The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 7, 1929, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1929 _Page Three Law ‘THANKSGIVING’ FUND REPLACES UNION LEVIES Evades Fight to Make Assessments Legal MacDonald Bargain With Liberals to Not Repeal Baldwin’s Anti-Trade Union SHURCH-FASCIS re eens ae le ALLIANCE READY FOR THE SIGNING For Mutual Protection Klein said he had been informed| ramet a [by Col, FL, Herron, exprt-man- CONNECTICUT DISTRICT CALLS ON ALL MEMBERS TO HELP CARRY OUT THE | Pearce | DECISIONS CONTAINED IN THE ADDRESS OF THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL the Catholic Church and the Italian | tte Producers and Distributogs’ As- ‘Washington Makes | | Bargain with French in Film Controversy WASHINGTON, June 6.—Amer- ican film producers will withdraw from the French market if France adopts a proposed policy requiring | the United States to buy one French} \film for each four Ameriéan films| sent there, Assistant Secretary of Commerce Klein said today. : |More Earthquakes in Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address to the Communist Party| “Sone in way of Ai Done in Way of Aid qe Polbureau is desirous of securing the broadest pos- | Go Beate ae eye sible Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Ad- the stricken district of El Nevado. dress and the immediate Party tasks outlined therein. All The federal government sent two Party members and particularly the comrades active in the workshops in the basic industries are invited to write their | opinions for the Party Press. Resolutions of Factory Nuclei also will be printed in this section. Send all material deal- ing with this campaign to Comrade Jack Stachel, care Na- tional office, Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York City. airplanes to study the cause of the tremors and get full reports on the loss of life, which is reported great. The district has been cut off from communication. Though President Irigoyen be- trays a certain amount of interest |* in the scientific and statistical sides | | (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) fascist government for mutual’ pro. S0Ciation, that this action will fol- of the disaster, little effort is being) LONDON, June 6.—The labor tection against the Italian workers|!OW promulgation by the French| et made to rescue the families driven Party announces the bate ae oe : ps | et . r a ants e Ke a eh ri ir s by th ak j | “nationa sgiving fund” to sek cop rmpsenuae toni oagrntioe ee ae ee ecu The resolution adopted by the Bureau of District 15, Connecticut | NEW YORK FACTORY DISTRICT UNIT ACTS. Lecce cei coterie te ficldaa| celebrate WMacDionala’a: accamioategs day at 11 a, m. when the so-called) "8 was as follows: sn CAS a SS ie Reeuee! Ie arenes “power. The fund is probably in- “Lateran treaties” are signed. | Cee Ses The address of the Executive Committee of the Communist Inter- Factory District Unit 9, Section 1, New York District, unanimous tended as‘a-wubstitute fon! the tage Since the original announcement i ji . a te ly adopted the following resolution on the Address of the Communist ; ie x ; sine e) c oa national to the Communist Party of the U. S. A. is the final decision on Intergati@nal to the members of the Communist Party of the United 4 union political levies which were oe this pa the sie ve unity = the disputed problems in the American Party. The controversial and oi ttl. ss @ prohibited by the anti-trade union ese reactionaries has been a roc! i i ii v i ‘f “ rp bo fu si y factional life of the Party, particularly aggravated since the VI. World “We, the members of Unit 9F, completely endorse and accept the act. The fund would enable Mac- : : | Congress of the Comintern, must now come to an end in accordance .| Address of the Communist International to all members of the Com- | @ Donald to better evade the Iabor At one time this evening it ap-| with the Address of the Executive Committee of the Communist Inter- 6 ““"". rigs s party promise to repeal the anti- based | munist Party of the U. S. A. ) : ire ian peared certain that some further de- national. . A trade union bill. The liberals would velopment in the controvers: be.| . 5 : : h A 2. We call the attention of the Party membership to the need f¢ : de oerals seat Pops Pies RL and Pea | + The Executive Committee of the Communist International states in carrying out all decisions of this letter not only in words but in di peal meg undoubtedly oppose any attempt to very definite terms what political ‘and organizational errors, deviations and ultra-factional actions were committed by both the Majority and | Minority groups of the Party. In undisputable terms the Executive | Committee of the Communist International corrects these mistakes and repeal the bill and MacDonald fears to risk def ough the liberals turning against him. and pledge ourselves to do our utmost to carry out these dec and help root out opportunism in all forms, whether it shows itse' openly or covered with “left” phraseology; we pledge ourselves to do ‘o Denounce Fascism | at Webster Hall Mussolini would be forthcoming. tel Ti Vatican decided to delay final ac- tion on the treaties until the gov- ‘International Bank for Bankers’ Unity ernment had been given an oppor-|- | calls upon the entire Party to use all measures in defense of the line | our utmost to do away with all attitudes of “rotten factional diplo- oe tunity to reply to the Pope’s letter,| | The fifth anniversary of the mur-| jaid down by the Executive Committee of the Communist International. | Wie Sister a Soanune pnvere ional cand say meted st peuy PARIS, June 6.—Contents of the) The Baldwin anti-trade union law published yesterday, taking issue|@er of Giacomo Matteotti, socialist * The District Executive. Committee unconditionally accepts the de- | st ata i ; Bee ill Gee eehe ooo E nee eee Bs ra ;.|deputy in the Italian Ch: # |; sae 5 Se ed thor he Le j 3. The Unit declares itself against the acts of Comrades Love- perts, which will be signed tomor-|contains besides the clauses pro- with Mussolini in regard to appli- | leputy in the ian Chamber of} cisions of the Executive Committee of the Communist International and : P cation of the agreement, Deputies, assassinated by orders of | Mussolini held his fascist under-| Benito Mussolini for his opposition dogs under control so that open con-|t? fascism, will be commemorated | Hick we: evoiied. lby the Anti-Fascist Alliance of | |North America at the New Webster {Manor at 2 p. m, Sunday. | “In coramemorating the death of | Matteotti the anti-fascist workers this year have to choose between two meetings held on the same day,” | NO RENT ACTION |a statement of the Alliance calling | a for mass attendance at the meeting declares. | The first meeting at the New Harlem Tenants Body Webster Manor is called by the of the Central Committee and pledges its support in carrying out these | decisions and undertakes to win over the entire membership of the Dis- trict for the support of the Comintern Address. The District Executive Committee pledges itself and its members to defend the Address of, the’ Comintern against any ideological or other opposition to the Address. We greet and endorse the unanimous decisions and acceptance of the Communist International Address by the Polcom of the Party. In accepting and in an éffort to carry out the decesions, the District Executive Committee calls upon every member of the Party to use stone and Gitlow, who refuse to accept the decision of the Communist International, against all attempts to split our Party on: anyone’s part, and for the Bolshevik Unity of the Party under the revolutionary lead- ership of the Communist International. 4. The Unit completely agrees with the Open Letter of the Com- munist International and the present Address that an organizational program is necessary to do away with factionalism, for a struggle against the Right danger, and for the building of a mass Communist Party in the U. S. A., and that the organizational steps cannot be row afternoon and made public prob- ably Sunday, reveal that the first annual payment by Germany under the Young plan will be 1,942,000,000 gold marks ($462,196,000). In addition to details of the sche- dule of annuities over the 58 year period of payments, information | g }made available shows that one of hibiting the member: sment of the union political campaigns, some very us anti-labor legisla- ticn, It prohibits general strikes, machinery for compulsory arbitration and makes it illegal to spend union moncy for sympathetic kes. It places the union treas- s under such supervision by ur f separated from the political line of the Communist International, and the principal ideas in mind in the government agents genuine bolshevik self-criticism and to develop a critical attitude in the | the unit pledges itself to carry out all these decisions of the Comin- “ f international bank ong vi ers ee c ranks of the proletarian members of the Party towards the actions and tern. B ROT Oe Ce aa erne aoe Yen for anything. (but ordinary raya téndencies of the Party leadership in‘order to minimize the future possi- bilities of deviations and unprincipled factionalism in the Party. At the Same time no matter how embittered, Comrades must admit the mistakes and guard the Party principles of democratic centralizaton and dis- cipline. Letter.” * OHIO SHOP NUCLEUS DISCUSSES ADDRESS. to handle reparations 5. The unit endorses the Section Bureau resolution on the Open | sibility of uniting certain interna- tional capitalist interests through a combination of international econo-| |mies of the allied nations. . * is the expenses or fake co-operatives is nearly impossible. © a0 Snowden Sees Baldwin. to Meet Monday | Anti-Fascist Alliance, a united front Piola : | LONDON, June 6.—Maci)onald organization of revolutionary work- has not even yet announced offi- (Continued from Page One) cially who his cabinet will be, al- | The possibility of strengthening The Central Alloy Shop Nucleus of Canton? Ohio, read and discussed | this alliance through the interna- the Address of the Executive Committee of the Communist International | tional by Owen D. ers, left wing unions and fraternal | We must particularly emphasize the following fundamental devia- groups, which, from the very incep- | tions corrected by the E.C.C.1.: bank created Assemblyman Charles McGillick.|tion of fascism, fought it and de- 1. Over emphasis of the strength of American inrperialism by the | to the members of the Communist Party of the United States of America Young's extortion reparation’ plan thoughshe admits he told the king, cemocrat, of Hariem; Assemblymen |fined it as an instrument used by Majority, in its thesis and in the subsequent discussion. and a resolution was introduced and unanimously adopted as follows: is not expressed directly in the text in confidence. He feels it proper Louis A. Cuvillierand, Grental, re- | the capitalist class in its war against | 2. Underestimation of the trend of radicalization of the American | (1) The Central Alloy Shop Nucleus of District 6 (Ohio) of the | of the final report but is plainly in-|to trust secrets to the living symbol publicans, and the Rev. Norman | revolutionary workers. Thomas, chief plaster saint of the | “The other meeting is held by the 3. yellow socialist party, have been | socialist party, in conjunction with clamoring for the honor of chief|the Italian republican party, an out- 4. peddlers of fake nostrums to the|fit which appealed to the Italian working class tenants of Harlem.) king to ‘overthrow fascism’ ’ while working class by the Majority. Disassociation of internal and external contradietions of Ameri- can capitalism by the Minority; The above factors leading to a dangerous tendency of developing conceptions making the U. S. A. an “exception” in the increas- ing crisis of world capitalism; Communist Party of America fully accepts and‘endorses the Address*| cluded in the plan for the tremen-)0f the empire and hereditary leader of the Communist International which tends to liquidate fracfionalism | dous financial institution. of British exploiting landlordism in the American Party. One of the most important fea-|and commercialism which he con- (2) We greet and endorse the decision of the Central Committee tures of the bank as expressed in ceals from the working class. to mobilize the membership of our Party for the decision of the Com- | the report is the function of han-| However, Philip Snowden con- munist International. dling all reparations and marketing |ferred with officials of the outgoing They are being actively supported |thousands of Italian workers were . 5. Insufficiently quick break from the Trotskyites by the Min- | (3) We call on the District Committee of District 6 to accept and | deliveries in kind from Germany, at No. 10 Downing St., and by both the white and Negro capi-|being murdered by the armies of ority; ‘ | endorse the Address of the Communist International. (Resolution of | thus turning over a certain amount is that he will be the talist press. |Mussolini. In reality, they are the | 6.. Impermissible methods in trying interpret and use the Open District No. 6 endorsing and accepting the decision was promptly done | of profits to a common fund. The chancellor of the exchequer (treas- Plan Rent Strikes, legitimate parents of fascism. The | Letter of the Executive Committee of the Communist Interna- | and published in the Daily Worker.—Editor’s Note.) bank draft and an annex are in-|urer). J. H. Thomas, the man who _The only organization actually | workers who really want to fight | fighting for the interests of the ten-| fascism will know how to choose | ants is the Harlem Tenants League, |hetween the two meetings.” 235 W. 129th St., which is being | tiona] as a factional decision by both groups; the Majority claim- ing that it was an attempt to hand over the Party to the Min- ority, the Minority trying to seize leadership on the same 4) grounds; these due to the extreme, unprincipled factionalism prevailing thruout the Party. sold out the railroad workers, is to be “minister of employment” and also “lord of the privy seal.” (4) We demand strong measures against the members who attempt | cluded in the report, giving technical to split our Party and against the Right danger up to extermination. | observations necessary, but leaving For closer work to the factory, building a strong mass and powerful | the site gf the Bank up to its direc- Communist Party of America, the section of the Communist Interna- | tors. tional. e aided by the Communist Party. The | wANT EFFICIENT IMPERIALIST | ARMY. League will hold a special meeting next Monday night at the 135th St. branch of the Public Library, 103 W. 135th St., to consider plans for immediate action. The League will ing of the Board of Aldermen on Tuesday, The Harlem Tenants League is, however, placing no faith in what capitalist legislatures, and collaborating with the landlords, wil) do. The League is beginning to organize rent strike committees in various localities which will mob- ‘lize all working class tenants, both Negro and white, to refuse to pay rent on July 1 unless the landlords take a fair rent based on what was WASHINGTON, June 6.—Seven| peers officers were appointed to-| day to conduct the annual army send a delegation of tenants to pre- | shake-up designed to rid the service sent its demands at the next meet- | of officers unfit or incompetent for | further duty. | The board consists of Major Gen- jerals Hanson E. Ely and Frank |A. Drum, Campbell King, M. L. | Walker, James B. Gowen. In conformity with the national defense act, this board will meet ae July 1 to classify officers in Charles D. Roberts. and shielding of deviations and mista mittee calls upon the Central Comm To build the Party, to build m war danger, to fight against opport ; of the Party, to close the ranks of t! | controlled | parker and Brigadier Generals Hugh | Party member. The District Executive Committee calls upon the Party members to put an end to factionalism. No more factions, and no more factional kes. The District Executive Com- ittee to conduct a thorough enlighten- ment campaign on the problems and issues of the Right Danger in the Comintern including the parties of the U. S. A. and of the Soviet Union. ore shop nuclei, to increase the fac- tory activities, to strengthen the influence of the Party in the mass | organizations of fhe workers in the fight against capitalism and the»! unism and Trotskyism in and outside he Comrades under the leadership of the Communist International, are now the most important tasks of every Forward for a united Communist Party in the U. S. A.! Long live the Communist International, the leader of the working class thruout the world in this struggle for a world dictatorship of the proletariat! —PETER CZONT, District Organizer, Communist Party of the U.S. A., District 15, , Connecticut. * GET CLOSER TO THE FACTORIES. i | CANTON, OHIO, WELCOMES ADDRESS, +3 At a meeting of the Canton, Ohio, Local Executive Committee, the | following resolution was unanimously adopted: The Canton, Ohio, Local, Communist Party of America, welcomes and fully accepts the Address of the Communist International and pledges itself to carry out the decision of the Executive Committee of the Communist International in uniting the American Party. We greet and endorse the decision of the Central Committee and the District Executive Committee of District 6 to mobilize the mem- * * | bership of our Party for the decision of the Communist International. We demand strong measures against the members who attempt to split our ranks and against the Right danger, criticism and for the building of a mass party—CANTON LOCAL, ' COMMUNIST PARTY OF AMERICA. For Bolshevik self- ‘Workers Registering for Local 43 Outing at ‘‘Nitgedaiget’’ Registrations are already flowing into the office of Local 4: 87th St., and at 640 Broadway, for the union is arranging Ca Nitg daiget, Saturday and Sunday, June 15 and 16. coming excursion unique program is bee the camp, 4 West being planned at the beautifal workers’ rest home in Beacon, N. Y., commodious busses have gaged to take the excursionists to Technical Men Demand That Delaney Call His Meet on Wage Raise Walter Karp, secretary of the Committee of Board of Transporta- tion Grade C engineers and a mem- ber of the Union of Technical Men, 92 Lafayette St., yesterday wrote to John H. Delaney, chairman of the board of transportation asking that he set a date for a minimum salary of the board of transportation, Karp said that at a recent meeting of the board of estimate, Joseph V. McKee, chairman protem, said that | Rea ol cits the whole matter of a readjustment tee hs tek eainay Hcees such manner that undesirable offi- P t U it: D d C M4 O t f C 7 t Add Build shi ittees and draw | of salary schedule for the Grade C Se ae oe eats sake centoved: rarty hits Deman arrying UUt 0 omintern MOSS | tictwoce wiltant meabers date | engineers would baye th be Kean Still Time to Get Tickets tor “Frethe There will be a big demonstration?New York workers, immediately| We pledge ourselves to quit our in the vicinity of Pier A at Battery Park between 12 noon and 2 p. m. | . . tomorrow. The masses of workers the masses besieging the boats. We promise to carry on in all our national! ae ve others who resist the decisions of the Strikers, Foreign-Born | td assembled will be expressing their| ‘The pleasures of the stay at the |Party activities the most relentless | . a 4 Communist International, and warn is Jee id ce ot O a Tl er solidarity with the Freiheit, Yiddish | beach Will be enhanced bj. tbe at.|fight against any individuals who| From Polish Editor and Bureau | them that the membership will find Pee Riprea geared Pain orm oe Communist daily, by thronging the |tractions of the sea trip along one |Shall attempt to creat splits in our Secretary. a proper recourse to all those who P' ez “Claremont” and “Onteora,” two boats especially chartered on the eccasion of the annual Freiheit ex- cursion to Atlantic Beach, N. J. Those workers who remembered the crowded pleasures of the out- ing last year will be among the early arrivals at the pier, to which’ it” Trip Today they are released from the shops and factories, will rush to insure that they don’t get forced aside by cf the most scenic highways of the continent. Ail arrangements have been com- pleted by the committee in charge. All that hgs to be done now—be- fore it is too late—is to get tickets at the Freiheit office, 30 Union Square. N You Owe It to Your Class to Read @ But—What to Read? 4 Here is a list of inexpensiv: e literature that will make you more fit to carry on the revolutionary struggle. Marxism—Lenin . 10¢ Revolutionary Lessons—Lenin .... Heading for War—T. Bell... Ten Years of the Cor mmunist International 10c Communism and the International Situation .......... Reminiscences of Lenin—Zethin...........0.. Paris on the Barricades. Communist Manifesto (new edition).......... Wage, Labor and Capital......... Organization of a World Party..... FREE DESCRIPTIVE CATALOG te WORKERS LIBRA RY PUBLISHERS 43° EAST 125TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY From New York Unit. | We heartily welcome and enthu- |siastically and unequivocally en- jdorse the Address of the Comintern, |printed in the “Daily Worker” on |May 20, 1929, former factions, and will be wide- awake to stop the creation of any new factions, Party. We demand from the higher bod- ies of our Party that they eradicate \from their midst all traces of facr \tionalism, draw into action all com- rades who are willing and capable they accept the spirit of the Com- intern Address, not only in words, but also in deeds. Only such a |spirit will make it possible for the |Party to proceed to its tasks in this |most powerful capitalist country.— Unit 2FD, AC, Section 1, District 2, New York. . 8 8 Steel Town Heard From. The Youngstown Local of the Communist Party fully endorses and will energetically support the Open Letter of the Communist Interna- tional to the American Party. We will mobilize the entire membership to fight together for a full under- standing and application of its line, -—Youngstown, Ohio, * * * From Grand Rapids, Mich. The motion adopted unanimously by the general membership meeting of the Communist Party, Local | Grand Rapids, Michigan, Section of District 7, was as follows: We welcome and pledge ourselves to defend and carry out the Address of the Communist International to our Party and the decisions of the Polcom. We are glad to note that our Com- | munist International has taken de- | cisive final steps to eliminate fac- tionalism in our Communist Party of the United States, thus making possible a united front of all Com- raunist forces in the United States, | sion of organizing and leading the American Revolution. Through a determined struggle against all deviations from the line jof the Communist International we jwill be able to build the Party as jthe leader of the American work- ing class. Long live the Communist Party of America! Long live the Communist Inter- I am in full political agreement | with the Comintern Address to the | American Party and for the organi- |zational measures that flows from it. I accept and great the decision of the Central Committee accepting utmost to smash factionalism, to help reorierntate the party on the Comintern line. Down with factionalism! | America on the only line—the Com- {intern line! Long live the Commu- nist International—B. K. Gebert, secretary, Polish Bureau, and editor, Trybuna Rieleotniszd. ie Le For Prohibition of Caucuses, Unit 5, Section 5, of District 2, New York, Communist Party of America, endorses the resolution of the Section Executive Committee and pledges to carry out all decisions of the Communist International in eliminating factionalism and unit- ing the Party to carry on active Communist work among the masses of workers in the United States. In order to wipe out factionalism once and forever it is necessary to prohibit the holding of caucuses, and all initiators and attendants of any caucuses should be expelled from the Party. Party documents should be dealt with at.regular Party functions, and a thorough proletarian democratic discussion conducted on the basis of the Communist value of these docu- For a united Bolshevik Party in| from the lack of new proletarian leadership which is necessary in or- der to forget factionalism; and, we, therefore, call upon the Party to evelop this new leadership, and call |upon all comrades to devote all of their time to Party work with a | view toward the above stated end. We condemn the splitting policies of Comrades Lovestone, Gitlow and | stand in the way of carrying on Communist work in the United States. We call upon all the comrades in jthe Party to forget factionalism and | get down to the work of leading the and by their activities show that |the Comintern Address. I will do my| masses of the workers to the vic- |tory of the Proletarian Revolution. |_-Unit V, Section V, District 2 (Néw | York). | a Shee | From Nucleus No, 27, Chicago. Nucleus No, 27, Chicago, IIL, at its meeting of May 28, 1929, passed \the following motion unanimously: “That Nucleus No. 27 go on record in favor of endorsing fully the Com- ‘munist International Letter and (pledge ourselves to fight against factionalism in the Communist |Party of America.” + * Anthracite Sub-District Acts. The anthracite Sub-District Bu- jreaa, at its meeting on June 3, dis- cussed the Open Letter to the Com- munist Party of America. We fully accept the Open Letter and Address of the Communist International and pledge ourselves to mobilize the membership in the anthracite sec- tion to fully carry out the line of the Communist International and the unanimous decision of the Cen- Vrataric, Acting Sub, D. 0. * + * For the C. I. Decision! “We are in complete agreement ments. ESTHONIAN BUREAU Farty may fulfill its historic mis- * * with the Address of the Communist * ENDORSES ADDRESS. The Esthonian Bureau has unanimously decided to accept and cn- dorse fully the Address of the Communist International; to carry out which is necessarv in order that our} loyally its decisions and to do everything in its power to liquidate fac- tionalism in the Party —ESTHONIAN BUREAU, A. MOLLER, Sec'y, ES EE Se a ea eB a tral Committee on the Address. | The Party at present is suffering | International. | utility and industrial field. We welcome this def- inite Address to our Party! We also accept the Polcom’s decision uncon- ditionally on this question.—District York, International Branch, No. 1, Great Neck, N. Y. ILD Circulates Coupon Books to Defend Mill ducted by the New York District of the International Labor Defense aniong workers and working class jorganizations. The coupon books are intended to raise funds for the defense of the foreign-born work- jers who are being attacked by the government, for the defense of the | |Gastonia, N. C., and Elizabethton, Tenn., textile strikers and for other | I. L, D. defense work including the | case of Harry J. Canter, Boston | militant, who has just been sen- | tenced to a year at hard labor on) ja charge of “criminally libelling”’ | \ex-Gov. Fuller. Each of the coupon books con- tains $4 worth of coupons selling | for 10 cents and 25 cents each. All) New York workers are urged to se-| jeure these books at once and sell, coupons among their friends and) shopmates as well as circulating | |them in the organization to which they belong. Funds are needed at once to save active fighters in the |cause of labor from the capitalist | jails. The coupon books may be ob- | | tained at the office of the I. L. D, 799 Broadway, Room 422, RUBBER BOSS GETS BIGGER JOB. | AKRON, Ohio, June 6Clifford F. Stone, vice president of the Good-| year Tire and Rubber Co., today re- signed. Stone came from the Dillon) Reed Co., bankers of New York, in| 1921 and is leaving to become asso- ciated with an eastern financial group having large interests in the| lutionary elass—Karl Marx (Com- maunint Manifesto), ‘ie | the Commugist Party. nediate superiot SEND the Daily Worker § HOUSANDS of workers on strike desire to receive the DAILY WoRKER, but we are not in a financial position to send it Although we send thou- sands daily—it is insuf- ficient to cover the de- mand. Even these bund- les we will be compelled to discontinue unless aid is forthcoming. The DAILY WoRKER as in all previous strug- gles during the past few years must be the guide and directing force. In addition to re- lief send them the or- gan of class struggle. TV VVVVVVVV WV VVVVVVVIVIVGISS DAILY WoRKER 26 UNION SQUARE NEW YorK City Enclosed find §...........t0 be used forthe DAILY WORKER fund to supply bundles of Daily Workers to the strikers in various sections of the country. Name .

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