The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 9, 1930, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW LORE SATURDAY, AUG ust 9; 1930 Page LG because they have no soap. The usual meals for convicts are as fol- lows: Breakfast—some kind of mush, two slices of bread, coffee without milk or sugar, no butter. Dinner—watery, greasy soup, meat which consists of bones, potatoes with eyes and half skins on them, and sometimes carrots; water is the only drink with this meal. Supper —tea, bread, sometimes spaghetti or beans or hash. The convicts eat in the mess hall, which is so crowded that you can hardly move your el- bow. Connolly. s is the tréatment which the convict gets, but some con- victs, who can afford to pay for it or who have political pull, get bet- ter treatment. For example, there is the case of Maurice E. Connolly, former borough president of Queens, and Frank Seeley, who was sent up with him. Connolly came to the penitentiary in a limousine and he has been getting limousine treat- ment ever since. When tiary he went directly into the war- den’s office. He did not get. un- dressed and did not change into prisoner’s clothes, as other convicts do, He walked over to the «first section and was assigned to Cell 13 on the first tier, He was intro- duced to Keeper Collins by Deputy Warden Fagan, and they shook hands like good friends, and Con- nolly was given seven new blankets and then assigned to his cell. He came right out again and walked around looking things over, and at 6:30 in the evening he was brought a steak supper, consisting of steak, fried potatoes, tomatoes, coffee and pudding. This supper was brought in to him by a convict named Moe, captain of the first section. Connolly occupied that cell for two weeks and then was moved to the second tier, fourth cell, and the next cell to him, the third cell, was used as a store-room for Connolly and Frank Seeley, who occupied cell No. 2 on the second tier. In Connolly’s cell, as well as in Seeley’s cell, there were three drop lights, electric fan, shelving put in by convicts, a chair with a cus’ion, white sheets and white pillow slips, Their meals are brought in to them by Charles Stew- art, a convict. Their breakfast consists of honey- dew melon, fried eggs with German fried potatoes—sometimes they are French fried—coffee with cream and warden’s bread—the kind of bread which is never given to the other convicts, Connolly’s exercise consists of sitting out on the grass on the left hand side facing Queens in the morning, and in the afternoon he is occupied with his bath and sleeps. He gets a shoe shine every morn- ing from Joseph Joshou, a colored convict; his towels are washed by another convict; the rest of his wash is done by still another convict. Seeley is supplied with and uses his own straight razor, which no other convi': is allowed to have; Seeley’s pants are dark gray, with a light blue check, made to order for him; ev-rybody else has to wear regular convict clothes. He pays $5 to Charles Stewart, a eonvict, for cooking his meals; Joseph Joshou, another convict, gets $2.50 a week each from Seeley and Connolly. The same amount is paid to the wash man. In No, 8 cell, which is between Connolly’s and Seeley’s cells, is an electric stove and they have tea whenever they want it, including buttered toast, and their cooking is done by a convict in the second tier named Charlie. Connolly had a piece in the New York Times some time ago about going to the mess hall and the won- derful conditions he found there. This is a deliberate lie, because he never went irto the mess hall and never had a meal there; he never had a bath with the other convicts; his bath is a private one and is taken by him between 1:30 and 2 o'clock every day. I went through hell in that place. Once I was injured while I was working on some machinery and fitst I was accused of laying down on the job, and for hurting my arm they put me in the bing; when I showed it to the doctor I was put on miscellaneous, but I was not sent to the hospital, even though my arm was broken. Miscellaneous means that you have to stay in the cell all day and get no work what- soever to do and you cannot get out at all. It's Hell If You're Sick. The treatment of sick men is ter- vible. Whoa a man is sick in his ell and wants a doctor he tells the tierman; the tierman makes out a report for the doctor, but no doctor comes around but only a_ nurse comes, who always gives him C. C. pills, no matter what he is suffer- ing from—whether it be foot sick- ness or head sickness or stomach sickness—always C, C. pills. Be- fore a man is allowed to get out of his cell when he is sick he must have a fever of 102 or 103, Then he has to walk to the hospital. Two Keepers. Now I would like to tell some things about Keepers Collins and Jackson. Some time in December of 1929, shortly before Christmas, a man had a little argument about a bucket. He took sick that night and was taken to a hospital; it was claimed that he had died from spinal meningitis, but the fact is that before he was taken to the hospital he was brutally beaten up by Jackson and Collins and no doubt that was the cause of his death. Two weeks before he entered this he came to the peniten- Tammany’s Hell on New York “Weltare” Island Jail (Continued From Page One.) | jail he was passed by the New York lit is well known that right in the jnobody could eat it; after dinner {something similar; he gets a visitor Boxing Commission as an amateur boxer in perfect health. Junkies. | I also want to tell about the} junkies and cokies at Welfare Island. There are about six hundred of them here and every day they go down to the right hand wall against the north prison and take out their tools with them, which consist of a needle, deck of coke, a little sponge, water and union Leader can, and shoot themselyes up in the arm. It is well known that about two thousand ($2,000) dollars worth of dope comes in through the keepers every day; the keeper who gets it is the one who operates the tele- phone there; through that keeper it is distributed through a nurse} called Red. Pete the Pollok is the agent; he is in the front tier of the second section and he makes about two hundred dollars a day easy. “Holiday.” I might as well tell about our last New Year’s and Christmas. For | Christmas dinner we had_ stinky chicken which was all black and we were locked into our cells for recreation; the newspapers claimed that there was entertainment but| that is absolutely untrue; there was | no entertainment or movies at Christmas or New Year’s., For New Year's dinner we had soup meat and for New Year’s sup- per we had bread, tea and jam. About two months ago there was a fight at the penitentiary between Robbie Werner and Green, on one side, and an Italian whose name is Joe Lobano or something similar to that. The Italian was cut up by| Werner and Green with razors and| knives. He was badly injured and was sent to the hospital, where he still is. Werner was put into No. 2 cell for one day, then shipped to Queens for one week and is now back at the penitentiary and has the run of the place and all the freedom he wants. Green is captain of the clothes box, That is the re- ward they got for cutting up the Italian. There is a man at the peniten- tiary by the name of Bertz, or almost every day, but I and other eonviets can get a visitor only one in two weeks. “Money Talks.” If you have money at the peni- tentiary you can buy everything} you want, including steaks and] chops, and cook it yourself. | Two packs of butts buys two) pounds of meat. Two packs of butts buys a pound of coffee. On pack of butts buys a pound of sugar. This is the meat and the coffee and the sugar which is supposed to go to the convicts but which they have to pay for if they are ever to get it. Bing is equivalent to solitary confinement and fellows are put there from ten to thirty days; there is also a cell No, 2 for those who are put in for a twenty-four hour stretch. In this cell there is nothing but a pail and it is so low that you cannot stand up in it; they give you nothing to eat when you are in Cell No. 2 and you are kept there until five o’clock in the afternoon of the day you are put in and then you are told to get out and sent to your own cell. Graft. Graft is very much the thing. It is well known that Cokey Shoehan, the keeper, will give a special pass for two bucks; that means you can sit in the outer office when you have a visitor; he is now a deputy warden there. If you give him five dollars you can have all the clothes and any other stuff sent in without the bundle being opened. Another incident in connection with Sheehan is as follows: There was a convict at Welfare Island by the name of Albert Peck; one day he was receiving a visit from his sister; this was some time last No- vember. As his sister was «coming down the road Sheehan, the keeper, tried to make a date with her for that night and said if she would go to New York with him and stay all night with him and have a good time he would see that her brother would get a six month’s break, that is, six months off his time. She re- fused him, and told her brother’ about it on that visit. Her brother spoke to Sheehan about it and Shee- han smacked him in the nose and told him he lied. Five days after that they took Peck out and put him in the bing for’five days for dis- orderly conduct. Peck was released in May of this year and he is now in the jail at Worcester, Mass., where I am sure he can be reached and will verify this story. Sheehan. In fact, at 12 o’clock noon, of al- most every day you can see Shee- han coming from the bridge with some fellow’s wife or sweetheart, or sister, He gets a convict’s wife to make a date with him, promises he will do a lot for her husband; to one woman he said, “you won't have to tell your husband; he won't know what is going on and I have money for you, and he won’t know anything about it.” There is a convict by the name of Bill Gettler, who acts as Warden MecCann’s secretary, and it is well known that fifty dollars paid to Bill can get you a transfer to Ray- mond Street Jail or the Tombs or any other prison that you want. A junkey is usually put in the same cell with a man who is a drug addict; naturally, the second man takes to the habit himself, so that Me REVOLT N CHINA MORE MARINES GO TO SWEEPS FORWARD WITH FULL FORCE U. S. Troops in China| Given Free Hand (Continued from Page One) send punitive expeditions to Hunan and Kiangsi provinces. Many pro- test meetings are being held in the Soviet Union against intervention in China. The Pravda writes that all imperialist powers are preparing to crush the Chinese Revolution. er eer Hankow Troops Mutiny. A section of Nanking govern- ment troops garrisoning Hankow, ineluding the bodyguard of the | Garrison Commander have mutinied and joined the Communitss, aceord- ing to capitalist press reports late yesterday. Another despitch states that “the distriet between Hankow and Shasi is reported wholly under Red domination,” that “red banners bearing the sickle and hammer., were reported flying from the flag- staffs of villages and towns along the Yangtze,” and that “large pla- cards bearing Communist slogans were erected on the river banks.” Communists Penetrate North. “A survey north of the river in- dicates the Red propaganda corps is exceedingly busy behind the lines of the Northern Coalition and that their efforts are being concentrated in southern Chili (the province where Peking is situated) among the peasantry,” according. to a report by Hallet Abend, the correspondent of the New York Times in Shanghai. This report indicates that while there is unevenness of development in the different parts of the coun- try, the Chinese Revolution move- ment is a nation-wide movement, by no means limited to one locality, Thus it can be clearly seen that the revolution is sweeping on with increasing force, ever on the offen- sive, despite the temporary loss of Changsha, which evidently has not affected to any significant extent the forward offensive march of the revolutionary forces. Imperialist Intervention. The imperialists, on the other hand, are pushing with full force their policy of extensive military intervention in China. In an inter- view given by Assistant Secretary of State Castle yesterday, the tac- tics of American imperialism in China can be clearly seen. Mr. | Castle says: “The matter of military and naval movements was entirely in the hands of the American com- manders in the Far East.” This means that the American marines and gunboats are giving a free hand in the attempt to sup- press the revolution, This amounts | to nothing less than an open de- claration of war against the revo- lution and putting China under the “martial law” of the imperialist military and naval forces. Diplo- mats from various imperialist coun- tries, from Great Britain, and from Japan, are busy talking with each other and the American State De- partment about plans of interven- tion. The Chinese Minister at Washington, D. C., Wu, has also been summoned by his imperialist masters to be present at their dis- cussions. A despatch from London indicates what kind of eggs the imperialist powers are hatching in regard to China. The reports says: “The suggestion is made here that Great Britain and the United States should make a concerted offer to assist the Chinese Gov- ernment in the restoration of or- der by lending officers who will organize the Nanking Govern- ment’s military forces and end the desultory war of many years. It is said the Chinese authorities at Nanking would readily accept such an offer.” Yes, the very nature of the Nan- king government, as a willing tool of the imperialists, indicates that Nanking would “readily accept such an offer. But the workers and pea- sants of China will prevent the real- ization of such a plan, which they know is not only directed to the en- slavement of China but also repre- sents a step in the military prepar- ations for an imperialist attack to the Soviet Union. jail is the place where many con- viets become cokies, Five dollars will buy five decks of coke; this money is7given to the prisoner by friends who come to visit him; the price is fifty dollars an ounce, and five decks will last for five days, and the cokies and junkeys take three shots a day. I do not know much about the riot but I know that it began Mon- day night about 7:20 P. M. and winded up last night, August 5, There was some argument be- tween the colored and white fellows about the ball field, and Head Keep- er Ryan pulled his gun in the door- way on August 4 and threatened to shoot and that really started the riot, because as soon as he pulled his gun all the fellows rushed for the gate, and then outside police were called in (August 5). I want cls: to say that the whole business of parole is a joke because there is absolutely no difference in the treatment of the men who are sent out on a flat sentence and the men who are sent out on parole, and it is also common knowledge that the whole parole board propo- sition isa mr of graft. You can buy time off, and the only fellow who is really up against it is the NICARAGUA; ELECTIONS TO BE RUN BY WALLS Admiral Hickey, ‘US S. N., Sworn in as aH of Election Board Sandino Lines Up with Chamorro and Bankers; Seeks Moneada’s Place < MANAGUA, Nicaragua, ug. Bx More cruisers and marines are ar: | riving every day here to see to it| that the Wall Street Government of | Moncada is perpetuated at the next | general elections which take place in November, As a first step, Com- | mander Andrew S. Hickey, of the | United States Navy was sworn in as vice-president of the Board of Nicaraguan Congre Elections, The mere fact that Hickey is a Wall Street naval offi- cer and not even a citizen of Nicar- agua, of course, means yery little to Hoover and Stimson, who have a strangle-hold on the election machinery, and want only their sup- porters elected, Sort of casually the cruiser Den- ver arrived recently, and Admiral Edward Hale Campbell, at the head of a special squadron in these wat- ers, visited Moncada. At the same time 330 marines and 30 officers were shipped aboard the U. § transport “Mississippi” from Coco Solo, canal zone, to do election duty in Nicaragua, according to Briga- dier General Shedley Butler, is to see that “our man wins.” In this contingent is Captain Alfred Wilkinson Johnson, who will aid in “supervising the elections,” There is growing mass resent- | ment in Nicaragua with the Mon- | eada-Wall St. rule. This is why | admirals accidentally flock in, and why a contingent of marines are transported here here for the elections EXPOSE FAKERS’ SCHEME AGAINST. INSURANCE BILL Mobilize i in Shops, Mines, Everywhere (Continued From Page One.) italist Congress this real Bill for unemployment insurance. In contrast to this Bill which} considers the needs of the workers, which recognizes that the bosses | and their state have coined billions out of the exploitation of the work- ingelass, is the betraying measures ! if | of the Musteites, and their gang of | petty-businessmen. It is the same Musteites who invited the bosses to cut all hosiery workers’ wages 15 to 30 per cent that put forward this | j fake “unemployment insurance’ | idea: (Labor Age, July). | “Perhaps the simplest plan in the United States would be one in which the employer, the worker, and the state government each contributed 1% per cent of the wage or salary. | . . - Benefits could constitute 40 per | eent of regular wage and run to a} maximum of 26 weeks in one year.” It is precisely this fake scheme, | which throws all the burden on the | workers, that 250,000 French work- | ers are striking against in one of | the bitterest class battles of the past ten years. This is a scheme which is wholly to the interest of | the bosses and gains the workers | nothing—but wage-cuts. If it were put into effect—and it would have the approval of the bosses—the whole cost would be thrown onto the workers, but a cu tin wages equal to the bosses’ “share,” plus the state’s contribution. The boss would cut wages even further than he is doing now, in order too pay his share and the'extra cost in taxes. It would worsen the standard of living of the employed workers and gain him and the unemployed nothing. It is this type of bill that the “socialist” fakers and the liberal petty-bourgeoisie are advocating and want adopted in order to keep the workers from fighting for real unemployment insurance to be paid by the.bosses from their swollen profits, through their class govern- ment—but under workers’ supervi- sion. The fake Musteite scheme provides for only 26 week's insur- ance at the most—the great major- ity of the 8,000,000 or more now} out of work, have been unemployed ! for more than 26 weeks. ‘They | would starve just the same even if | this fake bosses’ scheme were | passed, | All workers should be warned against these fake scheme wshich will crop up more than ever since the Workers Social Insurance Bill is being spread to hundreds of thousands of workers. fellow who hasn’t got the dough or pull. I have mie this affidavit volun- tarily and have read every word of it and -vear that it is true; I have not received anything nor has any- thing been promised to me for the making of this affidavit but I have done so merely in the hope that it may make it easier for other poor convicts who may come to the peni- tentiary after me. (Signed) Harty Rupprecht. Sworn to before me this 6th day of Augu-’ 1° "0, Fay Siegartel. ~ Notary Public, Kings County. s U. S. Puppet when several thofisand are already on the scene, propping wp President Moncada’s government with their | | bayonets and machine guns. Moncada was put in office by the direct intervention of Secr 'y of State Stimson, just before he be- came secretary of state, Moncada le he turned was paid $5 for each r in and was promis: i by Stimson that the U, » government would see to it that in the elections Mon- cada would become president—as the marines were going to count the votes. Moncada became president. 1 Street knows that the elec- tions would be very embarrasing t Moncada, so they in the form of marines and cruisers. Meanwhile, Sandino who has be- yed the cause of the revolution- ary workers and peasa s lining | up with C ‘0, ative leader, who also had dealings with Wall Street and tts marines. His | opposition to Moncada consists in proving to Wall Street that he can be a better lackey for American imperalism than their present in- cumbent. Chamorro and Sandino | hope to capitalize on the growing discontent of the masses to convince American imperialism that what they really need is a change of government, in order to fool the workers and peasants. Several bankers are supporting Chamorro, and his new lieutenant Sandino, says El Graphico, a newspaper of Mexico City. & | Today in History of | the Workers 1 ° August 9, 1844—Imprisonment fer debt abolished gland. ¢ in 1920 — Proclamation by German | Communists and Socialists for blockade against allied aid to Po- land in war against Soviet Russia. 1920—Street car workers at Hav- ana, Cuba, struck» 1921 — Dayid Sodoni, organizer for men’s cloth- ing workers in New York, killed by company gunmen. 1921—De- cree establishing New Economic Policy issued Soviet Russia. 1922—Deputy sheriffs, coal com. pany police, and state troopers beat up 600 striking miners at Nanticoke, Pa. Vote Communist! 1 him support | UNITY LEACHE. IThe io Committee eaareks ‘a Is Now on ‘‘Vacation’ workers?” ° the answer is very viele “No.” HE peasy press announces thet the Fish committee is on “vaca- xtyre | This talk of vacation of the Fish committee, the atetmpts of the All Demonstrations tol socialists and the liberals to minimize the full meaning of the Fish Demand Their Release: Commission are only the illusions and camouflage used by the capitalist The Fish commission, class to try to keep the workers unprepared. (Continued trom Page One? crude as it is, is a distinct sign of the preparations that the capitalist | York district organizer of the Com-} class is making to suppress the leadership of the working class, the munist Party. A dee T y! Communist Party and its ever-growing mass press, the Daily Worker. of the parole board s the sen-; During the “vacation,” the bosses are laying the groundwork for @ |tence on all but Raymond at six; sharp, so-called legal attack against the Communists. They are build- mnths, and gives Raymond ten| ing their apparatus and machinery so that they can more easily sup- | months. The T.U.U.L, demands press the workers in their struggles against the hosses. : | mediate release, | The capitalist class did not wait for the “vacation” of the Fish | The T. orders lal its affil-| committee to try to suppress the Communist Party and the Daily liated organizati to get in touch} Worker. After the leaders of the agricultural workers in California with local International Labor De-! were sentenced to a period of 8 to 42 years in San Quentin and Folsom al! they again placed on trial in Los Angeles Comrade Sklar, sub-district organizer of the Communist Party, and Comrade Spector, Internationa] Labor Defense organizer, in an attempt to outlaw and to make illegal The campaign for their release| the Communist Party and its press, But the power of the mass, protest lis to be made part of the giant na-| of the workers broke through even a packed jury. The jury disagreed, tion-wide campaign for demonst thus showing the support that the workers are giving to the Commu- tions September 1 for the passag nist Party and its press. oi the Workers Social Insurance Bill, | During this period of “vacation,” what are we todo? Again the proposed by the Communist Party.| answer is very simple. The results of the Los Angeles case is only one fense secretaries and arrange for joint campaign for the release o! all the representatives of the job: i less. The bill demands that all war funds} example of the militancy of the workers and their determination to jappropriated by the U. S. govern-| defend their political Party and working-class press. We must increase {ment be turned over to unempl and develop our everyday contacts with these masses of workers. We ment insurance, old age insurance,| must move forward every day and breakdown the illusions raised by ete., and that;further appropriations} the bosses and their allies, the socialist party. We must further unmask for this insurance up to a total of] the betrayals of the Greens and the Wolls. Through this process we $5,000,000,000 be made, all to be| can mobilize better the offensive of the workers for their struggle handled by committees elected by} against unemployment, imperialist war and for the defense of the |the workers and the jobless. Soviet Unior. The T.U.U.L. states: The working class has its machinery to do this work. The Daily | “At the conferences which are Worker is that weapon. The best answer now and the best method for | now being called in preparation | preparation against the attacks that the capitalist class is carrying on for the demonstration, we must is to increase the everyday regular sales of the Daily Worker. Eyery pass special short resolutions—a | worker must be armed with a subscription of the Daily Worker, Every | copy of which must be sent to all Labor papers, demanding the rel- ease of our comrades. It also may be adviseable to send these reso- lutions to the City and State Gov- ernments. But the most important thing is that we mobilize the mas- ses of workers for a real cam- paign for the release of our com- rades.” Furthermore the T.U,U.L, calls for all mass meetings, especially the August 15 mass meetings to cele- brate the opening of the Fifth World |Congress and Tenth Anniversary of |the Red International of Labor Un- ions, to pass resolutions demanding the release of Foster, Minor, Amter, | jand Raymond. day the workers must get the Daily Worker and spread it amongst others, Comrades, build the everyday circulation of the Daily. Distribute these issues amongst the workers. The increased cireulation ef the Daily means that every day the working class is carrying en a steady bombardment against the walls of Imperialism. Subscribe to the Daily Worker yourself. Get other workers to subscribe, As Always™ Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget FIRST PROLETARIAN > | The T.U.U.L. warns of the neces- H sity to resist the present drive of |the employers’ government to arrest its organizers and active workers. > = a igi cM mk Apel CAMP—HOTEL wage-cuts! Hotel with hot and eold water in every room, Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days, | FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, near Mt Lake. German Table Rates: 816— $18. Swimming and ishing. | M. OBERKIRCH 1, Box 78 KINGSTON, N. ¥ Cultural Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass singing. Sailing for the Soviet Union AUG. 16 New Liner STATENDAM AUG. 27 BERENGARIA World Tourists, Inc., 175 Fifth Ave., N.Y. (Steamship Vickets to AU) Parts ¢ Cultural ¢rogram—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lee- tures, symposiums, etc, CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. PHONE BEACON 731 N. ¥, PHONE: ESTABROOK 1400 By Train: From Grand Central every hour. By Boat: twice daily pPYVvvvvvvvevvvvvde. WVIVVVVVVG WORKERS’ CO-OPERATIVE CAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. (50 Miles from New York) Sports, swimming, boating, rac- ing, dancing, musical and eul- tural programs +: . . ’ : SOCIAL PROGRAM Excellent Orchestra Aeroplane Rides Rates Reduced for Members of Trade Wlectricity, running water bungalows, mass singing, eum fires, comradely Union Unity League to $17 Per Week! of the World) ALGonquin 6656 Unity WINGDALE, N. Y. Where finest comradeship prevails Well-known place for along vacation Where food is hea SPORTS-SONG-THEATRE Comrade KKANESS requests musical director, that all comrades playing struments, should — kin bring them along. | Regular Rates $21 RESERVATIONS WITH $5 DEPOSIT TO BH MADE AT New York Office: 10 East 17th Street; Gramercy 1013 MONROE, N. Y., Phone: Monroe 89; You Must Not Miss the Following PAMPHLETS of a Series Prepared by the LaBor Researcu Associa= tTion and Published by INTERNATIONAL PAMPHLETS Our Doors Are Open, Workers of All Races and Nationalities Come! _—_—_—— www wy tee oe WAR IN THE FAR EAST, by Henry Hate. meee This important subject treated by a newspaperman in close touch with current political developments in the East CHEMICAL WARFARE, by Donatp A. CamERON...... A discussion of poison gas in the coming war, not as imaginative fiction, but as a scientist's statement of facts MODERN FARMING: SOVIET STYLE by Anna Louise STRONG .......-.,.,,.5006 A description of the agricultur§) rev etelee | in the Russjan village WORK OR WAGES, by Grace M. BurnnaM ........++ ‘The author has made a special study of unemployment and social insurance and brings together the latest information on this vital subject THE STRUGGLE OF THE MARINE WORKERS by N. Sparks Former editor of the Marine Worker? Voice, tells ¢f the little known conditions under which seamen and Jongshoremen do their work and struggle for organization Send Your Orders to the WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 east 125TH stREET NEW YORK CITY Camp lthful and plentiful OUR BUSES LEAVE L0Dn 8) AND SEVENTH AVERY Wriday at 6:30 pom Saturday at 1 p.m Sunday at 9 a.m Monday at 12 pm Wednesday ,at i pom ine | Every idly By Trains Prom or 125th St. to Wing a Centrat Ny HOTH STREVT TELEPHONE: MONUMENT 0111 (Special di, Jount fates to organizations) ¢

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