ON THE MORNING of Labor Day, 1939, a solemn Mass of Requiem was celebrated at the church of St. Paul the Apostle, Troy, N. Y., for the repose of the soul of John M. O'Hanlon, who had served as...
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I48 THE COMMONWEAL June 2, I939 assuming men one could meet anywhere; he has never put himself forward as a writer. Once in a Dublin drawing-room I listened to a song that was being sung, "The...
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February 25, 1938 The Commonweal 483 ference with nature, protecting thus the life of the generation to come. The breakdown of these guiding principles of marriage and child-raising inescapably...
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207 A TRYST AT GOMPERS'S GRAVE By WILLIAM COLLINS JUST off the main traffic artery that runs north through the hills of Westchester lies Sleepy Hollow, the resting place of...
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The author of this article is a general organizer for the American Federation of Labor and has been an active trade unionist for the past twenty-five years, traveling throughout the United States...
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RADICALISM AND LABOR By WILLIAM COLLINS THE Communists are having a field-day with present unemployment conditions. Revolutionary speeches and parades make good copy for the press. Police...
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THE GOOD OLD DAYS OF LABOR By WILLIAM COLLINS WE ARE indebted to the United States Bureau of Statistics for the opportunity of reading about labor conditions as they existed in the early days of...
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July Io, 1929 THE COMMONWEAL 269 TRADE-UNION PROBLEMS
By WILLIAM COLLINS T HE rank and file of the membership of or- ganized labor in the United States is satisfied that the principles of...
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January 30, 1929 THE COMMONWEAL 365 "To Messire Noel, named the neat of...
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