The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 7, 1930, Page 3

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| 1 | t Ji FRENCH WORKING CLA SUPPORTS COMMUNISTS AGAINS ‘EP PERSECUTION Terror SS Attack on Communist Paper Answered By sein) tn Workers Collecting Fund of 1,500,000 Frances Strike Wave Breaks Out and Revolutionary Unions Defeat Right Wing Minority PARIS (By Inprecorr Mail Serv- ice)—The Communists Geroux and Desnots have just been arrested in connection with the framed-up “plot against the security of the State” for which 150 officials of the Com- munist Party have already been arrested. Comrade Chapuis, the business manager of the central organ of the French C. P. “l’Humanité,” who is a cripple but who has been held in prison since the 17th of July, has now been sentenced to three years’ imprisonment in connection with a number of articles published in “?'Humanité.” The young Communist Ancel has been sentenced to a year’s imprison- ment for “resisting the State au- thority and inciting military per- sons to disobedience.” He has also been in prison since the 13th of July. The answer of the revolutionary workers to these brutal persecutions is to strengthen the fund for “I’Hu- | manité,” which has now reached a | million and a half francs. Strikes are breaking out in in- creasing number, the minority in the French revolutionary T. U. fed- eration (CGTU) have been over- whelmingly defeated and stormy demonstrations have been held against the six treacherous ex- Communist members of the Paris Town Council. Despite the repres- sion the influence of the C. P. is steadily increasing. Mislead to Leave Soviet; Want Back MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Mail Ser- vice).—Many of the Swedish peasant families who were persuaded to leave the Soviet Union and return to their “native country” as a result of promises and propaganda, are now anxious to return to the Ukraine, which they left. | More families have petitioned the Swedish authorities to let them re- turn, declaring that the Swedish em- igrants have been deceived, that the promised land has not materialized and that the emigrants are being forced to work for the rich agrarians Hungarian Workers for low wages. In addition, the Swedish govern- ment had not given them Swedish nationality as promised. The petition concludes: “We have been made into’ the slaves of the Swedish rich landown- ers. We want to go back to the Ukraine, and if you give us permis- sion to return we are prepared to walk the whole way on foot, rather than stay here.” The bourgeoisie has dug a pit for the Soviet Union and is falling into it itself. Jailed Without Trial PRAGUE (By Inprecorr Mail Ser- vice).—According to a report from Budapest, the courts have now come to a decision in the case of 100 per- sons who were arrested in the early part of the year for alleged Com-) munist activity. | The arrested persons have been in prison for over eight months without any proceedings having been com- menced against them. Eighty-seven of them will now be brought to trial whilst thirteen will be released be- cause, although the police have been making exhaustive inquiries, nothing can be discovered against them. It is, of course, a regular custom in Hungary and other Balkan coun- tries for the police to arrest people first and then collect material against them afterwards. place next Spring, so that the ac- cused will have been in prison for over a year without trial, not that such little things trouble the Hun- garian authorities. Workers Cut Diamonds But Starve BRUSSELS (By Inprecorr Mail Service)—The crisis in the dia- mond-cutting trade in Belgium is | sharpening rapidly. The number of unemployed has now risen to 7,000, of whom 4,500 are organized in trade unions. In Antwerp alone, suffering. By an agreement with the leaders (!) of the “socialist” union, the employers are closing down all remaining shops for two weeks. Avella Miners Strike Against Cut in Wages (Continued from Page One) rade the towns attacking miners, raiding their homes, brandishing weapons, The executive board, Illinois dis- trict, National Miners Union, has issued instructions to all local unions and the N.M.U. members to instantly organize defense squads to repulse these fascist attacks. + & Police Arrest W. I. R. Man. BELLEVILLE, Ill, Jan, 6— After a conference on miners’ re- lief at Staunton, Marcel Scherer, Workers International Relief repre- sentative in Illinois, was stopped at | the point of a gun by police and ar- | rested on a framed charge of steal- ing an automobile, So swift and} militant were the protests of the Staunton miners that the police were foreed to free Scherer soon after they had arrested him. Relief conferences were held in St. Louis, Mo., Sunday and in Belle- ville Sunday night. George Voyzey and Gerry Allard, leaders of the National Miners Union, spoke. Plans were made for organizing re- lief on a broad scale. te a * W.LR. Station in Taylorville. TAYLORVILLE, Ill, Jan. 6.— Undaunted by threats of United Mine Workers’ gunmen, the IR. has opened a relief store in Taylorville. This is the second relief station opened, the first being located in Eldorado. A local relief conference was also held at which a committee was elected to take charge of the store. A conference was held in Spring- field, Thursday, at which A. Herchy was elected secretary of the Spring- field relief committee. A truckload of food and clothing from Chicago is expected here at any time. A big district relief con- ference will be held in Chicago on Saturday. raed Issue Coupon Books. Coupon books, containing cou- pons selling from 25¢ to $1, have been issued by the Workers Inter- national Relief to raise funds for the striking Illinois miners. They can be obtained from the local W. I. R. secretaries or from the W. I, R. National Office. All workers ate urged to sell these coupons among their shop- mates and friends, as well as to raise funds in other ways. Send all money at once to the National Office of. the Workers International Re- lief, 949 Broadway, Room 512, New York City, |Court Ovens to Frame Saylors, George Saul) (Continued from Page One) planned against Saylors on the mur- der charge. Identified Lynchers. The perjury charge against Say- lors was made by the mill owners’ penter and Bullwinkle, the mill own- ers’ lawyers, who acted as State's prosecutors against the Gastonia class war prisoners, lead the mill bosses’ lynching mob which kid- napped Saylors, Ben Wells and C. M. Lell last September, and because he persisted in saying that he saw | them. In the attempt to railroad Saylors on the same murder charge in which they have railroaded the seven Gas- tonia workers and N. T. W| organ- izers, the bosses’ courts made use of an affidavit alleged to have been striker, and which Allen stated was forced from him through intimida- tion by Carpenter and Bullwinkle. The International Labor Defense has obtained from Allen affidavits repudiating the one forced from him by Carpenter and Bullwinkle. Allen denies that he heard Saylors state that the latter did not see Carpenter and Bullwinkle in the lynching mob. A second affidavit obtained by the I. L, D. from Allen denies that he knows anything of Saylor in the Aderholt case. Allen's Affidavits. The affidavits: follow: “December 20, 1029, “J, Robert Allen, hearby say that I do not know a thing about C. D. Saylors in the A. F, Aderholt case. I, Robert Allen was not there, so therefore I could not have seen him there. I, Robert Allen, have not heard him say anything about it, in any way, shape or form. I, therefore, have not discussed it with ©. °D. Saylors at all. Any cther affidavit is not true, “(Signed) ROBERT ALLEN. “Sworn to and subscribed before me this Dec. 20th, 1929. “R. L. Sing, Notary Public. (My commission expires Dec. 9, 1981.) ee Oe December 24, 1929, “T, Robert Allen, have not heard C. D. Saylors say that he did not see John G. Carpenter and A. L, Bullwinkle in the mob on the night of September 9, 1929. But did hear him say that they were in the mob of night of Sept. 9, 1929. If any other affidavit made outside of this, they are not true. (Signed) ROBERT ALLEN. North Carolina, Mecklenburg County. Personally appeared before me, Robet Allen who, under oath Yugo Slavia in SPEED VICTOR TALKING) Where Neero Workers Crisis Shown by MACHINE WORKERS TO © 9 Exhibit LIMIT; LAY THEM OFF | watux WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1930 : BERLIN (By Inprecorr Mail exhibition “Death jand Terror in Yoguslavia,” orga- nized by the League of the Free (By a Worker Correspondent) DEN, N. J. (By Mail).—The Christmas gifts for the workers of | the Vietor Talking Machine factor, | Balkans, is opened here by the| consisted of kicks. in their backs, |former Prime Minister of Albania, | They were getting laid off for lack | Mgr. Fan Noli, The exhibition aims | of work, just before, and even long | at showing the bloody national and | before Christmas, and now the fac. | Social oppression of the Pan#ere | tory js almost all closed down be- jbian regime and the present mili-| cause of overproduction, that is the | tary-fascist dictatorship in Yugo-| great amount of work the workers |slavia, |had to produce during their cruel Statistics, documents and ‘photo- | and long days of speedup. graphs all contribute to a damning | = indictment of the ruling classes in| g, Yugoslavia. Ten years of white ter- | = x Seay Riga age ror in Yugoslavia, 3,964 executions | inqonpene, “Meionalization, and a few and political murders, 40,000 politi- | ove 'ty drive in the mew cmeahun te cal arrests, 3,500 political fugitives, | "V1 fh huesey’ mectiin, Pee 100,000 emigrants swell the bosses’ profits. In the last six months alone 56 | The bosses had planned this last pring. Machinery then was placed if | | After the new speedup system was Il set to be ct, the > a | Then, in the evening, the workers were so tired, because they day’s slavery took all the strength out of them, and they had to get ready for the next da work, And, I tell you, f workers, that I did realize the outcome of this ystem they were planning last ng. nd throughout speedup, the g, and the b They laid off hundreds and then rehired them This was this workers al damn of worker again with a big wage cut. done until every worker had suffered the wage cut. Now, I will advise the workers that at the pr nt time very few workers are employed and th Seth ones beginning to base another new Are Furthe r ‘Robbed «gp ~ rage rnree CIALISTS” IN COUNTERFEITING _ ANTLUSSR PLOT British Imperialists | Back Conspiracy (Continued from Page One) the money to start the counterfeit- ing business, he refused to reply. But documents exist, some 40 vol- umes of them, that prove these Georgian white guards were fi- nanced by Sir Henry Deterding and young Nobel. Evidence “Stolen.” These 40 volumes of evidence, by the way, have been monkeyed with in an amazing manner. Seized when the arrests were made two years ago, they naturally were turned The first proceedings will take) over 1,000 jobless diamond-cutters | are without support, penniless and | courts, because Saylors saw Car-| made by Robert Allen, a former) | ternationa! Red Aid, Hekimovitch, and the leaders of the Yugoslavian Young Communist League, Oreshki and Mishistch. Four thousand political prisoners jare still in prison. The exhibition |tional oppression practiced by the ascendant Serbs against the Croats, | Macedonians, Albanians and other national minorities. 1930 TO BE CRISIS YEAR (Continued from Page One) provement of conditions that will put business, investment and fin- ance back to where they were in 1929; (Here’s the rub!) “(3) Some industries are ad- mitted to be facing rather serious problems, such, for example as the } automobile industry and build- | ing.” (This is the blast of wind | that scatters Hoover's house of | ecards that he labels “increased | building program.”) American capitalist industry, auto- mobiles? Only ‘one real outlook. Sharp crisis and a smashing drive | for world markets to dump Amer- ican automobiles. This was foreseen by the Euro- |they met to devise means of driv- ing out U. S. competition, The French government proposes an in- erease of 90 per cent in tariff against U. S. autos. Harry E. Pierson, writing on the |try (Journal of Commerce, Jan. 6) points to the world market. “Europe is a beacon light for the | automobile interests in America,” he says. “Why there should be an ex- cessive supply in America, and why | Europe has been recognized as hold- \ing a great potential for demand, jis of first concern,” Stimson is doing his part by demanding more |war cruisers to further U. S. trade, while at the same time Hoover or- despite conference or agreement. While Hoover’s economic crisis three-minute men shout their propa- italist press, and thru the willing |mouths of the social-fascists head- ling the Americari Federation of La- |bor, the Federal Reserve Bank piles up reports of sharpening decline. | Here are the facts boiled down | from various cities: | Boston: “There was a sharp re- cession in New England industrial activity during November. . . . | Carloadings of merchandise and | miscellaneous freight during Nov. | in New England fell off consid- | erably. Building construction continued to decline, ete., etc.” Philadelphia: ity declines, The decline in the past month was shared by south- sylvania, -but Delaware showed the largest percentage of reces- sion in total awards,” Cleveland: “Factory employ- ment receded sharply in Novem- ber, compared with the previous month and was less than the cor- responding month of 1928... . This situation in December was aggravated, Declines in payrolls has been greater than decline in unemployment. (This is the same picture throughout the country— wage cuts!) Chicago: “The decline in United States production of passenger automobiles in Nov, from October averaged 47,1 per cent. Heavy recessions were reported in rub- ber, food products, leather and vehicle groups. Rubber manufac- turing declined 10.5 per cent. Food products showed a loss of 7.8 per cent in employment. . . . The number employed in leather manufacturing decreased 6.5 per cent and their earnings were down to 16.1 per cent (more wage cuts!). St. Louis: “Generally through the district, according to the em- ployment service of the Depart- ment of Labor, a surplus of work- ers exists, most marked among states that the above affidavit is true. #3 ROBERT ALLEN. 24th day of December, 1929. J. E. Thomas, Notary Public, Mecklenburg County. (My commis- sion expires Jan. 27, 1930, |Com workers, intellectuals | 2 put into e: y ane Lerevolutionaries have |hiret about 15,000 workers and drove ioee d, including the secre- | them to slave under a real stretch- tary Yugoslavian Communist | Ut in a minute, and another man Paty ch; the secretary of |to keep up with the line, he was the Yi n section of the In-|thrown out in a minute, and another | gives a frightful picture of the na- | What prospects for that jewel of | pean automobile manufacturers when | |prospects of the automobile indus- | ders the speedy building of fifteen, | ganda over the radio, thru the capi- | “Building activ- | ern New Jersey and eastern Penn- | Witness my hand and seal this/ of machinery and a new tem that will mean r twice as bad. Victor workers, we must build our factory nucleus up, that we can be able to end these slave conditions. —Vietor Worker. y short- man substituted, to avoid lage and delay on the line. Tipping System, and Military Line-up in R. R. Porters’ Slavery le at the same time the bosses hire and fire these workers, and try to keep them terrorized from becoming militant by militarizing these workers. The Negro rail- road porters must fight for the demand of living wages and de- cent working conditions, and the abolition of the tipping system. They must at the same time cast out the Negro misleaders, such as the Randolph and Cross- waithe type, yellow “socialists” ’who collaborate with the bosses, oppose militant action by the porters, and work hand in hand with the A. F. of L. fakers of the Green and Woil type, who have had Negro workers barred from entering most A. F. of L. unions. They murst become part of a railroad workers’ industrial union to take in ail railroad workers, and form their section of this union under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity which stands for the united st gle of both Negro and white work- ers, together against the capital- ist system which fosters race discrimination. (By a Worker Correspondent) I want to tell of the cond under which the Red Cap port all Negro wo: , at the Penns vania R, R. Station, in New York are forced to work. There are five hundred or more of these work at Penn Station, all of them workers. They work long hou no pay at all from the railroad company. Instead the railroad sells | each one a very expensive uniform and it must be paid for in cash. They must line up in a military manner when going on and off duty. Amongst them are “leaders,” such as captains, sergeants, and corpo- rals, just like in an army. They have very high rent to pay jand big families, and all they have |to depend on is the nickles and |dimes that any travellers may feel like giving them—WORKER. | se 8 EDITOR’S NOTE: The system of tipping is a scheme carefully fostered by the bosses in the cases of such work- | ers as railway porters; it saves | the bosses from paying wages | ‘Stuck in Basements That Are Wet, Negro | Janitor’s Lot Is Hard | (By @ Worker Correspondent) | We, the janitors and more espe-;such jobs that whites will not take. |cially the Negro janitors, are among} Janitors’ hours are from 5 a. |the most exploited worke ‘to i1 p. m. and his pay $10 to $% | In most cases Negroes have been;a month and most landlords want fired from the wet basements and|you to buy soap powder, buckets, ‘whites taken their places and put |brooms out of these wages and also on the ground floor and gotten more want you to collect rent. Janitors money. work 365 days in the year and no The landlords or the tenants can- | vacations. not do without the janitor one single} It is necessary for janitors to or- day a week. The janitors are getting ganize into a fighting union to bet- little pay but plenty abuse and dirty | ter their conditions, and I think all rotten conditions in wet basements, | janitors, Negro and white should without light, gas, and with little|be together in that union, And a air, |union led by the Trade Union Unity There is a great prejudice against | League will take in all. | Negro janitors, who can only get | —NEGRO JANITOR. Against Imperialism | CONDITIONS F | (Continued from Page One) | WOKEN WORSEN with lynching for speaking at a | | ti q jmeeting for the organizing of white | . and Negro worker into trade i x, lunions in Norfolk, Virginia. | WASHINGTON, | The International Trade Union| tions of women in indus’ |Committee of Negro Workers pro-|ing worse, according to reports of |tests against the unwonted murder tne Women's Bureau of the Dep of our Haitian and African fellow | workers; we protest against the im- prisonment of white and Negro or- |ganizers in the U. S. A., we protest jagainst the suppression of the trad unions of Negro workers, the break-| port them at the lowgst standards ing up of their meetings. We de-|o¢ living. “Employed women are at |mand the freedom of trade unions|, great disadvantage,” says the jamongst Negro workers, the free-| Bulletin, prepared by Agnes L. dom of public assembly and the| peterson, for the Department of |right of Negro workers to organize|}abor, “In fact, some of the prob- trade unions and to strike. We call joms that must be shouldered by jupon the revolutionary working | women,” wails Miss Peterson, ‘chal- jclass throughout the world to sup-|tenge our present social order.” port the struggles of our fellow | f Negro workers in Africa, Haiti and) the United States. International Conference at London July, 1930. Our call for an International Con- ference of Negro workers for July 1, issued a few weeks ago and work. i ss ed out at the Frankfort Congress | he prosperous dames in the A. I, of the League Against Imperialism {of L, purposely do not attempt | to in August, is a part of the general Ba he see ee of eet |mobilization of the international | SUV 7 de Union Unity Lone. working class against imperialism |PY ‘he Trade Union Unity League, and capitalist exploitation. In par-) Bree go ticular it is to mobilize the Negro| Jobless Increase in workers for trade union organiza-) . tion, We call upon all Negro work: | Many Industries jing class organizations and frater-' Na nal working class organizations of | (Continued from Page One) all races to begin preparations for ployed workers to “work hard, re- main calm and take the long view’ in a speech he broadcasted over the this conference. Columbia Broadcasting system, Sun- | J. W. Ford, is in charge of organ- ization work for the international day night. With the big bosses promising mass unemployment for trade union committee of Negro workers, The committee has offices | at 2 West 15th {\s., New York City. 1930, the jobless should, according \to Klein, tighten their belts and |take a long view. In spite of his optimistic tripe, |Klein should not entirely cover up |the sharp crisis. He said: “We may ‘recognize, and acknowledge it read- ‘ily enough, that right now there is some decline in commercial activity, ions @, Negro Masses Fight 6.—Condi is becom- Jan. ment of Labor. A survey covering 60,000 worl women showed that their wages ere very low, insufficient to sup- The solution of the problem of rotten conditions for working wo- men offered by Miss Peterson is \“chivalry.” The American Federa- tion of Labor, through its women’s {department, workers very closely vith the scab Department of Labor. unskilled labor and artisans in the building crafts. . . . There was a sharp decrease in building per- mits issued and contracts let for construction.” (This is the time | when the bosses usually make | contracts for Spring building.) crisis all along the line, with the a few of the recent business fail- Idisease especially , affecting jits| ures were more than a little dis- 'vitals in the basic industries. ‘ quieting.” The facts show that American as there has been during November | federation of Labor would face at capitalism is in the throes of ajand December, on the whole; that/this particular time On th n cers tell of the miserable conditions Vet to the Berlin prosecutor Was- of the Negro way porters and the Negro janitors. After be- \mund. But now this worthy got ang b ly exploited by the bosses the Negro workers come home |mixed up in the famous Sklarek to flats like these, where they are further robbed—this time by \scandal exposed by the Communists grasping absentee landlords. A flat in 134th St, Harlem, where |0f Germany as involving the “so- Negro workers live i ” mayor of Berlin, Herr Boess. And four days before this present Vadonenke trial Wasmund “retired.” 4 BA j F Ne feta Boe Nomi oscar Then when the trial now opens, ia be Wa u “The eae Abe this is tery ob. the documents have “disappeared,” | cine ay ead 3 Th a oF Enis 18 very ob |it being said that they were taken vious. The bosses of the South are /from official hands, photographed } f} i T beginning to see that terror alone | and then sent to various countries— FU UAL § jcammot defeat organization work) apparently sold as blackmail by exploited south- | these estimable “socialists.” | Se) N. T. W. and | (Continued from Page One) T. U. ULL. “Respectable” Foes of Bolshevism kidnapr row. Legette No Workers There, The counterfeiting scheme was Blythe, 7 r of the Char-| “Lawyers, politicians, lead-|established on a wholesale basis, lotte Observer, goes so far as to ¢ ‘orm the audience of the labor With a big printing press in Munich state: “Perhaps some of the group |fakers in their conference today, in|and a whole string of “money pass- (Blythe means the thugs) may have |the fashionable ball room of the /¢ts’ in England, Sweden, Italy, Bul- |seized young Totherow and ta Hotel Charlotte. The workers from |8@tia, Germany and France. The him towards Whiteville, and per-|the mills will not be there. infamous German general, Hoffman, haps into South Carolina and left| “The coming of the A. F. L. and|Who negotiated the Brest-Litovsk him as the Charlotte Communist | its much boomed conference im-|“Peace treaty” for Germany with the Soviet Government and Captain ugene Weber, a German fascist, who is now one of the chiefs of the armed fascist band, the Stahlhelm and other lesser lights were in on the conspiracy. Weber is one of those now on trial. But as in the recent case of Or. loff, the scandal will likely b¢ hushed up, the scoundrel, Orloff, recently being released after a se eret trial, because the German “so cialist’” government had used him a 'a spy against the Soviet Union. Last Call r warrant ges that he defended the | ee Rush Greetings Rush Bundie Orders ; Saylors was Greetings received after January 9th will not be inserted in the Anniversary Edition. Orders for bundles for mass distribution re- ceived after January 9th cannot be filled. poses further tasks on the T. U. U. L. and the Communist Party; theyi will have to face not only the guns 1 and police courts and thugs of the rom the Communis es, but also the bosses’ social ds reviving.” Unfor- |fascist allies, the fakers of the A. tunately for Blythe’s last theory the | F. L. | ecing the yi “The southern workers will draw their own conclusions.” group cont Perhaps it was other clever pathy and r t around Ch bos: slark, editor af the bos: the Cotton Textile E i » palm off the kid pping as a pure other dares to deny the right. Join the Party of Your Class! Join the Communist Party! | Here in Ct textile worker faa toda; he apy be arres lag was one of the Gastonia | police and mi {7 This i not there. posure of Carpenter and lors identified them a gang of thugs who t | Organizers Ben Wells | out of a house in Gas of Sept. 9, drove them throu ral Jeounties and finally whipped and We have extended the time for placing of beat Wells. |. The perjury ez is espee sent time in Carpenter i: political office and fears exposure will ruin him politically, as the workers will se mill owners plot and m bundle orders and insertion of greetings to the last possible date and this is final. Act immediately! . Will Your Greetings Appear Among Those That Will Go to the Workers of the Soviet Union? t with in co lotte rlotte will apy lowers, r of the saylo Frank and mem in the G: Will your city, your Party Unit, sympathetic organizations be represented in the Sixth Anniversary Edition with greetings? With George u the LL.D., charged riot,” “carrying a con pon,” and other similar |basis of the ch; isimply that he addressed of workers Mt. Holly, county, to tell them of the Gastor case. } New Foe / s | While this terror is the members and |militant unions in the Charlotte conference of heads of in-| ternational unions in the A. F. L. opens, today. | Si Gerson, organi tional Textile W 2 at Charlotte, stated today: “William Green, Thomas Mac- |Mahon and MeGrady, all veteran wreckers of labor unions, are lez1- | ing the holy war against the Com-| munists, and aga National | A special printing of the Sixth Anniversary Edition in the Russian language will be sent to the workers of the Soviet Union, congra- tulating them upon the success of their Five Year Plan, informing them that we will fight valiantly for the defense of the Soviet Union, NO GREETING FROM YOU, NO BUNDLE ORDERS FROM YOU WILL CONSTITUTE A VERY SERIOUS SHORTCOMING ACT TODAY! This Very Moment! v for the Na- a7 ion now Send Your Greeting—Your Bundle Order | Textile Workers" which means against the work- | BY TELEGRAM ers, | “The main slogan under which | 4 Green and his well paid henchmen lare rallying, ight the Commu- | nists and the Trade Union Unity | | League.” | | “The chamber of commerce, the \eapitalist newspapers, and_ various leivic organizations are breaking |their necks trying to out-do each lother in courtesy and cordiality to |these high moguls of labor faker- | |dom. Even the arch reactionary |and labor-hating Charlotte News is |most polite to William Green. Nev- | jertheless, they utter a word of | |warning to Gree! The News | ‘editorially, Jan. ‘The econ disadvantages which the American ANNIVERSARY EDITION Ao 26 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY g as Seen je ay are tremendous. | Everywhere business and industry | jare trying to clear a path through the underbrush and get back into!

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