The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 5, 1931, Page 3

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DAILY | WORKER, NEW YORK, SATU RDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, Baar Page Three ‘OHIO WORKER TELLS OF URGENT NEED OF RELIEF IN MINE ZONE |More Food Needed 4s in Ohio Fields to Keep | Miners On Picket Line and Spread Strike || National Miners Union Organizer Threatened With Jail By UMW A Official (By a Worker Gonefonient) AKRON, Ohio.—Just recently visited a part of the mining \fields in Ohio. To show you the tactics used by the United Sacnine Leagus are ike ceradlaax || Mine Workers’ officials and how they have become a scabbing dina that Wil “lax. the dale | organization, I cite the case of the Cadiz Mine in Cadiz. down here this winter. Organize | | Here most of the miners were ready to join the National and [and fight povert poverty! | | Miners Union and were ready to walk PAYS GIRLS $5 A lout on strike. The bosses of this A. F. of L. HELP BOSSES FIRE HUNDREDS OF ST. LOUIS STREETCARMEN Labor Fakers Cooperate With Bosses Move to Lay off and Fire Carmen 15,000 St. Louis Jobless Live in Dugouts and Boxes Along Mississippi Texas Farmers, Fight Poverty! (By a Farmer Correspondent). | ANNONA, Texas.—Conditions of the farmers is such as never ex- | perienced before. Truck farmers | are hauling off their crops, vir-| tually giving them away. Cotton is not going to be worth gathering. There is no work to be found any- where. No one seems to have money | except those who have public jobs, | the big bosses and the bootleggers. | The farmers and workers will have | to get together and fight for some | | real relief or we will starve to| | death this winter. The Unem- | ployed Councils and the United| Strike Movement Gain in Denbo, Pa. By a Miner. DENBO, Pa.—The picket line is | getting bigger here in spite of the yellow dogs—the state police. We got more people interested in our strike every day, They say they will throw us in | jail if we keep on striking, but they hayen’t got room enough in the jail for all of us. We expect more mines to come out on strike | soon. We will win if we stick to |the National Miners Union, but we need relief to carry on. We are thankful for the relief the workers sent and hope they send more so we can win sooner, 50 PER CENT OF FIELD WORKERS (By .a Worker Correspondent) ST. LOUIS, Mo.—The St. Louis Public Service decided to cut the wages of their employees and to lay off a few hun- dred. But first they increased the carfare from 7 cents to 10 cents. Then after hundreds of workers could not pay the dime to look for jobs that don’t exist, the street car company began to howl about their-business depression and fired a couple of hundred workers by putting into service the one-man cars in which one man does the work of three skilled workers. Calls in Fakers UT JOBLESS IN | mine at once called on the UMWA | to come and sign up the mine. They The company then wanted to exploit their workers a little DURANTY HELPS BOSSES ATTACK SOVIET UNION Worker Nails Vicious Anti-Soviet Lies of ‘Times’ Correspondent New York, N. Y. Daily Worker: Here is more concrete evidence of insidious capitalist propaganda pre- paring the American massts for war and to stir up hate among the work- ers to shoot their fellow-workers in the Soviet Union. In a dispatch to the New York ‘Times of Aug. 30, Walter Duranty, the Moscow correspondent, says: “Russian murders, of course, there are—more fiendish, ingenious, tragic and strange, indeed, than in most countries, but with rare exceptions they are no longer a matter of public knowledge.” But could Mr. Duranty, with all his smug superiority, match the fol- lowing, clipped from the New York World-Telegram of Aug. 30: “CLARKSBURG, W. Va., Aug. 29. —A gallows as efficient as that of the state penitentiary was discov- ered in a sub-basement of a garage owned by Harry F. Powers, 45, one- man matrimonial bureau, who has admitted the slaying of a rich widow and her three children. “A trap door with a rope suspended from a rafter overhead was found in the unused garage. “Police also reyealed that the screams of a child were heard on duly 6. “The mother, Mrs. Aste Buick Eicher, and her two daughters, Greta, 14, and Annabel, 9, of Park Ridge, Ill, were found in a shallow trench near the garage. They had been starved and garroted. The body of the boy, Harry, 12, indicated that he had been beaten to death, probably with a hammer.” Rotting, stinking capitalism in its dotage unwittingly exposes itself. ‘The American workers are seeing through the lies of the bourgeois press, If they do rise and fight, it will be a real fight—against the war makers, Linotype Operator. KINGANS’ PACKING HOUSE CUTS PAY Must Organize Against Further Reductions (By a Worker Correspondent) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Kingan’s Packing House has been working two and three days a week, some of the workers working only a few hours a day, which makes it very miserable for them. Besides the sHort week and short days and the terrible speed-up and the miserable wages that the workers hhave been receiving, the company forced a 2% cent an hour wage-cut on the workers, which they accepted because they were not organized, But still the workers in the shop are beginning to think. They say that the Reds who speak to them at the shop gate are perfectly right when they say, organize and fight against wage cuts. Still the Reds say that there are going to be more wage cuts if the workers do not or- ganize and fight gainst them. Never too late to organize in the Trade Union Unity League, which is the only affiliated union body that is fighting for the interests of the working class. Red Builders Build Daily’ in Tampa, Fla. nee Tampa, Fla, Dear Comrade: For the first time in the history of Communism in Tampa I have seen a natural born Floridian come and ask for a Daily Worker and a Southern Worker. He came and asked for the papers from one of our most active agents in the party. | He and another man came into town just for the purpose of getting the papers, Things sure are getting hot here in Tampa. Our Red Builders here consist of one Communist or- ganizer, two colored and two white Pioneers and one new member, Our paper order is 50 Daily Workers and 100 Southern Workers weekly. —Pioneer Red Builders, *more, and being afraid that there might develop some labor trouble, they called in the fakers from the A. F. of L, The fakers “protested” the wage-cut and the lay-offs, made a fuss, got together with the city boss, the mayor, and a few aldermen to arbitrate the case. employed would take their jobs if they did, turned the whole case over to the Chamber of Commerce which has on it all the wage-cutting bosses in the city including the owners of the street-car line. The A. F. of L. said they could do nothing for the workers. What will be the answer? it’s hell,” say many of the carmen. Why the A. F. of L. when we have “something better?” Quite a few of the carmen are talking about the Trade Union Unity League. Driven From Homes And they have reasons to talk real organization. Fifteen hundred men, women and children in this city are living in boxes, dugouts and paper sheds, sleeping on newspapers and blankets along the Mississippi River. Many of these workers were mem- bers of the A. F. of L. Some 200 March starts at Bonsall and Clear- ground a few weeks ago by the police because these workers. dared to talk organization. Must Organize The Trade Union Unity League is getting on the job to organize the unemployed to fight for bread and shelter. The street carmen must not fear the unemployed as scabs, but join them in their struggles in the TUUL for unemployment insurance. The unemployed are in turn “ving organjzed to help the street an in their struggles against tt s and the A. F. of L. and ti. city government. Only the workers themselves can solve the workers’ problems. By struggling and fighting together, both black and white, against the master class we will then become the mas- ters ourselves. A YOUNG rhabhackig Joseph Vargo, a 16-year-old min- er, who was shot on the picket line at the Crescent Mine, California, Pa., on June 26 by a hired thug of the mine owners. Finally the A.| F. of L., after calling on the workers | not to strike, stating that the un-| “Yes, | JOBLESS IN CAL. Agricultural Workers Hungry in Midst of Big Harvest Stockton, Cal. Editor Daily Worker: This is the “prosperous” season in California, This is the golden har- vest time when the luscious fruit for | which California is famous is picked jand prepared for market. This is the time of the year when all of the | workers should be working or would be under a sane system. But over half the agricultural workers\ cannot find jobs. They are only going to harvest about 60 per cent of the peach crop. All the rest of the fruit harvest is similarly cur- tailed. Of course there are some workers who are working. But from the list below you can see how little they, will be able to make: Picking fruit (top wages) per 10 hour day .- $2.50 Average piece-work . 1.75 Hop picking, average ayer! at $1 per cwt. top.. * 2.00 | Topping sugar beets... 175 | Picking cotton, average at 75c. per cwt. ......+. Fesnerssee +++ $1.50 During the cotton picking season there is usually a heavy fog in the morning and the workers .cannot |pick. Consequently even the above | figure will be reduced, Child Labor. Wages show a similar downward trend in every harvest. As a result little children are working in far greater numbers than ever before because their parents cannot make enough to support them. Workers are not saving anything and will start the winter with no “stakes” to help them pull through. Many of the comrades say, “This summer we can- not do much now. But wait until next winter. We'll give the bosses hell then.” ‘There is absolutely no foundation for such a theory. Now is the time to work even harder., Workers are hungry right now even to the point of starvation. We cannot relax our efforts for a single moment. Work- ers, after two years of famine rations, will not submit to starvation. Build neighborhood branches of Unem- ‘ployed Councils now! A Worker. Ex-Servicemen Kicked Out of Hospital Clinic (By a Worker Correspondent.) STOCKTON, Calif—The writer, an ex-soldier, went to the San Joquain Clinic to have a tooth filled. The Clinic people sent him to the San Joquain Hospital. At the hos- pital they refused to fill it. Told him he was not paying for it, ‘The ex-soldier protested, saying: “I will leave the chair only on one of three conditions; first that you fill the tooth, or second that you give me a slip stating you do not fill teeth, or third that you throw me out bodily.” They called Dr. Friedberger’s bouncers, The ex-ser- viceman left the clinic without his feet touching the floor. It was a seven-mile hike. But it was worth it. And this is the “dem- ocracy” we fought for.” Miners Worse Off Than in 1878, Says Old W. Va. Miner Maidsville, W. Va. Hello, Dear Comrades: Just a few words from an old min- er. I have been working in the coal mines since 1878 and I never saw conditions in the mines as bad as they were today. When I was 14 years old I was driving a mule and hauling coal in the mine. My wages then was $1.50 a day. My father was also an old miner and served in the Civil War. One Man Unions. I have seen these one-man unions, how they organized the workers against each other for the benefit of the bosses and then on election days the union leaders came out and told us to vote for the bosses. The bosses became capitalists and millionaires and multi-millionaires. Now these millionaires are driving us working people to starvation. Now it is plain that we have got to get together in one big solid union, the National Miners Union, and fight or we will starve to death. Here in Northern West Virginia we came out on strike and the UMWA gave us a cheap yellow dog contract: 30 cents a ton for digging coal and $12 a month for house rent. Before the UMWA came in with their fake agreement we got 27 cents an hour and paid $7.50 for house rent. So we miners make $1.50 a day when we work and we don’t work every day. As for myself I only got one day’s work last week or two days from the 16th to the 22d of the month, Worse Than 1878 So it is plain to be seen that the miners are worse off than they were as far back as 1878. And then we hear all kinds of talk about how the worker in American industries are getting more and more for their work as the years go by. ,Any worker knows that this is plain bunk. The bosses are driving us to the wall more and more every day to squeeze more profits out of our hides, Must Build N.M.U. There is only one thing for us to do and that is to get into the Na~ tional Miners Union and build strong committees in the mines, and with a good organized relief movement like the Workers International Relief be- hind us, we can come: out on strike and win what we are after. A Mine, Herbert Hoover and Walter S. Gifford, two of America’s leading wage slashers, are seen here discussing measures to be taken to force 11,000,000 jobless workers to starve quietly during the coming winter. Gifford, the head of Hoover’s Unemployment Relief Committee, showed how much he was interested in the welfare of the workers on August 1, when he cut the pay of the Bell Telephone Laboratory workers 8 per cent. Hoover likewise slashed the wages of the workers on his Cali- fornia ranches 10 cents an hour, Company Store Lard .. Flour, med. quality . Coffee, low quality . D. S. meat below: Company Store Ginghams, etc. . Dress goods, yd. Everything else in proportion. MINERS CHARGED DOUBLE PRICE FOR GOODS IN COMPANY STORES, (By a Worker Correspondent) GARRETT, Ky.—Under the pretext of “safety,” the Wells Elkhorn Coal Co. has decreed that all men wear goggles. store is the only one that sells them, and the price is $1.50. ordinary goggles that cost around $6 or $7 per dozen. toe shoe is the order of the day too, and the price is $4.50. Compare the company store and an independent: Other foods compare with the above on an average. Yet the company Just plain The safety Independent Lard Flour, same grade Coffee, same grade . D. S. meat, same grade ... eee AKO 50e 10¢ 12% Dry goods Independent Ginghams Dress goods, yd. Poteet Admits Pian: Will Support Fascist Policies (By a Worker Correspondent) OMAHA, Neb.—Marcus L. Poteet, Department Commander of the American Legion in Nebraska, openly admitted that this fascisti organiza- tion is in the political ring when he stated in a speech at Griswold, Iowa, | “That since both old parties con-/} tinue to have the same platforms, | bunk! |has as its leaders, and supporters, the American Legion, with its huge voting power, should formulate sound foreign and domestic policy and see that it is included in the platforms.” . American Fascist. Any person knows, or should know, that this American branch of the fascisti is a faction that threatens to be just as dangerous as the Mus- solini clique in Italy. For over 12 years the American Legion (with a | large per cent of its officers holding reserve commissions in the army) has fostered capitalist patriotism in the schools and colleges. It has, on numerous occasions, stopped free speech (it pretends to uphold -free speech) with the worst kind of vio- lence and even murder (Centralia, Washington). The American Legion has constantly backed every imper- jalist move of the United States and it is responsible for the organization of the C. M. T. C., military training in the universities, federalization of the national guard’ and every other move to build up the bosses’ offen- sive against the Soviet Union. The American Legion has acted as a strike-breaker and it willingly allows | the lynchings of white and Negro workers in communities where it has Rockbottom Wages In Ind. Packing Co: Swift Poor Standard Still Lower (By a Worker Corresondent) EVANSVILLE, Ind.—The Evans- ville Packing Co. which was headed by the Minhimers lowered the liv- ing conditions so far that the work- ers came out on strike in 1921 for a living wage and better working con- ditions. Minhimer sent to New York and other places and got organized strikebreakers and the workers went down in defeat. Now this compszy is run by Swift and conditions are even more rotten than they were before. The standard of wages are so poor that the workers can hardly exist. What we must do in this plant is to get together and organize com- mittees in the different departments. This is the first step to make if we hope to fight in an organized man- ner against these bosses for an in- crease in wages and better conditions in the plant. The Trade Union Unity League, which is leading the miners and textile workers in their struggles for better conditions will give us the same real working class leadership. Let us get with the Food and Pack~- ing-house Workers Industrial Union and fight against thees starvation conditions, units strong enough to prevent such outrages. Commander Poteet made a great gesture when he stated: “The Legion made all kinds of fake concessions and by the help of these reactionaries | they succeeded in fooling the miners DRESS FACTORY 2: ee. that this with the cons and before tl wed to shift for on an open shop Must Build Committees | a ie lon or ne In Shops to Fight | themsetves and wo Starvation Scale | basis, we can see the degraded con- pier |dition that the UMWA is now in. Philadelphia, Pa, It is an open scab hearding organiza- Dear Daily Worker: |tion sanctioned by the bosses to I work in Seltzers dress factory at | crush the rank and file movement of Tenth and Race Sts. Philadelphia. | the miners now being organized to I can hardly tell you how miserable | petter their conditions. conditions are in this shop. Wages| 4 minor of New Philadelohia, Ohio have been cut and cut and cut. Now| _. member of the UMWA local in I am working on skirts, They are| inet section—‘old me he londed 14 very hard to make and for making | tons of coal for $6. He works two the whole skirt, except the hem, we | gavg @ week and barely exists. get five cents, 60 cents a dozen, ine Threaten Or) ‘These skirts are so hard to make| 74, organizers who attemnted to that after working like crazy all day | oeanize this section into the Na- Jong T can only get 18, at the most, /tional Miners Union were threatened one. So you can see how muc’| with arrest by the Marshall—who by wages I make, Some weeks I can’t tne way was the president of that make $5. Often on pay day I've got- | section of the UMWA. But through ten in my envelope $3. Imagine, $3 | his reactionary tactics he got himself for slaving all week. | unloaded from the local by the rank All the girls in the place are dis- | ang file of the miners. Bed, Me ee ae we | Rebellion against the reactionary say: “I wish something would hap- | wisteaders of the UMWA is rife in pen, I can’t stand this much longer. | the fields that I visited. its tars ee nipsees ase of | “Last winter in the same fields there my friends who work in other shops | ore eight deaths caused by starva- say that things are even worse there. ane stent * | tion, according to the physicians who ope something happens soon. T| attended them. All the small cities wish there was a revolution. and towns in this territory are in A Girl Worker. | debt and the workers living in them Caters she cannot furnish the relief necessary to (Editorial Note—The girls in | keep the fields free from starvation. the Seltzer shops should get in Yesterday a truckload of food left touch with the Needle Trades In- | for Bridgeport, Ohio, from Akron to dustrial Union at once at 929 Arch | relieve and aid the striking miners. St. Shop committees must be |The need of food in this field to keep built in the shops, demands must | the miners on the picket line should be drawn up and the workers or- anizer constitutional provision that the or- ganization is noy-political and will not be used to back candidates for public offices has been used to keep. Legion men 6ut of politics.” Such Today the American Legion ambassadors, senators, congressmen, governors, mayors, judges, big busi- ness men, lawyers and politicians. These persons organized the Legion (under the guise of “comradeship”) to promote their own class interests. It is another move by the bosses to try to foo] the workers into be- lieving that capitalism only needs to do a little superficial re-organizing in order to bring back “prosperity” to, everyone. If the bosses succeed in fooling the workers this way it will not be long until every American worker will find himself in a worse position than a citizen of Italy! Workers! don’t support the Ameri- can Legion! It is a machine of the bosses. Bosses Drive On Mexican Workers Deport 1300 Workers From Los Angeles by this time be realized by all labor ganize for struggle against the | organizations and workers every- starvation wage scale.) N. ¥. POLICE SLUG 22 Secret STARVED WORKER The Akron section of the Miners’ Relief is planning new activities to Beat Up Unconscious Worker With Club increase the relief work in this sec- tion. A relief station has been or- Fellow Worker: Children are shot down on the ganized in Barberton, O. It might be well to cite a couple of cases of excellent work done by workers here in helping the miners to keep up their fight. A middle aged woman comrade, who works two days a week at $2 “sidewalks of New York,” innocent women are mal-treated by the police and railroaded by ‘our’ corrupt police judges, while white slavers and gang- sters fatten the bank roll of the Tammany cops. These thugs of Tammany are always on the job, a day and who has to support an invalid husband and two children, however, when an unemployed work- er is in need of their “gentle” at- spends her spare time working for tention. the Miners’ Relief. She gathered two baskets of groceries and collected $3.75 in money and had only one Last night, having to carry the banner, I witnessed a case of police brutality of Walker's cossacks, A worker dragged himself along Fourteenth street and at the corner of Irving Place collapsed from mal- nutrition. A cop standing near re- cognizing an unemployed worker ad- ministered first aid by kicking the prostrate form in the ribs, snarling the while, “C'mon git up you drunk- care of her family over Sunday of the same week. Another comrade, who was dis- criminated against because he sells the Daily Worker and was threatened with the workhouse last winter be- cause he refused to sell apples is also one of the hardest workers in that district gathering relief for the strikers. (By a Worker Correspondent.) LOS ANGELES, Cal—On Aug. 17 the freight yard of the Southern Pacific Railroad was filled with over 4,000 foreign-born workers to watch and say good-bye to their friends and relatives, 1,300 of whom are be- ing “voluntarily” deported to Mex- ico. How voluntarily they are being deported can be judged by the fact that most of those who are being deported were workers poorly dressed, with emaciated families with little bundles in their hands, surrounded by a cordon of police and immigra- tion officials with full bellies and guns bulging from their sides. The capitalist press announces that more are to be deported “as soon as the funds are available.” We are organizing the workers here against these deportations. We called a conference on Aug. 9 to or- ganize the unemployed to fight for real relief. “Red” Hynes and his prize’ bulls smashed our meeting, but the work of organizing the unem- ployed is going on in spite of the red squads, JOBLESS, WORKER IS THREATENED CHICAGO, IlL—I am an unem- ployed worker and because I owed two months rent which I could not possibly pay, I was made to move from my flat. Now after being out I have received letters from lawyers asking for $140. or they will garnish my wages. This is one time when maybe I am lucky; that I have no job ‘so the fakers can’t rob me of what Hidde 1 might eam, en bum.” ‘Workers present showed their resentment and the cop turned around threateningly and attempted to clear the street. This tool of the boss class now thoroughly agitated dragged the unconscious worker to his feet and drove his club with cruel force in his face. The poor fellow in pittul shape and bleeding pro- fusely was dragged to the station house where it was necessary to bring in the services of a doctor. I was not a bolshevik, but this has made one out of me. Yours truly, —J. 0. VW ilkes-Barre Preacher Helps Bosses Starve Mine Workers (By a Miner.) WILKES-BARRE, Pa.—The relief committee went on the job today to collect food, money and clothing for the starving miners in the soft coal region. We had just started to can- vas Blackman St. from house to house and a comrade and I entered a house where a minister of the church sat doing nothing. We ap- pealed to him for money, food or clothing, telling him the unbearable conditions that exist in the soft coal rgion, He insisted on seeing our credentials, He took our credentials dentials were not signed by local police appeared and arrested two of the miners who were collecting. This minister lives on Blackman St. and the name plate on the door was Rey. Stroud, He is the man who is responsible for the arrest and is a stool-pigeon working hand in hand with the bosses to help starve the miners back to work under these rotten conditions, Comrades Ben and Peters, the two arrested, were released but told not and said excuse me a minute until I telephone. In fifteen minutes he returned and refused us, not giving us one cent, but told us to go to the Red Cross. We told him the Red Cross refused to help the miners in Pittsburgh. He said we would bs arsesied, qur cre- to collect unless the United Mine Workers’ seal was stamped on the credentials, This proves the fact that the police and state, minister and church and the strike-breaking United Mine Workers are together as one in trying to starve the miners of the soft coal, pound of coffee in her home to take | men, etc, One minute after this the | ARMY, SAYS FAT N. Y. POLITICAN G.U.HarveyWould Put Single Unemployed in Army at $10 a Month (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich—One of the latest plans to “relieve” the unem- and which, by the way, ex- clearly that the bosses are more interested in preparing for war than relieving the unemployed, appeared in the Detroit ‘Times of Aug. 29. I quote from the Times: “NEW YORK. Aug, 29.—The federal government should recruit 500,000 single men, between the ages of 18 and 30, into the army for a year at a $10 a month salary and maintenance, to relieve unemploy- ment, Borough President George U. Harvey has announced. This plan, he explained, would provide for single men who otherwise would be overlooked in relief plans. Moreover, it would decrease unem- ployment and provide a large re- serve army.” Now, you single guys can holler horray for the U. S. A. and the red, white and blue! One could not really call this forced labor in Rus- sia. No, this is proposed by a fat politician right in New York, U.S.A. TEXAS FARMERS FLAY FARMBOARD iSay Why Plough Up Useful Crop (By x Farmer Correspondent) LUFKIN, Tex.—Bankers and mer- chants here are wandering around in confusion over the cotton situation. ‘They make themselves ridiculous. The farm board says plough up | every third row of cotton. Governor Long is sure that not a bit of cot- ton must be raised in 1932. Then, ; he says, the price of cotton will go | up. The farmers here, who talk on this | subject, frankly do not see the point- |For one thing they do not think that the price of cotton will be much effected, and even if prices would go up, the bankers, merchants and capitalists generally will benefit most, the farmers are sure. Some farmers also view the situa- tion in this light: Why destroy cot- ton when so many millions of farm- ers and workers in the USA do not have sufficient clothes? Not until the farmers and workers get together and organize and take a hand in their own affairs will there be a real change in the cotton sit- uation. Hungry Workers Fed on Garbage Unemployed Councils Must Be Strengthened Stockton, Calif. Daily Worker: I went out to find a job. I could not find work, but I met = young woman, dressed in overalls. She had just come to town and had just got out of an automobile coming in from the highway. She asked me for 25 cents to get something to eat with. I told her that I was broke and told her that she ought to get in touch with the Unemployed Council, as all workers should stick soaviber and fight for relief. I then went to the cares (Sells Floto). Some unemployed workers put the bum on the cook for some- thing to eat. He gave them first pick out of the garbage bucket. Some of these workers were eating from this bucket, This food was | only fit for hogs, dogs, capitalists and | Politicians to eat. It was not fit for | workers, I told the necessity of ore ganization in the Unemployed Coune cils, where we could force Unemploye ment insurance and leave the swill for hogs, ete. It is pretty hard when workers are forced to cheat the pigs out of their dinners. A Worker, Write to the workers: in the Soviet Union. They ‘will answer your questions concerning the Five Year Plan. Send all letters te International Letter Exchange Daily Worker, 50 E, 13t* St

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