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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1980 INTERNATIONAL NEWS RED ARMY ORGAN EXPOSES BOSSES WAR SCHEMES Shows Up Activities of Geneva Meet MOSCOW.—The “Red Star,” the organ of the Revolutionary War Council, publishes an article dealing with the session of the Preparatory Disarmament Commission in Geneva. The article points out that the chief contradictions of imperialism, the Anglo-American antagonism and the antagonism between the victor and the vanquished states, are intensify- ing. The imperialists are in a blind alley and the armament race is tak- ing on feverish forms. In 1913 the U. S., France, Italy and Japan expended 23 milliard gold roubles on armaments; in 1926 this sum had increased to 3.9 milliards, and by 1930 it was 5.7 milliards. The western neighbors of the Soviet Union spent 224.8 million gold roubles on armaments in 1926 and by 1930 the sum had risen to 358.4 millions. Imperialist preparations for war are rapidly increasing. The imperial- ist general staffs and diplomatic corps are working hand in hand to achieve their objects, whilst the “peacemakers” in Geneva set up a smokescreen to conceal their prepara- tions. An armed intervention is be- ing prepared against the Soviet Union. The imperialist general staffs are extending and consolidating their close relations with the armies of the western neighbors of the Soviet Union. Every year imperialist France sends its best military experts to in- spect the armies of Poland and Rou- mania. The war industries of the western neighbors of the Soviet Union are financed by the imperialist states and their armies are supplied by their imperialist backers with the most modern technical fighting equipment. The campaign whipped up against alleged dumping on the part of the Soviet Union is a part of the ideo- logical preparations for war on the Soviet Union. The Kondratyev affair in the Soviet Union shows that the imperialist powers reckon on support from the counter-revolutionary and kulak elements within the Soviet Union. A Soviet delegation will be present at the Geneva session although the Soviet government harbors no illu- sions concerning the possibility of disarmament or even partial disarm- ament under capitalism. The dele- gation will expose the hypocritical and demagogic phrases of the capi- talist “peacemakers” and put forward clear and definite proposals for dis- armament. The rejection of these Proposals will once again expose the real activities of the capitalist powers. The Soviet government reckons on the support of the masses of the toil- ing population in all countries. In the Soviet Union itself the masses will answer the war threat by increas- ing their efforts to carry out the great plan of socialist construction and thus cause a guarantee for the in- vincibility of the first proletarian state. BEGIN WAGE CUTTING ON NEW YORK DOCKS NEW YORK.—The boss stevedore at the Munson Line docks here broke the news to the longshoremen Tues- day that they would soon be getting 75 cents an hour. The present pay is 80cents. Hundreds are working there and the International Long- shoremen’s Association has had an agreement with the employers about which the men knew absolutely noth- ing. “2000 Increase byJan.1”, Detroit Detroit joins the Daily Work- er campaign for 60,000 read- ers with the following tele- gram: CAMPAIGN MANAGER DAILY WORKER UNITTS YESTERDAY AP- PROVED DISTRICT PLANS DAILY WORKER STOP AC- CEPTED CHALLENGES CHI- CAGO PHILADELPHIA STOP PLAN INCLUDES INCREASE TWO THOUSAND DAILY READERS JANUARY FIRST THROUGH FACTORY SALES HOUSE TO HOUSE CANVAS STOP NOVEMBER TWENTY- FIRST TWENTY SECOND DAILY WORKER RED DAYS. STOP LAST CONFERENCE CALLED DECEMBER FOUR- TEENTH SAME EVENING MOCK TRIAL CAPITALIST PRESS STOP DAILY WORK- ER SPECIAL CAR WILL TOUR DISTRICT STOP IN- CREASE ORDER ONE THOU- SAND DAILY STOP DETAILS MAILED, A W MILLS ORGANIZA- TION SECRETARY L FABI- AN DAILY WORKER AG’T, 60,000 campaign news page 3. All out for Red Sunday in New York tomorrow. Briefs from All Lands (Cable by Imprecorr) RIGA, Nov. Nov. 20.—Two workers, Murneeks and Shalmann were ar- rested at Dunaburg charged with membership in the Communist Party. They were today sentenced to four years hard labor each. * BERLIN, Nov. 20.—The metal bosses of Bavaria, and Baden have given notice ending the existing wage agreements. They demand a 15 per cent wage cut. An arbitration decision was an- nounced providing a wage cut of four to six per cent for the Stettin metal workers, The workers refuse to ac- cept this cut. a ROME.—Three persons alleged to be couriers of the Communist Party were tried by the fascist Special Tribunal on a charge of having con- ducted Communist propaganda and with having entered Italy without proper papers. Camilla Raners was sentenced to 15 years and 6 months hard labor, Bruno Tosin to 14 years and 6 months hard labor and Ar- gentine Gili to 10 years and 6 months hard labor, Camilla Raners and Ar- gentie Gili are women. He Rn MOSCOW.—The stream of workers in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union is continuing steadily; 1,500 workers in Sverdlovsk have joined the Party, 80 members of the shock groups in Slatoust, 716 in the engi- neering works in Leningrad, 115 in the Marx works, 200 in the Stalin factory, 97 in Krashy Viborshez, 75 in the Vosroshdenye works, etc. Two hundred workers joined the Party in Balachna, 100 in Murom and 50 in Ustjug. * MOSCOW.—On the 13th anniver- sary of the November Revolution a series of new works, factories, power stations, cultural and educational in- stitutions, etc., were opened. Near Ossinovo the first White-Russian overland power station was opened. It will use the local peat supplies. A cracking works was opened in Baku and a motor oil works.. Further, the first Soviet large-scale match making factory was opened in Moscow. In Kotelnitchi, near Nishzni-Novgorod, a new power station was opened up, and in Falenki, near Nizhni-Novgorod, a great broadcasting station. HOOVER SILENCE BACKS HYDE TALK Wild Anti-Soviet Yarns Refuted by Strong (Continued from Page One) fair; about the “arrest and exile of Rykov and Bucharin and 700 others,” would be recognized immediately as false if they came as is usual with the trade mark of the Rigalie factory on them. So the papers yesterday placed Vienna and Berlin and Lon- don date lines on these yarns, but the body of the dispatch usually men- tions casually that it was based on “reports from Riga.” These reports have been ridiculed by the Soviet Commissariat of Foreign Affairs as “beneath denial,” and the Tass news agency in Moscow comments on them as “both stupid and malicious.” A Contradiction. The Post series is involved in a basic contradiction. It has to prove that Russia is dangerous to United States trade because of the power and efficiency of. its industry, and it has to encourage imperialists and dis- courage revolutionists by saying that the whole of Russia is one vast bread- line around a chaotic and wrecked industry. The first articles emphasized the breadlines and were reprinted and distributed free by gangs of patriots all over the working-class sections and garment district of New York. The next articles told of gigantic progress of the Five-Year Plan, and were not so distributed. Yesterday, simultaneously with the Riga reports, the Post flops back to the disorganization and misery theme, and announces the Soviet railroad system wrecked probably beyond re- pair. Workers Hear Facts. The true situation in the Soviet Union was explained to 2,000 cheernig workers gathered in a meeting of pro- test against the war plot called by the Friends of the Soviet Union on Thursday night in New York. Anna Louise Strong, managing ed- itor of Moscow News, speaking after Robert W. Dunn and M. Olgin had thoroughly exposed the war schemes of the imperialists and particularly of Hoover, told of enormous advances and of enough food, though in the stress of doubling production in the last three years there are difficul- ties. The difficulties and shortages are openly admitted, and are being corrected by the Soviet workers. Happy and Confident. Strong told of the joyous and car- nival spirit that pervaded the thir- teenth celebration of the anniversary of the Soviet Union. This confidence and enthusiasm proceeded largely from the fact that every district and every factory hangs out a proud boast POLISH TERROR OF PELSUDSKI IS WORSE IN UKRAIN Many Beaten, Jailed and Tortured WARSAW.—The Polish authorities continue to dissolve and destroy the Ukrainian co-operatives and educa- tional organizations. The fascist “Il- lustrovany Kurier Codzienny” reports that on one day the authorities dis- solved all such organizations in the districts Grodek-Yagielonski, Rava- Ruska, Lemberg, Przemysl, Droho- bych, Dobromil, Zolkiev and Bobrka. ‘The campaign of arson is also be- ing continued by the tevolutionary peasants. On Oct. 22 a large estate in Czyski in the Lemberg district was also destroyed. The following day the telegraphic connections in Zloczov were destroyed and a number of ar- son cases occurred in the town. In Vierzbitcha the Polish official who ordered the dissolution of the reading room and the co-operative was Shortly afterwards murdered. During the last few days arson and sabotage have occurred in Kovel, Rovno and Lubomil in Volhynia, In Lubomil the attacks were on a mass scale. The Ukrainian bourgeois news- paper “Dilo” reports mass arrests of suspected Communists and members of the revolutionary peasant party Selrob in Volhynia. On Oct. 21 the ambassador of the United States handed a note to the Polish government in connection with the mal‘reatment of a Pole who had adopted American citizenship and was on a visit to his relatives. “Nova Zorya,” the organ of the Ukrainian clericalists, reports the ar- rest of children of 9 and 11 years of age on charges of sabotage. The “Illustrovany Curier Codzien- ny” reports that mass searches and mass arrests of peasants took place on Oct. 27 in the districts of Stryj, Ra- hatyn, Stanislau and Dolin. In the village of Gaja in the Lem- bert district the peasant Michael Ti- utko has died as the result of the terrible tortures inflicted on him by members of the punitive column which recently scourged the district. The depth to which ‘the bourgeois Ukrainians have fallen in their anxi- ety and fear of the Poles on the one hand and the rising revolutionary working masses on the other can be seen from an article published by the ex-senator, Haluschinski, in “Dilo,” in which he furiously attacks those who have dared to oppose the government, terms their activities criminal and calls on the fascist government of Poland to punish the responsible per- sons ruthlessly. The fascist organ “Przelom” ex- presses anxiety at the mass applica- tion of bloody terror in the Ukraine. It declares that the terror has been carried out “collectively and on a mass scale,” and expresses the fear that it may damage the good rela- tions between the Polish bourgeoisie and the Ukrainian bourgeoisie in the occupied areas. of enormously increased production and construction. It comes also from the feeling that the agricultural crisis, the attempt to make a sixteenth cen- tury method of agriculture feed a twentieth century factory system is solved. This problem has existed since 1926. Now, in September, the crisis is turned. A quarter of the farms in the Soviet Union and half of the grain growing area is collecti- vized. The rest soon will be. For the first time in years there is enough sugar (vital in such a cold country). Strong verified the articles of Dur- anty in the New York Times that during October the food supplies in the cities rapidly increased. Every worker has enough to eat of bread and vagatables and fish. There is a shortage of meat and fat because of the collectivization movement running away with itself last year and before the tactics could be changed, causing the peasants to slaughter too many of their farm cattle. Collectivization now proceeds on a sounder basis so as to save the cattle. Tractors make up for the horses disposed of. State hog farms will within one year re- pair the deficit in meat. The speaker told of the great in- creased demand of all communities, however isolated, for manufactured products. This is the chief difficulty with transportation. It is a tem- porary difficulty, a crisis.of growth, which is being solved temporarily by shock brigades of the advanced work- ers and working youth who mobilized 50 Vv l7 SCORE LIES ON CRISIS, JOBLESS, Manufacturers Ass’n | Gets A.F.L. Help (Continued from Page One) sue of the New York Times shows | that electric power output, a good guage of industrial activity all over| the country, shows the sharpest drop| for the week ended Nov. 15 through- out the entire crisis. Mr. Edgerton’s| phrases about good business condi- tions will not wipe out this fact. With | the drop in electric power there was| undoubtedly a drop in employments All business indexes, including the} Federal Reserve Bank, the Annalist, the Standard Statistics, shows the crisis reached the lowest point dur- ing its present course in October, and all facts point to still lower levels in November, December and January. No worker shall be fooled by the hokum of Edgerton, or the tools of the National Manufacturers’ Associa- tion, Green, Woll and other fascist leaders of the A. F. of L. Conditions this winter are going to be frightful for the workers. The bosses are cut- ting wages, increasing speed-up. The jobless army is mounting well above the 9,000,000 mark. The fight against starvation must be intensified. Demand the passage of the Unemployment Insurance Bill! Collect signatures! Expose the fakery of the bosses and the A. F. of L lead- ers. JATTER OFFICIALS YADE CENSURING Members Denied Right to Vote On Motion NEW YORK.—The regular meeting last night in Beethoven Hall of Local 8 (finishers) of the United Hatters of North America brought Micheel Green of the national office down to try and explain why he called out the police on the workers at the women’s meeting when committees « the finishers wented to tell them that the men were against a wage cut, and gein their solidarity to oppose the cut. By parliamentary tricks «nd man- euvers the officials ruled out of order the resolution proposed condemning the calling out of the police against the union members, and declaring that officials who do that “are using their positions to split our ranks in order to help the bosses to force the cut on us. Such action deserves our bitter condemnation.” Want To Cat Salaries Motions to cut the high wages of the officials, to have only one full time official and to have en executive committee were also ruled out of order. Green in his speech attacked the Daily Worker article exposing his trickery at the women’s meeting, and declared the committees illegal and “Communist.” Jerome Hope took the floor and stated: “If anything I say here about rank and file control of the union or wage cuts is Bolshevism, then I’m one.” He is not a Communist Party member. Members of the committee took the floor and exposed the officers maneuvers for a wage cut ond ex- plained the need of committees from the men workers to visit the women workers meeting in the interests of solidarity. The bulk of Green’s speech which to load and unload cars even on Nov. 8, a holiday in the U. 8. S. R. It is being solved permanently by a re- arrangement of some forces in the Five-Year Plan to make the trans- portation system equel to the enor- mously increased demands. The speaker gave menus of office workers, far worse fed than the fac- tory workers, to prove the starvation now so loudly charged was a myth. “There is not a breadline in Rus- sia,” she stated, and added, “I be- personal experience with breadlines, shouted agreement. Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. . LS. ” ‘OPTOMETRISTA-OPTICIANS FOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN'S Suits and Overcoats PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. 1690 LEX. AVE] 609 W. 81st ST. orn Sireat b Cor et nicnos ae DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT given by th Greek Workers Club—“Spartacus” TONIGHT AT 8:30 P. M. 301 West 29th Street Tickets 25 Cents Dancing Until Two in the Morning to lieve there are some in New York.” | The audience, some of whom have} Page _ Five — | Red Sundays inN. Y. and Over OW EE CAN FRAME UP A CASE” U.S.in60,000D More Challen The circulation desk is groaning all over the U. S. in the campaign for | Sundays from now on will appear red New York will have a Red Sun- . day tomorrow. Party and league 7 members will go from house to house explaining the role of the Daily Worker, selling copies, tak- ing subscriptions and building up house to house routes. Report at section headquarters Sunday morn- ing at 10 a. m. ROCHESTER AND SYRACUSE IN ARMS The challenge from Rochester to| Syracuse now on its way to the latter city crosses a challenge from Syra- cuse to Rochester in the Daily Work- er campaign for 60,000 circulation. Here is the word from the executive | committee in Syracuse. “The Party in Syracuse considers the statement of the Rochester sec- tion in the Daily Worker in Nov. lith issue ‘we are mobilizing the two Party units to help out in this | drive’ as totally inadequate, weak and unsatisfactory. “The Party in Syracuse hurls a} revolutionary challenge to the Roch-| ester section that we shall-have a better record in the Daily Worker drive than Rochester, and that we| set oursélves to concrete tasks of es- tablishing routes in various parts of the city and to have the Daily sold in the strets by comrades of the Par- ty, league and pioneers, “Our slogan is 100 per cent mobil- ization of the revolutionary move- ment in Syracuse behind the Daily Worker drive. ' “, . . this most important work | has been shamefully neglected. The fact that the Daily has been eager- ly bought by hundreds and thou- sands of workers who have come to our demonstrations and meet- ings indicated that these workers are ready to become steady readers and subscribers.” BEST CONFERENCE IS HELD IN GARY E, Thomas, District Daily Worker representative in Chicago writes: “In Gary we had the best func- tionaries conference for a long while where we discussed thorough- ly the Daily. “The sections are getting on the job: Section 5 challenges Section 2, Section 3 challenges Section 4, sec- tion 2 challenges Section 3. The units | of the sections are challenging each other. “We are calling a conference for the Daily Dec. 21. This conference will not be for the drive alone but to es- tablish a permanent apparatus for the Daily.” BROCKTON TO BUILD HOUSE TO HOUSE ROUTES The Brockton, Mass., unit writes: | drive with this note from L. Fill-| | more: | for the Daily have just been out and ailyCampaign; ges in the Air under the weight of reports from} 60,000 readers for the Daily Worker. | all over the obey “Our unit has decided to take 10 copies of the Daily Worker each and | endeavor to build up a house to house | Daily route. . We distributed 1,000 copies of the election issue and are | confident we can do something here to aid the Daily.” | DAILY WORKER ASSET IN CANADA Vancouver, Canada, swings into the “In answer to the new sub drive | collected the enclosed $9. “Hope the movement there is in a position to put over a real drive behind the central organ and that conditions such as Jorge uncovers in his ‘Red Sparks’ column will not be tolerated by a Party beginning to make real history.” FINDS DAILY BIG HELP WITH FARMERS “I have found the Daily Worker | a great help to me in directing the farmers and workers to a practical | SAYS OLD PAL OF MEANS, WOLL’S SP Civie Federation Detective S Served Time for Swindling; Shot a Woman; Is Great Liar | Federation, is now openly allied with one of the slipperiest labor spies in America. He is none other than! |Gaston B. Means, former operative | of the bureau of investigation of the} |department of justice under the no-| torious William J. Burns. His record includes trial for murder of a wealthy widow, faking a will, being a German) spy, collecting bribes for former Atty. | Gen. Daugherty, plotting rum sales) |and acting as detective for the late| Mrs. Warren Harding against her|y husband. His book, charging that | Mrs. Harding poisoned the late pres- ident, is still one of the best sellers in New York book stores. Means has been hired by Woll's Civic Federation to spy on workers and their organizations, at a sum | said to be as much as $500 a week,| according to an investigation con- ducted by the New York World. He has now been subpoenaed to appear | before the Fish Committee to hand | out some of his “disclosures” to that group, which is aiming at resurrec- tion of the bureau of investigation marked Burns’ regime in post-war | revolutionary Party. “The farmers here have come to the four roads and they do not know which one to take... . The capitalists are playing a game of freeze out and I think the people here will support our papers better 4in a short time.” P.G.M., artist, Detrait: “Put a couple of lines in the corner of your paper telling readers to leave their papers on street cars. The Daily Worker is well gotten up.” IRISH BUY FROM NEGRO IN BRONX. Henry Williams, one of the most | active members of the Red Builders New Club, says: “I sell to Irish ex in the Bronx. One ; lady said to me, ‘instead of spread- © ing apples all over the city they ought to spread the Daily Worker. Once people get © these Daily Work- er ideas in their heads they won't stand for things.’ “A fellow gave mean extra nickle Henry Williams to yell out ‘Jimmy Walker is a Tam- many crook.’ “I don’t have to be paid to do that though. I get my ppaers at 5 a. m. every morning.” a] he said was “only to clear up” the matter of the police, was in a coverty way, propaganda for wage cut. Nominations When nominations were made for local officers, the machine nominated Humphries for president, Oldenberg for vice president, J. Louis Afric for secretary treasurer, The members of the local nominat- ed the following candidates, who! stand for a program of struggle and against the wage cut: president, Jer- ome Hope; vice president, Harry Kah; and for secretary treasurer, Max Manes. E. Hearn, independent, was nom- inated for president, and Max Finger was nominated for vice president. This Max Finger came out for the | wage cut. The Committee of Action To Fight Stenographer Wanted. Job open for expert stenog- rapher; dictation, general office work; Party member or close sympathizer, Apply: OFFICE WORKERS UNION (6 WEST 2ist ST, NEW YORK Ask for MAY FIELD {f possible, apply between 10 & 12 a.m. Party work, Against Wage Cuts is circulating to all members a leaflet calling for sup- port of the resolution which was tuled out of order at the Local 8 meeting, and denouncing the use of police by the officials, and calling all to fight against the wage cut. MEXICO CITY.—In one of many attempts to cover the sale of Mexico to the U. S. bosses, Ortiz Rubio forced 5,000 children to swear off drinking. Thus, like in the United States, a fake issue is manufactured to hide some offensive against the workers. years. According to an operative who worked with him under Burns when “red-hunting” was a favorite ‘occupation of the department of jus- | tice under A. Mitchell Palmer, Means | tion after his release from jail a year and a half ago on a liquor charge. A Wonderful Liar. “His reports make fascinating read- ing,” said his former buddy, “but you can’t check them up. letter-stealers I ever knew. When I first heard of him he was working for the Germans during the war as and the red-hunting hysteria that) | was employed by the Civic Federa-| NEW YORK.—Matthew Woll, act-| justice was under i: ing president of the National Civic|Senate commi He's clever | and slippery and one of the best a spy. He's the sort who would take| ation by a Jail For Fraud. While w the latter tice, Means was assi Mrs, Maude King, a w in North Car dead, shot by a bul gun. Claiming suicide as he taking her out for target practice, he was acquitted, Her estate had dwindled from $5,- 000,000 to $60,000. He served two years in Atlanta penitentia i “glass casket” fraud case and later. took another 2-year rap for liquor law violation. Good At Framing. “He’s a slick article,” had low-detective. “He can fra case if anybody can. I look for some startling sures’ in the document line when the National Civic Federation chooses to make public his reports.’ The Civic Federation, whose finane cial secrets are well guarded, has Mrs. Finley J. Shepard, the former Helen Gould, as a principal angel. Woll has obtained the use of the names of many important labor lead- ers on the letterhead of the organ- ization. Among them are Frank Feeney of the elevator constructors, Michael Keough of the molders, Thomas McMahon of tt textile workers, William D. Mahon of the street car men, David B. Robertson of the locomotive firemen and Jo- seph P, Ryan of the longshoremen. The principal activ’ of the fed- eration consist of denunciations of American business men trading with the Soviet Union and hysterical de- mands for the deportation of foreign born radical workers and the sup- pression of radical organizations in this heals | low—if there’s money in it. And can he write reports!” According to this information, Means, who “knows a lot about Burns,” turned to him after his re- cent release from jail for help in get- ting a job. Burns, who is an inti- mate friend of Sec. Ralph Easley of the National Civic Federation, gave Means a cordial recommendation to Easley, who straightway employed him in the Civic Federation’s favorite racket, lying about the reds. Hecan do almost anything, Burns says of Gaston. Few men in America enjoy such an German imperiat government in this country, right-hand man of Burns, and later employed by Atty. Gen. Daugherty in the crooked liquor deals for which, among other things, the former head of the department of 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Admission Youth Progressive Club, Y.C.L. Unit 1, Bronx DANCE TONIGHT AT 8:30 P. M. 569 Prospect Avenue 35 cents SECTION TWO—RED SUNDAY All comrades report to WEST SIDE WORKERS CLUB, 64 West 22nd Street this Sunday 10 a. m. to canvass for DAILY WORKER readers. LOUIS HYMAN—N, T. K, MARMAR—Intern'l L, TALMY—Icor JESSIE TAFT—Pioneers THE 75th JUBILEE of Comrade MORRIS VINCHEVSKY (The Pioneer of Jewish Revolutionary Literature) will be celebrated by all revolutionary workers TONIGHT MADISON SQUARE GARDEN WILLIAM Z. FOSTER and others will greet in the name of the Communist Party Greetings from the following Organizations: M, OLGIN—Jewlsh Buro—c. P. WM. ABRAMS—Morning Fretheit Writers wei vu A. Workers Order Prices: 50c; 75c; $1.00 M. EPSTEIN—Greetings from the Soviet REDY—Jewish Workers’ School of the International Workers Order » KURTZ—"Proletpen” SALZMAN—Chairman FREIHEIT GESANGS VEREIN, RED DANCERS, ARTEF AND OTHERS Tickets on Sale at the Office of the Morning Frethelt 35 East 12th Street, New York City up any sort of work—nothing too} odious past as Means, ex-spy for the} Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUP Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5974 All kinds of CUTLERY ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES MAZDA Bulbs Our Specialty. NEVIN BUS LINES 111W. 31st (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs Tel. 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