The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 17, 1930, Page 3

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I eae toemnaranenie NE » NE CAILY WORKER FRENCH COMMUNIST IN PARLIAMENT EXPOSES ine Under NTW SPONT ANEO ‘an re a US STRIKES =s—= AT BRIGGS BODY CO. W YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1930 rage unrs |not make any rash capital ling its cri: such pre- A EVEN BOSSES ADMIT DEC, DROP: just f Col 2 (Ja s, the Jes- BEING ORGANIZED FRENCH WAR SCHEMES AFTER WAGE SLASHES) re tr Neel The Largest Army in the World and Enormous Auto Workers Union Organizing Cleveland ism as Mr. Gitlow Naval Budget—Ye ies r : Mr. Lovestone, nor ure oflq Are. ° ° ad t Lies About It Workers Figures Show Wage ‘the arrogant of U.S. imper-/Severe Situation in 7 . 5 | , 3 ‘ is " TR Bes aay Sa ialis rest of the ti Wa | )Praises French Soldiers Who Have Repeatedly | By a Worker Correspondent) workers at the plant, merely for Cuts; Crisis Increase ci Textile Mills A CI ELAND, Ohio.—Since the |t other wo! s to go on strike. a has heen found that con- faite ; 4 Demonstrated Against the Government RE BOs adt The local of the Auto Workers Un-| (Continued from Page One) Lintaun:cprcepekiyein SCRGORCE \ncaec eee een. Briggs Body shop opened a month |! Me te oeanica ik month’ and/a6d006 since Sint ann ES PROOREy i thes ia » 4 Body plant, where a strike of over | mini iihena have bean fous _ {io ing to organize the wi a i since Septem- | conjuration of interested finan- | 9 999 .y vas PARIS, Dec. 25 (By Inprecorr through the bourgeois and socialist | id dees ay been four spontan- ers here. About ten of ber. If the 50 per cent of manu- | cial minds. Not too much grati- Wo ie iam vbedela U Aige De Meaty Baissea) oo eepite taal: agi-| paneest whien.Heton’ expose tho eous strikes in this hell-hole. Wages | joined the T. U. U. | facturing ‘employes for which no fication can be taken in the im- | ar th poe aay aie e A tematic obstruction of the French |basic principles of military organiza- have been reduced 30 to 40 per cont |are beginning to re a data were returned is assumed to nts and enlargements in’ | poav cnriormuse office On Tusates ‘ enc? | tion in France and dealt once again | in some cases. All the workers strong Auto Workers Union is neces-| have fared the same, the period's and cert manuface |e oY mn e Chamber of Deputies, whose capital- | 11h "the notorious “Plan Z” of the were formerly getting a day rate |sary to fight against the onslaught| increase in unemployment, tem eke verte all planned) |v ciee) ghoae nye cymes ae , Nee enrey S 2 "i nerly getting a day rate y to fight against the onslaught s e pyment, tem- or these were all planned | gpa coo, ade’ ist members shouted, “Traitor!” and | French General Staff. These prin- from 40 to 75 cents an hour. Some | of the bosse: | porary or would be the slump.” adda se aie ty V: despite the polsonous attacks of the |ciuples, he declared, were to defend| A worker correspondent tells of the workers were even gett Conditions at the Fisher Body} somew ” i fog alee Pele teaa ey : ae ie ee French social democrats, the Com- |the French bourgeoisie from the rev-| of the slave conditions iv a Phila- “lar an hour. Now, ev A pee bad. : These f the ely thas WOME: Feuleaiine munist Deputy Beron, whose con-|olutionary proletariat. The great-| delphia carpet dye house. Phot upmobile has just opened UuPling 9 portent of the present cris HER hae coe HIRT i stituency is in Alsace-Lorraine, est section of the French army in| illustrates risks of dye hous: °YS have to kill themse now, and many of the unemployed | cover the mass unemploy says the Chronicle, ea oe pte ad i made a sharp criticism of the in- | France was concentrated in the four| workers. It shows remaing oj %® make five and s workers are going there for jobs,| mining industry, railroads, depart-|ly brought home to the facts, nO! the cop pushing him aside and pre sane militarism of French imperial- | great industrial districts: Nord, Hsco Dye Works in Brool:lyn after but they will be out of luck, beca Hicnbs stores! wall: shone shipping |(matter “how, weveondlide that Bor. (c co yu ect eee ote ism in connection with the discussion | Lyon, St. Etienne and Marseilles. Of | « blaze which threatened workers there ave too ma led wor trade—in fi rowing forever cannot continue, | sreqker, : . of the war budget. |the twenty-four colonial regiments | liv The dye workers are or- out of work, due to the bosses’ |jigns of work m | that jay must come, and un- "Aoyama: contesante intel Beron exposed the maneuver of the | in France, sixteen were also in these National Tex ‘ : speedup, and the n machinery | the faked rep-rts of the . less there is some retrenchment in ane ue an Pete Poin ho EaveveneAE meuitWiatexapts io\ Case’ dleteiots, | Last Friday, the police at the re- roduced in the industry Beat vis Eesdustnn Dou the order of day wills wrendes ea tate ch poeaee ouflage the real figures of the ex-| Beron also showed how the au- jquest of the bosses, arzested six! Seba neta ic eet n that will | 4), CWE RE Ui penditure for armaments and also|thorities were preparing for war Sell D to Y W ee el production Pimrarilutanee havo” unemployed workers. Ri ; P er banding Sell Do to Y cent below y 4 2 Meclared that the real figures of | industry for its coming tasks. He] ‘ @ Seaman Correspondent) 7 ate Fe eee a a Rae French war expenditure were 15/then praised the attitude of the TAN En 1M 1 J : saactut’ Seatieate oR Betis a oy pieven ellen ve La milliard francs, whilst the total| Wrench soldiers wh a t ¥ 1 ya, Young Communist Be ee aA en oee nT . tal | i tbe Bas ao RE AUREL EA BRAEEOH du s placing only - . ‘ for more than 20 years. Freight strength of the French army, in-| ninety-two demonstrat z long-haired Be ‘ Trade Union Unity 2a ; B' cluding the specia) formations, was | thirty-two by active soldiors, fit 2 eu 9e a home for seamen who ate} "There has been witnessed by the ae Asani abe 19 sharply pressir ) nee nae ete COD ESS Ce 700,000, in other words, the largest | by reservists and ten demonstra-|Strike Against J< eeldhrown on the heath) by the Ship-| cn soendant andl Geverall others, (traces cotton oct at mon relie he Str f the 6,000,-| The New Haven ‘Clock Co. has laid A Fi K e€ Against Jap im Z ‘i orrespondent, and seve thers, | shows a curtailment of curr off another hundred The W arey in ie world tions in which both active soldiors atte ownore that support’ the Institute, | ine cetsuanae’ ot money. for dope, (eens epee ey nt [000 unemployed will grow tremen. |Sff another hundred men. Thai Wil: A storm of indignation swept and reservists participated. perialism jor rather, controls it for it isthe |. 050 ona/ell these other thinge-that|caieii che sate clants. = © immed yee OU ead Vl sae ia va ian sal |seamen who support it. ee ea chain a Bateau dhe ikatiles. of, the | Gov) ate) Wcskiemvocnnanarplyies * * q SEOUL, Korea, Jan. 15.—Jap-| The seaman’s first thoug’ emer aien eta me trcanaudentl Gro, rie ers against the growing wage|4uced forces. orkers fill the Five-Day Week Hailed by Soviet Workers |ance wtioaics iosty srvoied she |he tsh "4" cne of ie oSiee| apm RENT euetvondnt cpa guides ig proustin inl testy. valent the ets vin ooking for fobs thousand striking students here. | Wagons” is to get a good meal and| reached a climax, and the time has | “oPPea, Wore Man non cas in the United Sta a MOSCOW, Dec. 24 (By Inprecorr | the labor protection laws was neces- |More than 10,000 dents are in-!a good bed, so he is told that the|come when all of the working class |v. "pu i ba 9 a : ete world crisis of | More Pennsylvania Unemployment. Mail Service).—The conference for|sary in accordance with the new | volved in the strike. Those arrested | Seamen’s Institute is the proper chall take a hand to bring t Sees Blac Re re For apiealian. The tempo of unem-| JEANNETTE, Pa,, Jan. 16,—Em- discussing the technical questions conditions of work. | include 250 girls. place to go for things. vcung workers: to. thelr’ proper Col, pecned ; ied Mowe Germany and the|Ployment here is paralyzed. The of the introduction of the five-day The carrying out of the decision| The strike is in protest against) qe pays 35 cents fo io'a hunts, iwenses. and. helo them pealise the dent of is poets eet ek 4 t shout the same|leading plant, the Pennsylvania working week has now come to an|of the recent plenary session of the the arrest of 900 students here and | and it is really as Gk, het es ad a Saal working cnet : oa ne Cea oe ne | Tevel, nt is growing aed Co., has been shut for two F k eg) ae OOn erate ea bosses look for gu in Great Britain. months. end. The speakers pointed out that | the workers had adopted the idea | of the five-day working week with | tremendous enthusiasm: and in its | resolutions, the conference expressed complete approva’ of the measures Central Council of Soviet Labor Un-/180 Korean students in Tokio in ions to send 25,000 workers into the | December for their struggle against collective undertakings is making| Japanese imperialism. There was fine progress. In Leningrad, alone, /a sharp clash between striking stu- 7,000 workers have volunteered for |dents and Japanese police last he has money, the lordly person at the desk sells him a bed for a dollar. ! Brooks Shoe Workers Strike at Wage Cut st—A Seaman. tion and Jesus Chi the work, and the recruiting is being | month. Many of those arrested are | still being held in prison. | world, and not one of graft, corrup- fancy phrases to ex more severe German Workers Battle in Many Cities considers the blacl ture of capitalism. “We are in low visibility,” period of economic a : s in a staté- The bosses are installing new speed-up machinery and when they do open up hundreds of workers will be eliminated. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan. 16.—The adopted by the government for the | continued, The labor unions in Len- | (By a Worker Correspondent.) | fer, but the fitters did not, so we ment recently pub d. ea Paye One) BRERRT Ok TOMA TC RUCEE introduction of the five-day work-|ingrad have challenged the unions/ Schools are surrounded by heavy} pyTLADELPHIA (By Ma decided to walk out Monday morn- “We now have a_ sufficient ut none arene killed: et Ne ie hio laid off seven ing week, and demanded that up to|in Moscow, in the Urals and in the ‘forces of police and the streets are | ai the Brooks Shoe Factory, where | ing and called a strike. A aneets number of November and Decem- ‘ inetei oat gral ibe oat recently on the Connellsville the first of January all cultural in- | Don Basin to a socialist competition | being patrolled by the Japanese, a5! there are about workers|was held with those wor! ber figures and of still more re- demouseeetion Ht che nee company announced stitutions should adopt it. It was|to see who can mobilize 100 per cent’/a result of the growing Revolution-| employed, the boss is trying to cut | we had a shop committee elected to| cent weekly reports, to make it naliea tak ihe ore voce ss dropped out of also pointed out that a revision of ary movement among the workers of the quota first. the wages 50 per cent, tell the bo: we will not accept that| quite clear that general busin We! and particularly industriel activ- + 6 6s site APSR NE OLE aap ROE TIL and students. The Japanese are | thom on piece wor i mstances, Class Justice in Czecho-Slovakia especially worried by the progress iia» week work, which they have will rath out and get all the| ity, are still declining.” recent passage | _ 60,000 Jobiess in Birmingham. of the Communist Party and the |neen getting up till this time. rest of the workers ‘out on strike.| He sees a continued decline, rey BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Jan. 16.— ! PRAGUE, Dec. 24 (By Inprecorr | was sentenced to eight months’ im- ese e oe Cone bala Sas Under these conditions, the work-| Those workers are not organiz sharpening but hop! moped on Jan. 8, g There are more than 60,000 unem- i aoa aeior ing in the struggles. ers are not able to make more than| yet, but we had signed the applica-|based on no facts, merely pivoted |t aployed her ployed workers in this city. The Mail Service)—A new wave of prisonment; in Rimovksa, Comrade ee eae . oe . hays ° “i? {TTT ie te ae ‘ e * ine eae ee - Revesz received a year’s hard labor. | 9 to $10 a tion ds of the T. U. U. L—Ajon his wish for continued big / 1,920,000 not counting great masses | building trades workers are espe- class-justice is rising against the | the TeGteitek ane ested in. con | DOSSCS: Trying to | The cutters had accepted that of-/ Shoe Worker. a change in June. By have exhausted thi means cially hard hit, the majority of them revolutionary workers. The Com- munist Deputies, Harus and Major, | are still being held in prison, despite | all the protests of the workers, In| | nection with speeches the three Comrades had delivered. Comrades Paufosima and Polacek, who have been in prison awaiting in- Railroad Saul} (Continued from Page One) Phila, Carpet Dye Wo eeearant to (By a Worker Correspondent) ar’ when the wo: rkers Fight Wage Cut A. F, kers of the | labor ys Ayres, the crisis will being out of work. support, but who do not register d hence do not apr in the of-| The Bank of Eusley, located in a ial fig . The “Rote Fahne” | district of steel workers, closed its there are 3,000,000|doors. More than 3,000 workers, many of them unemployed, who had have lasted one year and his bourgeois associates by a change in June, is not a uance of production equal to 1 What Ayres nean con- the last few days a number of new |quiries in Aglau for many weeks, : : > + Mail), |it co- vith the bos: ayy sentences have been passed. hae now gene ona earee striley {cell in the basement of the prison,| PHILADELPHIA, Pa., (By Mail). 1) CO nen Tithe nen pene n an 2 crisis a few pennies in the bank have had In Kashau, Comrade Tibor Weiss |in order to secure their release. one of the policemen said to the|—A strike is on at the Hardwick) 6 By yadelphia, join the National |{%, °¢Pi at steel wro-/ The New York Journal of Com-|their life savings wiped away, This other, “If he starts out throngh the|and Magee Carpet Mill at 7th and|Texttie Workers Union, the only |“uction w to 25 per/merce yesterday, in an editorial ap the fifth bank that has closed NT i ‘. back door kill him dead.” as . oD hesaeke: Kania wHial Peete */eent, automebile production, which | unemployment in Germany, admitted | here in’six months. 'WU Tours Beal 1,000 Mill Workers in Lehigh eh Meh aoe ork [Rae ee Ets See ae is off 40 per cent, ouitding which is|that the situation is “gloomy.” A+ ee tae struck against a wage-cut here |bosses and organizes the workers | ppeandunc tne : Boon a off 43 per cent, will hit an F n of American imperial-| s Mill Bosses Move. e Protest When 5 Jailed eas sieisaes Ife a spokesni 100 Jobless to Each Job. for Silk Strike “ophe release of Cliff Saylors on | {TOM 70 to 63 cents an hour and into an industrial union and is affili- /56 -& t9 29 por cont below 1929. ricabichs Has <eroaeslbane ainruntal : ’ the mardes charge will become a|tettible working conditions. 'The|ated with the Trade Union Unity |" 7yi, would keep unemployment in German bonds and ind «it. CHICAGO, Jan. 16.—Sears-Roe- (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One) ees a. : {strike has been on for five weeks |League, which will lead all the)s 004. ¢ Nae a nei AD eEMan| bones ane wevecu?. buck @ Gow mailearden house, eavars Beal’s tour begins in Pittsburgh, | place tomorrow at noon, |real victory when he is also released Lead ad the anlittiie police oe erate | workere “aga the capitalist mill |down to 6,000,000 or 7,000,000, and points out regretfully that at least //. fi fc Seals 2 TenEORe AMIE ates eee te (Clive case thetapssiers Gil he Med [On te Darius charge,” ead Jy Dou |oc. oe claus ane Muill the work: |owners and their toole, the A. F. of (Ton? make the capitalists feel) some of the unemployed in Germany | Med. tor fone girls st. 810_anwea : : \Engdshi, secretary of the Interna-|U70Ms exists in shis mill ,the work-jowners and their tools, the A. F’ of ove comfortable than the steady|“have to be supported from instr-|® few days ago. Nearly 400 jobless land, Jan. 27 and 28; Detroit, 29| Beal, sentenced to 20 years in the ers who belong to.the same union,|/L. labor fakers who _ betra the s F girls applied for the jobs. and 80; Chicago, Jan. $1 and Feb./C...on’> ease and the organizers tional Labor Defense, yesterday. Hane tor another crate ae seanbinie ee Reena aioe pea ti growth of more than 200,000 un-! ance funds supplemented by Govern. | 8'"'S ‘PP! ‘or jobs, ; Minneapolis, Feb. 2 to 8; North | arrested yesterday and bailed out. | Engdahl pointed out that the m “lon the HER on stti es ; if eich the Sraiaeat Rerenice ie employed east) month withouea any jnisnt toa and /sdvanse | | strike. | : a let-up. it regrets, hinders the Schacht, head of the Reichsbank re- pate, Feb. 7-9; Montana, Feb. 11-| Hundreds of unemployed workers | (er frame-up on Saylors was in-| nis policy is advocated by the tended to cripple. his defense in the ‘hosses.—W. P. “Prosperity a Myth.” 1 ation.” arejcently, in getting the “socialist” | 123 Washington, Feb. 13-18; Cali-| are being notified today, and will |p : nerca ich in “the. de Even granting that C Parl Gilbert, eta Hebe fan E eee A8is Bho Ga his vale sia weetiag: erjury charge, whi 8 e de-| . : ete the Philippines, who has a voice, but; Even that Ce arker Gilbert, government to begin a campaign tu teat ta” he rill eiaie Utabe Gok at ie es oe Gk fens of Manville-Jenckes, Attomey Borah and Filipin or tee pr diout ‘the same |¢aM see through the pall of v the irector of German) reduce and finally to abolish un- orado, Kansas, Southern Ilinois, In- pare eee SNS |Bulwnikle and City Solicitor Car-/B Q ur g e018 Unite views as Borah. Guevera, in a speech |'Sibility” which he-reports, he does |r ed up Hjalmar|employed insurance relief —Ed. West Virginia, Pennsyl- diana, Cincinatti, Delaware, New Jersey, vania and New York. “The strike fund” declared Clar- ence Miller, secretary-treasurer of | ., the union, today, “is a prime neces- | sity for a succssful campaign. We must raise $10,000 at an absolute | minimum. “The A. F. of L. fakers, out to|® sell-out the southern workers, ad-)| vertise a million dollar fund for| their campaign. We must act more| swiftly, more surely, to save the workers from being misled by the corrupt reactionary bureaucrats.” Need Is Great. “The Trade Union Unity League and the union is sending Fred Beal to tour the country to arouse the workers to the extreme danger of he A. F. of L., of the necessity to ‘aise funds, of the imperative need ‘or building the new revolutionary linions under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League.” “The unbearable speed-up, wage cuts, spreading like a plague over the land, has created a new upsurge of revolutionary activity. The union must not lag behind the workers in| their struggles against the bosses’) speed-up exploitation. Wage cuts and speed-up are edr-marks of the period directly preceding the com-| ing imperialist war. “Now is the time for straining every nerve, every energy of the! union to organize the masses of | textile workers into a strong revo- | lutionary body. A fundamental in the campaign is that of a strong struggle-fund of at least $10,000. , “The conditions in the industry, yspecially the silk, demand a gen- ral strike, as soon as possible. All Tuis attack is the i “ning of | penter, of Gastonia, to Saylors re-| the bosses’ ce‘npaign to break up jpeated assertions that he saw these N.T.W. mill meetings, and drive the | two leading the gang that kidnapped | union from the streets, in prepara- |him, with Ben Wells and C. M. Lell,| WASHINGTON, Jan. 16.—During tion for further speed-up and wage |and flogged Wells. The collapse of | the discussion in the senate over the ig. The ~" T.W. a: "the Com-/the murder trial was due to the|sugar tariff the question of the in- munist Party are determined for| mass protest of the workers, and the | dependence of the Philippines ‘arose. a great fight, and the workers are jexposure by the I.L.D. He called} Senator Borah, arch-faker of the responding t> the? call for strug-|for more protest and more support | Hoover administration, said: “As for le. ; to the LL.D. to free Saylors on the| the Philippines I would like to see The Dartmouth mec‘ing yeste-day | present charge, Saul and the Gasto-|them given independence, but I do Against Independence sed to protect t interest in the , if some blance of inde- ndence were granted to the bour- geois of he Philippines. Jin Congress, pro | American imperi E |'NEW BEDFORD L MEMORIAL JA The Ne Bed which wi UARY ‘d Lenin Memo 26. al, y scheduled for | 23. |W. U., $3 was one of < series held at mill) gates co. part of the goneral organ- | izaticn campaign of the union, and in preparation for the district con- vention of the N.T.W., February 22- Meetings have been held at the main ga’2s of the following mills: January 13, Goswold; 14, Wansutta and Grinnell; yesterda,, Dartmouth, Accushnet, Butler and Hathaway. Today meetings were scheduled for the New Bedford, Rayon and Whit 2an mill Hegelias, Perry and Russak were arrested at the Beacon mill gate lact week, and their trial comes up | tomorrow. * * The National offiee of the N. T. ifth Ave. New York, | issued a statement condemning the | police bru’ ‘ity in attempting to smash the union, “Our union is fac- ing a gc.cral struggle in the in- dustry,” said Clarence Miller, secre- | tery v urior, “and the mill | owners and their police are making gvery at.empt to stop the growth of th N.T.W.U. Rut neit’se in th South nor in New Bedford, or in any other place, will the police succeed in breaking our union. We are mobil- | izing our members to organize de- | fense corps against the terror of » nia seven. Pick Five for Whitewash. | GASTONIA, N. C., Jan, 15.—The Gaston county grand jury today dicted five of the 14 recognized mw derers of Ella May. They took care | not to include any of the really re-| sponsible superintendents or over-/ seers. The men indicted are all gun- men for the cotton mill bosses, and if they ever come to trial will be} whitewashed. They are Horace Wheeling, Troy Jones, Lowry Davis, Fred Morrow and Q. H. Lundford. AAAAADAADAALEABALADDDAEE Correct Dangerous Pens Bladder ana Kidneys rey Don’t neglect burning passages, nightrising, ainful elimination, armful irritation. Take the advice of famous doctors. Correct such ailments at once before they become more serious. For quick relief, get from your druggist the remedy successfully used for nearly half a century by specialists, Santal Midy has ) p. m. not expect it is going to happen in|’ been changed to my time, and I doubt if it will hap-| 4 It will take pen at all.” place in Bristol Arena, the biggest The two resident commissioners of | hall in town. OSSSSLOHHESSOHOS OSE SS OHSS WINTER VACATION FOR WORKERS AT CAMP NITGEDAIGET NEW HOTEL NITGEDAIGET, Beacon, N. Y. | | | Fight Imperialist War Preparations! _ * 1 Defend the Soviet Union! JOIN THE COMMUNIST PARTY!‘ Wednesday, January iB at7 P.M. A MASS PAGEANT evolutionary workers must be wewverwewewvewwervvervve 4 aware of this, and hasten their . B Presented By wrrks activies theie fellow Workers! 1852 ‘THE SAME ADDRESS FOR 7% YEARS 1950 The newly built hotel. has 61 rooms—two in a Workers Dramatic Council, | Workers D: Gi amr , = ; 1» rkers Dance Group, mobilize for the general strike.” A call for a national silk confer- ence in Paterson, N. J., on Feb. 9 has been issued to lay the basis for the national silk strike and has al-| ready gone out over the country. NEW HAVEN INTER-RACIAL AFFAIR SUCCESS. NEW HAVEN, Conn:, Jan. 15,— The first inter-racial dance held by New Haven Unit 2 of the Young Interest Starts First of Last Quarterly Dividend Paid on all amounts from $5.00 to $7,500.00 at the rate Of ..........000. Mondayn (all day: Open Banking by Mall We Sell A. B. A. ao 1980 Deposits made on or RISTM AS, the Communist League, section, was a success, and 10 ap- plications were received for mem- pership in the League. bane \ 2 in the Negro |: ntl 7 P.M. Society Accounts Accepted Travelets Certit heck THE month will draw interest from first Each Month % CL room—hot and cold water in every room. Showers and baths on every floor. WINTER SPORTS—Skating and Sleighing to your heart’s content MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW! Price same as in summer—$17 a week. CAMP TELEPHONE: BEACON 731—862 NEW YORK TELEPHONE: ESTABROOK 1400. / Workers Laboratory Theatre, Freiheit Gesan, es Fer Labor Sports Union, W. 1. R. Chorus and Brass ris Installation of Communist Recruits PROMINENT SPEAKERS Admission Balcony 50c + Orchestra 75¢ 0 es I WR SUS TS Auspices--Communist Party of the USA— District Two 26-28 Union Square and the YOUNG COMMU.9IST LEAGUE New York, N. ¥.

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