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~ tt 1) Oe TH ods oneeo SP Ott enD r2es ore 2 eomsacta ty Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WED? ESDAY, NOV. 21, 19 28, SLAVERY FOR MIGRATORIES IN THE WEST Low Pay, Long Hours, nd Farm ya on Railwa (Ru a CHICAGO able rn went West st go, North Dak h laborer with Fole tion comnan toad w 85 cents an h supposed travelled to owr time, rT Ja: 2 bunch arrived. 80 me heeause of the and from hour *he company camp, and be learned they were to he assessed $2 apiece for ” T stood thi: of us, diseu and generally “poor tax nce a We with the low conditions, th down our tools and walked tc camp. We had to wait from 11 a. m. to 5 p. m. for our time checks Our suppers had heen deducted from our pay as well as the afore- mentioned taxes. When > started eating the supner, for which we had been charged, we were told to get out by the bosses. We insisted on eating the meal we had paid for, as we were 30 miles from the nearest town and it looked if we would have to walk back there. We had been told to leave camp several times hefore supper. and know we dn be allowed to stay the r We were forbidden to ride or town on the work train to Glen 20 miles away, but thru the decency of the train crew ranaged to hide in the cars and get there. I worked for Foley Bros. six and » half days, and after the deductions ror board at $1.20 per day. poor tax $2; road tax $2: hosnital fee for ene month 85 cents, and $3 for shin- nine. I had the grand sum of $8.90 Jeft for my week of the hardest kind of toil. As to the “noor tax,” I Jon’t know what it is for, except that we, the poorest members of so- siety. were compelled to pay it. About the road tax. one can see no sien of roads (only cow paths) in that desert-like country. I think it *s all a graft. About the hospital “oa, heing bothered with ear trouble, T derided to find out if there was anything but hot air to the com- sen claims of “exnert medical at- tention,” as I had paid this fee many times before in other jobs. So I saw their doctor. and he never even examined me, but gave me a pre- scription to a drug store, which proved to be worthless. One more swindle of the workers, these medi- cal fees charged all over the west. I had enough of Montana, where they have devised more “legal” but dirty schemes to skin migratory workers alive than any other state I have vet worked, and I have worked in 17. I then went to North Dakota to take in harvest work. I found some great changes from yerrs azo now mrevailing. I had not followed har- vest work for several years previ- ous. For one thirg, the rich farmer *s no longer coming to town to look *or his harvest slaves. Why should! he, when the country literally swarms witbsworkers from all over the country, looking for work for e)most any wages. In fact. many did not even trouble to ask the farm- er what wages he was going to pay. Jobs are not nearly as easy to get as years ago. Another change was the almost complete absence of the I. W. W. members. Con ons are as bad as they were 20 years ago; working hours from dark to dark, wages whatever the farm owner is willing 4o pav the hands. Poor food, bad sleeping quarters, in strawstacks un- der sky, are the rule. Owing to the fact that more farm- ers than ever are buying their own threshine rigs, the threshing runs are constantly getting shorter, often not heine over a week lone. Another mew thing in the farming covntry chinery being’ intro- v the “combine” and The former cuts. of nd sacks the grain, all in ane overation Bu the rain in many places Dakotas Ages not ripen evenly he early threshing of it with a combine Mifficult, and the subsequent troubles with damn grain at the ele- sators even worse, the swather has heen invented. It cuts the grain as it stanas anc places in swathes aver which the combine can after- wards travel when the straw is dr: snouch, picking it up and threshing tt, Three men are reouired to ope ate it. Under the old conditions it took 12. At the elevators there a now regular drying machines to dry any wet grain coming in from com- bine threshing. The farmers everywhere in the northwest are in bad shape. Wheat prices average 70 cents to 80 cents a bushel while potatoes are so low in price that in many cases it. is cheaper to leave them in the ground. verywhere farmers are leaving the ntry, selling out at prices that amount almost to giving away their property. prices for farm products, the high vost of living, high taxes, and the high price of everything they must | ment, as a great many of them are | going to the already overcrowded | cities, where they will soon have | ouy. In most cases they fail to realize “he real cause of all this, saying thatethe city workers “get it all.” : BUDENZ- * | osha. Imperialist Aircraft Carrier Prepares for — War Photo shows giant U. S. aircraft carrier Lexington, speeding at Cal., in naval maneuvers. LAB 40 OR FAKER, TRAITOR IN KENOSHA jondent ) the managing ed- or Age,” Louis F. z, was able to pose before a able section of the workers “libera! Had he not de- ed the execution of Sacco and tti over a year ago? ak against the invasion of American marines in Nicaragua? Was not his magazine advocating the use of militant policies in the d labor movement? But ail this was before something happened in Kenosha, Wis., that made Budenz discard the hypoccitical mask of a “liberal” and come to full view as an arch reac- tionary misleader, What brought n out in all his reactionary glory s the lockout of 330 toppers and knitters by the Allen A. Co. of Ken- Budenz was hired .by the American Federation of Full Fash- ioned Hosiery Workers, an A. F. of L. union, to “lead” the strike, and therein lies the tale. One fine day, Budenz arrived in Kenosha to supply “leadership” to the strike. He chose for his head- quarters the Hotel Dayton, the By a Worker Co most expensive hotel in town, where | he soon became a familiar figure to the Rotarians, admired both for his after-dinner wit and excellent table manners. Within a short time after his arrival, the open-shop Allen A. | secured an injunction against the strikers from the federal court at Milwaukee, The strikers continued to picket and very few scabs were able to drift into the firm. The po- lice arrested several of the strikers who were later served with notices | by the federal court to appear in Milwaukee for trial. uy charge was “conspiracy to vio- late the restraining order of the court,” and Budenz was cited to appear as one who participated in the “conspiracy.” Calls Off Pickets. The trial took place in the latter part of April and after a lengthy discussion, in which twenty-one bal- lots were taken, the jury acquitted the defendants. Budenz returned to Did he | is True | The trumped | |Dan Hoan, of Milwaukee, Budenz, after enumerating the outrages per- petrated by the hoodlums of the {Allen A. Co. against the strikers, |remarked: “We extend our hand} jto Allen A. asking for co-opera- jtion.” And soon thereafter in an| of the “Kenosha Ho: r,” the strik semi- letin, edited under the inspi tion of Budenz, we find considerabk space devoted to a gem among class-collaboration policies: The bul- | letin announces that the leadership | of the strike willing to offer | $25,000 as a guarantee that as much | Jor more goods will be produced by | |the strikers under a one-machine | ‘tem as under a two-machine sys- jtem, and therefore the company has }no reason for trying to two-machine system on the strikers. | But the firm, in spite of the beg- }ging and cringing attitude of the \lesdership headed by Budenz, stub- | |Lornly held out in its attempt to | jsmash the strike. And the Young| Workers League continued its active participation in the strike and con- tinued to urge militant methods ex- |resing one by one the attempts of | Budenz to settle the strike against | |the interest of the workers. When | |the president of the local Chamber | |of Commerce and publisher of the | \“Kenosha Evening News,” Mr. Kingsley, called a secret conference of both sides in the dispute in an lattempt to put something over on the strikers, the League warned the young workers against this man- euver of the bosses, Budenz, desperate at the League’s |constant efforts in behalf of the |strikers which prevented him from getting the strike off his hands by |e betrayal, showed the depths he |was capable of sinking into, In the |Chicago Tribune of Aug. 26 Budenz {is quoted in an interview as stating jin connection with the terrorism jand bombings that have taken place from time to time in Kenosha at the |instigation of the gunmen and pri vate detective agents of Allen A. as follows: “If the firm is not re- (sponsible for them, it was probably is install a ~ CELEBRATE 11TH _ ANNIVERSARY iN MADISON, WIS Kruse Addresses Mili- tants (By a Worker Correspondent) | MADISON, Wis. Nov. 16 (By Mail).—A celebration of the 11th anniversary of the victory of the proletariat over its oppressors, the capitalist class, and the establish- ment of the workers’ fatherland, the Union of Socialist Soviet Re- publics was held Friday night in a heavy rain under the joint auspices of the Young Workers (Commu- nist) League of America and the Workers (Communist) Party of America at Woodman Hal}. The celebration was latgely attended by workers from neighboring factor’ | including a sprirkhirg of universi |stadents and professors. miles an hour, off Point Vincente, LABOR SPORTS The following is the Metropolitan y Workers’ Soccer League schedule The principal speaker of the eve- for eDIOGTEOWS ‘4 ning was Comrade William F. Division “A Kruse, candidate for governor of Argentine F. C. rdham F, C. v: Y. Eagle F. C. Rob Roy, Martians. vs. Hungarian bs Mlinois on the Communist ticket at the last election. Comrade Kruse |had just returned from a three year ‘stay in the Soviet Union and was |therefore very well fitted to de- “B.” scribe the workings and successes A rgentine F, C. vs, Hungarian | of the first proletarian government | Workers. |in history. Comrades Gordon and Freiheit S. C. vs. Prospect Unity.|Shulimson read some of their| ee on A. C, vs, Scandinavian | workers’ poems dealing vividly with| orkers. the class struggle and the fight] |against the money-thirsty bosses, | |which moved the audience of work- | ers greatly, Comrade Kruse pointed out the | great ‘advances in all fields of so- |cial and economic life which the| | Soviet Union had made. American Hungarian @Bys. Division “C.” Scandinavian Workets vs. Work- ers B. Harlem Progressive vs. Freiheit. Vagabond S. C. vs. Spartacus. Co-operative vs. Red Star, The following is the Brooklyn Workers’ Soccer League matches scheduled for today: Division “A.” Spartacus vs. Freiheit. Union City vs. Scandinavian. Atlantic Park vs. Red Star. He force- fully described the proletarian spirit inoculated into the workers of the |U. 8. S R. which mad: this greut| |advancement possible. The basic| |principle of this first workers’ and) | peasants’ government is that of the| | producers getting the benefits of) |the products of their toil, instead of toiling in order that a parasitic! balloon-belly may become fatter,| was very strikingly illustrated by Arthur Hopkins announces his the speaker. third production of the season, anew) After summing up the whole les-| comedy by Philip Barry titled “The| son which the Soviet Union gives to| Dollar.” The play had its out of| workers of all the world the speak- town opening at New Haven on|er called upon the workers and stu- BARRY PLAY “THE DOLLAR” OPENS NEXT MONDAY. |Monday. Following three days there| dents to become conscious of their| timidity and impotence of the intel- A |Q\N the occasion of the 30th an versary of the Moscow Art The-; atre, the Yiddish Art Theatre is} playing for the first time one of the| notable success of that great troupe, Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard.” And it has done so with so much taste and understanding that the re- sult is one of the finest productions I’ve ever seen at this theatre. At once the presence of an expert) directing hand is apparent. It is the hand of a pupil of the great Stanislavsky himself, Leo Bulgakov, formerly of the Moscow Art The-| atre. Bulgakov is the actor who did) such memorable work in the role of |Suvarin i nthe Sacco-Vanzetti play, “Gods of the Lightning.” “The Cherry Orchard” was, to | quote the program notes, “Chekhov's |swan song.” He died five months efter it was produced by the Moscow Art Theatre. Already the storm- \clouds were gathering and only a |few months after Chekhov's death) there burst the fury- shortlived— of the first Russian Revolution, con- stituting the first threat on a mass scale to the czarist-capitalist despot- ism. It was Chekhov's artistic misfor- tune to have been the spokesman of voices whining in the wilderness. The malady of the soul that afflicted the declassed Russian bourgeois in- telligentsia of the mineties and the early nineteen-hundreds found in him its most eloquent articulator. | It was an intelligentsia devoid of ele- mentary moral courage, foundering in the sterility of bourgeois life, yet fearful of the rising revolutionary temper and awakening creative pow- er of the masses. “Sweet lemonade” was the way Chekhov himself char- acterized the work of himself and his colleagues. “Among us,” he wrote in the early nineties, “there are neither immediate nor future goals, and in our souls are emptiness and desolation. We take no art in political life and have no faith in revolution.” | It was Chekhov’s greatness as a writer that, being himself a victim of this malignant bourgeois disease, he was yet able to look it in the face and to paint it so caustically, with so much shrewd and ironic despair. And he wrote into “The Cherry Or- chard” all the indecision, all the i TE “CHERRY ORCHARD” BLAZE IN 0 | talist country it still flourishes, root- IL A TALENTED ARTIST. KILLS WORKERS ‘Risks of the Low-Paid Toilers Shown Worker Correspondent) GELES (By Mail).—Bell- view, No. 2, big Santa Fe Springs, | Calif., oil well, went on fire 9 few days ago. Flames, 200 feet high, jean be seen 40 miles away. Work- ers, 1,000 strong, are fighting, try- jing to check the fire. At least one worker has been killed, but I don’t remember his name. The flames are so hot that men, working sev- jeral hundred feet away, must cover |their hands and faces to prevent being blistered up or worse. Many workers have undoubtedly been more or less hurt, but the capital- ist press is only interested in the loss of property, as usual Since the terrible explosion which shook the ground and broke win- dows for mil early F y morning a total of 38 more neithborine wells have been affetced by the Bellview catas- Four ignited and ca 2 Ys 3. bene in: the: early “hours af the comes in its full social implications | 65. your others ots destroved indictment of the most powerful sort. so that: thaw could not act as The cherry orchard “has been torn ; A "D tore up by the roots in Soviet Russia. K: ee Bie Tieinee! Ome But in this country and in every capi- There are also 25 wells which were being drilled and 5 move that tilir Zita Johann, who plays the chief role in the Arthur Hopkins’ pro- duction of “Machinal.” The play is in its final week at the Ply: mouth Theatre. ne ee Se eopnes rigs ed in the swamp of bourgeois intel- lectual nihilism and dilettantist des- Onarsdeia tive ie aba eg pair. lall of these. ; The cast of “The Cherry Orchard”) The Getty well, also at Senta Fe is unusually good. With one glar-|Springs, burned for about 6 weeks. ing exception—Miriam Elias, who) The fire of that “outlaw” well was plays the Ieading role of Madame o~tinenished one week before Bell- Ranevsky (she alternates this part view No. 2 started to “rebel.” So, with Helen Zelinskaya), Miss Elias }eing no real united action against is really pretty bad; she mumbles the oil kings, the natural forces be. her words, strikes langorous pos- low must be ruled by company tures and tries in general to look unions—or the A. F. of L. like the Tragic Muse (which Madame Anyhow, many workers were -re- Ranevsky certainly is not). More-|norted killed or badly hurt. And over, Miss Elias ought to know that tho property loss? Well, they are taking faces’ isn’t acting. At least talking in millions. it hasn’t been for some time. Edward L. Doheny beat the gov- Of the others, chief honors should ernment. But he is getting old, and go to Ben-Zvi Baratoff, Maurice these red-hot oil fires undoubtedly Schwartz and Celia Adler, with sec-| take him kind of uneasy. He is re- ondary honors to Gershon Rubin,| ported selling out—in order to pre- Lazar Freed, Louis Weisberg, Abra-|pare himself, perhaps for auother ham Morewsky, Sonia Gurskaya and) world with a mild climate. Anna Zilberman, L. P. RINDAL. Kenosha in triumph and strutted|qone by a small number.of Com- about stating that the jury decision) munists of the Young Workers “was an out-and-out victory” for | League.” the cause of labor. However, | Aids Frame-up of Youth. strange to say, all picketing was| This was» quite a deliberate at- called off by him for over two/tempt to have the Allen A. Co., the weeks after the “favorable” de- | police and the local government cision. Allen A. used this period of frame-up members of the League on time well in securing a large num-/» trumped-up charge of “bombing.” ber of scabs and strengthened its| This is on a par with the method are in for a sad disillusion.’ position to give battle to the strik- e The Young Workers (Com- munist) League, immediately sen- sing the danger if picketing is dis- continued, issued bulletins to the |strikers calling upon them to or. ganize mass picketing in spite of | the injunction and to extend the strike by calling out the 800 unor- ganized workers in the employ of the firm. Red-Baiting. The answer of Budenz to the bul- letins of the League was typical of his reactionary outlook. Every meeting of the strikers was turned into a red baiting campaign. The strikers, instead of being advised hew to meet the injunction menace of the bosses, were harrangued with anti-Communist slander by his emi- nence, Lo He warned them against the Daily Zz reading Worker and other red publications. However, nothing was said against veading the only daily aper in the city, the “Kenosha News,” which was upholding the open-shop policy f Aller A. Because the Young Workers League demanded militant action, it vicious ck by Budenz. Soon, however, due to the con- tinued provaganda of the League amongst the strikers, Budenz was forced to make a gesture of organ- lizing picketing. He allowed the strikers to picket for a half hour | at noontime, twice a week. Natur- lly this was insufficient and scabs recruited by the firm in great The local police, pliant were | numbers. tools of the open-shoppers, made | |many arrests and the firm’ let loose a small army of thugs, private de- tectives and professional strike- | |breakers against the courageous | strikers, Co-operation With Allen A. | Speaking on May 12 at a monster | open-air meeting in one of the pub- llie parks of the city, on the same | This is because of low) platform with the socialist mayor, first hand knowledge of the miser- le conditions of the workers there. —MIGRATORY WORKER. s made the center of a used by the industrial spies and frame-up agents which during the course of the strike he pretended to vigorously oppose. Nor is this all Not so long ago a spy was discov- jered in a local machinists’ union. Budenz immediately gave’ his name publicity in the strikers’ bulletin And in the same issue of the bul- letin we have the following signifi- cant sentence: “We warn Q-170, connected with a radical group |here, that we know of his activities also.” We later ascertained tha \this Q-170 was an indus*'al |one John P. Bugno, who been |a member of the Worker: Party until quite recently, when he was expelled. What is significant, how- jever, is that it was ascertained that |Budenz had known for a long time |about Bugno as an industrial spy. hut had kept silent, and had we not ascertained this through other chan- nels he would no doubt have been still inside the Party doing hi jand three days in Hartford, “The| class interests and follow the lead|lectual bourgeoisie of his time. Ob- | Dollar” will come into New York,| of the workers and peasants of the| jectively opening at the Plymouth Monday. | Hope Williams, who scored a suc- cess last season in Mr. Hopkins’ pro- duction of Mr. Barry’s other comedy, “Paris Bound,” will play the leading part. Others in the cast are Ben Smith, last seen in “Rope,” Donald Ggden Stewart, Dorothy Tree, Mon-| roe Owsley, Barbara White and| Walter Walker. Robert Edmond Jones did the settings. the tragedy of “The U. S. S. R. and revolt against the|Cherry Orchard” is the tragedy of oppression of the bosses by join | the expropriation of the decadent ing the Workers (Communist) Par-| Russian landowning class (represent- ty or the Young Workers (Commu- ed by the Ranevsky household) by nist) League which actively fight, the rising capitalist class (in the for a workers’ and farmers’ social person of the rich merchant, Lopak- order. hin). But its subjective tragedy is —SIDNEY SLOTZNICK. —_——_——_ lies in its revelation of the utter | futility of the group for whom Chek- \hov spoke. And as such it is some- {thing more than revelation: it be- We demand the immediate abott- tion of all vagrancy laws; protec- tion of unemployed workers from arrest en charges of the particularly black spots of his record in Kenosha, it may be well to mention the attempts at bodily harm made by thugs against League members for opposing the class- | collaboration policies of Budenz and | Compary, none of which he can plead ignorance of. The strike is not yet over. Though | the firm has over 225 scabs, the | courageous strikers are still hold- | ing out What further acts of treachery Budenz will perpetrate re- mains to be seen. But this thing is certain. That this reactionary inisleader will no longer be able as in the past to pose so effectively as of a more liberal hue than his col- leagues in the American Federation of Labor, Lewis, Woll and Green. His policy of “no picketing,” his policy of not calling out the unor- zanized, his tirades against the Communists, his traitorous state- ments in the press, his collaborat- tion with the bosses, shows clearly that another “liberal” has evolved into a labor lieutenant of the capi- talist class, S. A. HERMAN. | | | Santal Midy Effective-Harmless And while enumerating sc Sold by All Druggists From Taylor Co., ell rs November a report of The Baker leading wholesale yofer Week ending achievement that will deal of controversy.” “A profoundly moving aap Best Selling Book in America “A narrative on the heroic scale . . 2 VOLUMES $5.00 & TON +. a literary inevitably arouse a great N. Y. Times drama.” Gamaliel Bradford =! Daily Worker JANUARY 5, 1929 WILL BE FIVE YEARS OF THE COMING OUT OF THE DAILY WORKER |much more poignant than that. It, —A. B. MAGIL. LENINGRAD, USSR., Nov. 20.—} A crowded meeting took place here, today in connection with the Ruhr lockout, A resolution was adopted | which encouraged the locked-out | workers and hoped that they would | effectually resist the employers. ASR Amis RANSACK U. S. CONSUL FILES. ZAGREB, Yugoslavia, Nov. 20 (U.P)—Unintentified burglars entered the United States consulate early to- day and ransacked files>~but did not touch money in the consul’s desk. It was believed they were seeking passport stamps. bea THE THEATRE GUILD Presents Major Barbara GUILD Thea. w szna st Eves. 8:30, Mats. \D STARTLING WEEK! _ “MATA HARI: : ‘The RED DANCER? Thursday «nd Saturday, 2.30 Strange Interlude Jono GOLDEN Vhea., ogtn of B'way EVENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 fIVIC REPERTORY '48t.sthav if Eves 8:30 d.&Sat.,2.30 EVA LE GALLIENNE. Director «at CAMEO "3: ALGEE BWay NITE HOSTESS MARTIN BECK THEATRE, Mats., Wednesday and Saturday. h, 45th St. 8th Ave. tives. 8.30. 50c; $1.00; $1.50, Mats. We CITIES ARE URGED TO BEGIN MAKING ARRANGE- MENTS FOR CELEBRATIONS NOW. ery Alli tins atl | VERY Workers (Communist) Party Unit and Sympathetic Organization Should Dis - @ tribute the N° union meeting, affair or labor event should pass without the distribution of a bundle of Daily Workers. ‘HE DAILY WORKER, the col- lective organizer of the labor movement is the best fighter for the organization of the unorganized workers, for militant trade union ism, against race discrimination and against imperialist wars. (1 ey your bundle a few days in advance of your meeting at the special rate of $6.00 per thousand. Baily Worker 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY, Please send me.. at the rate of $6.00 per NAME ADDRESS. opies of The DAILY WORKER J G ERLANGER [HEA. w «ath ST. Mat, Today, “The Cherry Orchard. |= ———=——— — Evenings 8.80 — Tonight, “Hedaa Gnblec® Mats., Wednesday & Saturday, 2.30. Thurs. love, “The Would-Be Gentle-| George M. Cohan's Comedians man. Fri Eve, “The Cherry Orchard.” a Wig SOL WALEER Sat. Mat!, “L'invitation Voyage.” 5. ag) ae De cl Sat. Eve, “Would-Be Gentleman.” ora bey, Premiere Mon, Eve., Nov. 26, “Peter “ B I 1 LI E ” ‘an,”” i ARTHUR HOPKINS announces LAST WEEK OF “MACHINAL” by Sophie Treadwell. PLYMOUTH Thea.,W.45thSt.Eves.8.30 | Mats. Thurs. & Sat. 3()N Phe “th “Ave & 09th st JOLSON Bvs.8.30, Mats. Wed.&Sat GUY ODETTE OB WOLF ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER na Muricn! romance of Chovin | the LAY HOUSE, W 57th St. little CARNEGIE, ? Continuous Noon to Midnight. “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD”. vop. Prices. Cirele 1561. |CHANINS 46th St. Wot Bway | J.P. McBvoy's Spark- | Eves wt <25|T wetth-alber [ling Story of a Show Matinees, Wed. & Sat. }Queen— SCHWAB and MANDI + MUSICAL SMASH OOD XN -W with GHORGE OLs, 5 muUsIC. Broadway at 41st & “Show Girl” » pvith ALICE WHITER IKeith=Albee-Orphew Attractions INT t REMEMBER THE MURDER OF SACCO & VANZE' SAVE SHIFRIN SEND YOUR DONATION AT ONCE TO SHIFRIN DEFENSE Com- MITTEE. ROOM 003, 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY. NEW MASSES BALL Is Almost Here--Buy Your Tickets BETTER THAN EVER — -—— GAY AND FREE — -— COLORFUL — — — UP TO EVERY EXPECTATION DECEMBER 7th WEBSTER HALL, 119 EAST 11TH STREET | Tickets now 81.50—At the door $3.00—0n « Union Square (Phone reservath 28 Union Sanare; Rand Rook wrights Theatre, 138 W. 14th § Je ath New Manner, 30 x necepted); Workers Bookshop, 7 BL 15th Street: New Play- <4 Madorn Hookxhop, 250 1, Sixt St, |