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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1931 Page Imree | BOSSES AMERICA, WORKERS RUSSIA - A CONTRAST . The preceding article dealt with Soviet dump- ing. With actual Soviet export figures it proves the fictitious character of the dumping charge. It shows this charge to be nothing but propaganda and material for the manufacturing of a holy war myth by the American capitalists against the So- viet Union. By MAX BEDACHT. | Vill. American Democracy Against Soviet | Dictatorship. The most “crushing” accusation made by ‘American capitalism against the Soviets is that they violate every principle of demo- craty. Hoover and Hillquit, Woll and Fish form one sanctimonious chorus in defense of democracy. They all froth at the mouth in accusing the Soviets of their dictatorship. Of all the capitalist decptions and of all of the capitalists’ sleight-of-hand tricks, demo- cracy is the most subtle as well as the most poisonous one. When the police club descends on the head of a worker while on the picket , line, he is not hit in defense of the low wages he is fighting against, but he is hit in defense of democracy. When the policemen murdered ) Steve aKtovis, he did it not in defense of the starvation wages paid by the boss against whom Steve was picketing; he did it in de- fense of democracy. When these days the po- lice in Ohio and in Pennsylvania use machine guns and tear gas bombs to prevent the strik- ing miners from holding mass meetings, they do not do it in the defense of the miserable conditions under which the coal companies force the miners to work, but they do it in defense of democracy. What is this democracy anyway? Why does it always have to be defended against the workers and never against. the capitalists? Why does democracy interfere in every con- flict between workers and capitalists on the side of the capitalists and against the work- ers? Why. does democracy provide for injunc- tions against the workers forbidding them “from leaving or threatening to leave the employ” of the boss, or forbidding them to talk to anyone about their miserable working conditions; and why does that same demo- cracy not provide for injunctions forbidding the boss to keep the workers out of employ- ment and thus condemn them to starvation? Ewen a superficial analysis will help us to understand this mystery. The capitalist class ts the ruling class in America. The political structure of the United States therefore is designed to represent and to defend the in- terests of the capitalists, One of the fathers of the U. S. Government, Alexander Hamilton, pointed out that “AlN communities divide themselves into the few and the many. The first are the rich and well-born, the other the mass of the people.” Hamilton declared that the function of government was to protect the interests of the rich and well-born against the “turbulent and changing masses.” The structure of American democracy was designed to fit the requirements outlined by Hamilton. The right of private property on all social necessities is the supreme law of this (CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE) oe an dandles the baby of a Negro wom- an in her arms. The baby’ is ill— from undernourishment. “My husband hasn’t brought pay time. “THERE IS NO MIDDLE GROUND” coal bosses, the state, and the scab union. Fighting under a union with a militant strike policy for the first A young girl says to me, “You're for the United Mine Workers?” “Certainly not,” 1 answer. democracy. The fundamental purpose of American government is to defend these rights. The government has to defend the rights of private property against those who do not own any and suffer from the conse- | quences; it has to defend the rights of private property against the rights of man. The right of man is attached to the right of property. The man who owns no property, therefore, has no rights. There are no rights of man; there are only rights of classes. The present situation affords a clear illus- tration of this fact. The rights of private property demand that one cannot get even the most indispensable neces s without paying for them. The rights of man demand that one get the most indispensable necessities whether he can pay for them or not. Law and order under American democracy decree that the workers cannot get what they need, except if they can pay for it. If they cannot pay they must starve. If they refuse to starve and take what they need without paying they violate law and order; they are adjudged thieves and felons. As abstract beings the boss and “his” work- er are equal before the law. But neither the boss nor “his” worker are abstract beings; the first is the owner of a factory, the second is a worker. When the boss appears in court for an injunction he does not appear there as an abstract citizen; he appears as a capitalist in defense of his property and of his property interests. The worker likewise does not ap- pear as an abstract citizen; he appears as a propertyless worker in defense of his ehance to live. Between the rights of private prop- erty and the right to live, the property rights always win The boss’ right to be paid for his commodity always precedes the right of the worker to live. The boss’ right to make profits on his investments always wins out against the right of the worker to get a living wage for his labor. The capitalists as the rulers of America made the defense of private roperty and of the interests attached to that property the embodiment of law and order. Under American democracy the worker has a right to help determine under what conditions and by what methods the capitalists may tan his hide into profit, providing the tanning process decided upon tends to bring greater profits. But the worker is not even allowed to think about the abolition of any practice of tanning his hide into profits. Any, such thought is adjudged as treasonable, as revo- lutionary. All the wealth and riches of the American capitalists together with the inviolable right to collect fat profits on this wealth are wrapped into an American flag and are labeled democracy. Whenever the American capital- ists have needs to defend this wealth and their right to collect profits on it, they send forth their policemen, they invoke their laws, they manipulate their courts, they keep the turn- keys of their prisons busy in defense of demo- cracy. Democracy is the fig leaf with which STRIKE SPREADS TO NEW MINES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) come in from New Kensington, as an organizer, how when he tried to hold a meeting, the police stuck a American capitalism covers the nakedness of | its dictatorship. Democracy is the name and form under which this dictatorship operates. The fundamental principles of Soviet rule have nothing in common with American demo- eracy. In the Soviet Union the workers are the ruling class. The Soviets are the mach- inery of government in the Soviet Union. The workers organize the Soviets. Contrary to American democracy the Soviets defend the living interests of the masses. While Amer- ican democracy defends the profit interests of the bosses against the workers, the Soviets defend the living interests of the workers against the bosses. Hillquit is right: the| proletarian principles of the Soviet govern-| ment violate every capitalist principle of American democracy. The basic ideal of Amer- ican democracy is the defense of private prop- erty; the basic ideal of the Soviet government is the abolition of private property. Demo- racy spells capitalism; Sovietism spells so-| alism. By concealing and covering up property in-}| terests with phrases about the sacred prin- ciples of democracy the ruling class of Amer- ica succeeds in “selling” the inseparable com- panion of capitalist democracy, equal rights. The empty phrase of equality before the law aims at concealing the fact of the inequality of the citizens before the law, the inequality of the capitalist property owner with the propertyless worker. The whole structure of laws deal with private property. Those that do not own any private property cannot de- mand the protection of the law. The law pro- tects the man only insofar as it protects his property. The beauty of the phrase of equality before the law turns into a bitter farce when viewed in the light of reality. This may be illustrated with a little controversy that arose some time ago in a Philadelphia Open Forum discussion. |, The speaker in that meeting had pointed to the farcical character of equality before the law. He cited as an example how brutally the Chicago police kept the crowds of unemployed and migratory workers moving on Canal Street while the same police would never dare to even speak ‘idsrespectfully” to an inhabitant of the Gold Coast (Lake Shore Drive), not to men- tion telling him to “move on.”* AY. M.C. A. representative present at that meeting accused the Communist speaker of demagogy He as- serted-that the trouble was not with the po- lice nor. with the law; it was with the un- employed. He pointed out that these unem- ployed migratory workers congregate on Canal Street to the point of blocking traffic. Ac- cording to this YMCA defender of American democracy the police has to keep these work- ers moving while the inhabitants of the Gold Coast never create such a necessity for the Chicago police. The Gold Coast inhabitants do not park on the sidewalk. Here we have equality before the law im- presgively illustrated. The legal prohibition HOLD SUCCESSFUL UNITED FRONT SCOTTSBORO CONFERENCES IN OKLAHOMA CITY AND free the nine boys. DETROIT, June 18.—Two hundred against loitering and agains benches is directed against J. P. Morgan of course is abiding citizen, sleeping on park ich and poor alike. } a good and law- He makes it a point not to loiter on public thoroughfares and not to sleep| ¢ on park benches. Only the “lower cl. have no respect for the law. They persistently | refuse to sleep in their own palaces or to| gather in their own private parks. To the ex- asperation of the police and to the sorrow of democracy they insist on loitering on the pub- lic sidewalks and on sleeping on park benches. Contrary to capitalist democracy the Soviets do not pretend legal equality. The Soviets cor- rectly declare that in a society torn by class divisions all equalities are a fiction. The rich and the poor cannot be equal. The rich eat, | the poor go hungry. The rich live in palaces, | the poor live in hovels. The rich have private | properties to defend and have policemen at| their disposal to defend them. The poor on| the other hand are the ones against whom the} capitalist police is defending the private prop- | erty of the rich. | The Soviets are based upon this reality. | They represent and defend the interests of the poor against the rich. While American capi- talism defends the interests of private prop- erty against the interests of man, the Soviets defend the interests of man against those of private property. While American capitalism covers its class dictatorship with empty phrases of democracy, the Soviets proudly de- clare their proletarian democracy to be a class dictatorship. While American democracy pro- tects the interests of the “rich and well-born | against the turbulent majority” the Soviets | protect the interests of the majority against | the profit-hunger of the few rich and well-| born. | The Soviets do not deny this difference be- | tween them and American democracy. On the contrary they are proud of it. The Soviets | present this difference as the hist8ric title to| their existence. About all the holy war myth accusations | against the Soviets the U. S. S. R. proudly pleads guilty to the one that they have noth-| ing in common with American democracy. The | Soviets have an easy task to show that the | principles of American democracy are nothing | but a common capitalist fraud The purpose of this fraud is to keep the workers contented | with the facts of economic inequality by rivet- | ing their eyes on the phantom of a political | equality. The hopeless hope to become presi- | dent of the United States is conjured up be-| fore the eyes of millions of American workers | to keep them shackled to the grind of’ produc- | ing profits for their bosses. A horse can be| trained to believe itself tied to a post if it feels the bridle dragging on the ground; the American worker is trained by the capitalists | to feel himself free because the chain that ties | him to the profit interests of capital leads | through a cloud of meaningless phrases of | democracy and equality. H fore the strike—with the exception | of two women members. Lack of experience in organizing and directing strike movements cre- ates certain dificulties, but these are discounted by the militancy and rep- resentative character of the leader- ship. The National Miners Union, is being welded together in the struggle and leadership right from the mines developed at a suprisingly rapid rate. One of the best working local strike DETROIT tto this confere Slump of All Districts Note:—Workers who do not wa their names published while 10 (Kansa fo a big drop; t must not let ch great d District 7 (Detroit) what, contributing ed some- | but this A Comrade A Marchuk IK Nestuk [A Pananetus 25 Lith, Wkg Womens All, Br. 14, Easton | Phila. District Party Unit, Proy RT 2.00 ‘Total #16.00 DISTRICT 2 Corky, NY J Bonardl, W.N 1,00 Total DISTRICT I Korengoh, Syracuse aus, Utiea xmacher, sport Syracuse tion Hd Club Total DIS |S J Frise McKee St. Louix Nucleus 1 N t, be Bronx thizer ee Y Forman, Seagate 2.00 | warrell, Pa. 404 Coll. by worker of | Mrs. A Drapo 1,00 aoa Oliver Dress | Col meet. ¢ 4.50 lets Re Coll, at meet, CFL Mrs, EB Chirkem, | Dr_S Bruner, Pittsburgh 10.00 $16.60 Batio, Total DISTRICT 6 a arr. by Workers Coop BMU, M Go 1 Sass Scoolis Gust Kpasnow W Tansky Rappapor! ‘Tsirox Bennett Se «WO Br. 277 Berkowitz AGLIMPROE RE N M Russ, Mut, Ald, 12 J Aleks Bingersang 50, Workers, Bx Ch, Bomxe, Lib- NY ag | Youngstown 5.00 | & “Jagoda \n " 1.00 | Ue ‘ jwib 1.00 | Cleve 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 Total s DIgTRICT 7 Mich, a A Bezich JJ Bexic h S Marin M Bezich J Mazurano J Begenich 1, Maretich JJ, Bronx Total s DISTRICT 3 Six Mile Run, Pa, Hastings © Hastings D Hebuk, if Bloom Seranton Y iwanush Suprun M Sakauit M Salsowits A Moskovieh A Bozer WwW Bh S Bochankow MOBILIZATION 0 “DAILY WORKER” CLUBS WiLL ABOLSH CRISES OF THE “DAILY” in tions for the improvement of the A.| paper as well ax a substantial do- . “we are| nation from the workers io the | B Faulkner ® Shepard use the Daily Worker critical condition,” writ calling an cy ence in| Sustaining Fund, the Calumet Section for Friday, June | f th 19 at 215 W. 18th Ave., Gary, Ind.” All organizations in Calumet de “Worker are asked to elect three ik home in months,” one young girl says. “—works like a dog—and the company takes all his pay. Seventy- five cents every two weeks for the doctor—forty cents for some fake in- surance—always in debt to the com~- pany—$60 or $70. Well, I'm down at the picket line with him 4 o'clock every morning.” ; At Houston, a2 man with ten chil- dren, made a bare $1 @ day, before the strike, loading 25 cars of coal a day, Ten small children, without shoes, without clothes—depending for their very life on the ability of the mother ta make a little nourishment out of scraps. But miners’ children don’t need shoes—according to Bartram, mine superintendent, and good church member. ‘The miner had given 23 years of his youth and health to the mine owners, in exchange for the liberty to starve while he worked. “I not go back and starve,” the miner said, looking down at the little girl he held by the hand. “T fight like hell with National (Miners) Union.” ‘The school teachers at the com- pany school house think the same way as the superintendent. “You had enough for bread and butter,” one of them said scornfully. ‘The young miners, and the girls at ‘Houston, were talking it over. Miners and their families seldom see butter, in the company stores. One was telling of a man he knew, whom the company store had refused to give credit. He began eating “T ain’t done that yet,” the boy, 16, said. “But I'd be willing to win this strike. Anybody who back, ought to starve to death.” But the miners do not go back. Nine thousand out, 20,000 out 30,000 =-38,000, not going back, but strength- ened by increasing numbers of miners joining the strike. The miners’ backs are to the wall, They are fighting for their actual existence. The U. M. W. A. has been thoroughly discredit- . ‘The NMU is the only hope of these coal town. Not only the miners but wives of miners, young men, boys and girls, call it “our union.” 'Thirty- three thousand miners, fighting with the NMU, fighting starvation, £35 “well, then, you're all right. I just wanted to know.” A miner shows me his pay slip for two months. Minus what ht owes to the company, minus smithing, minus rent, doctor, “relief,” electric lamp— it equals just enough to balance what the company owes in wages to the miner, and tens of thousands of oth- ers have worked without pay—liv- ing, no, starving, from day to day. Here is a sample pay slip: Wages $20.76 For storage . $16.53 Smithing 15 Rent .. 2.63 Doctor 5 Relief Assn. . 30 Electric lamp ..... 40 Not far from Houston, the com- pany houses-red shacks-stand. “Bundles of sticks” a young miner says. He has been making $8 or $9, for a two weeks pay. The soles of his shoes are almost worn through. His sweater his worn to threads. His family consists of a father, a brother. and a smaller sister. “Father's too old to work. He got the asthma.” The mines do that too. ‘The family lives on $8.00 every two weeks, and the salary of the brother working in the factory. In most of the mining towns there are only the mines, and starvation is quicker. “If we get enough relief up here” many of the miners say “nothing can beat us. If we don’t starve to death, we'll keep on fighting until we win.” and white, nod assent. ‘The issue is summed up by one young miner. “You're on one side or the other” he said. “Hither you're a boss, clubbing us down on the picket line. Or you're a miner, or ® work- er, fighting with the National Miners Union, no matter what—” Already the danger has reared its head. The betrayers, the UMWA, have come into the strike-fields with elief” and soft words, to inveigie the miners to go back to work. Many miners refyse to take relief from the strike-bredWtrs, Some say “sure we will take their food—anq they can go to hell.” But the danger is there. ‘The UMWA tacticts wil | strike And miners and their wives. Negro believes thes | Pat Pa, at gun in his ribs and moved him on five miles, while the whole mass of miners followed in a procession, until they reached a piace where they could hold a meeting. The next morning the mine was struck. At this mine 50 miners age known to have had nothing but water in their lunch buckets for the last six months, BRIDGEPORT. Ohio, June 18— Practically all the leaders of the Ohio, West Virginia, district strike were in jail on Wednesday, but the swept on, nevertheless. At Darkey, Unionvale and Rail Rover No, 6 mines, over 650 men walked out on strike today. The country is filled with armed men hired by the state and coal companies, every attempt to mass picket or hold meetings is broken up with tear gas and the menace of bul- lets. The mass picketing at the Stewart mine was tear gassed this morning, District Secretary Sivert of the Na- tional Miners’ Union and Whitey Nelson, its district president, are both arrested. Nelson is also chair- man of the District Rank and File Strike Committee. He and his wife and one other union member were arrested on the Piney Fork, Ohio, picket line. Five were arrested in ‘Warwood, West Virginia. Most of the members, including the chairman and secretary of the Rank and File Strike Committee, are in jail. ancient Hine break the strike. ‘The miners must not be laid open to this danger. The miners are put- ting a mighty struggle. But relief to strenghten the strike, is the crying need of the hour. The miners resist- ance depends on the food and money sent into the strike fields, “You're on one side or the other.” If you're on the miners’ side, you must rush relief—food, money, into the fields at once. The miners’ struggle against starv- ation, against the boses, is the fight of all of us. Make the struggle of the miners stronger! Extend solidarity! Rush relief to the Miners Relief Committee—Room, 611 Penn Avenue, Negro and white delegates represent- ing 105 organizations, attended the local United Front Scottsboro De~- fense Conference called by the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the International Labor Defense, the two organizations charged by the nine boys and their parents with their defense. ‘The conferenence was held in the New Workers Home, 1343 E. Ferry Ave., Sunday, June 14. Among the organizations represented were work- ers’ clubs, trade unions, fraternal or- ganizations, Negro churches, wo- men’s organizations, and block com- mittees. All joined in the united front fight and pledged their soli- darity to carry on the campaign to Boys, Mooney. Billings on Presidium. The conference was opened by William Nowell, secretary of the L.S. N.R., who made the main report.. The conference was roused to a frenzy of applause when the nine framed-up boys with Tom Mooney and Warren Billings were made honorary mem- bers of the presiding committee. The report on the legal work done in the case was made by George Kristalsky, Michigan secretary of the I. L. D., after which the delegates in their discussions of the reports enthusias- tically expressed themselves in favor of the mass fight policy and program of the LS.N.R. and the T.L.D., and pledged the moral and financial sup- port of their organizations. MINE STRIKE SPREADS IN THE OHIO FIELD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) appear before Sheriff Duff today to explain alleged intimidation of min- ers there. They appeared voluntarily, and, after they had denied charges, were lectured by Prosecutor Paul Waddell, Major Blount and Sheriff Duff. They were allowed to return to their homes.” “rhe men appeared voluntarily and +. Were allowed to return to their homes.” This is the apex of hypoc- ricy. These miners had taken part in a picket line so they are called in to be browbeaten and threatened by a military triumvirate acting in be- half of the coal operators with the full sanction of governor White, and the Ohio state government. Another delightful instance of the temper and methods of the loyal hirelings of the coal owners occured when Tony Minerich, was arrested at the Powhatan mine. A special deputy held a tear gas bomb under Tony's nose and howled: “I've a notion to smash this right in your face.” At Warwood, W. Va., where 900 yesterday, and where {tenant of the state troopers tried this morning to terrorise miners into confering with the coal operator and agreeing to return to work, This o¢- curred immediately after the arrest of Minerich and Peris. The operators following the same tactic: Arresting the NMU organizers, flooding the field with gunmen, and trying to force the miners back into the pits at the point of automatics, rifles and machine-guns. accompained by libe- ral doses of tear gas. The strike breaking UMWA offi- cials to day, were brought into the situation—which shows that the wide spead terorism is not sufficient alone to break the strike, and that the coal operators know it. The UMWA at- tempted to hold a mass meeting at the Gaylord mine, Martins Ferry. Two policemen were at the door of the hall and every one entering had to sign his name. The attendence was 15, including police. This is a bad beginning, but it is certain that, under the gun muzzles of the coal operators mercenaries, the UMWA, will be put in charge of the attempts to start back to work movements. The strike in the Ohio-West Vir- ginia district is barely eight days old. The strike machinery is still weak, especially the relief machinery, but there has been big improvements since the first regular meeting of the District Rank and File Strike Com- mittee, Sunday. The District Strike Committee and the Strike Executive Comitee, is composed entirely of and relief committees is at the Brad- ley mine, where there is a large per- centage of Negroes. Their relief com- mittee was the first to be organized and yesterday they collected enough food—including two cows—from the farmers and merchants—to take care of aH needs for several days. They close check-up they make on collec- tions is shown by their report which listed “156 eggs.” There !s tremendous sympathy for the miners and their families in ‘this sharp struggle on the part of the workers. Clerks in the stores, employ- es in the telegraph companies. steel workers, railway men, street carmen, etc, all say they want the miners to win, ang all seem to feel that the miners struck the first decisive blow against the wage-cuting starvation program of the bosses and their gov- ernment. It is necessary now to organize mass protest against the legal sup- pression and armed terrorism, to or- ganize the mass resentment of all sections of the working class, and break through the iron ring of legal suppression and armed attacks which the coal gperators and their govern- ment are trying to strangle this mass revolt against starvation and slavery. Above all it is necessary to spread the strike. “A struck mine for every arrest” 1s the slogan. At the same time the black poverty in the mining camps makes the organization of strike relief a central task. Conference Called By Governor, Coal e, organize committees un unio ‘ss organizations to raise funds fo 3 t dds with the Party, who see in th the fighter for their inter answer the call of the Party in mass demonstrations, mu. to save the Daily Worker. BUILD D. W. CLUBS IN STHLOPS, NEIGHBORHOOD! Districts! Sections! Units! Fra- ternal Organizations! —Immedi: mobillzation of hundreds of th sands of workers into Daily Wi er Clubs will wipe out the stant and accumulating deficit of the Daily Worker and pave the way for n self-supporting, revolu- tionary ting of the Yonkers, orker Clnb drew any valuable sugmes~ N.Y. workers. Jeading bosses and the government Officials to push through the scab efforts of the United Mine Workers of America is strikingly told in the following capitalist dispatch from Pittsburgh, sent out by the United Press: ae “PITTSBURGH, June 17.—Return of the United Mine Workers of America to power in the Western Pennsylvania bituminous field was} Predicted by some today on the eve of the conference between union of- ficials and representatives of the Pittsburgh Terminal Co. with Gov- ernor Pinchot tomorrow in Harris- burg. “The company ts willing to recog- nize the union, it was understood, provided a satisfactory wage rate of 42% cents a ton for loading, instead of 45 cents, the highest rate paid before the strike, it was reported after preliminary conferences. “«the™ operating ~company desires the reduction in return for union . Company UMWA (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEY miners will close their ranks more solidly under the National Miners’ Union leadership.” Two Negro and two white dele- Gates spoke, telling the governor they and the rest of the miners will re- turn to work only on agreements with the National Miners’ Union. Borich presented to the governor the demands adopted by the striking miners. Sie wate by sha vanes recognition, which tneludes the check-off and check weighmen. “The Terminal Co. is the second largest in the Western Pennsylvania field and the agreement, if reached, would affect five mines employing about 2,550 men. It would go far toward restoration of the power of the U. M. W. of A. in this field. “Twelve eviction notices wpre filed with the prothonotary’s office today for service at the attention of miners and operators was directed to other peace moves in Western Pennsylva- nia. The eviction writs will be ex- ing worke discussio tainment, the Dail Vorker Club in every neighborhood, shop, factory, 28 will si the “Daily? suspension, r working ¢ y ail subser andr » add to th Sustaining Fund. a bundle or ders at one cent a c of the demand for t 8. F also strik . will bul of the Daily Immediate preparatio; Days, June 26, 2 of trouble lat Labels size boxes 5 1-4 inches ir to all districts in view of the & Gaily receipts. this week suspension of the Daily Funds from Tag Days mus’ 2 Tas will save a fot will mean Worker t be wired to the Daily. Five per cent of this money will be credited to the dis- tricts on their current or past ac+ counts. Members of “ICOR” Attention By decision of the N. Y. Ci mittee of the “Icor instructed to participate in the Dajly Worker campaign for funds. As the Daily Worker is the daily in the country English porting the Masses in their st h the bosses, the City Con e of the “IGOR” belleves {ts members should help as much as possible to make the campaign a su holding ties, socials, e as ‘well as by tions. WORGERS ORGANIZATIONS TO THE RESCUE At a farewell party given in honor of Comrade RK. by the Brigh« ton Beach, N. Y. Unit 6, Section 7, comrades ‘contributed twenty dol- lars for the Daily Worker. Seven dollars also collected at farewell party to Comrade ( for the farewell » leaving for held last Hlars raised» by at House Party party to ¢ USSR for Ww F. On “Two dollars to extend my sub ai one dollar to keep it al long as the ecrisix for the ecuted by deputy sheriffs at the com- lasts will donate one dollar