"8b63162c-3eb1-4ca0-a925-9c75c24cdc35"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2017-04-03"@en . "1925-09-25"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cflacla/items/1.0344589/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " With Which Is Incorporated THF^C. FEDERATIONIST\nSeventeenth Year, No.\nsass\nLeague Fears Crash\nOf World Imperialism\nGENEVA, Switzerland. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Delegates to the league of nations assembly here, admit that economic\nconditions in Europe, are ln many.\n, respects \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 growing worse, despite\nseeming financial betterment They\nare proposing fantastic artificial\nregulations to bolster up the de-\n. dining capitalist states of Europe.\n-Premier Falnleve, on the opening day of the assembly, said that\n\"economic forces, if left unrestrained, might cause a new war.\"\nLouis Loucheur, the French delegate, who proposed the resolution'\nfor a \"world economic conference\"\nof the capitalist powers, said that\n\"since the end of the war, Europe,\nhaa been a prey to an economic\ncrisis.\"\nThe \"economic conference\" is'\nproposed in an attempt to counteract the growing prestige of Soviet\nRussia, and to check the decline'\nof the European imperialist powers.\nmNOOMR, B. P., FBffi^^NING, SEjPT- 25, 1925\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' .yVi\" ' * ' *\"\n0*\nEight Pages\n5c A COPY\nCLP. Issues Manifesto\nLabor's Attitude Placed Before Electorate\nPropaganda Against\nAnthracite-Miners\nCanadian Mine Owners\nWant More Immigrants\nMONTREAL\u00E2\u0080\u0094 (FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Pres. Tom\nMoore,1 Trades and Labor Congress\nof Canada, denounces the articles\nin British papers which statei that\nCanada is in great need of coal\nminers who will enjoy fine conditions To nail, thireffort-to depress\nthe wage market still further,\nMoore cites the fact that the British Empire Steel corp., leading\neastern employer of miners, absolutely refuses to guarantee its Nova Scotia mine workers even 4 days i\nwork a week. Of 12,000 miners in\nthat district 4,000 are normally unemployed, according to the mining\nreport of the province.\nT ABOR'S CAMPAIGN ln the federal* election is now definitely\nunderway. Campaign headquarters have been secured at 814 Hol*>\nden Building, 16 Hastings St E.,\nand Mr. R. P. Pettipiece has been\nappointed campaign manager.\nThe following eleotlon manifesto\nhas been issued by the C.\" Lb P. to\nfederal electors in Greater Van-,\ncouver, and . adjacent constituencies:\nTO FEDERAL ELECTORS\nThe entry of Labor into federal\npolitics is not new, but this is the\nfirst time in British Columbia,that\na united effort by the various organizations representing Labor has\nheen made on any comprehensive\nscale\nWe have had to fight our employers, whether individuals or corporations, for everything we have\nin the way of improved Hying conditions. Every advance we have\nmade has been gained by bitter\nfighting and sacrifices on the part\nof the workers, and it, requires\ncareful watching to maintain them.\nEvery word of legislation on the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2statute books, having this object\nin view has been conceived in the\nminds of the leaders of thought in\nthe labor movement, afld\" were\nPlaced there _.only .After years of\nagitation on the part of the work-,\ners.\n-Changed Conditions Make New\nMethods Necessary\n.With the development of Industry -in svery country, conditions\nhave beoome auch* -that, haphazard \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nlegislation ls no longer sufficient to\nmeet the requirements of..- the\nchanging times. Fundamental\nchanges are necessary if order is\nto be brought out of the present\neconomic chaos.\nQuestions of immediate urgency\nface the workers of Canada1 the\nchief of which is the matter of\neducation along the lines of social\nand political economy, and the* development of a social consciousness\nby the working class. The welfare\nof the workers and producers of\nthis country* necessitates investigation from the social viewpoint, and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2not:from the* point, ot'View of spe-,\ncial and privileged Interests.\nPreeent Immigration PoUcy\nFundamentally Wrong \u00C2\u00BB\nA matter of general concern to\nall personsjylwlSw by selling their\nability to'work it the bonuslng of\nthe importation of living packets\nQf this commodity for the Canadian market. Why should the importation of the power to labor be\nbonused and all other commodities protected?\nGenerally speaking we are not\nin favor of tariffs that tend to assist the building up of big fortunes\nto captains of industry, but we, are\nnot in favor of throwing open the\nmarket in Canada to all commodities irrespective of the conditions\nunder which these same commodities may be produced. We cannot stand by and allow home markets to be flooded with the products\nof the development of capitalist\nImperialism < in 'Oriental -countries.\nProvisions for Old Age Pensions\nSince it ls impossible for the\nworker, as a result of the wages\nsystem, to make adequate provision for old age, without an undesirable lowering of the standard of\nliving, we favor the enactment of\nFederal Non-Contributory Old Age\nPensions. '\nUnemployed Must Be\nProvided for\nIn common with aU other coun-\n(ConUnued on page J)\nW1KES BAKKB, Pa\u00E2\u0080\u0094The striking anthracite miners have just received, their last pay, which is for\nthe work performed the last half\nof August. It is estimated .the pay\nroll for. the. entire region will exceed $1B,800,0U0. This will be the\nlargest pay ever received by the\nminers in any two week period. On\nthis* fact the anthracite operators\nare waging an Intensive advertising campaign. Printed on the back\nof the miners' statement of wages\nis a beautiful message from the\ncoal companies.\nOne statement reads: \"$1,200\nlost daily by the miners and whose\nfault?\" Another reads: \"Impartial arbitration is the fairest way\nto settle disputes. We are always\nready to arbitrate our differences\nhowever, come what may they will\nbe arbitrated in the end.\" Some\nothers claim the miners could\nmake huge wages if they would only work and keep, quiet.\nU. F. 0. Hot Td.Enter\nThe Federal Election\nFree Overtime Given Bankers' Association\nCanadian Exploiters Trains Private Gunmen\nAllies Milked Germany\nOf One Billion Marks\nPARIS.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Germany paid one billion gold marks, under the Dawes\nplan, during the first year of the\noperation ot the plan, according to\nthe report.of Parker Gilbert, agent\ngeneral for reparations, made to\nthe reparations commision and\npublished by that body.\nThe billion gold marks paid by\nGermany consisted of 800,000,000\ngold marks raised by an external\nloan and 200,000,000 as partial Interest from railway debentures.\nOTTAWA, Ont.-*-The United\nFarmers of Ontario/ have decided\nto take no part in the 1926 federal election, as an organized body.\nAsked as to the reasons for the\nnon-participation of hia organization, Mr. Morrison, secretary of the\nU. F. O. stated that, the United\nFarmers had decided at their 1922\nconvention that they \"were opposed to. the transformation of the\nfarmers' movement into a new political party\"; and that in 1923 a\nresolution was passed to the effect\nthat the farmers' organization had\nsuffered as a result of their participation ln political activities.\nThe U. F. O. will send out literature, if asked, on questions in\nwhich lt is interested, but will take\nno part in the campaign;\nDon't forget! Mention the Advocate when buying.\nSend in Your Subscription Today.\n^iiiii>ini.\u00C2\u00BBi\u00C2\u00BBmm\u00E2\u0080\u009EtiltM\u00C2\u00BBiitiitii_ni..tn..t..tini.t,.ti\n{ WHERE DANGER WAS\nTHERE HAIG WAS NOT f\n/COMMENTING on the mill-\n^** tary manoeuvers being\nconducted in Great Britain,\nthe Vanoouver Provinoe of\nSeptember 23rd, has the following to say:\n\"It hardly needs an open\navowal from such a military\nnotability as Field Marshal\nSir- William Robertson to\nconvince the layman that the\nmanoeuvers, however ably\nconducted, can bear only a\nfaint resemblance to war.\n{This was exemplified in the\nincident of Earl Haig and his\ncompanions standing in the\n!- line of danger.\"\n...mem m \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mme nm i i ii ii i ll ii ii ii\nConference On China\nMerely Dose of Guff\nWASHINGTON\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Text of\nthe note sent to China's temporary government at Peking by the\nnine powers that took part in the'\nWashington conference of 1922,\nshows that nothing is promised\nChina except a discussion of her\ndemands. Each power is \"willing,\neither at that (forthcoming Qcto\nber) conference or at a subsequent\ntime, to consider and discuss any\nreasonable proposals that may be\nmade by the Chinese* government\nfor a revision of the treaties on the\nsubject \"of the tariff.\" Also, the\nconference to discuss the'possibility of sometime recognizing the\nright of Chinese courts to deal with\nforeign offenders in China may be\nheld at the same time as the tariff conference.\n(By Federated Press.)\nMONTREAL\u00E2\u0080\u0094That a period of\ncutthroat competition with labor\nthe victim is beginning ih Canada\nis evident. from reoent developments. Some weeks ago the James\nPender Wire & Nail Co. of St\nJohn, New Brunswick, one of the\nconcerns in the British '-Empire*\nSteel Corporation, induced its employees to work overtime.* without,\npay to enable the eompany to,\nmeet competition. Thereupon the\nRoyal Mail * Steam \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Packet Co.,\nwhich draws a big subs.dy from\nthe Canadian government, quoted\nreduced freight rates on Pender\nproducts shipped to the West Indies, in order, its announcement\nsaid, to show its friendly appreciation of what the Pender- employees are doing to increase foreign trade.\nCanadian papers now report\nthat Pender has obtained' large\nforeign orderB, and they are lauding the Pender employees as a\nfine example to other * workera.\nThis policy offers-Canadian workers tHe opportunity to work overtime tor nothing to supply foreigners with \"Cheap products.\nST. PAyL-*-(F P)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Minnesota\nbankers who are copying the Illinois Bankers Association plan of organizing 10,0*0 private gunmen\nhave drawn heavy fire from organized labor for*- their usurpation of\ngovernment police functions.\n\"It is hinted^ says the Union\nAdvocate, \"thatthese police will be\nused for: other purposes than apprehending bank bandits. In other\nwords there Is no reason why theBe\nhirelings-could not be used in an\nalleged crisis such as a strike.\"\n\"We believe this is the most lawless and brazen thing that has been\nundertaken in America in the name\nof law enforcement. The organization of such aggregations as contemplated by the bankers ls clearly a menace to democratic government. To tolerate it, is a confession of failure of lawful government.\"\nAutomatic Devices\nMenace Telegraphers\nCHICAGO\u00E2\u0080\u0094-(FPJ-r-On the very\nday that the Commercial Telegraphers Union of America opens\nits convention in Chicago, the Western Union Telegraph Co., announces further displacement of key-\nmen 'by automatic transmitting machinery. Through automatic repeating devices the Western Union\ncan now send a message by cable\nand wire all the way from London\nto San Francisco without the help\nof the telegraph operators who\nformerly had to receive and then\nsend on the messages at the various relay points. Automatic transmission Is a major problem of the\nunion.\nHighlight! on This\nWeekYNewi\nCANADIAN Pago\nC.L.P. Ii\u00C2\u00BBu.\u00C2\u00BBM\u00C2\u00BBnlf_\u00C2\u00ABto......._.\u00E2\u0080\u0094.._\u00E2\u0080\u0094..' 1\nFree Overtime for Canadian Bou. i.... 1\nBritish Labor Speaker ih Vancouver.. 2\n___J__BIO-_\u00C2\u00BBr\nBanker* Trsin Gunmen.-*.**. 1\nBom Preu Attacks Minen -. 8\nFordiied Education in U.S.. 6\ni BIRMH\nWhy Saklattala Wu Exeinded 1\nUnemployed Uied Against Sallon.... 1\nronxex \"\nWorld Imperialism 8haky.\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 1\nAllies Milk Oermany.... ...... 1\nEducation la Bouia.....\u00E2\u0080\u009E.....\u00E2\u0080\u009E...._.._~\u00E2\u0080\u0094 5\nProduction Increasing;\n% Poverty Keeping Step\n-WASHINGTON\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094A wage\nor income of $1,800 a year ls needed to supply \"elementary decencies\nof life\" for a family in cities of\n100,000 or more, and $1,600 is\nneeded ln smaller towns, says Rev.\nFrancis J. Haas, Ph. D., professor\nIn Marquette University, reporting\nto the Natl. Catholic Welfare Conference on his studies of subsistence needs. Production, he said,\nts Increasing twice as fast as population, yet this increased wealth\nis not being passed around fairly.\nMachinery ls displacing skilled\nworkers and reducing their buying\npower. A minimum wage rule is\nnecessary.\nOntario Bosses Want\nTo Exploit Children\nTORONTO \u00E2\u0080\u0094 (F P) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Premier\nFerguson of the province of Ontario has declined to make any general suspension of the school act,\nwhich provides for attendance at\nschool up to 16 years of age. The\npremier has, however, promised to\nconsider issuing permits in special\ncases, where a boy may be the sole\nsupport of a home. The Toronto\nschool board had asked permission\nfor night schooling of children between 14 and 16 who must work by\nday.\nThe right arm of Labor Is \u00C2\u00BB\nstrong press. Add power to this\narm by subscribing to THE CANADIAN LABOR ADVOCATE.\ni-t-\u00C2\u00AB**i-B***---e***\u00C2\u00BB****^\nFor live readable news of tho\nfarmer-labor movement, read THE\nCANADIAN LABOR ADVOCATE.\nSTRIKE FOR 12 HOUR\nDAY AND 6 DAY WEEK\nPHILADELPHIA\u00E2\u0080\u0094(F P)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Clothlnnt stores alc-n? tho\ncongested South nnd l.-iin-\nbridgc streets nre shut* down\nby n strike of Retnil Clothing\nSalesmen's Union, Local No.\n11, .-iffHinted with the United\nHebrew Trades Clerics in\nthese little stores have bcen\nworking 16 hours a duy frequently nnd always seven\n} days a week. They demand\nthc 12-hour day and the six\nday week. P*agt Two\nTHE CANADIAN UBOR ADVOCATE\nFriday, September 25, 1925\nC. L. P. Issues\nManifesto\nBritish Delegate To\nAmerica Has Plenty\n But Russian Labor\nFinds a Great Flaw\nLabor Party Open* (Contlntted Jr6m page n\nSpeak Here Sunday Election Campaign trl6S> unempioVed m Canada has\nbecome a permanent and-serious\nA...G. Walkden, general secre- The three Labor candidates for probiem. The responsibility of\ntary of the British Railway Clerks' Greater Vancouver opened their proyi,jing work or adequate main-\nAssociataion, and an executive campaign on Sunday night last, tenance for' the unemployed resta\nmember of -the British Trades when A. Hurry, candidate for wlth the Domlnion Government.\nUnion Congress, will speak in the South Vancouver; J. Sidaway,\nRoyal Theatre on Sunday evening candidate for Burrard, and W. W. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2B**g Capitalist\nat 7:30 o'clock. The hour for the Lefeaux, candidate for Vancouver Development Ahead\nmeeting has been placed half an Centre, held the platform at\" the We do not intend to try and\nhour ahead of the usual time be- Royal Theatre and outlined their make the hands of the clock of\ncause Mr. Walkden is leaving for policies. R. H. Neelands, M.L.A., industrial progress in Vancouver\nthe East on Sunday night. occupied the chair. The meeting and Canada generally, go back-\nMr. Walkden was the fraternal was successful and a good collec- ward. We recognize that the evo-\ndelegate from the British Trades tion was taken up, but expenses iution and development of compet-\nCongress to the Trades and Labor ior federal candidates are heavy, itlve industry means the concentra-\nCongress of Canada, where his and all those who can assist fi- tion 0f production and transporta-\nremarks reading the probability nancially should do so. tion into the control of centralized\nof British labor refusing to work Mrs Rose Henders6n has been groups. The economy of this we\nnominated as Labor candidate for welcome. Undoubtedly we have an\nif war was declared caused con\nsiderable cheering, and much the New Westminster riding. Ar- era of big capitalist development\nrangements are reported to be about due in this portion of Can-\ntne under way for a convention in ada, but what the ultimate effects\nand North Vancouver, and it is stated 0\u00C2\u00A3 this upon the* masses of the\nMr- that. Dr. W. J. Curry will1 be asked workers will be can be best judg-\nDo to be Labor's candidate in that ed by a surVey of the position of\nthe population of big cities that\nCampaign headquarters have have already passed that way.\nbeen secured at 814 Holden building, and R. P. Pettipiece has been\nappointed as campaign manager.\ncomment in the daily press.\nThe seating1' capacity of\nRoyal Theatre is limited,\nthose desirous of , hearing\nWalkden should come early,\nnot forget that the meeting starts constituency,\nat 7:30,\nC.L.P. Meeting in New\nWestminster Saturday\nThe Canadian Labor Party will\nhold a campaign meeting in the\nLabor Temple, New Westminster,\non Saturday evening at 8 o'clock.\nIt is expected that Mrs. Rose\nHenderson, candidate for this constituency, .will be on hand to address the meeting. Arrangements\nare also being-made to have Mr.\nMust Nationalize\nBasic Industries\nWe are favorable to the transfer\nof centralized industries and transportation to the government as national industries and undertakings\nwith a view to their transfer to\nthe people of the country and the\noperation for the good and use of\ning ahead. The mill and factory the people o\u00C2\u00A3 Canada( instead of\nworkers report an increase of\nUnions in Vancouver\nMaking Good Progress\nVancouver unions are still forg-*\nfor private profit.\nIf war, defense, the Post Office,\nmembership of between 30 and 40\nduring the last two weeks, and\nalso that considerable progress is health- elation, water, roads,\nThe carpenters report initiating \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00A3 national and municipal concern,\nsome 23 new members at their\nlast meeting.\nand best operated by representatives of the people in the public\nAG. Walkden Secretary of the b ^ ^ work fire protection, police, social wel-\nRailway Clerks Union of Great ntB with the employerfl. fare, and other utilities, be matters\nBritain, address the meeting, if ......\nit is possible to secure his services for that night.\nA big.*,attendance is expected,\nand it is hoped that New Westminster electors will not miss this\nopportunity of hearing federal\npolitics' discussed by Labor representatives.\nThe lathers report a successful interest, why not banking and\norganizing meeting last week, and credit; also the production and dis*\nREGISTER\nThe Federal Voters' List will be\nopen for the registration of names\nfrom September 24th to September 30th\nBoard of Adjustment\nFor CN.R. Employees\nthat good progress is being' made trlbution of the necessities of life?\nin organizing the lathers in the Towards the solution of these\ncity and in building up that or- questions in the publio -interest the\nganization. Labor Party of Canada pledges\n '\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ' itself and with that in view places\nits candidates in the field of the\npresent Federal Election.\nGenerally our position with regard to proposed legislation would\nOTTAWA, Can.\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094A board be governed by the answer to the\nadjustment for settlement of dis- question as to whether or not the\nMake sure your name is on the putes has been formed by the Can- legislation in question would be\nlist, and when polling day comes adlan National Railways and the beneficial to the workers of the\nvote LABOR. Canadian Brotherhood of Railway country. If not progressive and\n ~\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Employees. This body is similar beneficial we would be against It.\nFar better to have the front of to boards already existing between We do not pretend to represent\none's face pushed in by the fist of-the service unions and both big the conflicting interests of both the\nan honest prize-fighter than to railway companies in Canada. The owners of industry and the produc-\nhave the lining pf one's stomach new board deals with grievances lng employees. We represent the\ncorroded by the embalmed beef of affecting clerical, station, shop, iatter.\na dishonest,, manufacturer.-^Jack Bhed| roundhouse and similar clas\nLondon- ses, The board will'have eight of'i^bor\n~- : members, four from the railways\nInternational Goal\nSend in Your Subscription Today, and four from the employees.\nWrite\nToday\nDon't\nDelay\n|h|biggest bargain in the world\n%NA$50\u00E2\u0084\u00A2WOOL\n$i00o.00\nEEWAED\nTo any one who\nwill prove thst\nanything stated in\nthis ad is mis-\nre p r esented or\nuntrue.\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY\nTo purchase direct from the manufacturer a tine quality suit made\nof pure wool valued at $50.00.\nStrictly hand-tailored to your measure, serge or worsted. Latest models. Single or *_/t f\f_\ndouble-broustod for ONLY iP-**\J\J\nSend No Money\u00E2\u0080\u0094Write for our Special Offer. Perfect\nFit and Satisfaction guaranteed V\nLadies'\n-SPECIAL OFFLR\n$10\nGentlemen's\n,00 VALUE PURE SILK HOSE FOR ONLY\nOur ultimate aim is the raising\nof all to a position of freedom from\neconomic care and poverty, a position* now occupied by the owning\nclass alone. Even their (the owners) position is by no means secure, and has to be continually\nbolstered up by fair and foul\nmeans. We have no intention of\ntrying to excuse ourselves for our\nultimate aim\u00E2\u0080\u0094the substitution of\na co-operative commonwealth for\nour present economic system.\n(By Carl Brannin.)\n.ROSTOV - ON - DON, Russia.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThere are plenty of people (aU\ntoo many) in Russia who have\nlittle understanding of the new\norder working out under the Soviet: government. Down the Volga\nand on the trains one hears complaints, mostly >from the peasants\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094high taxes last year and before\n(this year reduced 40 per cent,),\nIncompetent, autocratic officials,\netc. Complaints come usually from\nrelics of the old system with the\nbackground of centuries of Ignorance and. Individual selfishness,\nTo make proper allowance for the\nwreckage, of the czarist order, the.\nhavoc of the civil war, the capit-*\nalist blockade, the famine and the\nscarcity of trained workers, Is beyond their powers of imagination.\nThey live ln their own petty\ncircle.\nHearing such a wail from a\ncouple of peasants, a poorly clad\nminer spoke up: \"Yes, it is too\nbad that progress is not made\nmore swiftly, but, after all, remember that we who have come\nup through the old order are to\nblame. We are all more or less\ncrooked. It is the new generation, the children, Who will make\nthe new Russia. It is too bad\nthat we old ones can't be liped up\nand shot, or herded off to ourselves where we can quietly die\nwithout contaminating the youth\nand interfering with their work.\"*\nHowever, there are humble men\nand women, gray with years and\nstruggle, who see what is taking\nplace and can, for this reason,\nforget something of the hardship.\nWaiting ifl_ line to buy a railway\nticket here one day, we found\nourselves in conversation with a\nnon-Communist old stone mason.\nHe found that we were from America.\n\"Yes, you have in America many\nthings which we need here. We\nenvy you your machinery, your\ntechnical development. Many of\nyour workers are better off. But\nthat ls not all to life. We have\nenough bread; we have clothing,\nthere Is shelter. But above all.\nthere is freedom.\" He smote his\nbreast with a gesture more expressive than words.\n\"I am past 70 and have known\nthe oppression of the czars. That\nis past and now we are building.\nTwo or three good harvests like\nthis year will work wonders. We\nhave established the true basis\nthat labor produces all and should\nhave all, Russia has every resource of natural wealth\u00E2\u0080\u0094coal,\noil, timber, rich soil and land\nenough for all. This and our\nhands and the spirit to build is\nenough. Give us time and freedom from outside attack and we\nwill have all that the most highly\ndeveloped. land has produced. And\nit will be ours\u00E2\u0080\u0094the workers'. That\nis more than the producers of\nAmerica can aay.\"\nCLASSIFIED ADS,\nBARRISTERS\nBird, Bird & Lefeaux, 401 Metro*'\npolitan Bldg.\nBATHS\nVancouver Turkish Baths, Pacific\nBldg., 744 Hastings St. W.\nBICYCLES\nHASKINS A ELLIOTT, BOO Pendei>\nStreet W. The belt makea of bicycles\non easy terms.\nBOOTS AND SHOES\nArthur Frith & Co., 2313 Main St.\nBOOTS (LOGGING)\nH, Harvey, 68 Cordova St. W.\nOAFE\nEmpire Cafe, 76 Hastings St. B.\nCHIROPODIST\nWHY SUFFER WITH SORE FEETI\nHannah Land, 924 Birki Bldg., (Wes\nInstant relief; evenings by appointment.\nSey. 1213. .\nchiropractor\nDr. d. a. McMillan, palmer\nGraduate. Open daily and evenings. Dawson Blk., cor. Hastingi and\nMain. Phone Sey. 8054.\nNANAHttO-WELLINOTON\nCOAL\nLESLIE OOAL OO'Y Ltd.\nPhon* Sty. 7187\nDENTIST\nDr. W. J. Curry, 301 Dominion\nBldg. \t\nDRUGS\nRed Star Drug Store, Cor. Cor-\ndova and Carrall.\t\nFLORISTS\nBrown Bros. & Co. Ltd., 48 HM-\ntings St. E. '\nGLASS\nGLAZING, SILVERING, BEVELLING\nWESTERN GLASS CO. LTD., Ut\nCordova St. W., few doora watt of\nWoodward'a. Sey. 8687. Wholesale and\nretail window glass.\nHOSPITAL\nBETTER BE SAFE THAN SORRY-\nGrandview Hospital\u00E2\u0080\u0094Medical, surgical, maternity. 1000 Vietoria Drive.\nHigh. 1.7.\nLADIES WEAR\nFamous Cloak & Suit Co., 619\nHastings West,\nHudsons Bay Coy., Qranvllle St.\nMEN'S FURNISHINGS\nW. B. Brummitt, 18-20 Cordova\nStreet.\nArthur Frith & Co., 2313 Main St.\nMEN'S SUITS\nC. D. Bruce Ltd., Homer and Hastings Streets. **\nW. B. Brummitt, 18-20 Cordova\nStreet,\t\nMUSIO\n\ 7IOLINS ADJUSTED, VOICED, RE-\nV paired, by expert. Will Edmunds,\n965 Robson Bt, Sey, 8094.\nOPTICIAN\nPitman Optical House, 615 Hastings West.\nPAINTS ETC.\nGregory & Reid, 117 Hastin\nStreet East.\nPatronize Our Advertisers.\nRANGES AND STOVES *\nCanada Pride Range Co., 346 Hast-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ings Street East.\nTOBACCOS\nMainland Cigar Store, 310 Carrall\nStreet.\t\nTRUSSES\nC. E. Heard, 969 Robson Street.\nNew Labor Government\nPredicted For Britain\nSix Fair Ladles'\nlight or heavy full\nfashioned pure SILK\nHOSE valued at $10\nfor only\n$1.00\nGuaranteed\nand Finest\nPerfect\nQuality\n.00\nTwelve Pair Man!\"\n- light or heavy pur*\nSILK HOSE valued\nat $10 for only\n$1.00\n,. : jh -vs\u00C2\u00BB. .* * -' \ S^N D N0 MONEY\n/^Hr/P^ ^^j___^S> Write us at once for\nKstH-'ir v,Msb\u00C2\u00BB full bargain offer to\nTHE ALLI_.P SALES CO., 150 NASSAU ST.. NEW YORK. N. Y.\nNEW YORK\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Another\nlabor government in England ls\nseen in the comparatively near future by Dr; L. Haden Guest and H.\nJ. Lawson, two la.bor members of\nthe House of Commons, who addressed the Civic Club of New\nYork. Lawson Was formerly a'\nminer and Guestls ' a physician.\nFall bf the Tories \"and rise of Labor party 'sentiment is predicted as\nresult of failure of conservatives\nto deal with\u00E2\u0080\u0094the- industrial crisis\nbut the new labor government, they\nsay,.must break more thoroughly\nwith old government traditions\nthan did the last labor ministry.\nEmergencies\nWHEN a crisis comes and\nsomeone at a distance <\nmust' be reached quickly,\n' the long-distance telephone\nwill prove its worth.\nFREE\n5-Tube Radio Set\nFREE\nSend self-addressed, stamped\nenvelope \u00E2\u0080\u0094 for full particulars regarding this OFFER.\nRADIOTEX CO.\n2fi\u00C2\u00AB Broadway, New York,\nN.Y. '\nB, 0. Telephone Oompany\nFresh Out Flowers, Funeral Designs, Wedding Bouquets, Pot\nPlants, Ornamental and Shade Trees, Seeds, Bulbs, \"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Florists' Sundries\nBrown Brothers & Co. Ltd.\nFLORISTS AND NURSERYMEN\n8\u00E2\u0080\u0094STORES\u00E2\u0080\u00948\n41 Hastings St. East, Say. \u00C2\u00BBl_-\u00C2\u00AB7\u00C2\u00BB 685 GranvUle Street Sey. 9813-1381\n151 Hastings Street West .....Sey. 1870\n\"SAY IT WITH FLOWERS\" Ridgy; Jeptegfter 25, 1925\nTHK CANADIAN LABOB ADVOCATE\nPage Thre.\n[ Coaldiggers Menaced Bumper Grain Crop in\nBy Associated Press Soviet Union in 1925\nOrganized R.R. Firemen Negro Porters'; Union\nJeer Company Threats Growing in Strength\n(By: Asspciated Press.)\nCHICAGO. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 With the anthra-\nj'cite strike in its third week and\nkhe bituminous fields still in \"bad\n[shape so far as union employment\ngoes, the role of the great press\nFservices i|P shaping public opinion\n[regarding the United Mine Work-\n[ers assumes a keener interest to\n[labor readers.\nThe Associated Press on March\n117, 1925, sent out a story over its\n[wires from Fairmont, W. Va., reporting the death ln a mine ez-\nfplosion of over a score of miners.\n[The Associated Press stated the\n[explosion, \"company officials de-\nfclared, had been caused by a dy-\nLhamite a^d nitro-glycerlne bomb\n[dropped down the shaft from the\n/surface.\". And the Associated Press\n[took care to add that the mine\n[was non-union. Newspaper headlines magnified this.\nThe largest American news ser-\nIvice thus skilfully spread .a perfectly groundless story, as will be\nFseen, that left the public to infer\njthat union coal miners were the\nnurderers of the non-unionists\nblown to pieces or asphyxiated\nby the explosion at Fairmont. No\nAdditional facts about the explosion were mentioned in the foi.\n[(owing days. The federal bureau\n(st mines had no facts. The West\nVirginia department of mines was\nlunable to give any pertinent facts\nlentil August 26, more than five\nnonths after the., disaster, when\nreported that the coroner's jury\nhad rendered its ' verdict. \"The\nExplosion which caused the mine\nlo blow,\" the jury verdict read,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Und which resulted in the death\npf ail the parties aforesaid, its\ncause and origin are to the jury\nunknown.\"\n. WASHINGTON.-r-Nearly three\nbillion bushels of grain Will- be\nharvested in the Soviet Union this\nseason, according to late figures\nreceived by the Russian Information Bureau in Washington from\nthe central statistical department\nof the U. S. S. R. This is above\nthe pre-war production in the present area of the Soviet Union, and\nis 50 per cent, more than was\ngrown last year. The whnat crop\nis double that of 1924 and the corn\ncrop is 5 times as much as last\nseason. ,'..\nT3efore the war, Russian wheat\nyields averaged about\u00E2\u0080\u009E10 bushels\nto the acre; this year's crop, runs\n12.7 bushels. Rye, oats and corn\nare likewise showing a greatly improved yield per acre. Experts\ngive credit to the use of tractors\nand American farming methods for\nthe gain made.\nThe crop includes 817,700,000\nbushels of rye, 660,000,000 of\nwheat (or only 50,000,000 short of\nthe American wheat crop this\nyear), 697,500,000 of oats, 273,-\n750,000 of corn and 75,000,000 of\nbuckwheat. About 300,000,000\nbushels of grain will be exported.\nRUSSIA\nco-operative rest home has\nCHICAGO.\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Threats of (By Art Shields, Federated Presa)\nh\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E ..\u00E2\u0080\u009E._ a *u u <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,u rePrisala appearing in company. NEW YORK. \u00E2\u0080\u0094The Pullman\n\een opened on the shores of the union organ8 wln not 8oare the Car Co> assoclated to the work-\nBlack. Sea by the powerful All- Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire- ers' memories with the historic\nRussian Union of Consumer Soci- me,\u00E2\u0080\u009E & Enginemen from sticking Debs strike of '93, and later cam-\neties. The home has been equip- to lts polloy of boycotting com- paigns in its Chicag'e plants, is\nped with playing fields, a library, pany activities among railroad again faced with an organization\nmusical instruments and extensive employees. Union officials ir_\u00C2\u00BB the movement among its employees,\nrecreation equipment for the em- Chicago office of the brotherhood, But this time the movement is\nployees of co-operatives. Those when shown a copy of Shop Craft not in the shops, but on the trains,\nwho are ill and in need of the Gossip, the Great Northern's com- among the 12,000 colored porters\nrest cure also have the care of a pany union organ, were not lm- who make up the berths and pro-\ncompetent physician, without pressed by its yelping, ' vide the service which the corn-\ncharge. The co-operatives- feel \u00C2\u00ABWe stlck by our convention de- pany sells t0 lts sleeping car pa-\nthat they owe this to their employ- eision,\" the Chicago office de- tron8-\nclares. \"Our 1926 convention ln . The pew movement started Jn\nDetroit ordered our members to the negro belt in Harlem, as\nkeep away from all company ac- Northern Manhattan Island ls\ntlvities like company unions, com- called, and is known as the Broth-\npany insurance, company pension erhood of Sleeping Car Porters.\nees for their faithful service.\nFRANCE\nFrench workers demand that\n.ul \u00E2\u0096\u00A0''_.\u00C2\u00AB___. _ i __. _. t-nttjr iiiauiamjc, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2jump-Ally iwuniuii *****-.v.y\u00C2\u00AB u. uicoiimg v^ttr x-urters,\nthe government give- them the . ... , r. . . . _. *'r \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\" , ,.\n... _____\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*_____._. ':_____. ,___ systems, company social work and It is strictly a negro labor union\ncompany baseball teams. These f\u00C2\u00B0r the simple reason that all the\nare devices to separate the worker Pullman porters belong to that\nfrom, the lahor organization of his race. but it is receiving the co-\nAny member of the fire- operation of both the* railroad\nmen who goes in for company ac- brotherhoods and the'' American\nand the wage workers novr insist tlvities mA violates the convention Federation of Labor; At preliminary organization meetings ad-\nsame guarantee against loss\nthrough depreciation of the franc\nas Is accorded Investors. Tlie government has Issued a gold coupon eraft\nloan that protects interests on bonds\nAs for the\" company union dresses an/ plederes of support\nthreat to keep firemen out of shop have been given \"^ w- J- 0rr-\nthat their wages are entitled to resolution will face expulsion,\nthe same protection as the money\ninvested in these bonds and held\nby persons who do not depend j^bs,\" 11.^^ i7tTa7 none V'our ?pec.,al \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBnlzer fo.r the_ Brother\n120,000 members is in the scab\nshops of the Great Northern, so\n. the threats mean nothing to us.\"~\non a daily wage.\nCommunists Answer\nGreen's Ultimatum\nliving Wage More\nThan Subsistence\nj BOSTON\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ten years ago\nliving wage meant a bare subsistence. Now it means reasonable\nlomfort, decent existence, a standard of health, wholesome living,\ntestified W. Jett Lauck, at the\nMassachusetts , state house where\nhearings were held before an arbitration board on the Boston ele-\nI'ated workers' increases. The men\n|re getting 72c an hour but de-\nfaand the 96c they consider neces-\nfary for a living wage. Arbitration\nproceedings were forced by the\nben's strike vote.\nCHICAGO\u00E2\u0080\u0094The attack by President Wm. Green, American Federation of Labor, on the Communists, made ln his Labor Day\nspeech at Detroit ajnd reported\nlast week by The Federated Press,\nhas drawn a reply from the Workers (Communist) Party of America. Both the central executive\ncommittee, ln an extended official\nstatement, and The Dally Worker,\nin an editorial, attack Green for\nhis ultimatum that \"members of\norganized labor are either trade\nunionists or Communists; they\ncannot be both.\"\nAdmitting its advocacy of a\ndictatorship by the workers to destroy the structure of capitalism,\nthe party charges Green is serving the employers, \"Instead of\nfighting the capitalists with and\nin behalf of labor, Mr, Green prefers to fight the left wing of the\nlabor movement and the Commu-'\nnists with and in behalf of the\ncapitalists,\" the party statement\ndeclares.\nPARAGUAY\nDuring the present session the\nNational Congress modified the\nlaw governing personal labor so as\nto compel all male Inhabitants of\nthe country, both native born and\nalien, between the ages of 18 and\nhood of Locomotive Engineers,\nand Ernest Bohm,.,* representing\nthe A. F. of L.\nTwo of the active spirits in the\nnew union have* already been dismissed by the Pullman company,\nn. TT a I \u00E2\u0080\u009E!.__-. TC__1_\u00C2\u00BB ever watchful of danger to its\nUn U. P. JbaPOr J.ieiO open shop programme,'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2but the\nunion has gained a considerable\nStudy Role of Negro\nCHICAGO\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Use of Negro number of members sincis lt was\n50 years, to labor personally for workers as strikebreakers by the born August 25th, A. Philip Ran-\nfour days during the year in the big employers in time of labor dis- dolph, general organizer, tells the\nconstruction and conservation of putes and their use to undercut Federated Press. A vigorous cam-\nwage scales and union conditions PatBn Ib under Way\" to enlist 51\nat other times is one of the phases *>w cent- \u00C2\u00B0f aU the Pullman'por-\nof the labor problem that is re- ters ,n tne next two months,\nceiving particular attention from '\nthe research department of the Na-\nbrldges and highways in the neigh\nborhood of their residence.\nCHILE\nA superior Council of Child Pro*\ntectlon, created in Santiago to co- tionaI Urban leaSue- whlch sPeclaI-\nordinate public and private child izes on the Ne-?ro situation in cities,\nwelfare work, will consider prob- To what extent the trade unions\nlems relating to eugenics, matern- are themselves responsible for the\nIty and infaHt and child welfare: Negro competition on an undrganlz*\nLow Wages Condemn\nChildren To Grave\nNEW YORK.\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The chief\nreason why negro children die\npromote \"nurs'lng \"and \"social work! ed basis through the practice of a \"^ '^ce aB \"P'** as *\u00C2\u00BB\norganize national child-welfare numher of white unions of exclud- \u00E2\u0084\u00A2hit\u00C2\u00B0 ohfl**>. sfs Forrester B.\ncongresses; and work with other Ing Negro applicants for a union \u00E2\u0084\u00A2^\u00C2\u00B0nJ.\" ^l\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0084\u00A2}.}*,*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\norganizsations in Chile and abroad card Is a further phase of the In\nhaving similar aims.\nvestigatlon. While few unions forbid membership to Negroes' by constitutional provision it is a commonplace that a considerable proportion bar colored workers in\npractise,\nfiend ln Tour Subscription-Today\nStay at the\nHOTEL STRATFORD\nThe Plaoe Called Home\nCorner GORE AVE. and\n- KEEFER STREET\nPhone Sey. 6121\nP. GIOVANDO, JOHN THA\n200 Elegantly Furnished\nRooms.\n60 Rooms with Private Bath\nModerate Prices\nFIRST-CLASS SERVICE\nCan Forge Fingerprint\nEvidence, Says Expert\nNEW TORK\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094John Nicholas Beffel, co-author of a book\nshowing that fingerprints can be\nforged, condemns the proposal of\nthe national crime commission to\nhave all immigrants fingerprinted\nin an open letter to Mark O. Prentiss, organizer of the commission.\nThe plan, points Beffel, might lead\nto the framing up of immigrants\nbecause fingerprint identifications\nare not infallible. Of the two men\nexecuted in this country solely on\nfingerprints evidence, says Beffel,\nthere is reason to believe tha one\n(George Brandon, electrocuted in\nNew Jersey ln 1921) was guiltless.\nPALESTINE\nInclusive of the 2500 land workers employed on co-operative land\nsettlement, the total number of ___________\nJewish workers now employed in\nPalestine is 15,122. This figure British Trade With\ndoes not include civil servants,\nteachers, writers, etc. The percentage of unemployed has fallen from\n10 to it per cent. In the past two\nof Opportunity, a negro magazine,\nis that the negro worker is so\npoorly paid. Low wages compel\nthe negro worker to take the\npoorest and most unsanitary housing, a^d low wages of the father\ncompels the mother to go into Industry. The children are neglected and undernourished.\nWashington blames the conser-\n_ , _ , _ . vatism of employers and the self-\nKUSSia GrOWing J.aSt ishness of whlt; whlle the\nbeen \"no relaxing in fnvor of the\nrailway companies\". Probably at\nthat he is telling the truth. The t\u00C2\u00BB capitalistic country. In one* issue ofthe Daily Province^1\" \u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB* \u00C2\u00BB' \u00C2\u00BB conquered and\nTzyzrTir:zTiit2 \u00C2\u00AB** \u00C2\u00AB* ^m\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2_^s \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB.: -m* war to -sr:i^zzj^z\nBeatty of the C. P. R. has more Be Won in Air,\" \"MariniB' Airmen Will Attempt to Make entrance to their great seaport?\nrlKht to style himself premier than Record Flight Across Continent in Bombers,\" \"Big Berthas The subsidized pulpit and press,\nhas Mac, late of Standard Oil: A ^ -^ - ^^ ^ .^ C^St From NaVffl fnd other forces guarding the >-\nt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 >> tiir'-- r _/\u00C2\u00AB_.*. -ir . m -r.. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 11 ter8l-,ts of plutocracy, give the im-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ntrssTAN workers believe in Invasion/ Navy League (Canada) Now in Two Divisions,', presAft... that' capitalism is a di-\n**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 doin\u00C2\u00ABr tblngs rather than talk- \"Turks Arm For Clash With Britain;!\" and that'Britain-is vinely appointed and final order\nIng about them. Some 135.000 gt j one of th(, j t war ffiail0(juVert in her histdry. ot/oclety, a\"d ttut f*k,atvala\ncotton operatives In Bombay, India. m, ,,_..,.. *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 , *.,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.,, . , \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ttnd \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2a co-workers are the enem-\nstruck last week, demanding an in- The abbatoir is being prepared and the butchers trained for le8 of God mi man.\ncrease ot waffes. .A few days aeo their grewsome tasks, but the-cattle doomed for-the slaughter As with all ruling classes, the\nthe Sovlej Textile Workers' Union are contentedly browsing, oblivioUB- Of- impending disaster, beneficiaries of capitalism are do-\nof Mo*V>w sent the strikins Indians -.vu 4.1. \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a n ~_ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -_ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 _. _i. v . ing all in their power to perpetu-\n\"o.noVrouMes to nssist them ln Whv these preparations? Certain it IS that those who WOr> ate the* rule, while the more ln-\nthptr s*rn*\u00C2\u00BBnrle for an Improvement f\u00C2\u00B0r a living have no quarrel with the workers of another telligent of the exploited classes\nIn their stnndnrd of livlne. That, is country, but it is they who will do the fighting-. Even the are WBantzing their forces for a\nthe kind of action thnt does more d :, which if war brraks out will scream for blood \"^.\"f* \u00C2\u00B0f. econoI\"lc stfuct\"'e'\nto btnd tbe working class in one \u00E2\u0080\u009Ey Pr6^! W. h ,\" ftreaKS_ OUt^WllL S6ream tor blOOCt, wh!oh- mnstcome if social dts-\nbomo-reneons body thon all the te\"s us. tna* li was obvious Britain's military manoeuvers astei. is to be avoided.\ntalking and thcoriidng that ever were a sham becaiise Earl Haig and'his companions stood ^h0Be m revolt are Dran,--etl as\n. . .,ii.\u00C2\u00BB.* traitors' and revolutionists, but\nhappened. ^ in the line of danger.* freedom from oppression is ever\nACTOMOBn.E e^ndltnre,,. for * , # # * # treason to the ^oppressor and the\nA the nven,^ fsmiiv m vanoon. PANADIAN WORKERS do not need to delude^^ themselves JJJ^^ t\u00C2\u00B0hfaJf0^6 biooSed\nver. is renortH In the \"Bimer\" to \j that tj. are immune, Canada is yoked politically to there Involved came through k ' * > ^ r - *.*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 war upoh 0UP fellow-man, and\nThat means he wii have to run workers. The only group representing working .class inter- -rfjto--w-4pBrti the nghf which can\naronhfl-naked. and this is no Card- ests in any way are the candidates of \"the Canadian Labor alone 11ft us to a, stage where\nen of Men. .a'Party. It matters not whether their numbeft'brsmall, they '*w\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABn^,1! b\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BBu,: -5uW\u00C2\u00AB-,,, fc :,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 IJ \"__o_ .i. <\" i_'-Y___. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'__ *- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"_r__L \u00E2\u0080\u0094-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.-.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. x-t- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!%. ux I h\u00C2\u00ABW* befbre1-; We? Bintslafr's\nit is essv to be indenenden#aa *t least chanlptoh-the \"cause of those who toil; and battle \u00E2\u0080\u009ECry t0- Jii8ttcei.. Balfijur Kerr.s\nwhen ail. behind vou nureo with|again8t anything inimical to their interests. Nothing can picture of King Canute on the\nyou, but the rtlffleultv comes wherte expe(jted fy^ fa fty0we^j representatives of the vested sea snore commandinS- the flood\n999 of your friends think you ftrer *\"' * J- ' * '\"*\"*\nintelligence than that WKIdh rules\ntoday.\nIn the Balkan States during the\nlast few months hundreds of Communists have been tortured aihfl'j\ndestroyed because of thetr political ' views and activities, and ' it\nwould seem that the same \"Spirit\nwhich crucified Christ for sedition; which forced Socrates**t6\ndrink the hemlock; whloh burned\nBruno in Rome, and which a few\nyears ago executed Franolsco Fer-\nrar in Spain, for endeavoring to\nsubstitute a rational education for\nthe superstition which prevailed,\nstill lives.\nBut the eternal law of change\naind the survival of the fittest still\nprevails, and who oan say that\nthe producers of the necessities\nand comforts of life, the creators'\nof soience, and art, and culture,\nare not more fit to survive and\nrule, to bring order out of chaos\nand peace out of class conflicts'\nand world wars, than are thi\"\nstock gamblers, the human jackals\nof war, the gluttons and dunces,'\nwho seem still to be controlling _\nthe destinies of mankind?\nW. J. CUKRT.\nUNION DIRECTORY\nwronj.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wenaell Phillips,\n*r|\nf_\.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A01\nALLIED PRINTINO TRADES COUNOIL\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Matte aecond Mondty In the montk.\nPreaident, -J. R. White; iecretary, R. H.\nNfeUnda. P. 0. Bo\u00C2\u00BB <\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nFEDERATED LABOR PARTT\u00E2\u0080\u0094Room 1\nill, 819 Pender flt. Weal. BnalneM\nmeetinga Iat and Srd Wedneaday even-\nInga. R. H. Neelanda, Ohalrman: E. H.)\nMorriaon,. Sec.-Treaa.; Anna Maelnnli:\nA.-.44 Prince Edward Street. VanconTar,<(\nB.C., Correapondlng Secretary.\n.Any dUtrlct In Britlah ColnmWa de- ,\nairing Information re aerating apeakera j\nor the formation of local branehea, kind-.\nIy commnnicate with Pr-vlnclal Secretary -I. Lyle Telford. 524 Blrka Bldf.,\nVanconver. B.C. Telephone 8eymonrJ\n1\u00C2\u00BB82. or Bayvlew 6880. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nBAKERT 8ALESMEN. LOCAL 871\u00E2\u0080\u0094 1\nMeeta aecond Thnreday every month j\nIn Holden Bnlldlng. Preaident. J. Bright'\nwell: financial aeeretary, H. A. Bow-\nron, 7B1 18th Ave. Eaat.\t\nCTVTC EMPT-OTEES' UNION Lf>CAL-j\n28\u00E2\u0080\u0094MeotR first and third' _'\"lda\u00C2\u00ABa In]\nthe month at U5 Haetlniw W*. at 81\np.m. ^Pro'idcnt. R. K. Brown 2R27I\nctin-les St \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00AB\"*-r-tnry-tT\"aai!rer O-orge]\nTT-*rr>>on. 1182 Pa-ker flt.\n\u00C2\u00AB\"VOTVT\u00C2\u00BB1fR5\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 TWE TVT\u00C2\u00BB\"HV\u00C2\u00BBTTnV\u00C2\u00ABT.I\nFNTON OF !5TK\u00C2\u00BBM AND OP\u00C2\u00BBP*TTVOl\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094T.ncal 00?\u00E2\u0080\u0094Meeta everv W*-dne\u00C2\u00ABdaytj\nnt 8 p.m/'Rnnm 818 TTnlden Bnl'dlng*'\nPr*-*R!*t**nt. H-arleB Price: hnatnt-aa agent |\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 r*d financial \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBci*'*t*'rr. E T. Hnnt; re*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2fUnp s'-erctnT .1 T Venn.\nHfT'OTf-'AVB\" VT-iT pu*.frrTT1'T]\nT'VTfiy I on| US \u00C2\u00BB E nf M\nVents In G.W.V.A TT\u00C2\u00AB!l' Sevmnnr audi\nPender Streeta. aee nd Snnday at Urt\na.m. Preaident E. C. Mlll\u00C2\u00BBr. 991 Nel-f\nann a'reet: aeeretary. E. A. Jamleaon.l\nH91 Nelaon atreet: flnancla' aeeretary.)\nW. E. William\" 991 N>*1\u00C2\u00BBnn atreet: nr-T\n;* t-nlaer. E FHchcr, 9B1 Ve'ann \u00C2\u00ABtre*-t ]\nTHE FEDERATED UEAFaRERS'l\nTTNTON OF CANADA\u00E2\u0080\u0094Headnnarter\u00C2\u00BB|\nat Rnoma 5. 8 and 7. Flaek Bnl'dlngT\n188 Ha\u00C2\u00ABtln*ra Stmet W*. Vanc-nver. BOl\nTel. Sev. 8898. Preaident. Rnhert Thomf\nVfce.Prealdent. Davtd Ollleaple: fiee'y-l\nTreaanrer. Wm. H. Dnnaldaon. Vlctorlt|\nBranch. Room tl. Green Blnck. Broad\nStreet. Victoria. B_0, Phone 1906.\nTYTOORAPHTOAT, UNTON. N\". \u00C2\u00BB2\u00C2\u00AB-\nPrealdent. R P Pettlplece: vlee-prea-1\nIden*. 0, F Oamnhe'l: aeeretarv-treaa-f\nnrer. R H NeManda. P 0. Bot 881\nMenf\u00C2\u00AB taa* Sundav nf eaeh month at\nnm In Hnlden Bnl'dlng 18 Hatt'nga F|\nPFTVpir BfPEPT TVPOGRAPHTrAll\nHNTON. No. 418\u00E2\u0080\u0094Preaident. fl. Dl\nMaednna'd: aecretary-treaanrer. J. Mil\nOamphell, P.O. Box 889. MeeU laaf\nThnrtdaT of each month.\nTHE OANASUlf\nCabor Abtjor^l\nWith Which Ii Incorporated\nTHE BRITISH OOWJMBIA RDlRAl\nnOWST\nPUBLISHED RVERt FRIDAT\nBy the Labor fabUihlai Co.\n' BniiatM Ml Idltoriai Offloe,\nU\u00C2\u00AB9 Howe St. \t\nThe Canadian Labor Advocate la a. non-1\nf\u00C2\u00BBctional weekly newspaper, giving new:]\nof the farmer-labor movement In actlonf\nSnVcrlptlon Rata:' United' SMtai- it_\nforeign, $\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB0 per year; Oaaada, 111\nper year. $1 far fix months; ta aaloail\nanhacrlhlng Iii a body, Ida par \u00E2\u0096\u00A0att-f\nher per month. f\nMember Tha Federited Praia ud Thai\nBritlah Labor Fran\n'interests.\n-*.:... Js^*.-\ntide to recede is pot more pitiful\nV. ' and IndtciiUv* of th\u00C2\u00AB low wder o( lay,; September 25, 1925\nTHE CANADIAN LABOR ADVOCATE\nPage Five\nA COMPARISON IN EDUCATION\nUP-TO-DATE VOCATIONAL SCHOOL \"Fordteed\" Education *\nBEING ESTABLISHED IN SOVIET UNION In the United States\nIteCOW\u00E2\u0080\u0094The many\ntn America* who\nto the success of the John\nChildren's colony on the Vol-\nhe glad to know -that the\nwork of self-supporting edu-\nis now being begun in a\n(By Anise)\nfrienda chief apprentice and assistant, a\ncontri- boy of about 17.\nCommunal Washing Machine\n(By- Cart Haessler; Federated I\nPress.) *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.*,;,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2. .*,,\nCHICAtJO.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The\"' steady>;;fise-** Iii\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the tide of mass production ap-\nIt ls rather exciting to think of pUed t0 Cnloa8\u00C2\u00B0(B sohobls* 8Weep-\ningt away one after the other the\nold-time personal relations between teacher a*nd principal,\nDon't Fail To Read\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsome of the little refinements of\nlife that are common in America\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-. and will be so epoch-making here. _ , . .,,, ,.ji\u00E2\u0080\u009Eu\u00E2\u0080\u009E_titv\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ty^of voeation^sehooi near^ the ordJnary famlly waghlng g^^!SS\n.w.- On my last trip* to Am- machlne) run by electricity. Do\nI collected funds, notonly for you ^.^ hQW they gaa wub\nhere? Without even; laundry tubs\n[John Reed colony, but -for exiling the same idea to reach\nin the mechanized lockstep output\nof the school \"plant,\" converting\nthe little red schoolhouse into a\n,.. miniature Ford plant where sev-\n^ e\"'.ln.8ha11?* tr?U8!,S' ?F :eve.\" >ral thousand pieces of pupil raw-\nmaterial are put daily through\nIntroduce as rapidly as. possible\nfelting In various trades on the\n(is of American technical- meth-\nbscowa\nterprlse ln which the usual modern methods of controlling employees can be successfully enforced, the Chicago Federation of\n;er groups of homeless children. ^\"Vh^rlverthrough^the teeflt \t\n'^ri^LS^yS! S8emS a \u00C2\u00B0rlme t0 tWnk of th08e the successive finishing processes\n^r\u00C2\u00A3r2\u00C2\u00A3S'at Sur AmeVlcan'washing machines, the _thls ru8hlng tlde is once more\na, wmcnnas piacea_ai our propgrty of prtvate families, that challenged* by the organized teach-\n,sal,slx houser in a charming worfc ^ on Monfl * ' .** J\nf\u00E2\u0080\u009Erb near Moscow, where we are m ^ w m c^\u00C2\u00B0- ^\nwhen weget it; will work at least Factory,Education\neight hours a day and perhaps The occasion for the challenge\nwe'll put on three shifts and work shows how far the factory idea of\n it 12 hours, and do most-of the education has penetrated the\n,'he harvest is good and we nhaHwagh,nsforthevlnage, school system. The-teachers for-\n'e \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 enough- to feed ourselves And d0e\u00C2\u00ABm't someone want to mally prot\u00C2\u00ABst \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 modified time-\ner well. But otherwise-we are glve Wa Ylctro,a? We have 150 cl\u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00B0M\u00C2\u00AB*eme which re-Wires them\nvery poor,- certainly -without recoraB,.a\u00E2\u0080\u009E ROod . mueic-sympho- to initial an attendance sheet from\nnuate shoes for winter or ade- \u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,.. quartet8i. Cha\u00E2\u0080\u009Eapta, We two. to four times each working\n.te books for schooling.- How- wotlMn,t turn * down the .-ft of a day. Dec aring that a school is\nr, we are steadily progressing; radlo \u00E2\u0080\u009E a motloil pIctttre machIne ^^*_$___^_ ?\u00C2\u00B0vS1_^\nbecause so many of theoffers' ejtj,Wf\neip I have had from America \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 General Culture\nmore adapted to city work than ^ ^ ow met **<** counc\u00C2\u00ABf *** *h\u00C2\u00B0le com- ln the day to have muCh effect on\nchildren come for four hours munltv of chHdren-s homes sur- .^ ^^ ^ ^ blg.b\u00E2\u0080\u009Eslne8S\nlv In two shifts. The peasants rounding us. We are at libertyto superlntenaenti Wm. McAndrew,\nthe tiearhv vtllaee have alreadv \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00C2\u00BB work \u00C2\u00B0ut methods of relating whQ has haStened the oonverslon\nd if we cannot also run a night the teaching to the Industrial work q{ the oM_Umo school ,nto fte\nft so that their grown sons may which the ch,\u00E2\u0080\u009Eren will be doing;\nand of introducing general cuture.\n^n this we have Dr. Charles Kuntz\nas our advisor. In general we are\nworking' on the great experiment\nwhich faces mankind after and be-\nfcrn trades.\nfe are choosing trades for\ntlch there Is a demand in Mos-\nsnfl which can' be learned\nthont too much evnense for\n(Jilnment. In doing this we con-\nIt with the trade nn'on organlza-\n[n of Woscow: It Is into these or-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nWntlons that onr children will\nlarge scale education plant ln every way he could devise. Teachers\nmay regard themselves for a time\nas different from other employees\nin the-modern industrial and social structure, but the facts are\nyond! all reyolutlons-how.-tocon- increa84ng,y agalnst them. They\nstruct a life fn which education ar6 cog8 ln the propaganda ma-\nand productivity shall be one and chlne of the ownlng order and\niral_ indivisible\u00E2\u0080\u0094in whieh the produc- they are golng to be treated as\n..... ' > tive process shall be the basis for nthnr cnes am h-inrilp*. other\nflrtiiate ln the course of a couple ,_,_,,. _ , ,., ,_ ner C05B are nanalea- utner\nyearg a many sided culture, and in which cogs have found that thelr de.\nall science and culture shall reflect fen8e against complete subjuga-\n1*m*Pi\ T/aboratory back to Illuminate every moment tlon is the union. Most teachers\n\A dental lahoratorv Is to be one of production. Nowhere but in the do not yet accept the logic of the\nonr first shons: there is a big Soviet Union is there the basis for practical situation, as the 1924\n\u00C2\u00A3mnnd for the product of such a such an experiment in the social national enrollment of only 3700\nIon. and will be later a big de- and political organization of the in the American Federation of\nand for skilled mechanics ln lt, people; and on no technique but Teachers shows. The day of the\ntbe Soviet Union grows more that of America can lt be based, individual craftsman, iii education\n(nonernns and looks after its It Is the aim of the American Vo- as in industry, is past.\ne<-tt. Tbe teohntmie here is bv no cational School in Moscow to make\t\n'enns es better arranged for the\nwith and conifortof the workmen\ni\u00C2\u00ABn in nnv Isbivsjorv be has seen\ntbe TTnlterl States. We evnect-\nenmhlne tbe trood points of both\nl-ntems\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Russian care of the\nlorker's comfort and the Amerl-\n\n advanced* technique.*\nWatchmaking\n[Next comes our clock factory. A'\nIrmer Russian who flfcit to Swit-\nfland af ter. 1906, became .there an\npert watch and clock maker.:\nIyer, since the revolution he has\nsen planning to come back and\nulld a factory-school for making\nlocks. This is ati industry hardly\neveloped-'ln Russian and 'it'ls Important to have cheap clocks so\n[hat peasants may begin to develop\nficcuracy and sens* of tine;-? He'\n'(fat-tile*' ttOWt ''wurttu of tools'\nfind ei-jnloment and we'are trv|ni\u00C2\u00BB\nbv hook or bv crook, to raise another' 18.000 worth, so as to start\nproduction In a small way with 2.\npupiii, He h\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB hli own ion as\nPass thia copy to your shop-\nhave rnnta and ret him tn subscribe.\nportant thing Is not what we drill\ninto our children, but what we\ndrill them into.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. Bates.\nCorporation of the Township of Richmond\nL92S\nA Ta& Sale wiiLbe held at the jTo^vn HaU,\nBrighpuse; B. C; o*r;\nWEDNESDAY, SESPT. 30, AT 10 AM\nLands sold at last fa* 'Sale ma^% 'iWf,\ndeemed on or before the above date.\nANONYMOUS\nThe Most Remarkable Novel\nof the 20th Century\nReality!\nJ\nAdventure I\nlimited Offer\nNov Only\n$1.00\nBegular Price\nB 12.00\nUNANIMOUSLY ACCLAIMED AS\nA MASTERPIECE. NEVER WAS\nTHE TRUTH DEPICTED IN A\nMORE FASCINATING* MANNER.\n.OO\nGeaMc\n:Cuaij\nr\nAUCTIONEER Sad APi. RAM.\nBB\nPhone Sey.\n1070\n748 Rlchardi Street.\nVaneonver,\nB.O.\nSpeciallit in Trasses for Hen, Women,\nChildren and Infants\nO. E. HEARD\nPhon* Sey. 8120\nttt Bobion Street, Vancouvor, B.O.\n28 Yeere Establiebed In Vaneoaver\nPublisher's Price\nDirect\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Only\nSend Your Order TODAY\n$1\n USB THIS COUPON \t\nAcme Publishing Co.,\n165 Broadway, New York Oity.\nGentlemen: for the $1.00 enclosed please enter my name for one\ncopy of \"Prostitutes,\" before the\nspecial offer expires..\nName\nAddress \t\nCity and State.\t\nVancouver Turkish Baths\nWIU Oor* Tou Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis or Bad Oold\nMASSAGE A SPECIALTY\nPACIFIC BUILDING\n711 Hastings St. W. Phone Bey. 2070\nGet Your New Coat at\n\"Famous\"\nYOU will reap the benefit in\nevery way\u00E2\u0080\u0094full stocks to select from\u00E2\u0080\u0094carefully chosen styles\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094guaranteed quality in materials\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the wonderfully low prices\nthat are the result of onr \"Maker\nto Wearer\" plan of selling.\nV.\nFamous\nCLOAK & SUIT CO. Ltd,\n619-623 Hastings Street Wtst\n0i :\nIs There Any Painless Dentistry?\nDr. W. J. CURRY, Dentist\nOFFICE: 301 DOMINION BUILDING\n, Phone Sey. 3354 for Appointment\nCAN,\"remember when chloroform, ether and gas.were the sole\nagents used to reduce the misery attending dental operations.\nAbout ten years ago NOVOCAIN was introduced, and it is sate to say\ntbat thiB is one ot the greatest boons to humanity yet discovered, and\nmakes Dentistry almost a pleasure. It is a' great thing to say truthfully:\n\"These extractions, fillings, or removing this nerve, will not hurt.\"\nWith the use of Novocain, work can be done thoroughly, time is saved,\nand the cost is less than before.\nI\ntarts K -a-v\nVANCOUVER\nWomen's Apparel at\nPopular Prices\nCoats and Dresses a .^19.95\npARMENTS that reflect the season's smartest and most becoming styles, fabric and color, and prices that assure\nmaximum value for money spent,\nWOMEN'S TAILORED COATS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fashioned of English tweeds,\nworsteds and blanket cloths; well tailored, with flare back,\nBelt or severely cut mannish lines. Practlciil coats for smart\nbusiness women. Sizes to 42. AlA QC\nPrioe \u00C2\u00ABP 1 \"et/O\nWOMEN'S PUR TRIMMED COATS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Offering choice of the\nseason's newest shades, in good quality velcurs; designed with\nbecoming flare or straight lines, to suit one's Individual taste.\nThey are fully lined and cosily finished with black, grey or fawn fur\ncollars. All sizes. <\u00C2\u00A3 1 Q QC\nSpecial value \u00C2\u00ABJ> 11/ei/O\nWOMEN'S BALBRIGGAN DRESSES\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Smart garments for sports wear.\nShowing attractive scarf or tie of\ncontrasting shades, whilst others\nhave the new high collar. \"Colors of\ngrey, purple, fawfl, green, blue, etc.\nIn sizes to 42. Pla/\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB/0\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Floor two\u00E2\u0080\u0094H.B.C. Piige Six\nTHE CANADIAN LABOR ADVOCATE:\nFriday, September\" 25; 19\nWith the Marine Workers\n(Conducted by W. H. Donaldson, Secretary Federated Seafarers\nof Canada.)\nTwo Camps\n(By Leland Olds, Federated Press)\nTT\IRECT ACTION to secure tol-\nNotes From the Camps\nSEAMEN'S ACTIVITIES\nStarving Sailors Ask fireman and pay the rate of or-\nT__ V-o{\u00C2\u00AB 1JV_. 1U.__i.__ !?\u00E2\u0080\u00A2______ alnary seamen's wages, which is\nIn Vain For More Food oniy half of what should have been\npaid. Who gets the difference?\nTHE S. S. Canadian Miller left _\u00E2\u0080\u0094:\t\nVancouver on the 3rd of June,\nBOOMS-PROFIT-WAGES-INVENTIONS\nSUB-SNARKS\n'THE lumber industry, is experi-\nencing something of a boom.\nsuit, it is claimed, wr.s that\nboard was merely charred,\nerable conditions comes inevitably when men in power bungle\nsocial management until it cannot\nbe straightened out without a\nshift of control. Direct action,\nthreatened by over 3,000,000 trade The lumber comPanies \"Port \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- woulQ **ot b**tBt into flame,\nunionists in England has just creasea orders, and a consequent of course is serious news for\nforced steps toward real reorgan- rlse ln prices. To them the out- lumbermen, and it will be ned\nization of the coal industry. Bnt laok ls favorable. sary for them to make anoti.1\ndirect action, even better organ- Not only ls thls true of B, C. wage slash to meet the competitlj\nized, must carry the rcorganlza- but the same holds good across\ntlon through after the 9-month *he line' where, orders are reported The organization of the worki|\nThe Consolidated Whaling Com-\n1925, and returned on the 9th of pany of Victoria wired to head-\nSeptember. The first port of call quarters for'men to join the S. S.\n_ \u00E2\u0080\u0094 . ,.- _ ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E , .. ,,,_ \u00E2\u0080\u009E , . . ' i*\u00C2\u00BB\"*M uuuufiu Ullt.r Uie U-montn \u00E2\u0080\u00A2,*1*-' ttttei, w\u00C2\u00AB\"\"Ci wuwd oid icpunou _...v *_.e*---.*\"--*.v.\... y_ _\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB ..-_._..\nwas Sydney NS. W where the \"Gray\", which yesel is going up to truce T^p,^ preS8 ,s ^ to be much higher than shipments, logger Into a trade union is a soe\nmen asked the skipper for heavens' the whaling stations to bring down at lt sowing abruption. Nothing is being said, however, menace, ahd If accomplished wo_\\nsake*, give them some more grub, the product of this season's catch*. The tra(le unlon deolslon> from about an lncrease ln wages. The be a ..natlonal calamity\". At le\nThe fare being served was very T Halberts, J. Lawson, and P. which great soola, changes may prlce 0f lumber may soar sky high, so one concludes from the fact tlJ\nscanty, and there was a shortage We sh were among those that were date, was simply to stop the but wages remain at a dead level, it is necessary to maintain a blac|\nBoiled beans sent to Victoria to man the \"Gray.\" movement of coal. It went to all except when the price of lumber list in order to see that this dc\nrailway and transport workers. It drops. When that happens wages not happen. But lt is perfectly*\nA non-union man was unsuccess- was signed by union executives either come tumbling down, or else order for the lumber barons to\nThe next port of call was Mel- ful in securing employment on one correspqndlng to Green, Morrison, the camps close, and wages cease, ganize employers' associations, a,1\nbourne, where one of the deck of the coasting vessels, on Tuesday, Matt Woll, Bill Johnston, Prenter, Prosperity in the lumber industry industrial councils, not to ment!\nboys cleared out, stating he was September 22nd. He had been on Bobertson, Manion, Noonan and means prosperity for the lumber- Hoo Hoo clubs. One of these clu;\nnever pleased so much as to give several vessels and when approach- ToD*r* In this country. Interpreted men on]yi and not for those they ^as formed in Vancouver recent\nthe \"Miller\" the slip, after suffer- ed to become a union man he re- oy labor's general staff in re-\nlng as he had. Another man left fused, every dog has his day, so sP\u00C2\u00B0nse to questions from the rank\nthe ship at Auckland, and the ap- he, lost the job, and swears ven- and flIe* Jt mean \"Stop All Fuel,\"\nof tea, sugar, etc.\nwas the predominating feature on\nthe menu.\nemploy.\nand a local lumberman appoint]\nas understrapper \"snark\" of tn\nIn the lumber industry as In universe. The fact that a pers\u00C2\u00BB]\ntain was kind enough to have the geance on the union It is rumored' that ta cut off thepower-which occupatlons, the Iron law of wearing such a high-falutln title\"\nmon \"nln/tn____4t* t*v*A a__nf__n/>i_i. -fn fhot v\e_ moo _-it__-_ nP i.V*r* nnIU.n *-..*t OnVcS CtLDlr.a.IlKr I.TinilHtria liBTYl r- * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ... .. ._, __.. '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nman \"pinched\" and sentenced to that he was one of the sailors who drives capitalist industrialism.\n14 days Imprisonment for a blank- came out from the Old Country on Capltalsts Preparing\net that was missed from the men's the C. P. B, Flyer, S. S. \"Princess\nquarters, Kathleen\".\nAt thta period of the voyage, the ;\u00E2\u0080\u0094:\t\nmen were being served with tripe, Several suggestions have been ed,\" said Chairman Swales, open- inVhe'ratTof\"prom\"\u00C2\u00B0C^ choosing titles for its offlcej\ncapitalist development is at work. ln our m,dst \u00C2\u00ABs not expected to dJ\nThe amount of constant capital in- throne top bunks, raise wages,\n\"There is a limit to the conces- vestea ln logging enterprises is In- reduoe the dead weight of chokeri\nsions unions can be forced to creaslng much more rapidly than The Ho\u00C2\u00B0 Ho\u00C2\u00B0 0,UD mad\u00C2\u00AB one m*f\nmake. That limit has been reach- varlabie ca.plta.1, causing a decline take however, and that was\nseafarer who frequents the water ish government is quietly enroll- feet logged in 1923, and the fact\niing a new special constabulary that wages during that year was\ning a member, and taking an active under the war department, with about the same as in 1924, one\nspecific regulation that \"no wonders how many million dollars\nmember may also be or remain a of profit were skinned out of the\nmember of any other trade or Coast loggers that year, but that\nsimilar union.\" This follows an is the price loggers pay for par-\nSeveral members of the organiz-\naccording tp the\nway he treated the crew. He had ^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ^ be6n away-from attempt to enroll a special trans- tlal organization.\nIrZfiSZlV^nSn-iZ the coast some time have been re- p,ort r\u00C2\u00ABserve branch \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00A3 the army, . . .\nS\u00C2\u00A3?. tl ,2 1Z, tlZ Td in-tated to membership, and many aIs\u00C2\u00B0 the recruiting of a trained Wttges could easily have been\nThis is the same skipper that had ^ ^ expresse(. & des[re tQ be civilian force of skilled workers lncreased flfty per cent, this fall if\nfrom among municipal employees, the men jn the camps haa been\nan old fireman (J. Flaherty) logged to the extent of over $80.00 on\none voyage on the \"Canadian Importer.\"\ndry hash and the usual C. G. M.M. aaaressea to tne secretary of the Ing the annual conference of the we flnd the lumbermen of\" B C Much Tnore applicable names cou'\nstew, with hardly any beef in it. Seafarers' Union to be mentioned British Trades Union' congress a writlng of ru|nous prices hlgb have been found beginning wi\nPotatoes were at a premium even at next meeting of the, organiza- month later. He pointed out that wages an(J ,ow profltg ' s. n., for instance! snarer-ln-chlel\nalthough there was a cheap rate tion, which will be held on Tues- union policy would be \"to recover ' snarler-par-iexcellence; snatched\nfor the ship. Orders were given to day, October 6th. As many mem- lost ground, establish sfiid improve Reviewing the lumber industry ne_pjus_uitra. sneak-unrivalled;\nhave the potatoes boiled In their hers as possible are urged to at- standards of wages, hours, and ,or the year 1924 the last issue of eyen \u00E2\u0096\u00A0aharic_voraciOUSi\nskins and save as much weight as tend. One of the suggestions is working conditions, and intensify the \"B. C. Lumberman\" complains\npossible, or else miss a few meals that the initiation fee...should be trade union action for winning a that they received $2 per thousand\nwithout the spud lowered for a certain period (prob- lar5er measure of control in in- -feet less in 1924 than in 1923.\nCaotaln McConnechy who has ab,y 6 month) so as to let every du\"try for the workers.\" The Brit- When one considers the millions of\nquite a reputation on the C. G. M.\nM. vessels for starving the crews front have the Privilege qf becom\nof whatever vessel he is in com- ing a member, and taking an activ.\nmand of, was in command of the lnterest in the doings of the sea- lne\n\"Miller,\" and did not harm his men of Canada-\nreputation any,\nWho\nIs BILL HUNGERFORD!\nAak Any Labor Han.\nSTANFORD\nROOMS\n863 SEYMOUR STREET\nHousekeeping and Transient\nCentral\u00E2\u0080\u0094Terms Moderate\nUnder New Management\n'Bill\" Hungerford and M. Cam-'\nbridge, Fropa.\nback in the fold of The Federated\nSeafarers' Union of Canada.\nBill Love quit the S. S. Anyox\nAt one Australian port the cap- anfl Maurlce Flynn flUed the va_\ntain signed on one man as an ordinary seaman, and had the nerve\nto put him in the stokehold as a\ncancy.\nEmpire\nCafe\nQUALITY\nCOURTESY\nSEASONABLE\n76 Hastings East\nHAROLD DEGG and\nBOB KRAUSE\nUte 64th Batt. and 72nd Batt.\nMail list at Headquarters:\nCox, A.; Croker, L. B.; Dawson,\nR.; Farquhar, D.; Harris, CT; Henderson, C; Hesketh, J.; Illott, G.;\nJones, R. N.; Kissock, J.; Knox, A.;\nLewis, E.; Love, Wm.; Maekay, J.;\nMahoney G.; McDonald J.; Os- ment mach^ery to pre8erye what\nborne, W.; Pattison, B.; Pugh E. ,t oalled ,ftw anfl order_ ^ ^\nto receive $100 a year from the sufficiently united to demand and\ngovernment while awaiting orders. flght for ,t; Th0Ullanas ot men\nForce WUl Be Used went East to take in the harvest,\n\"These things,\" according to taking the vast built of the surplus\nGeneral Secretary Bromley of the supply of labor off the market. It\nlocomotive engineers and firemen, was an oportune moment to de-\n\"clearly Indicate that behind the mand an increase, but the neces-\nscenes elaborate preparations are sary cohesion was lacking,\nbeing made to deal with any * \u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nemergency, as a result pf Industrial trouble, and it can be as-\nAfter proving, at least to their\nown satisfaction, that red cedar\nsumed that the next big industrial sh]ngles cou,a not be made to burn\ndispute will bring to light govern- ^ ,umbemen are now face(J wlth\nA.; Smith, A.; Williams, A.; Wil-\nment of force will undoubtedly be\nHams, J.; Worrall, Wm.; Worrell, use(J fop th(J purpose Q{ suppres.\nJ.; Warren, S. slon and wll, be deveiope(1 to the\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E . . strongest possible degree of effl-\na new danger. An Inventor In\nChicago has succeeded In maklne\nsynthetic lumber from sawdust,\nbark, and other waste material.\nThe inventor claims that boards\nmade according to his formulae\nwill not burn. When the Invention\n-Baboeuf.\nI\nSubscribe to The Advocate\nMAINLAND CIGAR STORE\n\"The Place for Pipes\"\nMail Orders Receive Prompt Attention\n310 OARRALL STREET VANCOUVER, B.C.\nCorner Oordova and Carrall\nLet us see what is understood ciency.\"\nby real equality. It has for its That is why British labor ls go\nbasis two essential conditions-' ing straight ahead, paying little was demonstrated an acetylene\nln common; enjoyment in common, attention to the attempts of the torch was applied to It, and the re-\npress to prove that it ls helplessly \t\nsplit on theoretical issues, AGAINST PIECE WORK\n. SYDNEY, Australia\u00E2\u0080\u0094(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094 A\nSCAB SHIP PASSENGERS conference of representatives of\nGET WARM RECEPTION trade unions is asking the Labor\nNEW YORK (FP) With la- Premier of New South Wales to\nbor songs and banners the strike of abo\u00C2\u00BBsn the piece-work system ln\nBritish seamen made Itself felt on the government railroad shops.\nthe sidewalks of New York when Piece-work system leads to soeed-\nthe White Star liner Majestic land- *\u00E2\u0084\u00A2-uP< accidents and slipshod\ned with its scab crew. As the pas- work.. The system was introduced\nsengers began streaming off they after the 1917 general strike*\nwere greated by a demonstrating \"\nthrong of hundreds of sailors and SAILOR SEEKS DAMAGES\nlongshoremen, who were respond- NEW ORLEANS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 (FP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094:\ning to a cabled call for assistance Charging permanent Injuries be**\nfrom the strike committee in Lon- cause of unreasonable orders from\ndon. all officer on the freighter West\n ' Ekonk. J6hn Frenkler, a seaman\nIt is by distortedly exalting some as filed suit ln federal court for\nmen that others are distortedly de- $50,000 damages against te U. S.\nbased. A vast mass of mankind sipping beard. Frenkler said he\nare degradedly thrown Into the was denied proper scaffolding\nbackground to bring forward with when painting by orders of the\ngreater glare the puppet show of officer In charge.\nState; and aristocracy.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thomas ;\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094- '\nPaine. I rj takes much monev to mnke a\nrich man, but it takes little virtue.\nBRUCE'S\nMIDSUMMER\nSUIT\nSALE\nBig reductions, splendid\nvalues. Regular prices\n$22.50 to $42.50, now\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n$15 to $37.65\nC. D. BRUCE\nLimited\nOor. Homer and Haatinga St.\nVANCOUVER, B.O.\nRed Star Drug Store\n\"The Mail Order Druggists\"\nWa Make \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Special Effort to Get Gooda Ont by First Mall\nAfter Receipt of Tour Order\nVancouver, B.O.\nSend in Your Subscription Today. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Bernard Shaw,\nThe Original\nHARVEY\nLogging Boot\nHAND-MADE BOOTS\n.for\nLOGGERS, MINERS,\nCRUISERS and\n. . PROSPECTORS\nQniek Strvios for Bepalri -\nAll Work Ourutssd\ngp._Ul Attratlon to Vail Orion\nH. Harvey\nE.tibliih.a la Vaaooavor Is HIT\n58 OORDOVA STREET W. iday, September 25, 1925\nTHE CANADIAN LABOR ADVOCATE\nPag?lUvta\n.employment Still\nGrowing in Britain\n(By Len De Caux.)\nONDON. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Despite the comb-\nout *. of the workless under-\nen by the Baldwin government,\nfise avowed policy ls to \"knock\noff the register,\" latest fig-\nfrom the ministry of labor\ntw an Increase of more than\nD00 in the number of British\nbmployed ln one week. This\nags the number of registered\n|mployed to 1,260,400, an ln-\nse of nearly 200,000 sipce last\nrhe situation is worse than the\nIjires indicate, for the govern-\nnt recently forced through its\nemployment Insurance bill in\nface of bitter labor opposl-\n, and many who Bhould rape unemployment benefit have\n|bn deprived on the pretext of\nliomy. It is estimated that\n.00 families will suffer aa a\nSuit of this bill. The governing has appointed a special staff\n| inspectors to restrict the num-\nof workless who can be reg-\nbred.\nTOESE Sale Prices Will\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Sure Save You Money\nWHY THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT British Seamen Slave\nREFUSED TO ADMIT SAKLATVALA For Starvation Wage\nT ONDON\u00E2\u0080\u0094Shapurjl Saklatvala, lea disposed to place some confi- (By Carl Brannin, Federated Press)\nCommunist taember of the denee in the talk of British dis- LONDON\u00E2\u0080\u0094British seamen's low\narmament. I want to point out wage Bcale ,B typifled ln the case\nthat so long as Britain can com- o\u00C2\u00A3 a donkey ma\u00E2\u0080\u009E( wlth 26 years on\nmand in her service-3,000,000 col- the sea# He reoelvea ln wage8 |60\nllamentarv Union Congress wliich \u00C2\u00B0red tr\u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00B0PS in India and South a month for a 12-hour day. Out of\nUamentory union congress, which Afri(ja and can throw them intQ\nBritish parliament has been for*\nbidden by the United States gov*\neminent to atend the Inter-Par*\nthis he had to pay at high prices\nthe field simply on the word of a for hls own food on board> De.\nviceroy all such talk is hypocrisy ductlons and contributions had to\nand sordid lying. The diplomats of be taken care ort> g0 ln the end\nEurope and America are not fool- there was ,eft for h,B wlfe and\nu. _\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB____\u00C2\u00AB vm. x.\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 w__.\u00E2\u0084\u00A2. efl The people a,-0 should not.be\nadmits to membership any member ..,.._ ,_ lamuy me sum ot t.* a weea io\n... IB-.On in. fii.\u00C2\u00AB*>*irf art* oholto.\nmeets in Washington, D. C., Octo*\nber 1st to 7th. The announcement\nthat he intended attending the\nCongress provoked bitter' attacks\nin the British press. This Congress\nprovide food, clothing and shelter\nfor them.\nOn a long voyage, say a 5-month\ntrip to Australia, his wife was advanced one third of a month's\n[Hen'a Hesvy Winter Weight Bib\nUnderwear, per garment, $1.16\nand *2.26\nden's Knitted Vests, sleeveless,\neaeh .'. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 11.76\nfen's Irish Serge Pants, 5 pockets belt loops, cuff bottoms,\npair . 12.85\niMnleskin Work Oloves 350\n[Military Orey Work Shirts.... 95o\nllfen't White ' Hemstitched Gam-\nbrio Handkerchiefs 50\nfen's Merino Underwear, per\ngarment BOO\nComblnatlona ...... $1.90\n(Arthur Frith & Co.\nftn'i and Boys' Furnishings,\nHats, Boots and Shots\n2313 MAIN STREET\nBetween 7th and 8th Avenues\nPbone Fair. 11\nof a parliamentary body in any ,\n. -\u00C2\u00BB ,_\u00E2\u0080\u009E. *w_ c 1,1 . _.i There is in the minds of the\ncountry. In 1923 Mr. Saklatvala\nattended ttae Congress in Copen- British aristocrats and Socialist im-\nhagen. perialists a lust for world conquest\nBefore being refused admission infinitely worse than the kaiser's,\ninto the United States. Saklatvala If there is to be world disarmament wages by the company and re-\nwas questioned by the Federated ther\u00C2\u00B0 mu\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB end to imperial- ceived one third each month while\nisf and British imperialism must ho was away. Where there are\ngo first, for it is the worst in its children and the wife is unable to\ndanger to the peace and prosperity swe11 the Income, she must appeal\nof the world. to the* local relief board for help.\n\"I should iike not only to warn When the man returned from Ws\nlong journey he was presented first\nthe western world of this imperialist menace but to suggest concrete measures to check it in spite\nof the frantic attempts to drown\nmy voice,\nPress as to the reasons why he\ndesired to attend the Congress, and\nmade the following statement:\n'I am going to America for the\nfirst time. Naturally it is not my\npurpose to tell Americans how to\nmanage their affairs. But I do\nwant the American people and\ntheir Canadian brothers to know\nthat the ideas of sir Bobert Home\nand certain other members of the America,\nBritish group are not the ideas of'great 00untry. It will be my first\nall the British people. He is a opportunity in 15 years to see them\nperfect representative of the Brit- and learn at first hand o\u00C2\u00A3 what\nish imperialist and aristocratic America haa meant to them. I\nclass. I am a representative of the am i_oki__g forward with keen sat-\nBritish working class of the ad- igfaotion to the opportunity to\nvanced type. When I denounce study your lnstitutions and the pro-\nBritish imperialism it is not be- gre8S your nation has made \u00E2\u0080\u009E\ncause I happen to be a native of ^\t\nIndia but because as a member of ^,\u00E2\u0080\u009E____._T_~_._, _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB_ w,_- \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E_._^\nthe working class I know that the SHIPOWNERS USE UNEMPLOYED\nBritish empire stands for the enslavement and degradation of not\nonly the workers of Britain and\nthe colonies . but the workers of\nAmerica as well. There is a growing menace to the living standards\nof the workers of the world when month\nthing with a bill for this / relief\nwhich consumes all that is left of\nhis earnings.\nThe use of Indian seamep in\nI have two brothers in Australian and eastern ports in an\nloyal citizens of your attempt to break the strike recalls\nthe wage scale for theBe men. In\n1921 on the British-India Line the\nwages for Indian seamen were\n$7.50 a month. These have been\nreduced to $6 per month at signing on. Out of its 20,000 seamen,\n16,000 are' Indians. The company\nmade $11,500,000 profit in 1924.\nTO QUELL STRIKING SAILORS\n(By Scott Nearing, Federated Press)\nbave men work on the ship about 18\nT ONDON\u00E2\u0080\u0094British\ntaken a wage-cut\nPatronize Our Advertisers.\nBOYS'\nSHOES\n\"'HE BOYS can always do\nwith an extra pair of\nshoes. At the prices we are\nbelling them you will be wise\nfn getting a couple of pairs.\nBEAL BARGAINS\nI Men, Women and Ohildren\n\The Imperial\nShoe Store\n[1087 OBANVILLE ST.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nseamen\nof $5 a days out of 30. Their pay is a lit-\nThcre have been rebel tie over $25 a month. When the\none nation can produce coal, textile strikes and left-wing protests, but ship lies in Southhampton between\ngoods and other manufactured ar- the officials of the National Sail- voyages, they may apply for shore\ntides with a labor horde of 16,- ors' and Firemen's union, who jobs at the Cunard offices, but then\n000,000 African, Indian and Chin- agreed to the cut, declare \"we are they must work at shore wages,\nese people earning from 8 to 16 Inundated with applications of un- about 20 per '.ent. below ship\ncents per day. That is the power lon men for positions.\" This means wages. The situation among, the\nof the British empire in these dark that where rebel strikes have been seamen is similar to that among\nlands. If this is allowed to con- started, the union filled the places, the miners a month ago. Both\nTbere has been delay in the sailings of channel boats for France\nand the Channel islands, but for\nthe most part the workers have\naccepted the cut. The secret of\nthe situation lies in the report\ntlnue, in 15 years all Europe will\nbe reduced to the coolie scale and\nAmerican workers will hit the bottom too in due time. Can American cotton growers compete with\nBritish plantations in the Sudan\nfaced a wage cut. Neither could\nafford it. The miners, well organized, maintained their* wage-rate.\nThe seamen, poorly organized, took\nthe reduction.\npaying labor 8 cents per day? Can from Cardiff and Swansea, pub-\nAmerican textile workers hold the \"lished by the London Daily Herald:\n-bare standard they have with Brit- \"Every ship requiring men has\nIsh mills in India and China using sailed. If there were another 50\nnative labor at 16c per day? That ships, they would sail, for men are\nis why I say the British empire clamoring for jobs.\"\nmust be dissolved. That is why I There are more than a million\nam an implacable enemy of the and a half unemployed in the Brit-\nUnion Jack and what it signifies. ish isles. This ls the off season in\n\"There may be people in Amer-\nGLASSES\n$5\nCOMPLETE\nHo Drags Hnd in Examination\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2THIS, advertisement means hlgh-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 grade glasses, with a thorough and advanced eye examination by a graduate specialist. You *\nwill find that we give the most\nvalue for the least money, and we\nstand back of all work turned\n......\n.-- * if- your eyes ache, see us,.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '::-.'.'.\nBird Eye Service\n205 SEBVIOE BLDQ.\n;\"; _ 680 Bobson Street\n;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2...- .*;.\n-\nPhone Sey. 8955\nthd shipping industry. The tourist\nrush is over, and many sea-faring\nmen would be laid off in any case.\nThe employers have timed their\nmove with judgment. Stratgetlc-\nally, the position of the men is\nweak. The seamen and firemen\non the ships are organized, but the\nstewards have had no effective organization for three, years. Even\nif there were no serious unemployment, the workers are not in a\nposition, to meet the employers\nsince the majority of seafarers do\nnot carry union cards. The recent\nefforts to create an industrial un-\nioli including all who work on\nships, or to affiliate the ship workers' With the Transport Workers\nhave alike failed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ; Before the August wage cut, sea-\nopen and firemen received about\n$50 .for a. full-time month, and\nstewards, were paid about. $47.. The\ncut:reduces their -wages to about\n; $45 .and- $42,. for..-full-time. But\n.these men do riot work, full time.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Take the workers on the Cunard\nliner Berengaria. They sign up for\neach voyage. When the voyage is\ncompleted, they are paid off. These-\nADELAIDE, South Australia.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(FP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The trade union movement\nin South Australia has requested\nthe state Labor government to give\npreference to unionists in all government departments. In South\nAustralia the building trade workers are fighting the government\nfor the 44-hour week.\nBird, Bird & Lefeaux\nBABBISIEBB, SOUOITOBB, BIO.\n401-401 Metropolitan Bulldlnf\nIST Haitian St. W., Vanconvtr, B.O.\nTslaphonts: Stymour MM aad ((67\nT\nSCHOOL\nOpens\n.** *\u00C2\u00BB\nOctober 6\nSixty\nCourses\nRegister any afternoon between 5 and 6, or October\n1st, 2nd and 5th between\n7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., at\nthe School Board Offices,\nDunsmuir and Hamilton\nStreets.\nRECIPROCATE\nWe support yonr paper.\nWhere do yon buy yonr\nPainting Supplies?\nPAINT THIS PALL\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094WITH\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nANTIMO WHITE\nPrepare for the winter rain*\nwith a coat of good paint\nIF BUILDING OR REMODELLING USB\nFIR OR LAMATOO\n3-PLY PANELS\nand get that cosy effect. See\nour finished samples and\nuse our free estimate service on paints and panels.\nGregory & Reid\nPaint Co.\nSey. 4636 117 Hastings E.\nWE DELIVER\nMEN'S NEW\nSTETSON HATS\nAre Now Opened Up, $8.50\nVELOUR, in thc New Shades $6.50\nBILTMOBE HATS, Silk Lined $5.50\nSTANFIELD'S UNDERWEAR, at $3.00 Suit, and Combinations.\nHANSON SOX SOc, 65c, 75c\nALL WOOL SWEATERS, up from $2.00\nW. B. BRUMMITT\n18-20 OORDOVA STREET WEST Page Eight\nTHE CANADIAN LABOB ADVOCATE\nFriday, September 25,\nf\nNEW FALL\nMILLINERY\nMRS. KAIGHAN\n8822 HASTINGS EAST\nBurnaby\nConfectionery\nS970 HASTINGS ST. E.\nENGLISH and AMERICAN\nMAGAZINES and Periodicals\nSTATIONERY and SOHOOL\nSUPPLIES\nConfectionery and Tobaccos\nLight Lunches Served\nI SUPPORT BUSINESS CONCERNS-FRIENDLY\nTO ORGANIZED LABOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2THE advertisers in The Labor Advocate deserve the support of organized labor\nand its friends. They materially assist in making it possible for this paper to\nbe of service to the workers. The individuals and firms using our publication are\nshowing interest in our cause, and workers should give them the preference in\nmaking purchases. As organized workers, you can readily see the value of reciprocity in preference to all others. This goes to show that our advertisers should\nget the benefit of the purchasing power of organized labor.\niPS\nmam\nmm\n$\nNORTH BURNABY\nPhone High. 801\n$\nPhone High. 457\nMitchell's Transfer\nFURNITURE MOVING\nBAGGAGE\u00E2\u0080\u0094EXPBESS\n3711 Hsstings St.E., Vancouver, B.O.\nDON'T MISS THIS\nBig\nWear-Ever\nSpecial\nRegular $1.85 for $1__>\nKIDD & CO. HARDWARE\nVANCOUVER HEIGHTS\nPhone High. 151? We Pay Glen. Calls\nCome With All Yov\nETE TROUBLE\nR.O.\n\"Registered\nOPTOMETRIST\nand OPTICIAN\nSee our stock of Wat<\nClocks and Jewelry\nbefore buying\nREPAIRING\nWatches, Clocks and JeweJ\nis a Specialty\nSatUtMtion Guaranteed\n3812 HASTINGS EASTJ\n(Unci to Bank of Commerce!\nVANCOUVER HEIGI\nKodaki, Films snd Anat.\nFinishing\nPrescriptions, Drags\nANDERS' QUALITY\nPBBPABATIONS\nTake Anders' Cod Liver and '\nExtract before Winter* oome\nSUTHERLAND Sells for Less\nA FEW OF THE REAL MONEY-SAVERS\nLargest Size Flannelette Blankets $2.20\n5 Yards White or Striped Flannelette for $1.00\nKnitting Wool, Baldwin's and P. K., per ounce 15c\nAll-Wool Tweeds, 40 inches wide, per yard 90c\nChildren's Wool Mixed Vests, each. 50c\nThe Busy Dry Goods Store\n3916 HASTINGS ST. E.\nWe Specialize in f j$|l 0QQ ChlDS Fried *ta Crisco\nTHE HEIGHTS CAFE\nFull Course Dinner 11-2\nShoyt Orders at All Times\nWE ABE AGENTS FOB\nMcCLARY RANGES\nin Vancouver Heights\nsold on east TEEMS $10 Down, $10 a Month\nYonr old range taken In exchange We buy, sell or exchange Now\nud Second-hand Furniture\nMARSHALL'S Hardware and\nFurniture Store\n8918 HASTINGS EAST Next to Sutherland's Dry Ooods Store\nNewman\nMeat\nMarket\nDELIVERY\nLEAVES STORE\nDAILY\n10a.m&2p.m.\n(No, 32\n3914 Hastings St. East\nOUE MOTTO: \"CONSISTENTLY LOW PRICES\"--!\nGIVE US A TRIAL\nTHE VETERAN (Arthur Clayton)\n4088 HASTINGS STREET* EAST\n0R00FRIES, CONFECTIONERY, Ice Cream,\nTobacco. Light Lunches Served\nBEAUTIFUL HAIR\nAre you satisfied with yours!\nFor Marcelling, Shingling and all\nforms of BEAUTY CULTUBE we\nare at yoar serrloe.\nDally from 9 to 7 and by\nappointment\nHOSIERY SAVINGS\nFull Fashioned\nQUALITY SOS HOSE\nAt prioes you ean afford to pi\nGome in any time and look f\nour stook\u00E2\u0080\u0094It will please yon\nOPENING DAT, SATUBDAS\nSEPT. 26\nMyrtle's Beauty Sho]\nGlen. 334\n3972 HASTINGS ST. EAST Glen. 31\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094NEW-\nART\nNEEDLEWORK\nSTORE\nNew and Exclusive Designs\nHEMSTITCHING\nand\nSTAMPING \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nMRS. E. STILES\n3822% HASTINGS EAST\nG. Val Mulligan\n4098 HASTINGS EAST\nTOBACCONIST\nBARBER SHOP\nToilet Preparations\nLadles' Work a Specialty\nTwo Barbers always in attendance\nW. T. Graham\nTAILOR\n4105 HASTINGS EAST\nPhone Glenbum 157R\nLet Us Make Your Suit or\nOvercoat\nWe make better clothes for\nless money.\nCleaning; and Pressing\nBridges'\nMeat Market\n3906 HASTINGS E.\nPerfect Refrigeration and\nSanitation\nCourtesy and Service\nT MnRoirrh\n1. H-CDBip\nBURNABY\nCYCLE STORE\nAgent for CLEVELAND CYCLES\nBaby Carriage Bepairs\nWelding and Goneral Bepairs\n4058 HASTINGS EAST\nR. C. HIRST\nELECTRICAL\nCONTRACTOR\nWe do complete and dependable\nHouse Wiring.\nLAMPS, PIXTUBBS,\nAPPLIANCES\n4003 HASTINGS EAST\nGlen. 161L\nMoving shortly to 4090 Hastlngi\n(itreet h,\nG. L. Lawst\nNOTABY PUBLIO\nt*\nAgreements, Deeds and Wills 1\npared; Fire and Automobile!\nnuance; Bents Collected!\n4001 HASTINGS\nVANCOUVER,\n. Fhones: Office, Glenbum\nBet., Highland 1273 j\nQUICK SERVICE\nSHOE REPAIR\nBest Material and Workmanship\nPrompt, Courteous and Satisfactory Service\nSEASONABLE PBIOES\nW. H. Cridland\n3818 HASTINGS EAST\nNext Door to McKee's Jewelry\nSton\nTHE GIFT SHO|\nVaneoaver Heights!\nJewelry Stoj\n(S. O. Johnson)\n3826 HASTINGS EAS\nNovelties and Bepairs"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "Canadian_Labor_Advocate_1925_09_25"@en . "10.14288/1.0344589"@en . "English"@en . "49.261111"@en . "-123.113889"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : the Labor Publishing Co."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Canadian Labor Advocate"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .