for Himself SHENENDOAH, Pa., April 14.— | All hard coal miners are wondering what will happen on August 31, | | | 0 | expires. The National Miners Union |is calling all anthracite miners to |fight under its leadership against t c d t w t d tract which Lewis and the higher district officials are openly arrang- jing, in conferences and banquets with the employers where they pro- mise never to strike. U. M. W. Shattered. But with the exception. of control | of critical opinion decentralization | {and first signs of dissolution within the United Mine Workers are al- ready evident. Local and sub-district | officers, in speaking at their local union meetings, spend no time ex. tolling the virtues of Lewis but tr n ir P officers of the nu fi moved and carried away by a patri- hi th: | tur soldier out of the apartment f complete ruin gives the son of the manuf murder and to expose the Randolph clique. {to protect their own places by talk \ing district business, “Never mind | what happens anywhere else,” is the burden of their song. “Let us fortify ourselves in our own district and ni the latest Sovkino Journal No, 22 an ac RADIO, GUNS BAR see that our jobs are protected,” _ th District officers are preparing for | August with an eye to making the best bargain they can for them- | selves. They even advise striking pi | by pit, instead of a whole collie TEXTILE MEETING Superintendents Warn Workers of Discharge Workers and Farmers ‘Delegation Off for the si R in ROME, Ga. April 14.—Armed sunmen sent by the mill owners DP ing, when Eva Le Gallienne’s com-| Soviet Union On Wed. LEWIS SELLOUT ‘Premiere Showing “Simple Tailor”, at 2d Ave. Today Beginning today, the 2nd Ave- Playhouse, will show for the ‘st time new Soviet film ‘Simple Taylor.” The picture mir- ors a tragedy of a Jewish soldier BEBE DANIELS _ a | the tic impulse t» the front. friends, the workers a tr 0 open his eyes to the existing onditions, but it is all in vain, he lecides to die for the Czar. At the} ime when the Jewish wo: in| niform are dying for ry, the Jewish manufacturers a iv’ big profits made on hrough ny army. throws jot paying the rent. H n order to help the famil In Bayard Veiller’s “Alias French je,” now showing on the Globe heatre screen. y te Her riend is arrested by the police for | ropaganda among the soldiers. The rmy create a po-| CHECKHOV’S “UNCLE VANYA” e the Jews kava OPENS TONIGHT | On the same program is shown} Jed Harris Di |hov’s “Uncle Vanya,” at the Co Theatre this evening. rom, and nasse, will nt of the latest events in east he Soviet Union, ing. In the cast are Osgood Perkins, Lillian Gish, CIVIC REPERTORY RETURNS | Walter Connolly, Eugene Powers, NEXT MONDAY WITH ‘d Joanna Roos. The present ver- “ROMEO & JULIET” on is by Rose Caylor, ' Plans for the first four of the x remaining weeks of the Civic Hairdressers and Barbers Called to epertory Theatre’s season will ¢ nto effect on Easter Monday even- any will return from a, two-week | Meet by T.U.U.L.. ——s “For All Kinds of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York UNION SQUARE THEATRES AcmeTheatre 56 East 14th Street NOW PLAYING “MEISTERSINGER ” the German Film Clansie from the Opera by RICHARD WAGNER, —ADDED ATTRACTION— “WILL HE COME BACK?” THREE GREAT FIGHTS ‘*, Tunney. Dempsey ve, Sharkey, Sharkey vs, Stribling. «x DIE HOSE XT W With Warner Kraus, Jenny Jugo. Also Berlin After Dark. W. L. R, CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3088 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered. All profits go towards strikers and their families, SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS: Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUE at 86th Street Subway Station NEW YORK CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers in MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, 'CBLLO ‘Theory and all other instruments és ss 4 tors! Pat fewer compunctions about convict-| six month sentence for an adult. h F d C vention and business men last night barred | engagement in Philadelphia, to re-| east | Cooperators Patronize the Foo ONVENUION “si sods 1h the Hall hie sce | |. Planning ‘to ke tn Mossy on sume the New York season with] A special meeting of hairdressers | S E R O Y . i — meeting had been called by the Na-|the first of May, a delegation of the premiere of Shakespeare’s | and barbers has been called for | Argentine Paper for Wall Street The New York food workers, or- ‘ional Textile Workers Union The|Ameriean workere and farmers to|“Romeo and Juliet,” which ie the CHEMIST BUENOS AIRES, April 14.—La|able Argentine markets, with Iri- | &@nized and iad ae all trade Presna in an editorial printed yes- goyen favoring British imperialism. | Working in the food industry, arc terday criticizes President Irigoyen|La Presna now sponsors the cause | Called by the Food verre HA for not appointing an ambassador |of Wall Street. More and more Ar- tion of the Trade Union vee to Washington |gentine is looking to Wall Street for League to send delegates to the The editorial follows a contro-|loans and La Presna declares in Shop convention Neos ei an versy over Irigoyen’s refusal at|view of the fact that the “commerce | t® form a new food workers’ indus- fifth and final one this season. ; Among the nine plays scheduled|#t 13 W. 17th St. {through May 17, Miss Le Gallienne | P of the T will include Barrie’s “Peter Pan.” 'League. »wner of Millers Dance Hall which|the U. S. S. R., will leave Wed-| he union had obtained for the meet-/nesday morning April 16, on the ing denied the use of the hall. | Aquitania. The delegation is un- Before the meeting was to take der the auspices of the Friends of place, mill superintendents threaten. | the Soviet Union. $ ed all workers who might attend! A farewell will be given to this that if they did so they would find; group on Tuesday evening, Apri |Thursday, April 17, at 8:30 p. m.,| | under the aus- Union 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Unity | WORKERS’ CENTER trial union. first to talk with Hoover over the | between the two nations is increas- newly established radio-telephone to|ing considerably,” and because Argentine. |“American capital is following into There is a furious battle on in|the Argentine market,” an ambas- Argentine between American and|sador should be appointed to work Communist Party units are hold- ing factory gate meetings before many “food factories” te mobilize {the unorganized for the convention. | Managers of the slave driving At- themselves fired when they came to{15, by the Friends of the Sov work Monday. The bosses used a! Union, at 134 East 7th St, 8 p.m. radio hook-up with loud speakers! Dance and Concert ice their slanders on the N. T,| Theatre Guild Productions ORT |MADISON SQ. GARDEN s#o"? BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union GREIHEIT BLDG.——Malin Floor i p Twice Daily, 2 & 8, Doors Open 1 & 7 P.M. | British imperialism for the valu-|more closely with Wall Street. RINGLING lantic and Pacific grocery factory, | W. U., and to praise themselves a3} at all mills and in the streets to| of Soviet Music at Morgan Wins in WASHINGTON, April 14.—The | Big Steel Merger Eaton interests, with the Depart. | Morgan interests in the proposed; ment of Justice “threatening” an | Bethiehem Steel Corporation-Young- | stewn Sheet and Tube merger won) over the smaller parasite stockhold- | ers, led by the Cleveland banker, Cyrus S. Eaton, who opposes the! merger. A whole series of cases in court are now threatened by the Education Head Says That the United States should be continued to be ruled more and more by a class of wealthy parasites, was investigation. This investigation would be a means of U. S. govern-| ment support to the trustification. | The fight between the Morgan | and Eaton capitalist groups is over the spoils wrung from the workers and who will get the bigger share ' of profits. Parasites Should Rule Conference of Institutions for the Professional Education of Teachers, held at the Pennsylvania Hotel, Cooper suggested that the “leisure |825 East 141st St., were so alarmed | good masters of the workers. at the meeting and distribution of | | convention bulletins that they closed W. U. organizers who came to con- all but one gate, and speeded the} workers through that with curses | and injunctions to go right home.| Nevertheless, here and elsewhere| delegates are being secured. Newark Census Shows Unemployed Number At Least 8 Million NEWARK, N, J., April 14.—Cen- | sus returns on the first quarter! million here show about 7 per cent | out of work. This is, as stated re-| cently in the Daily Worker, proof | | FSU Affair Saturday The Friends of the Soviet Ri sian Concert and Dance, vy takes place next Saturday evening, To Build Education April 19, at 8 p. m,, at the Central | Plaza Hall, 111 Second Ave., will Center for Trade |have many concert surprises in the ii \program. A special Balalaika or- Union Movement chestra has been engaged, the la- test “Chastuschki” will be sung by the dramatie artist, Leis, recently | jarrived from the Soviet Union, and | the Soviet artist, Kopoliovich Lu- | ganov, will recite revolutionary || poetry. Borno Sulks at Thugs in cars trailed the N. T, duct the meeting. The Working Class Education Conference which will be opened by a banquet on Friday night, April 18, at Manhattan Lyceum at 7 p. m., will continue its sessions on Satur- day afternoon, April 19, at 2 p, m. The conference is called by the | Trade Union Unity League and the coisteastsasusenaunsemssssessse HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY MAR CIRCUS 1,000 New Foreign Features inel. Tribe of MOUTHED Admission to all incl, seats, $1 to $3.50 tax. Children er 12 half y afl. except Sat, Tickets at Garden Box Office, Gimbel Bros MUSIC BOX i=, 4 sway. Mats. Thursday and Saturday aj “TOPAZE” Comedy Hit from the French FRANK MORGAN, Clarence Derwent THE COUNTRY By IVAN TURGENEV GUILD Ww. 52a. Evs. 8:30 Mts.Th,&Sat.2:30 “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard Shaw ALVIN W. 52d.Bvs. 3:30 M x Wed. and Saturd t 2:30 with CONTINUOUS SHOWS pi _p ry! Deiiy Fro BW, Rae LO:SOcnL Workers School. Organizations the gist of a speech made Saturday | class,” by which he meant the chief | that the 6 per cent jobless found in| which have not elected delegates New York City, on incomplete re-| should do so at once, and send their by William J. Cooper, United States Commissioner of Education at the convention of the Eastern States, exploiters in the United States, be made into a fascist aristocracy to rule the workers with an iron hand. Mellon Kettle Calls Mellon Pot Black PHILADELPHIA, April 14.— Charges of graft and buying the senatorial and gubernatorial elec- tion were made yesterday by one section of the eorrupt Mellon ma- chine in Pennsylvania, headed by James J. Davis and Francis Shunk Brown, against the other rotten New Law Rai The new taxi-eab ordinance, rushed through by the board of al- dermen to save Police Commissioner Whalen who is violating the law by refusing to grant a license for taxi cabs cutting rates from the present 15 cents for the first quarter mile and 5 cents for additional quarters, has a joker in it. The ordinance Arrest Five Students in India LONDON, April 14,—Reports from Calcutta state that five stu- dents were arrested for preaching “sedition.” The boycott against British cotton cloth is rapidly ex- tending. * * 6 BOMBAY, April 13.—Gandhi is being left strictly alone by orders of the British imperialist Viceroy, it was pointed out today, when Divi- “Indignation” Won’t Help Jobless Suddenly discovering unemploy- | ment, the liberal, wishy-washy sky- pilot John Haynes Holmes declared in @ sermon yesterday, “I am in- dignant that there should be any jfaction, led by Joseph P. Grundy. There is not one iota of politica! i difference between the Davis-Grun- | | dy faetion. Both are supported by | Mellon money and follow the slight- jest wishes of the Hoover-Mellon Wall Street gang. ses Taxi Rate not only prohibits all rate cutting below the rate set by the big taxi fleets who seem to control! Whalen and the board, but it provides a new waiting rate that raises even the present fares. The new charge is 5 cents for each one and a quar-| ter minutes, instead of as at present, five cents for each two minutes, | sional Commissioner Garret and the | Division police officiels declared | they would not arrest Gandhi until \they received other instructions, from the Viceroy. Gandhi is the | best tool the British imperialists | beve among the Hindu bourgeois, since he is doing his utmost to de- flect the revolutionary discontent of the masses. such thing as unemployment in a christian.” Most sky-pilots try to |hide capitalist exploitation and its | inevitable mags unemployment under the term “christian.” Cleveland Jobless in Demonstration for Relief, Fight Cops CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 14.— Unemployed workers demonstrated in force today before the offices of the Cleveland Community Fund, de- | struggle, a delegation of the unem- | ployed, forced its way into the Fed- \eral Building and presented the de- | mands. | INDICT CHIEF AS BOOTLEGGER KEANSBURG, N. J., April 14— Charles W. McGuire, the chief of police of this town, and 75 pro- minent residents, some of them on the police force or in public office ‘and woolen, silk and knitted géods society calling itself civilized and|s |turns, was too low a figure for the names to the Workers School, 26-28 \country as a whole, since it is in; Union Square, New York City particularly that} there are spring seasons in the gar- ment and similar trades. Six per cent unemployed in the} country at large would be 7,200,000 jobless. Seven per cent would be} 8,400,000. ' FASCISTS UNITE ‘ VIENNA, April 14.—Expressive of the united front between the Fas- j cist elements of Germany and Auc- tria is the new commercial treats | reducing duties on Austrian draught and breeding cattle, sawed timber. just concluded. | METAL FRACTION MEETS. | All members of the Communist fraction in the Metal Trades League) of the T. U. U. L. are called to a! | meeting tomorrow evening at Work- | ers Center, 26-28 Union Square. Communist Activities ‘Workers School Banquet, 1 To open phen | Class Education- al Conference Friday, April 18, 7 ». m, Manhattan Lyceum, 66 St. Program; John Reed Club; admis- sion $1, *_ * * Seetion On Financia} BSeegetari ture Agents report at Street, right a bat Y. ©. %. Distriet Dance. Saturday, New Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Avenue. John C. Smith Band. Admission Tiekets at all League headquarters and 26 Vator Square, i Unit Meetings Tonight, teh at ection, 4,8 p. m., 143 EL ig it.. Room 6. Unit 1F, Section 6, 68 Whipple St. Unit 1, ‘Section 4,836 Lenod Ave, | and Litera- 7 E, Fourth ‘ships, docks, and locals of the M. School Officials Seek Injunction Against Strikers School officials of the Lincoln Memorial University sought an in- iunetion against the strike of over 400 students who have been out a week to date because of “medieval modes of administration” in the school and the dismissal of two pro- fessors. Only about thirty-five attended classes yesterday. Delegates Prepare for Marine Workers Union The National Office of the Marine Workers League announces that 200 delegates have already been elected to the national convention called by the league, to meet in New York at 140 Broad St., April 26. More delegates are being elected, from W. L. A considerable pereentage are Negro seamen and longshore- men. The convention will create a new Marine Workers Industrial Union. J Wall St. Orders, (Continued from Page One) martial law is being decreed by U. S. marines, A statement has been issued by General R. P. Williams declaring that “during the meetings of the Council of State this month, no gatherings in the streets will be allowed. All citizens are requested not to stand in the streets,” and in general to obey the orders of the | marines and the Wall Street police. | However, the Haitian Patriotic | Union tries to mislead the masses of Haiti into the belief that Hoover, the arch enemy of the Haitian work- ers and peasants, desires “inde- pendence” for Haiti. They crawl be- fore Hoover saying: “We beg the Honorable President Hoover to use his good office to stop the Council of State from functioning as was first agreed upon by his Commis- sion.” Worker Giving Out | “Daily” Is Arrested | Abram Dimoff spent a day in jail rather than pay a $2 fine on a dis- orderly eonduct charge arising from his distribution of the Daily Worker and other working-class literature at 120th St. and Park Ave. He was tried at the Fifth District Magi- strate’s Court. ‘LOVE, HONOR and BETRAY | | | ey | BEBE DANIELS ™ “Alias French Gertie” with BEN LYON ——— a a Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a St, W. of Bw: Saat. Wen. ae Worker Correspondent. EAST SIDE THEATRES ‘A. H, WOODS presents \ ALICE BRADY * | A Satirical Comeay | Now Playing! 2nd Ave. Playhouse 133 SECOND AV. CORNER EIGHTH STREET TODAY AMERICAN PREMIERE! Latest Soviet Production “The Simple Tailor’ (“MOTEL SHPINDLER”) A tremendous tragedy of a Jewish soldier carried away by patriotic impulse to help win the war and his later realization of the oppression by the esarist government of the Jews, —ON THE SAME PROGRAM— SOVKINO JOURNAL NO THE LATEST NEWS FROM THE SOVIET ane We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty Socialist and saint— p.m. Unit 8F, Section Unit 5, Sectior Mermaid Ave., 1,,6:30 p,m, nT, op. m., 2001 Coney Island, Labor and Fraternal Organizations. Women's Council Concert and Ball. Saturday, April 19, Menhatan Ly- ceum, 66 East 4th St. John C. Smith Band, 50e in. advance, 756 at door. Steve Katovis ILD, Wednesday, 8 p. m., at Workers Center, " . * Secce-¥ a sett! ILD. Wednesday, 1472 Boston Road. * 4 « Workers Laboratory Thentre, Standing for a government Without blemish, without taint. I do admit the system isn’t All that it ought to be Hear the Famous Pink Song and Danee Man in His Latest Hit: I'm Norman Thomas, Comrade Thomas, But cast your vote for Norman Thomas And leave the rest to me. Unemployment does exist And business isn’t bright; Just cast your vote for good old And things will be all right! Admission $1.00 RED REVUE AND BANQUET OF THE WORKERS SCHOOL Friday Evening, April 18th me at 7 o’clock Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St. & Usual Ageneles |; Phoebe Foster, | Dr, ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please teleph. | DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not connected with any other office Tel. ORChard 3783 DR. L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY Cor. STREET Eldridge St. NEW YORK VEGETARIAN ESTAURANT |] 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD,, Bronx | (near 114th St. Station) {|} PHONE:— INTERVALE 3149. RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEI1.UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sta. Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Eat where the best dairy foods are served. Where customer recommends another, TRIANGLE DAIRY RESTAURANT 1379 INTERVALE AVENUE Cor. Jennings st. BRONX Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVR, Phone: UNIversity 6968 Phoner-Btuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPRCIALTY: YPALIAN DISHES Sintra Mall Peaheelg meet where all , 02 E.12th St. New York Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write te The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept, 26-28 Union Sq., New York City manding immediate relief, to be | : mnee Hotel & Restaurant W paid for by the city and adminis. | Pee" yee tie RA federa| fvery evening this week, 8 p. m., W. 17th St, Opening the Working Class Education Conference tered by the workers. i pass solecstt-dy eS Painters Mine ection. om pe bale eee oo TAC t 2 re door “aectipea) a“ epi Baia Thesatll Ke entiete acl egal 8 hes i ling Restaurant, 116 See all the municipal celebrities in the political satire written Monday’ of Whe Moste Gasty? *“ ers defended themselves so well|ing of the Independent Shoe Work. Passate, mugen Main Aye. im Ret we and directed by the JOHN REED CLUB ef etna heute Mind pose out one of the uni- $4 tonlat ot Ld oe ee ny ant a eatin Menday,| ane Wetkere Obeneratire Tae tihrane Also a new one-act play by the WORKERS LABORATORY THEATRE atternoon at 8 oelosie Mounted police then charged the| portant m crowd, but after considerable there. Brighton Reacn No, 17. Fridav, 237 . district pioneer eeting, and all should be Agke Waal director, wil Stone, 4 o wlan See, Ule dee poe speak, nu Office cpen from ® a. m, to it

Other pages from this issue: