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Page Two BOSSES, ALL. | IN MIGHTY WAGE | SLASH CAMPAIGN Unite With Jobless for| . “Work or Wages!” | Continued from Page One) iuthorized by the representatives of abor (the bureaucrats Green, Woll and Co,—Ed.) . that no new movements for the purpose of wage increases apart from those already | in progress, shall be commenced and that the workers will in every way cooperate with industry in the solu- on of its problems.” Slash Wages y Day. | onths have passed, each; wringing new reports of hun-} s and thousands thrown on the of wages cnt, ten, twenty, e per cent and more, of | t running only part time. | \. F. L. Helps Wage-Cutting | Campaign. In January, the Monthly Survey! Business of the American Fed- ration of Labor, in order to aid the wage-cutting campaign, declared that “never before have manufac- | turers been so generally willing to sbandon wage reductions as a means f reducing expenses.” And yet, at! the same time steel workers in Youngstown suffered a twenty per cent cut in wages. Wages Down Everywhere. Philadelphia, 1400 workers in| Aberle Hosiery Mills had their | wages cut. in Y Rapids, 34 workers a wage cut of 8 per reduction in two! d he textile mills of Holyoke, Massachusetts, wages have been cut 50 per cent. Reports from that city on Jan. 18 stated that operatives ning $28 in four days on navy ct work last season were now | ng $18 to $20 for a week of 4 hours, beginning at 6:45 a. m.! and quitting at 7 p. m. In the paper mills of Holyoke, inskilled workers getting $18 to $20 a week are now working only two | or three days a week. In Pontiac, | Michig: vusands of workers are | out of and over 2,000 families | are living on charity. « * * get 1 to one worker, “the few 2 . have been put back to vork following widespread layoffs in d body factories are ex- speed-up, slack time and ve rates. I went back to Friday at 60¢ an hour—a y rate.” ‘early 50 Percent testified that on niece work in his plant ly 59 percent. putting cut 20 jobs e day vil e to put eut 45 » make the same wages,” | r stated, | 35 Percent Siash in Waterbury In Waterbury, Conn., workers in the Waterbury Clock plants suffered wage cuts of 25 ner cent follewing the introduction of the “ Tn Danville, Va., the River: Dan River Cotton mills announced a/ wage evt of 10 nev rent on Jan. 15 effective Feb. 1. In the Oakland Mo- tor plants at Pontiac workers 5 / 85 to $7 a day were cut on Feb. £ i £3.40 and $3.60 for an eight-hour day | end an hourly rate of 43.5¢ and 45¢ or $17 nd $18 for a forty-hour week, In the Chevrolet-Fisher Body plants in Oakland, California wages were cut 12 per cent last month, regard- less of the numerous cuts suffered by the workers throughout the year. In the Ford plant at Kearny, N. J, a new workers brigade system has been introduced. Work gangs have been cut from 7 to 5; $7 a day men have been fired and new men hired at $6 a day. In Fall River, Mass. vorkers of the Flein Silk Mill struck against 1 wage cut of 20 ner cent. Duluth Workers Hit In the lumber industry in Duluth, Tinn., wages have been cut from $40 19 $50 a month to $30 a month. In Hamilion, Ohic, the Champien Paper Co, employing 3,500 workers, fired half and cut the wages of the rest 50 per cent. In Yorkville, Ohio, the Wheeling Steel Co. cut the wages of als workers from $9-10 to $5 & day. In Rockford, Ill. workers of the Rockford Republic Furniture Co. suf- fered a wage cut of 10 per cent. In Moundsville, W. Va., miners employ- wage cut WORKERS, S | Out of the Mills and Factories! | DAIL ! HANGS SELF ON PROSPERITY SIGN Workers Don’t Fear Bosses’ Brutality (Continued trom Vege One) capitalists and their A. F. of L. bor” fascists are very much wor- vied at the demonstration of the working class today called by the Communist Party on the Interna- tional Fighting Day Against Unem- ployment. The N. Y. Central Railroad asked the United States Veterans’ | Bureau to furnish fascist recruits to stand guard over the railroad work- ers and “prevent strikes” today. Re- plying, A. P. James, regional man- ager of the Veterans’ Bureau, lo- cated at 225 West 34th St., is send- ing men to the railroad company as “guards,” directing the recruits to “Lieutenant W m O’Neill.” The “labor” fascists of the N. Y. Central Trades and Labor Council, headed by Ryan, vice-president of the A. F. of L., have issued instruc- tions forbidding A. F. of L. members from striking or participating in the demonstration, and Matthew Woll, of the A. F. of L., is emitting interviews inciting police violence against the workers. In New Jersey, the manufacturers have been told to mark down for blacklisting, any workers absent from work today. In the New York } city schools, the teachers have been instructed to prevent workers’ chil- dren from rallying to the Union Square demonstration, On Wednesday afternoon, under | cover of twilight, “Gorgeous Gro- | ver” Whalen, N. Y. police commis- | sioner, was having machine guns in- stalled in the buildings along the north side of Union Square and huge quantities of ammunition brought in, doubtless to “protect” the work- ers in their right of free speech and assembly. Few American workers, perhaps, know that patriotism has been in-| corporated and what it is doing, but the “United States Patriotic Society, | Inc., of 2 Lafayette St., since Sun- day, has advertised in the New York | Times, requesting “all patriotic Americans to display the stars and stripes on March 6.” The ad ap-| appeared in the “personals” along | with “Abe: Ill and worried; please | come home,” and another queerly | “patriotic” notice saying that “Navy workers still unpaid.” | The “negligible” Communists are | receiving considerable attention! Boston Strikers Win 25 Shops; Picketing Grows ‘ | (Continued from Page One) | the only country in a world of} breadlines where there is no unem- ployment! Busy With Frame-Up Dubinsky and Schlesinger and} other company union officials, are busy building up the Dress Con- tractors Association, planning ma- neuvers, and frame-up stunts. Several pickets in court today| were fined $25 each. charges for $10,000 bail each. In contradiction to the I. L. G. ing last night was packed with en- thusiastic strikers, who cheered the victories already won, and pledged stated that “there are a few men being called back to work—no new men being hir.d. At least that is what you are told when seeking em- ployment and I have heen informed that in the Delco products (General Motors subsidiary) that men were making $7, $7.50 and $8 per day when laid off but when called back ed by the Paisley interests struck against a cut of Se a ton. In Six Mile Run, Pa. more than half miners are out of work, while the othere, working on a two-day week, Have received cuts of over 20c from £1.91 to £0c 2 ton. /aivertise "Wage Cuts sn the Detroit Free Press the fol- ing ad appeared for tool design- “First class jig and fixture men willing te work at ceduced rates tem- porarily. Give name, phone number and last place employed. Address Box 2451, Detroit Free Press.” “Tem- porary” wage-cuts, indeed! Office workers in New York, thousands of whom sre unemployed at present, have suffered an & per cent wage cut s‘nee last autumn accordirg to con- servative estimates of employment The actual figure is un- coubtedly uujlipninnpnupnpupinnuu; doubted:y much higher, and what is York is true of the agencies true of New emire country. hie mon the first week in February, ek A metal trade worker writing to|> were cut to $19 per week. Also informed that draftsmen have been of the|eut 35¢ per hour. I also know of 1| temporary erecting job that should pay 1.50 per hour and they are of+ |a week and miserable board working | Elias Marks | and Corvine were held on framed) W. meeting, the N. T. W. I. U. meet- | workers of Baltimore, employed and | Indignation Rises At Murder of Jobless Boy (Continued from Page One) brother under arrest for “larceny” are trying to shift responsibility. They say the young worker should not have tried to escape. But he knew that it is a crime to be jobless and hungry under capitalism. Then the policeman murderer, Andres, says that his “foot slipped” and young Nunemacker was killed “ac- cidentally.” But the brutality of the police against the workers is too glaring to be hidden by such palavar. Only yesterday the police broke up an unemployed mass meeting in front) of the auditorium, the mounted po-} lice tidng down the workers in real Cossack style. But tomorrow, on March 6, there will be thousands of workers strike and demonstrate in spite of the po- lice, and in resentment at the capi talis tem of murder and starva- tion. { Call From Wagon to Demonstrate. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., March 5. e bosses of Chattanooga, having seen that the Trade Union Unity, League and its Unemployed Council | were successfully mobilizing the workers, both jobless and employed, both Negro and white, have changed their policy from “ignoring” the movement to a policy of trying to break it up. An open air meeting here today, called by the Unemployed Council has been broken up by the bosses’ police, after a melee in which hun- dreds of workers, Negro and white, rallied around the speakers. As a result, not only the speak- ers, Amy Schechter of the T.U.U.L., and the Negro organizer Lewis, but other workers both Negro and white were arrested. Yet, while in the wagon, the workers called out to the | crowd to meet tomorrow in the big} demonstration on World Fighting Day on Unemployment, the workers | cheering enthusiastically. A big demonstration will be held here to- morrow in spite of the arrests. ee oe | Babies Starve BALTIMORE, Md., Mar. 5.—One little example among many of the |fact that capitalism makes life a hell | for the workers’ family, is seen in the item published in the Baltimore “Sun” ov Monday, telling of a 28 year old mother of four children, | Lelia Murphy, 23 North Stricker | street, who is unable to find work | that piys enough money to support | the children and is forced to give her bahies away to someone more | fortunate. | Two are already parted from the mother, taken by other people. A Loy and girl of 9 years remain, bright and beautiful children as the published phote shows. The miser- able “chari institutions slander the poor working class mother by saying she was “tired” of her oabies, when the natural desperation of try- ing to care for children unde: cap-| italist starvation and wage slavery drives working mothers insane. Her husband has disappeared, also driven by unemployment to part from his babies, and the best the mother could find as a job was $10 in a hospital hut this barred her from being at home with the chil- dren. Against such a hideous system the unemployed, Negro and white, are challenging the capitalist chief of police who has called out all forces armed to the teeth to prevent the demonstration on March 6. But the | workers will demonstrate anyhow in solidarity with the international workng class. themselves to go on and win the rest | of the shops. Schlesinger’s meeting voted him authority to call a fake strike in Boston, “whenever conditions re- quire it.” At Schlesinger’s meeting the I. L. G. W. chiefs pleaded that the work- ers “should not lose hope” in the Join the Y WORKER, NEW YOR! THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1930 pera aC 2 ee TU. UL. CALLS |Masses Called to Union Square Calling upon the workers of Grea- |ter New York to down tools today, jand to demonstrate in masses in Union Square, the Trade Union Uni- ty League, Metropolitan Area, is- sued the following appeal to its af- RED FRONT HOLDS BERLIN MEETINGS Rochester Unemployed Drive in City Council (Continued from Page One) lay there were severe collisions with the police in which one worker was eviousiy injured. * * Slap Socialists with Demands ROCHESTER, N, Y., March 5. The attempt of the social fas who call themselves the “socialis' party, to attack and betray.the un- employed movement here, tempt being weleomed by the capi- t city councilmen, was yester-| day exposed by the Council of Un- employed in the following resolution | adopted by the Council of Unemploy: ed and read before the City Council by a delegation of the unemployed: “Hit Socialists” “The Unemployed Council of Ro- chester condemns the program for unemployment presented by the § cialist Party to the City Counc its sessions February 24, and views it as nothing else but an effort on the part of that party to make po-| litical capital out of the suffering of the unemployed workers of Ro-| chester. “The Unemployed Council consid- ers this program as reactionary, which, even if adopted and put into filiated unions and the working class generally: Employed workers, strike today, March 6th! Lay down tools at 12 o’clock. Employed and unemployed demonstrate on Union Square, at 1 p. m., against starvation, for WORK OR WAGES. ty League, Metropolitan Area, the new revolutionary Trade Union Cen- ter, which organizes the unorganized and the unemployed, and leads the struggle against wage cuts, long. hours, the speed-up and for unem- ; ployment relief, and all its affiliated unions and Industrial Leagues, t:e Food Workers Union, Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, Independ- ent Shoe Workers Union, the New .| York and New Jersey Districts of!" the National Textile Workers U: ion, the Building Maintenance Wor! ers Union, the trial League, the Building Construc- | tion Industrial League, the Laundry Workers Industrial League, etc., ap- peal to all the workers in their in-) of anthracite miners was held in! the Socialist revolution. “I personaly have come to the y, and were opinion that religion in general is reception of « hindrance to the cultural de m of struggle.|opment of the ma: asurer | strumert of obscurantism and coun- ter-revolution, employment is not the problem the main speaker. Guynn dealt in| must fight agai Lewis’ recent visit to! the creation of the the I hereby resign my office as bi treacherous |and break forever with religion. Voluntary Dissolution of Chureh | student: An extraordinary consilium of the | they krainian Autocephalous Orthodox jate closely with the workers and to to sell out and betray the anthracite! Church has taken place in Kiev in| give their best to the cause of the miners just as they have done time | crder to discuss the situation creat- | building and again with the soft-coal miners.|ed by the exposure of the relations The only way to prevent this be-| of the church and its highest cigni-| tical insifference and demanded a dustries, to all their members, and jto the working class generally to rally in gigantic masses to the mili- tant demonstration against unem- | Ployment, the speed-up, long hours, wage cuts, and capitalist oppression. U at/of the unemployed alone. Unemploy- ment is a class issue; it is a curse that hangs over the heads of all workers. Fight against the attempts of the bosses and their social fascist agents, Matthew Woll, Green, the whole bureaucracy of the A. F. of L. and socialists to divide the em- ployed from the unemployed, and utilize the vast and growing army force, will bring no relief to the/of unemployed to cut wages, reduce mass of unemployed, but will serve instead to retard and crush the ef- forts of the unemployed workers for relief. “Though the Socialist Party de- clares ‘in its program that the capi- talist system is responsible for the prevailing unemployed and suffering of the workers, the effect of 5] employed Councils, Organize! proposals, if carried out, for the formation of an unemployed con- ference constituted principally of the business men, their government and its relief and employment ag2n- cies, would be a surrender of the de- mands of the unemployed to the ten- der mercies of the very class respon- sible for the present unemployment and the general attacks upon the wage and working conditions of the whole working class. “How considerate the present city administration of Mayor Story is for the interests of the workers has already been demonstrated when it proceeded to employ for painting and carpenter work, workers at the |rate of wages of the common Ia- orer. “The Socialist proposal to estab- lish an unemployment fund, one- | third of which is to be taken from the wages of the workers is nothing else but an open support by the So- cialist Party of the present wage slashing campaign of the employing class. “The Socialist Party is fully aware of the fact that the wages of the workers, even in New York State, have never reached the stand- ards for decency and comfort declar- ed essential by many governmental departments. “Today, as a result of the speed-up and part time employment, etc, wages have reached new low levels. To suggest further reduction for any purpose, every worker can only consider as another attack upon his wages. Furthermore, to demand that the .vorkers contribute to re- lieve a situation for which the work- ers are not responsible, and for which the Socialist Party holds the capitalist system to blame, is only an act of treachery. Counter-Demands “As against the proposais of the Socialist Party, the Unemployed Council of Rochester proposes: “1, Complete insurance against un- employment, to be provided by the government, financed by taxes on income, inheritance, and profits pro- viding wages of $15 per week for each unemployed worker, with £5 additional for each dependent with- out exceptions or disqualifications. “2, Administration of unemploy- ment benefits to be in the hands of the workers elected from shops and fering 65c.” company union. unemployed organizations, with ab- conditions of all workers. Unemployed and Employed! Unite your forces! Demonstrate your class solidarity! Strike and demonstrate at Union Square teday and hear our demands! 1. Unemployed workers! Form Un- De- mand work or wages! Demand im- mediate emergency unemployment relief to be paid by the bosses and their government! 2. Demand that all administration of relief be in the hands of unem- ployed councils! 4. Full equality of Negro workers! |all workers arrested in connection i with unemployed demonstrations. ‘strikes, protest meetings, etc.! 5. Demand the seven hour, five- day week! 6. Build the Trade Union Unity | League — the center of class strug- | gle unionism of the U. S. — Section |of the Red International Labor Un- jiont Join the Industrial Unions of the T. U. U. L. | unemployment, sickness and death! | 8. Fight all attempts of the bosses |and their agents to divide the ua- | employed workers! 9. Smash the social fascism of the A. F. of L. and the socialist party! 10. Smash the imperialist war danger! Defend the Soviet Union. solute equality of Negro and white workers, “The Unemployed Council wishes especially to warn all workers against belief that the capitalists or their government can be prevailed upon, through the medium of rec- ommendations such as made by the Socialist Party, to legislate the above named demands into force, “The capitalist class has never granted the working class its de- mands, except after a long, bitter struggle. The brutality with which the efforts of the unemployed for relief from starvation has been met in many cities by the capitalist gov- ernments, the police clubbing, black- jacking, mass arrests, and jail sen- tences, eloquently testify to the de- termination of the ruling class and its state to crush the workers’ move- ments, and continue unhampered to ride roughshod over the whole work- ing class. Even in the Socialist-adminis- tered city of Milwaukee, the at } tempt on the part of the unem- ployed to present their demands to the Socialist city fathers was wesottarie es Come Off the Breadline! Fight, Don’t Starve! D. inte i emonstrate! The Trade Union Uni-| the standards and drive down the} 3. Demand that police terror! against the unemployed workers cease! Demand the unconditional release of | 7. Fight for social insurance for! |Tortures the Colonial) Workers i | Since the world agricultural cri- | sis makes plows unnecessary the imperialists arg reversing the old | adage and are beating their plow- | shares into swords. Scranton Miner Strike) N.M.U. Show Up Lewis ; church carried out their tasks|iributed to the turning of the (Continued from Page One) against the Soviet power under the| church into a counter-revoutionary ‘s and 75 cents for the labor-| mantle of religion, I am aware of | organization, sind regards the con- c pit committee. The N.M.U, intends Marine Workers to organize a strike committee of the | church. the at-\Teague, the Metal Workers Indus-|rank and file miners, and will pro-|phalous Greek Orthodox Chu icket line. / nothing but an instrument hands | A very successful mass meeting against the Soviet power and aaginst of workers, engineers ,students and ceed to organize a ma: Cheer Guynn Speech. | Wilkes-Barre, Sunday. The miners filled the hall to capac enthusiastic in their the N.M.U. pro; Charles Guynn, of the National Miners retary Union, was detail with the anthracite, and exposed {meaning of Lewis’ jspeech. Said Guynn: “The hard- coal miners must fully understand} | that Lewis and the U.M.W.A intend | | | U. and prepare for a national, gen- leral strike in September.” | Guynn called on the miners to| | vote against the sending of dele- gates to any of the two fake con- | will take place on March 10. | Trade Union |as chairman of the meeting. | While the meeting was on in | Wilkes-Barre, a Scranton cop came laround to the N.M.U. office in | Scranton, and enquired about a mass ‘meeting, about Guynn, ete. It is obvious that the police had already been notified to break up Guynn’s | meetings, and try to prevent the N. | |M. U. from mobilizing the hard-coal miners for strike in September. Secret Contract. United Mine Workers of America International Board members have | |returned from a meeting of the | | board in Indianapolis withethe glad | | word that the miners are to have jnothing to say about the terms of |the slave contract Lewis and the! operators are arranging to take the | place of the one expiring August 31. The tri-district convention of an- | | thracite miners, usually held before | the expiration of agreements in order to lay down demands for the | new contract, will not be called, In- | ternational President John L. Lewis | has decided. Instead the miners will be summoned into session after | the agreement has been negotiated | by Lewis and the operators. Faced with an accomplished fact, they are expected to put their approval on a contract which will undoubtedly tie them for a long term of years, pre- vent them from coming to the sup- | port of the bituminous miners in the | jnext struggle, and further cut their | wages by indirect means if not di- | | rectly. | | ‘The National Miners Union calls jall anthracite miners to defy this sell-out, leaving the U.M.W.A., and |Join the N.M.U, for a national strug- | gle in both coal fields this fall. met with mass brutality, clubbing and arrests, “The Unemployed Council of Ro- chester declares that only by the or- ganization of the thousands of un employed within the council, and in a militant campaign can its demands be realized. While the Socialist Party may ap- peal to the Eastman-controlled city administration to act, the Unemploy- | ed Council calls upon the workers | for action. The Unemployed Council points out that the only ones capa- ble of giving jobs or wages to the unemployed are the employers of Rochester, and they are not only ‘not doing so, but are engaged in | introducing more speed-up and wage | euts, laying off more workers, and adding the saving in: labor costs to (their profits, thus compelling the workers to bear the burden of their crisis. “The Council appeals to the em- ployed workers to organize and rally to the support of the demands of |the unemployed. Only by winning the demands of the council, can em- ployed workers safeguard their wag- es and working conditions, Hun- dreds of workers have already join- ed the Council and will carry on the struggle in spite of every effort on the part of the Socialists and such resolutions as that of Guzzetta to Idivide and mislead the workers. Scientists, Engineers and Technicians Give MOSCOW, (By Inprecorr Press tionary organizations and in partic Service)—The “Proletarskaya Pra-|ular to the so-called League for | vda” jMark Grushevski, a bishop cf the) Tde decision of the consilium Ukrainian | Orthodox Church: “I was one of the founders active church was founded after the Soviet | Autocephalous power had broken the back of the | Church Ukrainian mn | ‘order to carry on anti-Soviet agita-| affiliated body of tion and activity. “The church was nothing but a/| Freedom for recognition of the N.M.U.| many committed trayal is to organize into the N. M.| taries to Ukrainian counter. TRIKE TODAY! EMPLOYED AND JOBLESS AGAINST BOSSES SOVIET UKRAINE BISHOP QUITS RELIGION; WHOLE CHURCH IS DISSOLVED Why Green of A. F. of L. Loses Sleep; But Not Over 7,000,000 Starving Jobless in U. S. Demonstration of Loyal Aid to Soviet publishes a declaration of | Ukrainian Freedom. k | reads, inter alia, as follows: |; “The extraordinary consilium is and, compelled to admit that during its The | ten years of existence the Ukrainian Greek Orthodox was a definitely anti- 1, in| Soviet crganization and in fact an the counter- jrevolutionary League for Ukrainian Autocephalous ‘eaders of the church counter-revol of counterrevolutionary acti-| “The extraordinary consilium de- The leaders or officers of the cisively condetpns all those who cou- counter-revoutionary acts) tinued existence of the church as by the leaders of the! undesirable. The extraordinary con~ Ukrainian Autoce- silium hereby declares the Ukrainian Autocephalous Greek Orthodox Church dissolved.” A very important demonstration The was the | counter-revolution | of the | others connected with industry took |place in Moscow yesterday under | the slogan, “The alliance of Science J- | and Labour guarantees the tviun -\ of Socialism.” There were over 200,000 demonstrators and the en- Every honest man gineers .and technical workers and eligion and for |students formed a giant column of . | over 30,900 men. > Special meetings of engineers, | technical specialists and engineering ete, took place in which ilemnly promised to co-oper- es, and en ialist s2cie’ up of socialism. They spoke against the dangers of poli- ‘evolu- | struggle against the sabotagers. : | BOGDANOV DENIES CHARGES | amtorg Trading Corporation has P. A. Bogdanov, chairmen of the | propaganda are unqualifiedly false. |-ventions of the company agents that Board cf the Directors of the Am- \torg Trading Cornoration, declared | Phil Frank, organizer of the yesterday that any statements direct Unity League, sFtor indirect, to the effect. that the AGAINST AMTORG financed or promoted any pvlitical WRITE about your conditions for the Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. Dive La Commune! HONOR THE WORKINGCLASS MARTYRS! at the Paris Commune Commemoration Meet CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE 67th Street and Third Avenue SPEAKERS A Play on the Commune by’ the Workers Laboratory Theatre Tuesday, March 18, at 8 p. m. MUSIC 3 INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE New York District, 799 Broadway, Room 422 Defend the Jobless! Support the Revolutionary Fighters on International Unemployment Day! Don’t let the bosses hand out long prison terms and bloody clubbings in answer to the demand “Work or Wages!” Hundreds of arrests in every part of the U. S. A. will take place today. 1000 arrests in February alone.--An unequalled mark! RUSH! ACT AT ONCE! MOBILIZE MASS PROTEST! Rush Funds.to the INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE Smash the criminal syndicalism charges! ' Halt the Deportations! Stop police brutalities and beating by MASS PRESSURE! JOIN THE I. L. D. TODAY! -: Come to the addresses below and join: NATIONAL OFFICE: 80 East Eleventh Street, Room 402, New York City BOSTON, MASS—=113 Dudley St: Ri NEW YORK DISTRICT-<708 Hrondy hye oom 422 PHILADELPHIA—014 Arch Street BUF! Me ota ee brad Street, Room 5 CLEVELAN! D226 West DETROIT—Arnold Ziegle: CHICAGO—23 South Lin ue erior Avenue S782 Woodward Avenue In Street m NSAS CITY—J, Ro - NNHAronS—t33 ea a ulin Street, Room 307 ‘)N. D. (Agrarion Dixtrict)—0. J, Arn s NSTON-SALiCM, N. C.—Hoom 6, United Cigar Bultdtaee” mere Seeare /E—Hotel Oo MIL WALK aah ‘ent Water Street M—1114 South College St GRAND RAPIDS, Miek—1257 Griggs Street, ‘s. B ing