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* DAILY W ahs cut ‘ URN GAS OFF NN UNEMPLOYED IN CANTON, OHI onditions Worsen Day y Day for Workers Canton, 0. the Daily Worker: am a worker from Canton, Ohio Shortly after May laid off with a lot of pr workers from my job and e been out of work ever since. } am a married man with three jdren and my landlord says pay j your rent by the 20th of this oth or I will throw you out. I i never seen anything mentioned ut the conditions here in Canton wondered if you would publish Many Lay-Offs, hey are laying men off here nt and left, but some they say y will leave them work if they work for about half the wages y are getting. There are thou- 1s of workers here, are in worse pe than I am, Hundreds of have had their gas turned off use they could not pay and must cook their food. What le they have over open fires in back lot, or any way they can y of them are beginning to see the Communist Party is for all <ers and are giving their sup- I have not been a member » but I say Hurrah for the pmunist Party and Soviet Rus- S. I hope to write more about conditions here later if I may. RCH ON ERIE OLICE STATION rt of Preparations or Demonstration IRIE, Pa., Aug, 1.—After a very essful mass meeting here in paration for the anti-war and nd the Soviet Union demonstra- | | tomorrow. the workers marched fhe police station. ley were determined to make it that the demonstration will be temorrow. ght were arrested in today’s af- /HICAGO, TL, Aug, 1—From 1 84 of the Window Washers, kk Wilbur, an active worker, expelled. Wilson, the national nizer, was present at the meet- when Wilbur voted against the ase in dues for the local union. membership all voted against proposition, but Wilbur was the tanding spokesman, and he was ediately thrown out. When he to the place of his work, he met by Wilson and “Monkey ” Taylor. They told him that have “gotten rid of the rest ie Reds” and they will now get f him and have “peace” in the n. Wilbur, is not a Communist, he is a militant worker who ht against the reactionary ; ks and bufeaucrats. He fought » union-wrecking policies, st about 2% years ago, the iow washers had about a thou- members in Chicago, now ie is only about 200 members The large number of them are ployed and the bureaucrats are to squeeze out from the few remained all they can. ilber was expelled without a —A CANTON WORKER. | Chemicni W oer ‘i disability, ete. Cut Wages of Editor the Daily Worker: New York City hospitals. wages also reduced from $85 and one meal, living out, which meant paying for room rent, 2 meals and often carfare, to $70 a month and one meal. Work 12-Hour Day Now all these employees put in 12 hours a day—7 a, m. to 7 p. m. —with a break in the afternoon of 2 hours and a day off each week. Ni '* time 12 hours straight. After 6 months service you get $2.50 a month increase, one year $5 a month. Surely not much, As for the food it is usually very bad and served to you like hogs; employees are classified and dis- criminated against; nurses get good ot privileges and are usually very supercilious and domineering. They are trained differently while in the nurses training school. As for the sleeping quarters of the porters and orderlies, etc., they usually are a big dormitory—no privacy, a dis- grace to the New York City Ad- ministration. In addition to the conditions under which these work- ers are housed ,and in addition to the above expenses, they have to buy uniforms, pay for laundry, not only for their uniforms but their civilian clothes, ete. There are about 18 or 20 city hospitals scattered all over the 5 boroughs of New York City, the world’s richest and great- est city—for whom? Visit them and see for yourself. The writer has personally seen the conditions in King’s County Hospital, Bklyn., and in Welfare Island. Tammany Crooks Previous to the scandal in the King’s County Hospital, orderlies and porters got $30 a month and then were raised to $45; since that time it has been reduced to $40. The investigation that followed was a faree as far as food and living conditions were concerned. As usual the authorities of the hospital know when a city official is coming, and are prepared—they give a good meal then. The city officials should come unawares, but this cannot be evened since they tell the authori- ties when and where thy are com- ing. As you know, the city officials of New York had their salaries raised last year; this year the mayor in- creased his own by $15,000 a year and so on down the line of the en- tire corrupt city administration. I am writing as an ex-service man; as a citizen who believes in and up- holds the constitution of the United States. A great number of people today are trying to suppress the Constitution, many of them sre workers who keep their fellow workers in subjection because that is the only way they can nake a living. They must he suffering from an inferiority complex. I shall --ote a i. more facts some other time for 2 do not want to take With Tammany O. K. and Aid quarters, good food and all kinds | 0d Workers of Pennsylvania : Ya. with starvation, when an indefinite lay-off goes into effect soon. | Contrary to the poisonous lies spread by the capitalist press, the | wood workers in the Soviet Union are having their wages increased, and are secure against hunger, being patd social insurance for sickness, Hospital Help New York City. Dear Comrade:—With reference to salaries and conditions in the Salaries during the last year were reduced for porters and orderlies and also attendants, etc. The first two got $45 a month and were cut to $40 a month, board and room, while the latter named had to be men o' experience doing nurses work, ete..@—-——-—— SOVIET WORKERS INGREASE DAILY Unemployed Trained for Industry Bronx, N. Y. Daily Worker: To the Editor: This question arose during a dis- cussion on unemployment in Soviet | Russia. We couldn’t reach a satis- | factory conclusion and are there-) fore forced to go to a more informed | authority, The Question | Why should there be unemploy- ment in Russia? Why cannot the government reduce the number of working hours so that more men will have to be taken on the em- ployed list? The wages of others can be cut proportionately to pay the new workers. Since the unemployed get unemployment insurance the amount of the reduction of the wages cannot be very much. We hope you will have the indul- gence to give an answer. Yours truly, Jack Brooks. . * * Editorial Note: A concise survey of this question was made in an article in the Daily Worker of Sat- urday, July 19, 1930, page 4, called Unemployment in the U.S.S.R. But a brief resume would be in place here, Building basi¢ machine-metallur- wie chemical and electrical giant in- dustries, there is an acute shortage of skilled workers, technologically trained, in the Soviet Union. Week- ly an’ yearly the industrial and ur- ban workingclass shows an absolute incresse as such workers are trained and rlaced into socialist industry. Thousands of peasants are at- tracted to the cities. They must pass through a definite period of training to even handle machinery, ete. Women workers and young workers likewise, The unemployed (the majority of whom are women) are precisely those, who while they get insurance, rent, cultural privi- leges, ete. are training or waiting to be absorbed as technologically fit for the great industries now in con- struction, 12 Years in the New York City, Dear Editor:— Starving in Park Row Park ORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1930 U JOBLESS STARVE IN THOUSANDS |Workers Must Fight Bosses for Bread pests Albany, N. Y. Daily Worker: I went to look for a job and found jliable) workers are jobless around here, walking around’ looking for | work. A man who lived in Albany | for 15-20 years and with whom |I became acquainted told me | conditions were terrible. Before one of the factory gates here some jobless workers got into |a discussion and here is what they said: (1) What the hell do the | bosses want to do, starve them to jhell, (2) it looks like the bosses jare doing it, (3) like hell they will starve. If they are to die they will die with a fight on their hands and jnot quietly. | Workers Are Starving. A few days later I went to a town called Ravena and stopped in a delicatessen store. After me there came in a worker 6 foot tall and about 180 lbs. in weight and asks for something to eat. He said he went out looking for work yes- terday morning and walked 50 miles and came back without a job, While this worker was telling his story about 5 others came in with hungry looks asking for something to eat. The storekeepers start running around wild, The workers have no money and buy on credit and the bills keep piling up. “What is it coming to?” the store-keepers say. But the workers have no work and have no food. of —WM. SHIFRIN. Williamsport Lunch Workers Get Wage Cut Williamsport, Pa. Daily Worker: Another sample of Hoover pros- | perity. “NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES: Effective on our next pay day, July 21st, 1930, there will be a reduction of $2.00 on your regular salary. Business conditions make it im- perative to make this reduction at this time. We sincerely hope con- ditions make this only temporary. “Alco Lunch.” ~—FOOD WORKER. Glass Workers Have Their Woll Too Cincinnati, O. Daily Worker, Comrades: Enclosed find some clippings from the capitalist papers. In your issue of Friday, July 25, you expose Matthew Woll, who is as you stated one of the miserable slimy creatures that regularly crawl into the work- ingelass organizations for the pur- pose of disruption or betrayal. I belong to the American Flint Glass Workers Union and Wm. Clark is the president, He is a bed fellow of Woll and Green, GLASS WORKER. Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. Army, Is Now Why don’t you. when you have your big unemployment day, have PSTATE N.Y. JAIL CONDITIONS | FOR POSTAL MEN; MUST ORGANIZE! | Bosses Gov't Niggardly | Towards Employees Eee, | Chicago, Ill. Editor, Daily Worker: | I am employed as a clerk in the} Though the capitalist governmen of the U. S. is supposed to be the; richest in the world, yet the working conditions in the post office are} worse than in any private concerns. | Only organization into the Trade Union Unity League and strike struggle will win for these workers, as for all unorganized workers, wages and conditions and insurance against the threat of unemploy- ment, The U. S. Government runs true to all traditions of the rich class, the more money it accumulates the tighter it holds on to it and the more raiserably it becomes towards its employes. Real Bosses Conditions. In many respects the post office is like a prison. Every person in the post office is known to the boss- es only by his number. When a person comes to work, he not only has to punch the time clock but he has to check in at another desk so that the government will be doubly sure that the workers come on time. The same procedure is followed when quitting work. Monotonous Work. The work is very monotonous whether it is sorting mail in cases or working by the machine. Sorting mail in the cases is especially hard on the eyes, Nearly three out of every five persons wear glasses be- cause theiy vyes have to be glued on one place all the time. If a worker turns his eyes for a second to rest them and if a foreman hap- pens to see him, the foreman im- mediately piles on more letter to sort so that the worker wouldn’t have time to curn around again. Bad Sanitary Conditions. Dust permeates the whole place and quite a lot of it gets into the {lungs of the workers. If a workers remains in the post office long enough he can easily get tubercu- losis. Most of the men who have worked there over five years look like consump ives, with their pale faces, hollow cheeks and black spots under their eyes. If a worker wants to go to the toilet he must go up to a desk where a foreman puts down his number ir a book and the time he left. The maximum amount of time allowed is fifteen minutes. Some men have stomach trouble but they never dare take a physic for if the book shows | they have goné more times in a week than the foreman thinks they should have gone, the workers are given their walking papers. Slave Driving Foremen. The foremen and section bosses | watch the workers like hawks. If one is seen talking to the worker next him, a foreman comes up to him, takes his number which usually means a bad mark against him and say “You better stop talking, the bess won’t stand for it.” Just like in a prison and yet some ignorant and deluded American justify this| kind of a life. Espionage Too. The post office has a rigid and comprehensive spy system. Spies arc placed among the clerks, work- ing by their side so that they worker is suspisious and hostile to the other worker. The workers are afraid to talk freely of their ideas and troubles because they might becon- fiding to a stool pigeon who would immediately snitch to the big boss. Sc it can be seen that working for the U. S. Government in the post office is even worse than working fo. the U. S. Government in a prison. We get sixty-five cents an hour. We earn every cent we get and de- serve many pennies we don’t get. Business is very slow and most of the time we work only about three or four hours a day. How cana man support a family on $16 or $17 a week? But the bosses are not worried about that, they leave these “small” problems for the work- Try to Revive‘ Garrison, N. D. Daily Worker: Some of the politicians of the now defunct Non-Partisan League are talking about “reorganizing” the League in the state. Press reports state that the League “members” ol = “ WALL ST. CLUB STARVES HELP Workers Must Join Food Workers Union New York, To the Editor of the Daily Worker: I am a waiter working in one of the richest clubs in Wall Street. We get $1.50 for four hours’ work. In case we get sick they dock us for three days. That means we lose $4.50 for staying out one day. In case we stay out two days they won’t let us work for the rest of the week. Get Rotten Food. The food that they give us to eat is terrible. They mix up scraps of beef, lamb, pork, wings and necks of chicken, skins of ham, in one pot with potatoes and brown gravey. But, no matter how hungry we are, we can’t eat that kind of food. Once in a while we get toothpicks in the food. We serve the best of food to the members, but they give us the worst. In case some food is left over from the members they don’t allow us to keep it in some place so we can eat it when we get finished. Must Work Elsewhere, Too. Of course we can’t exist with what we get in this place. Have to work (extra) for dinner 4:30 to 9 o'clock in one of the best restau- rants in Brooklyn. Food and work- ing conditions are the same here. The boss compels us to pay $65 a year for uniforms that belong to the house. Never needed so much money for uniforms in one year, Now we pay that much and the uniforms don’t belong to us. Hoping that you will publish my letter, but not my name. HOTEL AND RESTAURANT WAITER. T.U.U.L. Active in Ind., Indianapolis, AsIs“Daily” INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Editor, the Daily Worker, Dear Comrades: You will find enclosed a few clippings out of one of our local bosses’ paper that may be of in- terest to you. Things are grow- ing worse here daily regarding employment. Our Trade Union Unity League is making wonderful progress thanks to the Daily Workers for its part. To Be Thrown Out Corpse; Farmers Want Fight of Work Soon ‘Non Partisan” have rolled up their sleeves and show a new “glint” in their eyes. Paid workers are to be used in “reorganizing” this dead corpse. The “Progressive,” La Follette’s paper, published at Madison, Wisc., will be «distributed among the farmers. There will be precinct organizations and county committees. The time, we are told by the League state- ments, is now here for some “real | fight.” | Farmers Not Fooled No farmers must be fooled by this maneuver of the League politicians. In 1928, in 1926 and in 1924, at- tempts were made to “reorganize” the League, but these fell flat be- cause of lack of support from the farmers. The present move of “re- | organization” will be just as inef- | fective. No Program Why can’t the League be reorgan- ized? Because it has no program for the farmers. Its program is merely a capitalist program and the farmers have long ago lost faith in this kind of a program. Because the League has no program, many farmers think they might just as well support the I.V.A. ticket, the big business candidates. Farmers! Support Communist Party! The farmers want to know what they can do about high taxes, inter- est and debts and monopoly prices. They are ready for a real struggle, not harmless capitalist programs. The nited Farmers League has the only program for the poor farmers. This program calls for tax-payers’ strikes, tenants’ strikes, cancellation of debts for poor farmers, a fight on monopolist prices, etc. Farmers must cease depending upon the legislatures and the Congress to give any relief. They must fight on} their own battlefields with their own weapons, aided by the workers. —FARMER,. Strike Against Wage-Cuts: Demand Unemployment Insurance! Sounds of Revolt Murmuring sounds, rumbling sounds, menacing sounds! Slowly the slaves are awakening, And long have they sslept in their slavery. The masters have laughed at their misery and dreams No more do they laugh... . Murmuring sounds, rumbling sounds, menacing sounds! Why don’t you laugh, Ah pious Master! ’Tis strange that your inherent eco- nomic laws And your mighty God of old No longer hide the chains of slavery, Or still those awful sounds. Murmuring sounds, rumbling sounds, menacing sounds! The masters are troubled and fear- ful Lest the chains that are hidden from sight SEES GROWING CRISIS IN ALL SECTIONS USA Organize and Strike Against Lay-Offs Somewhere in the States. Daily Worker: Facts gathered on a ttip across have been interested in the |the following: main post office in the gang-ruled the country: pmunist Party for some time but My first stop was in Albany, |City of Chicago. Some people seem Oil fields in Bakersfield, Cal. shut cr joined the Party till last! Paid low wages under an intense speed-up system, these ch ; ;Where I got the Press and found to have the foolish notion that work- Chemical wood workers of Northern Pennsylvania, over whose | aun a Says pee ww wage: le 5 m, se chemical | o4 ? lf A i easure. | x 5 * 3 aor k, I joined the United Motal] 07 towers in ohe faglaniaciuad ‘Sheffield, Pan are now threatemat {out that 5,280 (official and not re- |ing for the government is a pleasure.! 4.445 hangs the ominous threat of an indefinite layoff during August. | Qj] fields in Long Beach, Gai ion. aA working on half time. Ford plant in Long Reach, Cas. working on two-thirds time. Wages of the copper miners in Arizona, Nevada, and Montana, cut ten per cent, Farmers in Nebraska ean’t har- vest wheat because they have no money with which to pay wages to the workers, Cut Engineer’s Wages, An engineer who installs sound apparatus for the Western, Electric Company told the following story: Each engineer was given 5 days to install an apparatus and seven days to instruct the operators, Now they are given 2 days to install and 4 days to instruct. At the same time 132 men have been laid off since March. Men were paid between 50 and 60 dollars a week. Now they are being paid 30 dollars. Hundreds of families have left their homes in northern Michigan and are following the highway to wherever it will take them. The oil fields in northen Pennsyl- vania are working at. half, time. The coal mines in the same _ter- ritory are practically shut down A large glass factory in northern Pennsylvania has cut its force. The railroad shops in Marshall- town, Iowa, employ workers for 3 days a week. The railroad shops ‘and steel mills in Gary and Hammond, Ind., have cut down and laid off thou- sands of workers. The workers are feeling the crisis and are seeking relief. Many of those to whom I spoke showed a desire to organize and struggle. NMU MUST FIGHT UMWA MD, THUGS Barton Toiler Defies Cowardly Gangsters Barton, Md. Daily Worker, Dear Comrades: I went to the United Mine Work- ers meeting Sunday to distribute about 30 Daily Workers, and expose the fakers who were holding the meeting, if I got a chance to speak. But I saw that they had the meeting sewed up tight. It was held at the Lonaconing ball park. The speaker was an organizer sent in by the U.M.W.A. to reor- ganize the miners. So I started t+ give out Daily Workers. “When two fellows told me if I didn’t cut it out I would get hell knocked out of me, I said, “Oh, yes! You and who else is going to do that?” With that I continued to hand Daily Workers right and left. There were about 259 at the meeting. Thad just given them all out when ten thugs went through the crowd forcing those that had gotten the Daily Worker to destroy them. When they wouldn’t do it the paper was torn from their hands and destroy- ed. Some of the workers put their paper in their pockets. When they saw what was taking place one thug asked me to take a walk with him and I said sure. White Livered Thugs. When we started, four others started with us. I asked him how many were going. Hegsaid five. Imagine five big mento, lick’ one little man. I only weigh 130 pounds. None of them were under 180. I é a a am 28 J hope and wish you would print|a big parade from the Battery Park| ers to puzzle out. Soon the day will Your comrade, Be seen and be burst asunder. told them they were a bunch of ATTLE LABOR DEFENSE STRICT CONVENTION BATTLE, Wash. Aug. 1.—The + conference of the northwest ‘ict of the International Labor onse was held at 110 Cherry )Seattle, July 19 and 20. There 55 delegates present from the aches throughout the district, Communist Party and the Young munist League, unions and frat- ial organizations. The district nizer, Yetta Stromberg, re- ied on her tours throughout the wvict, which were used to build strengthen the already estab- cd branches as well, as to or- le new branches. The big ‘aigns, the Centralia cases, the Mooney and Billings cases » discussed. slegates from the different ches reported for their branch- A healthy spirit of self-eriti- prevailed. Delegates pointed he shortcomings of the district branches, the local problems, gave practical suggestions for coming these shortcomings, district committee of 15 was up any more of your valuable space. Good Luck Good health, luck and success to you and all the staff in your noble, self-sacrificing work for the eman- cipation of the proletariat and to educate them to have a superiority complex and not to have an inferi- ority complex as most of the work- ers now have, even though they have made and produced everything on this earth, Yours fraternally, FRANCIS BESTON. * 8 8 P. S.—The “Chief,” a civil serv- ice newspaper published in Beeke man St. N, Y. C. wrote some time ago that all N. Y. City employees would have to be citizens and that the “Chief” would publish in the following week’s issue the salaries of N. Y. C. hospital employees, It was never published. I wonder why? Workers Relief Committee Arrested (Wireless By Inprecorr) BUCHAREST, Aug. 1, — The Workers Relief Committee at Klaus- enberg was arrested and tortured ‘1 ed with an executive committee ‘fpven, which meets every week. ’ nrison. The police declared that re- lief work is Communist propaganda. this in your paper, the Worker. their editorial columns. Veteran's Story, Now this is my story. the 69th Regiment, Infantry, fo twelve (12) years up till about two I even fought with the 69th, which was the} years ago, when I resigned. 165th Infantry in the world war, Today I am out of work for over three months. Does Uncle Sam look after me? The hell he does. And there are thousands of world war vaterans in New York City who can say the same thing as I do, “The hell with this country and the flag.” Now, I would fight for the Rus- sian army tomorrow, because I would love to see the United States army get beat. It would take the swell head out of them and at the same time would make them look out for the boys who fought in the world war, I am no foreigner. 1 was born and raised on the East Side, New York. I always loved my country and its flag, but today just hate it. Here I am starving in Park Row Park, a world war veteran who fought for Uncle Sam, and today Uncle Sam can’t find work for me. Daily I wrote my story to the New York newspapers, and so far they have not printed my story in I was in parade, cers all the men who are out of to Union Square? Say the parade would start at 8 o'clock and would reach Union Square at 5, Show New York brokers and rich men all the men that are out of work. Carry banners and signs. Say join in sol- diers and sailors, men of the world war who are out of work. I bet if you had this parade from Battery Park right up Broadway to Union Square it would be crowded with thousands of men who are out r of work. Gee, I wish you would have this Show “the down-town offi- work, A 69th Regiment soldier, gassed and shell-shocked jn the world war, now starving in Park Row Park. ~—A VETERAN OF THE WORLD WAR. . . . Editorial Note:—Workers and ex- soldiers who are beginning to see that the capitalist system is one of mass starvation, of unemployment, But it is composed of men who were U | | of war, must be on the watch against |of the workers means the winning moods of individual vengeance. The United States army today is the tool of the government of the bankers and big bosses—Wall Street, workers and farmers, The bulk of| come when the workers are going to surprise the bosses by a world-wide revolution as a solution to their problems. A Post Office Clerk. Resume “With the Shop Papers” Column Next Week The SHOP PAPERS column will reappear weekly starting with Saturday, August 7 on the Letters from the Shops page. All districts, sections and shop | | nuclei issuing shop papers are | urged to send copies for critical review in the With the Shop Papers Column. Send to Workers Correspondene Dept., Daily Work- er, 26-28 Union Sq., New York. —_— conscripted armies are composed of workers. Part of the revolutionary struggle of decisive sections of the bosses’ army (the proletarian elements) to the side of the revolution, to aid in | mittee which is in session now. R. H. A. GANDHI ORGANIZATION WON'T STOP SELL OUT BOMBAY, India, Aug. 1,—The Indian National Congress (Gandhi's organization) has a working com: It | refuses to say whether it will con- sider and pass on the negotiations for sell-out of the independence movement by Gandhi, The negotia- tors, Jayakar and Sir Tej Baha Bahadur Sapru are now again on their way to Gandhi, with a note from Nehru, suggesting some modi- fications of the plan. They were sent by that creature of British im- perialism, the Indian National leg- islature. The only decision announced so far by the congress is a plea to boycott the elections. Chervonetz Forger Arrested in Bern the establishment of a revolution- ary workers’ and poor farmers’ gov- | ernment | (Wireless by Inprecorr) RASLE, Aug. 1,.-The chorvon- etz (ten ruble note) forger, Karu- Hide them better, Oh treacherous masters! Strengthen the chains that bind the slaves! | Murmuring sounds, rumbling sounds, menacing sounds! You laugh no more, Oh masters, The Spectre haunts you now; The workers’ blood that you have Shed chokes you. "Tis well that it does! Murmuring sounds, rumbling sounds, menacing sounds! Continue and grow ever louder. yellow curs and I invited them to come one ata time, but they would not do that, So when all the people saw what cowards they were they had to content themselves with fore- ing me by weight of numbers to leave the meeting. The speaker tried his best to in- cite a movement for my destruction, but I left in peace. Most of these miners hate the U.M.W.A., so I don’t know how successful the meet- ing was. But I know that thev are doing their best to get all the miners back to the U.M.W.A. So I am go- ing to give them all the opposition can. rt it? gs to shoulder they are march- ing: Black, white, yellow and brown, The toilers, irresistibly advancing. Murmuring sounds, rumbling sounds, REVOLUTIONARY sounds! Up! Courageous fighters! Toilers, brothers all! Win the product of your labors! Fight! The right is wi the mighty! B, E. sy “fetal Worker, Los Angeles, Calif. midse, was arrested at Bern, Switz- jerland. Germans are seeking for his (extradition under the Swias-German extradition treaty, As ever your comrade,’ PAINE J. CULP.: Potash Resources Discovered in USSR. MOSCOW (LP.S.) — Ah iit tant discovery has beén Usbekistan. An extended Potash has been discovered, ° Tests how that the matter has 20% po~ tassium chloride and almost no mag- nesium addition. Powerful veins almost on the surfaces ‘This’ “fi will no doubt spur on the n ratnch kine Arnald frenzies of anti-soviet in of