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AUGUSYT 18, 1930 Page Three DAILY WORKER, NEW YUKK, mUNvDAY, | _ Longshoremen Will Fight Cut MOBLIZESET.1 ENT ERNATIONA. DEMONSTRATION << el SYA] Se OC FOR JOBLESS BL! 7" Expose ‘Labor’ Unemployed Councils py» ae “in Active Fieht Party’s Slimy. Work in Eoypt Cuban “Opposition” Offers Itself to Wall Street Bankers | There is a severe political and} between | (Continued From Page One.) ouncil has staged several demon- For ‘Crime’ of Being Jobless; STD OE (Ge munet | wcll ae ee economic crisis in Cuba. Machado’s alists.” His pur: to st POSES ILA, WW On’ the cecasion, the police re-) BERLIN (By Mail)—A mani-lhicody regime is being shaken to its|en the fascist regime and direct ¢ sorted to shooting into a demon- | stration, against the eviction of a festo of the internctional office of the L.agve Against Imperialism ex- | | | worker for non-payment of rent.| poses the imperialist role of the Since this time, the council has| MacDonald regime in Egypt. The | grown tremendously, and now the, manifesto declares: are further trying to stop| Fight For Social Insurance! foundations. In this midst of the growing mass discontent of the Cuban workers and peasants, the Drop in Sugar Price. fake, petty bourgeois leaders of the The severity of the Cuban « | nationalist party are trying to gain has its origin in the advantages for themselves. full force against the rebelli impoverished workers and peasants. “AS BOSS TOOLS, ‘Wilmington, Del. }a-night which, makes less than two| rs | Daily Worker: | cents a room. ‘DETROIT TOILERS Wilmington, Del,, is one of the} Arrest Jobless. “In the suppression of the an Baker’s Racket About. oldest and most reactionary cities in| All streets in Wilmington poljce | tivity in the struggle for the| imperialist revolt of the Egyptian ‘the U.S.A, Conditions in shops is Over | on the lowest grade. | F . | The average workman’s wage is Daily eon acter se | from $18 to $16 a week. The Philadelphia longshoremen| Work in the shipbuilding com- | ‘ ‘ ies ii ded up by piece work | inder the leadership of the Marine | P@es Is apes 4 a Workers Industrial Union have capi-| but still they can’t make much more are guarded by strong police forces. The 10) New Castle workhouse is full with | | unemployed workers who are arrest- | ed for no other reason than that} they are unemployed. But the mag- istrate finds them guilty of differ- ent “crimes.” Some of them were arrested for TO CHINA REVOLT | Workers Social Insurance Bill. The “Red” squad will not succeed in its | effo The workers called |an- | other meeting for the following day. | September Ist Meet in Detroit | In Detroit on Sept. 1st, “Labor ay,” at Cass Park, at 1 p. m., the |Trade Union Unity League and the |people, the Labor Government is| playing the same dastardly role as| is has been playing in Indian and} jin Palestine. It has sent warships | |to Alexandria while making a hypo- | critical declaration of neutrality a has given military and moral sup port te its feudal vassals in Egy They| drop in the price of are openly offering themselves to| Cuban economy rev American imperialism as instru-) gar production. Th ments to betray the masses in the) the sugar in present crisis. A Washington dispatch dated Aug. 15th to the N. Y. Herald-Trib- une says that, “Some of the leaders in the opposition nationalist party) ar ing into the ian ¢ | Pt to Presi ‘acha isi talist ship’ owners and. stevedores | ‘han the average workman. © President Machado plan a visit seared stiff; and as the workers know that the LL.A. of Polly Bak- er’s, the I,W.W. and the rest of the hosses toois and fakers will not dare fight against their masters (like “urnhy Cook Co., Jocko and other stevedores). Tho woikers realize that the Ma- rine Workers Industrial Uniod can not be»-bovght and that it is organ- izing the workers for strike against a wace cut, the cutting dowr of gangs,-and for a standard scat: of wages fo> all the longshoremen in Philadelphia. | Low Pay. | Now the coastwise men get from| 20 to 40 ents an hour. Jocko pays | whatever he damn pleases and as} low as 40 cents an hour, I.L.A. but- | ton or not, The men cannox get! hired: unless they buy moonshine for the bosses and Polly Baker and his gang slugs the workers when they | protest. | At Spreckels and the American line the workers must bribe the boss- 2s to hire them, Rotten Slings. Rotten slings are used to haul | jrafts‘aboard ship injuring and kill- | ing the workers in the holds of the ships ~The men are forced to board | irafts3o dain big that the winches | can’t Pull them. ‘The speedup is so zreat that thousands can’t get work. | Most-of the men can’t make enough | ‘o feed their wives and kids. Workers Will Fight. Yet these greedy bloodsucking | capitalist shipowners are out again to give a wage cut and the bosses realize that their damn bosses union, the LL.A., can no longer fool the workers because the leaders will not fight for the workers but slug and spy upon and blackball the workers if they complain, —JOE GRALICH. The New National - Hymn 5 Detroit, Mich. Jear Sir: Would you kindly print this New National Hymn in the Daily Work- er? It goes to the same tune as My Country "Tis of Thee. (eel ie A-NEW NATIONAL HYMN. | : I ! My country “tis of thee | Land of small liberty | Of thee I sing, Land of race suicide, Land of the law defied, Every town and countryside | gether. j for the last six months and to get janything to do seems hopeless. If and thousands like me. Overtime Building Ship for War. The bosses of the Pusey and Jones | Co. (shipbuilders) give the workers the “privilege” of coming 2 hours before starting time to work and working 8 to 4 hours overtime on piece work, and the man who don't want to work with such a speedup is laid off. Wages for the women that scrub floors in the offices of Dupont are $7 for six nights work or $1.16 a night. Every woman must clean 60 rooms walking on the railroad when are looking for work. Others for stay- ing on the street corner in the eve- nings. I heard one case like this. One Negro worker was arrested when he walked on the state highway. When the magistrate asked him what he| ince, the capitalist papers have to |ment of the Workers’ Social Insur- was doing he answered that he was looking for work. The magistrate then said. “I can’t give you work, but I can give you ten days in the workhouse,” Boss Becomes Liberal Letting Agent Talk In- surance Chicago, Ill. Daily Worker:— In the machine shop where I work the foreman is very strict. The shop has rules and regulations tor the workers. If anyone is a few minutes late to work he is docked for half an hour, or fired alto- If an unemployed worker comes into the shop to ask for a job he is not ailowed to walk up to any worker or to talk to anyone but the foreman. A few days ago, at noon tine, the foreman told us that tomorrow | there is coming to the shop a rep- resentative of the Railway Em- ployes Benefit Association to talk to us. We were surprised, as usu- ally no agents, peddlers or others are permitted into the shop. Workers Must Pay. The next day a well-dressed gen- tleman came to us and gave us a “life insurance talk.” He told us how the railway workers organized themselves into an insurance com- pany, how they help their members in case of death and sickness, etc., and urged us to join their associa- For Pushing Bronx, N. Y. Editor, Daily Worker: As a worker who has a family to support, I have been out of work it wasn’t for a little savings I have I would be starving in the gutter. IT realize that there are thousands Hoover and Barnes, his publicity j this. Jobless Worker Sees Need to Men tion, In spite of the fact taat we are not railway workers they will accept our cash and us as members. The boss agrees to deduct our in- itiation fee of $5 and our dues from our pay, said the organizer of the railway insurance busine: Boss a “Liberal We began to see the light as to the reasoa why this guy v al- lowed to *nik to us in the shop. The boss turned out to be quite liberal with our cash.’ We could noi see why the railway workers are anx- ious to organize even non riilway workers into an insurance company while they regi ct to orginize even the railway workers iat» a fighit- ing union. As it is wo! known there are at present 16 different unions or brotherhoods on the rail- ways, and when some of them are on strike the rest of them are scab- bing against them, Most of the workers in our shop know about None of the workers in the shop joined the outfit. The union insurance peddler left the shop empty handed. —TOOLMAKER. Fight For Bill ter. If these rotten living condi- tions remain to the winter, the workers are going to be loudly heard from, The elementary need of work or unemployment relief in the form of trade union rate of wages while the workers were working, is the need of the present time. This demand upon the municipal and federal gov- ernment must be pushed all over the jNanking Flirts With Japan Seen (Continued From Page One.) !ed workers and peasants. Concern- | ing the situation in the whole prov- {admit that “the situation was not | so favorable to the government.” It is well know that Japan prac- | tically controls the situation in Shangtung. How is it possible that Japan, while supporting the North- ern coalition, should allow Chiang Kaj-shek to reap a victory at the present moment? It is possible that Chiang Kai- | shek, in a moment of desperation, \temporarily disregarding his oid master, the United States, is indulg- ing in some costly flirtations with Japan with a large offer of special privileges and so on, Always tak- { offers, the Japanese imperialists | might very likely have allowed Chiang Kai-shek to win a victory in Shangtung, thus also putting a little pressure on the scared North- westerners in order to get more con- cessions from them. The big noisy slap in the face which the American imperialists gave to Chiang Kai-shek on Satur- day by refusing to allow the Du Pont Company to deliver contracted ammunition to Nanking can he con- | sidered as a good evidence support- ing this interpretation. This flirtatious adventure of Chi- arg Kai-shek and Japan, of course cannot yet be considered as the he- ginning of any durable alliance. But the flirtation as a temporary maneuver certainly cannot be ex- cluded as an impossibility. Events move very fast in China and scene change very freuently. When con- ditions in the country are so un- stable, the realignment of forces are possible almost at any minute. These maneuvers also indicate the intensified conflicts of the different imperialist powers in China. While | all imperialist powers are sending gunboats and armed forces to China to try to suppress. the revolution, conflicts among themselves are also intensified as the struggle becomes | more severe. Conflicts among the imperialist powers themselves and militant protests and strugg!e| against intervention by the working class all over the world will eventu- ally defeat the boss policy of inter- vention in China. { ing advantage of new and better | pill, A grafter's Lar |agents, talking glibly about pros- |perity is a lot of lies and bunk. |Only the majority of the workers | of this country really know and feel My native country thee Of the divorce court free country with all possible speed. The | A F present ruling capitalist class will al abet not give any relief or material sup- port to the workers unless they fight and demand it. Thy name why love? Why love thy. tarrif bills That robs the man who tills While "Wall Street’s coffers fills ‘The top above. ul Let music ‘swell the breeze Praising ‘monopolies A mournfal song. Let every mucker rake, Let ~'l the trusts partake, Rise, price-of ham ‘and steak Gh, Lord," how loner Iv Our Senate, “tis to thee Hl kriend of plutocracy To thee I sing. Long may our land be bright | With Standard Oil’s great light, “ Ye trusts ith all your might » Tax everything. | —An able-bodied Michigan | worker who has been un- | employed for a year. One ae Editorial Note:—Race suicide and | divorce courts are the plaint of betite bourgeois jeremiahs, and are : not pertinent working class issues. - Try Drive Negroes Off Atlantic Beach ATLANTIC CITY, Aug, 15.—Un- der the pretense of affording Negro bathers capitalist “protection” against insulting’ remarks by white . by, police here are engaged _ in-an_attempt to discourage Ne- groes from using even the Jim-Crow section of the beach, This morn- ing the section given over to Ne- .groes was thickly populated by cops who kept everybody on the move. ‘Inquiry among the Negro popula- tion. developed that nobody had re- ‘quested police “protection” against -ingulting remarks, that as a matter of fact nobody had ever heard any insulting remarks. It developed, however, that the rich guests of two exclusive hotels, directly back of the Negro section of the beach, have objected to “havine: to look out on Negrvts enjoying themselves.” | the need and want of food and shel- NOW DISCOVERS TAFT AS ENEMY! Negro Misleaders Are) Surprised! The Negro petty bourgeois press, which serves the imperialist oppres- sors of the Negro masses by ped- dling illusions about capitalist dem- ocracy and capitalist justice and by trying to direct the resentment of the Negro masses against the white | | race as a whole instead of against | ;, the white capitalist class which ex-| ploits both Negro and white work- ers, is now pretending to have just discovered that Taft was an enemy) of the Negro masses. | The Whip (Chicago) ‘in its cur- rent issue carries a story in which it naively relates that letters of the late Major Archie Butt, Taft aide, written to his sister during the Taft administration, indicate that “far from being merely disinterested in the Negro Taft was actually hostile to them and wanted to eliminate them from politics.” The Whip then goes on to quote in shocked surprise several slanders made by Taft against the Negro race, as well as several expressions of out and out hatred of Negroes. The story is also carried in other Negro papers. These same bourgeois newspapers, expressing so much sur. prise at this further proof of Taft’s notorious antagonism, as an agent | of United States imperialism, to the | Negro victims of that imperialism. | are the same papers that eulogize | Abraham Linesln and Theodore | Rocrowrtt na teiande pad “hanatan | tors” of the Negro masses, although Negro| i —JOBLESS WORKER. available facts are quite to the con- trary, and ably expressed in the case of Lincoln by the fearless Ne- |, gro revolutionary, Frederick Doug- lass; and in the case of Roosevelt self-exposed in some of his letters published since his death and before that event in his attitude on British rule in Egypt. It is to be noted, too, that these same Negro bourgeois papers in spreading infamous lies and illu- sions about the “friendship” for the Negro masses of such imperialists as Roosevelt, etc., have no word to say of the Communist Party and its Struggle against lynching and Ne- gro oppression, Seeking crumbs from the masters bles they dare not identify them- selves with the enemies of these masters even though they realize that these masters are the oppres- sors of their race! ae FARM IN THE PINES fed to Pine Forest. near Mi Germ: rabte tt ne 18. Swimming and Fi M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON. N.Y Rt WORKERS’ WALTON TAKE, MONROE, N, Reduced Rate of $17 of Trade Union Unity League: PAID-UP MEMBERSHIP BOOK MUST PRESENT Regular Rates Reservations with $5 NPW YORK OFFICE f Cam COOPERATIVE CAMP WOCOLONA 10 WAST Phones Mo» SPENDS $110.00 McCarthy Helped in Framing Mooney SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17.—P. H. McCarthy, A. F. L. state build- ing trades czar for many years until his retirement in 1923, has pur- chased an estate in the hills near Los Altos, for $110,000, “It is worth at least twice that,” says McCarthy. “Where did McCarthy get the mo- ney? $10,000 at least came from the public utilities, About eight years ; Unemployed Councils are holding a|to prevent the further development) |big mass demonstration against un-|of the revolutionary movement and | employment. All workers—unem-|to protect the interests of Britis) | |ployed, employed, Negro, white,| imperialism. At the same time the| |native, foreign-born are urged to} Labor Government has been continv- | }take part. This demonstration as|ing its negstiations with the Wafd| part of the struggle for the enact-| leaders in whom it rightly sees the| |men that will finally and inevitably make the desired compromise with | | British imperialism. “The League Against Imperialism As the unemployment increases, | while giving its wholehearted sup- Jover 150,000 are jobless now in De- | port to the Egyptian masses in their | |troit, the bosses are putting for-|struggle for national independence | ward _self-proclaimed “friends of | and social freedom, deems it neces- | labor” with their fake relief pro-|sary to warn them against the | |posals to divert the attention of the | treacherous tactics of the Wafd lead-| suffering workers from the only | ers, wl are similar to those of | program which offers real hope for | the Indian National Congress and | improved conditions, the program of | which must be clearly exposed to the | the Trade Union Unity League and | masses of workers and peasants, as | the Unemployed Councils who are | well as to the students and urban |fighting for the enactment of the|poor that constitute the rank and only real Workers’ Social Insurance | file of the Wafd Party and among The fake bill is full of “jok- | whom there are sincere anti-imper- | ers” such as the exclusion of agri-|ialist elements. The League wishes | cultural workers from any benefits, |to make it clear to them that their giving the bosses’ state department | Condition can only be improved by of “labor and industry” complete ;¢@ttying on an uncompromising power to “formulate rules and reg- | Struggle for the complete overthrow ulations for the unemployment in-|0f imperialism and its feudal and surance fund” and the limitation of | Capitalist agents among the Egypt- benefits to 40 per cent of “usual” | ians; and for the establishment of wages for only 12 weeks with no | full national independence. This provision for unemployed worker struggle cannot be carried on under and their families after that time. | the domination of leaders whose in- st df the election ance Bill comes in the mi | Detroit mayorality paign. cam- Due to the mass activity of the|terests demand a compromise with Communist Party, and the T.U.U.L. |imperialism, but only with a clear socialist fakers are coming to the fasueaee and political interests of help of the bosses with a fake “in- | the broad mas burdens on the shoulders of the |ca'ls upon all truly anti-imperialist workers so that the bosses’ profits| elements in Fyypt to unite their eiabas anti-imperialist S$ organization TO FIGHT EXTRADITION that shall coordinate the struggle {itself with all the anti-imperialist OF NEGRO T0 ALABAMA for-es of the world and thereby en-| | ‘yptian m: , liams, a Negro worker, was arrested} |, 2 bf here in an attempt to have Gov-/'Gain For Red Union extradition | papers to Abbeville, Ala., where he} # p #4 | n Pit Council Voting) 1928. Sending him back to Alaba- x ma would mean certain lynching, or | BERLIN, (IPS).—The pit coun- The American Negro Labor Con-| stronghold of the Christian trade gress and the International Labor | unions, have resulted in a note- onstration demanding his release. | ary trade union opposition. The list | The demonstration takes place Fri-| of the latter organization received | Hartford. the last elections. The Christian The National Association for the trade union list received 401 votes in the |shops and factories, the | Ptgram that corresponds to the real surance” bill, which tries to put the| “The League Against Imperialism will not be interfered with. | forces and bring into being a strong | for Egyptian independence in Egypt e the complete victory of th:| HARTFORD, Aug. 17.—John Wil-| ernor Trumbull sign | Leadership in German is charged with murder on Dee. 11,| at best a farcical trial. }cil elections in Langenbrahm, a Defense are staging a protest dem-| worthy success for the revolution- day 7 p. m, at Windsor and Main,| 495 votes as compared with 308 at Advancement of Colored People has against 456 votes. The reformists | shown its traitorous role when, in, 195 as against 286 votes. As the bailing him out, they promised that | Christian unions have more mem-| they would safely deliver him over|bers than they received votes it is to the Alabama authorities on de-| obvious that some of their members mand, j voted for the list of the revolution- — lary trade union opposition whieh | union, White clubbed the strike to | Now takes the place of the Christian | defeat. unions as the strongest organization | McCarthy, then out of the mayor's | in the pit councils, The great drop office, but head of the San Fran-|in the reformist poll is also inter- cisco building trades, chartered a esting. | dual union which put men to work | ——-————~—+——_ | in place of the strikers. Tom Moo-|the preparedness day explosion ney fought for the men during the strike. In 1916 Mooney was framed on charge, Duncan Matheson, captain of detectives, had Mooney and Bil- lings arrested. ago a state senate investigation in- to campaign funds caused the pres- | ident of the Pacific Gas and Elec-| trie Company to admit furnishing McCarthy with $10,000 to oppose a state amendment. McCarthy had long been known as a “P, G, & E. man.” In 1910 he! was elected mayor of San Fran- cisco on the union labor ticket. Dur- ing his term he appointed Gus| White, an office employe of the P. G. & E, chief of police, Gus! White was later to frame Tom Moo-| ney. Ordered Mooney Arrest. Two years after White’s appoint- ment, P, G. & E, electricians went on strike under the banner of the electrical workers’ _ international VY. (80 miles from New York) | per week to Members $21 Per Week Deposit to be made at ST. nerey 101% 80 SPECIALOFFER FOR THE MONTHoft AUGUST THE FOLLOWING PAMPHLETS FREE WITH EACH YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION TO THE COM- MUNIST, Official Organ of the Communist Party of the United States (Yearly Subscrition Two Dollars) Another War Coming » 05 Death Penalty Demanded—The State of Georgia Against the Communist Party ..cecisccsscscssscces sevens Why Every Worker Should Join the Communist Party. . Chemical Warfare, by D. A, Cameron. . x Work or Wages, by Grace Burnham. Modern Farming: The Soviet Style, by Anna Louis SONG ois ns ote sevens Wa ois. War in the Far East, by Henry Hall. Out of a Job, by Earl Browder Soviet War on Religion ..... Twenty Million Unemployed ......... Southern Cotton Mills and Labor, by Myra Page. Rush your Two-Dollar cash, money order or check and get the COMMUNIST for one year and the aboye list of pamphlets FREE! WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street New York City all but wrecked the dustry. 1 laborers in the sugar cer had their unemployment there is a big to this country to lay their cause before the State Department and| members of the Senate.” For some time, “opposition” lead- ers in Cuba have been visiting New York and Washington trying to con- vince American imperialism and par- ticularly the National City Bank of New York, the leading exploiter in Cuba—owners of billions of dollars of Cuban property—and Secretary of State Stimson, Senators Borah, lantation and ury fact, the only cot ing sug Cuba In th ang imperial ned hand, whi the f Cuban ma A Nye, King and Norris, that they an the Naw Yorke tink can do Wall Street’s work better |g) states than Machado. “With the support powerful Asw Wall Street Elections. Wall Street and Canadian bankine The latest plea of the “nationa!-| interests, a determined ef wil ists” is that American imperialism | be made to extricate the ( supervise the fall elections, under | gar industry from its pre the Platt amendment, so that they | position. Tho L. Chadbourne might have a chance to carry on| Chadbourne, Stanchfield and Le Machado’s fascist rule. They franik- | announced last night that repr ly point out the growing mass di tatives of the Chase National Ban content. They state that unemploy-| the National City Bank, the Ro: ment is greater than ever before | Bank of Canada, Hayden, Stone ir Cuba’s history. They prove that | ©o,, executives of Ameri Machado has been totally discred-| Companies having production in ited. The great mass of people are| Cuba, and represent taking up the fight not only against | Cuban-owned estates, had Machado, but his backers, American | Committee to ‘find and a imperialism, and its chief Cuban rep-| edies for the present deplorable sit- resentative, the National City Bank. | Uation.’” In this situation, the nationalist| ‘These imperialist “remedi in “opposition” maintains that Wall| more wage cuts and misery to the Street needs their help. Therefore,| Cuban masses, it should send its marines and} Machado attempts to clear the cruisers to Cuba to put them into| way by arresting 300 workers. Ha office. is deporting to his fellow-m Heretofore, Stimson and others | Chiang Kai-shek, all Chine have told the “opposition” that they | ers arrested in Cuba for re were perfectly well satisfied with | ary activities. Machado's handling of Wall Street’s| class leaders are under indictment, affairs. Stimson pointed out Ma-| awaiting trial. The situation is chado’s enviable record of a list of | growing tense. It is to help ow hundreds of murders of revolution- | American imperialism that Iturralde ary workers and trade union lead- | and Siegle, nationalist leaders, come ers. In fact, at the present mo-|to Washington, beggin for interven ment, U. S. Ambassador Harry F./ tion, and the opportunity to take Guggenheim, now in Havana, is try-| Machwdo’s place as more faithful ing to patch up the “differences” tools of American imperiali Dozens of workir sm. Spend Your Vacation at FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL Accomodations to suit the taste and desire of every camper HOT AND COLD WATER; ELECTRIC LIGHTS; SWIMMING POOL; TENTS; BUNGALOWS; HOTEL ROOMS. Cultural Program for the Season The Artef Studio; Mass Theatre; Mass Singing—J, Shaeffer and L. Adohmyan, Directors; Dance Plastique, Edith Segal; Sports Director, Saul Fisher; Educational, Olgin and Jerome. Every Day Something New! Athletics, Games, Hikes, Excursions, Dances, Theatre, Chorus, Lectures, Symposiums, etc. Sbecial Feature Programs for Week Ends Sat 1—The Entire Freiheit Gesangs Ferein and the ° Freihgit Mandolin Orchestra in a Variety of Revolutionary Songs. J. Shaeffer, Conductor. Aug. 2—Under the Banner of the T. U. U. L.’—a revolutionary mass pantomime produced en- tirely by the campers. 3—The Nitgedaiget Chorus—J. Shaeffer, Con- GALA PERFORMANCE — SAT., AUGUST 23 An Entirely New Proletculture Program. The First Time in Camp Nitgedaiget. Watch for the Announcements! | ductor, 4—Recitations—by Members of the Artef. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. PHONE BEACON 731 N.Y. PHONE: ABROOK 1400 By Train: From Grang Central every hour. By Boat: twice daily Every German Sveaking Worker Should be a Steady Keader of DER ARBEITER Official German Organ of the © H) munist Party of he United States SPEAKING RY FOR Dear Comrades: Enclosed find $2.00 for one year’s subscription of DEK ARE! ($1.00 for half year subscription.) : NAMB ...... ADDRESS .,