The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 10, 1931, Page 3

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‘ ee | eee eee...eeeeaeaQaQaaGLGE sti (a FTC! —— — | | | \ ‘throughout the counties or states. 4 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1931 Page lhree 1 Bedacht Shows How Masses in 1917 Revolted| In Russia and Ended Bloody Regime of Czar (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) government of the United States shook it in willing and welcome recognition. In February, 1917, two and a half years had passed since the workers and peasants of Rus- sia were being slaughtered on the battlefields of the World War. For the rulers of Russia Constantinople was the most important object of the war. The ruling powers of Russia— ' like those of all countries—hid their war aims under glittering phrases. But these phrases meant nothing to the Russian masses. They had exchanged the shop or the farm for the battlefield, only to find that instead of the policemen with the knout, now the noble offi- cer with the rod belabored their backs. Be- sides they had to face death or maiming on the battle fields. To aggravate all, Czarist corruption stole the best part of the appropriations for their food, for their boots and even for their guns; and from home they received word that their families were starved and lashed as ever only more so. The Masses Put An End to Czarism. Unable and unwilling any longer to bear the burden of this bloody and corrupt regime, the Russian masses in February, 1917, shook czar- ism off their backs. The Russian legislature had never dared to take power from the Czar. But it took power immediately from the revolution, A group of capitalist members of the Duma formed itself at once into a Provisional Government and usurped power. For the masses this meant little change. The working conditions in the shops and fac- tories remained as miserable as they ever were under the Czar. The army continued fight- ing for Constantinople, as it had been fighting under the Czar. The soldiers were still driven by the rods of the same brutal aristocratic of- ficers as under the czar. Though the police- men now wore the red emblems of the new- born republic—still they were the same brutal Czarist policemen with the same _ knouts. Though the government was now called a re- public yet the aristocratic land-barons of old still held their estates while the landless masses of peasantry still continued to starve as they had ever starved under the Czar. Only the long suppressed political life of the masses asserted itself as an achievement of the revo- Vution, And this achievement of nesessity had to become the lever of the further develop- ment of the revolution. After the masses had made a revolution they had to find out that in their economic position everything remained as it was before; only the names had changed. The battle or- ders which caused them to die in the war were no longer signed by the Czarist minister of war, Sukhomlinoff, but by the republican min- ister, Kerensky. They died no longer for the -Czar—but they continued dying, nevertheless. Czar or republic, the war aim of both spelt the same: CONSTANTINOPLE. The rule of the landowners had made way for the rule of the capitalists. But both brought hunger, ex- ploitation and death to the masses for the ben- | efit of the few capitalists and big landowners. \ The People Turn to the Bolsheviks. During the years of persecution and oppres- sion, one political party was irrepressible in its activites. It carried on a systematic and persistent struggle against Czarism. It or- ganized and led the workers in struggles for wages, for the right to organize and for an opportunity to live. This was the party of the Bolsheviks. In their activities the Bolsheviks won the confidence of the masses; they learned the science of revolution; they steeled them- selves in discipline. To the Bolsheviks, there- fore, the Russian masses looked more and more for leadership. ~During and for the purpose of the revolu- tion the masses of Russian toilers had organ- ized. The workers in the factories got to- gether, discussed their problems and elected delegates to meet others similarly elected in shops and factories. Thus the councils of workers’ delegates arose in the cities. In the ! villages the poor peasantry likewise met, dis- cussing its problems and electing delegates ‘which met with others similarly elected Also the soldiers in the ranks met by regiments and divisions, discussing their problems and elect- ing delegates to meet with others similarly elected by other regiments and divisions. These delegations of workers, peasants and soldiers | also met in national conventions and estab-| lished national councils. At first these workers’ councils (Soviets) fell under the spell of the phrases of the men- | shevik agents of the Provisional Government. | Only experience and the leadership of the Bol- | sheviks taught them the emptiness of these phrases. Under the initiative of the Bolshe- viks the Soviets formulated their own revolu- tionary program. However, the Provisional Government, like the government of the Czar, only represented | the interests of the few—the interests of prof- it-making capitalists, as the former had repr sented the exploiting big landowners. The ca p-| italists and land-owners wanted Constanti- | nople; the masses wanted bread and land. The | landowners and capitalists insisted on continu- | ig the war; the. masses demanded peace. These differences were irreconcilable. A de- cisive conflict between the Provisional Gov- {ernment and the councils of workers, soldiers and peasants delegates was therefore unavoid- able. The Bolsheviks proposed, as the only possible solution of this conflict, the taking over of government power by the Councils (Soviets). There was no other way out. The essence of the conflict was who should rule. Should the few capitalists and landowners rule through the Provisional Government, as they had ruled through the Czar, or should the masses rule through their Couneils of Dele- gates, through the Soviets? Should the con- quest of bread, land and peace for the masses, be the guiding principle of the government, or should it be the conquest of Constantinople for the capitalists. The Soviets Seize Power. By November, 1917, the mensheviks and so- cial Revolutionaries had been thoroughly dis- credited in the Councils of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Delegates. The national conven- tion, under the leadership of the Bolsheviks, | decided to take over power. With the help of the armed revolutionary masses they arrested and dissolved the Provisional Government. The whole Czarist government machinery, which the republic had taken over, lock, stock and barrel, with its policemen and its judges, with its jailers and its executioners, with its aris- tocrats and with its laws, were uprooted and completely replaced by the machinery and de- cisions of the workers, soldiers and peasants delegates, the Soviets. The capitalist republic of Russia had thus given way to the Soviet Republic. The big landowners and capitalists were replaced by the toiling masses as the rul- ing class. This change horrified the capitalists and big landowners of Russia. Now they began to groan. The groans of a hundred and fifty million of exploited workers and peasants in Russia against the oppression, exploitation, starving, lashing and executions by the big landowners and capitalists never found an echo in the capitalist press, church and the politics of the world. But the groans of the few hun- dred thousand landowners and capitalist ex- ploiters of Russia were immediately amplified a thousandfold. And why? Because the Soy- iet Revolution overturned the age-old “order” that the exploiters must rule. The masses were so long the governed for the profit of the capitalists and landowners that it was de- clared the evident antithesis of order to have these masses become the ruling class. Capi- talist “civilization” cannot accept the principle that not property and property interests shall exploit and rule man, but that man am man’s interests shall rule and exploit property. For the eapitalists the exploitation and political op- pression of the many for the profit of the few is order, is civilization. The rule of the many against the profit interests of the few is dis- order, is anarehy, is—Bolshevism. The second article in this series will appear in tomorrow’s paper. In this article, “Down with the Soviets,” Comrade Bedacht will tell the entire story of what the capitalists all over the world did and said after the Soviet Government was established. Be sure to or- der your copy of the Daily Worker immedi- ately. Strike Spread by Militant Starving Miners in Desperate Struggle; | held, and half a dozen mass marches on mines not yet pulled out are be- ing organized. The workers of Pittsburgh are first of all being drawn into the strike re- lief. Saturday night a meting was held on “The Hill,” and a permanent Picketing {CUNTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) they stumbled forward, and four times the mounted police charged into them clubbing and trampling children underfoot. The marchers would not be dispersed, and those who could see answered with a shower of stones, driving the police behind their barricade, a truck drawn across the road, The crowd demloished the truck with stones, and the mine came out on strike, ‘The fight near Westmoreland was more deadly. The Cannonsburg marchers were stopped @ long way from the mine, charged into, tear- gassed miners’ bones were broken, miners’ eyes were knocked out, and the march broken up, the state police riding after those who retreated and clubbing them down as they over- took them, Here one trooped was knocked out with a stone. Still more deadly was the battle right at the mine. The marchers i pulled it on strike while the troopers were attacking their fellow workers on the other road. ‘The troopers returned, and charged the Avella and Slovane, ete. march- ers at the mine. They crashed into a truck full of men, women and chil- dren, clubbed the adults unconscious, and taking the small children up in their hands, dashed them down on the paved road. Here too the miners fought back, and the troopers sud- denly began to shoot. Over a hun- dred shots were fired, according to some accounts. Two miners were shot: William Parsons of Slovane, shot in the back, and Mike Sklarski, of Gilmore, shot through the arm. ‘There are reports that one mined took a gun away from a trooper and shot him with it, but these are un- confirmed. ‘The strike is being spread. Locals of the National Miners Union are formed in many of the mines which struck only today. Strike committees sectional relief committee set up, with @ one day committee to hold a tag day Sunday. Collectors went out in spite of torrential rains. Two more such metings are sched- uled Wednesday and Thursday. The Wednesday meeting will be under the auspices of the Western Pennsylvania Striking Miners Relief Committees and the Trade Union Unity League at 30 South 11th St. at 8 p.m. The similar_meeting Thursday is on the other side of town, at 805 James St., N.S. ‘ Under the auspices of the Metal Workers Industrial League and the TUUL, William Z, Foster will speak, Friday, at 8 p. m. in the Pythian Temple. This is a solidarity meeting for the strike. A conference of steel workers to work out relief plans for the miners’ strike was held in Pittsburgh, on Monday. The history of af! hitherto ex- from Avella section had started at, are being set up and relief commit- midnight, and reached the mine and | tees elected, Mass meetings are being isting society is the history of class struggle—-MARX, 1917 Negro children, the reformist finding it increasingly difficu the lives of the nine boys. William Pickens made that discov- ery Sunday night. Pickens, who first ternational Labor Defense to save the boys, has under pressure of the im~ perflalist contributors to the N. A. A. C. P., joined the rest of the N. A. A» ©.-P. leaders in attacking the Scottsboro defense Sunday night at a meeting in a church here he at- tacked the boys’ parents, who have all along refused to have anything to do with the N. A. A. C. P., as igno- rant and uneducated. He spoke of the Negro workers and farmers who have rallied to the defense of the boys as the “densely ignorant portion of the colored population.” He at- tacked the I, L. D, and the Commu- nists who are leading the fight to save the boys. After his speecn, Ne- gro workers present at the meeting seized the floor and thorouhgly ex- posed him. Police called to evict these militants found that two Negro working-class leaders, Joe Burton and Gene Braxton, had completely won the audience gf 100 persons. The reformists and their police allies found themselves helpless before the support of the audience. DEFENDS KLAN LAWYER AND WHITE SUPREMACY. In his speech, Pickens completely exposed the treacherous character of the N. A. A. C. P, leadership, He defended the Kian lawyer, Stephen R. Roddy, who helped to railroad the boys toward the electric chair in the original “trial.” He unwit- tingly revealed the position of the N. A. A. C. P, leadership as con- cerned chiefly with maintaining the present race relationship in the South of white supremacy and frightful exploitation and degrada- tion of the Negro masses, “The logic of Communist activities would be the creation of a new ana more serious race problem in the South.” “Fie defended the honesty and motives of the Alabama bosses and their courts in railroading the nine innocent Negro boys to the electric chair. He said: «fhe Communists have potsoned the minds of these humble, helpless Negro people concerning the honesty and motives ofthe state, courts and even of non-Communist Negro lead- ers. The Communists in sapping through the densely ignorant portion of the colored population are cer- tainly most menacing to good race relations.” Sees Good Relations in Lynch Law and Slavery. In the face of 45 known lylnchings last year and the increasing legal and extra-legal terror against the Negro Magses, millions of whom exist in ac- tual slavery on the plantations of the big landowners, Pickens prated about “good race relations” ana defended the authority of the white ruling class which yobs, exploits and de- grades the Negro masses. He said: “Red agitators have threatened ev- ery authority in Alabama, and also the conservative counsel (here he re- fers to Roddy, the Klan attorney de- nounced by all nine of tne boys as “a betrayer of our cause.”—Editor) of the condemned men and have tried in every way to trick the un- educated relatives of the prisoners.” UNWITTINGLY EXPOSES LIES OF FELLOW TRAITORS. In Pickens’ eyes, these nine chil~ loudly praised the efforts of the In- | Pickens in Attack on Fight to Save Scottsboro Boys Defends Lynch System (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the Scottsboro, Alabama ,boss court against nine innocent | Negro tools of the bosses are t to betray the fight to save dren, one of whom is 13 and two of them only 14 years old, the oldest | just 20, have suddenly become Continuing his speech, Pickens unwittingly exposed Iies of the N. A. A. C. P. leaders that the parents had asked them to defend the boys. He admitied that the parents were soldlyl behind the In- ternational Labor Defense even though he continued the slander that they were too ignorant to know what was good for them. He said: “The Communists have corralled abducted, fenced in and hidden the relatives to prevent thelr being ap- proached by agents of law-abiding organizations.” GETS ON KNEES BEFORE WHITE OPPRESSORS. | Pickens then proceeded to apolo- | gize on his knees to the white rul- ing class oppressors and murderers of the Negro masses for the mili- fancy of the Negro workers in the fight to save the boys. In line with this servile attitude he refused to admit that an injustice had been done the nine Negro children sen- tenced to burn in the electric chair after a murderous frame-up and farcial “trial.” He said: “If defendants in the Scottsboro trials need justice they should get it from law-abiding Negro and influ- ential, just-minded whites. The in- fluential South shouldn’t take a sec- ond chance of an age-long rift in the good relations of the races of this section: (He covered up the fact that it is the influential South which con- trols the court which framed up and sentenced these boys to burn!) He then pledged the N, A. A. C. P. leadership to continue its efforts to curb the resentment of the Ne- gro masses and to strangie the mass fight which alone can save the boys. He said: “Whatever conservative efforts are put forth by the N, A, A. C. P. to defend these cases must first wipe out the mischief breeding impression already made by these Communists.” Pickens’ traitorous attack on the defense is endorsed by the Chatta~ nooga Times, a boss paper viciously hostile to the defense. This paper gives a column and a half to his speech under the significant head: “Negro Speaker Warns Against ‘Red’ Campaign.” Negro Workers Repudiating Traitors. The Negro workers through: the country must follow the militant ex- ample of the Negro workers in Chat~ tanooga of denouncing and repudiat- ing this betrayal of the fight to save the Scottsboro boys. Negro workers! Rally in a fight- ing alliance with the white work- ers, to the defense of the Scotts- boro boys! Smash the co-operation of the Negro Judases with the Southern boss lynchers and their courts! Smash the vicious frame- up against the nine Scottsboro children! Rally to the fight lead by by the International Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights to stop the legal lynching of these working-class children! Workers Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day to day struggles. _ Contributions Daily Drive Received to Date Unit 4 DISTRICT 2 | Section 1 Let in, Brooklyn iusthonian Workers Club Section 4, Unit 3 Ocipoy, Bronx Total A Comrade, NY € Sunday and Monday Bronx Workers Club DISTRICT t J Feldman, Brookiyn C Mela, Natick, Mass, L, Schwartz, Brooklyn wd ndville, Vt Ww ’ u Section 4 1 Vinnish We durve . Rant fman, Brooklyn vu Pondyiile Vt Thelma Wirtanen, Bondville, Vt. © nit ue seonts S D Brady D Fedau Maas. 1, Mass. nil], Mass, Boston, Haverhil G Salmi a Ang M Holm Y Ojama , W_Kx Smith, Haverhill Mass. B Anttila P Hachuk, Haverhill, Mass. © Honka ¥ Panteley, Haverhill, Mass. A Yokinen” verhill, Mass. ¥ ‘Tama akae © Arlund W ha Haverhill a sympathizer, ‘ © Pehrman Shop Nucleus A, M Aronen . Mass. H Aronen See 2 Unit’A, Quiney, Mass. BE Jarvin Seetion 1, Aliston Unit Seetion 1 Camer, Unit 2, Dudiey > Boston Mass. cil 2, Bronx ; Bronx 50 tinian Frankox Society, Total Distriet 2 Hempstead 1 1 416| LG MN YE ‘ Progressive House, G, Lerner, Office Staff 1WO, NY 1 Wollman Bortnick, Section 7, H George, Bronx Section, 5 Section Section Workers © Bran! it L 1 Section 3, L Section L oh Coll at pien Aid Mu Linotype Operators, Big Six Workers of A dyer, N Bunion, Brooklyn W AD, Harlem Lisecky, See ce Section 5 Serge Bro Section 1 B Axelr HM Werner, tion 10, Singer, N Anderson, NY ILD Polis! Section 9, Section 8, Harry Oppenhei Alex Hales, W_Gulberg, Ellenville, NY H Weinberg, Franklinville, N I Birnbaum, M Karr, N Leathers Goods Strik Workers of Mike Haureluck, NYC Section 2, Section 8, Unit 1 H Williamson, Brooklyn Section 12 H Ostrow, Strach, Bro Section 2, U Roberts, Se Anelian, Bricklayers M Thon, NYC M Berger, Bronx B Feldman, Bronx HW Sievens, Section 2 00 B Michaelson, N ¥ © O Section M Weintraub, N 139 But we must save the nine Scottsboro boys. Stetion 2) Unte 22 250 Organise! Section 2, Unit 17 J Getzels, Brooklyn M Chelbian’ A Comrade Chelbinn’s B Lowenthal, Brooktyn Nat Pine, Bronx ‘Tannenbaum, Brooklyn Section 10, Jack Kart, Section 4, men’s Cou i Meltzer, NY € tt 1 WO Branch Kimmel, Bronx Unit 7 le Union Unity Council, NY p of Federal and State Workers City Hall Joseph Stenger, Brooklyn Food Workers Ind. Union, N By J Dougan, Great Nec Paul Gugan George Patka cil 5, Unit 9 nit 16 N. Padell nit 1 | F. Pakall nit 1 2.00 | J Peulinkas Servicemen's League, J} Kupsinkis 2 00 J Sechkar nit 2 0 (; Kiinatht nit 17 4 Lauzardes Murray, Brookiyn + Dugan nit 2 od SG Sa A AR ie of Russion Nat. tual Society Malyin Dress Cos, Yo (CON" ction 2 183 White Pinins Bristol yo feet. to denounce him, mer, NY © . Brooklyn NYC vo NYC 1.00 Standard poe William Pickens. i . nyo nx nit 16 ction t Group, TUUL ’s Friend, Brooklyn Friend, Brooklyn Enclosed find We pledge to do al Passaic Unit NYG pate 11 UT—clear the decks of such rubbish! the lives and liberty of the innocent Negro boys of Scottsboro! desertion of Pickens is only an incident. as the struggle rises to a higher stage; and the masses engaged in such a fight should expect more such desertions as the fight goes on. me class to which Mr, Pickens belongs—petty-bourgeois, hangers on and worshippers of the capitalist system, even if sometimes wavering and discontented with their masters—cannot be trusted to lead a struggle of the masses against blood-sacrifices to their oppressors. Peterson Hicksville, LE Peterson | A Arvidson | F Peterson | + Philquist ” 3 Hedbayny, Bronx J Sechwartzberg, N ¥ S Glauberman, Bronx S Dubowsky Bayonne, ‘Two Comrades, NY F Solbrig, Poughkeepsie NY J Viaek, Ferryville LT Na Women's Council 34, | G ©, Section 5 A worker, N Y © G and J Bashe Brooklyn, NY | Thom Milmovic, Clifton, N J | Leo Siskind, Brooklyn | Concoops, N ¥ © | M Text N Bergen, N J | Chas Stmag! N Y € J. Jindra, N Y¥ © | S Pechar, N Y € OF,NYC J Kavaltr, NY C F Osenasek, N Y © cM NY OC | @ Pikal, NY © | | | | ry 33332333 Albert Neves, N Rochelle, ¥ ¥ Coll. at affair by Brownsvilie Workers Youth Center Staten Island Unit a1. Red Sparks of Ridgewood, Bkiya 5.00 Section 5, Untt 13 25.00 A sympathizer $ 30. 33 Lawrence Deporte David Horowitz, NY © Women’s Council 20, Bast N ¥ | 1 W © School, No. 1, N ¥ G ¥ © 1 Bronx 4 Lewis Farkas Ukrainian Ed. WW Asaociation, NY © 1 8 Caplen, Brookiyn Section 1, Unit 2 Section 2, Unit 10 Section 1, Unit 1 H Kessler | Red Spark A ¢ | J Dvorneck, NYC | Section 4, (naz | Section 5 Unit 7 Section 5, Unit 7 Yonkers Unit “ Section 5, Unit 13, Coll. at fare- well party for & Goldman NYG going to USSR 00 | Section 5, Unit 4 2008 | Seetion 5, Unit 4 00 | Section 8, Unit 2 00 | Robert New 00 A Kozna, Brookirn 00 | Seetion % Unit 1 25 Camp Unity, Wingdale, N VY 14.50 Section 5, Affair Units 21, 32, 33. 27 96.35 Prole: 11.23 Section 1,00 Section 1.00 Section 2.00 | L Marcus, 5.00 A sympathizer, Brookiyn 3.90 A group of ESU, Brownayille Br. 6.00 Lerner, Brooklyn 2.00 | 1 Metles, Brooklyn 5.00 Jack 5.00 ‘Wells, Brooklyn RD Danber, NY © 2.00 A sympathizer 2.00 N | Union City Unit, NT H Samuelson, Brookiv# 0 | D Iselepes, NYC 2.00 Section 2, Unit D 1.00 Young Defenders, Bronx 4.50 Section 10, Newark—Farewell party for Com. Salwania, leaving for USSR 13.00 Section 10, Newark—collected at pienic of Lithuanian Lit. | Society ILD and Women's Counell Section 10, Unit 4 Slovak Workers Society, NYC Section 4, Unit 12 I Nester, NYC Dayid Karlson, Astoria, LT Morris Galland, NYC © Robelard, NYC J Harris, Brooklyn, NY Ike Luberman, Brooklyn BE Brown, NYC H Greenberg, Rosendale, L 1 M Kaplan, N ¥ © H © Pitner, NYC Section 1, Unit t Coll. by Carp. Group—Farewell party to Com, D Rosenberg going to Soviet Unton (36.00 D Gell, NYC 1.00 Yonkers D W Club 19.00 Stevenson, Brons 2.00 G K, NYC 2.00 Section 5, Unit 24 3317 Federation of Workers’ Choruses Maspeth, LT 17.8r Section 6, Unit 4 4.00 Section 6, Unit 5 . 2.75 Section 1, Unit 6 DS Section 4, Unit 4 4.00 F Frischkoff, Brookiyn 1.00 Member of Spartans Greek ‘Workers, NYC 5.00 Lithuanian Workers, Scotia, NY 4.00 Coll. by | Katrowitz, Woodridge, NY Dorfman 1.00 Smith 2.00 Arkin 1.00 Novogrataky Log Neukrug 1 Reissman 50 Comrade 1.0@ Elkin 100 A comrade 1.90 Dr. Mislig, NYE 5.00 Total 81,269.68 Recause of lack of space the con. tributions from the other districts will he published tomorrow, Mr. Pickens Takes the Handkerchief UED FROM PAGE ONE) Labor Defense for the Scottsboro defense, Pickens made the “little mis- take” of suggesting that the defense should depend upon a supposed kindheartedness of the governor and ruling class of Alabama, though he was at that time “also” for a mass movement. mistake” caused us to criticize him at the time and to warn the Negro people and the working class of the danger of such a view. Now the struggle has risen to a higher stage, more and more thousands of active masses have been drawn into the struggle; and the sharper fight has brought a further differentiation. to be just another handkerchief-head. even This “little In the final test Mr. Pickens proves But the struggle to save the nine innocent Negro boys of the Scotts- boro case will not be weaker for the desertion of Dean Pickens. For the result of the united front policy and for the defense of these boys has already been to bring new tens of ready the struggle to save their lives and liberties has become a broadex and deeper and more conscious act on the part of many thousands of Negroes and workers of all races, Pickens deserts, forces for this high cause haye been recruited. where Pickens spoke his treason, the Negro workers jumped to their nousands into the struggle. Al- but already new Even in the church ICKENS advances the theory of “be good,” be white man’s Negroes,” and get favors from the slave owners. We have heard this before from Booker Washington, we have heard it again and in still coarser and more depraved form from Marcus Garvey when he too made his overtures to the Ku Klux Klan. And now from Fight as never before to save The ‘We must expect such incidents The It can be done. Cut out and mail at once to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York SAVE THE DAILY $35,000 Save-The-Daily Worker Fund . dollars . conte in our power to save our Daily by raising $35,000 Section Unit tf Section 4, Unit 12 by July 1, Section 1, Unte (3 1.50) .. Section 1, Unit 13 SW | ORMMIO S550 S54 CA LV OUEELES nm Sie dahewrdaeeadcedarer ered A Sympathizer, NV © 1.00 feutinn Ee 18 ‘ ge} AGMPOIT eee eieeesc ede eccevecsccsce coves OMY ssscvccensorenscbevcoen Manvel, NY © ss 125 MUST HAVE $1,000 A DAT! A worker, NYC. | NO a a RR A SS SA a,

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