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Page D: AIL Y Wi ORKER, Gastonia Strike 1 NO MORE SHEEP-LIKE SLAVERY IN THE MILES, SAYS MILITANT LEADER Threats, Terror, Have Failed to| Spirits Reign of Dampen 1 St rikers’ By FRED ERWIN B E AL. |the National Guard who were only Well, we're } ! In The | two blocks av in charge of one Spevitablaires trying to or-|Major Dolly (als stonia mill law- the ar of textile) yer and one of those helping the k z prosecutors in t The Tex ys’ frame-ap of leaders and strikers) iiiiegen ork in| The city’s deputies were no where the South last Decem T we to be found on this night. One} went on quietly at f hen the; Woman who lived near the Union bosses, th their stool-pigeons, dquar and could plainly hear learned that the workers were or-|and see the destructionists at work ganizing by the hundreds, They d to have telephoned the police knew then that something had to mn of the affair and the reply be done if ld ir is no law in the city profits. .T ing of uni A reaction.set in but not the sort n the Man he bosses were looking for. A tre- 1 mpathy set in workers the Manville. s mill er this by calling a strike. which compelled a ing. It was a fore- on that nothing would ut and that the bosses would be given a whitewash. So ansy The began April 1st. At least 2,100 out of 00 workers em 2s call. The bi wer The Guard Is Posted. ious at als SON Raat ao Hay However, the strikers said they ers—“their docile 100 per »e prepared the next time. American workers.” They were pre- et to work and built a new arte d pared. They leaflet, lie after lie t at the gates. The unior tent at tect. it and strikers answered these on the A spot. One of the big signs in red paint the bosses put up read a Man, Don’t Be strikers afterwards their own slo; made in front ets themselves and placed und every night to pro- and the lives of the many ing in the tent colony. Nightly meetings were held on the} with greater and greater num- | work and friends attend- | v Saturday night specia) a were given: music, dancing, boxing and picnicking. Plans were under way to show moving pictures. | The spirit of the workers every-| was mounting higher and | Those that were strike- ere allowed to attend mass meeting and entertain- It was generally understood | the Piedmont ment. vail 2 aaah Sonal that these workers did not realize from ct ier i "spoke Sanka oo GERM oniore a| spoke. workers on strike. The purpose of | lay-preachers ty 7? 9 bi the strikers was to convince them | Bosses Plot. pe} that their place was in their ranks. | The textile barons became |The i \ofbads inal” conterahices alarmed. Mill owners from all over | with “scabs.” It was known that the South held a two- in Gastonia on the s union issued mimeogr calling on work to join the strike. Manager Baugh was continually in fear of a huge walk-out which was | gaining momentum every day. To try and offset this he called the whole Strike Committee, one by | one, into his office one day—flatter- | ing them that they were his best | workers, and promising them better days if they would give up the union, He also stated at this time (end of May) that 1,700 of his orig- | inal workers were still out of the mill (many of whom went to their| The workers were | responding. The bosses in some of | the mills gave a slight incr: wagés to;stop the stampede. villesJen¢kes brought in the National Guatd. Men and women were bay- enetted: Medicine shows were put on ly the bosses to try and draw the trowd. fron meetings but jiithout su The Gastonia Gazette, the bosses’ paper, always against the workers and hinionization of the mills, issued mountain homes or to other mills | to work). He needed his old and} experienced workers. He will need | those he has now in the near future | ng violence against because these workers will not slave terribly long hours—night and day —for measly low wages. They know that the National Textile Workers | Union is here to stay. Its leaders | cannot be bought. Southern work- | ers are learning to become organiz- ers, in fact there are several of them now. The revolt has now begun. | Forward to a new and brighter life | and day for RE Se workers! TO TELL GRAFT The siecers were determined to have .a_union so this nose-rag of a fress urged the bringing in of the United. Textile Workers’ Union (U. T. W.) as thé best means of smash- ing the stri They printed a let- ter, 4 questionaire to Manville- Jenckes, supposedly from a worker, in which one cf the first questions was, “If we rvn Beal out of town will you let the workers join the wT. W.2” However, thru the faking activi- ties and the many sell-outs in the South by the U. T. W. misleaders, their whole program was exposed. IN BANK CRASH President McMahon reg red in the best hotel in Gastonia one day but left in a hurry. It is rumored), : that many textile workers who had Injured Workers Are joined his organization a few years | Hit By Closing (Continued from Page One) | | wept hopelessly in the street when | they gathered that their scanty compensation had been swallowed in the latest graft orgy. Politicians Involved. nd back intended to pay him a visi ask for the return of the high in tion and due fees that his organiza- tion ran away with. Beating Men and Women. The deputies were busy beating up men and women and making ar- rests on the picket line. The Inter- |} national Labor Defense came to the Harry Weinberger, organizer of | rescue of the arrested strikers and | the parent New Jersey Bankers’ Se- | went their bail. Carl Reeve, the curities Company and whose profit- | I. L. D. representative, was himself | making “deals” will be exposed be- | arrested on the picket line and stood | fore today’s jury, today said the | in danger of his life for his efforts | crash was due to political complica- | in the workers’ behalf. Vera Bush| tions. Davis, who pocketed $599,- and Ellen Dawson, union organizers, /000 in 56 days in 1927, apparently were arrested many times for picket-| referred to the directorate, which ing. This writer was arrested on included Ex-U. S. Senator Edward I. the charge of “kidnapping” a scab’s Edwards, governor of New Jersey wife who was at that time a loyal from 1920-23 and active in the dem- | striker who volunteered to go to ocratic organization whose New New York to raise relief for the | York members were largely respon- strikers. This case was laughed out | | sible for the City Trust swindle. of court, making a “bum” out of| The bank’s president is Mayor Major Bulwinkle, lawyer and chief Roegner of Passaic, whose aides | provocateer for the Manville-enckes | include local municipal officers, i Company. | At least $300,000 of the bank’s Intermittent Strike. surplus is “missing,” an examination Through threats and terror some | by directors of the Bankers’ Secur- ‘workers went back to work, coming | ities Company revealed, A sum of | out again in a few days. Many $300,000 has been separated from strikers would go back a few days the original $1,000,000 capital. to work and then come out again.| Today's witnesses will tell the | This angered the bosses still more | jury of the means used to line the as it upset production and kept them | pockets of the grafters. Weinberg- from hiring strikebreakers in such | er, it will be shown, borrowed money Jarge numbers from other states.|from his own bank to purchase | Strikebreakers were secured from | stock. Georgia, South Carolina and other | states on the strength of lying) ‘promi es of high wages and to some | that a’’new mill had been built.) The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial starts July 29! Twenty-three | workers face electrocution or eee the asia ne a Si patvea | prison terms! Rally all forces to rand-out policy the DOSSeS | save them. Defense and Relief more desperate and in an} to further terrorize the ws there is evidencw that it its*"Committee of One Hun- dred? ‘toa down the Union's saat | Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 | East 11th Street, New York. | Afte progre: ery revolution m: Phe Marked Raiders. | pened after one o'clock in VEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1929 SHOP PAPERS WITH THE SI Wie SIX PAGES OF THE DAILY WORKER, the Shop Paper Department also comes back. We hope to make this department permanent, and what is more, a twice a week feature. And that will be an casy job with the help of those who get out the shop papers. your shop paper, by sending it in to the Daily Worker, worker cor- respondent department regularly, so that we can review it. Let workers throughout the country know: about The Workers Will Reap the Benefits. HE workers of the McCormick plant of the International Harvester Company, Chicago, bought 1400 copies of the Shop Bulletin issued by the Communist Party nucleus in the plant last Friday. They thought so much of the shop bulletin that they were willing to pay out $30.04 to buy them. This is the second successive time that the Harvester workers have contributed sufficient money to pay for the cost of the printing. The bulletin now has a broad influence. With the bulletin on a self-sustaining basis the nucleus plans to improve and enlarge it. More pictures and features are planned and the bulletin will be issued more frequently. The anti-war struggle, which is closely linked up with the condi- tions in the shop is the feature article in the bulletin. Two full pages of shop news and articles on the Gastonia frame-up and the Cleveland T.U.E.L. conyention make up the rest of the bulletin, * * * Slaving for Henry. HIS is from the Ford Worker, gotten out by the Communist Shop Nucleus in the Ford plant at Kearney, N. J.: An important factor in the plant is the “Pusher.” They work for the interests of the bosses, despite the fact that they themselves are being exploited. Their job is to drive the men—drive them until they squeeze out of them the necessary amount of production. The “pushers” are watching every step of the workers. We cannot leave our places for a moment. If we have to go to the toilet we have to run there and run back—the belt is moving, the parts are coming and we, the workers around the belt, must move just as fast, watch every move of the belt and move with it—we are part of the belt. Every one is sweating, the body is weary, the work is hard, the belt is fast and we, despite out tiredness must move with it, must fol- low it. Not a word can be spoken to another worker. All know their work and all must do it. And all we are getting for this body and nerye-wrecking work is 65 cents an hour. The “pushers” infest the place; one worker drives another; all for bigger profits for the bosses. One gang leader is trying to outdo an- other. This is capitalism. This is the system under which we live. We fellow-workers must do something in order to change these terrible conditions. We must organize. We must fight against the speed-up, against the unsanitary conditions, bad ventilation which undermine our health. We must fight for better pay, better working and living conditions.. We must fight for social insurance, health and accident insurance. We must fight for time and a half for overtime, against this mad speed-up and the gang of “pushers,” for closets for our clothes, clean drinking cups. we fight together. J We must organize a shop committee with representatives from all departments. This shop committee, composed of workers elected by the workers from all departments, will fight for our interests. Fellow workers! Send in articles to “The Ford Worker!” It is your paper—it fights for your interests, Casey Jones Says in the “Headlight.” Ce JONES, in the “Headlight,” shop paper issued by the Com- munist Party nucleus in the Southern Pacific Railroad shop, San Francisco, about an S, P. scheme to fool its slaves: YOU CAN WIN $100. Yes sir, and if you don’t want to believe me take the S. P. com- pany bulletin. You find there a big announcement, telling about the five prizes ranging from $100 to $10, to be given to the lucky employe, who will give the best answer to the big question: “How S. P. can increase its revenue?” Well, this is our chance to become a millionaire, while helping Mr. Shoup, Sproule and the other starving stockholders to get a little bit more bread and butter. ‘The S. P. wants to have $100 worth of advice. Here is No. 1: The wages are too high—let’s declare a general cut, of 25%. Not so bad to increase the revenue! How about No. 2: I suggest a 12-hour work- ing day. The work is so easy that there will be plenty of time left to go to the shows, to take automobile rides, in one word, to have a good time. Sleeping? We don’t need that. We take it so easy at the S. P. that after the day is over, one feels like starting all over again... 1 think these two will do. Watch me boys, getting the $100! ’Xcuse me, I almost forgot about the slogans. This is another way to make $25 or $10.- The slogans will be left for the next issue and the contest is open for everybody. Send in your tips and slogans to the “Headlight” and they’ll be printed for sure. Once they appear in the “Headlight” you will surely get Mr. Shop’s $100. Step on it— and rush your letters to your friend—CASEY JONES, * * For the Western Electric Slaves. HE HAWTHORNE is the shop paper gotten out by the Communist shop nucleus in the Western Electric plant in Chicago. neat in format and make-up, so live with its humor and light stuff, so full of worker correspondence from Western Electric workers at the Hawthorne plant, that it is not hard on the brain to figure out why it is popular with the workers in the big Western Electric plant, who just about eat it up when it is printed. It plays up the Gastonia frame-up prominently, explains its mean- ing to the Western Electric workers, and calls on them to support the framed-up workers. A- fine Young Workers’ section is devoted to showing up the real purpose behind the Citizens Military Training Camps. The Western Electric Company is one of the biggest boosters of the CMTC and has tried hard to trap its workers into joining the CMTC. Says the Hawthorne Worker: “Another reason why big concerns such as the Western Electric support the CMTC is because there the young workers are taught to be docile and obedient (to the boss). In the CMTC the young workers get anti-labor propaganda. They are told that organization is not good for the young workers. In the CMTC the youth is trained to fight for the bosses in war time, and slave for them in peace time.” Take it all in all, a scrappy shop paper like the Hawthorne Worker will be one of the main instruments in waking up the thousands of slaves at Hawthorne. * * * Some Wise Cracks from the Hawthorne Worker. N its “Shop Humor,” the Hawthorne Worker has another fine feature. Here are a few, well, not exactly gems, but sorta funny ones: HARD TO SATISFY THE BOSS. Worker: Mr. Jones, you promised me a r for June 1st. Mr. Jones: I said I’d give you one if I was satisfied with you. Worker: Well, why aren't you satisfied with me? Mr. Jones: Because you want a raise. P.S.—Maybe the Western could also use Mr. Jones’s excuse for its failure to give the thousands of raises it promised for June 1st. ON FURTHER THOUGHT. Big Boss (has called Jim and the gang foreman before him and asked angrily): Jim, did you call your foreman an imbecile and an idiot? Jim (thoughtfully): Well, the more I look at him the more probable it seems that I did. BLAME IT ON MOSCOW. Teacher: Johnny, why did the American Colonists start the rev- olution against England? Johnny (thinking hard and fast): Well, they must have gotten orders from Moscow. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF GRAY HAIR. Teacher (in the physiology class): What does the appearance of head indicate? Western Electric, where my father works, it’s a signal either for a wage gut or a lay-off, jl ill ead taabatin on We can only win our demands when It is so | EVERY WORKER DOES WORK OF 2 ON R.R. EXPRESS: Foremen ‘Promoted by Scabbing By a Worker Correspondent (Continued) CHICAGO (By Mail)—Some of the union members working in the | American Railway Express were in- ducted into the union by the toe of |2 British couple who have an abun- | a boot or other coer as in all unions some are merely | members, But there are many, per-| |haps a majority, of the membership | who know the predicament they are | in, who realize that the union does |on the par the bill, who feel that the |Freddy, who is unusually shy, re- “ slave driving, parasite feeding meth- ods of the present system are al wrong and that the remedy does not | | hopes lie in mere revisin of the wage scale | lor dickering with corporation rep: |: sentatives. Whether dealing with steady men, 90-day men or extras the motto of |the company seems to be “Give them \all they can bear.” We have never |seen a workshop that exacts so much, The number of men em- ployed is the smallest possible to |keep the depots in operation. The {number of extras and 90-day men has been reduced about 30 per cent since the company changed hands March 1. A few steady men have iquit and none hired in their place. | Try to Cause Bad Feeling. Every effort is used to create bad feeling between the steady men and the extras. Most of the steady men ‘are car loaders, freight routers or value room men. Their knowledge |of the business puts them in a posi- |tion of directing the other men who are designated platform men, most of whom are extras. While the foremen encourage the regular men to help keep the extras busy, they at the same time tell the extras that jhe i is being imposed on by the steady {thus creating enmity between the two groups and preventing an un- derstanding amongst them. Do Two Men’s Work. | Steady or extra, the men are all \kept busy every minute of their | time. As near as possible each man is foreed to do two men’s work. | The car loaders are kept at least 25 | | per cent short of the number needed, Three freight routers usually do the work of five. The sorters, truckers and other platform men never exceed ,50 per cent of the number needed. | There is on an average one foreman | to every seven men, These foremen are there to see |that an abundance is done. Very little care is taken to handle ship- ments carefully. Eggs, fruit, frail packages, bed springs, castings and every conceiv- able commodity are piled into one heap by men who have no time to use care because of the terrific speed at which they are driven, Don’t Care For Men’s Safety. The company is careless of the safety of the men. Heavy boxes, erates, castings, etc., are placed on the four wheelers prmiscuously. |Enough men are never hired to do |this work properly and many are hurt lod@ding and unloading. The steel plates or boards used as run- ways from platform to cars are never properly secured and often slip. In this way many are hurt and some have been killed. Not forged only has the bourgeoisie the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern PERIALIST WAR CONGRESS THE YOUNG PLAN A. | | | REVIEWS AND BOOKS 89 EAST 125TH STREET | cive method and dance of money and a lack of brains. | JUST OFF THE PRESS July Issue The Communist A Magazine of the Theory and Practise of Marxism-Leninism THE REVOLUTIONARY STRUGGLE AGAINST IM- H. M. WICKS THE RIGHT OF REVOLUTION—AN AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY TRADITION A. LANDY RIGHT TENDENCIES AT THE TRADE UNION UNITY ‘WM. Z. FOSTER GASTONIA—THE CENTER OF THE CLASS STRUG- GLE IN THE “NEW SOUTH” WM. F. DUNNE The Reparations Conference and the War Danger FRIED The New Reparations Plan, by G. P. FURTHER NOTES ON THE NEGRO QUESTION IN THE SOUTHERN TEXTILE STRIKES CYRIL BRIGGS CAPITALISM AND AGRICULTURE IN AMERICA (Continued) V. I. LENIN ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC POLICY E, VARGA LITERATURE AND THE CLASS STRUGGLE FRANZ MEHRING Price 25 Cents WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS Is Beginning of Rebellion ot Workers Throughout South, Says Beal “Fyeddy” Is Mildly Amusing FVERNU LAMP. Farce at the Lyceum Theatre SLAVES INHALE. A typical English drawing room | |comedy titled “Freddy” is now at the Lyceum Theatre where it is mildly amusing summer audiences these hot nights. It is by C. Staf- ford Dickens who also staged the production, | While the comedy is entertaining most of the time, occasionally it| starts to drag, but somehow hits jits stride again before it becomes | boring. The play opens in the Gommery’s home in Surrey, England. It shows Freddy Hall, a friend of George |Gommery, who is the business rep- |resentative of the household, finds | |himself the center of a love affair | t of Mrs. Gommery. pels the advances of Mrs. Gommery y/and says he has a mistress. He in this way to evade her.| Asked the name of the woman, he | says she is Queenie Mellish, a lead- ing London actress. holding a theatre program with her name, when asked the question, and it was the first name that came to} his mind. Complications arise dual to the fact that George Gommery | is conducting an affair with the same Queenies. : | Freddy reaches Queenie and ex-! plains the entire situation to her. TED HEALY. nu Jar Who is furnishing much of the | funny situations in “A Night in| the Shubert Theatre. I. L. D. Gains In Fight. ‘On Cheswick Courts. (Continued from Page une) | man, Our work is to gild lamp fixtures. The solution is made of lacquer and Freddy was |Venice,” the revue now current at | Silt dust and let me say, when that gilt is poured into the solution and a quantity swirls across the floor, | swept by the wind, everyone shields is entire face. POISONOUS GILT | Youn g Wor orkers Ready for Action (By a Worker Correspondent) | The place I work in is the Evere Lamp Co., where girls and boys ‘are chiefly employed. My work is so injurious in char- | acter, so dangerous to the worker’s | health, that two things usually hap- pened on the |quit in a day or a week, or if he | stuck it through because of desper- ate necessity, | another section of the factory. |the boss, a fat slobby, speak-thru- | the-nose affair, with the able assist- job. Either a boy he was transferred to But e of his roaring, abusive fore- found some kind of remedy. Inhale Deadly Grains. The deadly grains in your lungs, your nostrils, eyes and even skin are \greatly dreaded. troopers brutally attacked a Sacco-| gilding all day, Then again, in staggering with After a great deal of turmoil, which | Vanzetti demonstration in Cheswick, | hcavy loads of lamp fixtures to the Pa., beating and clubbing, men, wo-| gilding tables, there are no seats at is served with many witty lines, Freddy and Queenie actually fall in) love with one another. The Gom-| merys go back home, the male mem- ber of the family starting another love affair with a Spanish actress | as the final curtain falls, Raymond Walburn plays the part of. Freddy and does very well in a difficult role. The other parts are also portrayed very precisely. Queenie’s ‘role is in the capable hands of Vera Neilson, while Mrs.! Gommery is played by Beatrice Ter- ry. Others in the cast are the author as George Commery and Hu- | bert Druce as Queenie’s father. WILLIAM FARNUM RETURNING TO BROADWAY THIS SEASON. “The Idol,” the new play by Mar- |} tin Brown, starring William Farnum, | is now playing a week’s engagement at Atlantic City prior to its Broad- way showing. Although Farnum ap-| | peared briefly in a revival of “Mac-| workers beth” last year, “The Idol” is his | first modern stage drama since 1915 | when he went west to join the Hol-)| lywood movie colony. Besides Far-! num, Irene Purcell, Martin Burton, | Hugh Miller, R. C. Fischer, Enid| Romany, Dorothy Day and John Hamilton are other players in the | cast. WIN STRIKE FOR UNION FORT WAYNE, Ind. (By Mail) — The 144 painters and the 254 eed penters who struck at the Wolf-Des-| sauer Department stores here be-| cause non-union labor was ¢mployed, have won a union shop. The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial starts July 29! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East ‘1th Street, New York. BRICKLAYERS WIN. NEW CASTLE, Pa., (By Mait).— The 150 union bricklayers here who| struck for $1.62% an hour, $13 a day, have won their strike, getting all demands. . NEW YORK CITY | for organizing the unorganized. men and children, Ten other work-| all and no rest allowed. We stand ers are still facing charges of dis |all day above the gilt solution which sisting an officer, etc. of Accorisi two years later, despite the fact that on the day of the dem- onstration he was at his home four |orderly conduct, inciting to riot, re- | gives off sickening gaseous fumes The arrest|that give dull headaches. An Unsanitary Hole | We work nine hours a day. The \lunch “hour” is thirty minutes. The miles away, is an attempt to find a/soitets are so filthy that one must scapegoat at any cost. be The New York I. L. D. will con-/ tering. tinue to fight with all the resources! soap, sufficient lockers? at its command to prevent Accorisi’s|o¢ the kind! extradition to Pennsylvania where he! quite a compensation? 1 probably be subjected to the) say that of $13 for the first week in a desperate state before en- No paper either. Towels, Nothing But our wages are If you can usual frame up tortures to extort a/ (ind few stay any longer), $14 or “confession.” STEAMFITTERS STRIKE PITTSBURGH (By Mail). Steamfitters of the F. E. Geisler Co. here have gone on strike against the discharge of two union steamfitters. The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial starts July 29! ‘Twenty-three face’ electrecution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80. East 11th Street, New York. |$15 afterwards, then I’ll eat an old | felt, The radical — young workers can easily be put to practice. citions with a few and all said in so many words: |start a strike around here.” need leadership. |Bush Terminal, Brooklyn, 36th St. and Second Ave. young workers are slaving in the factories in this section from about 25th St. to 59th, First to Aves. Our Communist Youth League must get to work there and build a real youth movement. feeling among the I discussed our lousy con- “Someone ought to They Our factory is in Thousands of Fourth D, B. “AMUSEMENTS?! LAST DAY! A Blasting Argument Against War! Quinn Martin, N. Y. World, says: “Fighting for the Fatherland has a 66 FF shocking, sicken- ing force behind it, a punch of hor- ror.” SE '—THIS AMAZING FILM! AUTHENTIC! ACTUAL! IGHTING FOR THE FATHERLAND” —and on the same program—— JOHN BARRYMORE in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” film guild cinema ° oe ‘ontinuous Daily to midnite Spring 5095-5090 52 w. Sth street OF BE Starting July 27—“LIFE Nereen-biography of trayed by the great art’ FAKERS MEET IN AUGUST. ALBANY (By Mail).—The New| York State Federation of Labor has} decided to hold its annual convention in August. No program for the un-| employed is planned, and no plans The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial starts ~ ‘y °°! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally ail forces to save them. Def nse and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York. (ASSETS EXCEEDING eTHOVE Maxter-Compoxer of the Ninth Symphony por; st, Frits Kortner. Nv—enneted in the actual AMKINO Ft PRESE! Lite USSIAI THE ATE Aca 1 ES eM ENT "$29, 000, vd Depositx made on or before the day of the month will draw int from the Ist day of the mom Last Quarterly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 to $7,500.00, at the rate of Open Mo pa 8 (all day) until Sell A, THIRD. AVE. 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