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€: i ‘Four THE DAILY WORKER ROES GIVEN ie : T ~ —) Rare to that particular meeting. | THE PARTY AT WORK — |.cey.iee 22) THOUSANDS OF FAIR DEAL BY R. LABOR BOARD sion Discriminates gainst Trainmen By LELAND OLDS. vated Press Industrial Editor.) U. §S. railroad labor board’s m sustaining the right of the uis San Francisco railroad to ainate against certain train » employes simply because they ‘lored and unorganized is con- d by A. O. Wharton, labor’s active member of the board, in enting opinion. He finds it in- ehensible that a tribual created mgress to deal out justice to ns irrespective of their race, or nationality should reach a decision on the evidence pre- Unfair to Negroes. 2 evidence shows, according to ton, “that the carrier has ar- ly disregarded the rights of employes and reclassified their without changing their duties; it has reduced their rates of pay established less favorable work- sonditions because they are col- men und for no other reason. \s sought to establish a separate distinct class based solely on the that they are of the Negro race ad of the white race.” re case involves 145 passenger emen whom the board describes} ollows: “:The employes involved ais dispute are colored men and ‘eb. 1, 1921, the effective date of wage reduction complained of * were unorganized. Up to the » of the hearing of this case they 2 still unorganized and their com- at is submitted by 100 (or more) eganized employes in accordance La provision of the transportation Barred From Union. m account of their color these em- ves are ineligible to membership he Brotherhood of Railroad Train- 1. Prior to the war the carrier «< advantage of this fact to classify m as train porters altho they were uired to perform’the duties of senger brakemen. In this way the nagement was able to evade the eenient with the trainmen and to * these colored employes a lower ge. zovernment control changed this tation. The U. S. railroad admin- cation defined the duties of pas- wer brakemen and ordered that ored trainmen performing those ties should be so designated and id the same rate of wages as white ‘my in the same capacities. The ad then classified these colored em- oyes as passanger brakemen and id them accordignly. In 1921 the labor board confirmed @ conditions established by the rail- ad administration subject to change ly by agreement between manage- ent and representatives chosen by majority of any class of employes. specified that such agreements wuld apply without discrimination » all the craft of class covered. Railroad Cuts Pay. The St. Louis-San Francisco rail- vad disregarded this order of the oard and on Feb. 1, 1921, arbitrar- y feclassified its colored brakemen s train porters. It thereupon cut aeir pay to $120 a month based on 40 hours’ work. The carried admits hat no change was made in their uties. Representatives of the employes ffected made two efforts to get the arrier to conform to the conditions »stablished by the authority of the yoard and then on July 6, 1921, sub- nitted the case for the board’s con- sideration. The fact that decision in such @ case involving the major prin- Note: The membership drive outlined in the following plan for District No. 2 contains suggestions which every party district and every city central committee might well adopt. It is being published as a means of stimulating similar work in other districts.—C, E. Ruth- enberg, Executive Secretary. * * * * LENIN MEMBERSHIP DRIVE, April Ist to July Ist. EVERY MEMBER GET A NEW MEMBER Issued by the District Organization of District 2. C Ngiptatal 25,000 people attended or attempted to attend the Lenin Memorial Meeting held under the auspices of the Workers Party on Feb. 4. This as well as many other indica- tions, as, for instance, the sympathizers we have in the trade union work, shows that there is a fertile field in our district for strengthening our Party by bringing those close to us into it. vention. Foreign Born Campaign, as well as our continuous indus- trial activities. While carrying on campaigns of this kind we come in contact with many non-Party people who are very sympathies to our Party. It is during this kind of Party activities that the oppor- tunity for drawing new mem- bers presents itself most, and furthermore during these per- iods of contact with the masses we must continuously have in mind the building and strength- ening of our Party. We have two outstanding purposes in our “united front” campaigns. One is the extending of our influ- ence among the masses of the work- ers and the other is to gain all the organizational benefits possible for our Party: This membership drive campaign is to be on a different basis than that which we have retently been carrying on, and has as a funda- mental purpose the development among our comrades of continuous efforts to bring those that belong to us into our Party. This campmgn is to be based mainly on individual efforts, in which the branch plays an important part, insofar as it di- rects the work of its members in this campaign. This plan we intend also to help in developing more in- teresting branch meetings, as one of our problems is to retain the mem- bers that join the Party and this cannot be done Very well if the branch meeting is dull and uninter- esting. The plan is as follows: 1. Party members while in contact with the sympathizers with whom they are working, be it in-shop, in- dustrial nuclei meetings, or any of our united front activities are to talk “Party” and what it stands for, pointing out that the Party is the intator of and furthers these unit- ed front campaigns, which are based on the life needs of the working class, as, for’ instance: A Labor Party, amalgamation, protection of the foreign born, et. Comrades do not necessarily have to go out of their way to talk to these sympa- thizers—they are more or less in contact with them at present in their work. They must see to it that these sympathizers are supplied with literature occasionally, such as the pamphlet, “Why Every Worker Should Be a Communist and Join the Workers Party,” the DAILY WORKER, the*Labor Herald and any other such literature that the comrades may think is appropriate for the particular sympathizer. Af- ter working on the individual or in- dividauls for a short period ot time he is to invite him to a branch meeting, not necessarily his own, where there will be a special speak- tiples of race discrimination was de- syed for more than two and half rears is itself a commentary upon his government tribual. 112 Trainmen Coerced. Evidence presented in the case thowed that subsequent to the sub- nitted to the submission 112 colored wwainmen were individually coerced nto signing an agreement to accept he conditions established by the rail- ‘oad in violation of its agreement with the trainmen. In spite of the tact that they later sent signed state- nents to the board repudiating this igreement as made under coercion, the majority board members took this er who will make a talk on some live current topic, after which a member of the branch will make an appeal for new members. If the sympathizer does not join at that meeting, we must see to it that he is brought to another meeting. We must also make all attempts pos- sible to get the sympathizers to come to“out general mass meetings, and other Party affairs, to instill in him the idea that we are a live, virile organization. 2. Branches must arrange their business so that at least an hour and a half of one of their meetings a month can be devoted to speak- We-feel that with the proper kind of effort our mémber- ship in this district can be doubled by the next National Con- Our Party is now engaged in several united front cam- paigns, the Labor Party Campaign and the Protection of the the sympathizer present that we do business in a businesslike way. To organize. your meetings in this fashion it is necessary to have a real, functioning executive com- mittee, that takes up the lengthy communications and reports to the meeting on the substance of them, and make its recommendati6ns on the action to be taken. The execu- tive committee should also devise ways and means to expedite the routine and technical work so that more time of the meetfags can be devoted-to discussion and action on the real Party problems. The executive committee should check up on-the activities of all the members of the branch and see to it that every member has a function to perform, and that no one mem- ber is so overloaded with work that he cannot do justice to any one of his jobs. . The matter of getting the branch to function properly is very essen- tial because it is a means by which we can retain the new members that join our Party, as well as keep our old members inspired and on the job. The speakers at these meetings must speak in one lan- guage, as we cannot expecte sym- pathizers to come to a meeting at which two-thirds of the time is de- voted to speaking in languages that he cannot understand. This is men- tioned to contrast the present drive with our old drive, where we had meetings addressed in two or more languages. The branch being the basic unit of the Party must see to it that the members of the branch carry out the work assigned to them relative to this campaign by having them make reports as to what they are doing in this drive. The branch must see to it that literature is on hand so that the member can get a supply for this campaign. A very effective piece ot literature for this purpose is the small pamphlet, “Why Every Work- er Should Be a Communist and Join the Workers Party,” above referred to. This pamphlet can a bought at le a copy or $8.00 a thousand, from the Jimmie Higgins Bookstore, 127 University Place, which is the dis- trict literature department. The bookstore has a ‘supply of these pamphlets and also other literature that can be used in this campaign. See to it that your members are supplied with literature as the writ- ten word is one of the most effec- tive ways of convincing sympathiz- ers as to what we stand for and why he should join with us in the struggle. Branches should not engage sepa- rate halls for the open meetings above referred to as every meeting place is large enovgh to accommo- date the sympathizers that will he brought in to thesé meetings. We do not wish to burden the branch with any additional expense, as we know the membership is called upon continuously for financial contribu- tions, branches may, if they desire, have throwaways printed for their propaganda meeting for distribution- This is effective, but not absolutdly essential. a much greater percentage of work- ers that we must reach use the English language than the ratio of English speaking members to for- eign language speaking members in our own party. This will help to build up our English speaking mem- bership- Comrades, we must strive to build a mass party in this country. Our Party is numerically weak, consid- ering the importance industrially, financially and otherwise, of this country, and the millions of workers engaged in the class struggle here. We must put forth special efforts to inaugurate the -above outlined campaign between the period of April ist to July 1st, by which time it ought to be a more or less firmly established institution of the Party and then, continued indefinitely. This is possible because no great efforts are called for insofar as the units of the Party are concerned, Let us show that we are the or- ganization we claim to be—militant, class conscious, organization ~ a Communist party. i$ Every member should get a new member. Forward towards the goal of doubling our membership by the next national convention.—Charles Krumbein, District Organizer, Private Boodle in Hot Rebellion on Taxation Enemies (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, March 21.—Pri- vate wealth in America has started a revolt of its own against contin- ued sacrifices forced upon it during war time. -That is the meaning of the demand for the Mellon tax plan as explained in a booklet by Otto H. Kahn, banker, gent broadcast in the national capitol by the Mellon plan propaganda committee headed by Major General O’Ryan.’ On this committee are numerous university presidents, corporgtion lawyers, pub- lishers, and several ex-ptesidents of the U. S. chamber of commerce, Kahn says that after the war capi- tal came to realize that the justifi- cation for high surtaxes no longer existed: “It came to feel that the maintenance of such taxey Was not due to the needs of the country but to political considerations or te class prejudice oy sectional animosity, and that their continued exaction was something not far removed from economic violence.” It then took steps to escape this taxation. Col- lection of federal taxes on incomes of $300,000 or above, which had been $243,600,000 in 1919, fell to $84,- 800,00 in 1921. Your Union Meeting Fourth Monday, March 24th, 1924 No. Name of Local and Place of Meeting. 14 Boot and Shoe Workers’ Joint Council, 1939 Milwaukee Ave. WORKERS LOCKED OUT IN NORWAY Communist Papers Are Fined for Strike Support By DR. KARL F. M. SANDBERG A general lockout was declared in Kristiania on Feb. 22, by the em- ployers association. It has been di- vided in two sections, the first one comprising the building, textile, to- bacco, tailor, woodworking, furniture, explosive and metal mining industries with some 30,000 men, takes effect at once, the second one, involving workers in the breweries, chocolate factories, electro-chemical industry, Norwegian Hydro, sawmills and the bookbinderies, some 13,700 men, be- comes effective a week later. It is considered a strategical move against the 9,000 striking iron and trans- port workers, who have been out for some time. 9,000 workers in the paper, cellulose and wood pulp in- dustry have declared strike in sym- pathy with those locked out. Of the F. of L.’s 100,000 members 24—30,- 000 only are working, about 70,000 on strike or locked out, Students Becoming Radical. The students of the University of Kristiania have elected a communist president of their society and an executive committee on a communist platform. Some _ studerits having acted as strikebreakers in the trans- port workers’ strike, the society re- solved that none of its members may serve as strikebreakers. Olav Scheflo spoke before the society on Lenin and Leninism, The technical school is located at Trondhjem, Mar- tin Tranmael spoke before the stu- dents society there on “Dictatorship.” He pointed out that engineers sooner or later would have to choose between capitalist dictatorship and proletarian dictatorship. Some farmers from Haus and Fane having worked as strike-breakers, the Bergen Creamery resolved not to ac- cept any more milk from them. Tranmael and Scheflo, respective leaders of the two communist fac- tions, have been found guilty of “praising an outlaw strike” in their papers and sentenced to a fine of 500 kr. each, Cost of Living. The Gold_Custom Law has been passed by the Storting, 96 votes for, 47 against. Customs will now have to be paid in gold. There is no gold in circulation, The Bank of Norway is exempt from redeeming its notes in gold and they are worth less than half. A duty of one crown will mean more than two of paper. The result will be higher duties and higher prices. A general protest was taised against the law. The Bergen Steamship Company will in the near future open a regular line on the Black Sea. The Norge Mexicga Gulf Line in connection with the _Swedish-America-Mexico . Line . _ 91 W. Monroe St. Butchers, Hebrew, 3420 W. Roosevelt Road. 70 Carpenters, 2705 W. 38th St. 80 19 W. Madison St. W. North Ave. 9139 Commercial Av. Carpenters, 505 8. State Bt. Carpenters, 1457 Clybourn Ave, Carpenters, 222 N. West St, Wauke- gan. Carpenters, 2040 W. North Ave. Carpenters, 6654 8. Halsted St. Cigar Markers’ Ex. Bd., 166 W. Wash- ington St., 7:30 m. Coopers’ Joint Ex. , 2525 S, Halsted. ¢ $01 Capitol Bldg. Engineers, 4643 S. Halsted St. Engineers, 311 Mg pos & Engineers, (2. R. Engineers (Loc.), 1 Oilers, 175 W. Wash. Empl.’s Joint E. Bd., 166 W. Washington, 3 p.m. 59 Ladies’ Garment, 328 W. Van Buren St, Moulders Conf. Bd., 119 S. Throop St, Painters, 3316 W. North Ave. Painters, Madison and 5th Ave. inters, 111th a Branches should arrange to take care of this membership drive cam- paign, even to the extent of making arrangements for the speaker when possible, The district office will, cf and supply the speakers where the branch cannot do so itself. 8. The language branches are to course, assfst all that it possibly can ‘imore. Dis. Council, 165 W. 549 Railway Clerks, Madison and Sacra- mento, 695 Railway Clerks, 75th and Drexel. 781 Railway Clerks, 549 W. Washington, 877 Railway Trainmen, 2990 W. Ave., 9:30 a, m, 195 Retail Clerks, Van Buren and Ashland. “| sin, Ladd and Frazier in North Da- and the Swedish line “Trans-Atlantic” will commence monthly sailings be- tween American Gulf harbors and Petrograd. The first boat, “Dela- ware,” will load the: last part of March. Borah May Pinch Hit for Elephant In Coming Election (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, March 23.—Sena- tor Borah’s name is mentioned in connection with the possible revolt in the republican national conven. tion against the nomination of Cal- vin Coolidge. Republicans who will not follow La Follette into a Farm- er-Labor movement, even temporar- ily, and who still shrink from the brand of Daugherty and the oil crowd, are trying to imagine a sit- uation in which ‘the party is to be redeemed when its handpicked dele- gates meet in Cleveland in June, The idea is that Pinchot in Penn- sylvania, Capper in Kansas, Norris in Nebraska, LaFollette in Wiscon- Trachtenberg Tour Monday, March 24, at 8 p, m., Stamford, Conn., Manchester Hall, 487 Main St. Tuesday, March 25, Baltimore, Md., Werk- ingmen’s Hall, 2509 E. Madison St. Thursday, March 27, Philadelphia, Penn., Brith Shoenn Hall, 506 Pine St. Friday, March 28, hester, N._¥., Amal- gamated Clothing W: Open Forum. Saturday, March 29, mton, N.Y. at 7:30 p, m,, Lithuania Hall, 271 Clinton St, Sunday, March 30, at 3 p. m., Utica, N, Yo Labor Temple, 714 Charlotte St. Monday, March 31, Rochester, N. ¥., Hall te be announced later. 2 Tuesday, April 1, at 8 p. m., Buffalo, N.Y. Labor Lyceum, 376 William St. Wednesday, April 2, Jamestown, N. Yo Hall to be announced later. Thursday, April 3, Erie, Penna., Hall to be announced later. Friday, April 4, E. Pittsburg, Penn., Hall to be announced later, Saturday and Sunday, April 5 and 6, Pitts- burg, Penn., Hall to be announced later, Corporations Are Stealing Millions Thru Andy Mellon (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, March 23.—Evi- dence in the hands of Senator Couz- ens which will be laid before his committee investigating wholesale frauds in the Internal Revenue Bu- reau of the Treasury Department shows that millions of dollars have been stolen by big corporations from the government by highway- men methods. Documentary evidence that various corporations owe the government great sums in income taxes which were falsely returned at too low a figure has been stolen from the files of the bureau. Em- ployes of the bureau have been de- liberately bribed to steal this proof from the files. Without the proof the government cannot collect the taxes, which were due years ago and the evidence of which cannot now be collected from original sources, The names and ownership of Tin Plate and other metal cor- porations involved in this fraud and bribery will be established. Scab Railroad Is Panhandling Uncle Sam for Big Sum ST. LOUIS, March 23.—Thé inter- state commerce commission recently certified to the secretary of the treas- ury that the Missouri Pacific railroad was entitled to $13,243,448 in full payment of the gaurantee of earnings, given the roads for the first six months after they went back to pri- vate control. Of this $660,448 re- mains unpaid. The Missouri Pacific is holding out for $2,000,000 more. This the Mis- souri Pacific claims for alleged under- maintenance of the company’s prop- erties during government control. The commerce commission has turned down the claim. This railroad fought the shopmen for two years. Strikebreakers have cost money, but they haven’t delivered the goods. The Missouri Pacific has figured in a number of wrecks since the strike, caused, experienced rail- road men say, by defective equipment. Large verdicts have been awarded in damage suits growing out of wrecks on this road. ’ Barkley-Howell Railway Labor Bill Goes to Bat Soon WASHINGTON, March 23. — Hearing of statements from the railroad labor organizations in be- half of the Barkley-Howell railroad labor bill has been completed by the senate committee on interstate com- merce. The railway com ies will be heard against the bill within a week or two- Chairman Smith and a majority of the committee ap- peared unwilling that the opposition should drag out discussion of this measure, which proposes the reneal of title 3 of the transportation act and the setting up of adjustment boards, mediation boards and arbi- tration boards in transportation with recognition of the nationally organized rail labor unions. Hearings before the house com- kota, and Brookhart in Iowa, will be able to bring so many protesting voices to the convention that the old guard cannot safely nominate its own candidate and will be obliged save it from annihilation, This theory is scouted by the reg- ulars, who maintain ‘that all of the rogressives will be with La Fol- to choose some one like Borah to|the h apa of Great Lakes, 355 N. Cla 16986 Scientific Laboratory Workers, Hall, Room 733, - bs 78 Teade ‘Union ‘Labet 66 Ww. nion 166 We 112. Upholsterers, 175, Washington Se (Note--Unless otherwine stated all meetings ore » Abe Potash Dies. NEW YORK, March 23.—Barney Rernard, who originated the role of Abe Potash in the “Potash and Perl- mutter” series of Hebrew comedies, Sev cla night from bronchial pneu- monia. apply the above plan, making what- ever modifications are necessary and see to it that their district committees and central committees give them ‘full co-operation, ag well as supply the speakers of the par- ticular language where the branch cannot ety: of one itself, Where there are two or more branches of a particular language in a given locality it may be wise to-arrange for the monthly propa- nda meeting in only one branch, all of the prospective members lette anyhow, and that the regulars will refuse to be stampeded into a surrender of the organization. They may be beaten at the polls in No- vember but they will retain intact the machinery to protect their posi- tion for the future, as against Borah, Pinchot, and all other semi- progressives, Communists Leave — Hall in Protest At Scheidemann ‘echnicality as an excuse for refyis-| ing, questions and a general discus- ng to right a clear cut wrong against| sion. The time of this meeting heir own decision, the transporta-|should be definitely established. ion act and the constitution itself. |Either the first meeting of the _|month, the last meeting of the Cement Finishers To Strike. month, or any other meeting of the EAST ST. LOUIS, March 2 ‘ix|month that the branch wishes to set ndred union cement finishe here | aside for this se. This is the strike April 1, unless an increase | meeting to which the sympathizers »f 10 cents an hour in wages, from|will be brought as above referred 10 cents to 80 cents an hour, is|to. The taking up of some business ted. Cement finishers in St.|at this meeting is desirable, provid ais, across the river, have just won|ed it is handled in a snappy, busi- 1 scale of $1,50 an hour. nesslike fashion, This will show toa: mittee have been requested, but will probably be refused by Chairman Winslow. In that event the friends of the bill will circulate the petition for discharge of the committee, made yossible by the new rules of iouse. This cannot be done until 30 days after introduction of the bill, or until March 30. Big Communist Vote In Czechoslovakia: Elect Nine Deputies ROSICE, Czechoslovakia, March 28. —Results of in Ruthenia show that the Communist arp received 100,000 of the to- tal 250,000 votes cast. Of nine deputies thus elected to parliament the jial- penonere! eats Trudova vie ungarian Na‘ parties eac have one, while the Communists have five. The Communists will also send A LAUGH FOR THE CHILDREN "T founda pat all right !" UNCLE WIGGILY’S TRICKS Philipp Scheidemann, who loyally supported his kaiser during the war and who, with President Whbert, is largely credited with having prevent- ed Germany from becoming a work- ers’ state after the revolution, is chief mayor of Cassel. Cassel was chosen the convention city this year for German Metal Workers’ Laver the largest single union in the world. Scheidemann, as mayor, arose on the first day of the convention to ex- tend the Srectings of the city to the metal workers. Thereupon the Com- munists, who number a little more than one-third of the entire member- , Tele hades ck hee CASSEL, Germany, March 22.—| the two representatives of Ruthenia into Ri riparia n autonomous province ui iS al of Czechoslovakia, possessing a bie ranian culture. Situated among foothills of the Carpathians, this ter- ing the Hungarian Commi i Narest the influence of i % the lingering feudal des- Ruthenia has remained in the hands bsen: Monday, March 24, 1924 SOCIALIST PARTY IN OKLAHOMA HAS SIX MEMBERS Workers and Farmers Prepare for Action By DAVID COBB. (Special to The Daily Worker) OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., March 21,—A few years ago, the State So- cialist convention of Oklahoma was a big event. Several hundred dele- gates from all over the state at- tended. There was life, there Fev rec there was enthusiasm, en. But in 1916, the party began to dwindle, and gradually lost in mem- bership, till in 1921, the dues-paying members had fallen far below the required number to retain a charter, and for that reason Otto Branstetter, the National Secretary revoked the state charter. In 1922, the National Secretary called a state convention to assemble on April 9, in Oklahoma City for the purpose of reorganizing the party. In response to this call fifty-six dele- gates met, paid their dues and re- organized the party. We started out on the political campaign. But the old comrades who had formerly furnished the finance necessary to carry on.a campaign failed to render any substantial assistance in any way. Our vote ‘had dwindled to five thousand in the state. In 1914, be- fore woman suffrage, we cast fifty- two thousand votes. We said then Oklahoma will be-the first state in the Socialist column. Again late in 1922, E. H. H. Gates assembled a part of the Socialist Local of Oklahoma City together and over the protest of the State Execu- tive committee called a state wide convention in Oklahoma City for the last of December. The convention which met pursuant to this call was composed of something like fifteen qualified delegates. Another Social- ist convention of Oklahoma, met again on March 9, of this year, with exactly six paid-up dues paying mem- bers. Four of these were from the city, two from the country, and three out of the city were from one family. Truly it may be said, “How the Mighty Has Fallen.” It is a joke pure and simple, every- one knows there is no such thing as a Socialist party in Oklahoma. The time was never riper, the psy- chology of the farmers and laborers never better to organize @ real class farmer-labor party, than now. The Socialists have lost faith in doing any- thing thru the old Socialist party. The entire group composed of So- cialists, progressive Democrats and Republicans who attempted to work thru the Democrat party are dis- satisfied with results, and have lost faith in the idea that they can effect- ually use to their benefit the Demo- erat machinery. I say the entire group, but I must make one excep- ome the professional politician in the ranks. Heretofore the law has prohibited a farmer-labor party as such in this state. This defect has been cured by the passage, on March 15, of a bill which will recognize a Farmer-Labor party as a legal political party, and the names of their candidate can now be printed on the official ballot. ‘ Such a party will be organized in a very short time and you may look for big things from Oklahoma. SSSSSSSSTESLEESESESE LS SLIP COVERS Including Labor and Material Davenport - - $9.50 Chair - - - - $5.50 Satisfaction Absolutely Guaranteed Also a wonderful selection of ‘imported Coverings at a tre- medous reduction due to our wide experience in the ing of Covers, enabling us to give you superior quality, Save 30%’ on your Automobile covers. Order direct from— ¥ GOLLIN BROS. Formerly With Mandel Bros, UPHOLSTERING , done in your own home very reasonable. f 6006 SO. KOMENSKY AVE, ____Call REPUPLIC 3788 ESANAKAK ANNAN IN INS “SAVE MONEY! - Make Sewing Machines $10, $15, $20 5 year guarantee--City wide delivery 970 MILWAUKEE AVENUE Phone Monroe 4630 PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK. . 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