The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 3, 1927, Page 2

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emer nye cet MELLON'S GANG ‘Australian Unions: FRAMING ANEW Boycott American TAX SWINDLE Open Shop Concern Will Exempt Rich and) cuicaco (FP)—the voice of| i bor made itself heard in Burden the Rest Australian labor made itself heard ir THEY DATCY WORKER; NEW" YORK; PRUDAY:. TUNE. heer. SHOE WORKERS IN LONG FIGHT FOR REAL UNION Brooklyn Bosses Bitter | the office of the Chicago Flexible Enemies of Labor (By ‘a Staff Correspondent.) Shaft Co., manufacturers of sheep Lies ian WASHINGTON, June 2.—It is still /Shearing apparatus, when the con-/ nd again the shoe workers months before Congress con-|°e™n’s metal polishers and grinders 9? yn have been fooled by vari- but in order that they may rest | Went out on strike. A 10 per cent| nds of labor fakers starting y this suramer and enjoy to the; V@8¢ Talse over the old $1 an hour| unions, getting control of unions utmost their trips and | Tate hed beon refused by the com-/already im existence. There have yacht junkets, adm on leaders|Pany though the other 60 Chicago|neen so many unions and so many are letting “the big boys shops where Local 6 of the metal) raijures in contests with the bosses all will be well in t matter of .|Polishers he agreements readily granted it that a widespread pessimism afflicts ting down on the : Y .,.|the shoe workers. Many of them From various Adm y began to fear for its! think ther no use joining a union there have em £1 tae n market when it re-|hecause have lost hope of gain- the “higher brackets” would e | ceived the following telegram from B.! ine anything thereby tax slashes, but in the past th Cc. Grayndler, general secretary, attitude is easily understood all been more or less not for Autralian Workers’ Union. in view of the history of the shoe quotation. “Avoid Dissension.” | workers, but it is suicidal to accept Tax Program for Rich. “Understand dispute your employes|it. Agaiast almost overwhelming Now co: ,/and your company.. Members of|odds the past two years a group of private life Secre Mellon’s attorney and °. sury . Tres Australian Workers’ Union use these | determined in public capac-| goods throughout Australia. Desire) gether ity his alibi man and personal agent | avoid dissension and therefore strong- | Worke workers have held to- ngthened the Shoe tive Union, until it is and Beate rotec on the Senate floor in such matters as|!y urge your company meet repre-|a influence in Brooklyn and New tax cutting and “explaining” the| sentatives of the Chicago Federation | Yor wholesale vote corruption ‘n Mellon’s|of Labor with view to amicable adjust-| ularly instructive is the his- home-state, Penr ia, with frank pronouncement of what it is hoped the Administration can put through next session. secure a senatorial nomination, the remaining inheritance taxes, reduce by about $200,000,000 the corporation | tax and cut to about 10 percent the} surtaxes that the rich pay. hopes to be able to repeal some of the so-called “nuisance taxes,” but only those effecting the rich, such as| club dues and high admission fees. Rob the Small Fry. In simple language Senator Reed, who next to Senator Smoot of Utah, chairman of the senate finance com- mittee, is the most important Admin- istration member on that all-impor-| tant committee, proposes to give those of incomes above $20,000 a huge re-| duction in taxes, The purpose is two-| fold, first to place the burden of in-| come taxation on the small producer | and secondly to prepare the field for a wholesale “shake-down” of the rich} for the 1928 campaign. Reed would say nothing about the “shake-down” for the 1928 political fight, but he very frankly declared | that it was time that the rich “were! iven tax relief.” | ion there ought to be no| reduction of the rates on small in-| comes,” Reed remarked, “the exemp-| tion e high enough and there seems | né necessity for further reductions in| the rates or increase in the exceptions. | The vates on incomes from $30,000 to $75,000 are out of proportion with the! rates on other incomes. This class| has only been brought down about 10 per cent since 1919. The rate on such| incomes is too high and ought to be| readjusted. Class Argument. | “American business would be aided in a reduction in the surtaxes. Money goihg to the government in taxes ought to be released for trade and business ventures. I favor a radica! reduction in the surtaxes with the maximum at 10 per cent. I am also in favor of repeal of the inheritance taxes.” This naive reasoning, according to Senator Reed, applies only to the) wealthy. That the man of small in-| come might use his taxes for “busi-| ness and trade ventures,” does not fol- low, according to Senator Reed.! Therefore only the rich will have their | taxes reduced, | Standing between the reactionary | republican administration and its plan to give the rich g,luscious tax remittance will be the Meniccats, for the most part equally reactionary and | anxious for big campaign contribu-| tions and the progressives who will be| the balance of power. They have no hope for big campaign funds, but they | are with only one or two exceptions, | incompetent to make a strenuous op-| position fight or ignorant of the fun- damental issues. Want Campaign Graft. As a matter of fact as it now ap-/ pears, Reed’s program, which is that! of Mellon’s and Coolidge’s, is most likely to get through. Both sides are| hungry for campaign handouts and| the Progressives have neither the guts/| nor the desire to make the fight nec- essary to prevent, the boodle. They| will utter a few complaints during the | session and then return to their baili-| wicks and make strenuous campaigns | about their heroic efforts in Washing- | ton against the “old party bosses.” | The budget meeting which will be! held June 13 is expected to disclose | that the Treasury expects a surplus next year of over $300,000,000. It is; the Administration’s plan to return| this amount in taxes to those of “the higher _ bracket” $20,000 and upward: | incomes — from | Rescue 5 in Fire. a/ment of wages and settlement of con-| to ditions.” Grayndler is a member of the Aus-|employers, who hoped thereby to pre-| According to|tralian industrial mission now in the|yent a real union springing up. Senator Reed, who thinks it perfectly | United States trying to discover the| all right to spend some $3,000,000 to| secret of American industrial supre-| He wired from Washington) republicans proposed to abolish the|and will be in Chicago to talk turkey June 19 jf his wire is not sufficient. Gen. Mgr. W. M. McArdle of the com- pany has stated to the union that he) He also| intends to run the Chicago Flexible macy. Shaft Co. open shop. Needle Trade Defense | Coney Island Stadium Concert Tickets Ready. The Coney Island Stadium Concert | arranged by the Joint Defense & Re- lief Committee for July 16, will be : |the biggest affair this summer. Over | organized + 30,000 people are expected to fill the} / large Stadium. The program will be | the best that was ever held in any 'y of the betrayal of the shoe work- ers by a fake union organized by the Busting Up the “United.” Tn 1919 the Shoe Workers of Brook- lyn, with the exception of the Good- year operators were organized in the United Shoe Workers of America, about 11,000 strong. The Goodyear operators were organ- ized in an independent organization | which had catered to the shoe manu- |facturers for the past 20 years by jusing their power to keep the lasters and other shoe workers unorganized, even going to the extent of striking against lasters and refusing to stitch their shoes when they would join a union, In 1919 the manufacturers forced a strike on the “United,” and with the “Goodyear Operators” as a nucleus, union to break the strike. The Bosses’ Fake Union. This union was called the Amer- ican Shoe Workers’ Protective Union. open air concert. The New York |This name was adopted for the pur- Symphony Orchestra, consisting of 100 men, is already engaged. Nego- tiations are being made with a World Famous Ballet. singers and dancers,- In view of the fact that a big rush for tickets is ex- pected, the Joint Defense Committee | will distribute tickets in various sta-| tions so that no one will be compelled |? | to experience the inconvenience of | wajting ip line. Tickets are priced at | $1.00 and reserved seats $2.00. They can be gotten at the follow- ing stations: Joint Defense & Relief Com., Freiheit, Board and Fufriers Joint Board. Get | your tickets immediately. Do not wait | for the last moment. Holiday Collections There will be noted Cloakmakers Joint jpose of fooling the Haverhill Shoe | Workers who were organized 100% in the Shoe Workers’ Protective |Union. In this they were partially successful as when they went to that city for strike-breakers they made |some of them think that it was a art of their own union. i The American Union controlled the |workers from that time on in the |factories of the manufacturers’ asso+ ciation. There were many attempts |to organize the shoe workers into }bona fide unions but they all failed until 1924, when three locals here who had been in the Amalgamated {joined the Shoe Workers’ Protective |Union. The “Protective” was the On Decoration Day, when thousands \first organization that was ever suc- |of workers were out in the various |camps and summer resorts, some of |them did not forget the struggle of |the cloakmakers and furriers and j | made it their business to do some- thing for the prisoners on their vaca- At Camp Nitgedaiget, a com- tion. mittee put up a radio set which was sold for $50.00. the Joint Defense Committee, situated near Camp Nitgedaiget. collection amounted to $33.80. * * * St. Paul, Minn. Again We received a check for $50.00 from St. Paul, Minn., which was collected at the Ladies Auxiliary of the Work- men’s Circle. This is the second do- nation of $50.00 from the St. Paul or- ganization. They also write that they will make good their pledge of $100.00 | more this week, * * * Brownsville Mass Meeting Tonight. There will be a mass meeting at 63 Liberty Ave., Brooklyn, Friday, June Srd. The meeting is arranged by the Brownsville Non-Partisan Workers’ Club, and is being held in behalf of the imprisoned cloakmakers and fur- riers. Prominent speakers of the needle trades will be present. All workers of Brownsville are urged to attend. “ + * In Elizabeth, N. J. The Elizabeth workers will have an opportunity to get acquainted with the present situation in the needle trades |at a mass meeting which will be held tonight at the Labor Lyceum, 515 Court St., Elizabeth, N. J. Prom- inent speakers from New York will address the meeting. The Jewish Workers’ Club will sing proletarian songs. Sam Liptzin (Uncle Sam) will read some of his famous storis There will also be other entertainers. Comrade Losoff of was present at “Camp Freilach,” which is He made an appeal in behalf of the; Cloakmakers and Furriers and the cessful in winning a strike against the scabbery of the “American”. One of the first strikes which the “Protective” ever had, the “Amer- ican”, immediately through their president, James A. Grady, signed up with the firm (Zwier & Grossman) and tried to fill the shop with scabs. The “Protective” from that time on has made steady progress up to this |time, having organized about two thousand workers in the trade and having agreements with some thirty manufacturers. | Up to 1923, the manufacturers had }complete control of the American | Union, an attorney sitting in every meeting of their Council to advise and steer them. At this period their funds were under the control of the manufacturers as it required the sig- nature of one of the manufacturers jon the checks to draw on their, ac- | eount. About this time many shoe work- jers who had formerly refused to join the organization sent in applica- tions and became members for the purpose of trying to wrest the union from the manufacturers. This con- tinued until last fall, 1925 when the militants had become so strong that they had the same difficulty in puttine over their agreement. The agreement of a year ago last No- vember was the worse that had ever been signed, taking away every right that the workers ever had, causing many revolts to take place which convinced the manufacturers that the members could no longer be con- trolled and that they must rid thé union of the militants. The Miller Strike. The fight was started by I. Miller and Sons discharging fourteen work- ers, including officers and board members of the fitters’ union. This ‘caused a walk-out of the entire crew (of about 1100, Miller told Grady, | The proceeds of this meeting will go|the General President 02 the Amer- \for the defense of the imprisoned ijcan: Union, at that time, that if he jcloakmakers and furriers. All Eliza- would throw seven delegates out of Three women, a man:and a baby| beth workers are urged to come to! the Council they could do business, were rescued by firemen and police-| men from the upper floors of 7406 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn yesterday | explosion in a drugstore on the ground floor of the building. OF 1927 $1 Postpaid Red Cartoons Of 1926 Now 50 CENTS j{} this meeting. Wales Wandering Once More LONDON, June 2.—From Unoffi- cial sources it was learned today that the Prince of Wales hopes to leave England for Canada on July 2, re- maining in Ottawa as tho guest of the Canadian government for a few days before leaving for his ranch near Cal- gary. The prince expects to be ab- sent about two months, It is not yet decided as to whether he will return through the United States. |Grady immediately called a special meeting of the Council and succeeded in having them expel the seven dele- gates, although they had no right to do it, as these delegates were elected by their locals and only the locals could recall them. When he reported to Miller he was told that that was |not enough, that they must throw out the fitters and lasters (meaning the fighters in those two locals, as most of the militants were in these | Jocals). 4 | | | | | | | | Grady to do. The result was that |a general strike was advocated by | Grady who had’ always held them from a strike in times when there |was a chance of winning. | Sabotaged the Strike. | This strike was never intended to |be won, and we have every reason |to believe was a frame-up between the reactionary officials of the union and the manufacturers. The strike |was declared about ten weeks before |the season would open with the idea in view that after a few weeks under these conditions they would be will- ing to sign up under any conditions. The strike had not been on three days when Grady and other officials were | trying to send back whole depart- | ments and crews on the quiet and in }many instances were successful. At | the same time the agents of the reac- |tionaries were holding meetings with | the manufacturers at which it was |proposed that they make an agree- {ment with the American Union cov- jering four locals which would leave | out the fitters and lasters. This | would leave the manufacturers free |to hire whom they wanted in those |departments. In that manner they | would eliminate the fighters. Then \the officials of the union would prob- | ably call their attention to the agree- | ment calling for all employes to be |members of the American Union and | would be told to go ahead and organ- \ize them. They would then have had | practically the same conditions as in } 1919. The plans did not work out. It is |true that the strike was lost but in- |stead of eliminating the fighters, |only the fighters remained. | Reaction Defeated. After the strike was declared off there was an election held on July 9th, in which Chester W. Bixby and |Thomas J. Flood were elected gen- | eral president and general secretary \respectively,on the issue of amalga- |mating with the Shoe Workers’ Pro- |tective Union. These officials took \their offices with the understanding |that no wages would be paid for the |purpose of clearing up the affairs of the union and uniting them with the Shoe Workers’ Protective Union. | Immediately after the election there |was a meeting held in the office of |Franklin C. Haven, between him and ‘Reilly and Donovan, ex-agents of the {Goodyear operators and the finish- ‘ers and packers locals, ex-president |Grady and William Ahearn, at which Haven suggested that they see the manufacturers as he stated that they had been calling him up for several days to see if he could not help them to get another manufacturers’ union. Franklin C. Haven is the at- jtorney who secured the charter in 1919 for the “American” union and |who for about four-years attended all the council meetings and advised for the manufacturers. Since then an attempt has been made by these reactionary leaders to form what they call the Greater New York Shoe Workers’ Union and they have al- ready got a charter from the state. Consolidate Two Organizations. There has been an agreement en- |tered into between the Shoe Work- ers’ Protective Union and the “Amer- ican” Union under the new adminis- tration to have the membership of the American transferred into the “Protective” and the members of the “Protective” to organize an associa- tion for the purpose of owning prop- lerty to be incorporated and then this corporation and the American Union which is incorporated, to merge to- gether under the name, charter and by-laws of the new corporation. Al- ready we have transferred several organized shops over to the “Protec- tive’. These shops were organized and had independent argreements as they were not in the Manufacturers’ Association, but we eannot finish the work of clearing up the situation and establishing one organization of shoe workers in this district unless we can raise the money necessary to square the bills which we inherited from the old administration. Defeated Renegades. After being defeated and discred- | SENORA CALLES IS COMFORTED | \Gonsti! Wha Had the Alicia Calles is shown comforting her mother, Senora Natalia | Calles, wife of President Calles of Mexico, in a Los Angeles hospital, where the “‘first lady of Mexico” came for an operation, the employer with the assistance of the bosses’ lawyer, Franklin . C. Haven, tried to use the old headquar- ters of the American union to reor- ganize the thing and sign agreements with the employers so they could oust the “Protective”. Even in this they failed because they are so utterly dis-| credited among shoe workers that no| one would join the scabby outfit. Progress Being Made. | The local organization, District |Council No. 2 of the Shoe Workers’ Protective Union, is making headway against almost insurmountable ob- stacles. If the national office at Boston would rénder the assistance necessary the shoe industry could be organized in a very short time and a real fight waged against the horde of petty bosses who try to make slaves of their workers. All shoe workers should get into this organization in order to estab- lish and maintain decent conditions for themselves and get a wage suffi- cient to enable them to support their | families. | CURRENT EVENTS (Continued from Page One) right as human beings, the christians take out their poison gases and their bibles and attempt to wipe them*off the face of the earth. | . 4 * pee of Egyptians, you will no- tice that when the Egyptian par- Nament voted to transfer the func- tions now discharged by the Sirdar,| or British commander-in-chief to the Minister of War, the British gov- jernment sent three warships to “im- press” the parliament. Sir Austen Chamberlain, the hero of Locarno (where the dove of peace was let | loose!) speaking in the house of com- mons on the question declared that Britain was morally responsible for the protection of foreigners. Com- ment on this typical piece of imper-| ialist hypocrisy would be like carry-| ing filth to a sewer. ° * * | Tease has been a gratifying re- sponse to our appeal for funds to save The DAILY WORKER. The financial crisis was complicated by the conviction and imprisonment of our editor, William F, Dunne and business manager Miller. But strange to say———or is it?—our readers and particularly the members of the Par- ty, instead of losing heart, getting discouraged or becoming philosophers of despair and dovbt, went to their pocket books and sent us dollars. As O. Henry had it, in one of his de- lightful stories of delightful seoun- drels, describing two confidence men in a barroom: “They cursed furious- ly and threw down dollars.” ° * * | UT our benefactors cursed at the enemy and not at us. This morn- ing I opened a letter addressed to me personally and saw an artistic piece of green paper peeping out. It bore the legend: $7.50, and the letter ran quite modestly: “Excuse the familiar- ity, but I have come to know you quite intimately thru your column. . . We have just emerged from a dis- astrous strike. . In the meantime, heads up! The game is breaking our way in the East and the birth of a new social order is visible on the hori- zon.” This is the way Frank Brodman answered our call. This is the kind of language we like to hear. It is double barreled. It shuts up the printers and it gives the cepitalists to understand that even tho we are standing on our ears financially, we will get on our feet again—with the aid of comrades like Frank Brodman. * * * HILE it is true that we have stalled off the printers for the Goes Into Business: |not permit their names to be used, Goods on Kellogg | WASHINGTON, June 2 (FP).— Lawrence Dennis, former consul in Nicaragua, has resigned from the United States foreign service to go into business in New York. He says | he will make more money in private life. | The general commentary among those connected with official Wash- ington life is that the ex-consul is very likely correct. And it is con- sidered extremely probable that he will find, in his private life, every effort made by certain public men connected with foreign affairs of the United States to aid and assist him to the limit. Had The Drop On Kellogg. The point is, that Dennis created a hullabuloo in Kellogg’s office not so very long ago, by suddenly leaving his post in Nicaragua and sailing for the good old U. S. A., preceded by a warning that he had in his possession letters showing Kellogg directly in- volved in the internal affairs of Nica- ragua. The latter is now a mere pro- tectorate of the U. S., but then it was an independent .country, with which Kellogg kept up a pretense of friend- ship. The documents Dennis had are said to have shown Kellogg in the act of creating a conservative reac- tionary revolt against the liberal con- stituted authorities. Nervous Nell Sickens. | When he neared Washington, Kel- logg became very sick, and went off on a vacation. Somebody else talked | to Dennis, and now he is “going into business,” without anything more heard of the documents. Dennis, before his decision to be| silent, said quite a lot also about the| favoritism in the U. S. consular serv- ice. In fact, he published a letter on it. Promoting The Rich. | that consular officers were kept in| low-paid and dangerous posts in the “mosquito belt” and in other difficult places, while younger men who had money. and social pull were sent to European capitals to live a gay and idle life among tearooms and dance parlors. These “career men” of the! diplomatic branch were pietured, by Dennis and by other consuls who did as being slavishly devoted to British models in manner, speech and dress; and with being greedy for big salaries and no work. Crisis Over. : When the Dennis letter was quoted in the press, Undersecretary Grew— in the absence of Kellogg—issued a brief ‘but placatory statement in which he said that Dennis’ letter had included many suggestions which might prove valuable, and that the department would be glad to con- sider and act upon them where pos- sible. Now that a good business berth has received Dennis, the crisis for the the “career men” in the diplomatic branch is over until congress shall see fit to investigate the charge that an oligarchy in the department is ignor- ing the Rogers law which placed the diplomatic and consular officers on an equal footing as regards promotion and pay. | Sacco and Vanzetti | (Continued from Page Une) | the author of numerous works of fic- tion. He is a very conservative Re- publican politician who assumes the old New England tradition of litera- ture and culture. Lowell is also a conservative, with decrees from most of the leading world universities, a commander of the French Legion of Honor and of the Belgian Order of the Crown, presi- dent of the League to Enforce Peace and author of many books of Ameri- can law and politics. He is a Back Bay conservative of the first water. Stratton was director of the United States Bureau of Standards at Wash- ington from 1901 to 1923, when he be- came president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, closely re- lated to Harvard University. He was in naval service from 1895 to 1912. As a physicist he carries degrees from many of the world’s leading scientific institutes. . | Duchess Appeals | An appeal was received today from the Duchess of Warwick, the British labor peer, for a reviewing commis- Workers of Newton Abbott, England asked the-liberation of Sac- eo and Vanzetti and 800 students of Smith College, a woman's college at Northampton, Mass., home of Calvin Coolidge, appealed for {ustice in the case, The Belfast, Ireland, Central Inde- pendent Labor Party vehemently con- demned the unjust verdict and urges the governor to veto the wanton sen-| tences. week the emergency is not over. To lose The DAILY WORKER now would be a calamity and one week follows the next with monotonous regularity. And printers are just as human one week as another. We want to put The DAILY WORKER on ao sound financial footing, as efficiently as this can be done under the present This was impossible for ited these renegades and agents of ' system. So comrades step in and help. The COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL 10 cents a copy—$2.00 a year 7 cents in bundle lote. “KINGS” SCHEME MEXICAN REVOLT Rebels Admit Aid From U. S. “Organizations” WASHINGTON, June 2.—That American business men are plotting the overthrow of the Calles Govern- ment in Mexico and that they are re- ceiving the unqualified support of the State Department was clearly indi- cated today with the publication of a manifesto by Rene Capastran Gurza, notorious rebel, and disclosures made in a Mexican presidential decree for- ‘bidding any department of the Mexi- can Government to purchase goods in | the United States. Tn announcing the failure of his re- bellion, Gurza declares that “funds which were to have been forthcoming from an American organization have not been furnished.” known that certain religious organi- zations and more especially certain oil barons have been planning to subsi- dize a revolt against the Calles Gov- ernment. It has long been That the State Department has been lending its support to these plans is clearly brought out by its refusal to permit the sale of American arms and munitions to the Mexican Govern- ment which needed them to suppress “religious” revolts supported and sub- sidized by American oil interests, po- litical observers in close touch with the situation state. The State De- partment has also refused to permit the Mexican Government to import 8 commercial airplanes, it was learned. Mexican Government Boycotts U. S. Pointing out the serious injuries to Mexico’ resulting from the policy of the State Department, President Calles issued the following decree Monday: In view of the fact that the Gov- The issue raised by Dennis was| ernment of the United States of Amer- ica has established a systematic em- bargo on merchandise acquired by various dependencies of the Federal Government, a procedure whereby serious injuries are caused in the ad- ministrative conduct of said depend- encies, since even now many of the articles already bought have not been received, the Executive in my name has decided to direct, in order to avoid the inconvenience caused by this un- | Justified delay, that from the date of the present decree all departments of State and administrative departments abstain absolutely from purchasing directly or indirectly in the said coun- try furniture, machinery, articles of consumption and articles in general intended for the administration of the public services and that such pur- chases be made in all cases from com- mercial firms established within the national territory. For this purpose the Department of Foreign Relations will immediately issue definite orders to the Embassy and Consulates of the republic in the United States so that they may on no account make payment in contraven- tion of the orders herein contained, and the Department of Finance and Public Credit will issue orders in the same sense to the financial agency of Mexico in New York. Given in the National Palace, May 30, 1927. The President of the Republic. PLUTARCO ELIAS CALLES. May Expect Reprieve Government Lets Ley, Cantonment © Builders, Slip Out of Charges SPRINGFIELD, Mass., June 2. — Suit for five million dollars, the out- come of charges of irrégularities in connection with the construction dur- ing the war of Camp Devens, has been dropped, Fred T. Ley and Company, general contractors, of this city, were notified today by United States At- torney Frederick H. Tarr. Government agents charged mis- use and waste of materials, excessive use of unskilled labor and twenty- eight other complaints i graft.. This was one of several suits filed against various contractors who erected the army cantonment but it was not known here whether the oth- er suits had been discontinued, in White Rock Mts. WINGDALE, N. Y. All conveniences; all sports; hiking; fishing; swim- ming; Sancisig amusements, ay racy t ML y Unit House, and tive House, 1 Xvonu New York City, N. Y. RUE rriday at 6 Pode, Bhtcre every Taaye at 1 PM,”

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