The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 4, 1930, Page 3

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[rin Labor Defense and Left | REYNOLD TOBACCO CO. | METAL WORKERS. STOOLS W ON’T STOP WINSTON-SALEM MEN Tobacco Workers Forced to Slave for $6 to $12 Weekly Wages Thugs Broke Into Office and Stole Typewriter (By a Worker and Mimeograph Correspondent) WINSTON, SALEM, N. C.—The and typewriter, hoping in this way bosses here are scared stiff for fear! that the thousands of tobacco work- | ers, whom they are exploiting like coolies, working them 10 and 11 hours per day for a measley $6 to $14 per week, will organize. The company, according to its own re- port, made $32,000,000 profit for the year 1929-30, while the workers are | slaving for $6 and $12 a week. From early in the morning until late at night, when we are ready to close, the headquarters of the In- Wing Movement in this city are | iguarded by dicks, Every werker | that comes up to the headquarters is immediately followed home and the next day reported to the boss. | The comrades working in the of- fice are daily followed, when they go to eat, when they go home to sleep, or when they go out distribut- ing leaflets. These rats and des-| picable scoundrels, who, instead of going out to work in the mills, like every honest worker does, are daily following and spying on the work- ers in this city. They broke into our headquarters and stole our mimeograph machine to stop us from holding meetings or from distributing leaflets. The work- ers of this city have them beat, though. While the dicks are follow- ing us around, the militant section of the working class of this city is busily engaged in the distribution of leaflets and organizing the rest of the working class into the left- wing organizations, like the Trade | Union Unity League and Interna- tional Labor Defense. Daily our numbers are growing, in spite of the many difficulties con- fronting us. The bosses have an idea that by hiring a gang of dicks and stool- pigeons to follow ug around that we | will get frightened and run away, but they are very sadly mistaken. We are here to stay, to organize the workers for struggle against teeir oppressors and to overthrow the whole capitalist system and put the workers in power; both Negro and white, to struggle for better condi- tions, against lynching, for full se- cial, economic and political equal- ity for Negro workers. Long live the solidarity of both Negro and white workers. —D. M. Young Girls at McK inney Hinge Get 25c An Hour ‘ (By a Worker Correspondent) PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The workers of McKinney Hinge in Pittsburgh sure know what speed-up and star- | vation wages mean. There are sup- posed to be about 500 workers in the plant, making all kind of build- ers’ hardware and supplies. Right | now, due to prosperity, there are) hour; even machinists are working on such rates. Some workers who have families are trying to keep them on 38 cents an hour. We are working only 8 hours a day now, and the workers are even |saying, “I hope we go back to 9 That’s |the point of starvation in the richest | a a ti |hours; we'll make more!” about 100 working, and sometimes | how hard up we are. the plant closes down all day Satur- 7‘ : day. We are taking steps to organize | The women workers, who are|@ shop committee of the Metal) GONFERENCE IN YOUNGSTOWN Meets July 14-15 With Broad Representation | | (Continued from Page Ones | try as a result of the vicious speed-! up system, “The workers in the metal indus- try are particularly hard hit by the} unemployment crisis. Hundreds of thousands of our fellow workers have been permanently eliminated | from industry, and it is almost im-|! possible for a worker at the age of 40 and 45 to secure a job. There are over 7,000,000 workers in the United States who are unemployed, affecting about 20,000,000 people at! country in the world. In Steel Mills. “The introduction of new machin- ery, the vicious speed-up system, followed by a whole series of wage- cuts and cuts in tonnage rates, have| placed the need of organization be-| fore the steel workers as the first order of business. “The open hearth capacity of the| industry increased from 38,000,009| gross tons in 1924 to 56,000,000 in| 1929, While the Bethlehem Steel Corporation reports 166 per cent more profits in 1929 than in 1928,| and the U. S. Steel Corporation re- ports profits of $258,000,000, wages for common labor is as low as 20c an hour in the South and 37c in the Bethlehem plants of the Eastern states, and 35c-45c an hour in Penn- sylvania. “The 12-hour day and the 2-shift system is becoming the main objec-| tive of the employers in the indus-| try. In many plants the 12-hour day, 7-day week is still in existence in such plants as the Illinois Steel, Otis Steel, Crucible Steel, Republic, | Weirton, and Pittsburgh Steel. The | so-called 8-hour day is in existence only in a few mills, and applies only to highly skilled workers. Betrayed by A. F. of L. “The so-called union of the Amal- |gamated Association of Iron, Steel) Jand Tin Workers, completely domi-| |nated by the reactionary bureau-| erats led by Mike Tighe, and Davis, has become a tool in the hands of the bosses to cut wages as evidenced by the average sheet wage scale} which in 1920 was $3.35, in 1928| mostly young girls from 18 to 22, Workers’ Industrial League in this: are hired for 25 cents an hour. If they are put on piece-work the rates are so low that they have to break their necks to make even the day rate, Piece-work is put on rates/| like 50 cents a thousand little pieces, and the workers thave to count the thousands hour after hour, besides working on them, watching their fingers, being careful on the drill and punch presses and other ma- chines, Men are hired for 38 cents an shop, especially with the. young workers who show a lot of pep and resentment as well against the rot- work under speed-up, low wages, unsanitary conditions—all of these things are driving us to organiza- tion, and the Metal Workers Indus- trial League is the organization which is going to lead us in a fight against the bosses of this shop, and —HINGE WORKER. Young Furniture Worker Likes His “Daily” (By a Worker GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—The Daily Worker is my favorite news- paper, as it is to every conscious worker. As soon as a worker re- turns home from work the Daily is found in his hands, reading the news of the labor movement. The Daily Worker is a worker’s paper and we should write to it. The factory that I work in is the same, like the rest in this rich country of “oursJ’ The horrible conditions are also like the rest of the factories. Grand Rapids is the center of the | furniture market and we should have | a strong and mighty union, under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League. The conditions in the factories ure very bad for the furniture workers. Berkey and Gay is one of the largest factories in the making of furniture. The hours are long for Correspondent) from the machines is very thick and weakens the lungs. There are a few fands found—in the bosses’ of- fices. The wages are so small that there isn’t paper dollars that you can save for a rainy day. To earn $20 to $25 a week you must work to a piece-work rate. And the man that can stay on the job of piece- work finishing I call a machine. Many men have come and gone, but they cannot stay, for the system is too fast for anyone. There are so many jobless work- if they can find any sort of work to do, The conditions in the fac- tories are getting from bad to worse. Come on, workers, wake up and fight to the last drop of our red blood. By having a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government on the face of the earth we will have a better world to live upon. young workers. The dust coming YOUNG FURNITURE WORKER. More Truth Than Poetry About Bum Conditions in Construction Camp (By a Worker DEADWOOD DAM, Idaho.—Mor- rison “& Knudson and Utah Con- #teuction have the contract for the dam. Approximately 80 sicves are here, and wages are $4 for 8 hours low. I haven’t made this camp yet, so I can’tesay just how conditions are. Holmburg Norman have the con- tract for the clearing. They are Correspondent) There is no bath house on this job; No place in which our clothes to scrub, This is a rag camp, with dirt floors; The toilets reek with foul odors; We pack nosebags which we put up _ ourselves, We pack baloons in dirty rolls, And sleep on beds of knotty poles; And we walk to and from work on our time, And we work, aye, a pace that kills, in swamp and slime; In the mess hall to stop their slaves ten conditions McKinney make us| in the whole metal industry as well. | ers in this city that they are glad | only $3.00; and in the recent con-| vention of the union in Youngstown. | Mike Tighe again accepted another | wage cut for the sheet and tin divi- | sion. Its actual membership is less | than 6,000. | Metal Manufacturing. “The slashing of piece work rates | {in such plants as the Westinghouse, | | the Western Electric, of over 40 per jeent in the last three months; the eut in wages in the Dover Arsenal |the day after Hoover’s announce- ment that ‘wages must remain high’ |shows the lying propaganda of the; employers and their agents in the! |A. F. of L. Machinists and tool- makers today are working for as | low as 50c and 60c an hour. Automobile Industry. “The Auto Workers are especially suffering under the Hoover ‘pros- perity’. The employers in the auto| industry, facing a shrinking market | and increased profits, are prepar- ing new wage cuts and more speed-; up to make the workers bear the entire burden of the crisis. Ovec| 100,000 auto workers are out of| work in Detroit. The auto workers | produced 210 times as much in 1929! as in 1914, as a result of the intro- |duction of new machinery (con- |veyor systems) and general speed jup. These auto workers are an- swering the bosses’ wage cutting campaign by building the Auto Workers Union as a departmental- ized Section of a new revolutionary | Metal Workers Industrial Union in the United States, Jewelry Section. “In the jewelry section of the in- dustry, wage cuts are in full swing, and as a result of new production methods and speed-up, unemploy- ment is on the increase. Fifty pe cent of the platinum and gold work- | ers are out of work, and the rest work from 20 to 30 hours a week. Twenty per cent of the watchmakers and novelty workers are looking in| vain for jobs. Young girls and boys are gradually taking the place of skilled mechanics for as low as $12.00 a week. In such places as Waltham, Elgin and other great mechanized and modern plants, the workers are completely unorgan- ized, and only recently has the Jew- elry Workers Industrial\League in New York been formed. Women, Youth, Negroes. In this conference, special atten- tion will be given to the organiza-_ tion of women workers, young work- | Putting ’em Down! WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDD SDAY, JUNE 4, *920 ‘A Letter from | Jatl on the | “Daily” Drive | (Continued from Page One) | “Our Party has proven to the workers in the South, col-| ‘ ored and white, that only the! Communist Party and Trade Union Unity League will fight for their interests. And all over the country the Party has, Page Three 7 ss \ YANKEE BANKERSMAKE BOLIVIAN GOVERNMENT AN IMPERIALIST TOY | shhh Meee ng kh President Exiles Vice-President; Resigns Only to Get Re-Elected to Make It Seem Legal Vice-President, Claiming Vacant Post, Is Told to Forget It; Armed Clash Is Possible learned that the wave of strug-| 5°! dispatches give an inter-]on August 6. But Saavedra, who MB aietiae up esting of how Bolivia’s gov-| took refuge in/Buenos Aires, has Se ue bois UP: | z z red the Bolivian cabinet protest- “« ernment, supervised by the Dillon-| ¥/"¢¢ Our Party must reach these |°™P™en SUP’ ‘ : ing that it is “unconstitutional” workers with its propaganda, | eed ® s of Wall Street, is run. | 446 aie to run aevaeteiaeae The workers must be helped in ve yearg ago, ae the “finan-| that he, the vice president has 5 sh ve 2M) cial mission” of Dillon Read which geal Hehe’ anes fe their struggle through its) ;, , ; “ager GOR SREP te ae ere noe eee He is recognized by the U. S. govern-| presidency on the president's re- propaganda and organ Jon.| ment, a « e arose between! moval or ignation, and that since The Daily Worker is a driving ons of an bourgeois igned, he, Saavedra, is fa f outpost of the Party. of ciate, President les exiling| president and orders to chief of | “Again the Daily Worker Nise Ereeaent Abdon Saavedra and) staff of the army to “put itself aaa ass “avenlation | 2 Tumber of congressmen, etc., suP-| under constitutional orders.” He Me De | faces a crisis—of circulation posediy over a dispute about the eae : id te Waar REIN (OER Capitalism devours the workers for profit, and starves and of funds. Facing all the) budget, telah take) office: them when there is no more profit in them. If they com- | attacks of the capitalist class,| Siles’ term of office expir is| The cabinet, doubtless at the plain, capitalists suppress them with lynchings, police clubs, |-it makes a fight to continue y on August 6. S y he) word of U. S. bankers’ agents in heavy jail sentences, outright murder, and the electric chair. | its work. re ened, the sere being ba en| La Paz, the capitals ice pra es By quirt| “Every Party and YCL eae “high re ‘ ons of a t ” “financial i nae ee Dillon. Read, 5 —.-— | member, every member of the/}e had been running the govern-| replied that Saavedra could go ! Trade Union Unity League,! ment without a budget as required) jump in the lake. But Saavedra JOBLESS TOILERS YOUNG NEEDLE every militant worker, work-|by the “constitutio: and the) again addressing the army chief | | ers? club, and fraternal organ-| Saavedra faction accu ed him not| demanded the army uphold the are eg) aes se bate | 0 of dictatorship but of graft.| constitution and assure his safety ueatlOn apay consider tt ite pears that his resignation on return. The general wired back ORGANIZE SELVES Fake Freedom Is Ex:| posed (Continued from Page One) and never would. In effect, he proved the constitution is uncon-| stitutional, and the free speech and free assemblage clauses are put there to fool the masses—they don’t mean what they say. Communis' have said this before, and some of | them have been put in jail for say-| ing it, but now the capitalist spokes- man himself proclaims it. “Free| speech” yes, “free assemblage,” yes, | argues the prosecution, but with} restrictions, suitable to a great com- mercial nation whose streets are primarily for profit making, and not for people to walk on. Back to Blackstone. Charles permitted free assembly —as long as no more than ten were \being waged. duty to help the Daily Work-} er in this crisis. You have WORKERS BLED et ts Pc Must Fight; Will Be At) to help many times again. The .. 7 : revolutionary press depends on| Union Convention the working class alone. | Especially bad conditions for) “The circulation of the Daily | young workers in the needle trades} Worker must be increased— are pointed out by a statement in| eyery worker must procure the Needle Trades Workers Voice,| cubs, The Daily Worker must| organ of the Needle Trades Work- eid ak of ates: hl ers Industrial Union, which urges| be sold at factory gates, union that many young workers be sent) meetings, at fraternal organ- as delegates to the national con-| izations, ete. vention of the union, in New York, “The Daily Worker must be June 6-7-8 | ‘ A ichti : ' ight het aniod Ene: vered (thes inta) Mace ene ee eh he tiation fee for young workers, and| Paper of the American work- considers there must be at least| ing class. This requires work 1,200 of them in the 10,000 new re-| —YOUR work. | “On the job then comrades The Daily Worker has sent up for Saavedra to send his orders to the Minister of War. The matter merely a game to leave the gov- ernment in hands of his clique in the cabinet, which would call an) rests there at present. “election” of a new “national as-| Saavedra’s faction counts on sup- sembly” that would. re-elect him,| port of many army officers, and thus giving his dictatorship some formal legal standing. {among the civilians of the “Na- tional Defense League” organized The “election” was called for| by the faction around jingoist slo- June 27 for the assembly which| gans for war against Paraguay, ap- was called for July 28, thus putting| parently trying to best Siles on Siles back in power legally before| this service to American imperial- the deadline of his regular term ism. i Soviet Union Presses Drive on Illiteracy * Thirty-six peoples, with a total of 30 million persons, have adopted the new alphabet, declared the repre- sentative of the Central Committee, Kulbesherov. Today illiteracy has been abolished to the extent of 10 per cent, whilst under the old Ara- bian alphabet only one or two per |cent of the population could read MOSCOW (LP.S.).—A great dem- | onstration of toilers took place re- cently before the Soviet house in Alma-Ata, where the plenary ses- sion of the Central Committee de- cided on the introduction of the La- tinized Turkish alphabet. The scien- assembling; Blackstone defends this, | the English law is the root of the constitutional provision, and the sentence at the end of the vicious| statute under which Foster, Minor, | Amter, Raymond and Lesten were} convicted, which says that nothing| in the statute shall prohibit the as-| sembling of the people to present) their grievances to the government | —is just a codification of the con-| stitution. Time after time (Ben- venga cited the cases) the high! courts have held that workers can’t | use the streets or gather to make | speeches if the police don’t give) them a permit to do so. | And there’s your “constitutional | right of free speech and assem- blage.” Elder, for the workers now in jail, pointed out that the ordinance pro- hibiting parades without a permit is drawn so that the police can use their own discretion practically as to granting a parade permit and absolutely as to what restrictions to put on it, thus, in the language of the constitution, “abridging” the right of assembly. He also pointed out that if you violate this ordinance and parade you get $10 fine or 10 days, but if you merely assemble for the purpose of breaking it (the eharge against the jobless leaders) | vou get three years. | The defense argues that both! these laws are violations of the) constitution, and that the wrong | one was used to convict the leaders. | It was also shown with a wealth | ot detail that 110,000 workers and jobless on March 6 desired to use the streets to walk on them, nom- imally their purpose, to the seat of government and protest starvation. The police commissioner ruled that he streets were first for the busi- ness of profit making, for business men and business traffic, and the | workers could not use them, The | parade ordinance is thus used to} prohibit the assemblage of workers | at the seat of government, one ef | their intentions on March 6, AUTO BOSSES } JAIL ANYBODY | ¥ 7 Stead | Fisher Body Co. Has Arrangement With Police; No Charge Needed. MEMPHIS, Miss., June 3—Wwe| always give first preference when) there is a job open to a man who! cruits for which a campaign is now The statement says: A Y l. Ev 7 5 Sa moilovi t een . Every work-|tist, Samoilovitch, appealed to the Me\/candition) of these young | 7 tees Sent y | workers in the various sections of | the needle trades are becoming} worse from day to day. The bosses | S s ” jassembled workers to do everything | or write. In Tatarstan, where great er must respond. lto support the new alphabet as a|resistance was offered to the new great step forward to the cultural | alphabet, 22 per cent of the popula- revolution in the East. ition can. now read and write. Tom Mann Greets | Jobless Leaders) sistent of revolutionary trade union- | hope to solve the economic crisis in the United States by introducing the rationalization schemes in every industry, “As a result of this scheme which ill we find in the (Continued from Page One) one of the sturdiest and most con- es Smaller Doles for German Unemployed “ BERLIN (L.P.S.).—Recently the budget committee of the Reichstag marks annually should be made in connection with the unemployment does away with ; iy fy Soe een aioe Wane com: lists; T'send my warmest message of commenced to debate the budget of / insurance and health insurance létdl sections aa well as big fac-|a comrade’s admiration, also to my the Reichs ministry of Inbor. The )echemes, He also proposed an in- ae eta dren factories “in| triend, Bob Minor, with whom 1| labor minister, Stegerwald (center| crease of contributions under the unemployment insurance scheme and | have campaigned in past years. If | my message can reach them, please |let them know that every day they jare in prison we shall have them in mind and be stimulated to ¢on- |tinue the revolutionary work in |which we and they have put years jof energy and which will result in | the overthrow of capitalism and so |solve and remove the causes of un: | employment. | “Go ahead, comrades, and be as- Philadelphia) where young workers are mainly employed. In the white goods line because of the section work, simple power machines, we find mostly young workers. “In the dress and millinery sec- tions, young girls who are getting from $10 to $15 per weck for nine or ten hours work per day are con- stantly replacing the adult women and men workers. Thousands of un- skilled young workers, such as ship- ping boys, etc., get no more than /sured that there are thousands upon $10 2 week for 10 to 12 hours work | thousands with corresponding devo- a diy.” |tion engaged in the work to get lrid of the rotten system now cur- sing the world, young and old coun- tries alike, We hope you will carry on an agitation that will result in |the release of our comrades, and jwe are confident that whatever re- sults you wili turn it to good ac- count for the advancement of the one great thing that matters to the NEW LIGHT ON HIGHER STRATEGY OF SELL ‘OUT The United Textile Workers’ Union, controlled by Muste, bo that it is holding back the workers | \oriq’s workers—the Revolution, of Danville, Pa, from striking Fraternally yours, against their bitter exploitation. “TOM MANN.” The U. T. W. spokesmen say: . “A newer and higher strategy is | ployers to show them how to sav eing worked out by the A. I. of L. | money; from the saving it is hoped in the South to win the cotton mills | to shorten hours and raise wages. to unionism. The no-strike policy} “Part of the plan is the education has been combined with features of | of workers to co-operate with the the B. and 0. plan of union-man-| mill owners. This is being worked agement co-operation to convince | out by Paul Fuller of the Wor! the mill barons that profits can be | Education Bureau, co-operati increased as well as wages. Engi- | with Engineer Geoffrey Brown of neering service is being offered em- the A. F, of L.” firm delivers to you only h union drivers, J tx 100% union our Catholic party), took the floor sev- | eral times and insisted that reduc-|a reduction of benefits under the tions to the extent of 1,500 million | health insurance scheme. Poh a Leningrad and Ivanovo-Vossnes- sensk during the third and fourth quarter of the current economic year 1920-30. One hundred and twenty thousand textile workers are affected. Soviets Put 120,000 More on 7-Hour Day MOSCOW (LP.S.).—The gov- | ernmental committee for the in- troduction of the 7-hour day in the Soviet Union has decided to introduce the 7-hour day in 36 | large textile factories in Moscow, | At Last! return trip to the SOVIET UNION! (and under the auspices of the World Tourists) Sailing June 28 on the MAURETANIA and July 16 on the BERENGARIA, Register Now! The Rush Is On! Remarkable Vacation and Opportunity to See the Five-Year Plan at Work. $280 Write, telephone or call personally Pon? TOURISTS 175 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Algonquin 6656 of the world can be obtained at the (Tickets to all pa y D TOURISTS, INC.) w OFF THE PRESS ! Special Convention Issue of TE COMMUNIST Central Organ of the Communist Party of the U. S. paying $5 for 8 hours low. The board is $1.50 per day, and not of the best quality. There are about 75 men in this camp, and conditions are fairly rotten. They can best be expressed in the following poetry: from whining, Is this sign, in huge letters, “No talking while dining.” But some day these slaves will take a fall, noe And realize that “unorganized” explains it all. “Pittsburg Steel Worker” Greeted by Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) PITTSBURGH, Cal.—The distrib-; The capitalist class became alarm- ution of the first issue of the “Pitts-|}ed ,and big head lines, “Red May burgh Steel Worker,” the organ of Day Riots Reared Here,” receiving ers and Negro workers, all of whom Mes recommended by the police | Fisher Body Co. “In return, they and greater percentage of the whole , lo little favors for us. as the boss brings them in wit! and worsen conditions, Complete here we telephone downtown and equality, equal pay for equal work,|/ ask for one of them to come out is the key to their organization, |and get him. They lock him up of which a program and methods @ breach of the peace is threatened. of organizatioa on a national scale,| “Then some time later, when we to bring the 4,500,000 metal work-/ get ready to have him let out, we ers in U. S. together in a powerful pass the word along and he is re- class union, is to be made up of one leased. No charges are brought | Once we are entering the field in greater and 8" deputy sheriffs,” explained the | greater numbers forming a greater Suide at the Memphis plant of the | When there | the idea of using them to cut wages | is a man who makes trouble out) The Youngstown conference, out| Without charges, on the ground that | A MAGAZINE OF MARXIST-LENINIST THEORY AND PRACTICE Contents ‘I Nores of THE mMonrn ||| Major ‘Tasks nefore Read This Paper Regularly! Send in your subscription and we will send it to you by mail every day. Ask workers who work with you and live near you to subscribe. Two Months $1.00 the Seventh Convention of the ©.P, U.S.A. By MAX BEDACHT The Crisis in the United States and the Problems of the . WS.AL Some Burning Organizati Y Some Problems tn the Building of District Leadership By J. STACHEL re in the y One Year $4.00 \]]| New ‘Trends of Agriculta B Three Months $1.50 Six Months 83.00 A “Fellow Traveler ing's Latest Boo “My Life” by L. Trotsky——-—-Reviewd by W. DAILY WORKER the shop nucleus of the party in the U. S. Steel Corporation, Pittsburgh, California, made quite an impres- sion in the plant. In one depart- ment, copies were placed in many parts of the mill, where workers could get them. The stories of shop conditions roused favorable com- ment the first page of the “Pittsburgh Dispatch.” Every police officer in Pittsburgh was mobilized for active duty and stationed near the Uy 8. Steel mills, the chemical work, the lumber mills and other plants along Antioch Road. Workers here are waiting for the next number of the “Pittsburgh Steel Worker.” STEEL WORKER, delegate for each 20 members in the league, one from each shop com- mittee, Council of the Unemployed, or rank and file committee of ac- tion; one or two from local unions of the A. F. of L., and one from each group of unorganized workers. Credentials should be sent to Metal Workers Industrial League, Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 611 BAYLO BECK—WRITE TO BOX 75 DAILY WORKER | against him at any time. ;had @ Negro locked up. He stayed | there @ month and a haif, and then jone day they asked us what we in- tended doing with him. We had forgotten all about him!” ‘ 26 Union Square | A] New York City I hereby subscribe for NAME \|) Boo neviews. | Combination Offers: ' S CORRESPONDENCE, one year tin y +++ 186,00 COMMUNTSY, one y TY ORGANIZER, yenr ‘ PHER WITH GH COD Si, one year... SEND ALL ORDERS AND SUBS TO WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 89 BAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY

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