The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 24, 1928, Page 4

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Cage Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1928 ———__— THOUSANDS JAM HILLS, VALLEY AT GREAT MEET Denounce Corruption; Hail New Union IN Continued from Page One ‘olden Roads Paved By Mine Slaves We're away at last. Wide awake ofce more.” .Then an old timer spoke, “It is like the old days, the old spirit ill alive.” The crow led the large dance ~~ - mit a a pavillion and spilled out on all sides Charley Shultz, of Edgemont stood on a table proposed that the Gravel in the above road at Cripple Creek, Colo., assays from $500 to $1,000 to the mile. The road is built out of the waste which and the toil of the miners has drawn from the mines. whole crowd uld move out to a i valley nearby, “Where the crowd anit" hie ool Se) 14 PA NESE SPEED PLOTS speakers speak belov “Atta boy Charley!” And with laughter and cheers the crowd gathered up chairs and tables and walked to the new site. At 2.30 the valley and hills were covered with about 2,000 men and TO ENSLAVE MONGOLIA A. By ANDREWS 2,000,000 roubles to the Outer Mon- 5 Solian government.” Then follows ave SHANGHAI (By Mail).—Ne : women and still they came. baie eas indicates the inten. | {He allegation that “Moscow is man- Russell Smith of Edgemont opened | from \ sfaay ulna ete to Ufacturing and spreading rumors to the meeting with these words: tion of the Japanese government 0 | 11, céract that Japanese nationals “This meeting is called to protest| proceed with all possible haste in) 1 Cuect. What 1 Blot! against: «hs against a alleged-to-be accepted Se ce soe coon OIE (Chinese) authorities Har- agreement. : ene bin.” is ro} A Harbin dispatch reports that Pi.” In this sort of propaganda Then he called on Charley Shultz as the first speaker. Shultz, a very forceful speaker, brought the crowd up cheering as he told the story of falsehood and betrayal by the fakers in their latest move. “First of all,” Shultz charged, “Fishwick claimed all that he wanted was a free hand they are abetted by such British im- for this purpose a special company et ie is to be established by the Japanese government with an initial capital of 3,000,000 yen ($1,500,000 gold). Its object in particular will be the exploitation of the mineral and for- estry resources of that vast terri- perialist papers as “North China News.” This daily makes a practice of printing scores of articles in each issue covering conditions in various parts of the country, the articles being headed: “From a correspon- Shanghai fee Fevis so that Tilinois cowld|tory. The company will bea sub-| at» Another device is thar of Bev cp @ scale on a tonnage basis|sidiary of the South-Manchuria | icring that a “traveler” states for the loading machine. And when| Railway Administration, which is | oCSnn glint: The names of such con- tributors are not given so there is no way of determining how much of such news is actually sent in to them and how much is fabricated in |the editorial office. In any case |these articles reveal the policy of the interests which the newspaper represents and are therefore sig- nificant. itself the official organ of Japan- ese imperialism in the gradual ab- sorption of Manchuria. This Mon- golian scheme will thus be a direct agency for the further extension of Japanese political influence in north- ern Asia, Such aggressive activi- ties on the part of Japan are doubly significant in that they are bound to create further causes for conflict with the Soviet Union and inesmuch sh senile, q 8 Siberia lies just to the north and Rice aviliams, of Collinsville, 4|tho U. 8..S, R. has «vital interes ae then MW: A in the independence of the Soviet 1.200 stool pigeons on the payroll of the United Mine Workers. The Lewis gave him this free hand they brought forth an agreement that had no scale for machine but a huge wage cut fcr all lines of work.” “Fishwick,” Shultz continued “promised to stand by the Jackson- ville agreement ‘until hell froze oyer’” “Well,” said Shultz, “hell must have frozen over and on a damn hot day too.” ‘ In this connection it is interest- “Union” of Stool Pigeons. is in ing to note that this organ of British imperialism stands unreservedly |back of Japanese imperialism in the Republic of Inher’ Mongolia. |latter’s hostile attitude towards the government of the | revolutionary Attack on U. S. R, When a party of in- | Soviet Union. union is completely corrupt. I am am old timer but I am ready to do my bit. Against arbitration! Against crooks! For a new fight- ing union! will take a rebellion T am rea: Bradshaw of Oak Hill Mine spoke next: “The new policy of Lewis is ‘the operators must make money tho the miners starve!’ All the of- ficials want is the check-off. Ar- bitration means slavery.” Frank Sebeert, of Belleville: “Thirty years in the U. M. W. but now I am ready to smash it and tid ourselves of its fake leaders.” Ike Walker, president of a Dv Quoin local, another one of the old fighters, not yet recovered from a severe beating given him by three officials of his sub-district, read 2 letter he received this morning stat- ing, “Get the men back to work at once or you will not be able to walk when we get thru with you.” Well. Walker appealed for united action to clean out all fakers! All for New Union. One after another miners, young and old, rose and added their words against the fakers and for a new union. Their names read like an honor roll of the fighters in the movement. James Rielly of Spring- field, Alex Vaughn of E. St. Louis Pete Mareno of Collinsville, Baum- gartner of French Village, Wilson of Springfield and many others. Then came the motions and reso- lutions. A resolution condemning Nesbit, for investing $150,000 of miners’ money in scab mines in West Virginia, was passed unanimously. A resolution against payment of dues to the Fishwick administration was opposed only by six hands. The resolution calling for spreading of the strike was passed unanimously with a great roar of approval. Then the business of electing committees organizing for the auto caravan, ete., was quickly disposed of. All this time Freeman Thompson, Dan Slinger, George Voyzey, Luke Coffey and other leaders of the Na tional Miners’ Union, were silent The local boys wanted to show that they could organize the fight against the machine and they did it and did it well. All thru the meeting calls for Thompson and Slinger were heard but now the crowd would no longer be denied. Old Fighter Against Fakers. And to a mighty swell of ap- proval Thompson mounted the table that served as the platform. Thomp- son is an old campaigner. He has _ fought crooks and corruptioa in Illinois Miners Union for years. At times he fought a lone hand, at other times he had mass support but sel: | dom did he get such a welcome as) » he received from that great crowd) | gathered on the hillsides at Bellevue ’ Park today. The miners knew what ‘| they wanted. They wanted a mil- , itant fighting union of the rank and . file. And where can be found a man better fitted to typify such a union than Freeman Thompson! 1 Sodden and be-fuddled minds and ] overfed bodies have come to repre- 1 sent in the minds of the minerg that corruption and class collaboration) that is identified with the Lewis- Fishwick type of misleader. Here, before them, was its very opposite, the keen flashing mind, the tall wiry » the fighting face—there he the fightinng representative of National Miners Union. That the Japanese im; are aware of these possib evident from reports appearing in the local Japanese press. Thus the “Nanshu Nippo” reported in July that the Inner Mongolian govern- ment “at the instigation of Soviet | Russia,” had ordered all Japanese residents to leave, threatening other- wise to evict them by force after three days. Moreover the “Toho,” a Japanese press agency, sent out a dispatch from Mukden reporting that the feudal chiefs (“Princes”) of Inner Mongolia had held a con- ference after the death of Marshal Chang Tso-lin and concluded to ask for the incorporation of that terri- tory within the Chinese Republic. The Maneuver The conditions which were to he presented to the Nanking govern- ment were special consideration for the new position to he assigned these chiefs and the non-interference by the Chinese with the schemes these princes have drawn up for the overthrow of the present Inner Mongolian Soviet government. In addition, they were to be allowed to exclude all Chinese from th: coun- try. Refusal of this order, the chiefs threatened, would result in a} declaration of independence by the Mongolians. | The clever hand of Japan in this | maneuver is seen in the fact that dueen feudal chiefs nnder Chang Tso-lin’s “protection.” As he in turn was an acknowledged tool of Japan and under the latter’s “protection,” the refusal by Nan-| king of this offer would open the | way to a declaration of inde-| vendence. and this, in turn, to an} appeal by these chiefs for Japan’s “benevolent” intervention. British Press Supports Lies. Nor are these merely occasional reports. Such items repeatedly oc- | eur in the Japanese press and are even sent out by official Japanese news agencies. On August 19, for example, the Nippon Dempo wired from Harbin: “Soviet Russia is giv- ing financial support to the Outer | Mongolians who are invading Inner were Mongolia. It has been brought to light that Moscow has _ remitted And the miners cheered to the echo! Speaks of Unorganized. He spoke of the miners in Ken- tucky and West Virginia and Western Pennsylvania. Those who Lewis said were unorganizable, They are now being organized and can be organized solidly but never in the United Mine Workers of America. “Thompson told of the Pittsburg convention. He told of past struggles against the Farring- tons and the Fishwicks in Illinois. He spoke of their palatial homes, their $68 and $35 a day income. And he told of the new constitution of the new union, the constitution which places all power in the hands of the local unions and their own grievance committees. It was the new union speaking to the miners and they received it with open arms. With a final appeal for support from Illinois for the building of a real militant union, with an appeal which will surely bear fruit, Thomp- | son finished, and the meeting ad- urned. Hitizois is lining up for the N. Miners Union |the publicity they turn out, es- Mpecially in overlooking the printing surgent Mongolian troops cut the Chinese Eastern Railway in August this paper hastened to assure its readers that the annexatidn by the U. S. S. R. of that section of Man- churia where the attack occurred was already an accomplished fact, secondly, that Outer Mongolia was “of course, merely camouflage for Moscow,” and, thirdly, that this sit- uation “appears to be viewed seri- ously by the Japanese government, | which fears some complications may | arise between Russia and China.” It then quotes the Tokyo “Asahi” as | gency Japan feels it must take! some proper and effectual steps for | the maintenence of peace in the Three Eastern Provinces (Man- churia). Self-Contradictory However, the press agents of the imperialists are often careless in of contradictory accounts, Thus in the same issue of the “Daily News” | —in fact, in the same column—it tells how four tribes in that section declared their independence “in league with the (Chinese) National-| ist Government.” The daily, more-| over, specifically states that this | fact has been “ascertained.” In other words the “Shanghai Daily| News” has investigated and found! out that its own story, featured with headlines, of the “Red” Hand in Inner Mongolia is absolutely | false. The “Shanghai Times,” the} other British imperialist organ,! publishes a story by its Harbin correspondent that puts quite a dif- ferent aspect to this Chinese-Mon- | golian trouble. He declares that “the question is whether the Mongol uprising is purely a local incident or whether the invaders have been instigated and financed by some other nation which wants to cause trouble in Manchuria.” He then ab- solves the Soviet Union from com- plicity. “Considering that the So- viet Union has a half share in the railway, it is hardly likely Ghat they would do harm to a line which is giving them a handsome profit and therefore to find an instigator it is necessary to look elsewhere.” Where else to look the article as printed did not state, but there can) be only one other source—and that | is Japan. | The outside world may deem such | a conclusion far fetched. To any- one who has kept in touch with this year’s developments of the conflict between Japan and China, on the| one hand, and between the imperial- | ist powers in their rivalry for the hegemony of the Orient, the vicious, | under-handed scheming and plotting of the ultra-reactionary Tanaka’ Government is quite plain. It is) evident that Japanese imperialism will hesitate at nothing, even to| plunging the peoples into a new world war—to accomplish its ends. Nor must the close connection be | overjooked between this growing | hostile attitude of Japan towards the Soviet Union and the British | plans for the latter’s encirclement by unfriendly powers. The disasters | which may be involved in just such | a policy as that illustrated in the, case of pee is the price which the Japanese must pay for British’ jsupport Im the Far East, ya some extent a prognostication of | what will befall the unwary miners after harvest time. vives there doubtless will be a great British and Dominion governments, with the result that the stranded miner-farmers will remain stranded, declaring that “in such a contin- | Warned not to come here or there GITLOW SPEAKS BRITISH MINER: VICTIMS IN BIG HARVEST FRAUDS Sent to Canada, To Remain Stranded | VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 23— of a skeleton there was a small| Money has been voted by the city|sword made of bone and also a council of this city to send an offi- jcial on a tour of the prairie prov- inces, to arange for tho display of |signs and posters warning unem- ployed workers not to come to Van- will not grant relief to unemployed people coming from other places.” Vancouver’s city council is -pa- tently afflicted with the same de- liberate myopia which is a chronic | | ailment of similar capitalistic bod- |ies. The money wantonly thrown | away in giving a pompous official a holiday touring Canada’s prairie provinces could be employed to far, | far better advantage by improving, rather than deploring, the unem- ployment situation and by amelior- jating the distress of the idle work- ers. Miners Victims of Huge Frauds. The reaction of Vancouver's city [council to the Baldwin government scheme to send 10,000 idle British miners to Canada’s harvest is clearly indicated. A gigantic swindle is be- jing perpetrated by British mine | jowners, calculated to deliver the | miners from the serfdom of Eng- lish labor conditions to the unor- ganized wage slavery of the Can- adian harvest. And the provincial | governments have positively declined any responsibility for the British limmigrants, after the harvest, so [that many of the miners who enter the agricultural fields and brave the jterrors of Western Canada, where |men eat in the summer and starve in the winter, will be left stranded, although the British government is understood to have guaranteed the return to Britain of any miners re- maining unemployed after the har- vest. Unintended Warning. The Vancouver reaction to the British government’s scheme is to As for the un- derstanding between the two gov- ernments the British guarantee is of dubious worth, for when the post- harvest unemployment panic ar- leal of buck-passing between the in search of employment and left to work out their own salvation. 4 IN ROCK ISLAND ROCK ISLAND, Illinois, Sept. 23. —Despite the fact that the Gitlow mecting was held in a hall on tha outskiuts of the town, and that the rally was not sufficiently advertised, | over sixty workers gathered here on Sept. 17 in Workmens Circle Hall to hear the message of the class struggle and the program of the Workers (Communist) Party in the election campaign explained by the Communist vice-presidential candi- date. Rock Island is one of three cities grouped on the banks of the Mis- ners’ Caravan to Build New Union in ~|couver has enough unemployed and | §t Wini Pearl, in “Thi ae Cae Sally “Rand, with Southard, and Peggy Conway. | jhis Gang. sissippi. The other two are Daven- [port and Moline. Rock Island is a great railroad center and Moline employs thousands of workers in the manufacture of furniture. A collection of thirty-three dollars | and fifty cents was taken. PANAMA DRIVERS PROTEST ‘Discover ‘Relics of Prehistoric Man in Soviet Union MOSCOW (By Mail).—Soviet archaeologist Vinogradov discovered a burying place of a prehistorical man on the river Ruza in the Mos- cow province. ; There he found a man’s skeleton; near its head was lying a stone hammer; in the right hand a knife made of flint and at the left heel two flint arrows, At the right side pot embellished with ornaments.’ The burying place was found in sand- the hills. In opinion one age. in the Ivanovo-Voznessensk province jwhere a stone hammer was found belonging to the bronze age. || Vaudeville Theatres | PALACE | Margaret Anglin, in “Samrty’s| Party,” by George Kelly; Jack Pearl | with Charles Marsh, Billy Harris! Old Jack and Bob Crosbym Harvey | Karels, and Sally’s Boy Friends; | Buck and Bubbles; the Chevalier| Brothers. BROADWAY Ethel Waters; Barr Twins and} Arnold Gluck; Mary and Ann Clark; | Wade Booth, baritone and Max and| Feature photoplay, | “State Street Sadie,” with Conrad | Nagel, Myrna Loy and William| Russell. | | HIPPODROME | Earl Lindsay’s Revue of 1928,| headed by Bizet and Henry Hilja, Charles Dane, Helen Miller, and The Alvin Sisters; Lang and Haley; | Josephine Harmon, with Florence | Newton; “Doe Baker,” assisted by! Peaches and Pappy; Kit Kat eee and The Five Jansleys, Feature photoplay, “Danger Street,” star-| rinng Warner Baxter und Martha | Sleeper. | IN GOIN’ HOME. Barbara Bulgakov, one of the! principal players in “Goin’ Home,” Ransom Rideout’s vivid play, which | will move tonight from the Hudson| to Theatre Masque. MOLDERS RAISE WAGES. | | SEATTLE.—Molders raised their | minimum wage to $7.50 a day after | a short strike. The former minimum was $6.40, but several mnlaeees paid more than this rate. The aver- | age increase is 60 cents a day, | TRUCK DRIVERS GAIN. DENVER.—Truck drivers em- | of $3 a week. jhicle, “The War Song,” a play by | the Spewacks and Mr. Jessel, at the i National Theatre. The cast includes | pits at the depth of two meters’ ri from the surface very high up at | Lola Lane, Shirley, Booth, Edward | of specialists, the | Langaner. conver in search of work as “Van-| Skeleton belongs to the end “of a The second discovery was made | | appear in the star role. Coal Fields North and South Ring Lardner’s Comedy Heads RED ELECTION Eight Openings of the Week DRIVE SPEEDE IN SIOUX CITY EORGE M. COHAN starts his Workers Addressed by season tonight at the Lyceum, with “Elmer the Great,” Ring Lard- | Stanley Clark ner’s baseball play. Walter Huston) SIOUX CITY, Ia. Sept. 23.— is starred. Others in the cast are | Nan Sunderland, Katharine Francis, The Sioux City branch of the Work- ’ (Communist) Party held an- Edith Luckett, Harold Healy and| ers’ Thomas V. Gillen. other election campaign meeting re- cently in its new headquarters hal! at 508% 5th Street, which was well attended. The principal speaker was Stan- ley Clark, who explained the doc- trine of Communism so vividly that jeven the youngest Pioneer under- stood it thoroughly. He depicted the hopelessness of the poor farm- jers and workers expecting any re- lief from the capitalistic system and | the two old parties headed by Hoover 7%) and Smith. panish Academy plans to in-| One of the members of the Young augurate a permanent exposition of} Workers League svoke on the work works published by the Academy, 2nd aim of the League, urging the | parents in the audience to introduce |their children into the Young | Workers’ League or the Young new play by Eugene Walter, star-/ PRESSMEN’S CONVENTION. | grod‘iete the felde ct the Bor Sout ting Fay Rainter, and featuring} PRESSMEN’S. HOME, Tenn —|Girl Scouts, Y.M. C. A. or similar Guthrie MeClintic, to the Eltinge/conyention of the International ‘capitalistic organizations hy whom Theatre, Tuesday evening. The/ Printing Pressmen and Assistants’|they would be trained to fight for play was adapted from the French | Union adopted a resolution to hold the capitalists against themselves— of Louis Verneuil. |conventions every four year, instead | the working class. of two years. —GEORGE STALKER. GEORGE JESSEL Another opening for this evening | is George Jessel in his newest ve- Leiter, William Gargan and Clara Richard Bennett will make his! first appearance here in three years, | at the Longacre Theatre tonight, in| Ss h tks j ett |80N8,” opening tonight at the Na- ES a Beahan and Garrett | tional Thantre: “Adventure,” a new play by John| SPANISH BOOK EXHIBIT Willard, author of “The Cat and} MADRID, Sept. 23.—On Na- the Canary,” comes to the Republic) tional Book Day in Spain, Oct. Theatre tonight. The cast is headed |ithe § by Roberta Arnold, and includes} John Litel, Leo Kennedy, Henry D. Apa jincluding many notable and unique A. H. Woods will inaugurate his | editions of Spanish literature. « season by bringing “Jealousy,” a/ “Cheé-Chee,” the new Fields-Rod- gers-Hart musical show, is an- nounced to oven at Lew Fields’s Mansfield Theatre on Wednesday. The book is an adaptation of Charles Pettit’s novel, “The Son of the Grand Eunuch.” Helen Ford will a — || KEITH. || ALBEE 2nd if BIG WERK CAMEO 42nd St. and Broadway “Fast Life” is another Woods play opening at the Ambassador Theatre on Thursday. Claudette Colbert and Chester Morris, are featured and the cast includes William Mor- | ris and Crane Wilbur. This is the |jj latest melodramatic work of Samuel | ITS A HIT “THRILLING—REALISTIC"—NEW YORK TIMES ~“Q SHIPS” Shipman and John B. Hymer. “By Request,” by the Nugents | with Elliott featured, steps into the | Hudson on Thursday. J. C. Nugent, | Norma _ Lee, Verree Teasdale, | Eleanor Winslow Williams, and_ Harry McNaughton are the others) in the cast. | “2 SHIPS” HELD OVER AT THE CAMEO. The British Admiral, Viscount | Jelli¢oe, makes a personal appear-| ance in “Q Ships,” the English film on submarine warfare. The film was supervised by a former U-boat | commander, Herr Max Rohen. On) the same program is “The Killer |Ployed by the Rocky Mountain Fuel | Killed,” a short Ufa subject depict- |Company secured a wage increase ing a fight to the death between an Indian Cobra and a Mongoose. LAST SIXTH and LAST GROUP for 1928 NOVEMBER VISA GUARANTEED— ANY PART OF THE SOVIET UNION CAN BE VISITED, A petition signed by 600 chauf- feurs of the Panama Chauffeurs Union was presented to the Mayor of Panama City on July 2. The petition requested the reconsidera- tion by the Mayor of a law requir- ing each applicant for a chauffeur’s license to deposit $100 in cash or a mortgage bond in that amount. WORLD TOURISTS, INC. 69 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY. CALL e s®NT By wor-p Tourists, INC. To SOVIET RUSSIA Leaving Wednesday, October 17 “S. S. MAURETANIA” TO WITNESS THE CELEBRATION OF THE | | | REVOLUTION $325.00 (Special Tour) $375.00 (Complete Tour) Tel.: ALGonquin 6900. (FE NATIONAL PLATFORM WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY THE PLATFORM of the CLASS STRUGGLE of the f 64 Pages of Smashing Facts—Price 10 cents NATIONAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, Workers (Communist) Party of America . 43 East 125th Street, New York City Make checks and money orders payable to Alexander Trachtenberg, Treas, — ACTUAL EXTRA ADDED FEATURE— “KILLING THE KILLER” A Cobra and Mongoose Fight to Death AUTHENTIC | THRIL LYCEUM Thea. W. 45 St., Eves.8.30 WARFARE! SUBMARINE Arthur Hopkins Presents Mats... Wed. & Sat. GEO. M COHAN Presents’ "| waALtER Huston ZACHINAL’ ELMER pees) GREAT A new play in two parts and ten scenes by Sophie Treadwell NG LARDNER'S AMERICAN PLAY | Plymouth Thea. W.45thSt.Bves.8.30 eee Mats, Thurs. & Sat,, 2:30 SHUBERT Thea. 44,W.ofB'way.Ev. 8:30;Mats.Wed.,Sat.2.30 Guy ODETTE DE WOLF | ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER in a musical romance of Chopin WHITE LILACS THE LADDER IN 1T§ REVISED FORM? ea., W. 48 St. Evs, 8:30 CORT Mts. Wed. & Sat, Money Refunded if Not Satisfied With Play. 1 — Maxine Elliott’s Thea., W. 39th st. meres“ ayvainen tb, Mats. Wed. & Sat. “Imtelligent Entertainment.”— Mantl This 273 Love ove | A New Comedy Hit by Edwin Burke | with Violet Heming & Minor Watson, | Theatre Masque 45th st, West of | "Broadway Rvs. 8.30; Mats.: Wed, & Sat, 2.39 “Goin’ Home” |“Exeiting Stuff’—The. New Yorker. | CENTURY Thea, 2 EVA THE th Mats. Wed. and Sat. with CLAIRBORNE FOSTER. inte wee sense “e’MARY DUGAN Mats.Wed.&Sat.2.30 | CHANINS, ‘W. of Broad | Se ndoth StF singe ate 8. Wed. & Sat. SCHWAB and MANDEL's MUSICAL SMASH (Good NEw with GEORGE OLSEN’S MUSIC. HAVE YOU Central Pk. 2 St. Eves ‘A Clean Hit, Winchell, Graph. THE TRIAL OF ED i Thea.AdSt.&8A\ Martin Beck 8.40.Ma.Sat., Wer NITE HOSTESS by Philip Dunning Staged by Winchell Smith Produced by JOHN GOLDEN, — | Acceptance eee | Just Published | FORTY-EIGHT page pamphlet con- i taining the acceptance speeches of z William Z. Foster and Benjamin Git- low, Workers Party candidates for Pres- ident and Vice-President of the United States of America. “ft s Included also is the nominating speech delivered by Bob Minor, Editor of the laily H Worker, and the closing address by Jay Levestone, Executive Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, summarizing the achievements of the National Nomin- i ating Convention, Each pamphlet carries a plate with the latest photographs of Foster and Gitlow splendidly done. PRICE 5 CENTS In lots of 100 or more 80 per cent off. National Election Campaign Committee 43 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK, N. Y. All orders must be accompanied by payment I

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