The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 4, 1928, Page 4

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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1928 American Seaman NO SLAVERY: 4 WATCHES: CLUB, GLASS ROOMS § Seamen Always Ready to Defend Revolution OPERATOR SELLS JOBS TO MINERS | Ohio Concern Extorts {Rest No Vacations on Capitalist Correspondent Shows How Soviet Crews Enjoy Best Conditions Ships S a EAMEN’S DEATH RATE VERY HIGH But British Board of Trade Don’t Say, Why Passenvers and Crew | 8114 F Fach M | LONDON, (By Mail). ma raterniz rom Hach an | . Registrar General of the Britis Fraternize z | Board of Trade, which is the highest DP i ewen Datrinne ies (By a Worker Correspondent) | authority’ of the empire’s shipping - Gipegebalensipairemeae BAMOCH, Ohio, Dec. 3—In East- | interests, remarks upon the death uriacar panes | ern Ohio there are jobs aplenty. Any ( rate among the seamen as follows: 4 | coal miner can get a job with the “The seamen’s comparative mor- geese ene “7 | Scott Coal and Coke Co. However, |tality figure from all forms of dis- aS iano Brower, abet 4 | there are “certain” reauirements of | ease is stated at 1378, comparing Bed by Amtorg, under the the anplicants. The first require- with 926 for all males, so that the best conditic ailing on the Pa- ps’ were de- meha aying in cific coast. The two s' livered at Petropavlosk, I was in the crew. After Petropavlosk for three weeks, we were shipped to Vladivostok on the| ; Soviet passenger ship Astrakhan. | While on the trip, which lasted six! days, I had a wonderful opportunity These Soviet seamen were am sors and among the first to They stand ever ready to dé of the Soviet Seamen, which are vital tpita ist nations. ong the first to rise against their enlist in the cause of the revolu- fend the revolution, and the rights unparalleled on the ships of the ment is that he pay $114 for the job. The second requirement is that he sign a contract. He must pay $30 (cash) as “down payment.” For the next six pays, |ie., for the next three months, the jcompany checks off from pay $14) | per pay. He must sign a “yellow dog” con- R, sailing the ships of the U. by the Soviet government. Elsewhere on this page an American seaman correspondent describes the advantages of the seamen He tells of the rest homes in the south, to which the’ seamen are sent seamen’s mortality from disease ex- ceeds the average by 48.8 per cent, and his mortality from violence—390 against 74— by 430 per cent. ‘Peter Pan’ Well Done by Civic Repertory Plaver. will also include the Symphony of Beethoven. Next Saturday morning Walter | Seventh | “Mortality is swollen by many exotic diseases, representing a risk |to which the home population is not exposed, and the traditional dangers |Damrosch will present his third|o¢ the sea evidently retain consid- to study at first hand the conditions HOO VER THREA TENS tract. (This is too mild a term for | Children’s Concert of the season.|crable importance.” of abe seamen and assengers on a it). The contract reads to this ef- | As musical illustrations for his ex-| While this is proven by the Board Soviet I ome of us were S| fect: (a) Loaders: Must load five] q@NE of the most delightful fan-| great individual child heroes—should planations of the functions of the|of Trade, what it does to reduce the ped as first class and others s LA TaN REP UBL TES cars per day (three -ton plus cars)|V tasies ever presented in the|he allowed to reach the hands of|}o11 tesoon, and trombone, he hag|death rate of seamen is exactly— | 8 4 nd these must be loaded six inches | United States has been revived by| the Russian child. Krupskaya, Len-| <cheduied the Overture to “Der {Rothing. On the contrary, it reduces eibiie:were rated at andl ae By SCOTT NEARING. Gheh Sk Diawaue gine dehites Hebtle. ‘aha aad ee peace has Eva Le Gallienne and is now part) in’s widow, is foremost among those] hreischutz,” an excerpt from the|Wages, imposes rotten and diseas’ of the regular repertoire of the|who thihk this sort of literature} producing food on the seamen and ond class, but there was no differ-) 9 battieship Maryland is the|StiP, surrounded by a flotilla of|free, Loaders do not get paid by|Civie Repertory ‘Theatre. It is| should be withdrawn, inasmuch ae rere a ii creas Mae OOY: OIE cha (Vestas). cade. allows ence in the food, which very | P de rs. They! also recollected ‘a it will i i ‘ |Loumbcysey, the Dragoons of) Ale jects” i e , Yl biggest and best war el in the| 4¢ coed yee ls c the ton but by the car. Five cars| Barrie’s “Peter Pan,” or “The Boy| it will instill in the child a false,| le £ «C ” British “subjects” as sailors on good. We got all we wanted to eat. that 4,000 United States marines| i if ” indivi iow lif | Cala from “Carmen,” In the Halls of| OY ‘ a d to eat United States navy. It is armed| that 4) a Pere ea ee One day brings the loader $7.50 per| Who Wouldn’t Grow Up. individualistic, view of life, and tend] th. Mountain King of, Grieg, and|British ships that should have been fe hacrved that the crew Sot) wit, cisht 16-inch, gans; twenty 6-| “8° suarantecng a fair and tee /day. (b) Motormen: Must pull 90/ «peter Pan” is a brillisnt pro-| toward increasing child-egotism,| (42 March from “Aida.” junked years ago, to lose their the same food as passengers, which was prepared in the same galley as that of the passengers, and by the Same cooks. There were still three galleys on the ship from the old days, when the crew were fed from the third galley. | Latin America. The first thing which astonished | edd thoke Tact te ihe us about the Astrakhan was the num-| qajly press workers remembered ber of the crew compared with] tat last winter President Coolidge American ships of the same tonnage.| went to the Pan-American Confer- This ship carried twice as many | men, which proves that the Worke inch guns and two 2 tubes. The tonnage of the Mary- land is 36,167. The Maryland is taking President-elect Hoover on a journey of “peace, friendship and good will” to certain countries of inch torpedo election Nicaragua—fair and free under the shadow of foreign bayonets. Big Gun Protection. Why do Hoover and Coolidge pick battleships when they go on peace missions to Latin America? Why are United States marines needed for free Nicaraguan elections? Coolidge gave the answer in his Armistice, Day speech. The United States business interests have “a great treasure” to protect—an in- cars of coal per day. This is ex- clusive of stone, slate and dust. Mo- tormen’s wages—$7.50 per day. (c) Machine men: Must eut enough to keep eighteen men working. Wages $7.50 per day. (If machine breaks down it means from 16-18 hours work a day). To Buy a Mine. The whole scheme of the Scott Coal and Coke Co. is to raise enough money to buy the Tapline Mine at : ink ith| Which will hinder both the child and] duction, generously sprinkled with) ¥ I those little technical devices and|the state in the struggle for the| -shiffings that delight| building up of socialism. ; the yen i whieh jn this case| leaders, however, believe that this is the child, Written for the chil-| “literature of illusion” does not in-) dren of an intimate of Barrie and/ ‘fluence the child to any great de- originally produced with these chil-| tee, but, on the other hand, helps dren in the roles of the homeless; the child psychologically in that the and motherless waifs, the play is| Superficial delight in the intrinsic moralistic to a great degree; but| Merit of the story is healthful somehow this is lost in the sheer| Whereas the fact of the heroes and} delight of the presentation. The fairies are lost, and become mere | knows | vestment of some+5 billion dollars | Bannock, Ohio, where the men will play includes Indians (the feathered) S¢Tews in a machine that delights the child. Two of the Soviet lead-| Wagner and Beethoven will divide Other | honors at next Sunday’s Metropoli-| | tan Opera House concert, under the jlives for British—which is to say its | own—profits, The Workers (Communist) Party fights for the organization of the unorganized workers, THE THEATRE GUILD nts KEITH: REST. CAMEO and Peasants’ government old type, and classes were free. An- |! ; ; Jus | work after th “down pay-|and blanketed kind) and pirates. | : ae guise ype, es tha’ aati a s, Work after they pay $30 “down pay- ne por i ry fa wee 3 " how to solve the unemployment |other thing that was very noticeable | Empires have just one method ef iment” and $114 total payment for| and wolves and fairies, all of which | rs Soeemoes an naleine tis “view | ajor Darbara ad WEEK (tig Panape” Problem. The sailors ate not short- was the social relationship between | protecting “great treasures.” Ask their jobs. The company claims that| are part of the experience of the) 2¥e ft A alae ne ed ; Matted, as aK ARNG aICR tap ote g “g aS i J 2 h hildren of a bourgeois fam-|¢@ducation, and Tchitcherin, the lat- GUILD * Ww atnd St “ ” anded, as on the American ships|seamen and passengers. No “Sea-| British, French, Japanese and Amer-|the mine will cost them about $17,-| three c 2 forest haunts| ter of whom has completely com- 8. 8 with their capitalist Seen. men not permitted on this deck” ican statesmen—they protect them 900 and the selling of jobs to the| ily who are led to the forest haunts mitted to memory the poem “Croco-| Thursday : nd Saturday, 2.30 Y. Times The sailors on the As three watches; the firemen had four | watches. I found out tha’ all coal | burning firemen and coal passers on the Soviet ships have four watches. I damn near keeled over when I first heard this. To think of all the years signs were about or “Passengers not permitted” signs. Seamen off watch walked side by side with passengers on the promenade deck, and at night when the passengers had a dance in the salon, the seamen danced too. The ship committee solves all the with big guns. miners will bring about $17,784, The Why has Hoover gone to Latin company guarantees the miners that America before his inauguration? it is a good investment and that no There are two reasons. one will lose money on the deal. Any | 1. Latin America is impotent be- of the officials of the company will fore the onrush of United States tell this. The company “promises” imperialism. They have no 86,167-|to pay back all the money the min- by Peter Pan, a homeless and moth- erless child who crows like a rooster | at dawn and shouts in his freedom, | “Ym youth, I’m joy! I’m a little] bird that has broken out of its ege.” In addition to the whimsical qual dile” by Tschukovsky, a fantastic | tale of a child hero who “accom- plished incredible deeds and subdued the wicked crocodile and made him) spew up a victim.” The question remains unanswered and the con- Strange Interlude fobn GOL 2DEN Bohne 2 EVENINGS ost “GRIM REALISM y World, Tribune ARTHUR HOPKINS presents “HOLIDAY” | a new comedy by Philip Barry ees ; troversy goes on. I, however, am) ,,. ‘Wp THE a | Phea.. 5ths! 3 of bitter struggle that we have had | social problems of the crew on board. | ton battleships and no 16-inch guns. ers invested in the mine. The con- ity: inherent an, the Taye Sait more inéined to believe that, in ERLANGER Liomeveniant to 2a PLYMOUTH deb Bit , in the U. S. ships to get three |The captain on the bridge may be| Hoover, circling Latin America on| tract promised that the company will | Satire is present, revealed through-| site of the faulty morals of the) Mat Wed. and ect. at esto ——— watches. We are even losing the leaptain, but when he stands before| the Maryland, is like a sheep dog. | pay back after a year’s employment, | Ut in little incidents. It is the! play, it would have no permanent, George M. Cohan's Comedians fivic REPERTORY "4st inae three watches, and without-a strug-|the ship committee to answer, a|Tounding up the flock on the way|(in stallments), the miners’ invest-| Presence of these satirical thrusts) sa ..0 affect on the worker's child with POLLY WALKER ” Long 5c; $1 00; $1.50, Mats. Wed.&Sat..2.30 ge a even a squeak fron the of-|charge, or to accuse some member | £0 He cebeee alee One dog can ah s beara foes Lampe a oe “Se ag in Mr Cohan's New est Musteal EVA Lie GALLIENNE, Director jeials of the International Seamen's |of the crew of rule-breaking, he is | handle a hundred sheep. | The Scott Brothers who own and oe ; In spite of hitches in the presenta- Tonight, “Peter Pan.” Union. And yet the Marine Trans-|just a seaman. For an office to curse| , 2 Europe is the real centre of! control the Scott Coal and Coke Co, | ‘tes whenever it is produced. | When| | Shs 0 Tlsn&s in Bhs presenta: DBLELIE.3|ven the Cherry Orchard.” Port Workers of the Soviet Union is or even use harsh language in giving | danger to United States imperial-jare reputed to have gotten their |‘he Pirates are about to make the) joy iS Ci coos a ee the — - only 10 years old, and 100 per cent orders to the crew is a serious of-| 8. There is Soviet Russia, There “mining experience” in Bloody Logan | Children walk the vcled Bunner"s| Play above the level of several of| CHANINS 46th St. Wot Uway organized, with four watches down|fense. Some of you American sea-| iS Britain, building her united front|/County. W. Va., where miners were a ihe, the ih allowed by the|its most glaring sentimentalities.| JOLSON "hea 71h Ave & sath St Mats. Wednesday and Saturday below in the fire-room on coal burn- | against the American empire. After|killed during the 1922 strike. Not- below i : men might think this is not prac- ne ; | ‘ j ive the children| Eva Le Gallienne as Peter Pan leaves) guy bal Aha Safes oi SCHWAB and MANDEL + ing ships, a room set aside on every |ticable, that sailors or firemen would ‘Hoover is inaugurated he will need|ables connected with this enterprise Sate Pap eae a Apel ase to| little to be desired. Egon Brecher ROBERTSON MYR'TIL HOOPER MUBICAT SM ship as a club room, and dungarees |take advantage, but let me tell you,!X! of his time and energy to pre-lare Assistant Prosecutor Michiner, cahichbarsyoniace gentlemen’? as the pirate captain, is perfectly, 'P % mustow! romance of Chante oO D N E W supplied by the Soviet fleet. We had many an interesting chat in the Lenin Corner (club-room) of the Astrakhan. Some of the seamen | could speak English, as many of them had sailed on British ships be- fore the revolution. They had many interesting things to tell us. Some of them were going on their vaca- tion and were getting ready to leave the ship on her arrival at Vladivos- tok. There they would get railroad | tickets to any part of the U. S. S. R.| they wished to go to. Some pre- ferred to go to rest homes in the south, and others were going to their homes. The Lenin Corner was 1..t only used for reading, playing chess, playing the phonograph, but also as the Astrakhan left Petropavlosk and arrived in Vladivostok on schedule time, and the work on the ship ran like a watch. I close with the slo- gan, a ship committee on every American ship. —J. H. * 8 EDITOR’S NOTE: In view of the recent revelations of the slave conditions shown to exist on ships of the American, British and other capitalist lines, following the Ves- tris disaster, which came as a re- sult of the Lamport and Holt line’s forcing the crew to sail on a rot- ten hulk of a ship; in view of the attempt of the capitalist press and courts to whitewash the company and make the starving, underpaid pare for the job of crushing Euro-|of Belmont County, aide to Prosecu- pean resistance to the on-march of the American empire. He picks this time to make Latin America safe for U. S. imperialism. So he rides south on the biggest and best battleship in the United States navy, fishing, jauntily, as he goes and giving Latin America a chance to smell 16-inch guns. Havana conference shows that, for the time being, that is enough. After March 4th, he will settle down to the real task of smashing the British empire and making the world safe+for United States ex- ploiters. PROFITEERING STUNT Comparing the “eat more liver” The} |tor Waddel, famous for his strike- breaking during the miners’ strike. Michiner is the legal adviser and “brains” for the Scott Coal and Coke Co. in their scheme t osnare miners into signing this contract and buying jobs, and buying miners for the op- erators, paying their way into slav- ery and buying the industry for their employers. | Rumors are that many miners des- perate because of long unemploy- ment and facing the winter without food and clothing for their: family have entered into this contract and put their last pennies into getting a job for the winter. Others who can- not read and do not understand the The play is shot through with bourgeois concepts of morality and of its very nature, since it is writ- ten by a member of the British no- bility, forces upon the conscious- ness of the audience a sort of cod- dling belief in this die-hard and | barren morality. But children, I am sure, would never notice any- thing except the incident itself, and delight in the play without the slightest regard for the meaning. ‘All of which raises again a con- troversy which, with the Soviet Union, recently passed its eleventh anniversary: The U. S. S. R. looks upon the education of the children as one of its most important problems. The cast. And it is useless to enumer- | ate the others of a cast so uniform- ly good that special mention must be given to all who appear on the stage. —EDWIN ROLFE. NEW WORK BY RUSSIAN AT) PHILHARMONIC CONCERT. rew work, Hebrew Suite, py Nicolai Berezowsky, young Russian! composer, and member of the sec-| ond violin section of the orchestra, and the performance of the Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 in B minor with Vladimir Horowitz as soloist; will be the features of the Thurs-| day afternoon and Friday evening concerts of the Philharmonic at} WHITE LILACS WRINEEEOTS zy Hen ETS WEES with GROKGK OLSENS Mt stc, Nl VANDERBILT THEATRE ‘W. 48th St. Evs. 8:30 Mats. Wednesday and Saturday 3RD STARTLING WEEK! PLAYHOUSE, ttle CARNEGIE, fy" sin st We demand the immediate aboti- ton of all vagrancy laws; protec- tion of unemployed workers from arrest on charges of vagrancy. Continuous Noon to Midnight. “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD”. | Pop. Prices. Cirele 7551. Third Season First Production t | : i ; Carnegie Hall under the direction ‘of | — SS a class room. and slave-driven crew of the Ves- propaganda with that which sold SP0le Scheme have also bought jobs. | jiterature and theatre of the first| wi | One afternoon I dropped in when| tris the goats, the above corre- “pink pills for pale eople,” and |some Rae wee tine Tae etece | Workers’ and peasants’ republic jerk aoa eal wl NEW, PRAYWRIGHTS THEATRE, a class was being held in marine en- gineering. The instructor was the chief engineer and the students were the coal passers, oilers and firemen, | off watch. I inquired if the deck department had the same opportunity, and it was explained to me that they did, as it is the union’s policy to develop work- ing class officers and eliminate the Fight Against Trotskyism and the Right Danger At a meeting of the enlarged Po- litical Committee of the Cleveland district of the Workers , (Commu- nist) Party, a resolution was adopt- ed condemning Trots! right danger, and endorsing the ex- pulsion of Shatchman resolution follows m and the and The Cannon, Abern from the Party. “1, The meeting of the Enlarged Politica! Committee of District Six, held on November 11, 1928, approves spondence from an American sea- man, revealing the difference be- tween conditions for sailors and passengers on a ship of the Work- ers’ and Peasants’ government and that of a capitalist nation, is inter- esting and timely. We hope to re- ceive more correspondence from seamen, to further show this con- trast. mittee declares that Trotsl menshevism, parading u phrase Jer olution; it springs over steps in the revolutionary movement, and thus leads to the setback or defeat of the revolutionary movement. Trotsky- ism, with its f theory of the “permanent rev in” and the im- possibility of build'ng up socialism in one country, dooms the Russian Revolution and naturally leads to The enlarged Political Com- | Communist strongly hinting that somebody is profiting by the enormous leaps in rrice which the once lowly associ- ate of bacon and onions has taken, Dr. Walter H. Eddy of Teachers College and Columbia University stated yesterday that liver had nothing in it that could not be ob- tained from 150 other and many of them cheaper foods, Party of the Soviet ism, is | Union did not hesitate to link up left | with elements expelled Trotskyism misunderstands }Communist Parties, who carried on| the role of the peasants in the rev- | from the a vicious struggle against the Com munist International and the Soviet government. It employed the most shamefu! methods not different from those of the lowest counter- revolutionaries. The opposition in the Communist Party of the Soviet | Union organized a party within the Bolshevik Party, thus threatening the unity of the Russian Party, the |Comintern and the that they are part’ owners of this jcompany. Advertisements in local papers to the effect that miners are jwanted brings miners from distant (Points into this trap of the Scott |Coal and Coke Co, In Eastern Ohio jand various other parts of the coal \fields there are all sorts of schemes |to trick the miners. Co-operative plans, collaboration with the bosses |and other schemes by the operators \trick the savings of the miners into |the crooked hands cf speculators and \coal operators who are trying to sell unproductive mines. All miners must be warned against entering into such contracts with the operators. strive as far as possible to instill in the children of the land a new ideology, in keeping with the new government. So much energy has been spent on children’s entertain- ment education in Russia that the output of children’s books in 1927-28 exceeded that of any other country in the world. But in con- nection with the building up of a Communist ideology in the child, many arguments have arisen, with foremost leaders of the Soviet state championing each side. This is whether books or plays which re- tain the slightest trace of what is| known, in this controversy, as) “literature of illusion”—i. e., deal- ing with fairies, goblins, ete., or || - VOICES OF REVOLT RPL LAL RT OLD A SERIES of attractively printed books ’ 4 containing the outstanding utterances of pioneer revolutionary leaders, with FIT PERFORMANCE NATIONAL TEXTILE WORKERS UNION “Singing Jailbirds” Ey UPTON SINCLAIR at Provincetown Playhouse Wednesday Evening Dec. 5th 1928 Tickets on sale at NATIONAL OFFICE 104 Fifth Avenue January 5 is the OFFICE: 133 W! 14TH ST. WATKINS 0588 SINGING JAILBIRDS By UPTON SINCLAIR A powerful portrayal of heroic struggle. A vital dramatization of the famous seamen’s strike of 1923 in Califor ing the spirited I. w. w. incorporat- Artistic, and other labor songs. entertaining and earnest in treatments OPENS TODAY AT THE PROVINCETOWN PLAYHOUSE 128 McDOCGAL STREET TICKETS: $2.50, $1.75 and $1.00. ‘ Every night except Monday. Matinees: Saturday NEW MASSES BALL DECEMBER 7TH, FRIDAY WEBSTER HALL, 119 EAST ELEVENTH STREET Special Attractions artedly the’ expulsion of |the workers of the Soviet Union and revolutionar; ‘tteal | ‘ meaeneartedly he ea elas the world giving up the task of |movement of the world. . critical introductions. Fifth Birthda’ from the Party. ‘The enlarged Po- | defending the Soviet Union against| i rive years later, when the | y The saat. of the “sidgingalatibirda’t. now. playing at Meal Committee calls upon the|the attacks of the world imperial-| | oy sod.” close to. another. in-| Wy of ‘the the Provincetown Playhouse, will give a selection of Hemtral Executive Committee to|ists. This is counter-revolutionary | rational war, when the tasks de. | I. W. W. songs—and those boys can sing! elean the ranks of all jeaders who| manifest any similar tendency in| the Party and emphatically con- demns the counter-revolution: ac tions of these ex-comrades, “2, The enlarged Political Com- mittee declares that these ex-mem- bers of the Central Executive Com- mittee who voted over and over again against Trotskyism and ap- proved the expulsion of Trotsky and other leaders of the opposition from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Comintern, but now defend Trotskyism, demonstrate that they both were unfit for lead- ership in the Party and have con-| sciously deceived the Party during the past few years. and must be condemned by the Party membership. “4. Trot yism is defeatism in that it fails to recognize the partial | of capitalism and the consequent temporary ebbing of the revolutionary movement. It leads to pessimism, and thus undermines the Communist Party. “5. By undermining and instilling a s Trot: the ment, stabilization the Party counter-revolutionary against the Soviet Union and the revolutionary workers. “6, The opposition group in the |volving on the Communist Parties have become even more serious, the |Trotsky group in the American Party challenges the integrity of the Party and hurls the most shame- ful slanders against the Party, the of the Soviet Communist Party Union and the Communist Interna- tional. This group of misplaced petty bourgeois intellectuals attacks | irit of defeatism, |the proletarian Communist Party of | ism plays into the hands of | the Soviet Union and demands the move- | reinstatement of Trotsky and other | It threatens the unity of the /renegades who have kept the Com- | Party and ‘the Comintern, and thus |intern in turmoil. jaids the imperialists in their plans|sian opposition demands the rein- In turn, the Rus- statement of the renegades in the other countries, thus Gomoanetrating’) i) | \their unprineipled position. Volumes Already Published: I, Maximilien Robespierre; II]. Jean Paul Marat; III. Ferdinand Lassalle; IV. Karl Liebknecht; V. George Jacqués Danton; VI. August Bebel; VII. Wilhelm Liebknecht; VIII, V. I. Lenin; IX. Eugene V. Debs; X. C. E, Ruthenberg. Bound in Boards, 50c each. ' Order from | WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 35 East 1251H Srreer. New York Crry. Daily Worker This is an event of the greatest importance to the revolutionary movement. All cities and workers? or- ganizations should make ar- rangements for celebrations. NOW! New Masses artists will make sketches of interesting costumes. Dancing until’3 a. m. to the music of Vernon Andrade Renaissance Orchestra. Buy Your Tickets Early. Avoid the Last Minute Rush. ———$}$3_——————————————————————— ———————_—____ —_— TICKETS IN ADVANCE §1.50. Special Rates AT THE DOOR $3.00 to Labor Groups and. Organizations. Ya. (phone reservations 44. U; ows Sa it

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