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AH Published by the Comprodally Publishing Co., Inc. datls except Sunday, at 26.28 Unton Page Six Souare New York City, NY Telephone Stuyvesant & Cable: “DATWORNS.” Adirese ane mai) all checks to tee Daily Worker 26-28 I’nion SGuare New York VN ¥ THE] HUMBUG of HENRY FORD (By a Ford Worker.) HE Ford Plant in Detroit is pointed to, to show the “Open Shop.” generally of erally accepted that there is ation interfer- nat is neces- there, ing beca s good is looked after s high, work fairly con- of men who see to it that fairly comfortable. Ford has statements so frequently As a matter the conditions epted as truth. no place where e worker are so exacting, grinding o utterly opposed to every attribute of dec ent and dev 2 lop ped Diane je these con- of f tendents and foremen who for with Ford and made it pos to be what it is t ntari forgotten th of men super hav rey office las compa some of They contempl Manchester, Cork, into. the 1 conditior orld nt inople, Labor. Labo! missioner a report workers e The vabor aplo; figur given have no doubt hy the Departr tended to wherever ent of in every case y but eve the benefit with that the figures Con Statistics, Stewart, in ed, wages s of 100 Ford workers typical of om wages from $6.40 to y of the hundred out at $6.48 per day. were for the yea working time for the 3 days. The average income from other source: than that being earned at Ford’s was—$14 The average incomg from all sources wa covering "family in Detroit, with ex- there industry m coming earnings average average expenditure was making an annual deficit of the Ford workers $7.96. The commissioner of labor in including the income from other sources in the total income was simply a method to make things look a little better than the really were. The income from wages earned against the family expenditure should only have been stated. This would have given the definite relation of wages the | hed far and wide. | earned at Ford’s at 1,649.63 against a family | expenditure of $1,719.83 which would show a deficit of earning at Ford's against expendi- tures of $25.20, which actually means that the 100 average families whose husbands or fath- ers are employed at Ford’s are in debt after working 250 days of $25.20. Now let us see how these 100 families ex- pend their wages. Some families had savings while others had bills for medical and other necessary expenses and no savings. The prin- ciple items of expenditure were: Food +» -$556.00* Housing - 388.81 Clothing .. +++ 210.67 Fuel and Light ....... 103.20 Furniture & furnishing 88.55 Life Insurance ....... 59.16 kness Expenses 64.73 School Expen 6.41 Cleaning materials Barbering Miscellaneous * about $10.69 per week The general home that was occupied was of from four to five rooms in a general home of a typical modern city of the 100 families: 47 owned automobiles radios had sewing machines had vacuum cleaners had telephones 6 had pianos 45 had phonographs 51 had washing machines Installment plan purchases were being made by 59 families. The money expended on to- bacco for 84 families for the year was $22. the average expen nditure for the movies for the year was $5.55. Now that the fig- made possible it would be of extreme rtance if the commissioner of labor could 1iry into the firms to ontracts. 36 87 29 5 and ures are erstood that the Ford » throughout by Ford. Such is not He has contracts for bodies from and the Murray Body Corporation ing 40 or 50 to 75 cents per hour, Murray ly Corpor on have within the last few weeks fired about 420 men who had been get- ting 60 to 75 cents per hour and replaced them by women getting,on piece work 15 to 30 cents an h he cohditions th are tated by the Detroit Fed e of the women can on 0 bad that it is tion of Labor that arn $7 to $8 per wee Ford contracted out the making of the generat nd the brake band to firms giv- ing 50 to 70 cents per hour for a 9 to 10 | hour day. So much for the policy of Ford Just now to work at Ford's and be a fore- man and not own a Ford car is of some con- en The f owning shaking in their other shoes. sequence. but Ford are es are b wede I: the s Bar cetntendents to their respective foremen as to whether or re hey own a Ford ccr. If they have not, ne within a v told to get one, f days; others get a longer pe It does not make any difference to Ford whether the car the foreman owns is paid for or not. The foreman must get rid of his car and substitute it for a Ford. None of them have the guts of a louse to make a stand like de- cent and honorable men and spend their earn- ings just where and how they like. The story of the conditions in Ford’s plant, not that sec- tion where the visitors are taken around, would be difficult to believe if it could be expressed. Take the foundry where the mo- tor blocks are cast, it difficult to imagine how men could stand the conditions there and keep human, “ Ford is a believer in the theory that he has lived before and he will live again. If he has lived before he must have returned as a spawn of hell, and should he ever come back it is to be hoped he will return to take his place with the chein gang fastened to- gether at Ford's foundry sweating and faint- ing, granding and bleeding, always at his post and e y knowing he is getting deeper and deeper into debt, his expenditures being $25 more than he can ever earn working 250 days per year. The monster that Ford and his kind are controlling amassing billions after billions of dollars, which ever increase and increase, sharpening the economic crisis and the war danger and more and more intensify pressure on the workers. The sentiment and the thoughts of the worker will compell them to seek a way = ‘om is fevor- able. The r “sed. = must be or; The Shopkeepers ’ “Socialist” Administration in Reading By FRED VIGMAN. WHEN, about three years ago the socialists rose into office as the administration party’ of Reading on the shopkeepers slogan of lower taxation, socialists sang paens to the new order that was to be established in Reading. Even the Communist Party reflected this viewpoint when we issued a statement calling upon the socialists to make good their pledge and pro gram. Prior to their advent to administration power the official socialist party numbered thirty- five members. Controlling, however, the Fed erated Trades Council, the American Federa- tion Labor body of Reading and vicinity, com- posed of craft unions, and upon the basis of the disintegration of the democratic adminis- tration, the small shopkeepers, householders rallied to the new-founded socialist slogan of cheap government. The workers that drag- ged in the wake of this petty-bourgeois tax re- form movement were enticed to the socialist party by promise of social reform. In his inaugural address, Mayor Stump, so- cialist, made clear that “legitimate” and private property had no reason to fear the socialists. That in contrast to the graft-ridden, cumbersome democratic administration the so- cialists wouid pul] the bosses government ma- chine out of ‘debt, and guarantee “clean and cheap” government, etc. And as a sop to the workers, Stump promised illusory prosperity and various reform projects. What were the problems facing the Reading workers at the time when the socialists as- sumed office? Notoriously open shop, the Reading bosses do not even require the Amer- ican Federation of Labor to “organize” their workers. With developed systems of espionage, black-listing, company guards, etc., the bosses have kept the Reading workers from organ- ization, while wage-cut after wage-cut, speed- up system after system were introduced and the workers ever driven harder and harder. Organization of the workers in the hosiery, cotton, iron and hat factories was and is the burning need of the workers.” That the work- ers of Reading are driven at a terrific speed and their rate of exploitation proportionately higher than in many other industrial centers, is the boast of the Reading Chamber of Com- merce, claiming that the per capita produc- tion of the workers here is greater than any other city in tle United States. Unemployment even three years ago was 2 _ stark reality to thousands of workers class business | fot of. thousands, even with entire families working in the mills and factories. What was the socialist answer to these prob: lems of the workers? With the blare of trum- pets, the socialists announced that the “equial- ization” of assessments was the big issue fac ing their administration. And so a new as- sessment appraisal was made, and amidst hos annas of triumph and victory many shop- keepers yere granted as high as 2 cents on the $100 assessment reduction. AS The workers of the Reading Iron ds. receiv: ing a wage cut, came out in a spontaneous strike. The socialists rushed to the scene of the strike, organized a company union, col- lected dues and told the workers to aid the bosses in increasing production and become “ef- ficient.” The workers went back, their strike broken. Having settled that, the socialists cast around for another fake issue to divert the workers’ attention from their betrayal. They turned to the momentous question of a new city hall as ‘befits a socialist administration. The issue was that of a new building or the renovation of an old building with the big building contractors for a new building and the socialists for a renovated building to save money. The socialists won another “socialist” victory. When Hoover announced his colossal fake public improvements construction plan to smooth out the rough spots in the capitalist crisis, the socialists took it up eagerly and an- nounced that they would inaugurate great public works. Today, from 10 to t5 thousand workers of a wage-earning population of 40,000 ‘are total- ly unemployed. Many more thousands are on part time. But to the socialist :dministration there is no unemployment, Taking their cue from the Chamber of Commerce who claim that only 4,- 000 exclusive of building trades and clerical workers are unemployed the socialists say that only a little more than 3,000 are out of work. The jobless are fed on Hooverian promises, while even the nurma] amount of building con- struction falls steadily. The suggestion of un- employment insurance is met with expressions of dismay an’ horror. “Think of the taxes” the socialist chorus takes up the refrain. Recently thousands of hosiery workers re- ceived a drastic wage-cut and their general ‘conditions worsened. The workers aroused, struck. The socialist officials and the Muste- esis And pinching poverty was #ver the | ite and socialist hosiery organizer, White, lost Central Orgah of the co Daily 525 a By mail everywhere: One year $6; six months $3: evecCRIPTION RATES: two months $1; excepting Boroughs of Mavhetian and Bronx. New York City and foreign which are: One vear $8: six months $4 60 a the “es By QUIRT Latin-American Workers and Murder of Gonzales By ALBERT MOREU. HE brutal murder of Comrade Gonzalo Gon- zales has aroused the class indignation of the Latin American workers of Harlem and the working class of New York. The series murders perpetrated -by the police definite expression of intensified oppression of the Negroes and Latin American workers, as exemplified by the murder of Alfred Levy only a short time before the killing of Gon- zales. The effects of the racial discrimination now running high in Harlem have conclusively proven to the oppressed colonials of New York, as well as of the United States, that the American imperialist class is fighting its death battle in the United States and in its colonies. It is significant that while Gonzales was killed by policeman O’Brien in the most brutal manner on June 30, when he and a group of Latin American workers were marching to a mass protest meeting held under the auspices of the Anti-Imperialist League and its affili- ated Latin American organizations, that the American organizations, that the American imperialists were massacreing 20 Mexican workers in Matamorros at a demonstration held there under the leadership of the Com- munist Party of Mexico. The bloody hand of Wall Street that killed Comrade Gonzales reached all the way to Matamorros, The lesson learned by the Latin Americans in the United States, especially the Mexican workers, who suffer most from American im- perialist exploitation and oppression, is that they no longer can pin their hopes for their emancipation on the leadership of the nation- alist traitors in their home country and in the United States. For they are nothing but the executive agents of the bosses. Fought in Mexico Against Imperialism. The story of the life of Comrade Gonzales as narrated by his wife, Dolores Gonzales, who has just joined the Party, is a vivid example of a proletarian family of Mexico suffering for years under the yoke of foreign dornina- tion. Gonzales and his wife took part in the bourgeois-democratie revolution led by Calles and the other henchmen of American imperial- ism now at the head of the Mexican govern- ment. Seven years ago, at the age of sixteen, Dolores Gonzales met her husband in the streets of Michaocan, fighting for the libera- tion of Mexico from the claws of foreign im- perialism. Much blood was shed then by’ the workers and peasants but they were led by the bourgeoisie, by its betrayal, into victory for American imperialism. Gonzales, a baker, found no improvement in the lot of the workers after the battle was no time coralling the workers and tearfully, pleading wit: them to stand by their bosses in time of stress and crisis and accept the wage-cut and whatever else the bosses want in a spirit of brotherly understanding. The workers, betrayed and confused, were herded into the mills, wage-cut and all. The vaunted boast of the socialists today is that they have given Reading the cheapest government yet. Indeed so ludicrous is their shopkeepers’ spirit that the Reading Times, a capitalist liberal sheet is up in arms against them on the issue of free swimming pool versus the socialist pay pool. Today the socialist party and the socialist administration of Reading stand stark naked as the shopkeepers party of the big indus- trialists and bankers, “Socialist” is the bait for the workers to straggle in their petty- bourgeoisie wake. Cheap government for the bosses is their chief slogan. Suppression of the workers in their fight inst the bosses under the guise of “socialist” is their chief task. And in true shopkeepers spirit they are carrying out this task. Never was there greater need for the mili- tant leadership of the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist Party as there is today in Reading and vicinity. The Penns; lvania State Ratification Conven- tiom of the Communist Party to be held in Reading, Sunday, July 15, should be the first step in a drive to acquaint the workers of Reading with the program of the revolutionary Trade Union Unity League, and the role of the Communist Party. Revolutionary clarification of the many prob- lems facing the Reading workers is imperative as exrosing the socialist administration of the Reading bosses, ry 1 over. Misery and starvation followed this triumph of Calles. The Gonzales family, pov- erty-stricken and at the point of starvation, decided to cross the frontier into the land of “prosperity” in “Yankeeland.” But they found that added to the poverty in this country was the racial discrimination to which all Latin American workers are subjected. Mother, 70, Worked in Imperial Valley Gonzales’ mother, a woman of 70 yea also driven away from Mexico into the misery of the Imeprial Valley. The intrepid young Gonzales, barely , struggling in the bakery shops of New York for miserable wages, part of which were sent to feed his aged mother. The crisis of American capitalism, increasing was unemployment, reached the poor Gonzales home. He lost his job and was unemployed for the last seven months, Dolores Gonzales was ghen compelled to increase her hours of work from ten to fourteen hours a day in order to feed her husband. From the fields of Michaocan, Dolores found her way into a restaurant of New York. For 14 hours a day her body was exposed to the intense heat of the kitchen and to the freez- ing icebox. The left-over food she was forced to eat swiftly undermined her health. Soon Dolores Gonzales was suffering from pulmon- ary congestion. Could she thing for a moment of leaving her job to take care of her broken health? No—Gonzales was unemployed and her $75.00 per month wages had to take care of beth of them. Gonzales began to see clearly into the situation. His passive attitude gave way to an active struggle against unemploy- ment and he soon found his way into the Com- munist Party. He knew when he entered the ranks of the Party that he would have to help carry on a struggle against the mperialist class that keeps seven million workers in the United States unemployed. Gonzales was a class- conscious fighter and he died like one. The death of Comrade Gonzales did not leave the Latin American workers of New. York indif- ferent. Two hundred and fifty of them have already joined the Communist Party. Many more will follow this vanguard of the workers. Police brutality, murder and assassination cannot and will not stop the Latin American workers from continuing the fight against American imperialism, under the leadership of the Communist Party. The demonstration at the funeral of Com- rade Gonzales has proven that hundreds of Latin American workers, by joining the march, intend to continue the struggle that Gonzales was faced to leave so heroically. Gas As a Weapon Against Workers . By GRACE HUTCHINS. EAR GASES cause intense pain in the eyes but are not poisonous in the con- centrations necessary to produce blinding tears. Indeed, should you walk into a room contai ing only enough to go on the head of a pin, you would feel-as though some one were tear- ing your eyes out with his finger nails. Yet if you run out immediately, in fifteen or twenty minutes you are quite all right again.” ig Effects of tear gas, especially chlor-aceto- phenone recently adopted by police and military troops in breaking up strikes and workers’ dem- onstrations, are thus described by a chemical expert, Donald A: Cameron, in a new pamph- let, Chemical Warfare: Poison Gas in the Com- ing War.* This gas is shot from a pistol, Cameron ex- plains, or set off from a special burning hand grenade which burns for about five minutes and has an immediate effect. After doing its work it quickly disappears. How military organizations are to use these hand grenades against the workers is told in confidential directions to military training clas- ses, issued by the United States Army and war department. Hand grenades filled with non- toxic gas and smoke are essential equipment in giving military aid to the civil power, the direc- tions state, and non-toxic gas is only the be- ginning. White phosphorus bombs causing the most _terrible of all chemical wounds, should be used _ against workers in strikes and against he Chi- nese in their anti-imperialism demonstrations, IMPERIALISTS AND NEGRO “GOLD STAR” MOTHERS By CYRIL BRIGGS. 'HE brazen action of the U. ment and a half dozen steamship com- panies in Jim Crowing the very “gold star” Negro mothers whom it was trying to use to make propaganda for war is a lesson to every worker, Negro or white, who may be enticed into the next war trap. These were women who had given at least one son or husband to the Flanders fields, to die raising a good crop of dollars for American imper- ialist capitalism. They were barred from the ships the white mothers were sent on, they were offered cheaper, slower, ships, and worse accommodations abroad. Credit is due them that they rebelled. Imperialism seeks to justify its crimes against the Negro masses by promoting the idea that Negroes are an inferior race, that they are incapable of progress and, of course, incapable of self-government, that they are not as sensitive to insulls and oppression as the white races, This imperialist white chauvinism S. war depart- ete. to wo ideology is use ter among the white ker to justify the s brutal exploitation of the Negro masses and by inciting the whit workers to contempt and hatred of the non- white peoples to prevent intern Monal work- | ing class solidarity and secure recru from the working class for the armed forces of imperialism and for its f organizations such as the Ku Klux K American Le- gion, the Veterans of For The imperialist ideology of race inferiori race hatred and racial separation is one the main props of the imperialist system of plun der and oppression. Without this ideology it would be impossible to get white workers for murder expeditions to Haiti, the Virgin Is- cist , the n Wars, ete. of lands, the Philippines, etc., or response to the lynching incitement of the southern bosses. So important is this ideology to the imper ma- ialist system that we find the entire chinery of United States imperialism wh in addition to the subject populations in its colonies and semi-colonies, has within the home territory an oppressed minority nation- ality of over, 12,000,000 people, utilized for the injection into the minds of the white work- ers of the virus of race prejudice and hatred. Jim-Crowing Negro Mothers. We find in the South the unwritten but strictly observed Jim Crow lav laws pro- hibiting Negroes to eat in the same restaur- ants, travel in the same trains, or attend the same theatres or churches as the whites. This division is to be found in every step of social life and is enforced by a systematic white ter- ror and mob lynchings, It permeates the whole life and thought of the South. It is to maintain this imperialist ideology that the imperialist government of the United States has deliberately cast the slur of infer- iority on Negroes and goes out of its way to insult and degrade the Negro Gold Star Moth- ers by segregating them on their trip to vis the graves of the sons who were betrayed into fighting for imperialism and against their own class and race interests in the last imperialist war. Even in its campaign to whoop up the war spirit in preparation for the next imperialist slaughter, United States imperialism does not forget the importance of the ideology of Ne- gro inferiority and race hatred in dividing the working class and isolating the Negro masses. And in this campaign of insult and de- gradation the Negro petty bourgeoisie are giving their full support, as witness their participation in the plans at City Hall Satur- day. The first s:;roup of Negro Gold Siar mothers sailed Saturday, July 12. They sailed on a Jim Crow trip. At City Hall, they were given a Jim Crow reception. The fas- cist American Legion, which, with the Ku Klux Klan, lays down lynch law for the south- ern Negro masses, participated in the recep- tion. The United States marines, notorious (hroughout the Caribbean as the murderers of countless Haitian and Latin American workers, also took part in the reception. And, cooperating, as usual, with the oppressors and murderers of the Negro masses was the ever ready betrayers of these im the Ne- petty bourgeoisie: the professional and race. Alderman Fred R. Moore presented the Jim Crowed mothers to Mayor Walker, the chauvinist who tried to introduce American Jim Crowism into within the Europe. Clifford Hawkins, another of the treacherous Negro petty bourgeoisie, was on hand to do his act. Colonel Benjamin 0. Davis, highest ravking Negro officer in the Jim Crow United States Army, was selected by the imperialists to give “face” to the pro- ceedings. The enemies and oppressors of the Negro masses turned out with a mask of “friendliness” in the effort to put over as smoothly possible the segregation policy of an imperialist government. And the treach- erous Negro petty bourgeoisie were on hand in their traditional role of defenders and apologists of the very tem under which Negroes are oppressed, segregated and mur- dered. The Negro masses must answer this insult to the mothers of victims of the last imper- war with a determined struggle for full political, economic and social equality and for the right of self-determination as the logical continuation and “highest expression of the struggle for equality. They must unequivo- cally demand the right to have their. own gov- ernment in those sections of the country where, as is the case in many parts of the South, we constitute the majority of the popu- lation. Together with the white workers, we must intensify the struggle against lynching, against unemployment and hunger, against wage cuts and inhuman speed-up, against the entire imperialist system of robbery and ex- ploitation, and for the liberation of the colon- ial masses and the establishment in the United States of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Govern- ment, which will abolish lynching, race preju- dice and hatred and the entire ideology which imperialism finds necessary for its existence. Negro mothers and widows! Refuse to be Jim-Crowed! Fight imperialist discrimina- tion and oppression! The Clothing Workers’ Struggle EF 1918 the men’s clothing workers, through an organized revolt, drove out of their ranks the betrayers, Rickert and Larger, of the “United Garment Workers’ Union,” who for many years had sold out the conditions of the | Under the corrupt rule | tailors to the bosses. of Rickert the tailors were forced to work in sweat-shops, long hours, at starvation wages which the bosses kept on reducing. The tailors organized against these conditions and through strike struggles succeeded in driving out the traitors from their ranks and forced the bosses to give them better conditions. Now, in 1930, when the treacherous clique of Hillman, Beckerman and Rissman have suc- ceeded in converting the Amalgamated into a full-fledged company union to serve the in- terests of the bosses, as well as their own in- terests, the conditions of the tailors have sunk to the low level as under the old rule of Rickert and Larger. Are the conditions of the tailors today bet- ter than under the regime of Rickert and Larger? No! They are not! 90 More Fired. Just as the Rickerts and Largers helped the bosses, so the Hillman company union today helps the bosses to lower our conditions. In C. D. Jaffe, Cohen & Lang, ninety more work- ers were thrown out on the streets to starve. Reductions were forced on the workers of J. B. Cohen, Wolf Bros., Rubin & Levy, and now in the very season reductions are forced in almost every shop. Already six weeks of the season have passed, more than half of the tailors are un- employed, walking the streets and starving. What are we tailors going to get out of the season? What are we getting out of the Un- employment Fund which is supposed to be a remedy for the unemployed? Nothing. The conditions won by the tailors through long, militant strikes have been completely sold out to the bosses, and their working standards are rapidly growing worse from day to day. While the bosses and the company- union are forcing reductions on the workers they already make plans for the next reduc- tion, the wage cuts, the inhuman speed-up and the slave-driving system of piece work are continuously throwing out an ever in- creasing number of tailors on the streets. More than half of the tailors are unemployed, with starvation staring them in the face, and all the workers know th + the Amalgamated according to writers in chemical journals quot- ed by Cameron, “Phosphorus has a most excellent harassing and morale lowering effect . . . The explosion of a phosphorus bomb, scattering lumps of burning phosphorus over a wide area has a most terrifying aspect, and may lead to seri- ous burns since it continues to burn as’ long as oxygen is available, even when embedded in the flesh.” Mustard gas, “the King of Gases”, is the most deadly of all, the expert states, and the most effective of all gases in breaking down morale. Because of its delay act’ and its terrible power even in the smallest concentra- tions, mustard gas causes huge casualties, Al- though ‘_ a, poison gas has not yet been * Square. works hand in hand with the bosses to en- force these miserable conditions upon the workers. We Are Back to 1913. Tailors! We are now in the same situation as in 1913. Thousands of us are starving with no chance to go back to work this season. The policy of Hillman’s company union is to throw the entire burden of the crisis on the shoulders of the workers. This can readily be seen by the statement made by Hillman’s agent that “one of the outstanding accomplishments of the Amalgamated is the fact that when bosses need higher production they come to the Amalga- mated; the bosses trust us”. This open state- ment of Hillman’s agent means that the Amal- gamated is a bosses’ union—a reduction and production agency for the bosses. Tailors! We must stop dreaming about re- forming Hillman’s company union. We must immediately organize for the same purpose as in 1913: to smash the company union and force the bosses to give us better conditions. We won the struggle in 1918—we will win the struggle today. A Real Union. In our struggle against the bosses and their agents we are not alone; we have the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union on our side. The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is the only real workers’ organization in the needle trades that is leading the needle trade workers in the struggle for better conditions, for the 7-hour 5-day week, for week work, min- imum wage scale, unemployment insurance, paid by the bosses and controlled by the work- ers. The N este Trades Workers Industrial Union calls upon all Tailors to come to the unem- ployed and employed tailors’ demonstration on Saturday, July 12, at 15th Street and Union Demonstrate against reductions, speed-up and re-organizations, and mobilize for the Cooper Union Mass Meeting. _ The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union called upon all tailors to come to the Mass Meeting at Cooper Union on Tuesday, July 15, at 6 P, M. At this meeting the leaders of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, Ben Gold, Louis Hyman and others will make @ report on the plans of the Industrial Union to actu- ally unionize the men’s clothing industry and force the bosses to give better conditions to the tailors, used against striking workers in the United States, it is ready as a weapon in reserve. Other sections of this 32-page vibrant pamph- let deal with the coming imperialist war, the chemical industry in relation to war, poison gas strategy and tactics, and the workers in relation to the war danger. Chemical experts in Washington are trying to find out more about Donald Cameron who has thus revealed some of the facts never told in the capitalist press, Editors of chemical journals recognize that some colleague has told the truth about war preparations and about the use of poison gas against workers. desi a Warfare: Poison Gas in the Comin ar. By Donald A, Cameron. Internati Pampntats 799 Broadway. Price 10 Cents, ee