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— By RYAN WALKER ee ’ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1931 Page Two , pee mW OSS PAINTERS CRAM THEIR | BELLIES; PAINTERS GET SOUP great deal remains to be done... only by continuing in the it that progress will be THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER Facrories Chosep NEW YORK. — Half the painters fr are unemployed. Many of them | and it fe eating slum, one bowl of soup pel same 5) iy, on the hreadlines, But the boss | made - hinters of Brooklyn and Staten Isl- hd threw a party Saturday night, leir “Third Annual Banguet” at periah Manor. Here is what they hd to eat (copied right off the imi- ition engraved menu): Fruit cocktail, celery, olives, cre- | We nuts, Parisienne potatoes, chick- | tn consomme- with noodles,..crown if sweetbreads, mushrooms, petis pois, chicken paprikash, risoli pota- won 3 ] : SOUALIZATION Worst to Come OF arya Indeed, with the help of the A. F. | Aa of L Painters Union, much has been | accomplished—unemployment, speed- up, worsened conditions, wage-cuts, either secret or open and admitted. But in the same spirit, he said, much remains to be done—the painters still at wogk can have their wages cut un- 4 til they live on breadline handouts too, and hours can be shunted up to Ne a 7) cs, = y : ) foes, toast chicken, aspatagus, can- | maybe twelve, Indeed, when the ack i @fed sweets, fatci @ermi, salade, painters uhcomplainingly let’ the 5 t i mints, melon fces, petit | bosses starve and speed the mas they lasse, mineral water, | do now, so that those bosses can swill in luxury as they do now, surely the bosses are excused if they think things are going to be easy to put over. But the painters won't stand for it always. Let them get in touch with ‘ sf the Trade Union Unity Couneil, 16 WAIT FOR NEEDLE STRIKE CALL West 2ist St. Let the unemployed (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tonic, malt tonic and ginger Reims SOCIALIST - LABOR Covennmeny’ Danville Misleaders Wash Hands Of Workers’ Misery DANVILLE, Va., Feb. 15. —- F. J. Gorman, vice president | of the United Textile Workers, and other “leaders” of the rec- ent strike of over 4,000 cotton mill workers here, have washed | their hands of the whole situation, Thursday the local union chiefs told Langhorne Jones, “county Red Cross chairman, to “assume full responsibility for relief of destitute families in the recent strike area” Miss Nellie Earedison, a Red ppen te be religious, the assures you CAPITALIST USA New what would a religious Jew do ation army bread line? Such he #ich ike that you speeches, and one boss fin- remarks thus: Ithough much of which we can has been accomplished . . . yet a WOMEN TO RALLY FOR MARCH STH Mobilize Women Food Workers STRIKERS ACCEPT, TUUL LEADERSHIP Commercial Furniture! Strike-Goes On NEW YORK.—The strikers in the | Commercial Upholstery Shop at their second meeting, Friday afternoon, were told that the boss said: “Since the union is not with you, you can’t! win.” The boss meant the A. F. of| |L. Upholsterers’ Union, Local 176,! Attention ! All Party and Young Communist League Members! | In the struggle that will take |] place in the needle trades—the dressmakers’ strike — the entire Party an Y. C. L. membership will have an important role to play. Every Party and Y. C. L. member || must expect to be called upon to | va a JOBLESS DEMAND join the. Councils of the Unemployed. Get some of that meal for yourselves, even if the bosses have less to swill nal organizaiton faces the uestion of on! PROTECT FOREIGN BORN WORKERS Committee Issues Call to All Organs ADELE CAFETERIA Cor. of Second Ave. and 7th Sf. and even 50 per cent. Thousands of them now wk from 8 in the morning until 8 at night. Bosses stand at their elbow urging them on to faster and faster work, and there are countless dressmakeis who ‘ind $15, $18 and $20 in their pay envelopes after 50 and 60 hours of the most back-breaking work imag- | inable. New York City But above all, all the needle trades workers who are members of the Party or Y. C. L. will be called upon to give full time to the strike, to perform all the duties Cooperators' Patronize I. L. G. W. Aid Bosses. ‘LEADERS GO FREE indeed, are not with | March the eighth is International) NEW YORK, N. ¥.—The New York| ided and |f *88igned to them by the Needle Cross nurse, reports the death from | Whose leaders Working Women’s Day. The very District Committee for the-Protection/ The T. L. G. W. has aided and/{ crades Workers’ Industrial Union. |! y7 ; pneumonia of a child, and adds,|@hY militant action and work on the | S E R O Y eed ial day has been set of Foreign Born calls ‘the attention | advised the needle trades bosses in|] ris is tho revolutionary duty of | Mass Meeting Today|*wanutition especially _among| theory that the workers are all will- ‘deaiay sside ir jon: in the interests of all working class organizations that every attack on the standard of li every class conscious worker, but children, presents a problem.” ing slaves. to Hit Railroading 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 . BRONX, N. ¥. ing of the dressmakers, but its trait- orous policy is rapidly opening the eyes of its members, many of whom | A furniture worker, interviewed by | the Daily Worker, states: “We know just the opposite. We are deter-| in support of the struggles for the Prot ion of Foreign Born, to the) following decisions of the New York especially of every Communist. This strike will be a very impor- tant one for the entire militant shows the im- for all f the Women workers | bo nd’ the Heceomty Let Red Cross Starve Em. Workers feel that the U. T. W., in ea NEW YORK.—Although the Tam- | vorkers, men and women workers, to : ies | lake setiously the question of mob- | Conference the Protection of | a flocking Cee ee labor movement, and must end in |) "any fake employment agency has) turning over the 3,500 starving fami-| mined to win this strike ourselves, ] fizing the millions of women work- Foreign Born, which was held on] fignting Union, ihe Mt O Cw. are (| victory for the needie trades || Packed up and moved, in the vain| lies (whose strike the U. T. W. sold| against the wish of the misleaders|] DR. J. MINDEL ] workers. District Committee, District New York, Communist Part; of the A. F. of L.” The strikers elected their own strike committee, and, after hearing | the organizer of the Furniture Work- out) to the mercy of the Red Cross, | have shown that they are through in | Danville, They do not expect Gor- man to come back. February 8th, at Irving Plaza, which | ied out immediately: immediately the ques- of affiliation and fill out ai- | effort to get away from the daily | meetings before it of the Down Town | Council of the Unemployed, there | will be another meeting at Leonard irs in industry under the fighting eadetship of the T. U. U. L. On this day, throughout the World. hillions of workers will demonstrate, now on all the important strike com- mittee of the Industrial Union. and | are expected to be among the most militant: dressmakers in the coming | Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone: Algonquin 8188 tien Joth men and women—demonstrate | fiiation blami: itztiee: | ; . However, local U. T. W. leaders will | ers’ Industrial League of the T. U.| Not connected with any ] ihe solidarity of both men andwomen| 2. Blect a Protection of Foreign | “ie most recent evidence of the | and Lafayette Sts. today at 10 a. m.| undoubtedly keep up the policy of ly-|U. L, the meeting voted to accept | other office ] torkers against hunger, Starvation, | Born Committe 3-6 members, | .anner in which the IL L. G W. and | The reason is a mass protest the method of organization and the| tage cuts, and the erable condi- | Which shall carry on the Preteetion | the bosses work together was af-| against the railroading of the Oct.| (CONTINTED O* PAGE 'THREE) | policy and accept the leadership of | lions existing under capitalism of Foreign Born work in your or-| sordeq on Saturday. }16 unemployed delegation—Nesin, epreerceh tea the F, W.I. L. The vote was unani- | ee a ee ganization and territory. mous. Fri, and Sun, by Appointment Tn the Soviet Union demonstrations FOR DRESS STRIKE 3,000 Jobless Answer Victimize Negro. ; Stone and Lealess—who will be on rill also take place against capital-| 3. Elect a representative of your Anna McKay, a Negro dressmaker, | | trial at that time in the nearby crim- Portland Terror By The strike started Frida: against Dr. J. JOSEPHSON sm and for the building up of a organization to the local committee! ‘ * : | the disch: of one worl vho de- Jocialist society Within the U.S.S.R./ for the Protection of Foreign Born. or Be ated Prcvighar id garcral Anniversary Meeting | inal court building, special sessions, Demonstration Teas Bise pay polio: poe SURGEON DENTIST wh ‘atherle votes | " | 347 . t., y | id : es é Aste 226 SECOND AVENUE on a piteap at ba ae coe Pca pot betes brarteeent wird Ma ago. On Saturday, when she opened Honors By Action | part 6. ; demands drawn up “ the strike Near 14th Streat, New York City irs are improving at a rapid rate| position of Folk Dances, Costume | B&X Pa¥ envelope, she found thather | ‘The Madison Square Council of the} PORTLAND, Ore. (By Mail),—The| Meeting are for reinstatement of the paraitel pay pest fe the 5S Si at Pantemnins nari ‘ sete 4 wages were short $10 and that she} NEW YQRK—About 600 workers | Unetnployed held a fine meeting Sat-| answer of Portland’s unemployed to/ {ited worker, definite date for pay | — fear alan. ‘worten workers of the/ or forei i NOE), Whict en te hand} was fired. She asked her boss why | gathered in Ambassador Hall yester- urday before the municipal flop | the mass terrotization of the Oregon day, no discrimination and no dis- || DEWEY 9914 Pic Be oe geome : | e lapses etc |he hadn't paid her her full salary. oe eae house, at First Ave. and 25th St.| bosses was given Feb. 10 by a mass| Charge of any for being on strike. Sunday: 10 A.M} Pot, Soviet Union are on an equal basis jas the Siar Casino, 10fth Bt ABA! toss replied that he fad taken | o7) 0M the first anniversary of the /wiiey sent in m delegation bo deinadtl | demonsizatiod tn wa rt of th VI With men workers and participate in | Park Aye. (Arranged by the District | out She s10° at the request of the | murder by the police of Steve Ka-| from the director of the flop house | Workers’ Diraanploytneat, (ne Nes | DR. J. LE f 6d phase of ee ae S.R [eee the Protection of For-/7 7, G. w., which would enroll her | tovis, to" honor that brave worker. | real food, that unemployed be lodged | Bill and in a march tpon the city| #24 the need of support through the | SURGEON DENTISE Be ares te 1 tte Sorusront elem oan in the company union, without her | ‘They voted a living monument in| every night instead of only fivenights | hall demanding immediate local re-| International Labor Defenso mili- |] 190) AVENUE U, Ave. U Sta. ial. 3 tant workers engaged in such strug- | gle. .The crowd cheered to meet in the court room and to demand the smashing o fall anti-labor legisla- tion and voiced its support of the National Delegation at Washington. | Mitseff spoke for the Communist | tn these shop brigades in the fac- 5. The fifsk mirciing of the newly tories, building up the industries. jelected Comm.'‘ee for the Prote*ticn While in the capitalist countries | of Foreign Born will be held jointly the women workers are subjected to| with the New y.-h District oars. | the most inhuman exploitation, being| tee ‘sr tre © it paid even lower than the pittance | Born on Wednisd: Paid to the working class generally. (8 p, m. at the M In the food industry there are|E. 4th St. Sil otganizatiozs a month, and that beds and blankets be provided for all who come, and none forced to sleep in the cold, Mannix wouldn't see them and sent an assistant. There will be an- other meeting today and on Tuesday | a demonstration, and another com- | | mittee to see Mannix. Many fol- | lowed to the indoor meeting at 16 lief. Over 3,000 Portland workers turned out in answer to the call of the Unemployed Council. | ‘The cfowd assembled at the Plaga | Block at noon, Munter, spoke for | the International Labor Defense on the revolutionary fight of the work- ers that this assemblage signified assent. She insisted that she didn’t | want ‘to enroll in the I. L. G W., but it was too late. Her $10, most the form of resolutions to back the | | coming dressmakérs’ strike to the} f her ealaey. a” Be is ‘bow | limit, to push the organization of beberle ats pes the Food’ Workers’ Industrial Union ae nana aw once wath | 2nd to demonstrate. soon before Mil- | tunately for her, her experietice with | Bronx, where Ka- | x 6 <¢ | JefS Market, the foe company union was short, if) tovis was killed in @ solidarity mass seloket | meeting for the food workers’ strike Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food 5 64 | that hundreds of thousands of women) have elected iti ésentatives +) the (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Preparations for the strike are go- |. 1G: | Workers, and we know through ex-|Local Co+-nittee for the Protection i Oakes | 2 : f perience that sie women workers in | of Fereign rate “Fe requested +9 seo) ok Dek elise be ‘ba ay aye Mike Otermeier aoe F. nue 1 v.| bas eee s Nia 90 oc 10 fined, y our industry are bitterly exploited by| 6. For all information, refer to | — .| Was chairman, Engdahl made the . | t the oss class. Th our strugtles, as | Committee for Protection ‘of Frey | Bat re in Manhatten Lyceum, 6 b,| Tain speech, Biedehkapp of ite Te peak ua ort raha hia A AALISE MEN i $ || HEALTH FOOD ‘ In almost all important struggles in | Born, Room 505, 32 Union square, | dependent Shoe Workers spoke, Paul| z | ti the working class, women have been | New York City. My aes couture oni pg a Doyle of the Building Maintenance Cain and Artem in | ~ S Vegetarian Restaurant t in the front ranks. We have ne- District Committee for the Pro- | the same place and atthe same hour Workers (Katovis’ union) declared B PL h | oe 1600 MADISON AVENUE glected to take seriously the ques- tection of Foreign Born. | tomortow inlht, | that eas fellow-workers would | ronx Playhouse e R Phone Ualvapitty sees r tion of organizing the women work- | “ti ene a | carry on in his spirit, Max Reppo- | , i tl ewe ture ht u's trl Deport Leon Mabille (2a ana aman tt NaS ain Pind Casey eens | TN Boos Paghowe, a Be re : women workers when it must be the |42¢POFr on abille us Aves tt < | the F, W. I. U. expressed the same | Y@'d, beginning today, will feattire on fe) Phone Stuyvesant 8616 job of our whole, for mon ard women. Without Notifying | Sus wanna i strike funds is| 16a. It Was the food clerks who) ‘ts screen “Cain and Artem,” a Soy- 7 » d March eighth, the women workers | gathering speed, but much is yet to| Were on strike at Millers Market. | Kino film. ‘This is @ film version of 42nd. ST. L BWAY. J obn 's Restaurant & in the food industry must march side Defense Attorneys) be done in this direction if the dress-| Sebastian Pappas, a food worker “@*im Gorki’s great novel. The bal- Pie . I SBECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES by side with the workers of al! other makers aré to be able to wage an|serving with the Dress Strike Com-|9¢e of the program will contain American Premiere ! 4 lace with atmosphere ti industries, with the men workers in| NEW YORK—Leon Mabille, mili-| erreetive fight against the wealthy | mittee as a symbol of solidarity and| CWS Teel @ comedy and other ; hein Brditreran oR mar M the food industry and with the work-| ‘ant Freneh worker, was spirited dut | parasites who exploit them. Branch | connecting’ link between the food | SPeCial features. 2nd Big Week! 302 E. 12th St. New York! hi ers in all cther industries of the Franklin Cotnty jail in upper|y of the International Workers’ Or-| workers and the déess strikers, told aS een w Every local of the Food and Pack-|New York by the immigration offi-| ger has already Faiséd $34 in cash | of the coming dress strike, and the| DRUG CLERK’S MEETING. “$ Star—Tremendous ‘Thrill.....”—NEWS ing ouse Workers’ Industria! League | “ials and shipped out of the United| and g12 in pledges for the $15,000| meeting voted unanimously to sup-|__NEW YORK. — A special organi- “By Rocket to the Moon” decidediy Advertise Your Union Meetings is urged to participate in the dem- | States without any previous notice to| strike fund. In addition, one mem- | Port that strike with all forces, finan- | “tion meeting of the drug clerks worth seeing.”—HERALD TRIBUNE. Here. For information Write to Onstrations on International Working | the attorneys defending him, accord-| per has pledged $2 a week and four | cial, physical and moral. will take place on Thursday at 8 p. ‘ a Women’s Day, and to mobilize as|ing to a report issued last night by| otners $1 a week for the duration of m, at Stuyvesant Casino, Kighth St. A DREAM COMES TRUE! The DAILY WORKER = many workers as possible through an | the International Labor Defense. the strike, Branch 9 has also or- and Second Ave. The meeting is x Advertising Department on energetic drive for participating in| When an inquiry was made by the| ganized a Stpport-the-Dress-Strike EVICT ILL BRONX under the auspices of the Medical Six Hilles aFonNa throvich stellar spacet ‘ _ the demonstrations. —S. Wiseman, | @ttorney of the I. L. D. of Sheriff] Committee of 7 ine wibers, which has Workers Industrial League, affiliated ae. RRS! Now Ne, ts trae 50 East 18th St. New York a ten ry chariot In Trade Union Unity League Calls In All Coupon Collections NEW YORK.—Thousands of cou- pon collection lists were sent into all industrial centers by the Trade Union ‘Unity League in an effort to meet the immense printing bills, Wash- ington delegates’ fares, etc. A num- ber of delegates arrived in Washitig- ton, D. C., who had no feturn fare, delegates from the South and West where finances are hard to secure, All workers Who have coupon col- Jection lists should put them to use ‘at once and send in funds collected. All T. U. U, L. secretaries must remit fifty per cent of all funds collected upon these lists to the T. U. U. L. national office, Contribution blanks for securing funds from workers’ otgahizations Were also sent into the field. The Morfison of Franklin County to the whereabouts of Mabille, the sheriff replied that he did not know where the immigration authorities had taken him to. The sheriff's letter read: “Replying to yours regarding Leon Mabille, would advise that Mr. Mabille was taken from here by Immigra- tion authoritiés. -We do not know, whether he was taken to Ellis Island or direct to boat sailing for France, but at any rate they took train headed for New York. A. E. MORRISON, Sheriff.” Mabille could not be found at Ellis Island as the authorities in the De- partment of Labor had taken him divectly to the boat and shi; off to Franee, ee Mabille was originally arrested in Los Angeles @ year ago for patticipa- tion in @ Mexican deportation and charged with being active in militant organizations. On @ trip to Cafada promised to raise $300 immediately, and has challenged other workers’ organizations to revelutionary com- petition in the faising of funds for the dress strike, Members of Branch 9 are now selling Solidarity Certifi- cates of from $1 to $25 for thé hene- fit of the strike fund. ‘The Ukrainian Workers’ organiza- tion has. athotinced that it is or Banizing for the collection of dona- tions to the fund and a conference of Finnish and Scandinavian organ+ izations will be held on Feb. 22 for the same purpose. i Two members of the N. T. W. I. U. have left for a nation-wide tour of workers’ organizations to collect donations to the fund, Their itiner- ary is as follows: Baltimore and Albany, Feb. 16; Syracuse, Feb. 17; Wilmington and Rochester, Feb. 18; Washitigton, Feb. 19; Buffalo, Féb. 20 and 21; Rich- mond, Feb. 21; Erie, Feb. 22; Nor- folk ahd Portsniouth, Feb. 22 and WORKER TWICE Tammany Ruthless in Backing Landlords NEW YORK.—The full force of Taimmany’s courts was put behind the éviction of Samuel: Rosin, 41, 683 East 137th Street, an unemployed photogtapher, when the worker's fur- hitufe was thrown upon the streets a second time. The previous eviction was resisted by the Unemployed Council of the Bronx atid the furtiitute replaced. ‘Then upon applitation of the land- lord the 16ist Uight Court supplied the cops for the second eviction. Rosin has been unemployed for a year and has a sitk wife and child. He has repeatedly appealed to the police and the Jewish Welfare Society with the Trade Union Unity Lea- gue. All drug clerks invited. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES KAST SIDE=BRONX RKO ACTS | Toany to Tues, Commings: sam Hearn doe EK Howard Roy Gordon Prospects ieist, RRO ACTS Loday to Tues. William Sen- ry and. C8. Bert Walton | “Cookie Bowers Tucker & Smith ‘and here it ist Directo hy Tite Dank who made “Mets whith men will f revared af y to the moon...) PATERSON has opened at CORNER OF :— Branch store: Special cakes madé tof all dechl —— Theatre Guild Productions = Green Grow the Lilacs GUILD yeah, sat 248 Flizabeth the Cueen Lenk Fontan ifred fynt eH PaO and others \ Martin Beck The 45th St ft Bway . West of Broadway ings 8:50, Mats, Wed. und Sat, 2:30 AR wi Fiv: DS Pregente WALLAUE’S PLAY N THE SPOT ARTHUR BYRON STAR FINAL STRICTLY UNION sHOP=F. W. 1. Deliveries made to your h TELEPHONE ARMORY 4-16 M. Plichevsky, Prop, PATERSO THE NEW YORK BAKER Goveriior and Paterson St: River and Washington St: Bread, rolls and cakes of highest quality ‘ ; THE Reliable Butcher Store T, U. U. L. national offi last Septembet he was deported f ¥ for aid only to meet with insults and Hy : an |e 5 seen calls ton all Workers’ otgantes stone, there back to the U. S. ahd Wad ahd BEY eéarigilogn anit Choressnd, ae meat Wite fainted when’ she Extea’ Shit! Stonday eb, 38a] Ete Seer ear oe electrte ani pie have opened.at * whether local ot national, to make |!0dged in the Pranklin Couty jall| feb, 24 to 37: Savanali, Feb, 26: Honing at ihe Wieitaes™ Racist rad ee - "| CORT THbATHE, West ot ani Biree 92 River Street | _ Stine aed Sepwert fonts 60) eee ae Jacksonville, Feb. 27; Toledo, Feb 27: "Tae tammnany sheet the B TODAY C REPERTORY 1th se, sin ay, | Doe Os Tals. We nd Sab 801] 9s Geant Street : wT. U. U. L. district secretaries will] “1 Wish to core 1p Samp sete. ae} ane & Hoe CHanl Eat, Home News Halleloudly Feberted that MAXIM GORKY'S 1 tio, Wi, HAD, Mata ‘Phra Boe A wn BUREE $4 Be NOVELLO Fresh Moat Products ahd Chicken be held strictly to account for ail| lation for the defense and| 3; Houston, March 8; Galveston, | Rosin received ald, implying he could || #9 gp, A dase on ape deems eo ffivbal (id dae ot Best Quallty funds collected upon collection liter-|Telef done in my behalt_by the 1.| March 7; Chicago and Milwaukee,|ave paid rent, sont heh OAMIEEE! THE TRUTH GAME Haiteton vanes, 06, Yar hoeas ature sent out by the national T. u.|}- D: for thosé 8 months that I have| March 9 to 7; Minheapolis, Mareh 8; alla - 4 Bp || sents 4 wooks adv. at Bot Ottice and on “TELEPHONE ARMORY #-ser1 U. L. office. T. U. U. L. secretaries | Deen behihd the bars, From solitary | Shreveport, March 9: Bt. Paul March A R T E M own Mall dia W, ay oleae Phoets FOSTER 4 Volo TREE || strctiy union shots W. Ev. will be called upon to furnish the na-| Confinement where I have been for! 9; San Antonio and Sioux City, What’s On— , —— aia sic ane Canneee ___ Saul Shorr, Prop. tional office with a complete finan-|‘he last 3 months T appeal to ail| Ma¥ch 10: Omaha, March 1); Dallas, s On A SOVKINO FIAT Cth Aver || Bronwen, Behny Mater tver,. Datta cial report of all incomes duting the last two months. Mahy T. U. U. L. class cons¢ious workers to do all ih their power to free thosé militant workers Who aré at present suffer- secretaries still owe for signature lists. literature, ete. These accounts must be thet at the earliest possible to- ing behind bars: Revolutionary greevings, March 10 and 11; Kansas City, Match 12 and 13; Memphis, March 13; St. Louis, Match 14 and 15; Chatta- nooga, March 14; Nashville, March 16: Indianapolis, Mateh 16, and Cin- jeinhatl, Marea 17, — MONDAY : . 4 Hand Rehearsal All old members — jilease promptly at 8 p,m Y ‘0 yolm wash We teport AN workers: wig "ili ali BRONX PLAYHOUSE 1350 Southern Boulevard OE EE, NAT g 1GGEST show is NEW York ponard-—=Ben Bins 3 sot eet RKO on th ‘The Seas Beneath’ With GHO, O'BRIAN AS YOU DESIRE ME By LUIGE PIRANDELLO JUDITH ANDERSON 4 80th BH, we ws! AS XIE BELTS Ui vem. Mutineos Wed. & Use your Red »Shoek ‘Troop @vety day un your job, The w next to you will help save the ) Worker ity 2:80,