The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 1, 1929, Page 2

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MILLIONS DOWN TOOLS FOR MAY 1 Meetings Everywhere; rlin Police 3e Fight h mee 1 whic left actionary he wing} | trade at the call of and in answer tions of the Com- 1 its districts of le, the fi 2 Jed by tex in the Colise the United § in where Negro workers will sing, la- bor sports clubs will perform and pageants will be exhibited. Juliet Stuart Poyntz, Ben Gold, Louis Hy- ma d Biedenkapp, Ben Lif- nd others will speak. Other New York Meetings. Upstate New York meetings in important industrial cities are in ‘alo, 8 p. in Harugari Froshin Hall; ter, 8 p. m, R. B. I. Auditori Niagara Falls, 8 p. m., Hippodrome Hall; Utica, May 4, Labor Lyceum; Bingham- ton, Syracuse and Troy, on May 5,} and other cities. Wilmington, Del., celebrate at 8 p. m and L: Meldin a W. Murdoch and o in Balt re at 8 p. m In addition there reetings in the west tiac, Flint, Sioux City, Ga wor with peakers. ers will speak will . Mozer ‘y, Chi- cago, Pittsburgh and all mining cen- | ters; Los Angeles, Sacramento, and San co. The -Boston meeting, at 8 in Franklin Hall, will be addressed hy C. T. Hathaway; the New Bed- ford textile workers will hear Al- bert ‘Weisbord, Alex. Bail and south- ern textile strikers in Briston Arena xt 7:30 p.m. There are also other Massachusetts meetings. Textile, Mine Workers to Meet. New Jersey will have meetings in Paterson, 8 p. m., Carpenters Hall; Passaic, 8 p. m., Workers Homes Union City, 8:30 p. m., Nepivoda’s! Hall. The big cities of Newark and | Jersey City will hold meetings at! 6 p. m., the first in Progressive La- bor Center and the latter in Ukrain- ian Workers Home. Philadelphia, Chester, Wilkes- Barre will have meetings at 8 p. m. The workers of Providence, R. I., will meet at 8 p. m. in A, C. A. Hall, Connecticut workers have meet- ings at 8 p. m. in Hartford Labor | Lyceum; Port Chester, Finnish Workers Hall; New Haven, Central Green; Stamford, Waterbury and Norfolk. The meeting in Cleveland, seat of the coming Trade Union Unity Con- yention, will be in the Public Hall at 7 p.m. There will also be meet- ings in Canton, Columbus, Warren, Youngstown, Akron, Toledo and the ether centers of heavy industry. NEW YORK, WEDNESD. MAY 1, 1929 Photo shows ruins of buildings after a tornado struck Cochran, Ga farmers in that section, injur DAILY WORKER, Tornado Kills Scores of Farmers, Injures Hundred: hundreds, and desiroying farms and Ss a taking the lives of scores of crops. Find Latin -American Tenants Pjpy DELEGATES and (Continued from Page Onz) fore and who have been so intimi- It will continue dated and cowed by the barriers put and evening up by bosses and landlords, that they can be forced to act as strike- breakers in large numbers, unles the bosses’ vicious propaganda counteracted. Many Cafeteria Workers. The organization of the Porto Rican workers is important for the complete organization of the cafe- terias in New York City. As we proceeded from house to house in our investigation of lower Harlem, we found that the largest group of workers were employed in the cafe- terias, many of them as dishwashers at about $12 per week, working 10 to 12 hours per day. Before entering the homes of the Latin-American workers in Harlem, I was led to believe thet many of the Porto Rican workers were back- ward and inaccessible to the ideas of militant class struggle. I was told that they have been so intimi- dated by the exploiters that they would be difficult to organize. Porto Ricans Receptive. That is not true. I was not kicked out of any homes or cursed.. In spite of the fact that Porto Ricans have been forced into holding a low position in the esteem of the re- spectable Latin-American colony, when approached as class brothers, they are receptive to the ideas of the anti-imperialist movement and of the class struggle. Many of them have never heard of the Communist movement and expressed great sur- prise when presented with our litera- ture both in English and Spanish. + es ee | Everyone Works. 'HE Latin Americans are very friendly and hospitable people. Once convinced of your sincerity they will invite you in, take your hat and coat, and the whole family will gather about you, only too glad to listen and talk. During our stay in their houses we found that a large percentage of them were unemployed, that every- once capable of working in the fam- ily, was either working or looking for a job. Militant Workers. At the Lozada household on East 110th Street we were surprised at the fervor with which we were re- ceived by the family and their ex- treme interest in our work, although they had never before been drawn into working class activity. Two of the older girls worked in shops, one as a milliner, the other as a dress- deas ; maker, while the youngest girl, just} arrived from Venezuela, brought her/ work home from the dress factory. | The milliner is very militant and| would make an excellent speaker. She told us that the Spanish speak- | ing girls in her shops were made to} work fifteen minutes longer than the other girls and when they came in one minute late they were docked} for fifteen minutes. She makes| about $22 a week at piece work and led a spontaneous strike in her shop a year May Day Ad Helen Zarraga, the dressmaker, had just left one shop where she | worked on kimonos because the boss made her work three and four hours | overtime without pay. She is now working on dresses, piece work, and| makes between $22 and $25 a week. These gi together with their younger sister and mother, will all| be present at the May Day demon- stration in the Coliseum. We found a Porto Rican family on the East Side, the father of who| had been unemployed for six months before finding a job as elevator op- erator at $21 per week. His wife! took her work home and between cleaning and cooking tried to make something on making lamp shades. | She got $3.75 per dozen. If she was a fast worker it would take her 2 days to make a dozen. From Father to Children. Home work is a common institu- | tion here. We found many mothers and young girls working on dresses, ornaments and lamp shades in the kitchen of their homes. The father of this family we found! (living at 1659 Madison Ave., where er, 2 he paid $40 for five rooms. He is|at present unemployed. The third, | lines, such as air forces, trained re- a tobacco worker, 57 years old, and! makes $15 per week. His son, who/ lives with him, works as an errand; | boy and makes $12 per week. From| father to son and daughter, it is all work, and nothing but work. Must Stay Here. As the daughter said: “Why should we remain here? All we do is work and work in order to pay rent and buy food. After that we have nothing left.” | Almost every Latin-American worker we spoke to said that he was planning to go back to his home country where he did not haye to |salve as much as here. But one needs money for that and after pay-| | ing for rent and food there is noth- ing left. More for May Day. | In a Cuban family of six, living The Millix cy Workers Struggle AgainstRight Wing ” eaction By S. CROLL. The Cloth Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union is hold- {ship of local 43 to the vicious at- | tack of President Zaritzky and his {administration was a determined ing its national convention beginning | one in favor of the left wing leader- May 1. The leaders and machine| ship and its policies, the General | to re-admit local 43 or the other ; expelled members as long as they continue to maintain the platform | which led to their expulsion. The | absolutely uncompromising unanim- | women’s conference called by the FOR MAY 4 MEET Unions, Shop Groups Cail Women Workers Women workers in the fur trade and the shoe industry are being called to special meetings by their respective unions. The meetings‘will create shop organizations in unor- ganized shops, and send delegates from organized and unorganized shops to the special shop delegate Trade Union Educational League to meet May 4 at Irving Plaza Hall, | Irving Pl. and 15th St. | Local 22 of the dressmakers has | endorsed this conference and at its last meeting elected delegates to at- tend. Shep Committees. Efforts are being me“e now to form shop groups at Macy’s depart- ment store, and Schrafft’s restaur- ants and candy shops. Shop com- mittees are being organized in the great Nal o plant in New York, and in the International Handker- | chief Co. All this is but a part of the in- tensifying campaign to make this shop delegate conference a truly representative one, of the varied in- dustries of this section. It will be preparatory to the Trade Union Unity Conference of June 1 and 2: in Cleveland where a plan for or- ganizing the unorganized and es- tablishing a new militant trade union center will be worked out. West 112th Street for which they | |seas” ACTION WITHU.S, Pamphlet Leaves Room | for Attack on USSR | LONDON, April 30.—In an elec- tion campaign pamphlet issued yes- | terday the British labor party adopts the slogan “freedom of the .” Tt declares against private and private blockade, but says that these are mainly Anglo-Amer- ican problems. The labor party fails to make ex- euses for the navalism and chal- lenging, imperialistic attitude of Ramsay McDonald, its premier, when it formed the government. The labor party government’s crushing of Indian independence movements, and tax revolts with bombs from | airplanes, and its aggressive for-| eign policy, backed up by warships despatched to Egypt, China and the near East, is not considered in the pamphlet. The pamphlet suggests that any | attempt of the British to use for) their own ends, to the exclusion of | the United States, the weapons of | war and blockade would be met| with serious resistance from Amer- ica. It warns that the powerful American naval forces could make a private British blockade ineffec- | tive and suggests joint action of the powers in such enterprise. | It is not likely that the failure to| mention the use cf these imperialist , weapons against the U. S. S. S, is! accidental. The formulation clearly | makes room for new attacks on the| Soviet Union. The slogan of “freedom of the! was originally raised by | Woodrow Wilson as one of the four- teen points, Ramsey MacDonald writes a fore- | word to the pamphlet. | ARMS MEET AGAIN EXPOSED BY USSR | Latin America Gov’ts Play Puppets for U.S. GENEVA, April 30.—The Pre-| paratory Disarmament Commission, | with support of the American dele-| gation, after having its hand forced by Maxim Litvinov, representative | of the Soviet Union, evaded accept- ing the phrase used in Hugh S.) | Gibson’s speech last week where he | ations conference, at spoke of “drastic reduction.” The} in an apartment of seven rooms at |Commission substituted instead the | and extend the rule of the mailed word “limitation,” leaving the way paid $60, we found four workers |0pen for further development of in control of this union are of the same reactionary nature as that of the American Federation of Labor. Altho tens of thousands of women are employed dustry the union never made any efforts to organize them. Not until the millinery workers, for the most part young girls, driven to action by intolerable working conditions, took things into their own hands and organized themselves into local 43, was there any organization of the millinery hand workers. Local Gained Members. The local quickly grew froma handful of 300 to 4,000 members. But once the local was on its feet and showed itself to be a militant body fighting to maintain its or- ganization and demanded better working conditions, which meant naturally a real, not a pretended fight against the bosses; which meant solidarity with other workers as well as developing class con- sciousness on the part of the mem- bership, the International began te devise ways and means for breaking up the local. The same holds true for the cap makers of Boston, and the cap makers and local 52 of Chi- cago. To Eliminate Militants. Not having been able to threaten or wheedle the membership of these locals into submission to the spine- Jess and class collaboration policy of the International, steps were taken to put them outside of the Inter- national. By this method the Zarit- zky administration hoped to destroy or ighten the local into submis- \ # Executive Board expelled the local.! ously adopted demands of local 43 This was in absolute violation of the | as expressed in the election of dele- in the millinery in-} International’s constitution, | Became Class Conscious. | Far from bullying local 43 or | other expelied members into accept- |ing the reactionary policies of the International’s leadership or de- stroying the local, the net result has been growing class consciousness on ;the part of these workers and an even clearer understanding of the | Zaritzky administration. The strug- \gle has taught thousands of women workers belonging to local 48, what |the differences are between right and left wing leadership, Their increased class consciousness is causing them to fight for their principles and demands with even greater determination. That this is so can be seen from the marked in- terest and great activity of the whole membership in the discussion of the local’s platform in connection with the convention and election of delegates to it. Delegates are be- ing elected as the local does ny recognize its expulsion hy the G, E. B, and is appealing that action to , the national convention. Have No Illusions. However, the membership of local | 48, has no illusions as to the possi- bility of being reinstated. This could clearly be seen from the nature of the many speeches made by rank and file members at the general membership meeting held early in April when the policy of the | delegates later to be elected by a _Yeferendum vote was discussed. It is as clear as day that the Zaritzky answer of the whole member-! controlled convention is not going | traitorous role being played by the! | gates who stand pledged to fight |for the same principles which the ‘local proclaimed before the illegal expulsion are as follows: Workers Demands. 1. Reinstatement of local 43 and all militant workers, 2. Organization of the unoygan- ized.cap and millinery workers. 3. For: the maintenance of the week system, ” 4, Forty hour week. 5. For the Shop Delegate Sys- tem. 6, For unity of all cap and mil- linery workers with the needle trades union. Both the industrial educational activities of the local and actual barricade fighting has won the un- animous support of local 43’s mem- bership for the sixth of its demands; “For Unity of all cap and millinery workers with the new Needle Trades | Workers Industrial Union. Stopping at nothing the Zaritzky machine is making a few frantic last minute efforts, before the convention, to in- | timidate local 43 members. If by its armed attack on the downtown office of local 43, beating and wounding of several girls and having 18 of them arrested; if by raiding the of- fice and breaking its windows, local 24 hopes to “win” the support of working women at present members of local 48, they have only succeeded in exposing themselves all the more as servants of the capitalists. Local 24’s actions are teaching the millin- ery workers to loath right wingers Two of them, cafeteria workers, are! a cafeteria worker, is employed at $24 per week and the fourth is em- ployed as a clerk. One of these, who said he was not politically minded, found nothing wrong with Machado, the butcher) of Cuba, to find that his brothers | ridiculed him and set him right. | They too will be present at the May | Day demonstration. Come to Coliseum. In another six room apartment} on the west side for which they| paid $60 we found a family of seven with five workers, all fortunate | enough to be employed at, present. In the Torrellas household the 55-| year-old father works at the Sun-| shine Biscuit Company’ for $26.50) per week. The 18-year-old boy works in a piano factory at dry sandpapering for $18 a week; a 40- year-old woman works in an em-| broidery shop at $14 a week; one | of the workers works for the I. R. T. at $32 per week and another woman does homework in stone ornaments at six cents a gross. She sometimes makes as low as 50 cents a day, sometimes as high as one dollar. , They, too, are extremely inter- ested in May Day and its meaning for them. They, too, will be present at the May Day Celebration at the Coliseum this afternoon. We Must Reach Them. These families are fairly represent- ative of the’mass of Latin American workers in Harlem. Every available | bit of labor power in the family is used. Where it is impossible to work in a factory, they must take their work home. Wages are low, employment is not assured them.” The South American families es- pecially are very receptive to our movement and need only a little in- terest and encouragement from us to| join hands against the exploiters. Latin American tenants, you will find that the mass May Day parade starting today from Union Square at 1 p. m. will lead you in the cor- rect direction in the fight against the exploiters. Follow the lead of your brothers and come to the mass demonstration of New York work- ers at the Coliseum, 177th St., Bronx. | | | * * * Continue to follow the Daily Worker in its exposure of housing conditions and description of the tenant’s problems, Latin American workers, come to Centro Obrero de Halba Espanola, 55 W. 133rd Street, where you will find class conscious workers, leaders in the’ struggle against the exploiters. Tenants are invited to write in freely to the Daily Worker about the conditions under which they ° are forced to live, WORKERS DEMAND RAISE. LONDON, (By Mail).—A de- |Warder at Bankruptcy | |Hearing of Lancia Co. |Company, which failed ten days his approval to armaments along the major eos serves, certain types of navies, etc. Also against the votes of China, the U. S. S. R., and Germany it de- cided to exclude any proposals for limiting “effectives available with- out mobilization.” Under this head are included soldiers who are on leave, but who are not in reserves. The puppet American imperialist | governments of Latin-America were used as mouthpieces by the Amer- ican delegation to fight for its proposals. The activities of the conference have been largely confined thus far to excluding any proposals which would arouse a demand for effective reduction of those armaments which are of major consequence in imper- ialist war. | | Awkward Question for | Frank H. Warder, till recently | state banking superintendent, is ex- pected to anpear today at the bank- zuptey hearing before Federal Ref- eree Henry K. Davis. Warder, at the request of Governor Lehman, cancelled a trip to Europe a few Gays ago, The hearing is in con- nection with the bankruptcy cases of Michael F. Longo and the Lancia Motors Company. It is expected that lawyers for | the stockholders cf Lancia Motors, | forcel into bankruptcy, it is be- lieved, by the Royal Indemnity Com- pany, ere expected to ask Warder in what manner he expressed his friendship with Ferrari, Ferrari was president of the City Trust after his death. Warder had given city trust loan for $1,000,000. Finnish Dockers Get Wage Raises After Ten Months Strike STOCKHOLM, April 30 (By Mail),—The bitter strike of the dockers in Finland which has been going on for ten months has now been settled by the intervention of the labor minister. According to the agreement made with the offi- cial, wages in three harbors are to be increased by 12.5 per cent, in eleven other harbors by 20 per cent, in two other harbors including the capital by 25 per cent and for all other harbors by 15 per cent. The minimum wage demanded by the workers has also been granted. For piece work an hourly minimum wage has been fixed. For loading and unloading dangerous loads like sulphur, cement, coals, etc., the bonus of one Finnish mark per hour .| will be paid. The result represents a great victory for the Finnish trade and to fight them as allies of the bosses, mand for a five shilling a week in- crease in wages has been made by London shipyards workers, unions and for the success of ener- getic struggle as against compro- mise, LABORITES ASK | _Zsmmany Has Kind Words for Dopester Photo shows Tammany’s Mayo lington Booth, who between them run the Volunteers of America, a boss-subsidized organization for feeding religious dope to the workers No wonder Walker has a kind wo: they advis tains in office? the workers to uphold capitalism and the grefters it main- FOOD WILL WIN GASTONIA STRIKE Pickets Rely on Fellow, Workers to Send It ‘ | (Continued from Page One) \is absolutely necessary to always have the relief stores well stocked | with food. “The mill owners and most of the small business men are doing their utmost to hamper us in all ways possible. We are not given any credit and are compelled to pay cash for all our food. | $1 Per Week. ” Walker greeting “General” Bat | Pie oat we ce net able te | give the strikers any elaborate | amount of food. We have been feed- | ing them on less than one dollar a week. | “The relief committee headed by rd for all religious fakers; don't COMMUNIST CALL WOMEN T0 JOIN STRUGGLE MAY 1 Discrimination, Bad Sh Woman Workers’ American Women Will Masses Abroad, Against Imperialism (Continued from Page One) new air fleets and greater navies, manufacture of munitions of war on an unprecedented scale, propa- ganda of nationalism and imperial- ism through every channel of cap- italist influence, the schools, the churches, press, movies, radio. Hypocritical Peace Moves. While preparing for war the cap- italist powers seek to delude the masses with gestures of peace. Peace pacts, arbitration treaties, leagues of nations, world courts, disarmament conferences, pacifist congresses, are heaped on each other in an effort to t.row a smoke screen over the imperialist war prepara- tions. The imperialist war plans are maturing rapidly. The new Amer- ican empire has thrown aside the mask. Wall Street openly and brazenly dictates to Washington and the world. Morgan, Lamont, Morrow, Young and their lackeys of the house of Morgan, represent Wall Street and Washington at the repar- Geneva, in China, in Japan, Mexico and Europe, fist and the Yankee dollar to every corner of the world, Communists Appeal to Women. On May Day, 1929, the Commun- ist Party sends out a call especially to the women of the working ciass, to millions of toiling women, slaving for a mere pittance in the factories and workshops of America, borne down by poverty and drudgery in the home. Working women’ are. the worst sufferers under capitalist im- perialism. They are the cheap and easy objects of exploitation in cap- italist mass production with its speed-up, low wages and long hours. They are being drawn into heavy industry to replace men workers. And in time of war they are forced to man the factories and produce the munitions and materials of war. Mothers as well as workers, the working women in America today, along with their labor in the shop, must bear and rear the children of the working class, must see their little ones starve in time of strike or unemployment, must bring them up in the hideous slums that capital- ism gives the working class for homes, must see them driven into} the factories and conscripted for capitalist wars. The women of the working class suffer as mothers as well as workers from the hideous ex- ploitation of capitalism, and from war, the inevitable accompaniment of capitalist imperialism. Organize Against War Danger. The imperialists today are trying to delude the women workers with false hopes of peace. Through the schools, the churches, <nd the pac- ifist women’s organizations they try to make working women believe that peace is possible and that the cap- italist world is striving for péace. This hollow sham must be exposed by working women, They must or- ganize for a bitter and determined struggle against the war danger, must penetrate the workshops and the homes with the message of the class struggle, must rouse the masses of the working women to a realization of the impending danger and a determination to fight it. Working women must organize, must build the new unions, must build nuclei, especially in the factor- ies and plants manufacturing war material, must prepare for the moment when they are called to man these factories in war-time, must make ready side by side with the men workers to crush the hideous capitalist system under its own war machine and build a new workers society free from war and exploi- tation. Rally to Communist Movement. On May Day, 1929, working women must rally to the banner of the Communist International, the world organization of the working class, which is the only force able to meet and fight against world im- perialism and world war. American working women! Join the Commun- | | May Day, 1929, stand shoulder —~= | Bertha Crawford, who is also a {member of the strike committee, is sub-divided into several sections, the sub-committees include registration, investigation, collection, relief store, housing and eviction, fuel and sick- |ness. Each committee has a head | who is responsible to the relief com- mittee as a whole. Sick Committee Busy. “The eviction committee, as an example, has to find living quarters op Conditions Increase Need for Revolt |for those workers who went on Coan oe | strike and were compelled to leave Stand With Working the company-owned houses. Our sick committee is also very active. |The amount of sickness prevailing }among the strikers is unusually munist Party of the U. S. A., leader | large. I have never seen s on in all the struggles of the American|™unity so shot through with sick- workers and working women. ness as this one. We have a girl Fight together with the men and| With several years nursing exper- women workers of other countries|ience heading this committee. We against the international attack| have been successful in our efforts upon the working class, against the|t0 obtain free, medical treatment speed-up and long hours, against ae the sick strikers and their fam- itali ; + list | ilies. Rea eaeieAa Mie the imperialist) “wan active committee is collect- Fight against the misleaders of 8 food from the farmers in the tals ms t th leadleracoe theo A, | surrounding territory. However, the 4 ee ape ee WwW 1s 7 de | xtreme poverty of most of these Union feagte against the’ Soctaltet| farmers keeps their nr a ae mn t very small figure. e Party, all of which, like their ilk) Gown '0 @ very s . 6 i M* largest part of our support will in other countries, are the enemies| have to come from the industrial and betrayers of the revolutionary | workers of the North, East and labor movement. $ West, who have always generously Mobilize Internationally. come to the aid of striking workers Working women of America! in all sections of the country. This time they will have to come to the shoulder with the toiling masses of! jmmediate assistance of the striking women workers in all other capital- | workers of the South who are in TO WORKING On) to| jist countries in a common struggle | des against capitalist imperialism. March side by side with the work- | ing women of the Soviet Union, your | victorious sisters, who have freed) themselves from the yoke of capital- | ism through their glorious revolu-| tion and are building a new workers society. | Working women! Soviet Union! Defend the working women and children of Soviet’ Rus- sia from the war plots of the im-! perialists. Forward, March! On May Day!) Down tools! Come out of the fac- tories! Show your strength and) fighting spirit! For the emancipation of the work- ing class! For the destruction of the capital-| ist sysem, its exploitation, and its wars! Long live the Soviet Union! Long live the union of the workers | and peasants for a workers’ govern-| ment all over the world! COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (National Women’s Department.) Defend the TRON MINER KILLED. | IRON RIVER, Mich. (By Mail). —Kalle Tuorminen, an iron miner here, was suffocated when caught in a chute and buried under tons of ore. CHEMICAL COMBINE GROWS ish Chemical Combine has proposed to increase its capital by twenty million pounds. The combine’s profit! pounds, LONDON, (By Mail).—The Brit-| in 1928 was five and a half million| perate need of food.” BAe Contributions for the striking workers should be sent to the Work- ers International Relief, Room 604, 1 Union Square, New York. Reopen Trust Charges Against Baking Corp. WASHINGTON, April 30.—A rccolution calling upon the Federal Trade Commission to reinstate and prosecute charges of formulating a “bread trust” against the Continen- tal Baking Corporation was intro- duced today by Senator LaFollette, Rep., Wis. The resolution, which was favor- ably reported by the judiciary com- mittee in the last Congress, points | out in the prcamble the commission dismissed the complaint and the De- partment of Justice its suit again: the corporation “under strange cir- cumstances,” which refer, presum- ably, to the pressure applied by representatives of the baking com- pany to the commission which ex- onerated it. JOBLESS FILL DOCKS. LIVERPOOL, Eng., (By Mail).— | A typical illustration of the great unemployment in England was the | scene on the Liverpool docks when a | steamer with a cargo of fruit from Jaffa came in, Over 1,000 workers sought the few jobs open. In the Soviet Union—the xeven- hour day. On May Day we inten- sify our struggle for the 8-hour day, 40-hour week! { Lowest Cost Tour to : Soviet Russia All expenses included § 3 2 5 New York to Moscow and return By special arrangement the Soviet govern- ment grants free entrance and emit visas for these excursions > > > ce bap No Previous Visa Applications Required June 29—Flagship Leviathan July 24—S.S. George Weshington Every tour and tourist insured free. Stopover privileges throughout Europe. Free Russian visas. Next sailing to Russia May 4, 11, 15, 22, 29. No delays. 52 sailings during the Spring and Summer months. obtainable by cable in three days. SEE YOUR STEAMSHIP AGENT Of ist International, born out of the last world war to organize the working class against the next world war! Join its American section, the Com- American-Russian Travel Agency, Suc. 100 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C.—Chelsea 4477-5124 TVVVVVVVI VT VW? *< VVVVVVVVVVVVY

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