The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 21, 1930, Page 3

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TOILERS DEMAND THE RELEASE OF JOBLESS LEADERS Set Hearing for April 11 in ‘Assault’ Case ROB PANAMA PEASANTS AUTO CONFAB WORKERS: CORRESPONDENCE - FROM THE SHOPS SOCIALISTS ASK FOR YANKEE COMPANY; a ARREST UNION LEADERS. IN DETROIT HAS HOOVER’S “PROSPERITY” BOSSES TO CLUB Le HLS Gr Yankee Imperiaticm AWE STARTED MEANS POVERTY FOR JOBLESS TOILERS overnmen ackeys 0 e imperil m D A K OT A FA R M E R S i eta in Outrageous Attack on Panamanian Masses Building Shop Locals “Nip Bevelution in the in Many Factories Bud”, Says Leader : DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1930 | The Man Behind the Man Behind the Gun Must Sell Their Products for Low Prices . S. War Preparations Aided by Seizure of * ‘ “ ;, ” (Continued from Page One) : (Coniteledtirom Pape cane) beatinied from Pape Ona) nd for Airports, Nominally “National ae and Buy H Continued from Page One Cols o po! i etatges jers. In most cases of strikes, the y High many thousands. The Milwaukee epant and valloosding 6! the com unemployed workers cooperated with police department has been very jmittee representing 110,000 New Panama papers reveal a new chi- canery of Yankee imperialism in “political purposes” resist the claims | the strikers on the picket line. sis | ch 6th un- and that the people living on these | After the August conference pro- York workers at the M: employed demonstrat patient with them,” But It Is Not Over. Bankers Grip on Poor Farmers Through Farm Board Grows robbing the Panamanian peasants of |'@nds “can go somewhere else.” | duction began to fall. Production The workers and unemployed here The resolution demands the im land, and the turging over to Yan-|ins larig for, senerations declore | ore steadily from 512,000 in sx ae do not think that the slugging of mediate, unconditional release of kee interests not only of these hold- th 3¢ the aaa in theita fem: thels | August to 119,000 in December. By a Farmer Correspondent _ ization (meaning, of course, their or-| hungry men in the streets and pub- oe Foster, M ter, Lesten and ings, but also lands desired for “na- Mass unemployment prevailed with) Sanish, N. D.—These are sure) ganization), but what go’d will that) lic squares of Cleveland, even tho Mass Political Raymo r the defense tional” air ports, that is to say, to the Pan-American Airways Company owned by Yankee imperialist capital closely allied with the United States war machine. Early this month, three workers, sent by the Workers’ and Peasants’ Federation to Darien, were arrested, e presumably for their agitation among the dispossessed peasants, against the claims of the Darien Estate, Incorporated, represented in Panama by Arthur Muller. Those workers arrested are Domingo H. Turner, Felicano Lara and Jacinto Chacon, the authorities, which are craven servants of Yankee imperial- ism, arresting them in Darien to- gether with seven “discontents” of the province, and still holding them in jail in Panama City. The Yankee representative says that the corporation claims the lands “because it needs them” and because it has invested some $500,- 000 in them; that the government (undoubtedly corrupted as usual) has “recognized” the company’s | claims, that only “some rebels” with Usbekistan Soviet Celebrates Freedom (Inprecorr Press Service) MOSCOW.—The fifth anniversary of the existence of the Usbekistan Soviet Republic was celebrated in forefathers, that all they have is | 150,000 in the streets in Detroit wrapped up in their homes and] alone. The union failed to over- |lands now being taken from them, | come the many difficulties confront- and that they would lose everything if they were forced to “go else- where.” Nevertheless the govern- | ment support to the imperialist cor- poration, the arrest of the workers jsent to aid the peasants organize | their resistance, shows clearly that the imperialists will get the aid of the armed forces to rob the Pana- | manian peasantry. { Likewise, a decree of the govern- | |ment cabinet, pretending to benefit | \the Panama cities by making titles | |clear within certain areas compris- | ing such cities and environs by de- \claring them outside judicial dispute, |sneaks in another proviso making all land near such cities suitable for “national” (that is to say, Yankee) air ports, also outside judicial dis- pute and disposable by the govern- ment. This not only robs the peas- ant holders of these lands and fore- stalls any litigation by them, but shows also the rapid preparation of Yankee imperialism for war by air- plane base construction in Panama. collective cattle breeding and cotton | growing are being organized and | the foundation stones of a number | of cultural institutions. | ing them and only partially sue- ceeded in carrying out the program laid out at the last conference. Only a few shop locals were organized and little headway was made in organizing substantial numbers of the unskilled and most exploited workers in the industry, Negroes, women and young worke Capitalists Can’t Solve. There is no prospect of the cap- italist ability to solve the crisis in the automobile industry. With a productive capacity of 10,000,000 cars in 1930 there is only a market for about three and one-half million ears, In the efforts of the employers to maintain high rates of profits, the workers are being subjected to increased rationalization with its speed up, wage cuts and worsening of conditions. Wage cuts have taken place in the Chrysler, Hudson, Briggs and other plants at the same time that production has been great- ly increased. Women getting 15c¢ per hour have replaced men who used to earn $1.00 an hour, The present period is the best time organization. Workers know that conditions are just as bad in other shops and the only possibility of improvement is through organization. * conditions of working women; I want, tough times for the farmers. Prices organization do us? As I remember on the stuff we sell are low and we) it, Hoover is the one who started pay a big price for the stuff we buy,’ this Farm Board business, and what and it seems to me that the Farm! can we expect from Hoover, the man Board cannot do anything about this! of Wall Street? This is a pretty raw as we were told they would. We deal and the farmers are bound to have little grain to sell and can't| ect their eyes open before long. I ta dollar at ; eerie Holes abies ban have read the United Farmer and The Farmers Union leaders are hollering about that we farmers! they sure are hitting the nail on the —B. 0. must organize into some farm organ-!' head in that paper. Write to This Soviet Working Woman! The following is a letter from a)to hear what they have to say, to Soviet working woman, who is eager | feel the living pulse in their pro- |to correspond with American work-!letarian veins. When does your ing women, Write to her. | working day begins, how do your * * hg | wages compare with the cost of liv- To the Working Women of America.|ing, what cultural recreations do you | Dear Comrades, jindulge in, in your leisure hours? Greetings from the stronghold of | Write and tell me of the rights of the Proletarian Dictatorship, from| Women workers. I, for my part, will | Leningrad City, U.S.S.R. |gladly answer any questions which | I am a worker in the printing| interest you. I shall try to give |Dvor” printing shop, in the type-|¥ou to visualize and understand all | stores. lthat I write this letter and in the/Women in the land of the Soviets, hope that I shall receive an answer |in the land where there is no slavery, from my proletarian comrades, who| Where all are equal. though far away are near to me in) Awaiting your reply, heart. Nata Rumiantseva (Sorter) I am very interested in the living| Address: U.S.S.R., Leningrad, Pro- spect 25th October, No. 74, Room gress for July 15 in Moscow. the clubs. are blessed by the “social- | ist” mayor and the A. F. L. mis- leaders, will stop anything. They are preparing to turn the trial of the 58 into a complete exposure of capitalism and the socialist party, and are preparitig to make May 1 here another day of demonstration by thousands. Build National Conference. From all over the country comes news of the selection of delegates for the National Conference on un- employment called by the Trade Union Unity League and the Coun- cils of the Unemployed to meet in New York, March 29, This conference will form a na- tional center for the unemployed or- | ganizations, and will coordinate and | give organizational strength to the ; mass movement that shows itself in| down tools, with the street car and every industrial city. It will work | out the details of the union of the|1 p,m. Thursday as one man, while industry; I work in the “Pechatnyi|You a clear picture, which will help| jobless workers and the workers who the waiters and all other workers ; , in restaurants and hotels struck at : jthat interests you, and give you a/hope to make more profitable for| midnight Wednesday and let the It is with the greatest feelings|S00d idea of the life of working|capital by using the unemployed to | horde of sleek Yankee tourists take still have jobs, which the employers beat down wages and lengthen hours. The unemployed and the militant workers in the factories and shops will work together, for work or wages, for immediate relief, and for the seven-hour day and five-day . Week, against speed-up, etc. City Conference. f the Soviet U The speakers were Grecht, Reeve son, Moses, Ha Ties Up Cuban Shops 2 H (Continued from Page One) Renee erhood voted heavily for the strike. amount wa d to the as- The attempt of the government rs and the A. F. of L. agents to check the growing influence of the Nation- Chicago Meet Demands Release. al Confederation by setting up re-! CHICAGO, March 20.—Hu cently a fek and government con-| of workers crowde! the Pe trolled “Cuban Labor Federation” Auditorium to commemorate and a so-called “Labor Party” that| 59th Anniversary of the Paris Com- was hatched out in the government | mune, Salita. aon SARS offices, has failed to deceive the) great enthusi the Cuban workers and the answer to! unconditional re nate the government’s attack on the le- ployed movement gality of the National and Havana| The yesolution d at “the revolutionary unions is seen in the paris Commune in the 24-hour strike sweeping the whole) jearts of the wor well as in island. the revolution Russian Reports state that theimy workers.” Cigar Makers Union was the f i Buffalo Meet Fights For Release. BUFFALO, March 20. falo workers held a meeting Sunday, March 16 wood Music Hall. The enthusiasm of the workers turned the meeting into a demonstration against capi- talist justice and against capi- talism. The workers demanded the un- conditional release of Ruth Wil- liams, who was sentenced for six months and fined $50 for carrying a sign and Comrades Larson, Don- ald, Melvin, Scherer, Har Stone bes operators leaving their posts at a 24-hour fast in the numberous hotels that center the Yankee winter resort trade, All newspapers but one, the “El Mundo” were tied up, reporters as well as printers stri ing with the other industrial work- ers, The strike, undoubtedly sweeping many towns by laying the founda-| In a manifesto on the fifth an-| Encourage Initiative. cipated in by all the delegates a : The National Conference will within it for more than the 200,000 | and the other comrades arrested in tion stones of new factories, for|niversary, the government of Us-| The union must encourage more program for future action was} 10.—Finances for this convention make plans for a national conven-| the capitalist press admits, is a tre- Buffalo. instance, in Bokhara a new textile /bekistan points to the great pro-|intiative on the part of the mem- adopted, outlining: ‘ shall be raised through the follow- tion on unemployment to be held in) mendous political demonstration of, The workers greeted very en- factory with 40,000 spindles, in| gress made economically and cultur-| bership and draw out new leader-| 1—The major task is the con-|ing methods: a special convention Chicago, in May. It will be pre- the power and advanced position of thusiastically the demand to free centration of all forces to mobilize! a mass delegation for the May 17 stamp of 50 cents shall be issued and sold to the membership and |ship. They must be encouraged to Tashkent a tricotage factory and | ally during the last five years on} ceded in New York by a city con-/ the Cuban working class in the in- write of their experiences and about A - Comrades Foster, Minor, Amter and ference on unemployment, March 27. Andischan, etc. |the way from a colony of czarism |to an ugrarian-industrial member of shop conditions in the Auto Workers convention, by the building of func- also to workers at shop meetings, Delegates to this city conference | ternational revolutionary movement. As it occurs in a virtual colony the other comrades that were ar- rested all over the country for | have | other factories in Bakhara, Kokhand, | i A number of great farms for|the Soviet Union. | News and in Labor Unity. tioning shop locals in all important open mass meetings, etc.; funds in many ¢ already been | of Yankee imperialism, it is a won- fighting against hunger and starva- G Fi Future struggles in the auto in-| plants of the industry which must’ shall be solicited immediately from |elected by the meeting of the jobless | derful demonstration to the working tion ion | Ei i stry wi videspr regularly and take up specific various sympathetic organizations; and by the union locals which met Inited S ji 4, - isman Given Five dustry will become more widespread meet regularly ai ip sp A) & ; s jclass of the United States that the “ : iy Speed Up, Persecution|E grievances of the workers in the,a special affair shall be arranged The speaker very _militantly jand bitter. The union must be ready jfor leadership. The national com-|evéry day struggle. Ther shop lo- mittee can be strengthened by cals must hold open meeti gs after |drawing in more leadership from) thorough preparation by distribu- the rank and file. We must prepare| tion of stickers and leaflets inside | for a mass convention by the middle | and outside of shops. |of May with representatives from| 2.—Functioning departments to the whole automotive industry. This | carry on work among women, Ne- | convention will take place during a| groes and youth. | period of struggle and we must be, 8.—A systematic campaign for prepared to have at least 500 dele-| union members and the raising of | gates representing at least 10,000 finances from all working class or- | workers in the industry. As part of | ganizations, the great metal industry we must; 4.—Fifteen members shall be | send a mass delegation to the con-| elected to the resident board in De- | vention of the Metal Workers Union| troit to take care of the national |that will take place in Youngstown | campaign. this week. Other unions and unem-' struggles of the American workin ployed councils are still to elect. _ * 8 is i Yorking | pointed out the necessity to fight class against American capitalism | the capitalist system that causes Male Newark: Mayor Listen {has a powerful and loyal proletarian ynemployment and starvation. Many fuses TabPET Ge cupaatoeay ciate NEWARK, N. J, March 20-‘The| tt 4p sleo s goorantee thet the Onea| Workers, joined the International FEEL LSREETGAIGE THR ALLA ovoatn ONE ,N.J., March 20.— is also a guarantee that the Cuba : ROREAIIIN lane Relies eal committee elected by the 15,000 dem | workers will maintain their oll challenged the Chrysler Local to|(rstraters agaitct starvation on tionary trade unions in svite of all Sing prison today by Judge Barret bring in more members by the time , which |the fascist attacks against them in Bronx County court. of the convention. The challenge|thrown out of the city hall on that jcommitted by the lackeys of Hoover) afontforte- was given 7% to 15 was immediately accepted where- | °C¢S10n. eee way into a meet-/and Wall Street. years. McCloskey was sentenced upon the delegates from the Fordtin& of the city commissioners yes- The men were hgeaas-aKalrpaecd A : ahi Oe from 5 to 10 years. Local decided that they would bring | ter¢ay and forced’ the mayor and his!’ JAIL BUILDING GRAFTERS. | found guilty two weeks ago on ex- in more members than the two of |&880ciated politicians to listen to the | $ ; he! Anthony Montforte, ‘master mind’ | torting $800 from Bernard Lyons, them, put together Ghallenass were WAIrca aU atten the cebraeerte: o the Bronx building trade racket,|a contractor, under the threat of also issued and accepte! by the dif- A 5 Z ee , and Michael McCloskey, union dele- calling a strike on plasterers and ferent cities represented. |tives of the jobless. af eiaht /B8te> both of the A.F.L., convicted|lathers. The workers got nothing 0 ght! jof extortion, were sentenced to Sing from these strikes. in U. §, Postal Service Years by Boss Court (Continued from Page One) | (Continued from Page One) to this process that the conditions j workers’ children, Only the protest are becoming worse from day to) of the broad masses of workers can day. This system of intensified la-| free Harry Eisman. bor is organized in such a way as to “We call upon all workers and call forth competition both between | workers’ organizations to pass reso- the workers of the branches and be-| lutions against the savage sentence tween the branches themselves, In| against Harry Fisman. some cases, when the different; Everywhere in shops, in big or- branches are comprised of employes ganizations in schools organize to- made up of different races, between | gether support the International La- the white and colored workers often, bor Defense in struggle for free- this competition gives rise to race dom for Eisman and all class-war hatred and is fostered by the bosses. prisoners. Defeat the bosses’ ter- to help finance the convention, etc. Issue Challenges. Among the delegation Proved Persecution. In view of protests on the part of the workers, an investigation com- miitee was appointed by congress. A decree was introduced prohibiting the use of chronometers and other means for measuring the time when ror.” on June 15, | 5.—The national convention shall Recently in a letter written by Harry Eisman while in the Heck- escher Foundation Home, he says: | “The case up against me today lis not merely an attack upon me as | Andrew Overgaard, national rep- resentative of the Trade Union Unity League greeted the conven- tion in the name of the National | Committee. He analyzed the econo- | elect a mass delegation to the June 14-15 convention of the National Metal Workers Industrial League to be held in Youngstown, Ohio. The national committee shall I Rush Navy War . Arms Building’ (Continued from Page One) masses about the growing war ’- ani, N, nist Party izer of the T.U.U.L.; M. Tomash, | Flaiani was ordered to sit down and were included two Negro workers and a woman worker, The delegation follows: D. Flai- organizer of the Commu- 3 J. Rubin, N. J. organ- Howe. The resolution with demands jobless, the right to organize, strike, |for the unempleyed workers adopted and picket, seven-hour day and five- jat the March 6 demonstration was|day week, abolition of child slavery, |presented to the city commissioners. |etc. The resolution says: | “The city administration support- lan individual, but it is linked up| mic crisis and pointed out the in-| initiate and stimulate revolutionary organizer of the Young Communist |two police escorted him to his seat./ed by the American Federation of ger. investigating the work of the postal employes, or to apply weights and any other methods for defining the amount of posts, accepted or sent out by the workers in order to sig- nify the productivity of labor, or also to use any other methods for frightening or forcing the workers. This decree was not endorsed by congress, although the investigation, which was verified also by the con- gress commission, disclosed many facts—that the postal workers are subject to persecutions, dismissals, to overfatigue in consequerice of ra- tionalization, etc. The letter-carriers were also sub- ject to an inquiry from the postal j inspector. They were followed up while on the road, and their every step was counted, in order to figure out the distance they covered, and in accordance with this they defined how much time they needed. After this the administration demanded that the letter-carriers make their rounds on the basis of the above reckonings. The conditions put for- ward were so difficult, that the workers forced to make their rounds without any rest, in order to com- plete their rounds in the definite period fixed for them. Increased Labor Productivity. Those who sort the letters are obliged to put in 60 letters per min- ute, or 3,600 leters per hour, i. e. with the maximum speed at which the hands can possibly move. The former demands were 16 letters per minute. During the course of one year the output in the postal deli- very branch increased by 100 per cent. Today the general average output is 60-70 per cent high’ than the output which existed before the introduction of the intensified la- bor methods. Beginning with 1917 up to 1926, the general postal incomes have in- creased by almost 100 per cent (which is also a means for defining the output), whereas the number of employes has increased by less than 65 per cent. Simultaneously the number of employes for $1,000,000 income has decreased from 61 to 127. In order to lower expenditure use is made of the cheap labor of the unskilled labor. More Fired. Laborers, who get much less than ofii 2 workers, have replaced skilled workers, In 1927, 455 laborers, who used to clean up the premises of | together with the white terror cam- | paign against the workers and worl:- | ers’ children.” The New York branch of the In- ternational Labor Defense, in expos: | ling the class vengeance of the capi-| talists even against the workers’) \children, as in the Eisman case, says: | “Harry Eisman, Young Pioneer, jafter having served six months in| the reformatory for participation in a demonstration of working class children against the Boy Scouts, was arrested on March 6 for participa- tion in the unemployment demon- stration. He has been sentenced to- |day by Magistrate Young in 22nd thorne Reformatory for five year: | “The magistrate expressed his re- |grets that the law did not permit him to deport Eisman. When At- torney Buitenkant of the I.L.D., maintained that Eisman had a right | to participate in the demonstration | |for work or wages for the unem- ployed, ‘the magistrate replied, | “That’s enough from you,” and Eis- man was immediately rushed out of | the court to be sent away. “The International Labor Defense lis participating in a demonstration i which will be held in front of the! | Heckschner Foundation, 105th St. jand Fifth Avenue on Saturday at! 1p. m “Open air meetings will be held Friday night throughout the city |to protest against this brutal sen- tencing of this young militant. The | LL.D. is issuing thousands of leaf- lets for distribution and is conduct: | ing an energetic campaign for Fis- man’s release. | “The sentencing of Eisman is only a part of the campaign of persecu- tion that is now being conducted by the Tammany Hall government | against working class children and their parents.” the post office, thanks to the in- troduction of the standardized sys- tem, were used to do the work of the skilled workers, and for clean- ing up, other workers were hired, who were given less wages than the others used to get. It is essential to note here that a large portion of the unskilled work is executed by Negroes. Thus the struggle against capitalist rationalization is one of the most important tasks facing the Postal workers of America today. (To be continued.) ability of Hoover to solve the un- employment problem. The answer of the capitalists and the government to the demand of the workers for bread was clubs and bullets. Fight Boss Agents, Too. The workers must organize and fight back, not only against the em- ployers but against their agents, the government, churches, the A. F. of L., the Musteites and other class enemies. All workers must be united, American and foreign born, men and women, black and white, youth and adult. He called upon the delegates to march forward towards a militant mass convention of auto- mobile workers on May 17 to lay St. Childrens Cours to the Haw-) the basis for a powerful national | automotive industrial union. George Powers, secretary of the Michigan District of the T.U.U.L. pointed to the awakening of all workers for militant organization. Militant Program of Action. After a spirited discussion parti- ‘competition of individual members ; for a membership campaign between| Already Tardieu has left. The shop locals for the registering of /fascist murderer Grandi will soon he \the greatest progress and also be-[0u his way to Mussolini and the tween the various national leagues STowing crisis in Italy. Foreign Min- affiliated to the TULU.L. ister Aristide Briand of France left 7.—The Auto Workers Union must this morning for Paris. “I don’t consider ag one, of ita baste dauve le? much use in sitting around a the building of the T.U.U.L. into a|hetel looking out a window at the real functioning council challenging | “eather,” sarcastically remarked the the reactionary strikebreaking De- walrus-like representative of French troit A. F. of L, headed by Frank imperialism. |X. Martel. | Stimson and his cohorts hang on, | | The union must draw the great, maneuvering with MacDonald—un- mass of unemployed workers into |doubtedly plotting war against the | active participation on the basis of |Soviet Union—while at same time} the general program of the T.U.U.L. |getting farther apart on their dif- exempting them from dues payments ferences on their respective war and connecting them up with the @maments. ' various shop locals of the factories |in which they were employed, | 9—The Auto Workers Union} | shall immediately begin a campaign | jin the shops for the election of a | rank and file delegation to the Red \ International of Labor Unions Con- F.S.U. Five-Year F Answer the Holy Crusade WITH MORE TRACTORS AND TRUCKS for the Five-Year Plan to help the workers and peasants of the Union Socialist Soviet Republics in building Socialism! Send your contributions to th 175 Fifth Avenue, Room 511, lan Soli arity Drive Against the Soviet Union | and baths on every floor. ¢ Friends of the Soviet Union New York City jer, |it was made public) NEW HOTEL NITGEDAIGET, Beacon, N. Y. 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 TELEPHON League; D. W. Graham, an active| member of the unemployed council | and a Negro worker who is out on 3,000 bail on a sedition charge; E.| Graham, another Negro worker; Lillian, Aissin, a woman worker; | Parker, an unemployed young work-| and J. Philip, another unem- ployed worker. The city mayor knowing the plan for the delegation to appear (since has ordered | Chief of Police McRell to station a police reinforcement and hold a squad near by. D. Flaiani spoke for a half hour in spite of the repeated interrup- tions by Mayor Congleton, Commis- sioner Murray, and Commissioner WINTER VACATION FOR WORKERS | AT CAMP NITGEDAIGET | The newly built hotel has 61 rooms—two in a room—hot and cold water in every room. Showers : ESTABROOK 1400. J. Rubin spoke, outlining a pro- Labor, the socialist party and other gram of the T.U.U.L. D. W. Gra-|“labor” agents of imperialism have ham, a Negro w s also spoke and met our demands with police clubs, ham, a Negro worker also spoke and arrests and even the jailing of the was stopped after a few minutes. best fighters among us. kg . * “We make these immediate de- Join the Communist Party. mands and call on the workers to The committee presented a reso-| organize in the revolutionary in- lution, including the demands for dustrial unions of the Trade Union work or unemployment insurance,| Unity League and join the Commu- immediate relief, no eviction of the nist Party.” m) 1852 THE SAME ADDRESS FOR 78 YEARS 1930 f * z ETROPOLITAN SAVINGS BAN oo Interest Starts First of Each Month Deposiia made on or before the THIRD business day of the month will draw interest from the First day of the month, Last Quarterly Dividend Paid on All Amonuts from $5.00 to $7,500.00 at the rate of 434%. Open Mondays (all day) unfill Banking by Mail Soe Ac THE BIG NIGHT! Tomorrow HARLEM REVELS Solidarity Demonstration Dai Saturday Ev'n’g, March 22 Reckiand Palace, 280 W. 155 St. 4 ‘The LIBERATOR Organ American Nigro Labs DIRECTION :—Sixth 3 Orzan Congress Trade Union Unity League inth Avenue “L” to 185th Street ONE DOLLAR AT THE DOOR TICKET STATIONS: nie Jackson 2U85 7th Avenue Vhe Liberator 709 Broadway Noom 338 26 Union \ Workers Bookshop Needle Trade: 16 W. fist St. 26 Union Square 1aL W. 28th St. t SPECIAL REDUCTION TO UNEMPLOYED. 2h CENTS Get them through your union or Unemployed Council.

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