The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 18, 1931, Page 1

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CHILD STARVATION. Central Org Norker faust Party U.S.A. (Section of the Communist bs ee WORKERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE! Vol. VIII, No. 94 Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the act of March 8, 1870 Ba NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1931 CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents 6,000 RALLY FOR MAY 1 AT START OF HUNGER MARCH All Aid to the Fighters for Nicaraguan Independence! | ahaa worker, every anti-imperialist, everyone who stands on the side of the toiling and oppressed masses, will hail with joy tho renewed and extended armed struggle against American imperialism by the Nica~ Taguan people. The outburst along the eastern coast, which contains the important sector of the Nicaraguan proletariat, is undoubtedly the result of the deepening crisis and the brutal unloading of the crisis onto the workers and toiling peasants, robbed by imperialist, ccncessionaires. The entry of this proletarian force into the armed struggle marks an history stage in the struggle for Nicaraguan liberation. Because it is these elements, the proletariat, weak and confused as they may now be, which give great promise of carrying through the struggle to ultimate success. Which may guarantee the victory by independent action from possible treachery by bourgeois leadership. Hoover’s and Stimson’s “new policy,” supposedly for evacuation, is the most transparent and detestable imperialist hypocrisy. This “evacua- tion” has already been the policy since February 13th—and exactly two and seven-tenths marines have been “evacuated” daily. But now warships and plane carriers are speeding under full steam with ten times more forces than have been withdrawn. Moreover, the FRAMING OF 9 NEGRO BOYS FURTHER EXPOSED; PLOT Convicted ot on Flimsy Testimony of One of Girls Wimbley, Co. Attorney Said “Co. Has Juice to Burn 9 Niggers” CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., April 17. --Additional facts discovered today WORKING CLASS IN MIGHTY PROTEST, Demonstrate May Day, Demand Release! NEW YORK.—Joseph Brodsky, well known New York attorney of the In- BY STATE, MOB, “DEFENSE”| SUPPORTS LEGAL LYNCHING OF NINE Stand Firm; Local Leader, Doughe ¢ Widespread Anti-Lewis Sentiment; _Defy Brennan’ rty, Tries to Utilize) NMU 150 MARCHERS LEAVE PITTSBURGH TODAY; LOCAL MARCHES BEGIN '8,000 Anthracite Strikers 4,000 Parade Streets of Philadelphia As 105 Begin Hike Score Ala. Lynchers native “national guard” officered by, U. 8. marines ,are definitely intended Will Demand Right to ternational Labor Defense, left for| by the International Labor Defense to take the brunt of imperialist, repression, with the entire armed forces of Yankee imperialism standing at their back and ready to act when Wall Street interests require. This is not evacuatian! This is not withdrawal of the armed forces Birmingham yesterday morning to help line up the defense for the nine Negro youths, victims of a court-room | representative further exposes the | vicious frame-up nature of the case against nine llegro youngsters, eight }of whom have been railroaded Gov. B. M, Miller of Alabama, who has refused to Urges Miners Take Control Themselves | Capitalist press reports indicate the strike of eastern| Pennsylvania coal miners, all of District 9 of the United Mine| | Speak in Norristown BULLETIN. NORRISTOWN, Pa., April of imperialism! It is only an extension of these forces, hypocritical); < ‘ j 4 path a behinds imperialist: demasgouy! di % liynching at Scottsboro, Alabama,| trong. to death sentences in the | raise his hand to stop the court » Workers of America, is still going strong and that preliminary | eave penne from Phila Tt is even “explained” that the airplanes that are now dropping bombs | Where sentences of death were passed | “itcult court at Scottsboro, Alabama.) room Iynching of nine Negro | efforts to force the men back to work pending “conciliation” | gy their numerical strength a0 upon Nicaraguan villages are “only cooperating with the national guard | on eight of them | ies ae young belt a con- | youngsters, being railroaded to | have failed. | militancy fee ake ee auiaae and are not operating as marine corps units.” Behind such empty phrases, | rs yperate with A vieted on the “insupported testimony | etectric chair on framed-1 sre is an indication of’a new strike bres tack | ities to leant _ : GHilai ane cHeP RAHA cetiwas Wil tn iinnderiet the Nisaramaan: | ore will cooperate with Allan] of Victoria Price, a notorious pro- p There is an indication of a new strike breaking tactic on} sac hed sobiinists a held a mass workers and peasants before the indignation of the class conscious work- | T2¥0, J. L. D. attorney who has been | stitute with jci! record in Chatta- charges. the part of the district officials of the U. M. W. is the con-| aid oF hel tas oan Seg capitalist ers of the United States! in the south for several days now,| nooga, Tenn. ‘The other girl, Ruby sideration of an (undoubtedly inspired) “request” of a few | Sealleneean Sethi hundreds. ‘The same identical capitalists who are starving millions of unem- |and with George W. Chamlee, lead-| Bates, was unaile to identify any of | dozen miners at the Locust Summit Central Breaker for a a ee ce loved workete Jot this /sculit ia bhai Rethiraet 3 the defendants on the witness stand | ME G «“ ear ; ntral Breaker for a) calt in the state potice.to break up te ch mi fs Foo Life ans tO. ae #0 ning; aod Jing attorney of Chattanooga, ‘Tenn | ii sutle Of the achive ald of ib ratty ‘separate union.” The idea of appealing to ihe district officials) the march, Pottstown isinext, with 4 ‘ag people. , ght {sour fight! The | lood | who has been engaged for the case] a . es for a charter for a separate union »—— a big outdoor demonstration tomor- that is being shed by the murderous agents of Yankee imperialism is the | cuter. Both of the girls are known | | m4 5 " by the I. L. D. ri a { can only be understood as a trick t q D | row afternoon. The marchers are blood of our class brothers and comrades! y : as prostitutes throughout Southeast | i split the strike. orkKer 8 tall to | | nein and cheering all the way All revolutionary workers, all anti-imperialist forces must at once rally | Negroes Hitch Hike to N, ¥. C. to Ask| “T! Tenuessee and northeastern Ala~ | i Gtie y TUE Gime. FRR ae to the support of all forces which are fighting for Nicaraguan indepen- | Aid of the 1. L. D i bama (Special to Daily Worker) | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 17 -§ dence! Particularly thosé which, like the Army of Liberation, are in | vee Guvaabeleraesie | The story of the youngsters that|Come Out Sunday In} saenanvoax, pa. April 17. — Defense oa six thousand workers, employed and {) the forefront of battle with arms in hand, fighting to drive off the in- | Two Alabama Negro workers ar-|they were not together on the train] “Ty ic for Def Eight thousand miners are striki cease | unemployed, massed inta.the elty fall ; vaders from their native soil! In every May Day demonstration through- [rived in New York City Thursday to|is supported by statements of white assalc Lor erense here against, the closing of Li | plaza here today at é Me m : es out the United States, let the banners be raised in behalf of the fighters | ask the I. L. D. to fight the lezal/ Workers who declare the nine boys —— Gen shire Gum the day off’ oF hans | ust Sin ae Sent Migivery. wontnaioe ee tee ance for Nicaraguan liberation! Iynching of the nine youths. ‘They|tade on widely ceparated cars, and| PASSATC, N. J., April 171A De-| {OF Tot BN ME OOF Oo oY US mash Seottsboro Pe alate ae gm Get out of Nicaragua! Full support to every force in battle against |had hitch-hiked from Alabama, tak-| that none of them hed any part in| ferise mass meeting for the freedom | (S87 mf Ut fT Auta Tit Paterson Frames‘ * | inn and tenameepieinant tinergnce: imperialism! ‘Hail to the armed workers of Nicaragua! Every aid to the | ing 16 days to get here, and were un-/ ‘he fight o f a group of colored ee Mie sap workers wee tei etre meth: whe sate Wi, A ana pat ikante a Ne rani ; ready |then with white men, eld Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at the ai r th. anti-Lewis ay VEUGARITER ee ee va auth sie Bi pee sicady ‘The white men who were riding| Russian National Homie, 159-Fourth | 2nd anti-Brennan sentiment, which NEW YORK.—The fight to free the | jf Philadelphia’s 195 hunger march- ; Members of ead Negro churches with the two girls do not accuse | St., Passaic. a local leader, Dougherty, is taking Victims of fhe Scotsboro, Ala., and | ers, starting for Harrisburg, a hun- } ° 9 and organizations have joined the na.|2RY of the defendants as those who| It is an attempt to stop the con- advantage of to put himself at the | Paterson, N, J., frame-up cases ‘is oy ae away. Four thousand of : re ou ctive us tion wide protest, repudiating the o.|tifew them off. the train. spiracy to kill our fellow-workers. head of an opposition movement. The | gaining momentum. ‘Thursday night | | pe ree the march- ’ shy Bae? a | ~ As a result not a single one | An interesting. program has been| miners, however, regard Dougherty | gop workers gathered at an open-air | TS @rOusH the streets to the put- operation wii je southern boss} ¢ ai . atranged. The speakers include Israel | Somewhat askance, remembering skirts of the city. The demonstra- INTO the office of the Daily Worker, there pours every day a tremen- ||lynchers by the Negro reformist press | Of he white men was put on the | strange ae are | nt Wilkes | Meeting at 7and St, and First Ave. | - hi sponeing 6 , y » s UREEOS | tinea “abe cal |Amter. ‘The Workers’ Laboratory | What happened in the case of Wilke: ve.) tion passed through working clai dous supply of stories of workers’ struggles, of events of great impor- |and reformist orgrnizations like the} ja ie pe renee Sadia pgs * heakiov ot Ria Werke’ sale l lpareet Where the Tr Pomiike called the Yorkville English | neighborhoods and was cheered bi tance throughout the world, of articles and statements aimed to give the | National Associatio, for the Advance-| ? ee ae hai ehh ace ser i tal nae tiatin ne MeeId’ Gub) thet Branch o: workers on the way and by the hos ) toiling masses’ of the entire country the best thought-out policies possible | ment of Colored Peple, The National | then told to get out of town. tional Relief will perform a play,| Maloney-Davis gang sold out the By nch of the New York District of pa aaah paced ou ia ae hos > to direct them to success. Urban League, the Universal Negro| There was a tacit agreement | “Buy Now. miners after pretending to lead | thelnternational Labor Defense, dem- | rhe’ Gagilalsh se 7 is ‘ , wags be | het « ” gainst vis istr’ | alist. press is boycotting : ‘The Daily Worker is now trying not only to improve its contents and |Improvement Association, etc, which| between the state, the “defense’ them against Lewis and the district | onétrated their PRES | a Hel ae are ee Ms ottin; l to give more than formerly, but to reach out to ever new fields at the = | sitorneys’; atid’ the mob’ vleaders or | smash the frame-up of the elghtNe- | ‘The marchers will fight the Norris same. time consolidating its present circulation upon a firmer—paid in (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE, | Hat there was to be no mob | District President Brennan was at| | tovs in Scotsboro and the five | town threat to use the state iro advaiicesbaaia: | lynching this time, that instead | the meeting yesterday of 1,500 min- | © presage a Gpiaiaranacsst ohn RUN eta as nie Reine cent - . Beis | | ye itt >a strike! e | on rn y mand the r g Subscriptions are the bed-rock of Daily Worker circulation. Every 1 TEVA chee eee era: tt Locust Gap. He was aver | sereon silk: sirikers, “whol 'the | +) cig meetings in Nerristowo, end q revolutionary and sympathetic worker is urged to do his or her little part ‘ { 4, n i | court _lyneb' Ea ¥ | Be 5) whelmingly outvoted after he talked | capitalist courts e trying to burn a epicvec ina J > | in adding to the campaign for subscriptions now going on, Are you active | Berta reer] as Wembley; Seatinbie) séorbey aed | himself blue -n the face trying to in the electric chair. ‘The speakers) Denounce Legal Lynchin, on this? Can you get a sub? Go out and try! | for the Alabama Power Company, | scare the men back to work. He told | af the meeting, D. Tarmon of the! Speakers of the Trade oitinlen§ ; ‘The whole working class of this country is being called | Who was one of those appointed A meeting of the May Day Capt-| them that if they won equalization of | | 1 Ty 8 called upon to rally , bythe $udge to “defend” ins, elected by their vari lub: | 1. L, D, and Beverhold, a Negro mem- | League and the Councils of the Un- 4 in masses to the May Day demonstrations in the struggle for their daily y.the judas to (Betend!: the: boys, alps, elect y their various clubs,) work they must take a ten per cent |’ : BOERS | employed addressed the Philadelphia demands and to warn capitalism that the workers are on march to said “Alabama Power Company | unions, language organizations, un-| wage cut. He howled about the sanc- | ber of the Workers’ -Servicemen’: Daley hallemmeting whieh di d th ; revolution. NT Ww: rk WwW re a P " has enough power to burn nine | employed branches, etc., was held on| tity of the contract. He called the| League, were enthusiastically ap- following’ telegram tebe Haye i ‘The Daily Worker is issuing special editions to reach all sections be- | ©” OLKErS 1TO-| niggers.” ‘The trial judge charged | Thursday, April 16th, ‘at 16 W. 21st | strike outlaw. He declared there “is | plaucled larder Willen’ o¢ Alanehee fore May Day. Are you active? Are you ordering the May Day edition? test Outrage [Ue AB, A sake ae ecaae:, into. | St. | no remedy for unemployment,” 21-/ «ane 7, 5, D, is now holding open-| “We thousands of workers as- Oar. in advance, And do not forget the greetings to the Daily Worker | ee ae ape Ratoens oth At this meeting instructions how! though he knows very well that the air backing feguikely Re _ - ie sembled at the city hall plaza in (25 cents a name) and larger ads from organizations! NEWARK, N. J., April 17. Ale : to organize their defense groups were| sentiment, is strong among the min- anid New Teleee, NESE a ar Philadelphia to send off our hun- ‘These May Day editions shobld reach the widest circulation possible, | mass meeting of hundreds of Nearo After the first death sentences |-given to them by a representative| ers for state unemployment insur-| Or workers in defense of the vintion | ger marchers to Harrisburg to pro- Get them into the factories! Into the trade unions! Into every group-of | amd white workers in this city last were pronolnced' there, .was <renien- from the Labor Sports Union.’ It! ance, 12 thaen back eee " Pealine ay test the railroading of nine Negro workers! Are you active? If not, get active at once! night demanded the immediate rem ee ae ee ctine antaide | PAS csbeclally stressed at this meet) ‘The National Miners Union is call-| pig indoor mass meeting will be held | boys in Scottsboro, Ala., to the elec- . lease of the 9 Negro youngsters, rail-| ing, the importance of discipline on| ing upon the men to: | next Friday, A in| ttle chatr. We are convinced th BP RAYMOND ©. BUELL, research director of the Foreign Policy Associa- | Toaded to the electric chair and sent- Peieeibey. pan remaining ‘casee, | (2? waareh om May Dey. The line/ 3, Organize e rank and file strike | St, Lukes ‘Hall, 125, W. Lboth’ Gt | tine Negro boys are fea ont ; tion, an idealizer of fascism speaking Tuesday in New York, said: | CHCed to die on July 10 by am Ala ee oe “tstat was. deliberately | oy mare, civen is as follows: As-| committee in each mine to lead the | winiam 1. Patterson, a militant | ate innocent of the charge placed ff “There is real danger from Communism,” because reparations burden was | P22 boss court. lee for the day of the. opening ef | come, Place at Madison Square, 28rd) strike under the slogan, “Don't let | eader of the Negro masses of this | against them. We therefore de- turning Germany toward the Soviet system, and that America could not | _ The following protest was sent to a Jocal fair in Scottsboro, which apne kate sabe et pis the officials interfere!” ___| country, who only receutly returned | mand the immediate release of the stop Communism with embargoes. Another fascist preacher, Benjamin | Gov. Miller of Alebama: drew in additional thousands from| worth of 7th Ave. to 38th St, West 2, Elect a general rank and file | from Soviet Russia, will be one of | Nine Negro boys and the abolition _j A. Javins, a lawyer, speaking on “Industry's challenge to government,’ | “We demand a new trial with a ‘he surrounding districts. The “trial” ‘ 3 | Strake ..commnities) Bua” spread the | the speakers. | of all Jim Crow laws.” sketched a plan for “organized capitalism” which he sald was being pre- | jury consisting of workers, at least/| was sagged as an additional feature | 01 S002 St. to Sth Ave. South of oth strike to all Pennsylvania & Reading | | Sa capa gs pared “by a committee whose make-up I cannot reveal.” half of wh hall: be N cf jfor the fair. Ave. to 15th St. and East of 15th St.| Goal & Iron colleries. House-to-house collections, to raise | Miners On the March. alf of whom shal jegroes. Manes rcpt to Union Square. It was pointed out,| 3. Get all the union locals of other | {u"ds for the defense of the two| MINERSVILLE, Pa. “April 17—A | “we will hold you responsible for} Roy Wright, 14, the only one of] 5. it was stressed to all workers that | districts to endorse and aid the | °@Ses, will be held Saturday and | delegation of jobless miners and OPEN AIR MEET Ware Cuts, Unpaid any injury to any of these nine Sk gd peepoenae 4 pemreneed to the we must assemble at Madison Square | strike. i | Sunday, May 9 and 10, the New York | their wives starts from here Sunday \ Labor Im ed 0 2 youths. We further promise that we |” oDatelise pa sata ght ral 12:30 p. m, and start our march at| 4 Each lotal strike committee to| International Labor Defense an-|at 10 a, m. on the hunger march to i Lose n ni g0 on ws the fight until fe. accent Tf they are going to be| 2:30 P- m. in order ta reach Union| work out demands to present to the pane | Harrisburg. At noon they hold a IN B R 0 N X Hatters’ Locals pisegiee Lk rate al Bet ea ae © | killed by the State Iet them kill me,| Sauare at 4 p. m. sharp. Tt was de-| company. : | meeting in St. Clair, at 2 p.m, an- : oe eve {ull social, political and eco-| +, instead of keeping me in prison | cided that the captains are to form| 5, Fight against arbitration and) Working Class Women |" 3) Prankville, at 3 at Shen- Mere at NEW YORK.—tLocals 7 and 8 of | Momic equality, with the right At pelts | tor life.” their defense groups from their vari-| the conciliation board; don’t let the | | andoah, at 4:40 at Ashland, at 6 at ta fi lia the United Hatters of North Amer- | Utermination in the Black Belt.” | ous organizations before the 23rd of | fakers. sei u back to work unti acure Preparing |™, came ‘0 Mobilize for May|; ; Workers bf Chattanooga are being gal fakers send yo! til . ica held meetings Wednesday at} ‘The mecting was held under the| mobilized for a protest meeting here| APtil, and on that day all captains| your demands are granted; fight for} May 1 Demonstration | coo. en ae ftom Mahonoy First Stuyvesant Casino and Beethoven | auspices of the League of Struggle | tonight against this murderous] and their groups will meet for final| the six hour day; no reduction in| - | City to meet the Minersville march- , Hall, respectively. The members of | for Negro Rights, an organization of frame up and death sentences for| instructions at the Manhattan Jy-| pay; unemployment insurance for all] NEW YORK—Councils of working| "%,2* Shetandosh, : ‘There will be HRS open air meetings | Local 7 had a 10 per cent cut in| white and Negro workers. ‘cight working-class youths, ceum, 66 E. 4th St, unemployed miners. | class women are in the midst of prep- ‘The delegation will stay over Sun- tonight in the Bronx under the aus-| W@8°S and in addiion had to do ireaae abations tor the May" lel demonswa-| Cee ee. ee ee pices of the Communist Party, Sec-| tee extra bows for nothing. The tion. Open air meetings are held in Lea ar Igesencoaginiger a hse ia die tion 5, to demand the immediate girls of the local agreed to accept a | “ ry ry mt the market places and around public meeting there, then go on to Sun- vitro ote anon mars MecP cs, te eee Masses in Nicaragua Support Armed Fight ro “Eo mare crane od from Nicaragua and that the hun- the local made them vote at the - g ‘The hunger marchers will asstire dreds of thousands of dollars spent | #me¢ time for accepting the three Lectures on May Ist as @ day of | the striking membets of the Ma- daily to carry on this war, in the extra bows. Thus the girls had to | Working class struggles are being held | honoy Valley of their solidarity and interest of the Wall Street’ bankers| #¢cept both the cut and the extra gainst a t. roops; OOVEYr Bd A vothorligngedaerngg bd ania iced See Taree he eerie in Nicaragua shall be used to give | Work, without the privilege of voting | councils are located. they will declare the solidarity of ‘adequate relief to the millions of un- | 40" the extra work. F nae | April 19th and 26th are set aside saute bia Rannren see ‘employed workers and oe families, ee is we officials of the | While Hoover prints state-| ,, bs ‘ besides the revivified battle|as the Red Sundays when the coun- | UPemPloyed workers, as tier? Sevens ta a Me Nowhe thie Weslo wage of anon ier | mente in, the capitalist “press tebel Forces Mass for Attack on Bluefields, |against American imperialism |ci! members will canvass the work- | (SEE PAGE FIVE FOR FORTHE ; i . i Ng ry i ‘ ng class houses with leaftets, pamph- NEWS.) ~ These meetings Will pleo protest | 1ozen hats to $2.80, $3.25 and 9350 about a “change in policy” to- Important City on East Coast; War by the armed forces of the jes, and the “Working Women.” | . per dozen, depending ’ Nicar: : ae ’ Army of Liberation and new against the attempt to “legally” lynch | BX C07 on the kind of | ward Nicaragua trying to inti- “a A lesen tate being raised to help the] Yonkers to Hold the 8 Negro young workers in Scotts- | "0" coer aa was that the | mate there will be no reinforce- Ships Land More Marines troops of workers and peas-| say pire United Front Committee, 0 ‘Air Meeti boro, Ala., and to prepare the work- | local More work, because | 1 onts for the . ants, is the fact that great pen Air eeting marines, the . & " of the Bronx to demonstrate their | f the decreased price, but it would 4 i The Councils of Working Class ; seid ess to fight for unempioyment.| ' reality mean that the other lo- latest news from Managua tionist f in Ni the: ear of the population ar! Women call upon the wives of the to Rally for May Me hi het. Waites shorter | cals would also cut the wages, so/ tells of, the constant arrival of| tionist forces in Northeast. | treating the Nicaraguan work-|supporting the anti-imperialist| workers to come to Madison Square S.-All insurance, orter | Ni i ‘ ‘ Sq YONKERS.—All workers, Negro hours, against evictions and imyor-| there would be no increased work for | battleships loaded with Wall) ¢'® Nicaragua was begun |ers like dogs had been executed | fight. on May ‘First at 12°" r tol and white, are urged: to attend-an - jallst wars rid tor the defense of the | oP local. butla general wage-eut for | Street armed forces to attack| ‘da”: by United States Mar- |by the insurrectionist. army| Reports from Managua state demonstrate against the HIGH cost of | open-tir meeting Saturday. April 17 irst anc only proletarian fatherland, | AY eet the: grow! | ines, National Guardsmen |>ftcr an armed battle in which| that a large Sandinista force| B® Mish rents, and to demand un- | af 7p, m, at the Larkin Plaza, New ‘he Soviet Union, on May Ist at Madi. | “°° swindled into acceptance, think- |the growing struggle of the vaviatora? mate a Unt Waatels : s' hdinista. TOrce| employment insurance, and — free) school Land and Nepperan Ave, This GE ioe, Gauere at 12:20 p.m. ing that it would mean more work | Nicaraguan workers and peas- es hoe ne f Pens BA nited | the eight Americans took part|under the leadership of Pedron|iunches for school children, feehiain meeting is Balog ston tn: ‘The meetings will be held at the| for them. ants and the Army of Libera- ie ta le a lanagua jin shooting Nicaraguan work-| Altamirano, had arrived at San| ‘The Council of Working Class | der the auspices of the Comm’ ‘ollowing places at 8 p. m., 139th St. | ————--——_____________. I tion. ater pril 17, ors. : Pedro del Norte and was pre-| Women calls upon the working class! Party of Yonkers fot the purpe'> ot nd Brook Ave. 16ist St and Pros-| Parkway, 24ist St. and White Plains} aq q _This followed the report that] Masses Support Fight. | paring to storm Bluefields, one | mothers to keep their children out of | mobilizing the workers for: the e-m- Aye., Wilkins Ase Intervale | Road and 163rd St. and St. Nicholas determined counter- {eight yankce tools of imperial-| The outstanding feature oflof the leading cities on the! sa on May First and to take ing Intorretiondl Workers’ Metid : m an Pei in A kg a ae A . y ‘ ga thom along to, Madis rd May ‘ ould alien 4 Ae magmas iis Ms atatee 1 i as ‘ against insurrec- jist corporations who had been|all the stories from Nicaragua,|East coast of Nicarague. | st. and igh ave. | Renter aa th a 4s bing she ca Aa

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