The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 12, 1929, Page 4

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iy { i Page Four _DATLY WORKER NEW YORK, , WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1929 General Cigar Co. Bosses Rally Churches to Their Aid in Fight on Striking Workers \EW BRUNSWICK WITH THE S SHOP PAPERS MAKE MICH. AUTO POWER, BUILDING - WORKERS DON'T FALL FOR FAKERS strike Against $15 Pay in Tobacco Plant (By a Worker c NEW BRUN fail)—The pr lant of the General Cigar srunsyick, is a fight ense exploitation nd unsanitary lant is one of ompany. Over 800 v ‘loyed in the plant, 75 hom are young he ages of 16 and 21. $15 a Week. The average wage e: 15 per week, a respondent) J. (By ma on asis. The work is performed on a ‘iece-work system and regular week vork. The piece-workers must go t top speed all day in er to av- gage their $15 per week. The speed- ip system is also applied to the veekly worl who must turn out wractically twice as much work as vas accomplished in the past, with- mt receiving any extra compensa- shop papers are coming in to this department in Send them in M: ANY respi nse to our re n tell all the 1est, but not enough. workers about them. so that we ca They've Got the Steel Trust Scared. I ACKAWANNA, near Buffalo, N. Y., is another one of the towns .s controlled from one end to the other, by the Steel Trust. The conditions of the steel workeers are the worst possible, and the work- s in the Bethlehem Steel plants, led by the Communist. Party and Communist Youth League, are going to organize and smash the bosses. One of their chief weapons is their fighting shop paper, the Steel Spark. Its power is shown in the following events: Several members of the Communist Party and League were dis- tributing the “Steel Spark”, shop paper of the Bethlehem Steel Mill, to the workers, when the so-called police of Lackawanna, but in reality the police of the steel barons, attempted to stop the distribution by telling the workers to disperse. This was resisted with a challenge to stop the distribution. The cop took one of the workers, Roberts and placed him under arrest, took him over to the company booth, and hence to the police station. Immediately following him were two other comrades. All three were held incommunicado. The trial was a farce, the company stool pigeons, were there full force, evidently to give advice to the judge. All three were charged with an ordinance against distribution. A plea of not guilty was entered. And the comrades in defending themselves pointed out the nature of the shop paper which the judge reproved, saying he had read parts of it, and it wasn’t fit for any peaceful community. Before passing sentence, the judge issued a strong warning, saying the conditions in the steel mill were “alright”, except in some parts, that the workers were “satisfied”, and that “the city would not stand for trouble among the workers in this peaceful community’. The judge stated he had ‘‘no right to be lenient”, but suspended sentence ion for it. Windows are kept closed | against, H. Kawsny, Barron and Roberts, who was also charged with t all times, due to the drying pro-| yagrancy. ess which the tobacco goes through. Workers’ Health Impaired. While this fills the pockets of the ses, it impairs the health of the vorkers, due tc the fact that they © not receive any ventilation what- oever. Many of them become ill ind are laid up for weeks on ac- ount of this. Discontent Spreads. Discontent spread over the entire lant and the workers were contin- a fight The tously talking of waging wainst these slave conditions. ‘imax was reached when a lash amounting to three cen xour was imposed. Immedi here was a general walkout, with | the entire plant out. The Trade ucational League immedi- ed into the situation by tiving active assistance to the strik- ‘vs, and calling upon them to trengthen the strike by the organ- | zation of rank and file strik ommittee and spreading the strike > other plants of the company. This immediately had a good effect ypon the str many of whom ‘xpressed the opinion that these | teps were absolutely necessary in der to win the strike. While these tactics met with the wproval of the workers, they on he other hand pee gthe ire of he bosses. Bosses Call on Church. | They immediately called upon the | thurch and Y. W. C, A. to come to their assistance, At a sermon de- ivered by the local preacher Sun- jay afternoon he called upon the strikers to have nothing to do with | the T. U. E. L. “These people,” said he, “are a bunch of Reds, who ire here to make trouble. We must itay away from their headquarters, stherwise we will be committing a zreat sin.” This kind of talk did yot have any effect upon the work ‘rs. Another tactic was resorted to. Jepresertatives of the Y. M. C. A. have been addressing the strikers, *dvocating class collaboration, peace- tual methods, ete. Bosses’ Alli The church, Y, M. C. ceactionary organizations have com- oletely failed in their attempts to mislead the strikers. The worke! realize that the only organization which is really fighting for their in- terests is the Trade Union Educa- | tional League, Already they have needed the message of the T. U. E. L. by taking steps to spread the strike to other tobacco plants. A committee of strikers visited the Perth Amboy plant of the same tompany, calling upon the workers to organize themselves and assist them in their struggle for better sonditions, Meanwhile the strikers are maintaining a real fighting spirit and are determined to keep up their struggle until victory is achieved. ROBERT CLARK. _ Build shop committees and draw the more militant members into a” Communist Party. Fail. | A. and other | | long service are maimed and still unconscious. | The Party and League will answer this challenge of the bosses, by carrying on greater activity amongst the workers in the Steel Plant. * * * Two Fighting Baltimore Shop Papers. HE class-conscious workers aren’t asleep in Baltimore. Two of the worst hell holes for the Baltimore workers are the Bethlehem Steel Corporation and the Hooper Textile Mills. And believe us, things are going to happen in these two slave-shops. For in both, Communist Party shop nuclei are issuing shop papers. You've read above how the shop paper made the Bethlehem Steel Corp. tremble up in Lackawanna. Well, the same company is getting a good dose of the shivers down in Baltimore. The Sparrows Point Worker—that’s the answer, 5 With the June issue this shop paper resumed publication, and was welcomed by the steel workers. It will be published regularly by the Communist Party nucleus in the Sparrow Point plants of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation. The June issue is one of the best yet. It points out that the Negro workers are the most exploited by the steel bosses, and appeals for a side-by-side struggle of Negro and white steel workers against the Steel Trust for better conditions and wages. It exposes most effectively the prosperity bunk of that prosperity shouter Charles M. Schwab, chief exploiter of the Bethlehem Corp. Steel workers. It is filled with many letters from the steel workers, A fine fea- ture is the Youth Page, for many of the steel workers are under age. You don’t wonder why the steel bosses get their police to work when they see such shop papers. * * Hooper Mill Workers Not Outdone. HE workers in the Hooper textile mills are not to be outdone in militancy by their fellow workers in the Bethlehem steel plants. And they prove it with their shop paper, the Hooper Mill Worker. The Hooper Mill Worker brings home to the Hooper slaves the wide front of the class struggle, by telling of the strike of the Gastonia mill workers, printing a letter from a Gastonia striker. The role of the National Textile Workers Union in the strike is pointed out, and the fighting leadership of the N. T. W. in the Gastonia strike is one reason why the Hooper mill workers won’t remain asleep any longer. * * * * The Winchester Co. Guilty of Murder! YDROTEST MASS MEETNGS at the Winchester Arms gates in New P Gisves, Cans, weny AGA apliel Aatiuetane Ot ¢ ved by the Winchester bos: The following from a special extra edition of the Winchester Worker, shop paper issued by the Communist Party Nucleus in the Winchester plant, on the occasion of calling for the mass protest meetings: t The bosses of the Winchester Repeating Arms Co. and their political friends in the city and state governments are responsible for the death of one and the fatal injuries of two received in the explosion last Friday in the Powder House of the plant. Patrick Doherty, who worked for 22 years in the shop, died. John W. Coogan and Fred Koeger, also with é I The investigation con- ducted by the Winchester Nucleus of the Communist Party clearly re- veals that: 1. The criminal negligence of the bosses and not “carelessness” of the victims caused the fatal explosion. a 2. Similar deadly explosions take place in the shop every year without any substantial provisions to prevent their re-occurrence. 3. The powder house was of a wooden structure with no air-proof chamber essential for places where gunpowder and fomite are mixed. 4. Explosions occur daily in the cartridge, gun and loading depart- ments resulting in injuries never made public. 5. The investigations conducted by the company and the city and state officials at all times acquitted the bosses and blamed the workers with “carelessness” and never resulted in absolute safety provision. 6. After each major explosion the bosses make a hurried clean-up in the entire factory removing all evidences of their negligence. SLASH IN WAGES Strike Forces Bosses to Backwater (By a Worker Correspondent) GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, (By Mail).—The bankers in charge of the Grand Rapids Auto Body Cor- | poration was somewhat surprised at the workers in the plant for not ac- cepting the 33 per cent wage cut. | E This company is in the hands of a | receiver at the pzescnt time, that is, {in the hands of the bankers, who | decided as soon as they took charge jot the plant, to force thru a general | 33 per cent wage cut. Reject Cut. The. moulders, body finishers, loose-panel finishers and other workers in the plant decided to re- ject the wage cut and organized a| walk out in order to fight against |” |the boss | These workers called upon the local T. U. E. L. secretary, John | | North, for assistance and coopera- | tion in their struggle. The Auto| Workers Union in Detroit, Local} |127, was called upon by the local} T. U. E. L, secretary in Grand| and help to organize these workers | into an Auto Workers Local. John} Schmies, National T. U. E. L. Auto Organizer, and William Frankfeld, also a member of the Auto Workers | Union, Local 12%, together with John | North, Grand Rapids T. U. E. L. secretary, took charge of the strike, | | organized a strike committee and | got ready for business against the Jopen shop. After the strike committee was elected representing the different departments in the plant, the bank- Jers decided to have a conference, called in the committee and were forced to state that the 33 per cent wage cut will not go into effect. The demand on the part of the} workers for a dollar an hour was) definitely decided upon. Must Organize. The weaitses in®charge of the| strike made it plain to the auto workers that the only assurance they have of stopping the wage cuts in the future is by having themselves organized and to go back into the shop as an organized body. It was then decided by unanimous vote among the workers that everybody sign up and that we make definite organizational arrangements for building an Auto Workers Local. In this connection leaflets were distributed among the workers in the Hayes Ionia Body Company in which we called upon these workers | to become part of this struggle and} to line up with this new local of the} Auto Workers Union. Further plans have been worked out for a cam- paign to organize the unorganized workers in the auto shops in the city of Grand Rapids. SENATE RUSHES FRAMEUP MOVE: Hasten Compliance of | Hoover Message | * WASHINGTON, June 11.—Presi- | dent Hoover’s orders to Congress that it must appoint a committee to co-operate with his “law enforce- ment” commission, now meeting and devising propaganda and recommen- dations for better frame-up methods to use against labor, was forwarded today by action of the Senate Judi- ciary Committee. The committee moved to report Hoover’s recommendation in his mes- sage last week that legislation be passed to consolidate and centralize the repressive organs of the govern- ment, placing police and secret ser- vice systems under a single auto- eratic head. To Vote on Farm Bill. The committee also authorized the Jones (“Five and Ten Law Jones”) motion to authorize appointment of A PACKING HOUSE HELL! Workers Relief Organ Negro Workers Slave for $18-20 Week (By a Worker Correspondent) JERSEY CITY, N. J. (By Mail). There are over 20,000 packing house workers in Hudsgn County, of which Jersey City is the chief city, and they are absolutely unorganized into any kind of union at all. The | slaves in these packing houses are | ~ for wages ranging from $18 to $20. A great proportion of the slaves in| the New Jersey packing houses are ~ Among the largest of the packing ts in this city are Swifts, Ar- _mours, Nagles and other large con- s, ‘Take the Nagle, Swift and mour plants, for instance, located the Hudson River waterfront. ring on Hoboken, are no safety precautions, no etion at all for the workers in| Splitters’ work consists in cutting |the carcasses of the pigs and cows. |Butchers make only $22 a week. Experienced Negro butchers are get- ing $18 to $20 a week, away below |the union scale, No vacations are | ever given the slaves in the packing houses. In the Finkenstein packing plant | bologna makers are being paid $6 a |This is on a basis of 60 cents an ‘hour. The union scale for bologna makers is $44 a week. If these slaves, in Finkenstein’s work there for several years; maybe they will get a raise to 65 or 70 cents an hour. The general conditions in these packing plants demands the organ- ization of these workers. The Amal- gamated Food Workers, whose Loca! | day, providing they work 10 hours, | | “Solidarity” Carries Stery of Gastonia War The June issue of “Solidarity,” official organ of the Workers In- ternational Relief, was on sale yes- terday. It gives the story of the Gastonia strike. It had articles by Louis Gibarti, International Repre- sentative, Workers International Re-|_ \lief; L. Landay, national organizer, Workers International Relief; Rose | Pastor Stokes, national camp direc- tor, W. I. R., and Jack Lee. A. Pollack is editor. Subscription rates, fifty cents a year. Five cents a copy. One Union Square, New York City, Sylvan It is the ultimate alm of thin work (“Capital”) to reveal economle law of motion of modern society —Marx, ey ‘The power of the bourgeoisie rests not alone upon international capital, upon its strong international connec- tions, but alxo upon the force of habit, on the force of small iniustry, of which, unfortunately, Me te plenty left nud which dail: pederes was the wrong time of the sjon the tariff bill, a joint congressional commission to study the Hoover proposals. The senate fixed tomorrow as the date for a vote on the debentureless version of the farm bill, Senator Borah pretended that this debenture plan would assist the farmers, al- though every economist knows that it will help only the middlemen and grain exporters, and truthfully enough assailed the bill without de- bentures as a fraud upon the farmer, Risk Vacations. Others senators answered, Borah declared that Hoover was! not keeping his promise made in his | acceptance ‘speech, parts of which! Borah read, with emphasis on the election talks about making the farmer secure, and placing him “on a level with industry.” The house today rejectcd the first conference agreement on the census bill, because it provided for starting the census at what the house con- and year, The demotratie party caucus has decided not to fix a date for voting! and will have | ja ‘house is when he is employed as a GET LOW WAGES Service Wor Torkers Hours Are Long (By a Yorke» Correspondent) The power plant and building ser- ice workers must organize in one union. Conditions are bad, hours are long, wages low and unemploy- ment at. The Amalgamated Plant and Building Service +s Union is an organization | organizes all stationary engi- and firemen, building super- intendents, maintenance mechanics | and handymen, elevator opcrators and starters, porters and all others that are employed in the production land the maintenance of light, heat, nower and service, in loft and of- fice buildings, hotels, thouses, _ hospitals, power plants, for getting higher wages, laundries and the purpose of hetter condi- |tions, shorter hours and finally con- |trol of the jobs on which they are employed. Only as Janitors, In our industry elevator opera- ters and porters receive from $15 to $23 without any meals. In a engineers, firemen and handymen are working 12 hours and 7 days a week with wages lower than that of | a hedearrier. Great apartment houses are built | all over the city, but not for the) workers to live in. The only time worker lives in an apartment superintendent or fireman and then they give him a hole or a couple of holes in the basement in order to have him on Hand any time during the 24-hour day. In the walk-up| tment houses the wives of the janitors have to help their husbands apartment } “The Constant Nvmph” Quite’ BODY G0, RESCIND SERVICE SLAVES @ Pretty Film, But Not New at the] brings | to America the film study of Mar- | “The Constant mb eNyaD” Little Carnegie Playhouse, | garet Kennedy’s novel of the same |name, and is a picture which is said to have had much success in Europe. \It is a British product. The plot is that of the conven- |tionally unconventional artist, {hounded by a wife who wants to roake a social lion of him, and grad- ually falling for a girl, heralded as elso unconventional, who seems to have angina pectoris. Mabel Poulton does Tessa eal |ger, the mountain girl, child of a} composer who works and drinks him- self to death, She rebels against | | School, and faints when she hears | that Lewis Dodd (Ivor Noveila), the | other artist, has married a rich man’s daughter. The best scenes in the play are |those which show Tyrolese scenery |and those indicating the regrets the [unequally married Lewis has over |his undesirable matrimony. He |takes it out by composing original {music to ballads about “poor pigs lin a silver sty,” by playing Chopin’s jfuneral march when the wife calls | jthe company in to, dinner, etc. | Eventually he runs off with Tessa, only to have her die of heart | failure. | The plot is not exactly new. Rapids, to come into the situation|number of hotels and institutions , ;There is nothing in particular to lobject to, except the slander on ar- tists, who, in real life, probably, are as likely to be as monogamous and |fond of nine o’clock bed times as \the average professional worker. The acting is good, the photog- |raphy is good, the thing seems mildly interesting while it lasts. Vice IONEL ATWILL will be seen here shortly in “Stripped,” a new play Ly Jane Murfi Besides starring in the piece, Atwill staged the play. |The supporting cast includes Jessie | Royce Landis, Charles Trowbridge, to pull the garbage and wash the | Thelma Hardwick, Frederick Trues- stairways and the sidewalks; the|dell and Anne Sutherland. Rollo bosses coHect high rents, but their Wayne designed the settings. Miss janitors are exploited day and | | Murfin was co-author with Jane FRANCINE LARRIMORE | | In “Let Us Be Gay,” the Rachel |Crothers comedy now current at the | Little Theatre. NEW GERMAN FILM AT STREET PLAYHOUSE A new Ufa production, “His Late Excellency,” is having its first | American presentation at the 55th |Street Playhouse. The picture was | directed by two Ufa veterans, Ernst | Licho and Wilhelm Tiolo, from the | German stage play by Rudolf Pres- ber. The principal roles are portrayed by Olga Tschechowa, star of “Mou- lin Rouge,” and Willy Fritsch, On the same program is a short film in color, “Madame Dubarry,” with Priscilla Dean in the title role, an “Life in the Twilights.” NEW SWEDE FINANCE HEAD. STOCKHOLM, June 11—Peter) Adolf Dahl of Kristianstad, a mem- | ber of the Swedish Landsting since 1908, has been appointed minister of finance, succeeding Nils R. Wohlin, it was announced today. | their thugs. SASTONIA MILL STRIKERS LOOK TO WORKERS AID Spike Press Lie That North Would Fail (By a Worker Correspondent) * GASTONIA, N. C., (By Mail).— In Gastonia, N. Carolina, the mill barons of the Manyille-Jenckes for many years have been exploiting the Southern textile workers for low wages and long hours. In the Loray | mill the doffers in the spinning room are getting the lowest wages known in the textile industry. The oilers ‘in the spinning room are getting \the average pay of $13 to $15 a |week. The workers in Gastonia are | working from 55 to 72 hours a |week. The girls in the Southern j mills are getting the average pay lof $7 to $9 a week. 55TH | the These young workers who have been In the Loray mill 40 per cent of workers are young workers. slaving for Manville-Jenckes for years have revolted against cheap | wages and long hours. For many | years the mill owners of the North | have been moving the mills to the |South to get cheap labor. But now | they have met the stone wall of the National Textile Workers Union of \ Arenal tis Soin Gichitaee | are fighting for a better living wage and better living conditions. Under the leadership of the N. T. W. U. the workers in the Loray mill are putting up a wonderful struggle against the bosses and The workers now are \being evicted from their homes which is a move of the bosses to | break the strike and to make room | for the scab labor. | The Southern textile strikers are receiving wonderful support from |the Northern textile workers tho | the capitalist newspapers have al- | ways stated that the Northern work- | ers would not help them. We South- ern strikers have found it different; Wohlin’s resignation followed a! we know that the Northern textile vote of censure given him by the| workers are with us. in the night and there is no limit to their | working hours. The turnover in the houses is very great, indeed. Most of the men are hired through employment agencies. They are mostly unem- ployed from all trades and they seem to work for anything that is offered them, In the loft and of- fice buildings there are thousands | of Negro firemen and elevator op- erators and porters who work for wages far below the average and they must be organized and better wages gotten for them. FIREMAN. 2000 COALDALE MINERS STRIKE \Walkout Despite Peace Policy of U. M. W. A. COALDALE, Pa., June 11.—All operators of the Lehigh Coal and| Navigation Company in the Coaldale | district were suspended today fol- | |lowing a strike of 2,000 anthracite miners. The walkout occurred when {company officials discharged a} | watchman for refusing to fire a lo- comotive in preparation for resump- | tfon of operations today after all mines had been closed over the week-end. The miners here are under the grip of the United Mine Workers of America, which sets its face against strikes, But the workers themselves have endured bad condi- tions and unemployment and low wages so long that a breaking point has been reached. Such mass in- surrections as this are not improb- able at any time, The National Miners Union is trying to organize the militant coal miners and co-ordinate their strug- gles in the anthracite. « Not only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring denth to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working class—the proletar Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto). | Cowl of “Smilin’ Through” and “Li- |ae Time.” The production is hav- jing a tryout at Atlantic City this iweek. The new Earl Carroll revue, as yet untitled, with book by Eddie |Cantor, will open at the Apollo The- jatre, Atlantic City, on Monday eve- ning, June 24. The latest addition |to the cast, which is headed by Will Mahoney, is William Demarest, who is one of the headliners on this/ jweek’s bill at the Palace, Helen Steers, Joseph Granby, Gor- don Hamilton and Gene Mallin have | been added to the cast of “Sisters lef the Chorus,” the play by Martin |Mooney and Thomson Burtis, which | Showshop will present at the Wind- sor Theatre, beginning next Mon- iday. | “Taura Lee has resigned from “A | Night in Venice” to join “Broadway ghts,” the new musical comedy which the Messrs. Shubert now have in rehearsal, with Dr. Rockwell anc |Odette Myrtil in the featured roles. | Moe Jaffe has been engaged to write the lyrics for the production. Ecquador Will Try to Make U. S. Co. Pay Up |Taxes Let Go 30 Years QUITO, Equador (By Mail).— The long standing conflict of the Ecuadorean government with the American-owned South American Development Company, which for 30 years expoited the gold mines of Ecuador without paying anything to that country, was settled recently. The controversy referred to the validity of the contracts and con- cessions of the South American De- velopment Company. The National Constitutional Assembly decided that the contracts are valid but that the company is not exempt from paying taxes on the sales and the lease of the lands and that for this the company owes half a million dollars per year. ' ’ Reap the benefits of the May Day demonstrations by getting into the Communist Party work- ers who participated. —Just Off the Press! |i] RED CARTOONS || 1929 | A_ BOOK OF (4 PAGES SHOWING THE BEST CARTOONS OF THE YEAR OF THE STAFF CARTOONISTS OF THE DAILY WORKER Fred Ellis Jacob Burck With An Introduetion By the PRICE } Brilliant Revolutionary Journalist HHI | | Joseph Freeman $ 1 OO Edited by SENDER GARLIN Sold at all Party Bookshops or Daily Worker, 26 Union Sq. government’s opposition Swedish Parliament in connection with the finance minister’s proposal to raise additional capital for the Jordbrukarbanken, in which the gov- ernment owns practically all the stock. HEAR and. SEE now with TALK Sodnd WARWICK. DEEPING'S great novel | \y in ata at toy war | RADIO- KEITH « ‘EO Evenings 8:30 Mat.: Wedtesday and Saturday 2:30 ‘The New Musical Comedy Revue Hit Shubers. 72h tie, Wot Bway | MOROSCO THEA, W. —WM. GASTON, A Southern striker. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class-From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! “AMUSEMENTS BASIL DEAN'S FILM of MARGARET KEN NOVEL the CONSTANT NY. VERSION Y's MPH PLAYHOUSE 146 West ith Street LITTLE Cirele 7551 Carnegie” 45th St. Evs, tinees: Wed., at 8:30, Thurs, and feuieaa lagen: DRINKWATER’S Comedy Hit A NIGHT IN VENICE BIRD 1’ HAND Emil FILM GUILD CINEM. N Ramapo Hills, at tion re membership. COMMONWEALTH Today and Tomorrow Only! JAMNMINGs POLA NEGRI as Mme. DuBARRY—The tragedy of the Continuous Daily 7 a pL tae to satan. 52 West Sth Street BEAUTIFUL WALTON LAKE “ ear assion as LOUIS XIV Directed by LUBITSCH "rench Revolution ACTIVE PRESS, Inc. 26-28 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY For Your Vacation or Week-ends CAMP WOCOLONA A WORKERS’ COOPERATIVE CAMP in the Monroe, N. Y. Modern bungalows, running water, electricity. Good whole- some food, tennis, swimming, boating, other sports, Dramatics —— Lectures —— Musicales SPECIAL JUNE RATES: $23 a week—$4.50 a day A $5 deposit is required with every registration, Special low rates to members. Write for informa- Fifty miles from New York. Route 17 or Erie R.R. to Monroe, (For trains call Barclay 600 (Erle R.R.) COOPERATIVE, Inc. 799 Broadway, New York City packing plants. Every worker /6 is located here, is planning to or- New York Phone—Stuyvesant 6015 Camp Phone—Monroe 80 a 12-hour. dey. Splitters \ganize these workers. re are only getting $12 a week. PACKING SLAVE. oe enough votes to prevent the pro- posed vacations unless concessions | are. ae to it. ; me wives birth to capitalins keolxic, spontaneously and seale—V. 1. Lenin (“Lett? nism De

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