The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 1, 1930, Page 5

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¢ UNEMPLOYMENT IN DUPONT DOMAIN IS GROWING RAPIDLY Suffer from Lay-Offs There Organize Into T. U. U. L., Only Way to End These Conditions Worker Says (By a Worker Correspondent) WILMINGTON, Del.—Some people say there is no unemployment here in Wilmington, the home of the DuPont millions, But here is a little example: A boss put up a sign for one hundred men, and within one hour there were over a thousand in front of the'place, and they called out the police and beat them off. There are hundreds of white workers and thousands of Negro workers walking the streets here. The average wage of a white worker is $20 and the average wage of a Negro worker is $15. Join the Com- munist Party and fight these conditions. You have no other course, fellow-workers, unless you want to continue slaving and starving. —Wilmington Unemployed Worker. Negroes Worst Exploited by Bethlehem Steel (By a Worker Correspondent) | _ Accidents are frequent in the mil various plants of the Bethlehem/among the plants of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, in the Maryland/the Maryland plant takes eighth a the workers are subjected to! place. the fiercest exploitation possible.| 5 - “i . Although the majority of the work-| _ Nestees Worst Exploited, ers work 8 hours, many work 12) The Negro workers here are spe- hours a day. The five day week is| cially exploited. The Negro work- not effective in all the mills, the ,ers living in Sparrows Point are tin mills are the main mills work- | completely tied to the company thru ing five days. When the hours were credit. The company has rooming charged from 12 and 10 to 8, wages | Places of the dirtiest kind for them, or rather earnings were decreased. |operating on credit. Through their The workers work piece work, so|ownership of the town of Sparrows much tonnage. |Point the company is able to keep Workers are not periodically laid thousands of workers tied to them off, but layoffs are effected every} hand and food. The company also once in a while. Workers are com- las a large police force to subject ing in from the Coatsville plant|the workers. The Negro workers which it is reported has completely|in the mill are given the hardest shut down, to the Maryland plant,/and dirtiest work for the lowest pay. at Sparrows Point, outside of Balti-|The company has segregated the more to leok for jobs. Negro workers in the restaurants Frequent Wage Cuts. jand in the washrooms. Wage cuts are frequently attempt-| Organize into the Trade Union because of the It fights for us! resistance of the | steel workers! workers, $ March 6 Shortco mings in Chicago (By «@ Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Il.—I was at the demontration here March 6th. st 50,000 in the parade and was over four miles long. for me of the shorteomings: not enough leaflets to go Tt had t i ¢ Wo we have over 300,000 ? at the pt I think these demonstrations should take place on a Saturday or Sunday and then it would have a larger attendance. for my fellow-workers. er was not men egroes in Chicago, there were not even 20 Negre — AWORKER. A Monument to Hoover Prosperity, “Charity” & (By a Worker Correspondent) OAKLAND, Calif—One of the most pitiful “exhibits” to come to the attention of the Oakland Council of Unemployed presented itself at the corner of Tenth and Broadway, on Monday evening, during the street meeting held there by the Council. A family of eight—parents and six children ranging from a baby of two years to a girl of 15— told of what Hooverian “prosperity” had done to them. Losing employment in Utah in February, the family piled into an old Ford and hearing that there was work in California came here to seek a job. They became snow-bound in Nevada and were forced to abandon the car and made their way to Sacramento, arriving there penniless. They hitch-hiked to Oakland, arriving here early in the morning of March 24, hungry and worn out. They were directed to the Community Chest headquarters and informed that being non- residents they were out of luck and sent to the Salyation Army. Here they were told that nothing could be done for them and were sent to the Volunteers of America. The Volunteers proved to be everything else but, and sent them to the Associated Charities. The well-fed supervisor in charge went into minute detail regarding the overwhelming demands being made on their resources by residents of Oakland, expressed sympathy for their plight and turned them down. ‘ The family, wandering over the streets of Oakland came upon the Unemployed Council street méeting, listened, got in touch with the committee, and explained their situation. An appeal was made to the crowd, and out of their scattered pennies and nickles a collection of $8 was taken which gave relief for the moment. The Community Chest Drive is even now on, Workers are gyped out of a day’s pay to fill the coffers of the Chest. The Unemployed Council will do its damndnest to expose every phase of “charity,” the Great American Fraud. —Oakland Worker. $1 for 10 Hours Slavery to Jobless (By a Worker Correspondent) : ST, LOUIS. Mo.—I am a young worker and have been out of a job \ for four months. I answered an ad in the daily paper for men to dis- tribute circulars for the Acme Distributing Co. Twenty-five men were . picked out of about two hundred. I was one of those chosen. We were sent out in groups of four and eight, each in a territory about two miles square. We were given sacks in which we were to carry two hundred advertising papers, weighing about sixty pounds. We carried these sacks full of papers, up and down stairs to private houses and in the apartment houses, and if we missed one door we were threat- ened to be sent in and paid off. Each group had a superviser, the men called them slave drivers, which they were. In some cases we had to go four and five blocks to get more papers and then carry them back to where we left off at. Bin he After about ten hours of this we went back to report and to get paid off. We received one dollar when we got in, and another on the following Saturday. Fellow workers, we must organize to fight against these miserable conditions, . Fight for a SEVEN HOUR DAY, a MINIMUM WAGE or oan DOLLARS a day, and insurance for those that are hurt on job, Organize under the Trade Union Unity League and fight for your rights. We have nothing to lose but our chains, —JOBLESS ST. LOUIS WORKER. Montgomery-Ward, Sears Roebuck Lay Off (By a Worker Corres: nt) OAKLAND, Calif—The unem- ployment situation in Oakland is day by day becoming more critical, In the retail department of Mont- gomery Ward, Sears Roebuck, the axe is falling on the necks which heretofore considered themselves im- mune, Montgomery’s have discontinued their filing of applications for “po- sitions” as the waiting*list has reach- ed a huge length. The working force has been reduced by not less than 20 percent. Of course, this is ac- complished by speed-up for those who are allowed to remain, and wage cuts. Sears Roebuck opened up a new retail store here in Oakland the middle of this month. This new store is one of the largest on the Pacific coast. Five hundred women were engaged for the opening. The line of epplicants extended from the office on the third floor to the street and. a full block beyond the em- ‘ployees’. entrance. days later, 200 clerks were per- manently ‘discharged. The unemployed workers here should all join councils of the unem- ployed, led by the Trade Union Unity League. JOBLESS WORKER. ‘ Negro and White Workers in Wilmington BALTIMORE, Md.—Of all the/In a contest conducted last year} Mobilize Against Boss Vengean Original Gastonia de. fendants, and those given jail terms, i DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL ce on May studyi 1, 1930 Day i | | | | ES | ng Lenin's works while in jail, 400 SEAMEN FOR DRIVES OF ‘¢ iqn, UNION ON ONE SLAVE'S 108 “IN SOUTH ‘Lucky Ones Risk Lives) in Coffin Ships (Green Aids Attack of | moe Bosses (Continued from Page One) | three flights of stairs with the walls | bedecked with very uncomplimentary {remarks about the Shipping Board and Joe in such language as the sea- men use in the fo’castle. They leave ino doubt about their opinion of T. |V. O'Connor, and E. C. Plummer, | Hoover’s chairman and _ vice-chair- | man of the Shipping Board. In a stinking room, which can seat |about fifty men, over 400 are | jammed, waiting for the job that, | | MARY DALTON N. T. W. n Allanta, Georgia.) With the closing down of many of the mills in Columbus, Macon, Au- | gusta, Rome, Atlanta and many of | the other cities in Georgia, and with many of the mill villages on a star- vation level, with the rest of the jmills working only part time, the |textile workers in Georgia are ready for struggle and organization: (Organ cd on the leaflets, and while} PU do all I can. jmever comes except to Joe’s parti- \cular friends, Board Gets Billions. Since its establishment, the gov- jernment has sunk over $3,600,000,- (000 into the Shipping Board. Most | of this money has found its way into |the pockets of the big ship owner: | Board had 548 vessels under its con- —BETHLEHEM SLAVE. | trol with a total dead-weight ton-| workers are dock nage of 4,474,016, which is nearly one-third of the entire tonnage in the United States. Out of this over 2,- | 400,000 tonnage, or 319 vessels were |tied up, not working in October. Probably another million in tonnage has been put on the idle list since the sharpening of the crisis, ‘ Jobs Seuttled. So the lines of sailors cast on the beach grow larger. They don’t frequent the Board’s fink hall for | jobs any more, After four months |, of waiting even the most patriotic sailor begins to learn that jobs have been scuttled. They come up because it’s warm and most of them haven’t a penny to ;get a flop. Free flops at the “Holy ‘Flop House” are cut down, and all |ether places are filled with thou- -sands of unemployed land workers. | The colder the day, the bigger the crowd at Joe's, | Nothing for Jobless. among the seamen has a special The Docking System Those mills operating are only working part time, and all the work- jers get is about $9 to $12 for ten, |eleven and twelve hours a day. With jthe system. of docking, even these | miserably low wages are cfit contin- ually. In Macon, Ga., one woman showed slips for the year 1929 i 7 « YS. | where the total deduct docki ed, but are not always successful,| Unity League, Negro and white\In October, 1929, the U.S. Shipping | Way $156 si ‘33 et nea ae ee |dale, Ga., for every bad eut, the ed four cuts. In the | Fulton Bag of Atlanta and the Ano- ‘horduck Mill of Rome, ete., the fine ed the wages anywheres from 10 to 20 per cent. Wage Cuts Besides the docking system, which is another means of cutting wages, the mill workers have had a ect |eut in wages. In Scottdale, Ga. the workers have received a cut from 4/ to 44% cents on the dollar. In Rome, most of the workers received a 25 per cent. cut in wages. Besides re- ceiving the cut in wages, a new sys- |tem of stretch out has been installed. |Many of the loomfixers have been stretched out from about 70 looms to |105 looms and weavers have been | stretched out from 18 to 30 looms. Workers in Revolt | The workers in Georgia are re- | } |volting and organizing under the banner of the Trade Union Unity | League and National Textile Work- jers Industrial Union. The mill own- Jers and Chamber of Commerce are ganizer by William Green and the | PY The demand for “Work or Wages”! trying to smash the revolutionary | tes’ | ae cus in line L. officials against the N.T.W.U, or- | democratic press, {trade unions in Georgia. stem for these bad cuts has low-! TRY TO DEPORT TUL SECRETARY _ Jail and Heavy Bail for Frisco Demonstrators | SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, March hight San Francisco unem- arrested ployed workers who wer last Tuesday at the socialist meet- ing conducted by Mayor Hoan gf Milwaukee, were held on a bail of $1,000 each when they appeared in court Frid Among them are Mike | Daniels, chairman of the council of the unemployed, and Morris Rappo- port, district secretary of the Trade Union Unity League. Rappoport was brutally beaten in jail about the body and face. He appeared in court with swollen face, but was de- nied medical attention. The authori- ties are transferring him to Angel |Island for deportation, : There will be a protest mass | meeting against the arrests, Tues- day. Five workers in Oakland were sentenced to 50 days each for the February unemployment demonstra- tion. The case is appealed. They are released on bail. Among them are Brown, Barman, Matigly, Stude- vant. The latter is secretary of the TUUL in Oakland. union, yet they appreciate the com- pany union, boss controlled A. F. L. They realize that the American Fed- eration of Labor act as boss men in the ranks of the working class. On| March 2nd, William Green, speaking before a “distinguished” audience of | preachers, mill men, etc., appealed to the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and the mill barons in Georgia to open their mills to the A.F.L. with its “co-operative method of produc- | tion and enlightened management | which put mills on a paying basis.” William Green had nothing to say about the recent wage cuts, the| stretch out, the docking system. And when questioned about unemploy- ment, his answer was the calling in of the police and the arrest of the! N.T.W.U. organizer. | | The arrest of the N.T.W.U. or- mony given in court by 12 A. F./ SOVIET RUSHES HEAV : INDUSIRY TO COMPELS FIVE YEAR PLAN DR 50,000 a Year Tractor Piant to Open July 1; Billion Rouble Factory Going Up in Urals Giant Mariupol Foundry Will Beat One at Gary Europe’s Biggest Rayon Plant Completed ill be completed in 1931 and an annual productive cap- which w will hav MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Press Service).~A new department of the Red Putilov works in Leningrad has |acity of 40,000 heavy caterpillar just been opened for the production|tractgrs. The cost of the Tchelia- of tractor parts. Together with the|binsk factory including a sociali new smithy which will be opened in| colony for workers will be 1,060 million rouble; Building oper menced in M tion of a g have an anr lion tons of steel (the ican foundry is that of an annual production pprox mately 3 million tons of steel). complex will have 12 blast the works on the 1st of April, this| will mean a hew independent fac-| tory for the production of tractor The mechanized workhops of tl Stalingrad tractor works have j completed the first tractor. ations have now com- y the co vhich will on of 4 mil- st: Amer- ary with la Full production will commence on the Ist of July. This is the first giant Rus- © sian tractor works and will have an annual production of 50,000 t ors. The building of giant tractor pr: ces and 40 Martin furnaces ducing works so proceeding in, A factory for the production of Charkov, the capital of the Ukraine, |ertificial s: has just been com- and in Tcheliabinsk in the Urals. pleted in record time ir ighbor 10,000 work: are engaged on the) hood of Lening The s building of the works in Tcheliabinsk ithe largest of its kind in ts “Socialists” Assist with Thuringia Fascists BERLIN, March 30.-When Ger-; When Frick’s fascist activitic sis gained control of Thu- Were exposed, Carl Severing, Reich Minister of the Interior, was forced to suspend a federal subsidy of $60,- man fase ringia in last year’s state election here, Dr. Wilhelm Frick, who be- ho be-| 990 a month to the Thuringian state ame Minister of the Interior in police while “investigating” its fas- Thuringia, immediately proceeded to cization. transform the state police into a fas-| This act on the part of the socia ne mene 8 ama eM i ea SS SN Page Five ~ ASTON SEVEN APPEAL, 1 WEEK BEFORE MAY 1 Mass Political Strike ief Slogan | (Con ed from Page One) murder were K. Y. Hendr' , Fred 3eal, Sophie Melvin, Amy Schech- 2 Bush, Clarence Miller, R. n, W. M. McGinnis, Robert Allen, Joseph Harrison, Louis Me- Laughlin, George Carter, K. 0. Byers, Russel Knight, J. C. Heffner, and Dell Hampton. ter, Ve F. Gib World protest of the working class rang like thunder,, The “| bosses were forced to dismiss charges against 16, and the remain- ing seven were found “guilty of second degree murder,” October 21, and were sentenced the same day to 117 years of prison. They were released on $27,000 cash bail during October and No- tions of the mass or May Day will of the great Gas- May Day will also gle against the attacks on the mass unem- against the ar- rs of the March 6th demonstration, and against the attempts to ilroad the Gastonia seven to jail for their leadership in NEWARK TOILERS | persecutions against the worl point. Under the Jones-White sub-| with the national terrorism against! ganizer has opened up the eyes of | sidy law the government is handing | the Communist Party, T.U.U.L. and| the workers here as to the role of | over $250,000,000 to the shop own- the revolutionary trade unions, the the A. F. L. | ‘ers. But not one penny for unem-| mill owners and Chamber of Com-| Besides that, the southern mill) ployment insurance for jobless sea-| merce have tried by terrorism, jail-| workers haven't forgotten the sell | men. Millions in mail subsidies! ing, throwing of tear gas bombs in outs of 1921. The Fulton bag work- | democrat Severing is only a legal ‘aim of establishing an outright fas-' gesture, since the socialists have no cist dictatorship, intention of really combatting the Frick used his office to legalize | fascists, and after some correspon- fascist organizations in the schools,|dence the subsidy was restored. The which are also under his control, and| same Severing makes every effort to particularly the secret fascis' destroy the German Communist ciety known as the “Eagle and , and is ready to drown the} con League.” |German working class in blood. = | cist guard, openly announcing his ~ HEAR J, PORTER Calls Soldiers to Fight With Workers NEWARK, N. {arch 31.—Hun- dreds of workers jammed a mass meeting here last night at which John Porter spoke on the “United States Army and the Workers.” Porter called upon the workers in soldiers’ and sailors’ uniforms to fight with their own class in the {mighty demonstration on May 1 against unemployment, wage cuts, | the deathly speed-up and the entire |system of wage slavery as well as for the defense of the Soviet Union. Porter, who is now touring the country under the auspices of the International Labor Defense, will speak next at Baltimore, Md., on Fri- day, April 4. Detroit Workers Protest Terror in Greece DETROIT. — Prote: the persecution of the Venizelos gov- ernment of Greece against the Greek workers, the Louis Tikas Branch of the International Labor Defense, here has adopted and sent to Greece and the Greek embassy at Washing- ton,’the following resolution: We Greek workers of the city of Detroit, being informed of the vicious ers of Greece conducted by the Greek go ing against|the public prosecutor is doing his ut- most to bring about a speedy execu- tion of this crime so to immediately illegalize and dissolve the only work- ers’ organization fighting for the sole right of supporting and protect- ing the victims of the white terror of Greece; Condemn this medieval method of the modern Nero, Venizelos and Co.,| and we demand: 1) Full rights of} | free activity to the I.R.A. of Greece; ernment which, by attacking and di General amnesty to all the work- solving the International Red Aid of| ing-class political prisoners; 3) Full Greece, attempts to crush the labor! liberty to all working cla ‘ganiza- movement and thus to terrorize the| tions and the right of political ac- revolutionary workers and peasants} tivity; 4) Down with the criminal of Greece, and being informed that | “Idionymon.” Tells of Brutality By Boss Police Religious in U. 8. S. R. Reject Pope Against . Jobless No such demonstrations have tak- | MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Press} | (Continued from Page One) Service-—The report of the United | en place anywhere. On the contrary, | 80 swollen from the beating and Press, which was eagerly taken up| the firm attitude taken up by the kicking. a number of bourgeois newspa-| Metropolitan against Papal and} “Friday afternon they sent me to and naturally by the social-} Anglican interference in the internal |the Bellevue Hospital, They took according to which| affairs of the Sovict Union in the|x-ray pictures of wy head and t hostile demonstrations of religious! inter of world capitalism, has|/had to stay in bea ever Sunday. believers took place in a Moscow met everywhere with unanimous sup-| Monday I was suppdsed to he all church against the Metropolitan| port and enthusiasm amongst the/right again and got up, Sergius on account of his public! believers, who have every cause to| “I was bailed out by the Inter- statement against the action of the| regard pseudo-friendliness on the} national Labor Defense. But I was Pope and the Archbishop of Canter-) part of the Pope towards the Greek-| still sick from the beatings and | | pers, Three or four! (subyentions) are given the ship bosses. This money is used to fill the pockets of the ship owners and to increase unemployment among the seamen and stevedores in U, S. and ‘other ports. Here’s how it works in| the words of one of the seamen who | worked on one of the Board’s ships not long agp: “The Seamen’s Act provides for| four hours on and eight off for the black gang. (The black gang is the | engine-room workers, coal passers or | firemen; water tenders, oil wipers, | engineers, etc.) These ships get al big pile of dough from the govern- | ment for carrying U. S, mail. When they get into Plymouth, even though | some of the men haven't had a wink of sleep, they put them to work un-| loading mail.” “All hands are put to work, re- gardless of the number of hours’ they’ve been working. Last trip I made we unloaded 8700 bags. No pay for extra work. And they steal jobs from the dock hands on shore. We work six or eight hours unloading. Then the black gang has got to go back to work again groggy. The bells in the | our meetings and raiding and pad-|ers of Atlanta still remember the |Durry, is absolutely without founda-| Orthodox Church with the utmost) got a cold and fever from ithe. cold locking the union headquarters to treacherous’ sell out ofytheir 1916 tion. smash and drive us out of town. strike and the recent sell outs in, 4 ¥ . Dink. ane seas Palate a Ware Shoals, Elizabethtown and the Organized Jobless Plan ines are calling for lynch mobs to i st cy gre out the organizers and a See ye eee iA aleceaiee | MLAY. 1 Demonstration whisper campaign for mob riot has. \; il | started throughout the city of At-| Wi), not be forgotten by the mill) (Continued from Pago One) lanta to prepare for the trial of the! “The answer of the textile workers |the Mouth, They were rushed awa organizers who were arrested before in Georgia to the mill owners and |their names not made public, and the | and at tey MAE OD Oo a \their agents, the A. F, L. and the |incident hushed up. | A. F, L. Campaign Union | U, T. W. will be a real textile work-| Large headlines in the capitalist | However, the mill owners realize | ers conference on April 27 in At-|press yesterday hailed the New| that the workers are organizing into janta, April 27 will be an answer to | York Board of Trade statement that | militant union, under the leadership the wage cuts, and stretch out. |*64 per cent of the employers report | of the N.T.W.U., and although they | April 27 will be an answer to the conditions are no worse than in| prefer to run their mills without any A. F, L., who have come into the|February.’ A careful reading of c | South to help the mill owners smash | the statement shows, however, that | mistrust. (before the city hall at noon on F |day, April 11 (the day the New |York committee repres¢ |goes to trial without a jury in spe- cell. “Last Friday they raised my bail from $1,0U0 to $5,000 and tcok me |to the tombs till the International |Lahor Defense hailed me out again. “Beating up workers doesn’t give jus any jobs or change our minds. | When workers protest against un- ,;¢mployment and starvation and the Non-P |misery the canitalict state can do Children’s School at Coney Island; | nothing but send police, That shows Y., at a meeting held March 24,| yy the whole cavitalist system. The demanded the release of Foster,| workers must organize and fight Minor, Amter, Raymond and Lesten, | and put an end to the whole system and of Harry Eisman, Young Pio-| with its police and radical squad.” neer, sentenced to five years for} taking part in the demonstration. Ti+ ting 110,000 cial sessions court). For Eisman, Too. The Non-Partisan Young Workers’ Write About Your Conditions Channel are ringing all the time (indicating ships in the road) and it’s dangerous business. “But the bosses get the fat sub- | sidies from the government, enough to pay for extra help, yet they squeeze profits out of us at the, risk of our lives. Sometimes the black gang gets only 2 hours sleep out of twenty-four.” Are Ships Factories? Readtabout the “Belt System” and the “Iron Mike” in tomorrow's DAILY Worker. i \the N.T.W.U. and the T.U.U,L. and | betray the workers to the bosses, | SHOW BIG SPEED-UP. | WASHINGTON.—Man-hour pro- ductivity in 11 important manufac- turing industries showed notable it creases from 1914 to 1927, ranging from 24 per cent to 82 per cent for nine industries. For the automobile industry the increase was 178 per cent, and for the rubber tire industry it was 292 per cent, according to the |Bureau of Labor Statistics, The John Reed Unit of Young Pioneers at Sioux City, Omaha, also | demands their release. | Trenton, N. J., is claimed by the! Every new Daily Worker reader workers to have more unemployment you get is a potential Party meme for its size than any other city. |hber. { FS." Eve-Year | 'an Solicarity Drive Answer the Holy Crusade Against the Soviet Union the reports on which this enthusias- | tie statement is based were only 25 per cent of those sent out, that they do not distinguish between the huge | industries and the small garment shcps, ete., where seasonal gains are to be expected, and that, about 12 per cent in the language of the Board of Trade, “show a decrease in employment.” | for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. q Demand Release. i The workers of Philadelphia are | called to a protest demonstration | . Southern Cotton By Myra Page “workers. worked in mill villages and kn “SOUTHERN COTTON MILI of the great struggles in the portion of the body of Amer and merciless, by a scalpel with a Leninist edge.” WILLIAM F, DUNNE, 39 East 125th Street EARLY REVIEWS . "Myra Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile As a southern woman herself, she has lived and read by every worker in order to understand what is back —GRACK HUTCHINS, author of “Labor and Silk.” + « . The author performed a surgical operation upon a which discloses in detail the misery of the masses. no ‘study’ by a social welfare worker. derstanding are there, but primarily it is an incision, sharp Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS Discounts offered on orders in quantity lots Mills and Labor 96 pp. 25 Cents. ie | ows the situation at first hand. LS AND LABOR” should be southern textile field.” ‘ican imperialism, an operation This is Sympathy and un- New York City LAST CALL for WRITE, TELEPHON WORLD TO 175 Fifth Ave. N. ¥. Steamship Tickets to SAILING APRIL 12 ON THE “BREMEN” AND APRIL 16 ON THE “AQUITANIA” MAY Ist ON RED SQUARE! Splendid Vacation—Great Opportunity—Sce the Soviet workers in action! WITH MORE TRACTORS AND TRUCKS for the Five-Year Plan to help the workers and peasants ef the Union Socialist Soviet Republics in building Socialism! MOSCOW ¢ OURD E, CALL PERSONALLY URISTS, INC. Algonquin 6656 Send your contributions to the Friends of the Soviet Union All Parts of the World ‘ ia 175 Fifth Avenue, Room 511. New York City

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