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___ Sor. WOMEN PLAY LEADING ROLE IN SPREADING STRIKE IN Mrs. Lawson and Mrs. KENTUCKY Snow, Old Pioneers of Struggle, Help Pull Glendon Mine Wife Demands Husband Come Out on Strike Or Get Divorce Ry MRS. RASTA ELLIOTT. (Wife of a Striking Miner) ARJAY, Ky.—It looks like Glendon is 100 per cent for the strike. The men and women have been picketing regularly and are determined to carry on till they win. We have two real old women right e— in the forefront of the struggle: a Mrs. Snow and a Mrs. Lawson, both real old pioneers who have been through many strikes. These two women have a great influence over the miners, especially in keeping the men from stabbing. Mrs. Lawson had « crippled son in the mine who was still working. She went and got her son’s young wife and went to the mine and sent word down that his wife wanted to see him. The boss said: “Is Mr. Lawson your husband?” His wife answered, “Yes, heois right now, but if he don’t come out and quit scabbing he won't be my husband Jong.” Young Lawson came out just as a wonderful crowd marched by on their way to Pineville. As for myself, I am very sick with the flux and wasn’t able to go with them on their wonderful march. I stood on the porch and waved at them as they marched by carrying a big flag. There were about 400 marchers. They sure made me feel good. We have lived long enough on bull- dog gravy and beans. I say long live the good old National Miners’ Union. It is the only organization that has showed the poor man any friendship down here. In all the other unions that were here dues came first—and all we got for the dues we paid was a sell-out. I was president of the women’s branch of the National Miners’ Union in Glendon for some time. We or~ ganized the women there to go to the mines when the struggle began to call the men out and join the union. We must fight this battle till it is won. Then we will eat something besides gravy and beans. I am nervous and can't write Correspondence Briefs HAM BONE “RELIEF” CLEVELAND, Ohio—A worker's wife, mother of small children, begged for a job for her husband, who has been out of work for over two years, but was turned down by the union officials. ‘The husband has been a member of the Carpen- ters’ Union for 18 years. All the carpenter’s wife got from th eunion officials was a ham bone. The union head who furnished the ham bone has been holding a soft job in the union for over 20 years at a high salary and all he has ever done is sell out the struggles of the building trade workers. His name is Harry McGlocklin. WORKER'S WIFE. gee onan «SLAVERY IN LANSING LANSING, Mich.—The jobless here are forced to work from three to five days a week and are paid off in old groceries. Single men are given no “relief” whatsoever. we protesetd to the attorney general about these slave conditions and he advised us not to bring the matter up again and not to call it slavery. The American State Bank closed up before Christ- mas, tiking the savings of hundreds of workers. A WORKER. SHOP COMMITTEE FORMING EVANSVILLE, Ind-tWe are or- ganizing a general shop committée in the Service Factory, Inc. The committee is being formed to fight against the group system and star- vation wages. J. 8. much, but I want the world to know that the wives of the Kentucky min- ers are out to win. Scotts Run Builds Unemployed Council (By a Worker Correspondent) LIBERTY, W. Va.—The Unemploy~ ed Council of Scotts Run, W. Va., at its meeting of December 29 spent the afternoon in preparing the council and its branches for immediate strug- gle. 5 The meeting was attended by members and several speakers pointed out the various problems we were confronted with. We had a long dis- cussion about the future demonstra~ tion to Morgentown to see the coun- ty commissioners who promised a good while ago that they would send their committee here to investigate the unemployed conditions here. Of course we know their trickery and we aresgoing to demonstrate in front of the court again, and also vend 2 committee before the commis~- sioners for their consideration and we are going to continue until some results are obtained Since the National Hunger March the delegates here have been report~ ing in the various ‘towns and mining districts with much enthusiasm on the part of the hearers. Two Sundays ago we held a meet- ing at Rivesville where the delegates spoke and made their report about the National Hunger March and the meeting was attended by over twa hundred persons who quietiy listened. A collection was also taken at this meeting and the people were very enthusiastic after the meeting and a branch is being organized there, Should we the unemployed in section continue with our activities, no doubt we shall come out victorl- ous because we have many local de- mands to present and that gives us 3 good basis for struggle. Many charity organizations are preying upon the unemployed and we are denouncing them and at the same time organizing our forces for the struggle against the fakers. Tammany “Emergency Work Plan” Collapses (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—The following notice was sent to all workers who registered at the Emergency Work Bureau: “To all registrants: “The Emergency Work Bureau cannot place any more people for the present. If at any future time more jobs are available, we will send for you in the order of your registration.” ‘Thus died the famous Tammany “relief” plan. Let's get busy: and col- lect signatures for the Workers’ Un- employment Insurance Bill. All the bosses “relief” schemes are like Tam- many plan. Organize into the Un- employed Councils and demand un- employment insurance, Wages Cut In Statler Hotels 19 to 15 P.C. (By a Worker Correspondent) CLEVELAND, Ohio.—Hotel Statler, one of the biggest hotels in Cleveland, must work overtime whenever they want them to. Now the wages are again cut 10 to 15 percent, so it will make them about, $10.00 a week. While the Statler ho- tel makes millions for themselves, the workers must starve. Some of the workers have worked 2s much as 42 hours overtime a month did not get one cent for the lebor. —¥F. O. KENNEDY. Governor’s Island Laborers Brutalized NEW YORK.—Laborers working fering from a heavy cold has the right three days a week on Governor's Is-|to warm himself now and then dur- land are subjected to the most vici- i.ceaing worker who is already suf- Childs (By 2 Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK—The Childs Restau- rant employes have just received » a 10 percent wage cut. Last year all got a 10 percent cut. Now the and dishwashers must toil 11 for $2 a day and even less in T talked to 2 fellow worker sbout | cut, ing the day.” Why build 2 fire on an open field if the workers are not allowed to ben- efit by its warmth? The fire on Gov- ernor’s Island was built for the pur- pose of making the workers believe that the bosses love them and want to be kind to them, The workers should organize a com- mittee and demand that the fire be used for the benefit of the workers. ‘aurants Cut Pay 10 Per Cent the Iood. Workers Industrial Union, but so far I have got no results. With ‘a little work, however, I think we can get some organization in these restau~ rants. I think the union should send some organizers to these restaurants and distribute leaflets and call meetings of the workers who got their wages eee a Successful Anti-War Conference Held SUPERIOR, Wis. A United Front Anti-War Youth Conference was held here Jan. 7th which laid the basis for a struggie against the war danger and paved the way to| demonstration to be held Jan. at the Tower Hall. A United Front 15th Anti-War Com- mittee was elected with representa-| tives of the Young Communist League, Labor Sports Union, Unem- | ployed Council, Communist Party, and a member of the Naval Reserve. Preparations are being speeded up and they point toward the success- ful rallying of numbers of young workers for the mass anti-war meet- ing and for the struggle against war. General Electric Co. Prepares Way For a Big Wage Reduction Police Arrest Workers| Giving Out a Shop Paper at the G.E. SCHENECTADY, N. Y.—Fearing the growing organization of the workers, and the exposure of the wage cut and lay-off schemes of the General Electirc bosses, the police here arrested two workers distribu- ting the “Live Current” a shop pap- er issued by the Communist Party nucleus in the General Electric plants, late in December. The two workers, Block and Salonen, were held two days incommunicado des- pite the fact that they are residents of the city. After grilling and threatening the two workers, the police ordered Block to leave town on pain of 2 long prison sentence. Salonen was of- fered $125.00 if he would tell who issued the shop paper, and what workers composed the Communist Party shop nucleus. Both workers Were released after police made fran- tic but futile efforts to pin somthing on them. Bosses Demand Pageants. The first issues of the shop paper “Live Current” aroused wide spread interest among the G, E. workers, exposing as it does the latest at- tempts of the bosses to put over a new wage cut through the medium of the company union in the plants. Writing on this the “Live Current” says: “The Works Council ts being used by the bosses to help slash our wages. The Work Council had a meeting December 22 where they were given the choice of a ten per cent wage cut or more, a lay- oq of 4,500 men, a.cut on all bonus payments, vacations and extra pay for overtime.’ * ‘The Communist Party nucleus or- gan points out that the threat of a mass lay-off is being used as a club to force through a wage cut and the supine Works Council, @ pliant com- pany union tool of the bosses, will be used to carry it through. Expose Swope's Scheme. ‘The “Live Current” also exposed the widely-heralded Swope unem- ployment and pension scheme as @ deliberate means of getting money from the workers which is not used for workers’ pensions. The “Liye Curent” writes: “When Mr. Swope announced his unemployment pension plan, he told the world that last he had found the cure for us workers against the fear and worry of un- employment. All we have to do is to give two per cent of our wages for the unemployment fund.” “Instead of paying insurance to those laid off, the company ts building 2 $4,000,00 power house on River Road, painting shops, chip- boxes, cleaning up the yards, etc., with our two per cent.” “And of course,—Mr, Swo cashes in on the free advertising he gets for his generosity.” Telling of one of the many tricks to cut wages indirectly a worker correspondent wries in the “Lfve Current”: “Carpenters who were making $1.00 an honr were transwerred to the power house and their wages are cut to 50 cents an hour, just enough to make $15.00 a week.” Another worker who wrote in the “Live Current” tells of the tice of forting workers to bu; workers and re-hire of # 2 ft (refrigerator) Dept. 96, to Erie, Pa. where they employ women at 30 to 35 cents an hour.” “Such fakery, wage cuts and rob- bery are more and more being forced on the workers. We will only be able to stop it when we organ- ize” Interest in organization and the Tole of the Communist Party in leading all workers’ struggles is spreading to wider sections of the General Electric workers and many interpret the action of the police in arresting and threatening the two workers, Block and Salonen, as indi- cating the fear of the Swope and ‘Young and other big bosses in the resistance of the workers against their wage-cutting, layoff program. Workers here ate determined to v -|foreseeing ‘‘the disappearance of the | troops operating in Manchuria de- | ing two Japanese officers and wound- | | desperation of the present situation DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY JANUARY 1 Chinese Red Army Captures Tungshan City, Partisans Defeat Japanese Troops | (CONTINUED FROM PAGH ONE) New York Times. e dispatch ad- mits that news of the capture of ‘Tungshan was suppressed for several days. The Chinese Red Army is| within 20 miles of Hankow, accord z to latest reports. On Saturday it occupied the town of Kwnagpei, | It is now advancing on Shekow, 2 town ten miles from Hankow, which is strongly occupied by Nanking troops. All foreign missionaries in the district have been ordered into Hankow by the imperialist powers, Red Partisans Punish Japanese In Maneburia. Yesterday, the heroic Red partisan | feated a large force of Japanese at Chinsi, killing four officers, includ- ing the regimental commander, Lieut. Colonal Gentaro Koga, and 15 pri- vates, according to the admissions of the Japanese. The Japanese invad- ers were surrounded and heavily punished. Japanese reinforcements were beaten off. Japanese bombing planes have been rushed to the scene | of the fighting. | At Tahushan, 80 miles north of Chinshi, a force of Red partisan troops attacked the Japanese garri- son at 1 o'clock in the morning, kill- | ing many Japanese soldiers. ‘The | Japanese claim that the attack was beaten off. About 300 partisan troops at- tacked Japanese at Kaolimen, on the Mukden Railroad, burning a number of buildings in which the Japanese were housed. A Tokyo dispatch to the New York Times admits military activities of partisan troops on a large scale throughout Manchuria. Most of the operations by the partisan troops are new being carried out during the night in an effort to escape the at- tention of the Japanese bombing planes. ° Kuomintang Paper Invites Armed Intervention. The Kuomintang press continues to warn its imperialist masters of the growing influence of the Chinese Communist Party and the impotency of the counter-revolutionary Nanking government against the mass up- surge. The newspaper Ta Kung Pao deplores the lateness of the action of Secretary Stimson, which in effect is a move for direct armed interven- tion against the Chinese masses. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times.reports the Ta Kung Pao as present social order in China, with dominance by the Third Interna- tional, unless more effective action is taken.” This is an open appeal to the imperialists to rush their plans for..armed intervention in order to save the present social system of robbery of the Chinese masses by Chinese landlords and militarists and the imperialist powers. Exposes Chen Sell-Out to Japan. As @ result of the growing rift be- | tween the Chinese militarists, re- flecting the sharpening conflict of interests between their imperialist masters, the Chinese newspaper Chen Pao has published a demand that Eugene Chen reveal the terms of an agreement which Chinese generally | believe he concluded with Japan last | summer, Chen is Foreign Minister in the new “united” Nanking govern- ment of the Canton and Nanking cliques, and is one of teh Canton tools of Japanese imperialism. Nanking In Serious Financial Crisis. ‘The movement to bring back Chiang Kai-shek to power shows the of the Nanking government and in- dicates considerable success on the part of the United States imperial- ists in their maneuvers behind the scene against their Japanese rivals and temporary allies. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times pre- dicts the early downfall of the Nan- king government “unless” Chiang Kai-shek, Wang Ching-wei and Hu -min return immediately to Nan- FOR NAVAL RULE AGAINST | islands. HAWAIIAN MASSES (OONTINDED FROM PAGE CPE) any eventuality. ‘The present anti-American feeling in the islands is the direct result of the lynching 2 few days ago of a native worker accused of attacking the wife of a navy officer. The lynching was carried out by U. 8. officers. Senator Bingham of Connecticut, whose Committer on ‘Territories has ction over legislature affecting waiian masses, yesterday made a veiled threatto restrict “the pres- ent powers of the islanders under the organic act.” He admitted that his move was moltvated by the great strategic importance of Hawail as an outpost of American imperialism in the Pacific. . - Senator Keller openly justified the lynching of the native worker, and asked why others alleged to have made attacks on American women had not been punished. The Japanese population in Hawati is the single largest group in the It numbers 139,631 out of a totla, population of 368,336. SO ETE RSEEETTaP EP PuETT OSE PEeIETEEEE win the right to issus and distribute the “Live Current” and te break down G. % police tamer. } turn of Chiang The government, already under- mined by the antagonism of the} masses, is facing a serious financial | crisis. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times mits that there | is “a big monthly deficit, lar; the result of the huge drain by the mili tary. The present revenue falls short | about $3,500,000 of the monthly re- | kuirements of the government. The | local and foreign money markets have tightened up as a result of the | fear of the Chinese bankers and the imperialists that the Chinese masses cannot now be stopped from settling accounts with the Kuomintang be- WIN CHANGE OF VENUE FOR NEGRO FARM LABORER | L L. D. Scores Victory In Orphan Jones Case | SNOW HILL, Md, Jan. M— What a Maryland judge considers a “fair and impartial trial” was re- vealed when Judge Bailey of the Snow court handed down a decision in the Orphan Jones’ case. Although two Negro workers have been tortured to death by lynch mobs and others have barely escaped with their lives in this eastern shore territory, the judge sttill publicly maintains that Jones, 60 year old Negro farm worker, accused of mur- der, will not be railroaded to a legal lynching in this court. Judge Bailey, however, has been forced to transfer the trial to Tow- | son, a town on the western shore, | near Baltimore. This is an mport~ ant victory for the International La- bor Defense, whose attorney Bernard Ades, has been defending Jones. Ades compelled the Superior Court of Baltimore to acknowledge that the/ counties about Snow Hill are over- Tun with lynch gangs of boss farm- ers and their hangers-on, and that a trial of Jones in this region would | inevitably railroad this innocent old | worker to death. In the past month eastern shore “best citizens” have lynched. two Ne- gro workers, ransacked. county < jails for two others, forbidden Negroes to buy outside newspapers-or to appear at night on the streets. They have beaten Bernard Ades and Helen Mays, 23 year old, investigator for the I. L. D. when they asked a trans- fer of the Jones’ trial. No effort has been made to bring the lynchers to trial. Outside reporters were told that the eastern shore was “proud of its little demonstration the other night” when Matthew Williams, 2 Negro worker, was taken from a hos- pital cot with the consent of the hospital authorities, hanged, dragged through the streets, and burned to charred bones in the Negro section. Yet here is Judge Bailey’s opinion accompanying his forced and reluct~ ant yielding to the I. L. D.’s victory: “Never for s moment have we thought nor do we think now that an unprejudiced jury could not be selected from afong the residents of Dorchester County if the case were tried in that county.” DEATH SENTENCE FOR 50 CENT THEFT MONTGOMERY, Ala., Jan. 11— In the same town where the inno- cent Scottsboro boys are languishing in the death house of Kilby Prison, @ jury decreed that two Negro work- ers who are accused of stealing a sil- ver half-dollar must dies in the electric chair, Robert Strickland and Perey Irvin, two unemployed workers, bummed a ride aboard a freight train. They are charged with staging a hold-up on the train—total result of which was the fifty cent piece. The judge called it highway robbery and the jury fixed the penalty at death. The case is now being appealed to the State Supreme Court. The Interna- tional Labor Defense, in 2 telegram of protest to the governor, charges that this “inhuman verdict” is 4) pert of 2 vast conspiracy on the part | of the Southern ruling class to ter- rorize Negroes into abject submission to unemployment and starvation. Pknecht Kentucky Strikers Must Have Food | And Clothing (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) { n Legion is distributing leaflets | nst the NMU strike leadership. The “Spread the Strike” Confer- ence .has been postponed to January | 24. Delegates from the present strike zone and from ‘Tennessee, Alabama and the West Virginia fields are be- elected | The arrested comrades sent spirit-! ed, fighting greetings to the Central Sirike Committee calling for mass picketing to spread the strike and | called for militant demonstrations to | answer the prevalent terrorism } CINCINNATI, Ohio, Jan. 11.—A| broad audience composed of Negro! white workers, liberals and st s attended a mass meeting held | the Metropole Hotel ballroom last | night and enthusiastically applauded | the Kentucky miners. Frank Bor- | ich, national secretary of the Na- tional Miners’ Union; Alfred Wagens national secretary of the Workers International Relief which is conducting the campaign for strike relief, and June Croll, of the W. L R. spoke. “Many pledges of relief and yolun- teers for strike relief work were se- cured. A delegation of miners, in- cluding Ruth Deck and Alfred Wag-| enknecht, entered Dayton this after- ; noon to organize strike relief activi- | ties. ‘The Kentucky miners active here are Debs Moreland, Mac Sum- ner, Henry Shackelford, Suda Gates, | John Bryant and Everett Inman. Food and clothing should be rushed immediately to the W. I. R. ware- house, 145 Pine St., Pineville, Ky. Sentence Negro To 16 Years On Framed-up Charge Court Refused Worker 1.L.D. Defense ELKTON, Md, Jan. 11.—Sixteen years at hard labor was the savage sentence meted out to George Davis, 28 year old Negro worker, accused of attempted assault on a white wo~ man. Mrs, Elizabeth Lusby, 25 year old wife of an aged farmer, charged that Davis, formerly employed on the farm, seized her and tore her-clothes on November 5. Immediately, lynch posses, admit- tedly. composed of “the best citizens of Kent County,” searchced the jails with ropes ready-noosed for Davis’ neck. The young Negro worker had to be spirited away to Baltimore. He asked Bernard Ades, attorney for the International Labor Defense in the Orphan Jones’ case, to defend him; but jail authorities intercepted his letters. Even when his request was smug- gled out and he had signed state- ments asking Ades to be his lawyer, the officers compelled him to accept counsel appointed by the Kent County court from among the same class of “best citizens” who had at- tempted to lynch him. These law- yers did not even trouble to ask a transfer from the eastern shore county where Matthew Williams was burned in forty gallons of gasoline. Much of the testimony at the Elk- ton trial was given behind closed doors. The Baltimore Post reports: “Elkton with its population of more than 3,600 seemed to be en- joying the elaborate preparations for the trial early today. Crowds gathered on the street corners and Workers! Do the places where you spend your money advertise in the Worker? ASK THEM TO DO IT! SEND US THEIR NAMES! Poy OA | 50 E. 13th St, N. Y. | . WE WANT A SIX-PAGE DAILY WORKER FIGHT for the only paper that fights against unemployment, mass starvation, the capi- talist class! to HEL FIGHT for the campaign to get 5,000 new subscribers! FIGHT to make it bigger and better and more powerful! GET SUBSCRIPTIONS NOW! HELP the signal for a widening of all fields. The campaign for to the Daily Worker is an i masses of workers through bosses’ starvatior and terror. AILY WORKER subser: constant touch with t Worker subscriptions help t demonstrations, in defens: fense of the class war prison ialist war plo ance. workers for big strike battle the Kentucky and Tennes: HE sharp contrast betwe the U. S. and the rise the Soviet Union is turning of workers to the Communi: HE work district. sharp rise from Calfiornia. ET new forces into the drive. the distance with new vigor (CONTINUED FROM FAGE ONE) Jan. 15, St. Paul's AME. Zion Church, 216 Jane St., Carnegie, Pa. Jan. 17, 805 James St., Pittsburgh, Pa., and at 72 South Ninth Street, Pittsburgh, PHILADELPHIA, Jan. l1—The West Philadelphia branches of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the branches of the Interna- tional Labor Defense have arranged @ joint protest meeting for the de- fense of the Scottsboro boys. The meeting will be held Tuesday even+ ing, Jan. 12 at the Postal Hall, 3942 Brown Street. Bernard Ades, I. L. D. attorney who is defending Orphan Jones will be the principal speaker. ‘This is only one of a series of meet- ings to be held in this city. ees 8 Demonstration In Chicago Jan. 20. CHIOAGO, Tll., Jan. 11.—A meet near the courthouse. It was repor~ ted that approximately 50 persons were present from Kent County, scene of the alleged crime.” ‘The International Labor Defense has protested the sentence as @ “railroaded frame-up used to terror~ ize Negro and poor white workers.” Steps are being made to appeal the verdict. Comes Out campaign for a wider and a more in mass dems Daily Worker subscriptions insure the support of hear the Communist program over the radio. pect a sharp rise in Daily Worker subs from the Cleveland Activize the new subscribers. Friends of the Daily Worker groups. Eat up the rest of PARTY RECRUITING DRIVE IS ag SIGNAT. FOR MASS EFFORT IN DAILY WORKER SUB CAMPAIGN HE Party Recruiting Drive that began yesterday is the the revolutionary struggle in 5,000 12-month subscriptions mportant part of the general solid organization of the out the country against the iptions keep the workers he workers’ battles. Daily o rally the workers to mass of the Scottsboro boys, in de- ers, in protest against imper- ands for unemployment insur- s against the bosses, such es coal strike. . en the decay of capitalism i of socialist construetino m the attention of the masses st Party. Get, to these new forces with Daily Worker subscriptions. . rs of. Cleveland have just had a chance te We ex- 4 | 4 siete California State Hunger March has crashed througt: the police terror in the big cities of the Pacifie Coast and has rallied large number of workers. We expect 2 4 5,000 12-month subsertption Form new and with new forces. MASS FIGHT FOR SCOTTSBORO BOYS # ge GROWS THROUGHOUT COUNTRY ing of over two hundred workers was held January 8ih at the Garvey Hall called by the International Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, The meeting went on record supporting the policy of the ILD and the LSNR in the con- duct of the defense of the Seottsboro boys and demanding that the NA- ACP turn over all funds they have collected for the purpose of helping the bosses to go through with the lynching, to the Scottsboro Defense Committee of the ILD. ‘This was one of the smaller meet ings held in preparation for the mass protest meeting on Sunday, January 10th, Nearly 100 workers signed up for the LSNR which is carrying on its membership drive in the course of this campaign. ‘The International Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Ne- gro Rights are arranging for = msab open demonstration to be held om the south side of Chicago on Wed- nesday, January, 20th, € p. m. at 49rc and Prairie Street. Speskers are being sent out to organiastions ast- ing them to participate in the dem- onstration, and many organizetien> are passing resolutions and sending telegrams to governor Miller and to the state supreme court demanding the release of the Scottsboro boys. THE WESTERN WORKER January ist RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 Name . BUILD IT! 26 Issues $1 A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 5c Western Worker Campaign Committee 15 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif. P YOU I want to get the | Name ceesssscesesevess | Street woeccecsss \City and State Fer one year 36.08 (%8.0¢ Fight for the e0e Subs Cam (WITH CASH ONLY) “DAILY WORKER every dest coscesecca de © in Manketten end Browz) Per six monthy $5.00 (34.50 in Manhattan and Tor three months $1.50 (£2.25 in Manhatten and Brems) For ore month $6.50 ($9.75 in Manhattan and Bronx) ee Cet Out This Coupen and Use Bei