Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
+n ean ne NRA TNR \, oe ape BESSEMER BOOSTER CLUB LAUNCHES NEW FORCED LABOR PLAN Jobless Forced to Work On City Streets, But Receive No Cash Pay Cash Given to Business Men Who Charge High Price for Groceries (By a Worker Correspondent) BESSEMER, Pa.—This town, Bessemer, is located in West- ern Pennsylvania, and is controlled by the steel trusts, although there are no steel mills in the town. Brick, cement and lime- stone quarrying are the main industries here perhaps it would be better to say they were the main industries, for they are not working at this time. Forced Labor I have read many of the fake proposals of the bosses to end the crisis, but I think the plan in operatioh in this town wins the prize. Correspondence Briefs NEW YORK “RELIEF” COMMIT- TEE DENIES RELIEF NEW YORK.—I went to the Labor ‘Temple where Mayor Walker’s Emer- gency Relief Committee registers the unemployed. I registered, but was told that because I_was not matried, I could get no relief. I told the reg- ister that the best thing I could do, would be to get married, no doubt. “That will do you no good,” he said. “After you are married, you will both Starve.”—A. .T. * ea 3 HUNGRY CHILDREN FIGHT FOR FOOD ON CITY DUMP ANDERSON, Ind.—I saw little children here in Anderson the other day fighting in the city dump over food that had become soft and could not be sold to the public—D. H. Sak aes SEATTLE TIMES FIRES MAILERS SEATTLE, Wash. — The Seattle ‘Times, this week, laid off their union mailers. The paper, which is locally owned, announced a wage-cut. rank and file muttered. The boss retaliated by a mass layoff and run- ning open shop. It is unnecessary to ask where the “labor leaders” of the A. F. of L. were at this time. Théy did not put up any resistance to the layoff, or making it open shop. A Worker. » 4 0 PAYS $1 FOR $5 A MONTH JOB DULUTH, Minn—I am an old lumberjack. I hired out to a dairy farmer near here. I paid $1 to the employment shark. .The job pays $5 per month+-A Worker, The; The unemployed (some of them) are given turns to work at fepairing the street for three days. They are given for this sort of a letter of credit for $12 in the Independent stores. No money is given to these workers for their work. The money is given to the business men. They charge high prices for their goods, and in this way they get rid of their goods and reap a small fortune. In the past the people bought a great amount of their food from more reasonable merchants in neighboring towns, but the local credit system has done away with a lot of this. Very few of the people here understand this, even when they can't get credit at the A. and P. Stores. This new local credit system is advocated and was put into operation by the Boost- ers Club, an organization composed of company officials and business men. -. Boosters Club Holds Affair Another amusing incident that oc- curred here was ‘ah entertainment organized by the Boosters Club. Ad~- mission was a gift of some article such as food or clothing—this to be distributed to the destitute. Needless to say the gate receipts cannot re- lieve the situation of the workers; it does not even give temporary relief. How could unemployed workers pro- vide enough food and clothing to feed and clothe the unemployed? Workers Awakening In a small boss controlled town like the workers are terrorized to the utmost to keep them from organizing. Many of the people still believe in the “bigheartedness of the companies.” Soon they will wake up, however. Many here have already awakened to the fact that the bosses’ remedies will not relieve starvation. When they all wake up here look out fat bellies in the Boosters Club, Children Hungry in Hard Coal Region (By a Worker Correspondent) COALDALE, Pa.—Thé miners here in the hard coal region who are lucky enough to have a job work from two tothree days a week at the most. Most of the miners have large fam- ilies and can’t afford to feed and dress them in the proper way. Chil- dren often go to school without a thing to eat. One. of the mines here shut down recently throwing 600 men out of work. Many of my friends who are high school graduates, are not work- ing and can’t even buy a job. When they went. to school, they were told that they were on the rosy pathway to success. It turned out to be the thorny pathway to starvation. Hotel Waitresses Paid $4.60 Per Week New York. Daily Worker: The hotel workers in New York should be organized and taught to fight the greed of the money racketeers. The Hotel New Yorker hires waitresses for $4.60 a week, then they have the nerve to deduct as an alibi $1.00 a week from each pay for the unemployed, money that the unemployed never see. Also 80 cents for laundry, If you go to the YWCA they offer to get you a room from $7 to $15 a week. Is that a place for working women or for high salaried profes- sionals. The food at the Hotel New Yorker would make any one sick, and working on a nine hour stretch it stands to reason many girls are out sick and then lose their jobs. If you want something decent to eat, you have to pay for it. ‘When you apply for a job there the head waitress tells you they ex- pect ritzy types, regular Broadway" chorus appearances—all for $4.60 per week, less deductions. If you manage to get a restaurant job you last about two weeks then you are back again at the agency who split his fee with someone else. When will these hotel fodd workers organize and battle the greedy system that is filling the town with prostitutes and rgrinding the young into an early grave, Read the suicides of young un- employed women. Many of these cases do not get into the capitalist papers. They are afraid of the truth, these vermin of the capitalist press. A Hotel Worker ie, a Editorial Note—The writer of this letter and ali waitresses in the New Yorker and other hotels in New York are urged to get in touch with the Food Workers Industrial Union, 5 E. 19th St., New York City. Chicago Job Bureau Supplies Slave Labor (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO—After coming to the Jewish Free Employment Bureau for over @ month, I, and half a dozen other younger fellows were given jobs that were supposed to last “until Christmas.” I was to be an entry clerk and sorting packages at the _ Boston Store Delivery garage. ‘ ‘We started to work last ‘Tuesday at 12 noon and worked until 12 mid- night. The next day we worked from 10 a.m. until 3:30 a.m. that morning —18 hours! And Thursday another 14 hours, from 10 am. until 12 mid- night. Tired and half asleep we work- ed in that big garage in the cold with little steam, doors opening and clos- ing all day leaving in the cold and drafts, and the running motors of the trucks giving off thelr poisonous ex- haust. i ‘The next morning, when we came down we were paid off, and I received the magnificent sum of 13.50 for working 44 out of 72 consecutive hours! It finally turned out that we were only helping out for the Netcher and Courtesy Day sales, Charities Block Aid to Starving Worker Brooklyn, N. Y. Daily Worker: Iam the father of seven small chil- dren, the oldest thirteen years of age. received $5. We received nothing from them before or after that. The investigator, Miss Allen, went to all gation of the Hunger March to Washington. Mich. Farmers Force County to Stop Foreclosure on Farms First Victory Won When Ontonagan Farmers from Eight Localities Put Demands to Supervisors ONTONAGON, Mich, (By Mail).— Poor farmers’ delegates elected from eight localities, Green, Mass, Fire- steel, Woodspur, Bruces Crossing Trout Creek and Topaz; besides over a hundred farmer sympathizers packed the county courtrdom to the A countywide meeting was held by the farmers in the courtroom and @ county committee of action was elected. This committee of 14 farm- ers pledged to carry out the organi- zational tasks under the leadership of the United Farmers League, also it great surprise of the officials of On- tonagon County here last week, At the opening of the supervisors meet- ing the chairman of the farmers committees presente dthe demands of cancelling mortgages interests, back taxes, etc. The stopping of the sale of Fred Saubert’s farm by the sheriff was vigorously protested by the farm- ers with the result that the super- visors were compelled to elect a com- was stressed by the speakers tnat we should not forget our official news- paper of the UFL, the Producers News which was being passed out to the farmers during the meeting. ‘The sheriff was again provided with the usual “bodyguard;” a car- load of state police from Houghton, Mich., who followed the speakers around the town after the meeting with a purpose of creating trouble. mittee from among themselves, in-| It was definitely pointed out at the cluding four farmers to hold a con-| meeting thatthe state police are al- ference with the representative of ways teady to defend the rights of the Federal Land Bank for the pur-| the banks and the sheriff against the pose of stopping the sale. interests of the farmers which caused At one o'clock Sheriff Schon read! the state police to follow the cars into the sale notice, during that time the} which the leaders of the farmers farmers were having the conference; went home in, with the Land Bank representative.| The usual trick that the county The Land Bank representatives came} supervisors try to pull of on the out on the courthouse steps and told) farmers is that postponing a fore- the sheriff that the foreclosure came/ closure sale is illegal, But when out on the courthouse steps and told| enough’ pressure is brought upon the the sheriff that the foreclosure was] county officials by the farmers the called off or a period o 15 days. As| postponement becomes “legal.” It be- difficult ag it as to for the sheriff to| ‘came “legal” in this case for no other stop the sale he was copelled to do|reason but that the farmers were so by the mass pressure of the| militant in their demands and scared farmers. these politicians ouf of their wits. coexistence with nelghboring lands and peoples seeking prosperity,” Honjo said. Mass Misery Intensifies In Japan While Honjo was peddling this hy- pocrisy, the yen continued to drop in Japan, with increased inflation of: the JAPAN PLANS NEW ATTACK ON CHINCHOW (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) nation last week of the Wall Street butcher, Chiang Kai-shek, and forced the whole Kuomintang crowd of the traitors in both the Nanking and the Canton wings to the manouver of setting up a new “more democratic” government as a means of decetving the masses and heading off the anti- imperialist, anti-Kuomintang move- ment. The failure of this act of deception was followed by the murderous butchery last Thursday of workers and students in Nanking, when huge crowds demonstrated against the new government. Chiang Retains Military Power. Kuomintang sources now admit that Chiang Kat-shek remains a force in the new “more democratic” government. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times reports: “There is an increasing impres- sion that Chiang Kai-shek might be re-elected president at the Cen- tral Executive Committee meeting scheduled for next Monday. Al- though Chiang a few days ago surendered all official posts, his Power remains unchecked, espe- elally in view of the consolidation of his military position through @ series of alliances with generals loyal to him in Chekiang, Honan, Kiange! and Anhwel.” Tt 1s reported that Chiang may pre- fer to remain for the mont uncon- nected officially with the new ernment. Chiang may want to walt until his Canton colleagues are in turn fully discredited before the Chinese masses. He would then use his military alliances to seize the gov- ernment and put himself forward as the “Savior” of China, in the hope that in their indignation against the Canton puppets of imperialism, the Chinese masses might forget the bloody role of Chiang himself as an agent of the imperialists. Gen. Honjo In Cynical Hyggcrisy. my relatives and friends, first telling} 2% @ statement dripping with im- them about our plight and trying to| Perialist hypocrisy and cynicism, the get them to help us instead of the|J@Panese Gen. Honjo likes the war charities, In the meantime my wife| Situation in -fanchuria to the situ- 2 z ation of the 13 American colonies in currency, and the employers throwing additional burdens on the starving Japanese workersand peasants, The yen d ropped at the end of last week an additional 75 points to 43 cents. While Honjo’s disgusting hypocrisy was being broadcasted over the wires from Mukden, dispatches were being sent from the same city reporting ad- ditional butchery by the Japanese of Chinese and Korean workers and peasants, with growing resistance to the Japanese invaders by Chinese partisan troops, slandered by the im- perlalist robbers as “bandits.” The New York Times reports: “Dispatches from Mukden told of fighting at various points between forces and bandits, and said prepa- rations were proceeding fast for a drive against bandits in the region of Sinmin, where there have been. everal encounters.” One Japanese and severay Chin- ese landowners known to be sup- porting the Japanese were captured Saturday in a raid by partisan troops near Mukden. The extent of the armed resistance of the Chinese partisans is clearly shown in a dispatch from Mukden which admits there is “Continuing organ- ization of irregulars into the semb- lance of an organized Chinese army.” Honjo Thanks Walt Street Govern- ‘ment. In his statements to the tmper- falist prees, Gen Honjo. expressed Japan's thanks to the Wall Street government for its support of the “The fall of Chinchow to Japan, in expert opinion here, would mean the definite isolation of Manchuria under Japanese control and would be fol- lowed by Japan clearing the region to the Great Wall and up to inner By BARD Scenes in the Bronx Coliseum, N. Y., Dee 2 at the send-off given the N. Y. Dele- NEW ‘YORK, MONDAY, YECEMBER 21, 1931 Page Saree The following letter from Chicago is an example of many, many letters that are now coming in. Get into the spirit of this Chicago com- rade and put the Daily Worker subscription cam- paign over the top. ‘Kindly renew sub scription for one month to the Daily Worker for which enclosed find 50 cents. I think your drive for 5,000 subscribers is very timely, and I am going to try for new subscribers among my friends. As soon as I get a little money I am going to send in my yearly sub,” my B. & O. President Says Railway Union Heads Asked 15 Per Cent Cut (CONTINUAD FROM PAGE ONE) The Friends of the Daily Worker group in Aberdeen,! Washington, is the second group, following the Leban- on club, to send in a sub- scription to the Daily Work- er. What are the other) groups doing to help the campaign for 5,000 12-month subscriptions to the Daily Worker? FIVE YEAR PLAN TO END IN 1932) Controf Figures Give Lie to Enemies ‘The figures for the Five-Year Plan vreeram for 1932 show that the plan will be ended next year, that is in tion will be 36 per cent xffiz fififf,. four years. The increase in industrial production will be 36 per cent, This publication of this program is a blow to the lying enemies of the Soviet Union who recently started a cam- paign to convince the workers of the world that the Soviet Union was on the verge of bankruptcy and that the plans for 1932 will show a large downward revision, At the opening session of the Cen- tral Executive Committee of the Russian Soviet Republic two days ago, President Kalinin said: “We have no doubts at present about the complete fulfillment of the Five-Year Plan in four. The Five- Year Plan which upon its inception was called a hollow fantasy by our foes is now a common phrase in every tongue.” against the Soviet Union. The dispatch further declares: “According to some foreign mili- tary attaches here,the Japanese basic aim is to go eventually into Inner Mongolia and cut the Rus- sian line of communications which runs through Urga in Ouoter Mon- golia to China proper, and walling off Russia from much of Eastern Asia through domination of Inner Mongolia and most of Manchuria.” Lies About Soviet Troop Concen- tration. ‘The Washington experts and for- eign military attaches quoted by the dispatch are clearly looking forward to renewal of the Japanese campaign of provocation against the Soviet Union. They themselves are rush- ing forward with lies that the Soviet Union is planning a concentration of troops in Siberia. The dispatch states: “What the reaction of Soviet Russia would be to such an accom- plishment is not clear here, al- though it is the subject of much speculation in official circles. There have been rumors that, notwith- standing official denials from Mos- cow of any interest in Japanese aims in Manchuria, the Far Eas~ tern Army of Russia is being quietly regrouped. This step would nor- " mally precede a concentration. The winter would provide the best op- portimity to cover a military re- organization, but the rumors have lacked definite confirmation in offi- celal advices.” Workers! Smash War Plots of the Imperialists? ‘This however does not prevent “speculation in official circles" on the next world slaughter into which the imperialists are now frenziedly at~- tempting to throw the masses. That these preparations are being rushed forward is evident from tthe in- creased expenditures by all imperial- ist powers for armaments. ‘The French Chamber of Deputies, with the sole resistance of the Communist deputies, has just authorized expen- ditures of nearly $50,000,000 for con- struction of four light cruisers of 7,500 tons each, one destroyer leader, one destroyer, one sea-going tug and one river gunboat. Workers of the United States! Smash the intervention moves of imperialism against the Soviet Un- fon! Smash the imperialist plans for a new world slaughter! Sup- port your Chinese brothers against their common enemy—Wall Street and the imperialist government in Tokyo! Down with war on the Chinese masses; Down with Amer- } fean murderons of the Chinese masses! Long live the international solidar- ity of all exploited and oppressed peoples! Organize and strike against wage cuts! The billion dollar war funds for Unemployment Insurance! Fight ‘ ‘Insurance at for ‘Unemployment, government! ear aS coming wage cuts on the railroads. The purpose of the visit was to work out plans along with the gov- ernment to break strikes and to use the government machinery in putting over the wage cut. President Hoover expressed himself as being a little concerned with the announcement of @ 15 per cent wage cut when the railroads would be satisfied tempo- rarily with a 10 per cent cut which would net the stockholders of the railroads some $350,000,000. Willard answered that the idea of a 15 per cent cut was brought up by the railroad officials, though he did not stat the reason. The New York “Sun” reports the incident as follows: “The press dispatches seemed to him, (Hoover) he said, to have stressed the point that the rall- roads had issued a thirty day ulti- matum for a 15 per cent wage de- crease. “Nothing of the kind, Mr, Willard sald emphatically, “Certain labor leaders had sug~ gested the formal serving of such notice, he aserted, and it would not have been issued that way other- wise.” This again confirms the facts pub- lished by the Daily Worker for the past few months exposing the role of the 21 railroad uni on officials as being among the most active forces working for a wage cut on the rail- roads. Only organization and strike by the rank and file will be able to stop this united front of the railroad un- ion misleaders, the railroad bosses and the government from putting over a wage cut. . Police in Two Cities . Attack Mass Fight to. Save Ross 1 FROM PAGE ONE) (OONTT funds to aid the fight to save Barney Lee Ross from the electric chair, was attacked by the police on the tech- nical grounds that no permit had been given, ‘The workers, unawed by the police, unanimously voted to continue the dance in defiance of the police edict. This was the first time in South] 6% OF 5000-12 MO. GOAL REACHED Sioux ity that workers had openly defied the police, and the police frightened by the militancy of the workers, withdrew in confusion. Speakers at the dance exposed the frame-up and lynch verdict against Ross. A resolution of protest to Governor Sterling was unanimously adopted, demanding the immediate release of this innocent Negro worker. Another resolution demanded the immediate release of the 9 Scottsboro boys, Mooney and Billings and all class war prisoners. Hundreds Jailed As Wall Street Terror Spreads In Manila MANILA.—One hundred forty-five members of the Tanguian Society, an anti-imperialist organization, were jailed here charged with sedition and incitement to insurrection in the new campaign of Yankee imperialist ter- ror that is sweeping across the island. ‘The Manila press is carrying sen- sational stories about planned out~ breaks and revolution and the whole constabulary is continuing a general round-up of all persons suspected of membership in anti-imperialist. or- ganizations, The Tanguian Society is demanding immediate independence. FOOD WORKERS FRACTION MEET. A general fraction meeting of all Party members in the Food Workers’ Industrial Union will be held at the Workers Center, 35 East 12th St., Monday, December 21, 8:30 p. m. When the W! to Blow You will find it warm and cozy ——in— Camp Nitgedaiget You can rest In the proletarian comrade): atmosphere provided ‘otel—you will also find it well heated with steam heat, hot water and many other tm- provements, The food ts clean and especially well and fresh p ¥ SPECIAL RATES FOR WEEK. ‘ ENDs automobile leaves the ye Colony for the Camp mas car leaves 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. For turther tnformat the COOPERATIVE OFFICE fol—Eeterbrock #1100 iA Metal Miner fro ing slanderous articles in “Liberty about the Soviet Union. radio, specialfzing Im tying about the conditions of the Soviet work ers. A metal Mont., whe knows the hackground miner in slanders in a letter to “Liberty.” Mon Nov. 11, 1931 Editor—The Daily Worker: I am sending you a copy of my also a few very interesting questions, to Mrs. Garrette Grady’s articles in Liberty in regards to Russia “I have been reading Eva Garrette Grady’s silly stories about Soviet Russia, And I call them silly because she puts me in mind of a little child some one took its candy away from They, (the Gradys) went to Russia as I can find out and got “canned” out as we call it, and then came home knocking everything socialistic. No schools, no churches, no baths, no morals and this and that and the other.” “Now I want to ask Mrs. Grady if they had any sanitary conditions or fine schools or modern homes in the anthracite mining camps of Penn- sylvania when her husband was a boy” “If she was raised in dirty company houses or camps called the “patch” around Scranton or Wilkes-Barre or and stayed about two years as close | She has | farm also heen delivering talks over the | r of the Grady family, has written | the following reply to the Grady | | ers letter to “Liberty.” It is a reply, and | m Butte Answers Eve Grady’s Lies About the Soviet Union Eve Garrette Grady, wife of an) husbend’s aunt worked barefooted in American engineer, has been writ- | denim dresses all day long from sen up until Pp un down on their parente” nia close to Pitts- “i days?” of the ton “Do Grady any ‘ou know women or men that had an edneation Butte, | or does your husband, William Grady, know any of his uncles or annts that had any education?” “Do y know the wages the min- get in the hard coal region of Pennsylvania or the soft coal of Alabama do not support a family, and let them live any better than the Russian workers do today?” “How are the miners working today that part of the country, or how did they ever work? You know what the miners't lives have been, if you were raised in that Cossack ridden anthracite region.” So why go up to Russia to better yourself and then come back home crying “blackest spot on earth.” It seems a sane person or a sensible person wouldn't go up to Russia or Siberia and expect to live in luxury, after what Russia went through. And granting it js as bad as you elaim, don't you, as an educated person, think they have done pretty good cdnsidering the trouble they went through?” “I know one thing, I spent two years in Alaska twenty-five years ago and must say we lived hard, but it was the best two years of my life. When you met a man he was a man and not a cut-throat, if he told you something, you could bet he meant it and you could rely on it. I don’t know very much about the Pittston?” “If she can remember little breaker boys, or mule drivers, or trappers (door tenders) from the age of 8 years and up, going to work for a few pennies a day part time, no schooling at all, to help support a much too large a family, all because the pa- rents were so illiterate and ignorant they knew no better than to have them and try to raise them?” way the Russian workers are living today, but it sure beats the Czar’s time andI can’t remember anyone writing midnight stories about that country before the Reds got hold of it. So it seems to me that people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. Oh yes! I know what I am talking about and can prove it and a lot more, Mrs. Grady. “Do you know, Mrs. Grady, your TOM MORGAN. Negro Miners Back Kentucky # Strike Call for January First (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Preparations for strike go ahead full speed. In Calloway s WIR. relief kitchen was established. A kitchen is being established at Blackmont,,. Every. mine there is organized one hundred per cent in the union. A local of the N.M.U. was established in Kettle Island Friday. At the Pioneer Coal Co., one of the biggest mines in Bell County, where no cash has been paid for six weeks when the men heard on Friday that the store was being cleaned out, for- feited their cash, got scrip and bought groceries. The company made no ef- forts to fill the store. About 125 men and their families are dependent already elected a strike and relief committee. The committees are one hundred per cent union. ‘Tried for Not Moving. At Creeches, Ky. George Perry must come to trial for not moving his wife and eight children out of the Com- pany house, They have no place to go but have received three days’ not- ice, He was evicted for refusing to sign a yellow dog contract on May 9. The average pay at Creeches on day work ranges from $2.16 to $3.20; for coal loading, from 32 eents a ton to 39. The euts off the miners’ pay for various reasons sveege from $4.50 per month to $10.50; for light, from $1.05 to $7.40; for “doctor” $2.00; hos- pital $1.00; burial fund, $1.00; school, fifty cents, although many kids can on the company. ‘The miners of Mingo Hollow have not go to school as they have no clothes or shoes. 304 YEARLY SUBSCRIPTIONS IN, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) employment work, the fight against wage cuts, boss terror, revolutionary activity on every front. Chicago still leads the show as far as total subs are concerned, with 608 subscriptions, 6 per cent of its quota, closely followed by the New York District which has reached 536 months in total, also 6 per cent of its quota. New York had a Red Sunday yesterday. Look to your laurels, QOhicago, the race is getting close. Detroit is still third in the race with 463 months to its credit. This, however, is 9 cent of its total 80 its standing in proportion to its quota is really higher. District 5, Pittsburgh, is picking up im the Drive. It 278 months or 9 per cent of its quota. It is followed with 272 months, 9 per cent of its quota. This week has from the following Districts: 1, Boston, with 338 or 7 per quota; 9, Minneapolis, with 222 or 7 per cent; 3, Philadelphia, 219 or 2 per cent. District 15, Connecticut, has moved forward with 146 months in subs and stands in proportion to its quota, at 12 per cent in a minute spurt. The following have hardly made a dent in their quotas to date: District. 10, Kansas City; District 12, Seattle; District 18, and District 18, Butte, Montana. 3 Three new Friends of the Daily Worker Groups have been added ' this week: Jackson, Miss.; Aberdeen, Wash., and Dertott, Mich ‘Titr work of starting Daily Worker groups is not being taken seriously enough by the comrades active in the Drive. More effort must he made to link up all activity for the Drive with the startine of theas informal groups which strengthen the Datly Worker. ‘ Every worker approached in the Drive should also be invited t | attend a group meeting. Issue special leaflets enclosed in all copies | of the paper on this point. Call readers’ meetings and conferences, Stimulate the initiative of workers everywhere in building up teas } fighting organ, the Daily Worker. CNT Fight for the 5,000 Subs Campaign Date... I want to get the DAILY WORKER every day! | Name . eer eee eee e rt eee ee eerererr rire rer re Terr ry yy Street wage o'v'c one cenesevcccecses00eceeeeyecescee enmecionhiian For one year $6.00 ($8.00 in Manhattan and For six months $3.00 ($4.50 In Manhattan and Bronz) For three months $1.50 (82.25 in Manhattan and Bronx) For one month $0.50 ($0.75 in Manhattan and Brons) ————_———_{_{_$_$_=_—————————— Cut Out This Coupen and Us)