+ Cr i A sma Hinge Sd oy [engl ppg vom EW Ae, Sar TER SSR RE pp 2% RL lot he water power monopolies, The | farmers have beem fighting it and 1) |am here to ask among other things, | pit |your help in the coming session of | \ Congress to see to it thay when that | WER If OR M LATION effort is renewed, there may be stand- | ling beside the farmers, who are fight- | ling the fight of the people, organized | 1abor, whose interests are precisely | |the same in this matter. | ird of People of United States Are Farm-| | That is only one illustration out of | At Least One-Third Are Wage-Earners. hundreds of how the farmer and the | i wage-carner, standing together for | United, What Power Could Stand Against, same things which means good | : . | hh Address Before A. F. of L. Convention, December 20, 1917. jgovernmeng and, above all, the use {of the natural resources of this coun- hi pers and Delegates: I have mainly for the happiness and welfare | {yy not mainly to make money for Mr. Cresey, former head profit of a few of ihe people. You | people. to say to you on behalf we stand outside the of the organized farmers of America, nting the Federal Board of majority who earn their living with \y 5 willing Fito. with a member- | their hands; as large ag your own, a | | privileged class; » of something over two | special privileges is the central en- | protherhood; that we look to you to] ~anized farmers, and what | emy and, above all, who believe that | yelp us in the things that are good | to be in the near future, a [the essential things to do in these jor us and that we stand willing to ip of two and a half mil- | United States is to take political pow- | help vou in the things that are good | organization was brought [er out of the dollar and put it into | for you. barticularly for the purpose | | the hands of man. The scale tf liv- he the organized farmers of ling o bv behind the government the President in the conduct of mer particularly to do for the at your ‘own organization | kor the man who works off | You will pardon us far-| ve believe that we come |only just beginnfg for,’ from the time | ges the earth than any other | since there have en, It is the earth that |has never been until now one single !qpn 200 per cent, and more, that it is he essential things for the | organization which could bring to- | not the farmer who gets the price hd life of our children— | get her all the organized farmers, and | vou pay for food, mainly, but that at thing, shelter, industry, fall the power of the ‘organized far-!icast one-half of that price, and some ring, transportation and mers, and put that power behind the | official figures show 75 per cent of All these things that! things for which the farmer stands. |tjat price goes to the middle man, better than the beast come | ‘The Department of Labor, the|gnd the unfair middle man is the rom thie earth. Ss all these things io man, | Labor Safety, the Employers’ Liabil- | he is the enemy of the consumer reserve thai the prosperous far- |iving, that the farmer is monopo- has in his farm is equivalent to | yt, tha; the farmer is grinding the er has in his bank. You have long | remember that the farmer is in exact- hag risem 100 per cent, the) , for it is ‘the farmer who j Act, and many other things you have t Un distributing her most | done, and the farmers on their side, | enefits Now the gether. Now, as I said to you, the Federal nenta] things, is api to be | Department of Agiiculture, the Bu- |; this war No other body of equal | peau of Markets, and in nean ly every the United States has had state laws which have been good both ttention from the govern- | for vou and for him. other body of men has| If these things 1 have said, are ttle and received even less, | {irue, if the essential interests of the hs the farmer, and the |wage earner and the farmer are the e wage-worker who pro- same, then why is ft that these two i. sends me here to speak grea: bodies of men, two million and the wageworker who con- a halt on: your side and two million ‘on his side, should be working with ner is not 8 yapitati, and | | prasically the same point of view, ia t vel 4 rotuhavige ithe dndimate action h you. The farmer Jhich would give us, ‘instead of two Lr; his average wages may 1solaied bodies, one body united for be two or three hundred muvual purposes of five million men. roduets from his farm and i I want to mention just one subject sur hundred dollars that br cash, but what he gets product of his capital but t of his labor. What he t ag much the product of bs the work the carpenter | his tools or the work the oes with his teols. The 1 interests of the farmer The best blood of your young men is going out trenches to make this fight. food, the ships, the munitions and ithe laboring men. hands. ar¢—and I do not mean if these two bodies were w orlk- | ng together. I sat'here on this plat- | ta TorEty of diffpssion of the paper . question, | knowing - that behind that question [lies the question of the control of | water power, as -one of the delegates eresits of the wage worker ; mentoned. For nearly ten years, in b interests of the capitalist, | session after session of the Congress why I am here today. ‘of ihe United States, the effory has sight it might seem that been made to fasten upon the citi- its of the men who are zens of the United States the greatest ood consumers and the of all possible monopolies, the mo- bore farmers might clash. nopoly in water power. The conser- ve look behind the appar- vation of natural resources means the more we study the conservation of the raw material of be background, the more power——coal, oil, natural gas and (your interests are the same. over ments, what power the finished product? tha: civilization on the basis of how he same platform as the much power they control. Year after You and he belong to year the effort has been made, and ody of American citizens. ‘has been defeated until mow, to put belong to the great body 'the largest remainibg asset that there we things and stand very heaven that can stand just demands unite upon? President Gompers: who "has jusy now councils of might formulating commitices or citizens who believe, that is in the hands of the people of the |r, orully addressed us, has asked | JUST KIDS nin? § lent of this country exists |nation, to put that also in the hands | hether some consiructive action ; — Stayin’ In. By Ad Carter rms mm — ow . may result from his suggestions, and | the question of the selection of 2] pr @ a 42 E52 committee or the authorization of the Ue B oy : . : 5 + iki Livery Pils Execeutive Council to meeq ‘with like | g A Remody That ¥ ie ers’ organlizations the purpose of Genuine bears gigaa 7 v i % A 2 om LS IRON | PIL A AREAS NE TSR am placing the =iwill act on the sugg MYDUR Ng Ci Us. ter be referred to the | Organization with the request that io final adjournment. Deleg {matter be {an Organization, they to {this convention before fits journment. (Seconded and . TN 2 SR YARN AE ST Re YR is cane Ln An =u oF THis 3 Aves asi JERSEY City. N.J, unanimously.) fo SRR] HAM DUPLEX RAZOR Cor 1al Union of St Engineers has i ity affiliates lin Briti ire the eight-h “BLUE BONNETS” — A New Fabric with N New Focus, { o Blue Bonnets mects the needs of the womas who wants a beautiful, Juble fabric f i x without yerinkling, repels dust and launders perfecily, ‘Admizabl ¥ adapted for jj 1day ~ ciresses, $p0¥t coals au fldrens garments, petiicoets, etc. Alo . Guar dye fast aud durable. Wide waiicty of e3- bis ad with mune of yr, Mew York { the profits of toil, clean politics, good | | { i | | come befora you with my | of the people and not mainly for the ihe few but for the profit of all the | 1 am not here to tell you | te Grange of Pennsylvania, and the farmer are part of the great jo. in detail] this can be done, but! who believe that|inat we extend to yom the hand of | But the Child Labor Bureau; the Bureau of | {enemy of the farmer just exactly as y but through the hand of |ity Act, the Workers’ Compensation | Tha interests of the two stand to- farmer acting by little isolated groups, have p,, ard of Farm Organizations came fundamental things, like | { produced the Parcel Post Law, the linto existence particularly to help us i 1 { 1 { young men and the best blood of our into the The and, above all, the unconquerable will to carry this thing through to a victori- ous conclusion rests with the farmers Together these two great bodies hold the fate of this ‘war in their hands just exact-| ly as they hold the prosperity and | lido you wish?” aske the averfare of the country in their And remember this—if any | Iman tries to tell you that the farmer | of the two is about the same and | \is responsible for the high cost or! 5 | | {the reserve that the prosperious Work- face of the man who must face fact, | {heen working together in a nation-| {ly the same position you are; remem- | | wide organization, but the farmer ¥s \ber that where the thigs the farmer | 2? citizenship, a fairer distribution of | Goo0n |S 0C0BCO000CO0000 Bc > LN SC0O000000000030080030000C CONOCOCO0000000C000000000 8 FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. (By Albert Rupp.) We want the freedom: of the press; We want the means ito think as free men. In toese great times of storm and stress We want the right to speak and be men. Let us declare our discontent Whenever laws demand repealing, And let us help our government To know the peopie’s earnest feeling. We want no censorship of news Which: gives .us lies as information. We want thc Truth to guide our views ) And guard the welfare of our nation. Let us mot grope in fearful night For doubts condemued and blunders biinded; But let ug walk in wizdom's light, Erect, and hopefui, and broad-minded. We want the freedom of tthe press, Achieved by heroes brave in story, And handed down these times to bless, Against the foes that hate our glory. Forced to the clash of war's wild arts. Ringed by the mad world’s crisis-fires, Let us have Truth to thrill our hearts, SOCIALISTS TO RAISE $1,000,000 FUND LLaunch Campaign to Raise Huge Sum to Win Vidtories in 1918 Congressional Elections—Plan Indorsed By Party's National Executive Committee. (By J. Louis Eughahl.) i A v Chicago, Dec. 21.Plans Tor ing to HLS a series of l:a.ets on launching a campalgn to raise a «Mil suggested topics as follows: ‘““Viola- d” for the rapidly ap- tion of Constitutional Right,” “Sup- | pression of the Press,” “Conscription : 1918 | {of Wealth,” “Labor im War time,” - were adopted at the meeting of the | ana “Scarcity of Necessities of Life.” Socialist Party National Executive] it was voted to issue as a leaflet Conmittee just held in Chicago. This | the statement of Karl Liebknecht to wiill be the big effort of the national | the court that sent him to prison. Socialist Party in the immediate fu- | Help Appeal O'Hare Case. ture. ; | ‘Ine sum of $250.00 was voted The fund will met only be used to | from the Woman's Fund to help pre- carry the 1918 congressional cam- | pars ‘the apeal of Kate Richards paign, which will be inaugurated at | O'Hare, associate editor of Social once, but it will also be used in part |Revatution, and chairman of the to finance the defense of Socialists | committee on war and militarism as unjustly persecuted by federal au- (the St. Lois Convention, who was lion Dollar Fun proaching campaign year of & And right to speak our heart’s desires. Q ~—Issues and Events. HCC0000000CO00EPEEOn00O000000000000000OC0ICTICOCT HIS LIMIT. 'always happens to tough meat.”—R. A farmer in great meed of extra IR. Telegrapher, hands at haying time finally asked . 9 9 been farms there | | {hings the farmer must ‘buy have ris-' 1 | town fool, if he could help him out.’ Mz. | “Whatll ye pay?’ asked Si. “I'll pay what you're worth,” a wered the farmer. We come to you at this time, | in rhis great crisis in the country and |ing that you were alive on the 15th | the world, saying to you that if there say there are as an illustration of what it means, | that if there are subjects in whiich we ‘of what it would mean, what it could | |must differ, let us frankly differ and | let it go ag that, but that in the vast | questions affecting you form this morning and listened to al, and affecting us, our interests and Then, with the will to get tozether, aly thag fs needed is the simplest machinery, for, it we have been beaten over and | again as the farmers and you | have been beaten over and over again in ¢pite of your magnificent achieve- | is there in this | country that can stand against the | just demands of the men and women: who produce the raw material and | the men and women who make up | One-third of all the people of the Unfited States against the which this two-thirds | fe 1 in this calling by employers who Mr. Pinchot, so eloquently and the farm- occur for some genera] policy to carry out to a suc- cessful conclusion the work and the | hopes and the aspirations of both the farmers and the industrial workers. I | matier before the | I convention and if it be agreeable I | restion made by | | Vive«Predgident Duncan that the mat- | Committee on hey report to this convention bhelore ate Koveleski moved that the referred to the Committee report to final ad- THEN CAME SILENCE. Grump (with newspaper)— Here's an odd case—a woman mar- ns- ries one man thinking he is another. Mrs. Grump—What’s odd aboug Si Warren, who was accounted the Si scratched his heac a minute, that? Women are doing that all the then announced decisively: time,—BEx, * “I'l be durned df i'll work for | :T =. uw A CASE FOR COURT MARTIAL. Recruit (nervously)__Shail I mark | time with my feet, sir? The widow of a German officer Lieutenant (sarcastically) —My presented herself at the office for the | dear fellow, did you ever hear of purpose of drawing the pension due | | marking time with the hands? to her. She handed in the necessary | Recruit—VYes, sir; clocks do it.— certificate from t 4 mayor of the | ! Bx. LST town in which she 1i i d, to the effect! Mrs. Smith—I want a cheap mouse that she was still alive. | trap, please, and hurry up; I want “This certificate i8 mot correct,” |to catch a train. said the official in charge. | Shopkeeper—My mouse traps are “What's the mater | not guaranteed to catch trains, ma- asked the lady. $ dam.—Ex. “1; bears the date "October 21st,” yw =» was the stern reply, and your pen- {HE OTHER HEAVEN, sion was due on October 15th.” | “Do you know where ithe little ‘Well, what kin 41 a certificate | hoys go who don’t put their Sunday isappointed school money dn the plate?” | apolicant. 2 . “Yes’m-—to the movies.”’—BEX. “We must have a gertificate stat-| *» = a VACUUM THEOLOGY that!”—ExX. + & HARD TO CONVINCE. with it?” bed October,” said the official, with | | ereat firmness. —Everybody’s. ! * * - A colored Baptist was exhorting. ‘““Now breddren and sistern, come up to de ner an’ hab yo’ sins washed thorities, and to carry on the organ- | found guilty and sentenced to five ization work and build up the mem- | years imprisonment for alleged se- bership of the party. | ditious utterances in a speech at Fund Biggest Ever Sought. | Bow man, North Dakota, last summer. This is the biggest fund that the | Mrg. O'Hare was formerly a mem- National Socialist Party has ever at lier of the mational executive com- tempted to raise. = That (% is within mittee and also international secre- the realm of things possible is shown |tary. She is one of the most power- by the fact that $60,00 was raised | ful women speakers fin the party. during the recent Hillguit mayoralty | Fight South Dakota Case. campaign in New York City, this | It was decided to put up a stren- money ‘being contributed by Sodial- luous fight in behalf of William J. ists in every part of the country. This | Head, Mitchell, South Dakota, sen- was after New York Socialists had | tenced to three years in the federal contributed $50,000 to help finance | prison ay lL.eavenworth, Kansas, for The Call, the New York Socialist | circulating a a petition to congress ask- daily, and $75;000 to purchase a ing for the repeal of the constitution home for the ‘Rand School of Social | Taw and expressing the opinion that Science, not to mention several other | the law ‘was unconstitutional and projecis that called for the ralising could not be enforced. of considerable sums of money. Plans to secure justice in this case If these sums can be raised in one | | were left in the hands of Adolph city it is certain that the national or-| Germer, party national secretary, and ganization can raise a much larger | Seymour Stedman, the party’s coum- sum to take advantage of the great- | sel. st opportunities that ever confront- | od the Socialist Party of America, - resent the committee. in behalf of the Make Wilson Financial Director. | four Socialists at Albany, N. X., con- Oliver C. Wilson, state secretary of victad Wrdistributin Illinois, was elected financial director | Fars, i the “Million Dollar Fund, Af with | Ald Women's - advisory committee ‘consisting of | The sum of $150.00 was voted to i ional Secretary Adolph Germer, J. carry on special organization work Louis Engdahl, Otto F. Branstetter.jamong women in California. Robery H. Howe and Seymour Sted-| It was also decided to send. Ella man. They will carry on their work ! Reeve Bloor into New York State HIS APOLOGY. away. under the general direction of the | where the women have just been en- The young son of the family, who All came but one. Naticnal Executive Committee. | franchised, where she will conduct an | had been out to uncheon at a little “Why Brudder Jones, don’t you All of the National Fxeeutive Com- | | organization. campaign of at least 60 | friend’s house, was ‘asked by his! want ye’ sins washed away?” miitee members were present at the | days. [niother on his return whether he had “lI done had my sins washed | meeting tha; considered and took | Anna A. Maley was appointed to | been a good boy. He hesitated a away.” this action. They -were Morris Hill- arrange for field work among WiIo- | moment, then answered, ‘‘Yes.” “Yo’ has! Where yo’ had yo’ sins | quit, New York City; Victor L. Ber-| men in co-operation wlih National washed away?” “Ober at de Methodish church.” “You don’t seem to be very sure [about the matter.” said his mother. fee What did you do?” | “Oh, I just spilled my chop in my { lax p,” he replied. i | | | washed, “Did you apologize to Mrs. lic Brown?” ! “Yes,” he nodded. “Tell mother what you said when vou apologized.” among women who are being install- at & cost of $12 houce. suitable. ,060,000 for a cour { claim The site is now declared umn | cured. men janitors cannot be. se- “Ah, Brudder Jones, yo’ ain’y been yo’ just been dry cleaned.” Ex. The society women, in an effort to | make both ends meet, are using less cloth at the top and at the bottom of their dresses. Along with many other modern tenementg on land purchased Secretary Germer. Take Qver Young People’s Magazine. Plans were made for a conference (with Meyer London, the lone Social- in his report to the committee, | ist congressman, at the mext meeting National Secretary Germer urged |of the committee. that states where the membership is | Seymour - Stedman will confer with small be grouped in district able to | London on proposed legislation dur- maintain a secretary to devote all of | the present session of congress. his time to party work. This recom-| The Young People's Department fm meudation was approved and a rea-! the pational office was authorized to ger, Milwaukee, Wis.; Seymour Sted- | man and John Work, Chicago; and |! Anna A. Maley, Minneapolis, Minn, Group Weak States in Districts. i “Oh,” came ihe quick response, things this dispays their patriotism. become that the funda- water power—for the reason that the | re farmers; at least one-third arc Yo 1 : is | ey Dah Tee ; [pe } 1th & of : ‘1 sai id, Excuse me, but that’s what —York Labor News. [sonable amount voted to help esta-|take over the Young Socialist Maga- rests of Voll gfe one, and man whe contmls. DOWS GORUDL Iwasowarers. Onethind and one- | # GN Ln SS blish district offices |zine, mow published in New York wha is to your ad- everything else. Mechanical power is | (hj ake two-thirds of soble Sl : 35 oo WE Tr : . : Tet olices, {ailio, a s ’ f run whag ig to ¥ a oryl Wing ChaliEni b third make two-thirds of the people San Francisco Janitors’ Union has {rade unionists in New York city it was decided to ask Tents Mea i also to the advantage of the key to modern civilization and |or the United States. Banded to- | ‘od ut it . 4 + + . a starte al 4 z ampaig ask nicipe ai ities i (hat you get much bene- nations are judged in the scale Of | gether is there any power mudd: | ed gn organizing campaign ask municipal authorities to build WOMEN WORK LONG HOURS Don’t Neglect Children in IN CHICAGO STOCK YARDS | War, is Plsa to America . EUROPE MADE MISTAKE IN AL. Y/shivgion, D. €-—The heaviest LOWING LABOR ST! ANDARDS | Food contracts in the history of the [ETN 252 3A SS AL i: p TO DROP. | wor ld have been ley within recent days to 14 of the great packing howu- —The increas- | | ses of the United States. These large ing necessity for maintaining stand- | orders have necessitated night work ards of child welfare during wartime |, was ‘pointed out today by the chil- | dren’s bureau in a New Year’s warn- | lL Washington, Jan. 1. as well as the increased employment of woman labor. Miss Mary MacDowell, director of ing, calling the aitention of American | the university settlement work at the citizens to the disastrous effects of | Chicago stockyards, also chairman of exemptions from child labor regula-| the committee on foreign-born wo- tions in foreign countries. jaen of the advisory commission of “Foreign experience: shows that | [the Council of -National Defense, countries which have permitted spec- | found on investigation that many i al exemptions from child labor women were accepting employment fs ards’? he data 5 3 Is efi g i standards, the statement in the packing houses for night work “have almost with one accord re-|after their day woof labor at home, gretted them as both injurious to the with the consequence that seme of children and inefficient as regards in-! them obtained one hour of sleep in { dustrial results. The immediate pen- | the 24. Af a result of her efforts to {alty has been a swelling stream of correct this situation the packers | child offenders pouring thru the have promised not to employ women | courts. i withs children under 6 years of age “Protection of babies and jpittle | for night work, children and of their mothers—a first | | essential in wartime to replace the million working women i waste of hu man life 1 - | 1 Tri . £ pu L lito on the battle-| ip shout the United States are demands local provision for J s 3 asking that they be paid the same rsing and medical care rotection not being : 15. | wages as men ‘for equal work. burden rests with a dollar s pious capitalist takes ket on Saturday Morris Hillquit was, asked to rep- In the meantime . ~ vein i STA Tea - HE w A se const some crea. lose a gre and gears cheap sep: J The ne its detache after the : The De ming unde De Laval vice, toge makes the . closer ski gives cons the bargai The new constructic Come in es. you in all will be inf bowl, the many othe eran” HL Have you | and do so. Br =» is one of the teach them in 1 Remember You can payment each Come in. CTL Loans and | TU. 8. Bond: Banking Hq Cash . Due from B Capital Stoc Surplus nc Circulation. Deposits..... The “The NOVICES ar ~ ~ , II OG CO SOOO GEO OSnEOaNnT 1 HUNT WINS ( ARIZO Phoenix, Ariz. state . suprenie George W. Hung state. Hunt co of Governor Carn Hunt, the then margin of 31 v court has unanin claim of 1 The succ elected govern