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w Rr 1 Page Six DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1934 » Daily QWorker EIETAA, CBRNE COMAEST PARTY BSA (SECTION OF CONMMHGAIST ITERATIONRS “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 5@ E. 13th Street, New York, N. Y. Telephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. Gable Address: New York, N. ¥ “Daiwork, ‘Washington eau: Room 954, N Press Building, 34th and F St., Washington, D. C. x | Midwest Bureau: 101 South Wells St., Room 708, Oheago, Hl. Telephone: Dearborn 3931. Subscription Rates: By Mail: (except M 6 months, $3.50; 3 mon’ Manhattan, Bronx, F 6 months, $5.00; 3 m By Carrier: Weekly, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1934 The Drought Crisis OOSEVELT is drought area. But 25,000,000 people, the impoverished farmers and their families are being erushed by the joint blows of the Roose- velt A.A.A. farm program and the furies of the heat wave. And the Roosevelt government does nothing for them. It subsidizes the greatest slaughter of cattle in history, so that the big meat packers, the mortgage-holders, the wealthy Jand- lords can be protected. But the human welfare of the poor farmers and their families is being crimirully, wantonly trampled upon by a government whose sole concern is to act in the interests of the big capitalist property-owners. The farmers need cash relief, fodder for their herds, water and food for their families, the dis- tribution of all available fodder food supplies in the drought area. These needs are embodied in the Farmers’ Emergency Relief Bill proposed by the Communist Party as the program of the impover- ished, mortgage-ridden, drought stricken farmers. the “investigating” N one hand is the program of Roosevelt. This is a capitalist program. It is a program of miserly, inadequate handouts, that give the farmers no re- lief. It is a program of driving the small, drought- stricken farmers into pauperism, into a new mass migration, so that the rich landlords can proceed to monopolize the farm lands and farm produc- tion. It is a program of protection of mortgage- holders and food monopolies. It is, in short, a program that spells ruin for the vast majority of the farm population. On the other hand is the program of the Com- munist Party embodied in the Farmers’ Hmergency Relief Bill. It is a program that calls for imme- diate payment of $2,000,000,000 in cash relief to all stricken farm families. The Roosevelt govern- ment spends $2,000,000,000 for war and destruction— why not for the welfare of the stricken farmers? The Communist Farm program calis for the im- mediate opening up of all grain elevators and wealthy grain stores of the big landlords for im- mediate distribution to the stricken small farmers. Tt calls for government free food and fodder dis- tribution. It calls for the cancellation of all mort- gage debts at once. The Communist Party program for the farmers is in the interests of the vast majority of the small and middle farmers, and is aimed against the bank- eps, mortgage-holders, and wealthy landlords. The Communist Party program expresses the immediate, vital needs of the drought-stricken farm popula- tion. The Roosevelt farm program is solely in the interests of capitalist profit no matter what misery and suffering this causes the impoverished farmers. * * * Nebraska Holiday Association in state con- vention has adopted the Communist Party Farm bill, showing that the farmers will fight for this Bill as their own. The fight in the drought areas against hunger ‘and devastation is now a fight to force the Roose- velt government to enact the measures outlined in the Communist Party Bill. The issue is clear—the welfare of the stricken farmers or the profit interests of the landlords, meat packers, food monopolies and grain speculators. In the drought area, the Communist Party calls for a fight in the interests of the toiling farmers as against the capitalist profit sharks and their agent, Roosevelt. Greetings, Angelo Herndon! | 'T IS with revolutionary pride that the Daily Worker today extends its heartiest greetings and welcome to Angelo Hern- don, heroic Negro leader of the American working class and the Negro masses. Unbroken in spirit by 19 months of imprisonment and savage torture, un- daunted by the vicious vengeance of the murder- us ruling class of the South, whose plunder rule he defied, Angelo Herndon is a living example of the revolutionary heroism of the toilers, black and white. Like Dimitroff before the Nazi court, Herndon, confronting the Atlanta, Georgia, lynch tribunal, conducted himself with dauntless courage, giving to the whole world a stirring example of how a Teyolutionary worker conducts himself before the courts of the class enemy. Herndon personifies the rising heroic resistance of the oppressed Negro nation to the imperialist enemy, to the plunder- ing landlord-capitalist minority which holds the Negro majorities in the Southern Black Belt ter- ritories in brutal subjection. He symbolizes the growing unity in joint struggles against their com- mon oppressors, of white and Negro workers, North | | | ee the Communist Party and South, which is being effected under the bold, | correct leadership of the Communist Party which | Herndon represents. | Herndon’s courageous, ringing defiance of the | Georgia lynch lords and their courts has found a responsive echo in the breasts of millions of Negro and white toilers who, under the fascist attacks of the Roosevelt “New Deal” are increasingly turn- | ing to the revolutionary struggle for Soviet power | as the only way out of the capitalist morass of mass | unemployment, misery, fascist terror amd imperial- | ist war. By their mass protests, by their pennies and their dollars, the workers and sympathetic intellec- tuals have rescued this proletarian hero from his torture cell in a Georgia prison hell and from the immediate threat of death on the notorious Georgia chain gang. This is a magnificent victory for the working class and the Negro masses. It now remains to | smash the chain gang verdict against Herndon, | and the lynch death verdicts against the nine Scotts- boro boys. This ean and must be done by develop- ing and broadening the ffiass fight for their free- dom, and by raising the $15,000 now needed to carry their appeal to the U. 8S. Supreme Court. Build the mass fight into a thunderous protest against the hideous attempt of the lynch rulers to murder Herndon and the Scottsboro boys! Rush funds for their appeal to the International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, Room 430, New York City. ;—_—_—______] | Troops and Bread in New Orleans VE thousand New Orleans workers staged a united front demonstration Monday in the heart of New Orleans, de- manding unemployment relief, in the face of machine guns and bayonets. The armed police of Mayor Walmsley face Huey Long's national guards on New Orleans streets in a factional fight of the “New Deal” party. Both want the political control of New Orleans, with its accompanying lucrative graft and political | plums. | The demonstration called attention to the | fact that:the state legislature, which has just adjourned, refused to make any provisions for the unemployed. Consequently, 1,500 unemployed New Orleans workers were dropped off the relief rolls last week and left to starve. The same state legis- lature which refused to continue relief appropri- ations, passed Long’s bill giving the national guard Police powers in New Orleans, When the unemployed workers demanded ap- propriations for relief, Governor Allen said the state government couldn’t do anything. Mayor Walmsley said he was “tied up with other matters.” The unemployed were denied relief. Meanwhile thousands upon thousands of dollars are being put on troops and police for military | mobilization to serve the ends of the democratic party factions. | Both groups of the Democratic Party in New Orleans are united om decreeing starvation for the workers. Both groups are agreed in the dropping of 1,500 off relief. Both factions are united in the discrimination and Jim-Crow against Negroes. Both factions have in mind only control of the spoils of political control, at the expense of the starving workers. . * . | THE demonstration in New Orleans is significant | because in the heart of the lynch south, the base | of the Jim-Crow party of Roosevelt, the demonstra- tors raised the slogan “Equal Rights for Negroes.” It was significant also as a splendid demonstration of socialist and Communist workers’ united front action for unemployment relief and for civil rights for the workers of New Orleans. ‘The demonstration sends a ringing cry through- out the country—‘Immediate withdrawal of the Police and national guards—no more money for military display—adequate relief for all New Or- leans unemployed, including the Negro workers— for the right of the workers of New Orleans to organize, to strike and to assemble.” | Relief Cuts FTER one year of the N. R. A, the relief lists in New City have grown by 77,000 families and the relief expendi- tures have been cut, the June, 1934, relief figures just released by the Welfare Coun- cil show. Month by month relief expenditures have been as follows: January ...$18,500,000 + $15,500,000 17,600,000 May ...... 15,900,000 20,600,000 June ...... 15,300,000 The addition of 77,000 families to the New York relief lists during the first year of the N. R. A. adds testimony to the Communist Party contention that the re- covery program was never designed to bring relief to the workers. 3% EAST 12°H STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Pleage send me more information on the Commu- | nist Party. | Workers Halt Eviction ooeing the evcted family in "S| Sausage Strike Ties Of Ill. Negro Family, Carry Back Furniture utmost, By a Worker Correspondent sidewalk. The eviction was featured by the brutality, |dumping a sick baby on the floor| in order to throw the bed on the Relief offiicals had denied the constables Up Detroit Plant Special to the Daily Worker DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 7.— The the | strike of the workers in the Sausage As Special Part of | just gone out that the Guard Troops} | keep the Guard Corps as a “reliable” | special troop of mercenaries without |any contact with the Storm Troop- |and who are now beginning to grow |restive under Hitler’s complete fail- | among the Storm Troops, as well as |in the new terrorist raids which | Hitler is planning |with the “referendum” in the next |two or three weeks. \struggle against the Fascst Mus- | solini | militants. |before the Special Court for the |belonged to a revolutionary party |and for “anti-national propaganda.” jretly assembling warships on the | Amur River, Soviet authorities re- jextrémely anti-Hitler i | destroyed the Fascist mark. COLLINSVILLE, Ill, Aug. 7.— ‘When a Negro family by the name of Newsin, with nine children, three of them sick at the time, were brutally thrown out of their home for non-payment of rent, a wave of angry resentment swept the work- ing-class sections here. White and Negro workers milled about . the Scene of the eviction. This resentment was converted Into militant action with the ap- pearance on the scene of a Com-/Party, Young Communist League, | munist miner, ‘assembled workers that the furniture be moved back into the house. The proposal was instantly adopted, and eager hands garried the furniture back and re- who addressed the unemployed family adequate aid, offering to pay only one half of the tent. This offer was refused by the landlord, who then mobilized the aid of the courts to put throgh the eviction. 3,000 IN ANTI-WAR PARADES PITTSBURGH, Pa.— Over 3,000 |workers demonstrated August 1 against war and fascism in two pa- rades called by the Communist Unemployment Councils, Interna- and proposed|tional Labor Defense and Unem- |ployed Citizens League. [were Hacker, Careathers, Allender, | ‘Doran, Smith, Moran and Speakers Thorn- ton, Department of the Detroit Packing Company today spread to other de- partments. The entire pickling de- partment came out, while some of the drivers and workers in the slaughtering department also joined the strike. Efforts are being made |to pull out the entire plant, which jemploys about 200, many of them | Negroes. The strike is being led by the mili- | tant United Sausage Workers Union, | affiliated to the Trade Union Unity | League. Unemployed? Join the Hed Nazis Form| New Terror Regiments Order Guard Troops Secret Police BERLIN, Aug. 7.—An order has| must now be separated as a special detachment from the Storm Troops. The aim of this separation is to! ers who sre recruited from the ranks of the jobless, petty-bourgeois, ure to keep any of his promises, The Guard Troops will now be| part of the Secret Police, with spe- cial training to fit them for use against their erstwhile companions | in connection Mussolini Jails Many in Effort To Halt Growing Opposition | ROME, Aug. 7.—Growing political government is resulting in increased sentences for arrested} On July 2ist three trials were held| Protection of the State. An anti- fascist from Padua was sentenced to five years imprisonment for having At the other two trials, one de- fendant was sentenced to four years imprisonment, the other to one and a half years, simply on the grounds that they had “publicly insulted a prominent personage of the fascist regime” and “slandered Italy.” Japan Sends Warships Toward Amur River, Soviet Heads Reveal HARBIN, Manchuria, Aug. 7— ‘The Japanese government is sec- port. ‘The Amur is a boundary line be- tween Soviet and Japanese terri- tory. The Japanese militarists have been pursuing a persistent policy of provocation along these Par Eastern boundaries, seeking to incite war actions on the part of the Soviet Government, which, however, has maintained @ consistent peace policy, while sternly warning the! Japanese militarists that the Soviet Union will take every measure to guard their own territory against invasion. Nazi Officials Fear University Students BERLIN, Aug. 7—During the last few days great changes have taken Place among the leaders of the “German Students’ Association,” Not only have the national leaders, Stabel and Zahringer, been deposed, but the whole of the sub-leaders as well. This mass removal from the leading positions is due to the steadily increasing oppositional trends among the students, On the walls of conveniences in |the Berlin University numbers of inscriptions |may be read: “Carete duces” (“Be |ware of the leaders”). “A people |kept under tutelage can have no faith,” “We demand real socialism,” and so on. The inscriptions refer- |ring to the Roehm affair cannot be repeated. | Hitler Oak Vanishes In Mysterious Manner DUSSELDORF, Aug. 7.—In a manner which completely mystifies the authorities here, the special Hit- ler Tree plant on May 1, has been dstroyed. ‘ Planted in special honor to the Fascist leader, and as a particular affront to the international day of the working class, the tree suddenly was found hacked and chopped down. It required particular bravery for the anti-fascist workers to do this as the tree is right in the heart of the City square. But the sympathy of the masses undoubtedly acted as & protection for the workers who 350 IN FALL RIVER FALL RIVER, Aug. 5.—Three hundred and fifty persons, most of them textile workers, demonstrated! here in the first Aug, 1 anti-war meeting ever held in this indus- trial town. The meeting was under the auspices of the Fall River branch of the American League Against War and Fascism. H. W. L. Dana spoke. Thirty-two copies of “Fight” and other revolutionary literature were sold. A firm basis for building a strong anti-war, anti-fascist organization was laid in this textile mill town, which is largely controlled by the Catholic Church, RALLY IN BALTIMORE BALTIMORE, Md., Aug. 5.—Over 500 workers, including a number of rank and file Socialists, partici- pated in the August 1 demonstra- tion held at the City Hall Plaza here. Harry Wicks of the Philadelphia section of the Communist Party was the main speaker. Other speakers were Dowell of the Amer- ican League Against War and Fascism, and Bernard Ades, Com- THE PRESIDENT’S MAN! By Burek NEWS ITEM: “It is definitely a part of our policy te increase and extend the rise of prices.” —President ROOSEVELF, From the First World War to the Second By NEMO Vii. In August 1934. Exactly two decades have passed since red posters and the shrill call of the bugles proclaimed general mobilization. Two decades which have wit- nessed the first world war and Versailles, the col- lapse of four monarchies, the first Soviet Republics in the world, the fascist reign of terror and the most tremendous of all economic catastrophes. The awakening of the colonial peoples, the construction of a new socialist society is bound up with these two decades. Only two decades, but in them the wheel of world history has revolved at furious speed. Bour- geois society, condemned to destruction and lying at its last gasp, hurtles into the*ravine with the gathering speed of an avalanche and there is no power on earth that can save it. Ever shorter be- come the intervals between the separate crises and conflicts, ever deeper traces are left behind by the economic and political catastrophes in the severely tested body of the capitalist social order. August 1934. Once again the mood of August 1914 prevails. The international situation is strained to the utmost. The principle which held until 1929, according to which there would be no large-scale war during the next ten years, today no. longer holds—so declared Mr. Churchill to the House of Commons as a justification for England increasing its armaments. And indeed the situation in the summer of 1934 bears all the marks of the eve of 8 great world conflagration. All the agreements made after the first world war have become scraps of paper, all the pacts have been torn to pieces. The partition of the world on the basis of the al- teration in the relations of power after the first world war has proved to be out of date. The Wash- ington Agreement, like the Versailles Treaty, has now only historical value. The struggle for the new Partition of the world in the summer of 1934 is in full swing, the plunder of Manchuria acting as the stone which is setting the second world war into motion. In August 1934 it must be clear to all toilers that the blood of the ten million victims of the first world war was shed only on behalf of capital. A straight road leads from August 1914 to Au- gust 1934. The first world war shook capitalist society to its foundation, and made a great breach in the imperialist world system, but it still did not bring with it the final and complete overthrow of this society. Because private property and the means of production remained in existence outside the Soviet Union, because the capitalist economic anarchy Jed to new serious contradictions, because the first world war accumulated new inflammable materials, mankind is confronted today by the grin- ning spectre of a second world war. Capitalism— is war. Today it is clearer than ever that imperialist peace is only a continuation of imperialist war by other means, that war is a normal phenomenon of capitalism. The whole capitalist world has been transformed into a single armed camp and in the utmost haste is making the last preparations for the daily possible, daily awaited slaughter. Just as in 1914, so today it is said to be a question of the “salvation of democracy,” “national security and national interests,” the freedom of the seas and unpeopled spaces for the people who have no space. Already the barometer of the shares of the bloody. armament international is mounting fever- ishly upwards and announces new profitable deals in death. According to a statement in the North American Review, anyone who searches for a practical way of bringing back the good old times to the world will find only one method, viz, a new war which would last longer, and be more deadly and expen- sive than the last one. The only alternative is a return to cannibalism. It is not often that the masses of the people are able to listen to such cynical confessions as that which finds expression here. In whichever di- rection one looks, one encounters the spectre of war. Sir Austen Chamberlain drily records that the posi- tion in Europe, public opinion and the actions of the governments are today more threatening to peace than at any time since the ending of the World War, while Mussolini pathetically declares that war is an accompaniment of the evolution of humanity and that war is to the man what mother- hood is to the woman. “I not only do not believe in permanent peace, but I find the thought of per- manent peace a depressing one. Permanent peace is a denial of the fundamental human virtues which only attain their full expression through bloody exertion of force.” Thus, Mussolini announced in the summer of 1934, amid the applause of his as- sembled satellites, “We do not say that it is certainly war, but we do say that it looks as if it was coming to the next war,” writes the organ of the French general staff, L’Echo de Paris, The correspondent of the Evening Standard, on his return from the Conti- nent, recently reported that in well-informed circles of Berlin, Paris and Warsaw, all the talk was about the moment of outbreak or the field of operation of the next European war. Finally, we may note what is written by the Pester Lloyd: “Everyone in Europe is saying to himself: a new war would be suicidal madness. And yet every- one has the instinctive feeling that such a danger is imminent. It is exactly as it was in the spring of 1914. At that time, on every side in Europe people were dominated by fear of war and from this fear of war, war resulted by inevitable neces- sity. “Today Europe again constitutes a great powder barrel. And around this powder barrel sparks are incessantly flying which alight now here and now there, and of which a single one is sufficient to blow into the air the whole of the stored-up ex- plosive materials.” It is exactly as it was in the spring of 1914, says this bourgeois paper. And, in fact, exactly as in 1914, the war parties are pressing forward, but the imperialists talk and talk of peace and wash their hands with a gesture of innocence in order to make an alibi in good time for themselves for the judgment of the world. Exactly as in 1914, the capitalist world in 1934 stands fully armed for war, even if it is still making the last preparations. Exactly as in 1914, the imperialist powers stand in arms, split into hostile camps, partly allied by secret war alliances and ready at any moment to hurl themselves on their adversary and on their prey. Whether it is a question of Japanese or Ger- man fascism, of French or Anglo-Saxon “dem- ocracy,” of big powers or little “neutrals”—they all stand so heavily armed that it would be no wonder if they were to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the outbreak of the war in the trenches. “Remember the imperialist war,” cried Lenin to the toiling masses of the people in every country. Very well then, on the twentieth anniversary of the outbreak of war, remember more than ever the first imperialist war, its causes and victims, its his- tory and its results! Remember that the war made the rich still richer, but the poor still poorer! Re- member that the war brought, not tranquility and peace, not work and bread, but new conflicts and struggle, new suffering and new oppression! Re- member that the first world war will be followed by @ second world war unless the wide masses of toilers at the eleventh hour deliver the death blow to the imperialist Moloch! 3 pe tee Aa aan SHA Gs munist candidate for governor ea (To Be Continued) 5,000 STRIKE IN MONTREAL MONTREAL (F.P.)—Five thou- sand members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America closed down 125 Montreal piants in a strike demanding a twenty per cent wage increase, time-and-a- half for overtime and union rec- ognition. Twenty thousand new readers “Nh Sept. Ist means 20,000 addi- onal recruits for organized class struggle, zs = Ee DEMONSTRATION IN CHICAGO CHICAGO, Aug. 5. — Workers demonstrated against war and fas- cism in Grant Park Saturday, at the call of the American League Against War and Fascism. Among the speakers were Bill Sennit of the Youth Section of the American League, Karl Lockner, candidate for Congressman-at-large, repre- senting the Communist Party, Harry Shaw of the American ie and Claude Lightfoot of the Struggle for Negro 26 WORKERS KILLED TOKIO, Aug. 7. — Twenty-six seriously injured here when 300 cartridges of dynamite exploded before the time set at the Hiro- shimo Electric Power Plant Works, trapping the men. A Red Builder on every busy street corner in the country means a tremendous step toward the | World Front i—_—By HARRY GANNE; Big Navy Guns Speak Museolini—“Peaee Modet” ¢ Anti-War Maneuvers * LL of the big naval powere are unlimbering thetr heaviest diplomatic guns in preparation for the forth. coming naval arms conference, Tokio and London have fired their first broadsides, and we can expect a fusillade from Wash- ington soon. For London, Lord Earl Beatty, Admiral of the fleet, spoke. Gen- eral Kunishige Tanake, former Military Attache in Washington, Stated the aims of Japanese im- Perialism. Roosevelt speaks every day on naval disarmament through rushing his billion dollar warship building program. And Secretary of the Navy Swanson has put words to the tune of the clatter of mil- lions of rivets, the refrain of which reads: “A navy second to none.” e 8 gist of Lord Beatty’s and General Tanake’s pronounces ments on the approaching naval conference is that all barriers are down. From now on there will be a race to the finish for naval su- premacy. The speeches and articles show that the preliminary, secret pourparleurs have failed on the most elementary points. The gen- erals and admirals are preparing public opinion in advance for the failure of the conference, and the most rabid race for naval arms for the onrushing imperialist war. All the imperialist conflicts have become so severe that they cannot be kept even within the hypocriti- cal bounds of treaties of limitation which never were intended to limit anybody. ‘AKE Lord Beatty, for instance, He fulminates against the “shackles of international agree- ments.” He is for a reversion to the days of Lord Palmerstone, when Brittania ruled the waves and the world markets, which is precisely what both the United States and Japan want to do. But this can be attempted not in speeches or in naval theorizing but in the practice of unleasing a new imperialist war to decide im- perialist hegemony, and for a re- division of the world markets, naval bases, and naval strength. The Lord Admiral is a very peaceful gentleman and cites as the outstanding model of his idea of peace Mussolini's war mobilization on the border of Austria: “We recently have seen an example of @... use of power by the head of the government of Italy, who preserved the peace of central Eu- Tope by moving Italian forces to the frontier to preserve the inde- pendence of Austria,” peep ioue Beatty has in mind, of course, the utilization of the British navy in the same way; and Roosevelt long ago took a similar Step of “prevention” by moving the entire U. S. fleet into the Pacific. The Japanese, likewise, believe in the same sort of “preventative” measures by moving armies into Manchuria, provoking the Soviet Union, and generally preparing for armed invasion of the workers’ fatherland. Admirals, proverbially, are not men of words, They prefer speak- ing through the mouths of cannon. That Beatty, Tanake, and Swan- son’s brood speak at all is just another indication that the con- flicts are speeding ahead so rapidly that there will soon be a change of loudspeakers, pie ee N EXCELLENT, practical anti- war demonstration, one that forecasts some of the methods of the revolutionary workers in strive ing for the deefat of their own ime perialist masters in the event of war, took place on Aug. 4 in Vile Jeneufe-les-Avignon, France. ‘We quote the Associated Press dispatch relating the incident: “France's air maneuvers above this city were halted last night by a crowd of demonstrators led by Communists [undoubtedly it was a united front demonstration of both the Communist Party and the Socialist Party in the city] who were protesting against war preparations. “When the signal came for all lights in the town to be extine ttacking, the crowd lighted big bonfires in the square and defied the police to extinguish them. The police failed.” ‘This is a war rehearsal that should be multiplied a thousand fold, Ct ee be prize headline of the year, one we recommend to the Pul- itzer Committee, is that in the New York Times of Sunday, Aug. 5. It reads: “Hitler Is Pressed To Give Assurance He Is Not Radical.” The American capitalist press, of course, uses the word “radical” as con- noting militant or revolutionary workers. Hitler’s butchery of the German workers, his imperialist war preparations, his slashing of the standard of living of the Ger- man people, and his wholesale sub= sidies to Krupp and other million- a can’t convince the cautious es, Toledo Herndon Meet To Hear Richard Moore ‘Herndon-Thaelmann- Scottsboro meeting at the First Spiritualist Church, corner of Dorr and Washington Streets, on Thurs- day evening, Aug. 16, Moore has spoken before in To- ledo and is very popular among the workers, who are preparing an en- thusiastic welcome for him. Earn Expegses Selling the “Daily”