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_Page Th ree OCTOBER’ 16, 1931 eplaail Auto Men Average $5 Weekly As Boss Press Lies| ‘TOLEDO, Ohio.—Workers in the Overland auto plant are told through DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, } FRIDAY, Savings Lost, Jobless 0 savings Lost, Jobless|State Refuses Framed Negro Shoots Self_in Alley Right to Legal Defense CANTON, Ohio.On October 8, at| ~ 7:30, Mr. Hunt, 50 years old, of 1513| BALTIMORE, Oct. 15.—In their ef- Ay (GREET 14th ANNIVERSARY OF | BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION THROUGH * SPECIAL EDITIONS OF DAILY NOV. 7 MINERS LAUNCH NEW DRIVE AGAINST PAY- CUTS NEAR HARLAN torture rere of | Jones and the State’s de- | Third St., N.E., shot himself to death | forts to rush through the frame-up | nial of his right to consult with his | the boss press that they will have lin the alley back of his home. Ill-|and legal lynching of Orphan Jones, | attorney. The LL.D, demands that|steady employment during winter gis 3 a Strike Against 5 Per Cent Cut Spreads to Five | health was the cause given for his) 60-year old farm hand, the boss au-|Governor Ritchie state his position | months. The truth is they are hav-| Ay open letter to all Daily Worker | League of Nations into the situa- | action; but if it was ill-health surely | thorities are denying the arrested | as the chief executive of the State of | ing a steady job now trying to live geiltstand xéndica ct iuevDally |. tena ane a Mines in Straight Creek District | the $1,000 which he lost with the| worker the right to see the attorney | Maryland. on the $5 a week they get. Over-| comrades “| ot PEE ceed che atic << closing of the Dime Savings Bank of | engaged for him by the International | All workers and their organizations | land workers are w ONGTARY Si wou sa viong tine: we have: te eet ale "Eapadallan a a = sees bs . as afl Canton on Monday was the motiva-| Labor Defnse. Jones is being held |throughout the country are urged to| week 8! hours a day at piece-work.| \inting in this col aa ee Fg, eee Ferment Increases Among Miners As Cold (aren lincommunteado in the Baltimore City |e once rush protest telegrams to| The bosses are trying to fool the |Dovs mitten us about now edited ne vce ete Wave and Starvation Sweeps Coal Fields | renow-workers, one of the planks | J#il to which he had been removed |Governor Ritchie, Sheriff Purnell | workers and keep them satisfied PY | potting along in your This greottig; sipuad by’ the werk: | following his arrest in Ocean City,|and State's Atorney Child, protest- | making such promises to them. But/ th. paiy am the Ha » Sig! | of the Canton section of the Com- Md., on a framed-up charge of mur- ing this hideous frame-up of a Negro promises don’t fill an empty stom- ers and farmers of the United : Harlan, Ky. | munist Party is that “the ejty shall) yesine » rich farmer, who discharged | worker and the denial of his right |ach, and when the workers find| "pet po” ae tates, will show that the masses Daily Worker: guarantee the deposits of Canton’s |about a big event in the life of the| are behind us in our stand ry rer: him when he demanded his wages, |to consult with his attorney. themselves starving in the winter just | z . workers which are deposited in Can- | Daily. ens Things began to move the week before last in Bell County. | fon banks.” Let's all rally behind |®84 the farmer's wife and two a like they did the rest of the year they |" "ae pig event is the November hy this greeting is of the In a section called Straight. Creek two mines went on strike | the Communist Party and a workers’ | 4#ughters. FREIGHT MEN 1D will see how much these promises| » otis cation of the Daily which i saa mae i As , ‘eade of the y ve TY ar against a 5 per cent wage cut, and while there are only 200] platform. Vote Communist next| That Jones was terribly beaten up A mean | will celebrate the 14th anniversary ig ies Nt miners working in these two mi same Creek that are expected written three more mines came We have local unions in a nes there are other mines on the to strike soon, (Sine this was out on strike.—Editor). ll these mines; there are com- month and show our solidarity! Weirton Steel Mills in an effort to extort a confession from him was confirmed today when a deputy warden who told the ILD attorney that Jones was being “patch- ed up” as he had been “busted up” | LONGSHOREMEN IN BOSTON WALKOUT, November °7 FINANCE WAR WITH FRANCE Soviet Union, of the Bolshevik the Daily Worker wilt contain an extra page which will contain articles by workers of the rev telling ct at i these gree! olution, rt of this workers to about their once and get tings. paper you a blank form that you can sign this to mittees of action in most of them as well as small relief com- | ysterday and that the attorney could | | conditions-and the progress they Cut out the n, paste it mittees, all of which will have toes Ga chilies edule alle ‘Kee e a e not see him until 3 o'clock. This af- Rae | | have made in the Five-Year Plan. of paper. broaden out. eae ce eee ee ce p p g ternoon when the attorney returned | rs This fil also conta a to those Workers Wise to Sell-| AR! Liga talieagd he pear nai from you, or Our committees were only in op- eration in the mine that struck about two weeks. The only think that we will possibly be weak in is relief and from the following you will recognize the importance of building an ade- quate relief apparatus. Paid in Scrip and they are all preparing for strug- gle, knowing that their only hope is to strike, they have prepared for defense. |'They have sent out the cry to their fellow workers to stand by and share whatever they can. Already the first chilly days have struck the miners. Their blood is so thin that they are not able to meet Thin little Cutting Attacks (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) attended your meetings but my job is not worth a damn and we might just as well be fired,” said one worker who to interview Jones, he was again de- nied permission to see Jones. The attorney was told by Warden Mar- tin that he could not permit Joncs to see a lawyer without the consent | of Sheriff Purnell or State’s Attor- ney Child of Worcester county. The attorny then telphoned Sheriff Pur- nell who refused outright to permit Out of Fakers (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) BOSTON, Mass. Oct.’ 15.—The | strike of the 3,000 Boston longshore- | |men spread to the freight handlers, when Local 799 was called out, the men in the sheds refusing to handle | the cargo which had been unloaded | | shevik revoluti Contributions workers will be Trud, which is | States is becoming steadily worse, as the result of the continued with-| drawal of gold, which has increased | in tempo. On Tuesday and Wednes- day of this week, the first two days the banks were open, almost $90,- ings from workers and workers’ or- | ganizations in the United States to | the 14th anniversary of the Bol- ion. by sent to us t the central S | trade union organ. The greetings by American work- them n the special y Worker Nover to send a ve a fine solidarity R. and In almost all the camps there are | the cold with resistance. ‘ the lawyer to see Jones. Thi riff h company stores. And this mean scrip. | children, blue with the cold, greet one po ce olga aoe te ake to alee wae eupe er. the ship owners to 000,000 of gold was withdrawn from ers to the workers of the USS.R ration : nee pp Scrip is used on the following basis.| the minute he enters the coal fields | Pe if and left the court house at Snow | obtain i a ef ROE righ S. Ship- | the United states. This brought the | which will be published in the special 2 greeting from the group Men on the cold rolls have been ame! elt t If a miner draws $1.80 a day he is allowed to draw 60 cents worth of scrip a day; if he makes less than $1.80 he is allowed only 30 cents. At of Kentucky. It is because of this that these 100 per cent American workers, descendents of native hill folks, are determined to strike and cut so much that many don’t want to work at all. Men with big fam- ilies get 2 days a week at 38¢ an hour, Hill so that he would not again be “annoyed” by any demand for the supposed constitutional rights of the | arrested Negro worker. State’s At- ping Board, and various other ship- | |ping agencies to be used as checkers and for the handling of winches met with complete failure due to a dis- total withdrawals since the suspen- ber 20, a period of three and a half} “We, weeks, to the enormous total of | edition November sion of the British pound on Septem- | Worker, will be as follows the undersigned, the 14th anniversary edition of the of he Dail whole through one you can tell them that ng for an organization cos form for in- the end of a day’s work it looks like | fight to the last ditch. torn $588,224,700. The 1 t of th % 1 ; ey Child had evidently antici- ‘ 224, e larger part of the) Daily Worker, greet the workers Pine AcE eeutae MRL a run on a bank, with the miners Operators Control All Anyone who thinks the stee] work-| pated such a demand and could not |‘ribution of leaflets by the Marine | withdrawals of gold are for French| and farmers of the U.S.S.R. on the ipiapiberqetrncetitan and thei wives ane te athe io Even the things that are pwned Wy ers won't fight against these ‘condi- | be reached, eee inde Sai oat baie bankers, In addition the French| 14th anniversary of the Bolshevik 6 18 Rasy der! SOR pany offices to wait for their 60 or | the coal companies are control Y |tions, is crazy. An now the organi- s fete mec’ | franc is still quoted higher than the voluti : fey i 20; Gbntaj: while those™ who teye sdb |tueni.; Here ts aulexa ple of iow tis Several employees at the Baltimorg and calling for their solidarity with q ig] revolution. simple blank sheet of paper. made enough for either allowance to allow them sonething, just anything, to stop the children from crying. After everyone has received their allowance the neighbors start out to find some one who got meal for their scrip, because they were only able to get lard. Some of the less fortun- ate, because they were only able to buy salt and baking powder, lend their is done. One of the blacklisted miners who had bought furniture and a cook stove from one of the largest houses in the South was unable to meet the payments and although he had been one of their steady customers for over fifteen years and had always been honest, the coal company found out that he owed the money and came one day and took the furniture zation of the unemployed workers in of the men that are working. The assurance that a growing number of lines instead of scabbing is pushing the organization ahead. The new union is intrenching it- self in these mills here, and it won't be long before the big action starts. these parts is removing one big worry | s) unemployed will fight on the picket | city jail have stated that Jones is ‘fering from scars on his shins and learly sustained during the brutal abrasions on his head. These were third degree to which Jones was sub- jected in order that the state might extort a confession out of him. The International Labor Defense is. preparing to take out a writ of ha- beas corpus if the state authorities continue to deny this worker his the striking longshoremen. While some few boats are being worked by scabs, the port for the | most part is badly crippled. Many | ships are being redirected to New| York and Baltimore for discharge of | cargo. The shipowners through the | press is attempting to create*the im- pression that they have the situation | well in hand; that in a short time | | daily conference in order to try to dollar, indicating that the export of gold will continue The bankers of Wall Street are in stave off the continuance of the shipment of gold and its very sharp | effects in making the financial crisis in the United States more acute. ‘The Journal of Commerce reports the | conference of the leading bankers as | follows: class. “The success of the Five Year Plan and the advances economic and cultural fields have strengthened our determination to advance our own struggles against the growing attacks of the boss “Our revolutionary trade unions in the mines of Kentucky, sylvania and West Virginia, in the textile mills of New Jersey in the forms to you. ings must begin at once. no time to lose. the names as soon as possi And also intensi tell the wovid Penn- | issue and to get ion, We n iss ed and But we can't wait until we get the Work on the greet- We have Start at once, com- rades, and send in the money and ible. your drive to i becal ble} and cook stove away. This miner ’ ‘ | tie tin es we are g0- qe may eyeraiane Stanctine land his wife told ze that thls ‘only West Va. Steel Meet ight to consult with an attorney in | *he Por a ie, grt) “The Federal Reserve authorities, | Rhode Island and in the shops ‘ Ne fai Gh takes Children Starving made them more determined to fight.| BENWOOD, West Va., Oct. 15.—A|order to arrange his defense against | — 14 tenor will no longer be a| {Was learned, are keeping inclose | and factories throughout the | too few copies. But we can't print Starvation is written on the faces —A Worker Correspondent. Jobless Council Forces Welfare to Give Relief to Starving Family Stockton, Cal. well that when the Unemployed Council gets a hold of it the wel- joint mass meeting of employed and unemployed steel workers has been called by the Metal Workers Indus- trial League for Friday night, Oct. 16 at River Front Park here. The meet- ing will mobilize employed and un- employed for the fight against the the attempt to legally lynch him. Fol- lowing the extortion of a “confes- sion” after a whole night of third degree torture, State’s Attorney Child hag already announced his intention to rush through the indictment of Jones within a week. matter of contention as between the longshoremen and the ship owners. This is-obviously done in an effort to demoralize the strikers. Their methods, on the contrary, have served to make the men even more deter- mined to gain their justifiabl de- touch with the foreign exchange field and partly to accomplish this purpose are holding conferences each day with the heads of the large downtown banks. Yesterday commercial bankers were cellad in groups and throughout the after- | out the whole United States, are carrying on a fight which will spread through- country.” THE COMING WAR. This greeting is especially | nificant now in view of the pres- ent war menace loo: enough copies for extra orders in ¢i sig- costs one cent each ming up’ ia |No. orders will be filled uw the big demand unless we have the cash from you for the arly. For ecial edition the copy and je in advance. inless they a eee recent and coming wage cuts and for| The I. L. D. has sent telegrams to noon held a series of sessions with | yanchuria. We are under no il- are accompanied by cash remittances. A few words from the state of sun- tere wit onl aera? Baa race immediate relief. “The fellows just|Governor Ritchie of Maryland, at mands, . George L. Harrison, Governor of | jucion that Japan's invesion of GRD HOW: ahine and oranges end from one off ee ee individuals. “They were |Can't.stand the cut,” sald one stecl |Anapols, fo Shettf Purnell and pees oem Ce Le Doeten ie New wore, Wesecre Batik: Manchuria and the entrance of the Below is an order blank you can tha: wealthiest cities in Ban! Joequin | 0 refused, food land absller.” dau | Worker who 18 active in building the | Flees Atemney Ohild, nb Snow Hill, District and of Local 800. is noW| ‘The United States bankers realize| United States government and the | use for ordering bundles Valley. The workers out here are | flatly r hom five gal. | MWIL here, and in spite of the fact protesting against the third degree | Crawling on his belly before Mayor | that the withdrawal of gold from the | starting to realize that they cannot | stead they promised them five gal- Curley in an effort at arbitration. | Gniteq states and the “rumors” about ORDER BL! live on sunshine alone, and that the oranges are not grown for workers to eat, but are raised to make profits for the few. lons of gas so they could get out of town. 2 The Unemployed Council did get hold of this case and formed a com- | mittee of forty workers and marched that they “can’t stand it,” the com- pany is planning a new cut aither now or the end of the month, . . BRIDGEPORT, Ohio, Oct. 15.— ternoon, Oct. 17, 3 p.m. in the same place. The committee is putting out Teaflets advertising the mass meeting and has also started registering the The men are becoming more and more disgusted with his actions and have gone so far as to openly de- clare resentment with his right-hand man, Sweeney. the stability of the dollar that have | been spread have a direct connection with the French government. The Journal of Commerce writes 14TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION OF TRUD, Please send HE Page from Featuring Special ALL-RUSSIAN TRAD copies of tk DAILY WORKER UNION ORGAN s edition to: One worker selling the Daily Steel workers from Martin’ unemployed of Steubenville, prelim- the following concerning the attack Worker came to two families living be daar Roe ee Mave. beshstalled toa awh a ee inary to placing the demands of the} The Marine Workers Industrial|/on the dollar by the bankers of NAME ....cscecseveescnscescerceseteesenessenentneeneeneeoeseaens on the dumps along the river. One|ramities. When the s pokesman of|in Bridgeport at Monument Square unemployed before the city council in | Union continues to urge the rank and | France. Penees = of the families had a four-week-old the committee started to explain the | Thursday night at 7 p. m. A repre- the course of a big mass meeting and | file of the ILL.A., to organize a mili- “while not concerned over the is baby with sores all over its bOdY,| case the parasite in charge said that | Sentative of the National Committee demonstration Tuesday night, Oct. 17.|tant picket line around the docks} effect of these attacks upon the ro, (5 SRS RAPED caused from dirt and filt. Each one} 1. could not do anything, but he soon | for the Building of the Steel Workers Wheeling Steel Company has shrut and to smash all attempts by their) American dollar, the administra- | of these families have nien chitdren. ' Industrial Union will address the | 4°W® its open hearth furnaces here. |officials at arbitration. Elect rank | tion would like to learn of their SEEN eh a changed his mind when he saw the ‘These children are deprived of edu-| determination on the workers’ faces, | Meeting, in addition to the working- Tube mill men who have been get- | and file strike committee at the next | origin and purpose.” i , (Cash must be sent with this order.) cation because they have no clothes} .. ye came across with relief for| class candidates in the “non-par- ting 1, 2 and-3 days a week, or less, | general membership meetings and| ‘They know both the “origin and) to wear. these workers’ families. tisan” elections of Peace Township. Labs be completely out of |deal directly with the ship owners. | the purpose” of these attacks. What | 5 = : Fellow-workers, let's not stop at s 8 8 hoes Misa Maa GEES they want is to be able to pin it on INDIAN SUMMER The law and order, the police, have been here and told them four times to move, because they know damn this. for social insurance. Let’s fight for real relief. Fight A Worker. Green Supports Stagger System in Butte Butte, Mont. Daily Worker: Mr. Green, the mastodon of the A. F. of L., made a much-heralded debut in Butte last week. He de- livered a somewhat awkward speech. From a worker's point of view, Mr. Green is all that his name implies. Mr. Green’s talk not only showed conclusively his stand as a misleader of labor, fro man economical stand- point his speech was the last word in juvenile imbecility. ‘The sum and substance of Mr. Green’s speech was “All from the workers, nothing from the bosses.” Mr. Green argued the workers want work, not dole or insurance. He said: “We must cut the man that is working down and put on a few of the ” It is obvious that Mr. Green intends to support the part-time stagger system of the bosses. He also assured the work of Butte that his clique voted in fa- vor of beer long before the American Legion arrived at their mature con- clusion. ° A number of enthusiastic boosters and hangers-on from the local A. F. of L. cheered him feebly. He failed, however, to fool any of the miners in Butte. A small boy, who was there asked his youthful comrade who the high mucky muck was. His comrad ereplied: “Oh, that’s the guy who kids the. working stiff.” So ap- parently the Butte workers are next to Green and his docile bull. Mr. Tobin of the teamsters union also appeared with Mr. Green. Tobin cayorted on the platform like a young colt. His dythrambs were superb comedy. A Worker, Murphy’s Thugs Shoot Two Detroit Workers Detroit, Mich, humanity in government while , body full of lead. ‘This morning Joseph Bem, the father of three children, while going to work and waiting for the street car to come at Trombly and Mt. Eliot Sts., was attacked .without any provocation on his part by one of How Steel Cuts Work STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, Oct. 14.— The first turn of the week in the tin mill here lasts from 10.30 at night until 8 in the morning. The last turn, going in at 11.30, had to work until 10.15 a. m. Thursday. The cuts have been so bad that working the No. 28 gauge last night a doubler on a crew putting out over 360 pairs only made about $5, whereas a year and a half ago he would have received about $9 for the same work, Open- ers were cut 23 per cent Oct. 1. They are making from $12-$15 in four turns. All extra pay for oversize orders has been cut off. The men are preparing for strike. a eee STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, Oct. 15.— ‘The Metal Workers Industrial Lea- gue is now organizing the unem- ployed workers of Steubenville. At a mass meeting on the river bank Mon- day afternoon a committee was elect- ed from the crowd, and another mass meeting scheduled for Saturday af- Meanwhile both the local steel companies are bearing down harder and harder on the men, They are determined to break down completely the standar dof living of the steel workers and their families. One worker received a pay check of eight cents from Wheeling Steel this last pay. He got four hours work and the company deducted $1.50 for the compulsory insurance. How much real “insurance” the men get is shown in the case of one tube mill worker who got hit by a pipe Sept. 16, was off three weeks, then was able to work two days, and now is fired. His total “insurance” under the crooked state compensation law amounted to $9.25, and now he has a sore back and no job. The appalling extent of accidents in the mills, despite all the company's “safety” talk, is seen by the number on his compensation cer- tificate which was over 98,000. ‘The workers laid off by Wheeling Steel are organizing and they will put up a real fight for real relief this winter. Terrible Conditions on Boulder Dam; AFL Makes Only Gesture the French bankers openly and use this as a weapon in the financial war | with Frances Despite the fact that these two VANCOUVER, Canada, Oct. 12—| The brutal exploitation and terrible | conditions of the workers on the} Boulder Dam by the Big Six Com-| panies, Inc. was told here by a com-| mittee from the A. F. of L. They gave a report which told of wage cuts, “fearful” conditions and lack of consideration for ex-servicemen. But this is as far as the A. F. of L. will go. It is their common game of making reports and noise and then co-operating with the employer in retaining the conditions. This is clearly shown by the fact that they | hhaye asked the Federal government | to investigate conditions. The Fed- | eral government is well aware of con- | ditions on the Boulder Dam, they are | directly cooperating with the Big Six Companies, Inc. in maintaining the conditions and putting through wage | cuts, jgle between them is becoming more imperialists now hold about two- thirds of the world’s gold they are both in very acute financial difficul- ties., The worsening of the economic situation through the deepening of the crisis has been so severe as to undermine the financial stability of both. As a result of this weakening of their financial stability the strug- and more intense, ‘ The At C THE AW! WELL-PREPARED HEALTHY ™ PRO Th Most Beautiful Time of the Year SAMP NITGEDAIGET All the necessary improvements for the Fall and the coming Winter months have already been installed PRICES ARE THE SAME ARM COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE LETARIAN ENTERTAINMENTS ¢ Only Fail and Winter Resort HOTEL NITGEDAIGET THROUGH US you can send food pack- ages, as well as other useful articles, such as clothing, underwear, shoes, etc., for which all costs, including duty, are prepaid here in New York: All such art- his thugs in the last week attacked | the of thi it : de warkeats with Gund Sede tpt eto ne icles are transported every week on Only a week ago a young worker covery is doubtful. steamers leaving from New York direct came to Detroit from Port Huron boone for work. This worker, be- unable to find employment, went to an alley at Rioppelle St. and hap- pened to bump into a well-guarded Behind a blind pig he opened blind pig, fired at this young worker, whose name is Sorehsen, plugging his Workers, please open your eyes. Don't you see that men with bloody hands are pleading humanity? Who is responsible for these two shoot- ings? The capitalists, the man who controls your police department. Yes—we can have humanity, but we'll have to take the guns away from these thugs. We must organize into strong workers’ defense corps to fight this terror. F. 8. E}k River Miners Ready for Strugele New York. Daily Worker: T recently left the coal mining area in West Virginia. In the Elk River Coal and Lumber Co, coal mine lo- cated at Widen, W. Va., the miners load coal for 60 cents a car which holds 100 bushels level full and the bosses compe] the miners to load the cars over their capacity. The company drills and shoots the coal and they pay no yardage they pay for rack which runs up 12 inches thick. These mines run from one to three days a week and the company forces thg miners to pay $17 for rent. The electric, doctor, coal and other bills are deducted from the pay which leaves very little money for the miners here have very little contact with the National Miners Union. We should get some organ- and |izers down into this field because the nothing for dead work. Neither do miners are ready for struggle. HONOR ROLL GREETINGS We, the undersigned through the 14th anniversary edition of the DAILY WORKER, greet the workers of th U.S.S.R. on the 14th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. AMOUNT Dollars Cents ’ Cut this out, get busy, collect greetings from workers in your shop, or factory, mass organiza- tion, and everywhere. Twenty-five cents and up for individuals, $1 and up for organizations. Mail immediately to get into the November 7th edition of the Daily Worker. for Russia. Am-Derutra parcels receive special handling and quick delivery by the Soviet Government. The moderate prices on food packages include all costs, as well as duty. Your relative gets the parcel free, without any charge to him. The packages are insured and prompt delivery is fully guaranteed: Full and detailed information may be obtained in person, by mail or telephone. 261 FIFTH AVENUE FOOD PACKAGES to Soviet Russia Direct from New York! AM-DERUTRA TRANSPORT CORPORATION, of 261 Fifth 29th Street, New York (10th floor), THE ONLY OFFICIAL FOR- WARDING AGENCY on all shipments from America for AMTORG and other Russian organizations, has the exclusive right to accept food packages direct from New York for all cities and towns in Soviet Russia Avenue, SEE WHAT YOU ND! At our office you can see samples of the foods that go into the packages, and con vinee yourself of the quality of the pro- ducts and the large variety of packages, Large Comfortable Rooms are Available in the Attractive To enjoy your vacation or week-end, go to Camp Nitgedaiget YOUR RELATIVE CAN GET WHAT HE WANTS at the “TORGSIN” STORES There are “TORGSIN” Stores in 50 large cities in the Soviet Republic, where all kinds of products and articles are sold direct or are sent by mail. We are the American agents for “TORGSIN” stores. At small cost you can send through us to your relative in Russia an order on the “TORGSIN” Stores, where he may select whatever he wishes for the sum that you send him. At our office you can obtain a list of the “TORGSIN” articles and prices. SIA, AM-DERUTRA TRANSPORT CORP. Only Authorized Agency in the UNITED STATES and CANADA for transporting parcels to SOVIET RUS 10th floor Telepone: LExington 2—4117, 4118 NEW YORK CITY