The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 30, 1931, Page 3

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_DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1931 Page Three WORKER TELLS ABOUT SLACK OPERATIONS IN OREGON MILLS Lumber Production Still On Down Curve Despite Bosses’ Optimistic Predictions Road Building Plan to “Relieve” Jobless Proves Fake 1 | PORTLAND, Ore.—In the lumber tnduebry no decided gain in mill operations as one type of mill or camp opening up is generally offset by another closing. The West Coast Lumber- men’s Association report on 340 mills shows operations at 45.67 per cent of capacity with 69.30 per cent as the figure for last year. This is the weekly figure and is on an even keel for the month. Shipments Below Production. Eighty-seven mills reporting urers Association show shipments 17.4 per cent below produc- | to the Western Pine Manufac- tion and orders, 148 per cent belowe#——— production. Soviet Order Opens Factory. Other industrial activity dependent upon lumber shows no gain with ex- ception of a carriage company at Dallas, Ore. This concern manufac- | ures stack carriers for lumber yards nd opened up on receipt of a $100,-| 00| order from the Soviet Union. | own dependent upon this work and | has not seen any large orders for| @ year or more. Farmers here are beginning to suf- | fer‘ as a result. of large differences between the growing cost and selling | price of wheat. Wheat raised in the | Inland Empire at a cost of 65c to 86c| 8 bushel. Banks that control the| mills have been forcing sales to pay | debts at as low as 50c. Fruit farm-| ers complain of the profits being got- | Spokane, Wash. | Daily Worker, I wish to report that I am on the job selling Daily Workers in Spokane and as there is no one in the field here and since this is an important | town, I have decided to make myself the regular Daily Worker Agent here. The workers here are sure up against it, worse than any place West of the Mississippi, but the trend to- wards communism and the new Red | Unions is good. As soon as these | workers get to making a few nickels, Tl be making good here. I am handicapped for money, so will have to struggle along until I zet a short job to make money to Southern Ohio Mail Marion, Ohio. Daily Worker: Some time ago I stopped in a town | in the southern partrof Ohio where Harry's brother used to keep a bank. You know Harry, who used to work | in Uncle Sam’s Kitchen. Well, as I) walked around Hoover's Kitchen, I window the cashier noticed that I {By a Worker Correspodent.) Milwaukee, Wisc. saw quite number of people lined up| in front of the MailsBank. In their hands they had a little book. Well, I decided that I too would} join the line; when I came up to the Daily Worker: The South Milwaukee Hospital, owned by Dr. Dempsey, has a widow working for it. She did not get paid | for six weeks, and she’s sure of not getting the money. There is also a nurse who didn’t getspaid. These two have two children to support. They paid afraid of being laid off without PThe relief here is being cut so the | ms | arackets don’t get enough to last them for two weeks, and they tell him | that’s all he’s entitled’ to. The out- | door relief doesn’t want to furnish milk. The county hospital doesn’t | take care of workers. The doctors | seem to take a look at you once in a while, and sometimes they do nothing at all but just you with a smile, i “(By a Worker Correspondent.) OAKLAND, Cal—An_ ex-service jan out of work for over a'year and half, and after looking for a job verywhere finally landed a job for 25, Jubilant, he-started work with zest to be good to the boss. But } tamished condition did not per- I this and after working a few days he fell unconscious on the job. TERROR IN ST. LOUIS SHOPS ST. LOUIS, Mo, April 17—On top ‘ot wage-cuts, speed-up, unemploy- ament and other evils forced by the, eee ben Ge iin ace weeks | ers of St. Louis, comes now a vicious terror in the shops. ‘The bosses started this campaign ieaned ‘of the increased activities of the Needle Trades Workers In- _ dustrial Union, In one shop the boss called to- gether all the workers after a distri- "bution of leaflets by the Industrial Union and threatened to fire any who went to any of its meetings. In most of the shops the workers are not allowed to speak to each So. Milwaukee Workers Get $7-$15 a Week { Hunary. Oakland Ex-serviceman Breaks Down | ten in the manipulations of the ap- ple racket. after they leave here. Road Building Fake. Press is stating that “private con- | struction is picking up” and the charity agencies are beginning to close. road work and funds are being held | with exception of $15,000 until next | | fall. The control of these bonds is in | | | the har s of a committee of leading | citizens. Their word is law. It looks | like a determined drive on all those who have no homes, etc., will be un- dertaken in the next few weeks. A group of savings and loan banks | are springing up with various names but all listed under one head as the “Guardian Group.” ‘It appears that | this is a milking scheme of the estab- | lished banks to get the few dollars | left in the pockets of the workers. “Spokane Daily Worker Agent Makes Good” start the Daily Worker myself. 1 am getting papers from Green of the Workingman’s Club. I have to pay him 2c a copy. The Skid Road is good for 15 or 18 Dailies and I aver- | age 15 per day, but will pick up. I have seven steady customers and I have been selling four days including to-day, which is Sunday. I like this town and as I am the} only Daily Agent here I will marry the town for the summer. I am do- ing my best for the Daily at present, altho I am on the sick list with such a cold that I can hardly talk. Lets hear from you out there. Comradely Yours, LA. R. Bank Closes Down hadn't any book; he asked me what I wanted. I reached for my pocket | and asked him for 50¢ change. Next | |to me in line was a Negro worker | who also had one of those little | books. He stood in frontof the win- | | dow looking through the glass and| calls out “What's the matter here?” | The cashier, called out, “There is| nothing the matter; haven’t you ever | heard of a bank busting?”’ The Ne- gro worker said, “Yes, I heard of a bank busting, but never before did I have a bank busting right in my face.” 3. while the workers are in bed with | pain. The workers at the Line Material Company are working two to three days a week in some departments, getting 40 cents per hour. The line Material Company intends to move out workers at the Wisconsin Apple- ton Electric Company. The workers there are speeded up and are getting three cents a mold. Molders are making only about $15 a week. When they pay their rent, they have noth- ing left. The coremakers are making only $7 to $15 a week on the core machines. So you see, workers, how prosperity is around the corner with starvation wages. Join the T.U.U.L. or the un- employed council and fight for real relief, unemployment insurance, and against wage-cuts. ment, which caused complete break- down. City doctors (so as to have the least to do with him) considered him crazy and sent him to Santa Clara County Hospital at Napa. . Many other ex-service men here in Oakland are on the verge of break- down and starvation. Ex-servicemen should organize shoulder to shoulder with other workers and fight this system of injustice. Ex-service Man. other and are fire if they do. ‘The conditions in the shops are worse than they were ever before: are unlimited, they work just as long $5 to $7 @ week; in some shops, hours are unlimited, they work just as long as the boss wants, while at the same time thousands of needle workers are walking the streets, About a week ago one of the big- gest dress shops, Ely-Walker adver- tised for help and nearly two thou- sand came to apply. None were hired. it turned out to be a trick to force those working for him to accept the steady wagecutting. In one of the cloak shops the boss instructed the workers not to go on the market when they go for lunch because he doesn’t want them to ge. any leaflets. In spite of this terror the N. T. W. I. U. will intensify its activities and is at this time engaged in a campaign ‘to organize shop committees, Portland voted $200,000 for | The capitalist press service which prints this picture says: calamity at Penowa, where hundreds of families are starving after coal mines shut down. MORE PACKING, OIL WAGE CUTS Phillips Co, Armour Grind Their Workers KANSAS CITY, Kan., April 28.— The. Phillips Petroleum Corporation, a large oil company, has just an-| nounced a 10 per cent wage cut for all workers at their refinery here who receive over 40 cents an hour. | This cut is to take effect on May 1. There is much grumbling among the workers, as this is the second cut which has taken place here recently. | A wage cut has just taken place in Armour & Co. packing house here, | | by which some workers lose as much | as a dollar a day. This is only one} of a series of wage cuts which the Armour workers have received. It has ture Armour is going to lay off the still employed. KASSAY FREED BY MASS PRESSURE Syndicalist _ Law is Declared Illegal (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Department of Justice agent and charged under the Criminal Syndi- calist Act of Ohio with “spitting on the rivets in the steel frame” which according to the Goodyear bosses would weaken the steel of that dir- igible. The International Labor Defense immediately investigating the case found that Kassay who was held to be the best mechanic in the plant had openly agitated amongst his fellow workers against the wage cut that had just taken place in the shop, although his own wages had not been reduced. There was talk in the plant of a strike and when the bosses dis- covered that Kassay was in sympa- thy with the workers and was a reader of the Hungarian Communist paper Uj Elore, they placed a spy next ‘to him in the shop who told Kassay that he was an agent of the Russian trading firm, Amtorg. Not being able to get anything on Kassay, the spy cleared out of the shop af- ter a few days. Immediately after that Kassay was arrested on the frame-up charge of sabotaging the dirigible by “spitting on it.” The Cleveland district of the I.L.D. immediately rallied the support of the workers in Ohio and secured Kassay’s release on bail which was set at the unusual figure of $40,000. The capi- talist press in Ohio and throughout the country broadcasted the usual lies that Kassay was an agent of the Russian government sent in to the U. S, to carry on propoganda and sabotage against American industry. wpm oe NEW YORK.—In a statement by the national office of the Interna- tional Labor Defense upon the-receipt of the wire from Cleveland telling of the freeing of Kassay, it was poin- ted out that through an immediate militant mass campaign the task of freeing Kassay was achieved. In ex- actly five weeks of vigorous activities against the attempted railroading of this worker our ends were accom- plished. Instead of ten years in pri- son, mass mass protests on part of workers set Kassay free. In the Amnesty Campaign for the immediate and unconditional release of the Im- perial Valley workers, Mooney and Billings, and the eighty other class war prisoners, the International La- bor Defense is pursuing the exact policy of mass activities as in the Kassay case. Conferences of all workers’ organization and their sympathizers are being held in all sec- tions of the U. S. and Jaying plans for the Amnesty Campaign conducted by he I. L. D. Mass activities of all forms is the only effective method of setting free the victims of the terror set loose by the bosses against any and all workers who dare to organize against low wages, unemployment and the speed-up.” also been stated that in the near fu- | majority of the workers who are} PITTSBURGH, Pa., Al long ago it was impossible to see a/| company union. come to ask for a job. Things now are quite the opposite. | It is hard to see a man at the com- pany office, Instead, wives and chil- for jobs for the husbands and fathers. Scores of them can be seen’ there. | often they are turned down. | On the public highways scores of | miners’ wives can be seen, with their children, going from one mine to} | another in an attem, for their husbands. They walk in rags and without shoes, hungry and exhausted. Many a mother. carries | her two or three months old baby as far as 15 miles. Again misery and “home.” day out. ‘This continues day in and children, the oldest being only five years, went a dozen times from Rus- selton to Wildwood, a distance of 15 miles, taking with her all four chil- dren. each time. Finally, hungry and tired, distracted by the cries of her hungry children, months old, in desperation, She gave a good beating to the foreman. Only in this way she was able to get a “Depression doesn’t describe it; it’s an absolute | Starving Miners’ Wives Beg Company for Job Jobs for Men pril 29—Not | job for jcb for her husband, to save her miner’s wife and children at the | by hunger. Only men would| | This is only one of thousands of dren are there begging the foremar| And the more they come the more | pt to get jobs | this is being done only to make | Again no. job. | starvation at Recently a young mother of four| the real beginning of a mass cam- ‘The foreman turned her down | the youngest only three | | starving children from horrible death Hunger Marches similar cases. Immediate relief for the unemployed miners is the de- mand of the hour. Thousands are starving. The Avella miners were} starving so much that within two weeks they have organized several hunger marches on the county seat. These hunger marches have forded | the charity organizations to give some food and clothing to’the starving fam- | ilies. Every miner understands that | | attempt to quiet them and to pre-| vent further struggles and hunger | marches. The coming District Convention of the National Miners Union in the Metal Mining District, May 10, the Ohio District, May 17, and the Penn- sylvania District, May 23-24, will be) paign, expressed in local demonstra- tions, city and county*hunger march- es, to force the government and the operators to give immediate relief to the unemployed miners. In the course of preparations of the Pennsylvania District “Convention, two hunger} marches will be held, one on Wash- | |ington, County Seat of Washington County, and one on Uniontown, | county seat of Fayette County. ands of steel workers and miners will | participate in the May First demon- strations in Westerh Pennsylvania, Wets Virginia and Eastern Ohio. The , | feature ‘of the demonstrations will be the report of some of the 128 dele- gates on the hunger march to Har- risburg. ‘The Pittsburgh demonstration will take place in East Park at 1:00 p. m. The main speaker will be George Powers, national secretary of the Metal Workers Industrial League. In the evening there will be a mass meeting at Pythian Temple, 2011 Cen- ter Avenue. One of the speakers will be Carl Price, district organizer of the Communist Party. The Pittsburgh demonstration will also be a protest against the whole- sale evictions scheduled for May 1st, especially of Negro tenants. . MILWAUKEE, Wis.—The workers of Milwaukee are enthusiastically pre- paring to make this May Day cele- bration the Jargest, most militant, and best organized that this city, run by yellow socialist fakers, has ever seen. The turnout and response to the Bassett Meeting was a splendid dem- onstration of the workers’ determin- ation to fight against the stagger system, wage slashes, soup kitchens, lousy flop houses, evictions, and pol- ice terror set loose upon the workers by the bosses, using the “socialists,” and LaFollette “progressives” to get the job well done. Tens of thousands of leaflets are being distributed by the Communist Party, the Young Communist League, the Pioneers, the Trade Union Unity League, the Unemployed Councils, the International Labor Defense, the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, and many other workers’ organiza- tions. Forty workers’ organizations came to the May Day United Front con- ference, April 19, and answered the Communist Party call for downing tools and. “demonstrating on May First, with pledges for funds and ac- tive participation both in the prepa- rations for May Day and in the dem- onstration itself, ‘ Phil LaFollette, the “progressive” faker-goyernor, has joined the Amer- ican Legion, the K. K. K., the social- ist party, and President Hoover in at- tempting to stop the May Day dem- onstrations, by,,declaring May 1 “Ar- bor Day,” and,calling the workers and workers’ to plant trees in- Milwaukee Workers Go Out May Day to Expose ‘Socialists’ PITTSBURGH, Pa.——Many thous-;stead of joining their class in fight- ing street demonstrations. The work- | ers, however, will see through the bosses and their schemes, and demand ‘Unemployment Insurance by demon- strating on May Day! The demonstration will start at 2:30 Pp. m., at Haymarket Square, North 6th and Vliet Streets. After a meet- ing, the parade will march south on Fifth Street, turn East on Wiscon- sin Avenue to Marshall Street, where it will disband. The workers are going to show their organized strength right in the heart of the business section. After the main demonstration, in the evening, there will be a program and hall meeting at 8 o'clock in Harmony Hall, South Sixth, and Mineral Streets. Down tools on May Day! Strike and demonstrate against imperialist | war, and for the defense of the Soviet Union! For the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill! For a 7-hour day and no cut in pay! ss CS ea Demonstrate in Grand Rapids. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich—A mass outdoor demonstration has been ar- ranged here for May Day, and thous- ands of workers will be rallied to-par- ticipate. ‘The demonstration takes place at 3 p. m., at Fulton Park. In the evening there will be an in- door May Day celebration and mass meeting at 1057 Hamilton Ave., N. W. (% block south of Leonard St. N.) Admission is free. There will be a program of revolutionary music and songs, Phone Stuyvesant John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St New York HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restdurant- 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 6865 “Ravenous Appetite, | speed-up there has been already) so | | $22 million in 1930, which is $6,000,000 | year totaled more than 11 million IMPERTALISTS IN FRANCE PAID MR. HITLER FOR AID Slender Means” PARIS.—“L'Echo de Paris” pub- lishes a biography of Adolf Hitler and | adds the following comments con- cerning Hitler's relations to French propaganda sources: “After the 1918 debacle, Hitler, to- gether with other adventurers of the same kidney, belonged to the general clientele in the anterooms of the al- lied ambassadors. Hitler showed par- ticular zeal in supplying the military commission with information. For us Hitler is a living reminder of all | those tendencies in Germany which we could have used to dstroy the last. relations between Eerlin and Vienna or in order to separate South Germany from North Germany. Hit- ler was received in audience by the French High Commissioner in Cob- lenz. Whether he received money? Probably, for Hitler always had a ravenous appetite and slender means. Later on also meetings took place in Innsbruck and Linz at which two French officers were present.” SINCLAIR LIES TO SLASH WAGES, Gets More Profits Out} of Workers; Pleads | Poverty in Letter President Sinclair of the Sinclair | Oil Co. personally signs a letter post- | ed in his refineries and sent to some | of his employees, announcing 10 per cent reduction on salaries of $100 a | month and under, and 15 per cent cut | in salaries over $100 a month. The wage slash, in addition to all the cuts so far put through, for the | workers who get hourly wages, that is, the common everyday worker in | | the industry, is not stated, but will be “on a fair basis so as to conform as | nearly as possible to the reductions made in the case of salaried em- ployes.” not only suffered from the general | depression . . . it has had many troubles of its own .. . After reducing | expenses wherever possible, we find | that can no longer be postponed . The dividends paid to our stock- holders January 15 and April 15 rep- resented a reduction of 50 per cent | below the rate previously paid.” | ‘That excuse is a lie! In the Phila- delphia Ledger of three days later | than the letter from Sinclair, is a report on the profits of the comp&ny, under a headline, “Sinclair Oil Corp. net of $22,214,002 shows big gain,” and the facts as given there are | that in spite of less income, the Sin- | clair Oil was able to so cut down ex- | penses (remember the wage cuts and that it could make a profit of over | more than it made in the prosperity year of 1929. Dividends paid last dollars, and Sinclair, who signs the wage cutting letter with a plea of poverty, was right there when the melion ,was cut, and made a nice little speech. Answer this cold-blooded attack on the workers by the wealthy Sinclair, with organization into the Trade | Union Unity League and a strike against. fey hla 4 wage cut! MASS PICKETING AT GREENWICH Hod Carriers Follow Advice of TUUL GREENWICH, Conn., April 29.—|} Hod carriers and building laborers here on strike against wage cuts have been mass picketing. They not only stopped three jobs being worked by scabs brought in from Stamford, on Monday, but they forced Mitchell to stop all his jobs until today, when he is supposed to decide wheter he will yield to the men or try to run with scabs. Mitchell is the biggest contractor and head of the bosses’ association. ‘The mass picketing is the result of | pressure from below on the AFL of- ficials of the International Hod Car- riers, Building and Common Labprers Union of North America.. These of- ficials were horribly shocked when ‘Trade Union Unity League speakers urged the strikers to mass picket, but the rank and file strikers were en- thusiastic about it. Don’t Let Ailing Kidneys and \Bladder Ruin Your Entire Bodily Health <a Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food You'll be sorry if you don’t act at one: tocurb kidney and bladder Soublon ‘A serious) -down in yourhealth may occur. Take action at once. Get Siantal prescrived for coanary "op a the world. ef = United Press Editor Says Machado Rules Cuba By Terror; Whole Country Is Like an Armed Camp; Many Killed | Streets Lined With Soldiers; Machado’s Palace Guarded Against Attack by People; Many Taken “For a Ride” Stark terror pervades, Cuba under the dictatorship of Ma- chado, with the support of the National City Bank of New York, and the U. S. ambassador, Guggenheim. The United | Press has sent one of its leading writers to cover the situation in Cuba. William P. Simms, who is foreign editor,for the Scripps-Howard newspapers, is now] ‘Baku Oil Workers in Havana. In a series of articles for | the United Press he tells of the ma- | chine-gun rule of the bloody butcher, | Machado. All Cuba is like an armed | Havana—picked guard over ventilator camp. While Simms gives a good picture | surface conditions de does not| of probe deeper. He does not see that | Build Five New Cultural Houses the main arm of this terror is di-| rected against the workers and par- ticularly against the Communists. Writing of Machado’s fear for his | the great majority life against the people, Simms says: “On the roof of the President-Dic- tator’s palace ser 2eys and skylights, fishing in the sunlight. ntries shafts, their |Have Sport rt Palaces and Open Air Theatres BAKU, U. S. S. "3. R.—'The Baku oil workers have built five, Palaces of the White House of| of Culture and a series of clubs at a mount chim- bayonets cost of $2,500,000. The Palace of | Culture “Stalin” in Suracham ts built | on modern lines and has» wonderful “tm the streets about the palace,| tounds with sport places oa Sua | squads of soldiers in khaki, and spe-| air theatres. 4,000 workers ‘visit this keep anxious] building and the grounds daily, An- cial| police in blue, the approaches.” | watch about the entrances and over| other such building is being built, at | a cost of $850,000. It will have three Simms knows that this terror rule| large halls, and hundreds of other of Machado is carr’ approval and under the direction of | Teading rooms, etc. the American imperialists who rule| | Cuba, A state of civil war exists in Cuba | with the forces of Wall Street thrown behind the bloody dictator Machado. | “It is martial law, guarantees have been suspended. Freedom -of speech and | writes Simms. “The President himself has declared \a state of war exists. Constitutional indefinitely of the press no longer exist.” Simms associated with the petty- bourgeois and even from them he got a story of mass murder. The fol-| lowing incidents that he tells about} are magnified a thousand-fold when | applied to the Communist ad mili- Sinclair’s excuse for this is in his | tant| workers who lead the fight of workers and sympathizers against letter: “The petroleum industry has | | against the Machado-murder regime. ied on with the|Tooms of various sizes for libraries, It will also have | fine grounds. The German workers delegation which arrived in Baku, declares that the workers of the capitalist .coun- tries cannot conceive of such splendid buildings solely devoted to the use of workers. Not even the! Bourgeoisie builds such splendid palaces in the capitalist countries. Demand Release of 9 . Negro Boys At May 1st Demonstrations (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | this outrageous frame-up and planned | mass massacre of nine innocent boys. “Beneath a smiling surface Cuba| hese conferences must include the | the Pearl of the Antilles, is in the|jargest number of working-class or- | grip of fear. The people live in fear| ganizations, together with delegates | of arrest. prison, or worse. The dic-| from the block and neighborhood that a reduction in pay 1s a necessity | tator lives in fear of revolution and | committees of both white and Negro lin constant danger of his life. There! workers which must, be, organized at may happett. “The people are afraid to talk,’ | a well-to-do Cuban planter told me | is a dull, gnawing anxiety over what) once. Workers! All Out May Day In Mighty Protest A national leaflet is being prepared | out in the country, a long way from) by the LSNR and will be issued in | Havana. ‘Talk too much and you/ millions of copies. A pamphlet giv- may be taken for a ride. They may | ing the history of the Scottsboro case there may be cide.” | find you hanging from a tree. And| some bullet holes} through you.| But it'll be called sui- Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STH FLOOR All Work Done Unde of DR. JOSE ISON ersonal Care from the time the boys-were arrested to the present and thoroughly expos- ing the frame-up nature of the case and the lynch justice of the capi- talist court at Scottsboro, Alabama, is being prepared and will be ready before tne end of May. | Negro and white workers! Only the | united mass protest and struggle of | the workers and all sympathetic ele- |ments can save the lives of these | boys! Only quick, energetic action in mobilizing mass protest-and érgani- | zational strength can stop this legal mass murder of innocent working- Cooperators’ CHEMIS' 657 Allerton Estabrook 3218 T Avenue Patronize SEROY BRONX, N. ¥. class youths! Build Biock and Neigh- borhood Committees ‘fdr Scottsboro Defense! Organize broad United |Front Conferences! Continue’ the barrage of protest telegrams to the governor of Alabama! ‘Demonstrate May First against the Scottsboro le- gal lynch verdict, against starvation, wage cuts, against imperialist war! 20 WORKERS FACE ELECTRIC CHAIR! SCOTTSBORO, ALA., PATERSON, N. J. ATLANTA, GA., 9 — Framed-up on “rape” charges .5 — Framed-up on murder charge 6 — Charged with coaching to in- surrection” SMASH THE BOSSES’ MURDER PLANS! Demonstrate May Day For the Release of the 20! Rush Funds to INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE, N. Y. DISTRICT 799 Broadway, Room 410, New York City THE WORKERS SCHOOL “Training For The (lass Struggle” 48-50 EAST 13th STREET ALgonquin 4-1199 MAY DAY GREETINGS! Fundamentals of Communism......... Fundamentals of Communism ...... Political Economy ... Leninism .. Elementary Russian . Intermediate Russian «oy: Spanish REGISTER NOW! DON’T DELAY! CORRESPONDENCE COURSES SUMMER TERM MAY 25—JULY 25 ecaTeLeredeis.» .Monday, 7-8:30 Thursday, 7- Me Wednesday, 7-8: Thursday, 7- . Monday 8 Pies paiee vs 7- Tuesday, 7- fi Thursday, 7- Number of Students in Each Class Will Be Limited! TO BEGIN EARLY THIS SUMMER Fundamentals of Communism, Political Economy, Leninism, ete. For further infromation write to the Santal Midy WORKERS SCHOOL, 48-50 BAST, 13th ST., NEW. YORK C&TY aut SOM aS

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