The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 8, 1929, Page 2

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Page Two : Ss New Repu EW YORK, blican Tar DAILY WORKER, N f for Big Bust NESS HELPS PLANTERS | Wall Street Air Corps Prepares for Coming War STOCK BARONS, SITRUS TRUST Raises Schedules on Cement, Textiles | WASHING" 7.—Laugh ing up the the joke played on who had been deluded by Republican party zampaign speeches into the idea that the tariff revision would some way tr other help them by raising the | iff on n products, the rep lican majority of the house -vays and means committee today re orted | at simply | e poorer | in a bill for a new tariff disregards the product of farmer altogether. Everybody but the farmers under- stand that a high tariff on wheat s y profit and whole influence the but no to the t the farmer price of the goods t one has taken the fa, Bay Photo shows some of the planes of the 91st observation squadron in n preparation for the coming in perialist war, in which these plan CERO RCORS maneuvers over San Francisco nes will drop death upon workers secret, and definite campaign prom- ises had been made. Insults Farmers. As though to add insult to insult, | A Century of Fake Housing buildings can be built even below the minimum provided in the law of 1901. WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1929 Only; Makes No Pretense at Farm Relief FIGHT EeFORT TO * Wau See" BOSS IRE ROUSED SEIZE MEXICAN PEASANT ARMS Communists Say,.‘Keep the Guns’ ued from Page One} | were imprisoned in Tamaulipas; the salary of the only Commu deputy |to the Federal Parliament, Hernan Laborde, topped pending the attempt cf his expulsion from the chamber under the pretext of having supported the recent military revolt, | though the Communist Party fought jagainst the revolution of the gen- Jerals, arm in hand; and now the |treasurer of the National Peasant} League, J. Guadelupe Rodriguez, has | been arrested under accusation of| robbery and banditry. In Jalisco, the | local political chiefs, accompanied by | armed guards, penetrated into a fac-| tory during working hours and took! away and imprisoned several ‘work- ers under the accusation of “plot- ting” against the local government and of supporting the new “United Trade Union Federation” (Con- fereracion Sindical Unitaria de Mexico) which was, at least the- (Conti Jouett Shouse, Kansas City busi- ness man, bitter foe of the workers, has succeeded John Raskob, explorter of General Motors slaves, as chair- man of the executive committee of one of Wall Street's parties—the democratic party. PROMISES SCAB \Body from the inside, the speaker |told some stinging facts about the |speedup, the danger and accidents, the robbery and humiliation suffered 'by the workers, who literally give every waking hour and often a limb or their lives in the brutal race of \the auto bosses for more millions, * BY SHOP PAPERS Case of Jailed Workers Up Monday (Continued from Page One) and the permit was revoked as the meeting was about to start. The “Otis Lift” was first issued |© * pet in April, This issue, exposing the!/ys-Overland plant. The distribution 12-hour day, the meager wages, and|f the circulars resulted in a request lcalling fora fight on the “time |bY the Merchants' and Manufactur- lstudy” speedup system was imme- |e?’ Association that the police preak |diately welcomed by the workers as |UP the May Day meeting that was their own organ. ‘The shop paper Scheduled. Despite this fact, a suc- |aroused the fear of the Otis Com-|°¢ss‘ul meeting was held. te er WE GRRE _ BERLIN TERROR about an eight-hour day and a union wage scale. Demonstration Assails ‘Socialist’ Murderers In a statement issued to the cap- (Continued from Page One) * Auto Workers Get Circulars. TOLEDO, O. (By Mail).—A dis- |tribution of circulars calling for a fight for better wages and conditions and the eight-hou- day featured May for the auto workers here. The ulars were given out at the Wil- * italist press of Yonkers, the open shop bosses’ men, Mayor Fogarty | and Police Chief Quirk, said the per- mit had been withdrawn because |“certain matters which it was | deemed inadvisable to bring to pub-| | lic attention were disclosed to the| police,” | The certain matters disclosed to| s to suppress the meeting. |the police, Otis workers point out,| Party, which had issued the call for SUPPLY IN SOUTH jwere disclosed by the Otis bosses, | the demonstration. | together with orders from the stat On Consulate Steps. {es Tenement Law for Rich. Miller, standing on the steps of * Chairman Hawley’s bill deliberately | ~etionlly, Saver sil i rea | rst spray ree Diane, Cnet 7 + |the German consulate, assailed the Measures in New York State powerful associations of farm cap- housing commission report on con- are, Even Clarence Stein, who is |leaders of the National Peasant (Special to the Daily Worker) it is “closed to Communists” or any | He considered the socialist chief of leaves the wheat and garin rates | } The respectable citizens of this fight i | A . + Pistia <cbut raises. the. tariff on aduainlaaion seeined CSteneak CRORE go sae \Bossés of Birmingham,| Exposes Fisher Body Slavery. | Berlin police and its vicious officials the agricultural products that are oe ~ ee or ie d labout /tielold) law tenement aaiioh Pough F ‘ Q |_ CLEVELAND, 0. (By Mail)—|who sent them out to shoot down controlled by large landlords, or by| _ (Continued from Page One) —_ notoriety. That set the landlords wake tenement conditions what they| re ,Sccusstion of robbery, in- Ala., In New Scheme rhe Fisher Body’ plant here is noto-| working men and women for pa- : disease like small-pox and infectious busy again and they had their state cendiarism and banditry against riously open shop, which means that | rading on International Labor Day. ; italists, which act like monopolies | diseases like tuberculosis. a ditions that everybody knew of. unusually honest for a state inv “| League grew out of their support of BIRMINGHAM, Ala., May 7.— one who by organizing the workers, | police, Zoergiebel, for ordering the and do reap profits from a higher| The first step in the series of fake ‘ ator, is fc i ‘ apper) addy: The hes fruit growers’ as- | housing laws ak wade wientlie ah a result the Tenement House Law of ae aks ane Hae the government and their fight/The local Chamber of Commerce of|will imperil the steady flow of mil-|attack on the workers, and the so- cociations are cheered with the fol- | legislature, in the face of unneces- 1901 was produced. It is supposed nosed Jaw does nothing or next to| inst the catholics. In the course this city has recently adopted @ new/lions in profits from this 72-hour a|cial democratic party to which lowing Orenges, grapefruit | sary opposition from the lar to have doomed the double-deck | rthing,” and he calls it a “tenement|°" ‘° Struggle, they requisitioned /method of advertising the scab/week slave’ pen. Zoergiebel belongs and which sup- and lemon peel, crude, dried or in| and real-estate speculators, dumbbell apartments (box-like! cuse law for the xichi? mules and foodstuffs and confiscated | agencies. “Down tools” in such a plant Ports his action, as lackeys of im- rine, 2 cents pound: candied or |its law of 1867. It is an illuminating | StU out unventilated cages), the “5 ss the changes called for in {some tom, ine, defeated “cristeros.”/ ‘The Chamber of Commerce has/means that you can’t pick them up|Perialism and betrayers of the ctherwire prepared or preserved, 8 education in the bluffing ability of COMMunity toilets, dark halls, and ae enone aes ae nt at poring the fights in which agraris-|recently issued booklet entitled|again next day, but Fisher Body | Workers. : cents pound; citrus or citrus peel,|the legislatures of exploiters to have made compulsory airshafts to| 18 OW Me Tals, free Pate gol as and the army fought together | “Birmingham, the Industrial City,”|workers celebrated May Day just| The speech was punctuated with ; candied or otherwise prepared or|study this law. supply air and light to all rooms, Te TOMS Wi tilations the etanenvg| seainst the “cristeros,” a village | which is full of lies about the in-|the same. The shop bulletin was| shouts from the workers gathered 1 preserved, six cents pound; limes,| It is also a good insight into the| fite-Proof public halls and stairs, eee eee eis ee eines the | vas cummed and the army now e¢°|dustrial prosperity and progress injdistributed as they went to work,|in the street, “Down with Police : 2 cents; grapefruit, 2 cents; pine-| conditions prevailing at that time,| 20° ade duene ae; of garbage, scat All not pte y lc the agraristes an incendiaries | the city of Birmingham. In thelannouncing a noon-hour speaker.| Brutality,” and “Long Live Work- ‘ apples, 35 cents crate of two and|and how little conditions have | Incane af escapes there will be me|end..0f, being responsible for the! booklet they call upon the exploiters | Hundreds poured out of the plant ers’ Solidarity.” : forty-five hundredths cubic feet; in | changed despite that law and others And Today. | privacy or safery from disease ia the) wring of the village. In a few in-|of different parts of the country to|at ndon and listened to one of their| After marching for an hour, the : bulk, one and one-sixth cents each. Violated Today, According to this law many of the | toilets.” says Stein Se ipa troops having in-|come and invest in Birmingham, and shopmates, recently laid off, tell the | pickets before the consulate of the : Big Packers Profit. According to this law no building , tenements standing in 1901 are de-) pot is th h Ase scarer he. hei arn eitieote He A Shetn | they, promise these exploiting in-|story of May Day, its American] murder government in Germany t Some sops were thrown to the may be occupied as a tenement house ¢lared unfit for human habitation) || °0 sh 5 esi! tee a a ie peti ey aeaitien oa A a vestors that they will supply them origin, born of the mass eight-hour | went to the hall of the Marine Work- C truck farmers, and the big stock! unless every sleeping room had a and should have been demolished.| “4S Passed by the state legislature, | arracts, surrounded (hem ane ‘ook |with slaves from other parts of|day agitation of the ’80’s. The speak-| ers’ League, at the Seamen's Club, But today, in 1929, nearly all of | ‘ined by the governor. Like all the| away their arms, saddles and equip-| ‘Tennessee and thereby furnish cheap|er pointed out that here, 40 years|where they were joined by a num- 5 ranchers and packing house owners | ventilator or transom window of an came out handsomely, as the follow-|area of three square feet; unless ing rate increases indicate fresh there were proper fire-escapes; un chilled or frozen beef, six cents/less there was ventilation in a pound; sheep, lambs and goats,| main hall; there must be no lez ; these tenements are filled to capacity without having gone thru preciable alterations, At the beginning of 1928, 554,- ap- others passed before it it is a fake, designed with the double purpose ot fooling the workers and helping the landlords, ment. They were also identified as “bandits” because they branded their horses with the sickle and hammer. | Communist Statement. | The appeal of the Communist labor to the northern capitalists who are running away from the steady revolt of the workers of the North, The booklet urges other states to after the first May Day strike, the| ber of seamen and held a meeting |Fisher Body workers were working which was addressed by I. Zimmer- at top speed 12 hours a day. iman, of the All-America Anti-Im- Knowing shop conditions in Fisher perialist League. BS) a i three dollars a head; mutton and the roof; no less than 1 water-closet 067 apartments in old law tene- + “ » 7 fresh, chilled or frozen goat meat,|to every 20 occupants; yard space; ments (those built before the 1901 Pay a eases af the Republic! |t#ke up the matter of establishing ¢ 5 cents a pound; fresh chilled or must be adequate; no basement or) law went into effect) were oc- | | : “shipping agencies for the furnish- : A Comrades * frozen lamb, 7 cents a pound, swine,| cellar rooms are to be occupied, cupied, housing about 2,500,000 |: Attar havitie’ iguil -e-|ing of cheap labor to the centers of g 9 vi + 5 * After having liquidated the re-| ood: in 2 cents a pound. | without a permit from the board of | people. welt sof: tha genefals-of the North; | exploitation. Sugar Goes Up. heaith and if occupied they must be A Better One. | \the et i :| The entire object of this booklet] : . aos o8 wae Ys ‘ ee Eas igh | government tries to disarm the}, ‘ | n The American sugar trust is given | seven feet high and have an external If you think that this is a good| groups of peasants who took active |i8 revealed in the statement that ; a real advantage ever ‘its Cuban | window. _ Dhe’ building laws a exatniple of how little laws really) |part against the generals in revolt they call upon the various com- TI te rivals in the raising of the duty on| for rooms having at least one win-| count when passed and administered | Sas land the clerical reaction. As on|Panies that have been instrumental ab h sugar to 3 cents a pound, which| dow connected with the external air, | by a capitalist government, there is| Home Comforts for’) previous occasions, the masses of the |i" breaking strikes, such as the i even with the 20 per cent preference | cemented cellars and fire-proof con- a still better one that even Clarence : ; United Steel Corporation to cooper- : : epee 3 Gla | . *: peasants have only served as cannon- f ‘ R ss Inc o. given Cuba, will make the rate 2.4/ struction. — in, of the State Commission of Big Oil Grafter fodder for the bourgeoisie and to(ate with them. They will have 9 ° cents a pound for her. The present} Not a single one of these regu- Housing and Regional Planning, had| : | protect a government which is not /@8encies then that will furnish 26-28 UNION SQUARE 4 basic rate is 2.2 cents a pound. The| lations, with the exception of the to admit. In 1885 the New York! (Continued frm Page One) | theirs black and white workers to scab K CITY most controversy has been about the} toilet clause, has been followed Tenement House Commission re- either till the sentence is completed : Policy of Op>-ossion. upon the workers in the striking NEW oe x sugar rate, and the Cuban govern-| generally. Today, in most tene- ported as a “public menace” 23 tene-|or his friends in political vower! “Calles anette sants in|27€aS with the cooperation of the ki ment has 2 delegation visiting its| ments, you will find at least one ments “covering 100 per cent of exert enough pressure to get the|1994, after the De la Huerta revolu. |CO@! and Iron police of the various A imperialistic masters in Washing-| violation of the law of 1867. the lot and at the same time situated | “prisoner” out before time. liege dete thst barde'thing after the |COmpmuies! e ton, begging for a low rate. Adecnameay sakes. in middle of the block, in which the “Make Him Feel at Home.” [revolt ae Godtee aia Reta s aiid] fe “Protect” Textiles. In 1879, on the request of reform-| bedrooms are totally dark with no| The sensitive limbs of the oil| i : ° | ' Hie cttee “aot “Tapartant ad-| cra, this law was amended to pro-|Vontlatlon whatever.” Now, 40 lbsrn will noe be inttae ‘ip, alte pecamnt stamses snow ante tase | TOE Her and Family are | ‘ vances are one taking cement from! Vide that no more than 65 per cent years Inter, 14 of these are still oc-|prison garb which other prisoners\ever thcir swing towards the left, Killed rs Train Runs | ii To I TL th the free list and fixing a tax of/of a lot may be occupied by a build- | Cpt. eta thousands of ‘are forced to wear. Two large bags|Calles and the government of Portes Into Auto at C i i yl mM (Z , qi OPEN DAILY EL eight cents per 100 pounds, and aling in order to furnish adequate Similar tenements in New York!of clothing were brought in by his|Gil try to do the same as in 1924 | uto at Crossing ji il ty) BUI, from 9 hi meral substantial revisi wards| lighting and air. It also provided| City,” says Stein, ppp cke De ? i | will j rom 9 a. m.-9 p.m, ge’ ial revision upwards | Fs I chauffeur shortly after his arrival|and 1927. The Communist Party of § " i WY\ It = th @f cotton, silk and wool fabrics|that sleeping rooms must have 12} The Tenement House Law went|at a late hour Monday night Mexico exhorts all: the peasants to|. STURGIS, Mich, May 7—-ive| — th rates, although raw cotton is left|square feet opening directly on the thru 150 amendments before the| ‘The doctor is a very nice man,”|refuse absolutely to give up their |Pcople were instantly killed and » Ip on the free list. public street or yard. Multiple Dwellings Bill took its place| Mary Wright confided. She waslarms. The government proclaims |**th was hurt so that he died on Our glasses are fitted by expert i a The bill will be taken up from| That amendment was a joke, It In spite of this law and its confident that she would “get along |that it has crushed the clerical re-|‘"¢, Way to the hospital when mechanics to insure comfortable k of the floor Monday under stringent| las been violated “legally.” For the |150 amendments, 40 per cent of tne well” in his department. | wetten|\ dont) thta'taalltas sO Bove | woes bemra sauna Wemun DRaben: | wear and neat appearan > wl rules by which the majority intends amendment also provided that a/ families in New York City live in| Authorities continued to add more|ernment only crushed a group of |&¢t ‘t@in crashed into the automo- i bearaecr i a Nee ee eee tf Ge bac of Soeur n Sonia ee in ad cc Sen auaienne SileueeL > Aree Bibtee lavage en | BA aes : . = e board o ', a housing expert for the the “dispenser.” esplended in his} ti 7 ‘ical- bs 2 seats = 4 ine eee the ene was occupied By) esi would give i ere sh government, who has seen silk pajamas, he went tor a drink pr ee ig ant rantvee AOA in th Earl Ward, Sturgis factory Work: | (Formerly Polen Miller Optical Co.) > th this matter the Senate was drawing| was a very easy thing to get this a igated slums in every part | water last night. “Is this what y f subli i er; his wife and three children and OPTOMETRISTS — OPTICIANS 4 to a close debate on the debenture| permission” with the result that the|of the world including Dublin ‘and drink out of?” he asked a prisoner| ‘totes, Inclitine chore’ of the cen-|}is mother-in-law, Mrs, Sarah Lee, 1690 LEXINGTON AVENUE., Corner 106: St. {A ore See yee a eis howe ne a ea reek ae eee London, says: gingerly as he saw him drink from|tey and the south. And the reac- | Wee the victims. | : — — i 5 sa i a Ag hia wipe cace Whar Buc ah daa i Py ee Adored Worst in World. \8 battered cup. ___ |tion will continue as long as there| One of the children lived a few fo or Thursday. ee ee oS Marae uk 0 ab pet “The condition of life in any slums ‘Yes sir,” was the reply. Sinclair! are in the country large estates and jminutes but died on the way to the m : a eI haee Sain ad Feige Shei me I have ever seen are better than they “4S then given a private glass. big landowners. Only the complete cree bes ee a oa ‘athe for 5 pes ol ae Laaattent Laws Mae Le the slums of New York.” | Chats on Horce Racing. breaking up of the large estates and | Picke Po seat i satiny ical ar hil F Mee exivemely difticait to "tind ra At present at the rate with which. However, he complained petulant-|the handing over of all the land to scene’ of the accident, i | scartmant Phlsh ie ail at ieheeann the old law tenements are being ly that the pictures taken by news-|the peons and poor peasants will BUS CO. MERGER 5 A PaMine oub into tha open © withdrawn from use, it would take Papermen as he entered jail made|he able to prevent the continuous ‘ a H ING FR ae ain more than a 100 years to get rid of Sim look as if his back was broken. | resurrection of the clerical reaction. DENVER, Colo. May 7—Con- It ane ives ies Noting them, But he was consoled by the conver-| “The experience of twenty years solidation of three of the largest bei f a RY puree was 0 ten deemed Svea sation of other inmates with whom of struggles has taught us that the bus companies in the country was wa 1 — fille A en rooms bites pepeencee HAs Beane Mawes jhe discussed horseracing, | bourgeoisie and the leaders of the |@mnounced here. The lines are the wh # Mayor. Sees Chance to|*umd 2 narrow shaftway, a yard 4 Scrap of Paper, —__|_ To assure Sinclair's friends that |Mexiean petty-bourgeoisie do not Pickwick, Yelloway and Greyhound un U Th Ga Blech wide, ee length of a five or 1 Ee Multiple Dwellings Law, which everything possible was being done|wish and are not able to solve the |companies, forming a $12,000,000 = hit se in ections six story building. was finally signed by Governor |for his comfort, G. T. Stanford, at-|land problem. They not only do not | combine. FOR WORKERSaa peary _ During all this time, and up to the | Roosevelt last month, after two|torney for the Sinclair Oil Company, Saxt the panei of the large (Continued from Page One) | Multiple Dwellings Bill of 1929, / years of wrangling among real es-| Was taken on a tour of insnection|{andowners, but, on the contrary,| AMAAAAAAAAAA : dre of landlords and land sharks to com- aoe Saige constantly being tate men and landlords and after/of prison headquarters by the jail|they desire the strengtheorifi!‘uEea__.==— JUS1 OFF THE PRESS! al bat the chamber of commerce group, agate ation of all the “laws” |) having hae meres is paves Pe a a ee cardi Pais capitalist elements, both in the city wit who are desirous of getting rid of | cuvers in the state legislature, is the) »In¢ 1s the only one of the)/and on the land. A bourgeoisie, a i i Bri their property on Allen St. and are}, 4, More Jobs. mst useless serap of paper ever Principals involved in the Teapot subject to imperialism, eannot fight Women In Soviet Russia . . . . 25¢ at thus pushing the scheme for widen- s the result of the investigation | filed, ‘e graft deal to go to jail. His|\against reaction, The bourgeoisie, *, Th ing and rebuilding Allen St. carried on by a commission ap-| Two years ago the state legis- SeMtence, however, was given not| inked to the financial interests of 4 Wage Labor and Capital by Karl Marx . 10¢ gui ‘ BIS | 4 ¥ NEWLY TRANSLATED S. v Bay raat ORAS eWihae Mok cou | Pointed by the state in 1884, a law/ lature formed a commission toi ey, eee of his activities in| Wall Street, does not want and can- ( AND REVISED EDITION) ‘ imdpce, led by Libby, wealthy realtor | was passed in 1887. About all this| examine and revise the Tenement ‘7° SWinde, but for refusal to an-| not allow an carnest and open strug- qT Y : so and owner of the large Libby Hotel, 2 2¢complished, was to hand out | House Law. As a result of the ac- pub bei incriminating questions | pie of the armed peasant masses en Years of the Communist Inter- whi which would have to be demolished |1° Moe soft jobs to hanger-ons, by’| tivities of this commission the Dwel-|Pu* to him by @ senate committee. |against the large landowners. national by I. Komor 10e lea’ if ‘the Forsythe proposition went | pipet ved nos aes a tarierey ngs Bill was offered last year eal 0 " Sooner or later the bourgeoisie will . Dike Silty Sete, ta coll into effect, succeeded in getting the ie Breve | ttOm 0 45.\ defeated because of the objections turn the arms, which it uses today j Cae * . lep i Allen St. proposition futon the deals | cece yomee tetas \ccuneant 00H of| raised by the representatives of f fb ermen Drowned against the generals of the north, Your Chance to See Reminiscences of Lenin by Zetkin . 35¢ call i cnllar two weeks ago. pes ear on housing by creating the | realty interests. What the realty in- | ew Jersey Coast against the masses of workers and | aq Proletari lution b : pla A Straight Fake. | “Tenement House Commission” to terests wanted was an annulment of Sairggots peasants, in order to destroy the Ss @ Vv I E T roletarian Revolution Lenin . . 50¢ the Th “model” re Seager meet once a year. We must not for-| the law of 1901 and legislation that, BIVALVE, N. J., May 7.—Federal| revolutionary onrush of the working (NEW EDITION) corey amine seen ge weer ht sence the awl nami thom te bu higher cts fers etved or oC, RUSSIA i Ghavatic And Forsythe Sts. ig lotment of families per toilet from | class apartments with as little re- (8¥ that four oystermen had been “Not One Rifle.” Program of Communist International. 15c ing a : twenty to fifteen. striction as possibl drowned. Calvin Spedden, Jr. 23,| “For thi: th f | tak section would like to see the streets| 1, the committee to “investigate” a tegnpiici was drowned near Fortescue when on tnis reason the masses °'| TOURS FROM $385.00 Cc * + . * req widened and a higher class residen- |, 2", rn stigate Landlords Aprove It. Mesa a reecue When | workers and peasants must be ommunism & International Situation 15c , tial section arise in order to increase News sgl ani Lomein, of Accordingly, three additional mem- into the walle rolls Mapa ba Na AB a Pols iat ede will put ail facies ris ir cwn profits. The “model” | CV * Ort “iy in Lea! the leading bers, appointed by the real estate ‘ai their arms and equipment and do | its Irtenet on lp Hod i i i thei pe Pr are ero member was William Waldorf Astor. | hoards of atenbattes, Bickiph aiid Bel Mes ee were reported | overything to arm still better. Only a Moet ary to mie reer tai Revolutionary Movement in the pos and at that would be left to “hu. |R€ landlord of miles of tenements. | Queens, were added to the commis |Cmed: nee Peek Mogg aeooners armed workers and peasants are an! Gpinion of the grestent social exper COCO Eis ha hietce sr os) ation LOG fall manitarians” who would “sacrifice”| __ The Big Fake. | sion and tedrafted the law in such|then men overboar a Re Hae ' effective guarantee against the per-| ment in the History of Mankind at é ough to be vatisfied with a return} From then to 1900 there were | way that it received the united sup-| the accident were mea Ports ot/cecutions and assassinations com-| first hand. World Tourists Inc. offer Complete Report of the Proceedings of wd tt pe inf |sporadic attempts at reformist | port of the real estate ere ERGTes mitted daily by large landowners| you a choice of tours which’ will ex- fs . shey six per cent on their investment pts |P and landlord ‘actly fit desi d the Communist Internat: ] 1.25 - A build apartment houses renting Schemes, the “Association for Im- interests. That means, of course,| RASKOB HAS NEW TRICK eA a thrice na ec Don't dream of cong eR ele sakBil a eR ie $ i 3 : at least $12.50 per room, a price Proving the Condition of the Poor” that the law provides absolutely no J 4 + |peasants will be able to take the| jieve ita reality | es ui Ee ee : zo r out of the reach of the mass of | politi up a few “model” houses on! changes for the tenements in which sine hace fer ota of ts ied by) eb ad ae only CORE is ints. Even that price is highly | West 68th and 69th Streets, which the mass of workers are housed. | ‘ ional commit-|the armed force of the workers an f immediately to im I, since both realtors and|Were model houses for the few who! What the bill does do {a Ae aa me vs pee 4 Hoaiee a guarantee the estab-| WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS oe of the state housing com- | could pay to live in them, te¥ bull ae ee fotors made the workers |lishment of a government of work- o A iad that. Cow. Taito $iy-1000: conditions, in tha. tenes permitted - Siu: peti Pe ay ne Kel ey union, yes-/ers and peasants in Mexico. 175; Reece nog N.Y. 35 East 125th Street New York City ne ; : ' ‘ c dy 01 “ i ea “charitable” enough ments in New York City had become houses and it is so vague in regards| get workers’ gy A to m holt rifle; nob one. SOURCE OF ALL REVOLUTIONARY LITERATURE ome f #0 hod that they nchior=4 o- iit cae lieht provisions that under itl. 44 tate an invdotment'cdimpeny: #eata1%

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