New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 26, 1915, Page 9

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TENTH ANNIVERSARY| STANDS BY L T COBB OBSERVING HIS Stepped Into Big League Basehall Just 2 Decade Ago Detroit, Mich., Aug. 26.—Tyrus R. Cobb, often referred to as the great- est baseball player in the world, to- day celebrated the tenth anniversary "$¢ his debut as a major league play- er. No special ceremony was planned by Detroit fans to mark the occa- sion but it was expected that Cobb would receive an unusual demonstra- tion—and probably something more substantial—from his friends this af- ternoon when he stepped to the plate in the last game of the important “Reries with Boston. Cobb’s path of fame which he blazed for himself, has probably never been equalled in the history of baseball. For eight successive seasons he has been champion batsman of the Ameri- can league. His average for the pres- ent season is about .380, and it seems almost & human impossibility for any of his rivals to wrest the crown from him this year. No batter has ever made such a record. On Aug. 26, 1905, a tall, nervous apearing boy of 19 vyears from the Augusta club, in a class C league, donned a Detroit uniform and was sent to center field by Manager Bill Armour to replace Dick Cooley. Tho player was Cobb; Cooley never got his job back. Cobb became a regu- OLD PRESIDENT WHILE HE ' Sixteen Inch Guns to Replace Smaller NATION, SAYST.R. Colonel in Plattsburg Speech Urges War Readiness, Com- pulsory Military Training and Attacks Profes- sional German-Americans. 26—With mbled feet, last Plattsburg, N. Y., Aug. more than 3,000 persons the huge semi-circle at his Colonel Theodore Roosevelt night on the camp grounds B itary Training School forcibly put under compulsory militar ing. Painting a word picture of des- olate and subjugated Belgium, the former president in one breath su- perimposed upon it defenselessness of the United States and pounded home to the minds of the hearers the need of action, and speedy action, in the matter of preparedness. of shame in the hearts of every one of you that the United States has not stood up for Belgium,” he as- serted. ‘‘For thirteen months Amer- the nations. We have tamely sub- mitted to seeing the weak, whom had covenanted to protect, wrong- ed.” Shortly before leaving here for New York last night Colonel Roose- velt made the following statement: “I wish to make one comment on we must stand by the president. I heartily subscribe to this on condi- tion, and only on condition, that it lar that afternoon and has never felt the sting of being benched. Only once in these ten years has the mighty Tyrus been replaced by a pinch hitter. When Cobb was a voungster, “Doc” White of the Chica- go club, was his nemesis. Catcher Freddie Payne was sent to bat for Cobb against White on the single oc- sasion. In 1906, his first full season, Cobb hit .320. That has since been <his low mark. Cobb has always played right or center field. Only one day during his Detroit career did he per- form elsewhere. He acted as volun- teer second baseman and Cobb as well as Manager Jennings admitted after the game that the infleld did not lose anything when the Georgian’s first manager made an outfielder of him. RUBE CANNED, BALKS. Sent to Toronto But Refuses to Go Wants Outright Release. New York, Aug. 26.—Walking pa- pers were handed to Rube Marquard yesterday by Manager McGraw of the Giants. That is, the manager of the Giants released the veteran southpaw pitcher to the Toronto club of the In- ternational league in exchange for Pitcher Herbert, but whether he goes there remains to be seen. He talked _Festerday as i he would not. ) Marquard has a three year contract with the New York club, expiring at the end of next season. In sendirg him te Toronto the club guarantees the salary named in the contract for this season and next and also has the right to recall him any time it may wish to do so. He isn’t released out- right. All the major league clubs waived on Marquard, otherwise he couldn’t be sent to a minor organization, but he is said to be dissatisfied and wants his unconditional release. If he obtained this some big league club could take him on without paying the waiver price and the process would relieve the New York club of paying the rest . of his contract. Bobby Schang, former Pittsburg catcher, now belongs to the Giants. He come by the waiver route and had on a New York uniform yesterday. He can’t play until September 1, when the twenty-one player rule become a dead letter, or unless room is made for him before that time by reducing the list of eligibles. KENAN TO ASSIST. Middeltown, Conn., Aug, 26.—The Wesleyan football management announced that Dan C. Kenan of El Paso, Tex., who captained and played fullback on the Wesleyan eleven last #all, has been engaged to assist Coach Dick Eustis with the football squad this year. Kenan will come back to his alma mater in the fall virtually ms an assistant in the gymnasium, but during the football season he will devote his time to the team. Under the general direction of Dr. Edgar Fauver, physical director at the col- lege, Eustis and Kenan are expected “#0 bring the team up to a higher standard than it has attained since Wesleyan won the football pennant from Amherst and Williams in 1903. The men will not report until Septem- has ber 20 this year, since there will be | no game the last Saturday in Septem- ber as heretofore. ~ NOT FOR SALE. Cieveland, O., Aug. 26.—President Charles W. Somers of the Cleveland American league baseball.club, yes- terday denied that he intends to sell the local club. - He said there was no fbundation for a story published in New York that the club might be rold to James C. McGill and William Bmith owners of the Indianapolis American association club. ., Ban B. Johnson, president of the American league was here yesterday in con- fercnce With Somers and this led to as the president stands by the coun- try. “It is defensible to state that we stand by the country, right or wrong, It is indefensible in a free republic to state that will stand by any official, right wrong, or by an ex-official. Right Course by Nation. “Even as regards the country, while I believe that once war is on, every citizen should stand by the land. vet, in any erisis which may or ma; not lead to war, the prime duty of the citizen is, by criticism and ad- vice even against what he may known to be the majority opinion of his fel- low citizens, to insist that the nation take the right course of action, “There is even a stronger reason for demanding of every loyal citizen that after the president has been giv- he or MAXIMS WIN SERIE: Hartford Loses Final Round—Police Called Into Game. New Haven, Aug. 26.—With Lefty Leach pitching oxygen inebriated ball New Haven won the excruciating se- ries from Hartford at Savin Rock Vvesterday afternoon, 6 to 4. Hartford got but one of three games. Sher- man started the game and being un- able to repel a heavy bombardment he was shifted over to left field, and Rube Hellfrich worked after the third inning. Score: h. e. 8 1 9. 4 Sher- r. New Haven .... 02120100x—6 Hartford 020100010—4 Batteries—Leach and Sope: man, Hellfrich and Texter. New Bedford Wins. Springfield, Aug. 25.—New Bedford won from Springfield yesterday, 3 to 1. Score: a r. h. e. 001000000—1 6 2 001000011—3 9 1 and Lavigne; Springfield New Bedford Batteries—McElroy Gleason and Philips. Police Called Out. Brockton, Aug. 25.—Pawtucket de- feated Brockton 2 to 1 yesterday. A decision by Umpire Finnell met with such disfavor on the part of the crowd that he was furnished with po- lice escort to the club house at the conclusion of the game. Score: % R hied 001000010—2 6 1 100000000—1 5 5 3 and Russell; e Pawtucket Brockton Batteries—Houck Benson and Dempsey. HIRED AND FIRED. The addition of star material to the leading American league clubs goes merrily on. Manager Bill Carrigan of the Red Sox yesterday announced that his club had purchased Sam ‘Ag- new, the veteran catcher, from the St. Louis Browns. The purchase price is said to be $8.000. Agnew has not been hitting well this season, but he is a top-notch catcher and should help the Red Sox a good deal in their fight .for the flag. The Giants purchased a new pitcher yesterday, Herbert of the Toronto club who will report to the New York team as soon as the International league season closes This deal, it was said, had no connection with the release of Marquard to Toronto. President Chivington of the Amer- ican Baseball association last night confirmed rumors that he had di pensed with the services of Umpire Doyle, “Doyle was given notice of his release by me yesterday.” Chiving- ton said “There is no question of his competency as an arbiter so far as the technical points of baseball are con- cerned, but temperamentally he is un- suited for the duties.” Secretary Quinn of the Columbus team of the American association an- nounced yesterday the sale of Out- fielder Shelton to the New York Americans and Third Baseman Johns to the Chicago Americans. The play- spgculation as to the possibility of a deal being pending for the sale of the local club, but both Johnson and So- mers denied that this had brought the league head here, tHough neither explained the real object of Johnson's visit to the city. ers will report to their respective teams at once. Announcement also was made of the purchase of First Baseman Sykes and Infielder Steil, both of the Central league. They ap- peared in the Columbus line-up yes- terday. - of the | ness and Professional Men's Mil- | de- | manded of the Nation that its sons be | train- | “There should be a burning sense | ica has played an ignoble part among | we | ‘the statement so frequently mnade that | is followed by the statement so long | for any free man | * en ample time to act rightly, and | ! has either not acted at all or has act- | cd wrongly, that he shall be made to | feel that the citizens whom he was | elected to serve demand that he be loyal to the honor and to the inter- | csts of the lan | “The president has the right to have said of him nothing but what | is true; he should ve sufficient | time to make his policy clear. Bug as regards supporting him in all pub- ! lic policy, and above all in interna- | tional pol the right of any pres- | ident is only to demand public sup- port because he serves the public | { well and not merely because he i | president. ‘ Presidents Oaly Mortal, ! “President differ, just like other | folks. No man could effectively stand | by President Lincoln unless he had | stood against President Buchanan, I, | after the firing on Sumter, presi- | dent Lincoln had in a public specch | said that believers in the Union were too preud to fight, and if, instead of acting therc had been three months' | 1 admirable, elocutionary correspon- | dence with Jefferson Davis, by mid- | summer the friends of the Union, | would have followed Horace Grecley's | advice to let erring sisters go in Deace at that day v put above righteousness by some mistaken | sault, just as it is at the present day. “The men who helieve in peace at any price or in substituting all in- | clusive arbitration treaties for an | army and navy should instantly move to China. If he stays here, then more | i manly people will have to defend him, jend he is not worth defending. Let him get out of the country as quickly as possible. To treat elocution as a substitute for action, to repy upon high-sounding words unless backed by deeds, is proof of a mind that dwells only in the realm of shadow and sham. Although he refrained from speak- ing directly of the crisis of today in our affairs with Germany, the colo- nel by his attitude led no one to be- lieve he counsels watchful waiting in the least entertains pro-Teutonic sen- timent. Address in Full. Following is the address, in full, Colonel Roosevelt made in the camp: “I wish to congratulate all who have been at this Plattsburg camp and at the similar camps throughout the country upon the opportunity they have had to minister to their own self- | respect by fitting themselves to serve the country if the need should arise. You have done your duty. In doing it you have added to your value as citizens. You have the right to hold your heads higher because you are | fulfilling the prime duty of free- | men. No man is fit to be free unless | he is not merely willing but cager to fit himself to fight for his freedom, and no man can fight for his freedom unless he is trained to act in conjunc- tion with his fellows. The worst of all feelings to arouse in others is the feeling of contempt. Those men have mean souls who de- sire that this nation shall not be fit to defend its own rights and that $its sons shall not possess a high and resolute temper. But even men of stout heart need to remember that when the hour for action has struck no courage will avail unless there has been thorough training, thorough preparation in advance. “The greatest need for this country is a first-class navy. “Next we need a thoroughly trained regular and professional army of 200,- 000 men if we have universal mili- tary service, and of at least half a million men if we do not have such universal military service. “At present a single army corps from Germany or Japan( which if substracted from the efficient fight- ing forces of either, would not even be felt) could at any time be ferried across the ocean and take New York and San Francisco and destroy or hold them to ransom with absolute impunity and the United States at present would be helpless to do more than blame some scapegoat for what was really the fault of our people as a whole in failing to prepare in ad- vance against the dav of disaster. Must Train Citizens, “But the professional navy and the professional army are not enough. Free citizens should be able to do their own fighting. The professionai pacifist is as much out of place in a demacracy as is the poltroon him- self, and he is no better citizen than the poltroon. Probably no body of citizens in the United States during the last five vears have wrought efficiently for national decadence and international degradation as the pro- fessional pacifists, the peace-at-any- price men, who have tried to teach our people that silly all-inclusive ar- bitration treaties and the uttcrance of fatuous platitudes at peace con- gresses are substitutes for adequate military preparedn . These people are seeking to Chinafy th country “A high Japanese military officer recently remarked to a gentleman of my acquaintance that the future do- minion over the seas and lands of the | Pacific lay with Japan, because China was asleep and America was falling asleep, and in this world the future lay with the nations of patriotic and soldierly spirit. If the United States were to follow the lead of the profes- sional pacifists, and to permit itself | to be Chinafied, this observer's opin- jon would be quite correct. “It is an abhorrent thing to make a wanton or an unjust war. It is an ab- horrent thing to trespass on the rights of the weak. But it is an utterly con- | temptible thing to be unable and un- willing to fight for one's own rights i in the first:-plage, and, then, if pos- ‘sesspd of sufficient loftiness of soul, to Ordnance in Our Coast Defenses | | their I O_IGINCH_GUN FOR. CORST DEFENSE [Wo 26.,—Information the plans the Washington, Aug. obtained regarding war department for fortress to he erected at Cape Va., disclosed the fact that the partment intends, as rapidly as con- gress will permit, to replace the guns now installed in all the coast fortifi- cations of the country with giganti sixteen inch rifles, excelling in power and accuracy any guns ever con- structed before. With rifles of this Henr de character, army oflicers say, no hos- of the | tile warships would be able to get in mammoth | range of the American coast forts be- fore being subjected to a deadly fire. At present the coast defenses outside New York and other seaport cities are manned by twelve and fourteen inch guns, with a range less than those of the guns on some of the biggest war- ships of Germa and England, in- cluding the British super-Dread nought Queen Elizabeth, which ca | fifteen inch guhs. The new teen rifle will exceed in power the ’l\\'u guns of the same bore recently i constructed for the Panama canal de- fenses, one of which is shown in the illustration, The latter have a total length each of forty-five feet, where- as the guns now planned will have | length of ty-four feet and will | capable of hurling a | weighing a ton almost miles. be fight for the rights of the weak who are wronged- The greatest service that has ever been rendered mankind has been rendered by the men who have shrunk from righteous war order to bring about righteous peace, by soldier statesmen of the type of Washington, by statesmen of the type of Abraham Lincoln, whose work was done by soldiers. The men of the Revolution and the men of the civil war, and the women who raised these men to be soldiers, are the women to whom we owe debt of gratitude. Ameri a deathless Ignoble Part. “This mea can fight. Under the conditions of modern warfare it is the wildest non- sensc 1o talk of men springing to arms in mass, unless they nave been taught how 10 act in mass and how to the arms to which they thirteen months America has an ignoble part among the nations. We have tamely submitted to secing the weak, whom we had covenanted to protect, wronged. We have seen our own men, women and murdered on the high seas without ac- tion on our part. During this time our Nation has not taken the smallest step in the way of preparedness to de- fend our own rights. et these thir- teen months have made evident the lamentable fact that force is more dominant now in the affairs of the world than ever before, thatthe most powerful of modern military nations is utterly brutal and ruthless in its disregard of international morality, and that righteousness divorced from force is utterly futile. “This camp has lasted two months. It has done immense good to you who have been able to come here—al- though, by the way, you must not think that it has more than marked the beginning of training you to your duties. But you have been come because you are either yourself fairly well-to-do or else because you happen to serve employers who are both public-spitited and fairly well- to-do and who give you holidays with pay. dollar toward your direct Inasmuch as we as a nation have done use For played spring able to | in’| | military | universal and obligatory for all that all our young men ! i should be trained so that at need they children | ; €d American need to be taught thatit ' The government nas not paid a | expenses. | nothing whatever for national defense ! during the past thirteen months, the time when during all our history it was most necessary to prepare for 1f-defense, it is well that private in- ; dividuals should have tried however, insufficiently, to provide some kind of substitute for proper action, & fligh Praise for Camps. governmental | “The army officers and enlisted men ! have put all good Americans under a fresh debt by what they have done ! in connection with this camp; and we owe much to the private citizens who have advanced the money with- out wh the camp could not have been heid. But you men have had to buy ycur own uniforms; you have had to spend money in fifty different ways; in other words, you have had to pay for the privilege of learning how to serve your country. Tk means that for every one man like vourselves who can afford to come here there are a hundred equally good American citizens, equal pa- triotic, who would like to come and are unable to. “It is undemocratic that the young farmer, that the young hired man on a farm that the hard-working clerk or mechanric or day laborer, ail of whom wish to serve the country as much as you do and are as much | entitled to the benefit of this camp as you sre, should be unable to at- tend such a camp. They cannot at- tend it unless the Nation does Switzerland has done and gives the opportunity for every generous and right-thinking American to learn hy, 3 months' actual service in one year or iwo yvea how to do his Auty to the country if the need arises— as | | recent exposurers of the w | heartily and men and ; than our own. | of and the Americans who are not rigit thinging should be made to serve anyhow, for a democracy has full right to the service of its citizens. “Such service wouuld be an im- mense benefit to the man industrially. It would not only help the Nation, but it would help each individual who undergoes the training. . “Switzerland has universal mili- tary service; and it the most derly and less homicidal count Camps hools of civil virtue, efficiency well men. wish to come to them. professional pacificists troons and college ganize peace-at-any-price As for es who should be made h the madd doing money-spenders, they to understand that they render service demands must submit ing in whatever country hey be o train duty. Can Dig Trenches. “Then if, in the event of war, they prove unfit.to fight, at any rate they I can be made kitchen sinks, or whatever a debauch of indulgence in sional pacificism has left them fit to do. Both the professional paci- ficist and the professional hyphenat- to dig trenches do and is not for them to decide the con- ditions under which they will fight. They will fight whomever the Nation decides to fight, and whenever the Nation deems a war necessary. “Camps like this are the best pos sible antidotes to hyphenated Amer canism. The worst thing that befall this country would be to have the American Nation become a tangle jangling nationalities, a knot of German-Americans. Irish-American English-Americans, anl French- Americans. 1f divided in such fashion we shall most certainly fall. We can stand as a nation only if we genuinely united. “The events of the pa ear have shown us that in any cr the hy- phenated American is an active force against America, an active force for wrongdoing. The effort to hoist two flags on the same flagpole always means that one flag is hoisted under- neath; and the hyphenated American invariably hoists the flag of the Unit- ed States underneath. We must all be Americans and nothing else. You in | this camp include men of every creed | and every national origin—Jew and Gentile, Catholic and Protestant, men of English and Irish, German French, Slavonic and Latin and Scan- dinavian descent. But you are all Am- ericans and nothing else. You have only one nationality, You acknowledge but one country. You are loyal to only one flag. “There exists no finer body of Amer- ican citizens in this country than those citizens of German birth or descent who are in good faith Americans and nothing else. We could create an entire national administration, from the president down to the last cabinet of- ficer, every one of whose members would be of German blood and some of them of German birth, but all | of them Americans and nothing else, all of them Americans of that the men such a type who feel I do could without reserve support them in all our international rela- tions. But the Americans of German blood whs are of this type are not hyphenated Americans. They are just plain Ameri s like the rest of us Enemies of Country. “The prfesional German-American has shown himself within the last twelve months to be an enemy to this country well as to humanity. The ay in which these German-Americans have worked together with the emissaries of the German government—often by direct corruption-—against the integrity of American institutionsa &and saeiost or- our Every man worth his salt Will | for the export of munitions of war a base abandonment of and the pol- | morality to refuse to make these ship- or- societies. and the mere money-getters and mere | Ly the to their else profes- | 1 could and | l.\msrmd doing its international duty, ‘.««htmld scornful indignation in | every such The arousc Ameri leaders an worth calling i among the | | practiced what comes perilously | to treason against the United States | “Under the Hague convention it was | our bounden duty to take whatever ac- | score, | tion was necessary to prevent and, if six- | | projectile | twenty-five | cither at home or in one 8 German-Amecricans have preached and | near | when | BUCHARE org N War Has Brought § (Correspondence Bu 1ong toast ure deal those " fortu 1re Vien oney celle Germany for ¢ It Bt th comy ticles much The nary ingly Th the chas nine than the allows of re sanc called too New afte ho Money t R of the charest Aug. gy known as the ‘XN)M of being the gm pe. The war has broy of money into Ru who have benefitted to spend their for there is Mtt these days to or London Mu is the result of JRwl nt bargaining with Al for her last Wwhea »ther articles of wartl is sufficiently easy to s icharest, and it is part e city that pleasure o nensurate with outlay, of clothing cost fi here as in Paris of hotels ask $6 a day for room, and meals are © costly Follows Paris’ i women of Buchi and carriage example of Paris, tened Parig of wal heels are higher anywhere else in t eastern temperament more cxaggeratio yuge and powder than tion., The men—that the fashionabla wsé! well dressed in me nes, iveler na 1¢ style ti in York. rejety rnoon appears at jts ) when everyones to be anyone goes for a di | Cha ie st man silke the iona leisurel Vict of F ussee. The horse-d: ill quite the thing, and driver in velvet n sash of gaudiest ¢ drive comes five o'clock cafes. Tea is fol promenade down Rives it ble 0 which is the Bucharest and like point of many a romance. | professional | T and Dinner and he evening is taken up the theater. Then at the concerts and | finished, the night cafes o are Pric cabarets and dance and everywhere pl es are on a scale whi { not to prevent, then to undo, the hide- | be hard to beat in New | ous wrong that was done to Belg! like this are | We have shirked this duty as of shown a spirit so abject that Germany | and children on the high seas. | it would be ments, Such a refusal is proposed onl ania and the Arabic and crime commit- the Napoleonic It is an international the close of century ago. practice a timid and selfish neutrality between right and It is wrong for an individual. It still more wrong for a nation. But it is worse, in the name of neutrality | to favor the nation that has done | evil. greate ted since contests thing to a is Use, of | » Depends Upon | “As regards the export tions of war, the morality depends upon the use to which munitions are to be put. It wrong to keep her in subjugation. { is an utterly contemptible thing not | to help in every possible way to un- | do this wrong. The manufacturers | of cannon, rifles, | biles or saddlery who refuses to ship them for use by the armies that are | striving to restore Belgium to its | own people should be put on a toll ‘ of dishonor. Exactly the same mor- { ality should obtain internationally | that obtains nationally. | “It is right for a private firm { furnish arms to the policeman srality muni- the a 10 ! white-slaver and the blackhander. It gis wrong to furnish the blackhander, | the burglar and the white-slaver weapons to be used against the | liceman. The analogy holds true international life. Encourage Mun Makers, “Germany has greatest manufacturer n the munitions herself heen of She supplied munitions to England to subjugate the Boers and to the Turk { to keep the Christians in subjection. Let us furnish munitions to the men who, showing courage which we have not show, wish to rescue Belgium from subjection and spoliation and degradation. Let us encourage mu- nition makers so that we may be able to hold our own when the hour of peril comes to us in our turn, as as- suredly it will come if we show our- | selves too ‘neutral’ to speak a word on behalf of the weak who are wronged, and too slothful and laz to prepare to defend ourselves against wrong. Most assuredly it will come to | us if we succeed in persuading great | military nations that we are not pre- | pared to undertake defensive war for | our own vital interest and national honor. “Therefore, our conduct as a ance with the highest inter- | national morality. Let us treat oth- | | ers justly and keep the engagements | we have made, such as those in The | | Hague conventions, to secure just | | treatment for others. But let | member that we shall he wholly able to render service to others and | i wholly unable to fulfill the prime law | i of national being, the law of self- | preservation, unless we are thorough- ly prepared to hold our own Let { us show that a free democracy can defend itself successfuly against any ! organized and aggressive military de- | epotism. To do so we must prepare (as a nation; and the men of this shape ‘cord- friends, let us nation in rules of us re un- | cartridges, automo- | of | principal SIAT who | 15 are | puts down the thug, the burglar, the | | of war to be supplied to belligerents | | best £ ango dances, They should be | has deemed it safe to kill our women | Hungarian music from zin As | pan-pipes, and vaudeville supper places offer ied entertainment: the news many types. | gre: | boc lower at d women and child numbers haunt the of the cafes until sl ¢ to favor the nation that sank the | They are allowed to ente com- | best mitted the crime against Belgium, the | among the table, restaurants and circuls where a few coins and many bits | The evil | Callea Victoria vigi | | or smi | not upon, afternoon promen strikes freer and toras a little wrong. | conventional than anythin same kind to be found in American cities, The les at a lady he does considered a person to but is rather regard | majority as a commendabl and gallant fellow: of the «ct| NO MORE CHEAP. PRICES A i World Is in for Period of | «co | o | will | this Sco 7 for y s w prod able com not it war will of o1 a pe permanent high the t honu war, high camy start gove along which rising prices.” § of Living Declan Dr. Slater rrespondence of the Assot " xford, England, July be no more cheap DB war the world is in £} declared 1 Ruskin Coll of a reries of Phases of the not believe,” he of he first nomic do | there will be a period of pe | the with | po- | in | war. There will be ng poverty, and such povent i1l be due to misapplh uctive powers which will It will be the pow from wasted resou from Iinadequate resol "here will be no ret prices. That means permanent res ir methods. There will rmanent wages readjustments to prices. The proper rade unions is to accep not for the duratie for the duratio 5 be a rise of er ses, but er prices ) and the ing this rnment men respol camp have and our people we should t I

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