The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 18, 1931, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1931 Wage three PAY OF FOREST FIRE FIGHTERS SLASHED BY GOVERNMENT IN WASH. Many Workers’ Homes Destroyed; Red Cross Refuses to Bring Relief Workers Listen. Only to Those Who Talk on Communist Program (By a Worker Correspondent) SPOKANE, Wash.—In Spokane, the local papers have writ- ten accounts of the fate of the workers who wait for a chance to fight the forest fires—waiting for a miserable chance to earn 35 cents an hour on the “ aptly called by a worker. smoky soupline” as it has been Wages Cut The press doesn’t tell all of what is happening to these workers. paid, is lower this year than Hoover says about his no wage-cutting policy. ten cents from last year. In front of @-- the “offices” in Spokane and the other central points, from whence they take fire-fighters, one sees hun- dreds of workers sleeping in the streets, waiting for a job. We mean they are sleeping on the sidewalk in their regular clothing. In the forest, fires rage this year greater than for many years, due to the drought. Many Workers Killed In the woods workers are killed, that no one ever hears of again. Few deaths are reported by the forest ser- vice, but if one could check the equip- ment sent out from the warehouses, a sort of reliable list could be set. ‘The governor of Idaho established martial law in six counties, blaming the workers for setting fire to the woods that destroyed their own homes! The troops marched 45 workers, classified as “undesirable” out of the woods—undesirable, be- In the first place they scale, which is government ever before, in spite of what It is a cut of cause they had agitated among their fellow workers for organization against this starvation wage-scale. In Priest River, a fire fighter told of how he and the crew with which he was working, stopped at 5 a. m. in the morning and fed a young mother who had stood all night against a fence with a babe asleep in her arms and two more kids asleep on the ground. Their home had been burn- ed out and the Red Cross had not been near them. Three days had passed since their home had burned. Turn to Communism ‘There is a bright side to the sit- uation, however. Workers back from the fire, tell how the men will not listen to anyone unless he speaks of Communism. They are turning to- wards the Party of their class. They have learned from Mr. Hoover and his starvation program—they are ready to fight. A. C. W. Misleaders Revel in Luxury While Workers Starve (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK, N, Y.—Unity House is a summer hotel owned by the Amalagamated Clothing Workers Union. Here all the poker playing of- ficials spend their weekend vaca- tions, The charge for board is far beyond the means of workers in the A.C. W. But the graft that is paid to the officials puts them into a class which can easily pay and have lots left for gambling. : The A. C. W. leaders are not only allowing but assisting the bosses to cut the low wages of the workers in the needle trade. But on “Labor day the Unity House had 1,250 of these grafters lazing about while the workers in the industry are on the verge of starvation. They paid a big price to stay at the house on money gotten from the bosses for allowing the wage cuts to be put over. Build Opposition! Workers — Stop allowing these grafters to live on your misery. Throw them out. Demand the money that goes into the Unity House to be returned to the union fundss Stop the graft by destroying the system that makes it. Leatn what happens to your money in the A. C. W. and then smash this graft ridden racket and build a rank and file opposition allied to the Needle Trade Workers Industrial Union, Rich Pastor Offers ‘Stirring Letter’ to ‘Relieve’ Unemployed To the Editor: In your expose of the full-bellied, lily-handed parasites who fraud- ulently live without working by sell- ing imaginary lots in a suppositious heanen you haven't been told of oné of the funniest farces of the year. Here it is, briefly, as told by our daily papers: ‘Two months ago Mayor Murphy asked the churches to do. what wel- fare work they could in their vicin- ity. And they replied they were not organized for charitable purposes. A reverend doctor on the mayor’s com- mittee told them they might as well give up entirely if they erased char- ity from their faith, hope and char- ity bunk slogan. They replied they preached charity so successfully that their individual members gave so much personally that they had noth- ing left to give as a group. Now Senator Couzens has called their bluff by offering a million if others would contribute nine more, and not a single individual church member christian has come forward. However, the Rev. Vance has come forward and told us he has proof that the church has done much for the unemployed. Why, in fact, he says, “Haven't we written a stirring letter to our constituents telling them that workers are starving?” So if you are hungry don’t look for a stirring portion of porridge, but feast your eyes (not your belly) on a stir- ring letter from the church. And while this farce was being enacted the son of the pastor of the million- dollar metropolitan church went on his honeymoon on his father’s pri- vate yacht! A Worker, Omaha’s Relief Plan: 3 (By a Worker Correspondent.) OMAHA, Neb.—The last time we heard from the bosses’ unemploy- ment committee has been about two weeks ago. That was when the com- mittee of Omaha open-shoppers wired Hoover's National Committee that Omaha would solve unemploy- ment in good Omaha style. The fol- lowing is a good sample of the Omaha style. The Fegles Construction Co. is building a grain elevator at Tilst and Dodge Sts., Omaha, working about 30 men, paying 30 cents an hour for Days Work for 30 Men! ten hours’ work and the company supplies pressed ham and cheese sandwiches for the workerg at noon for 10 cents apiece. workers have to look out for their own trans- portation, which means 20 cents car- fare to and from work. The job will be over in two or three days and the men will find that they are just like they were before they started, except being a little older and having their strength sapped away. They will be able to take their place on the street among the job- less again, . Smelter BosSes Charge Workers Illegal Com- pensation Fee Omaha, Neb. Dear Comrades: A leak here in regard to working- men’s compensation shows that the packing firms, smelter factories, con- tractors and other large employers have been charging employes 1 per cent of their wages to be applied upon compensation insurance ob- tained by employers. State Compen- sation Commissioner Cecil Matthews had to admit that such procedure was illegal. This is nothing new with the Doak Trys to Deport Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) American Smelting and Refining Co. Plant located here in Omaha. For years this firm has taken as high as 15 per cent of one week's wages from the workers and then when one of them dropped from “lead poisoning” he would be sent to some ill-kept and Poorly-attended ward (set asidé especially for cases that hospital au- thorities called “bums”) and left there in an environment of vomit, vermin and unemptied bed pans to suffer, starve and maybe die. A Worker Correspondent. Finnish and Russian to China : Ss pau sigan “Spain Is A Workers’ Republic.’ Say The Murderers In Madrid MADRID, Spain, Sept. .7.—After vou shoot the workers for insisting on something to eat—tell them it is a “Workers Republic” that did the shooting! That seems to be the poli- cy of the Socialists here. The Na- tional Assembly, in which the So- cialists are the largest party voted, yesterday by 170 to 152 to so desig- nate the murderous regime of the bourgeoisie and the priests in Spain. It is significant that a Catholic priest was one of the main support- ers of the motion. Louis Araquistan, the boss of the socialist party, made the main speech for the motion. He took especial pains to show that the title meant nothing more than politics and that the government is not a dictatorship of the proletariat: He said: “The dictatorship of the Russian proletariat is: an exclusive function of that nation. In time the privi- leges of private property will dis- appear, and even private ownership itself, but the socialists do not in- tend to annihilate the owner class, but merely to incorporate it in prop- er functions. We socialists now be- lieve the people will accept the situ- ation.” Thus, the socialist party here does not propose socialism now, but uses the same formula by which the Ger- man socialists after the war seated the capitalist class on a bloody throne. And the socialists have just seen to it, with machine guns, that the workers of Barcelona had to ac- cept the situation—temporarily. United Textile Faker Slavish Advertizer Of Boss’ Sheetings SALEM, Mass., Sept. 17—Shee Workers Local Union No. 83 of the United Textile Workers has a busi- ness agent named John P. O’Connell who is one of the most unblushing class collaborators évér seen. His of fice is nothing more than the adver- tisiag agency of Pequot Sheets, in which factory his local works. A sample of his efforts is an open let- ter addressed to all A.P.L. unions by O'Connell, couched th the most slayv- ish terms toward thé company. He lauds the company’s bonus system, and says: “Our concern has a high social state of mind.” He then urges all union members to use none but Pequot sheéts, and winds up: “Don’t forget our colored borders. They are now on the way. Inquire about them.” It is no wonder that this company was able to institute part time work for its 2,000 textile workers without any resistance from the union, Workers Correspondence fs the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE. geon” with the customary punish- ment ration of bread and water. It is learned that the view then taken by those who control the policy of the state was expressed with the words: “If Mooney died in the regu- lar course of prison life, the ‘Mooney case’ would be over.” Later, because of a fear of exposure, the plan was modified to a less spectacular course. ‘The known facts give évidence that Mooney did actually receive punish- ment calculated to break his health, immediately after his denunciation of the former governor. Although known for some time, publication of this open charge was postponed until the details of the conspiracy against Moonéy could be checked up. Final confirmation has been made possible by the testimony of Frank Spector, a prison mate of Mooney’s, who was recently released from San Quentin penitentiary, Cali- fornia, Spector served 13 months following conviction on criminal syn- dicalism charges growing out of his activity in connection with prepara- tions for the strike of the California agricultural workers in the spring of 1930. Seven of Spector’s comrades are still in San Quentin and Folsom prisons serving terms of 14 years each. “Immediately after the decision of the California Supreme Court de- nied Warren Billings’ appeal for a pardon, which was made the basis for action on Mooney, a chain of persecutions began against Mooney,” Spector said. “This is a form of re- taliation fot Mooney’s fiery denun- ciation for former Governor C. C. Young and the California Supreme Court. He was moved from a light job earned by his 15 years in prison to the kitchen of the officers and guards. There, in a small room, 7 feet square, with no ventilation and with only a door leading into the hot kitchen, Mooney works here from 5:30 in the morning until the middle of the afternoon peeling potatoes, onions, ete. In the corner of the room is a shower used by 28 prison- ers. The room is constantly filled with steam and stench. “This had undermined Tom’s health,” continued Spector, “but when he finally complained he was told that he would be sent to the ‘main line.’ That meant that he would get @ fare mainly of beans, and after 15 years in jail one cannot live on beans. In his kitchen job Mooney does sometimes get such things as eggs and milk. So he had no choice. The result that he has come to look almost like the picture of tw oyeats ago when he had lost his teeth and 30 pounds in weight.” Spector, who is now on a national tour, putting forward the demand of the International Labor Defense for War Plot Against the Soviet Union Seethes In Four Capitalist Countries (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) to pave the way for such an an- nouncement. (Wireless By Inprecort.) MOSCOW, U.S.S.R., Sept. 17—An editorial in Pravda comments on the statement of Secretary of Commerce Lamont to the Tass (Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union) corre- spondent,,jn which Lamont said that the article in the United States Daily by the official, Pass, of the Com- merce Department was “the personal opinion of the author only.” This official has written against the granting of credits to the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics for goods purchased in America, Pravda says: “Despite the ex- istence in the United States of in- dustrial groups interested in trade with the U.S.S.R., the ruling circles in America unceasingly conduct a policy of disruption of trade between the Soviet Union and the United States. The adoption of a law grant- ing the customs officials of the United States the right to impose merely by administrative order an embargo on imports from the U. 8S. 8. R. is sufficient proof of this. “The recent trip of Secretary of State Stimson and Secretary of the Treasury Mellon into Europe has caused greatly enlivencd activities by all anti-Soviet groups. United States government says, he ference is also military—for the pur- pese of drawing Germany into the scheme for & military invasion of the Soviet Union. Ludendorf, after sketching the de- pendence of Laval and Briand on the French iton capitalists’ associa- tion, and their relations with the Wall Street bankers in America, says: : “Even if M. Laval and M. Briand are at loggerheads, which is an open secret, they will be at one in | the endeavor to deepen still further | the economic and political depen- dence of Getmany and above all to attain Gerinany’s entrance into a fraternal league against Russia, The French atmameénts industry promises itself fresh” profits from another world wat. “The same hopes are shared, moreover, by a large section of the American world-capitalists. The loan which Germany is to get will lead to a further burdening of the German people, which must work forced labor for world-capital. The latter can then easily forego the Young Plan payments: the inter- est on the new loan furnishes a sub- stitute, So ‘rapprochement’ be- tween France and Germany is con- at least reflects what it does, in| pri connection with trade between the Soviet Union and America. “Facts are facts. All possible impossible obstacles are béing put the United States against Soviet ports, Soviet exports to the States are but one-third IFFORT 10 SILENCE LABOR PRISONERS HAD DEATH AS A MINERS’ RELIEF | | Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 26-27 M | EVERYBODY ENLIST—EVERY- i | | SOLIDARITY DAYS FOR BODY HELP ae || Readers of teh Daily Worker immediate and unconditional am- | should go to the miners’ relief aesty for Tom Mooney and all class- | |headquarters in the cities and | | war prisoners, said that it was clearly | | SIGN UP for Solidarity Days, for the warden’s original intention to| | immense mass collections, house- put Mooney in the dungeon for 60| | to house and on the streets, for days for his denunciation of Gov- | miners’ relief. ernor Young and the Supreme Court, | | | 4 D. W. CLUBS BEST MEANS TO INCREASE SOLIDARITY: Comrade V. P. B. writes just a line| amples of the crying need that is from Washington that the forty cop- j felt for the Daily all over the coun- ies of our fighting paper be increased | try. Comrades! The best way to to sixty. He wants to build it up to| get the Daily Worker to these work- a hundred anyway very soon. He is | ers who are hungry for it is to start ready to fight to increase it. He|or increase Daily Worker Clubs. If but for tactical reasons changed his plans in favor of slow torture and death for Mooney. “Although this veteran prisoner has been robbed of his physical strength,” Spector declared, “he maintains his undaunted spirit. He is ever occupied with the campaign for his freedom and that of the other labor prisoners, and spends no time in brooding. He asked me to convey to all the workers his sympathetic and sincere greetings and to tell them that he places his hope for freedom in the broad masses of the American working class who, in his opinion, can alone force the gates of San Quentin open for him and the other class-war prisoners.” These latest revelations showing a Plot to kill the oldest and best known of labor's prisoners has given a sharp impetus to the mass cam- paign organized by the I. L. D. to force the release ef all class-war prisoners, in defense of the Scotts- boro boys, the 34 Harlan miners be- ing framed up on murder charges and slated for execution, and for the freedom of the seven remaining Im- perial Valley prisoners. Districts of the I. L. D. are al- ready laying plans for mass demon- strations for amnesty in every city and town in the U. S. within the ten days between Sept. 13 and Sept. 24. These demonstrations are being ar- ranged on the broadest scale pos- sible, drawing in especially all forces of the Trade Union Unity League If there is no miners’ relief com- | | | | mittee in your city then send for | | | collection material to the Pennsyl- | | vania-Ohio-West Virginia-Ken || tucky Striking Miners’ Relief | Committee, 611 Penn Ave., Room | ead Pittsburgh, Pa. | | and its affiliated organizations, and | the rank and file of the American | Federation of Labor. Special efforts | are being made to put forth the | burning issues in the mine fields of | Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky. In the New York district section | demonstrations are taking place | Sept. 23. A Mooney-Harlan-Scotts- boro conference will be held the first | lpskees in October. | Three speakers are now on na- | tional tours for the I. L. D—all | bringing forward the demand for | | amnesty. These are Frank Spector, Pat Toohey and Sender Garlin, co- editor of the Labor Defender, who will speak in more than 75 cities on “Boss Terror in the U.S.A. and Pro- letarian Triumphs in the U.S.S.R.” | The I. L. D. is at present faced |with the task of defending more workers in struggles than in any previous period. J. Louis Engdahl |declared yesterday that funds for conducting this work are urgently needed, and that contributions should be mailed or telegraphed at once to the International Labor Defense, 80 | East 11th St., Room 430, New York | City. | GOVT THREATENS TO USE IRON FIST writes that at present they are start- ing an Unemployed Council in this | town, with the result that they need | to build up our fighting mouthpiece by leaps and bounds and do it shoul- der to shoulder. He promises to write about all events of working- class interest from time to time, such as starvation cases, etc. Workers Hungry for Dailies. Another letter comes from B—, Texas. Comrade O. D. G. writes that he has to discontinue his bundle tem- porarily, Workers sure were hungry for them. They just passed them from one to another, When the cotton-picking season begins, this comrade expects a shower of sub- scriptions, These letters are just two ex- at first you only have enough money for one copy, a group of people can get together and one person read it to the others, with plenty of discus- sion thrown in. Then you can get more workers and farmers into the group. After a while throw an in- formal picnic or gathering and charge a very small admission fee. This affair can serve the double pur- pose of getting some money for the Daily and also to draw more work- |ers in. By this time there should be some among the number who can | subscribe to the Daily, and all mem- | bers should try to get a few subs a week or month if possible. Increase the Daily Circulation in The need of the working class for the Daily is evidenced again by the | following letter from J. R. of Cecil, Pennsylvania: example of disobedience to other services, civil and military.” The opposition is determined to make the sailors feel the terror of the capitalist class so that the capi- talist class will be able to use the navy in its war plans—in the attack on the Soviet. Union. In order to prevent the upsurge of the sailors from sharpening and tak- | ing on forms of united action the ships have been ordered back to their home ports where they can be iso- lated to a greater extent than when they are united for maneuvers. Even though the sailors were ordered back to the home ports instead of on to the maneuvers, which was a victory for them, they refused to go until they received a written promise on the part of the commander-in-chief militancy will affect all of the other categories of state employees. “There is still apprehension that the men of the land, air and police forces and the great army of school teachers will take simflar measures to | show their resentment against the wage reductions undertaken by the | government for all these groups. “Already a tremendous propaganda \is working in behalf of the teachers to make the government revise the | school cuts.” | The government has promisel to |‘“investigate” the complaints of the | sailors and the entire capitalist press jis playing this up as a major vic- | tory of the sailors. This has been a | Victory for the sailors but the rea- son the government is playing it up |is to prevent them from gaining a AGAINST SEAMEN FIGHTING WAGE CUT: that they would not be diverted from | real victory—the abolishment of the the return home. The Times reports | wage cuts of the MacDonald hunger this in the following: budget. The capitalists want the sailors to be sa (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the sailors. When the vessels arrive at Davenport, Plymouth, Chatham, etc,, the workers must greet the sail- ors. All sections of the armed forces must make common cause with the workers. Capitalists always declare that members of the armed forces aré still citizens with all rights. Let the men take the capitalists at their own word and adopt the slogan “No cuts in pay or allowances” and join hands with the working masses. ee So wide spread is the extent of the militant upsurge in the British navy and so fearful is the government of the sharpening of this miltancy and its spread to the other sections of the armed forces and to the remain- der of the working class that not one single statement has been made by any of the conservative or liberal leaders in the government of the ne- cessity for breaking the upsurge by force, The ony voices to be raised in de- mand for punishment of the saiors were the voices of the British so- cialists. It is the socialists that are demanding the crushing of the mil- itancy of the sailors by the brutal methods that have been used in the imperial British navy as long as it has existed. The New York Times reports the fearful attitude of the government as follows: “Not a word has been said, offi- cially or publicly, in Parliament or out, by any member of the gov- ernment about the necessity of up- holding discipline. There has not been the remotest hint of a court- martia, Instead, Sir Austen Cham- berain, First Lord of the Admiralty, announced today in the House of Commons: “Fis Majesty's Government have authorized the Board of Ad- miralty to make proposals for alle- viating hardships.’” The government has gone so far, says the New York Times, despite the possible effect it might have on in- creasing the militant spirit of the sailors and on increasing the mili- tancy among the remander of the armed forces who wll recognize in this the fear of the ruling classes be- fore the resentment of the sailors nd soldiers. The Times report con- ‘}tihues as follows: “Whatever misgivings were felt = Bay a combination ($1.00) and get one concerning the effect such a state- ment might have on future disci- pline in the navy, none was ex- pressed in the debate and very few in the Commons lobby. There was much more lively concern about the possible bearing the navy’s resent- ment may have on the political and economic situation of the gov- ernment.” In this situation it was J. H. Thomas, formerly one of the leaders of the Labor Party, who demanded the strictest carrying through of the vicious discipline of the British armed forces. The Times reports Thomas as saying, according to his friends, that, “‘4f he had been in charge of the navy the sailors would have been disciplined for an example and the fleet would have been sent to sea | according to program instead of a- lowing “these men to sovietize the British Navy.”’” This is the fascism of the British social-fascist arm of the Second In- ternational. The remainder of the leaders of the Labor Party, like Hen- derson, have not yet dared to come out openly for the fascist measures that Thomas proposes in the attack on the British sailors. But these op- position leaders are united with Mac- Donald and Thomas in the attack on the sailors but they refusé to they can be used in the attack by the | capitalist class at the more critical situation which the capitalists know is developng. ‘The leaders of the opposition, the Laborites, are however determined that this militant action of the Brit- ish sailors should not go unpunshed. They realize that this action of the sailors is a major attack on British imperiaism and they mean to defend British imperialism aganist every at- tack of the working class. The oppo- sition realizes, as the Tmes points out in the following report, that this act of disobedience on the part of the sailors is an attack on the very foundation of the armed power of the imperialists: “The responsible leaders of the opposition on the front Labor benches in common with members of the government, consider the matter extremely grave. Not only have British seamen refused to obey orders, thereby forcing, the postponement of maneuvers of the “A message from Invergordon re- veals the men still believe them- selves to be in command of the situation. It was said their leaders refused to allow the ships to weigh anchor tonight until they received a guarantee from the commander in chief that they would not be diverted during the voyage to dis- tant stations instead of to their home ports.” The sailors will not be satisfied with returning to their home ‘ports instead of to the maneuvers.. The demands of the sailors is that. the wage cuts be withdrawn and until this is done they are determined to act unitedly in defense of the very lives of their wives, their children and themselves. This was clearly stated in the let- ter sent by the leaders of the sailors to the Admiralty. This letter, stated that, “It is evident to all concerned that these cuts are a forerunner of tragedy, misery and immorality among the families of the lower deck and unless a guaranteed writ- ten agreement is received from the Admiralty, confirmed by Parlia- ment, stating that our pay will be revised, we are still to remain as one unit refusing to serve under the new rates of pay.” The sailors know that the MacDon- | come out now in the attack so that | ald budget wage cuts are aimed at | cutting. even the present miserable | \living standards of their families. The Times quotes one of the leaders | of the sailors of the giant cruiser Hood as follows: “We are fighting for our wives and children. The cuts cannot hit us aboard ship, but our wives, after the rent is paid, have only a pound left. How can they stand a cut of seven shillings and sixpence?” The bitterness of the workers in the armed forces has not been con- fined to the Atlantic fleet. The Lon- don Daily Mail printed yesterday morning a dispatch from Malta, in the Mediterranean, saying that there had already been some discontent among the British air forces against the wage cuts. Furthermore the re- sentment of the British workers in the Woolich arsenal and other War Department establishments near London against the MacDonald wage cuts has been admitted by the Brit- ish government. The Times reports that the great fear of the British isfied with having | gained an “investigation.” The sail- ors, though, demand not an “investi- gation” but the wiping out of these attacks on their living standards. The real plans of the government led by the socialist, MacDonald, ara revealed in the statement made by MacDonald to the House of Com- mons Wednesday. The Times states, “Premier MacDonald told the House of Commons he thought ad- | justments could be made without materially decreasing the net amount of navy economy.” MacDonald plans to make “ad- justments” without providing any in- \ecreased funds for the sailors. The “adjustment” will be miserable that there will not be any benefits for the sailors from them. MacDon- ald is determined to go through with the pay cuts for the sailors. The planned character of the ac- tion of the sailors is even more clear- ly revealed from the most recent sto- ries of the actual events. The re- fusal of the sailors to go out to sea for the maneuvers was determined at a meeting on shore on Sunday where a strike vote was taken. On Monday this vote was confirmed by another meeting on shore. The stc- ceeding events according to the New York Times account were as follows: “Tuesday morning was the zero hour. The commander-in-chief sig- naled to the battleship Valiant, whose crew had taken the initiative in the strike to lead the line to sea. The 12,000 men of the fleet stood waiting anxiously. Men from other ships declared afterward that had the Valient got under way the rest | would have followed. But the men | of the Valiant remained below | decks and refused to obey the of- | ficers, “An anxious council was held on the quarterdeck. The officers were fuliy aware that the eyes of the fleet were upon the Valiant. They decided to try to raise the anchor themselves. The pickets did not try to stop them; they simply warned that as soon as they raised one an- chor the men would drop the other. “The Valient remained at anchor. Soon the sailors came from below | decks and crowded forward. The cheer they raised was taken up on the other ships and the strike was on.” At Invergord the report states sounds of chéering continued to be Atlantic fleet, but they have set an {capitalist class is that the growing ' heard on shore from the vessels. Morning ONLY THREE MORE WEEKS LEFT TO THE AILY WORKE Freiheit Young Worker BAZAA |

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