The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 12, 1932, Page 3

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t “onstration to proceed and opened machine gun _ »AILY ILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1932 Page Thre¢ Ford -Insull -U. S, Steel-A Record of Violence Against the Working Class! The Daily Worker reproduces a poster nailed up throughout the Kentucky strike fields, and handed to Tennessee sheriffs, offering a reward of $1,000 “dead or alive” for Frank Horich, na- tional secretary of the National Miners Union. This reward, which is offered Kentucky agents by Henry Ford and the United States Steel Corporation, is part of the murder incitement against militant workers which led to the cold- blooded shooting of four hungry unem- ployed workers by the Ford private gun- men in Dearborn, Michigan, last Mon- day. Now Ford and the U. S. Steel of- fer $1,000 for the murder of Frank Borich. We print below a breif history of the murder and violence of the Ford- Insull-U. S. Steel through their private army of gunmen and deputy sheriffs in Kentucky and Tennessee in an effort to drive the miners to death by star- vation, * ° May 5—Four killed, one a striking miner and three sheriffs, and a dozen more wounded, On same day three killed in a slate fall in the mines. Two more were killed in an ‘unexplained shooting between starving miners and company gunmen. May 7—Three hundred and fifty mil- itiamen with machine guns were sent into Harlan and Evarts, by order of the Governor of Kentucky. Also an armored tank. May 11—Twenty-nine miners were indicted for murder. A worker correspondent to the Daily Worker writes: “Many have been kill- ed so far in the Harlan County strike, of whom 18 were coal miners. Among the dead miners are three Negroes who were shot. in the back.” “There are 600 militiamen in the County.” July 24—The care of Jesse London, International Labor Defense represen- | four gunmen who raided his home. Thir- tative, dynamited by Harlan gun thugs. July 30.—Jesse London arrested and charged with criminal syndicalism. Po- lice searching every house for organ- izers and literature. Have instructions to shoot, kill and slug. August 2—Warrants out for National Miners Union organizers. Bruce Craw- ford, newspaper correspondent, shot and wounded by coal operators’ thugs. August 7—Jesse London re-arrested, together with Arnold Johnson, repre- sentative for the Civil Liberties Union, and held on 110,000 bail. Jason Alford and Bill Duncan also arrested. Thugs raided homes of miners. August 10—Relief kiachen at Evarts, blown up by gunmen. August 14—McKinney Baldwin, Ne- gro mine delegate to Pittsburgh con- ference tied to tree and beaten. August 18—Henry Thornton, active member of the National Miners Union beaten and ordered out of county by ty-five Harlan miners on trial for mur- der. August 17—Boris Israel, newspaper correspondent, “taken for a ride” by three coal operators’ gunmen, Shot at and wounded in the leg. August 20—Allan Taub, Internation- al Labor Defense attorney, threatened “to be put on the spot” by Deputy Sher- iff Earl Brock, son of the prosecuting attorney. August 26—Indictments on charges of criminal syndicalism returned against 36 miners. August 29—Deputized thugs in auto- mobile with machine guns searching for district committee meeting of the Na- tional Miners Union held in Pineville. Thugs raid the home of Kimbler, ac- tive menwer of the National Miners Union. September 1—Joseph Moore and Ju- lius Baldwin murdered by Deputy Sher- iff Joe Fleener. Joseph Baldwin wound- September 8—Jones and Hightower, UMWA, indicted for perjury. November 7—Dreiser Committee was framed up on charges of criminal syn- dicalism. November 17—Wholesale arrests of National Miners Union members. Kentucky-Tennessee Strike Started: January 1—Thirty thugs set up ma- chine guns at Swimming Poo! to kill Joe Weber, strike, leader who barely escaped, ‘Try to kill Bill Meeks, sec- retary of Southern District, NMU. January 8—Miner shot in Harlan County. January 4—N.M.U. offices raided. V. Smith, Julia Parker, Dorothy Ross, Vin- cent Kemenovich, Clarina Michelson, John Harvey, Margaret Fontaine, Ann Barton, Norma Martin, arrested held on $5,000 bail each, charged with cri- minal syndicalism. Warrants issued for 10 others, including Frank Borich and | Joe Weber, January 6—Allen Taub, LL.D. attor- ney arrested on charges of “obstructing justice.” Warrants out for attorney Stone, LL.D., and Charles Peters, W.LR. secretary in Pineville. American Legion in various towns holds meet calling for sterner legislation against Communists and agitators. Min- ers, members of American Legion, re- fuse to attend these meetings. January 15 — Joe Weber, secretary Central Strike Committee, and Bill Dun- can, active miner, were kidnapped at Cumberland gap by Tennessee and Ken- tucky sheriffs. Their were both taken near Barborville, Ky. and viciously flog- ged into unconsciousness, The only reason they escaped with their lives was because of a telephone call to the Knoxville relief office, which establish- ed the fact that they were kidnapped. January: 16—Machine guns used to T.U. U.L, BRANDS MURPHY-FORD MAS SACRE; CALLS FOR MASS FIGHT TO WIN RELIEF AND UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE ‘CUNTINUED FROM PAGE OND | lord workers who in below zero weath- er came to demonstrate at the Ford factory? Their crime was to be unem- ployed. Not only that. The capitalists who, throw millions out of the factories to starve want them to starve to death quietly. But the Ford workers led by the Detroit Council of the Unemployed and by the Anto Workers Union, which is affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League, refused to starve. They re- | fused to see their wives and little ons | starve to death. They organized and demanded that Henry Ford who coined billions out of | theiv sweat and blood, shall give them som: relief from starvation. They de- | manded mimediate relief. They de- | manded the jobs which Ford only a few | weeks ago promised, They were particularly guilty of the crime of raising the demand for UN- | EMPLOYMENT INSURANCE at the expense of the Ford Company and the guvernment which he controls. In the eyes of the pacifist and philanthropist | Henry Ford, this was the biggest crime the unemployed workers could commit. Such demands would interfere with the profits of Henry Ford. Such demanda ‘weuld, it is true, result in the saving of many workers’ families from death by starvation, but it would have to come out of the pockets of Henry Ford, filled with the booty from the murderous ex- ploitation of the Ford workers. This crime of daring to refuse to starve quietly. For this, the greatest of all crime against capitalism, to interfere | with the profits of Henry Ford, the Ford police, privately controlled organ- ized gangsters, assisted by the Dear- born police, augmented by the Detroit police of the liberal Frank Murphy, opened gun fire on the orderly and un- armed demonstration. SLOODY ATTACK PREPARED IN ADVANCE ‘This bloody murderous attack on the unem- ployed was premeditated. Henry Ford annoyed by the growing resent- ment of the starving hundreds of thousands who in greater numbers voiced their demands, de- cided to teach the unemployed a lesson. On the day of the demonstration instead of preparing to meet the committee of the peaceful demonstra- tion of unemployed who came with theid modest demands for a piece of bread for their starving families, Henry Ford refused to allow the dem- fire from machine guns stationed at the Ford plants, Ford succeeded in teaching the workers a lesson, Not only the workers of Detroit, but the workers of the entire country learned a very — important lesson, They learned that Ford and the whole capitalist system which he represents, care little about the starving tens of millions of people. They care only to protect their millions and billions robbed from the workers. They heve behind them the organized murder ma- chinery ef the state to shoot down the workers vho dare demand the right to live from eapital- jan, ‘They learned that Ford and capitalism answer with bullets the cry for bread, MURPHY FORCED ADMIT FORD GUILT, But the Ford massacre resulted in more than the murderers bargained fo» * | ers’ community, in thousands of factories all | FORD RESORTS TO FRAME UP TO COVER A wave of protest is sweeping in every work- over the country. Scores of workers’ organiza~ tions have already expressed their protest against the murderer Ford and to his allies and execu- tioners, the Governor of Michigan and the Mayor of Detroit, Frank Murphy. Not only workers but large sections of the poulation in general, have been aroused to this cruel murder. Mayor Mur- phy, who admits that his police “were sent to help quell the riof,” pleads that he is not guilty because his police arrived too late. But his own police chief boasts of the activity of the Detroit police in quelling the riot. Murphy in laying the whole blame for the murder on Henry Ford’s police and the police of Dearborn | admitting under the pressure of the mass pro~ tests which threatens to unmask this demagogue and thus make him Jess useful to the Fords, that tthe demonstration was peaceful and orderly un- til attacked, mmkes a very important admission that the whole working class knows to be true. But he will not succeed in whitewashing him- self. His whole record in Detroit in arresting and jailing the unemployed, of cutting down re- lief at the request of Henry Ford shows him to be part of the same clique of starvers of the un- employed and guilty of the massacre of the un- employed. UP MURDER, Henry Ford will not succeed in covering up this murderous attack by the terror and frame up campaign carried on by his prosecutor of Wayne County, Toy, and by Governor Brucker with his state troopers, with the full assistance of Mur- phy’s police in Detroit, The whole working class knows that the guilty are the Fords, the Toys, the Bruckers ahd the Murpys. They will not allow the framing of the out- standing leader of the workers in thtis country, Wm, %. Foster, who spoke to thousands of work~ | ers last Sunday in Detroit, urging them to.or- | ganize and struggle for relief and for unem- | ployment insurance. They will not succeed in convincing the mas- ses that Foster, Schmies, Reynolds, Goetz and the others being arrested or framed, are guilty | in the massacre carried through by the police, which resulted in the murder of 4 workers and the wounding of many more. Ford and his whole system, Murphy,. Hirvcker and the whole capitalist government, stand con~ demned before the masses of unemployed and employed workers. The working class will or+ ganize and resist the efforts to whitewash the murderers through the old American system of frame-up which is keeping Mooney and Billings, innocent workers, in jail for 16 years and whichc sent Sacco and Vanzetti to death on a frame-up. PART OF GREEN, WOLL TREACHERY. And: where are the leaders of the AFL in this great national outrage against the unemployed and employed workers Where are Green and Woll? Where is Mr. Martel, the head of the Detroit Federation of Labor? Workers of the AFL, see for yourself who these gentlement are. Workers murdered for demanding bread. Work- ers murdered for demanding unemployment in- surance, But Mr. Green keeps silent. Not a word against the murderers. Did the Ford mur- derers not carry out the policy of Green who fights against unemployment insurance? And Mr. Woll is on the same day that the murder took place, busy in the capitalist courts demand- ing an injunction against the Fur Workers Un- ion affiliated to the TUUL, for daring to unite the workers in the fur industry in the fight for better conditions. And was it not gangsters, allied with Woll, who attempted to kill Ben Gold the same day and wounded another worker with gun fire? Mr, Maicel, being nearer to the scene, could not escape saying something on the massacre, And his only statement was the “fear that this may make more Communists!” This is the rot- ten, corrupt, bankrupt leadership of the AFL that with the ald of the state power, holds its paralyzing grip on nearly 3 million workers or- ganized in the AFL and the R.R. unions, openly defending and putting through wage cuts, openly fighting against unemployment insurance, but now and then feeling the wrath of the masses trying to hide behind the empty radical phrases of the Mustes and the Gitlows. This is the same crew of agents of the capitalists in the ranks of the labor movement, who in the last war, sent millions of workers to slaughter and now cries loudest for intervention against the Soviet Un- ion, the only country in the world where the workers rule, where unemployment has been | banished forever. WORKERS, EMPLOYED AND UNEMPLOYED! ‘We must learn the lesson from the Ford mas- sacre. We must organize. Only through organ- ized mass pressure will we compe! the capitalists | and their government to grant relief to the un- | employed. Only through organized mass pres- sure of the millions of unemployed fighting side by side with the employed, will we force the en- actment of the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill, Join and build the Councils of the Unemployed. Rally for the fight against star- vation, ‘We must organize into trade unions and fight against the wage cuts and starvation wages. Auto workers of Detroit, see for yourself what you can expect from the benevolent Henry Ford. Organize and build the Auto Workers Union. Workers in all industries, become part of the fighting trade union movement of the Trade Un- ion Unity League, All Local, Distriet and National Bodies of the TUUL Unions: Take up the Ford massacre at your meetings. Adopt protest resolutions. Answer the murder of your brothers through intensive organization to build your unions, Become an active force in the struggle for unemployment relief and insur- | ance. Help build the Councils sof Unemployed. Take the lead in developing the united front of the workers against starvation, frame up and murder of our class fighters, “Our answer to the Ford-Murphy massacre must be @ tenfold increase in the collection of the three million signatures for the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill of the Unemploy- ment Councils to be presented to Congress early in May.” Workers of the A. F. U.: Bring this massacre issue into your loca! un- jon, Protest the murder of your fellow workers. Expose the treachery of your leaders, Organize the fight on wage cuts. Take the leadership of your loca] union in your own hands. Join hands with all workers and fight against the boss at~ tacks. Repudiate the Green-Woll stand against unemployment insurance. Support the fight for unemployment insurance. Workers of the whole country. Employed and Unemployed Workers: Protest the murder of your class brothers. Send protest resolutions to the Governor of Michigan, the Mayors of Dearborn and Detroit. Demand the immediate unconditional release of all arrested workers. Be on guard against the frame up of Foster, Schmies, Reynolds, Goetz and others, Demand the arrest and punishment. of those who are organized this mass murder, Demandthe dissolution of th eFord private po- lice. Demand the abolition of the spy system in the Ford plants and in all large scale industry. Fight for the right to demonstration, to assem- ble, the right to organize and picket! Make this fight the starting point for the broadest mass movement of the entire working class for immediate relief and for Unemployment Insurance! We are the millions. Through organized mass pressure we can stop the murder of our fellow workers and compel the Fords, the Hoovers, to grant relief and unemployment insurence! NATIONAL EXECUTIVE BOARD TRADE UNION UNITY LEAGUE Wre 4 FOSTER, GENERAL SECRETARY. attempt to cow miners at demonstra- | tion in front of Pineville court house demanding release of arrested strike leaders, ilized by operators to patrol Thirty to 60 gunmen with guns evict miners. Evictions ing. Middlesboro, Kentucky, criminal syndicalism. January 24—Largest force ers was to take place. shot dead by Irving Miller fred Wagenknecht, Workers tional Relief secretary, arr January 19—Machine gun crews mob- | G. Green, Negro miner, arrested in charged with thugs guarding every read, bridge and | railroad leading into Bell County where a huge demonstration of striking min- February 10—Harry Simms, organizer of the National Miners Union | ators’ gun thug at Brush Creek; Al- Knoxville, in an attempt to cripple re- lief. mittee kidnapped. ers arrested. Worke: increas- cinnati, | r Pineville. Frank attacked and of gun | operators’ deputies. February 16 — youth | February 18—N: coal oper- | ion declared illegal February 11—Part fo writers’ with criminal syndicalism. lief warehouses broken into. W.LR. truck bringing relief shot and wounded z Allan Taub and Waldo | | Harold Hickerson arrested and charged | | | | February 14—Matt Curry, striker | | from Clearfield, brutal! slurred by coal Simms prevented by greatest mobiliza- | tion of gun thugs, special deputies and | National Guardsmen. i Simms, goes scot free. i | the strikers from com- | dred bullet Doris Parks and ly poured ir Thirty min. } Un need rs Internationa! Re- Driver of lar brutally beaten strike March 4—Two more miners arrested | in Knox to leave March Mass funeral of Miller, murder of | Union an | Kentucky syndi ational Miners n- by Sheriff Broughe | youth organizer of correspondent, a at 24—Harry Jac ity League Natiqnal organizer, to fifty days on chain gang ] activities in organe ployed Council. Bill 1 given a like sentence. —Indict leaders ef Kentucky ville; finger printed and warned e city. 5 — Joe: Chandler, national ne National Miners Allan Johnson, Daily Worker ed in Middlesboro, ged with criminal Joe Yeary arrested in a and | ton and all meetings are absolutely p.v- | raid at th > time. Interna- | hibited. Three automobile loads of | March > Hurst and an un- ested in | Harlan gun thugs burned the home of | named min rested in Middlesbore | Plez Turner, striking miner, to prevent | and charged with criminal syndicalism. WASHINGTON ADMIT JAPANESE WAR MOVES AGAINST U.S.S.R. Say Japanese Are Mob Expectation of an i tack against the Soviet “riots and other disord terday. Expressing and Korea, State Department of Japanese troops along the that the Japanese battle fleet was off the post of Vladivostok. The U. 8. Navy Department. Admit Soviet Firm Peace Policy government is clearly both elated and concerned over the Japanese war} moves. Elated, because these war | moves are directed against workers’ | Russia, jointly hated by all the im- perialist plunderers*and murderers, iet Union Frontier; Japanese Battle Fleet Off Viadivostock U. S. Imperialists Elated, But Also Fear Ex- pansion and Strengthening of Japanese Imperialism outbreak of a revolution in Japan itself where | expressed in Washington official circles yes-| “anxiety” ove rthe Japanese war moves in Manchuria! troop movements into Manchuria,” and “the odd movements | of the Japanese battle fleet in the Sea of Japan,” on which the| important Soviet port of Vladivostok is situated. Washington dispatches a few days ago reported* Baltimore Sun later announced that | the report had been confirmed by the | ‘The anti-working class Washington | | the Japanese to their task of acting OFFICIALS ilizing Armies On Sov- mmediate Japanese at- Union, and fear of the ers are reported” were | and mystification | officials admitted the massing Soviet frontiers, “heavy fresh | | are sure it means trouble, but they are not certain of the direction.” in other words, the State Depart- | ment officials are not sure but that | the Japanese who are still maintain- ing a huge army in South China will not threaten the loot of United States imperialism in that part of China. The interview, like the various notes of “protest” to Japan by Secretary of | State Stimson, is aimed at recalling | as the spearhead in the armed at~ tack against the Soviet Union, with- Concerned, because of the possibility of the strengthening of Japanese im- perialism through its annexation of | large territories on the Asiatis main~ | and. Expecting an early attack by | the Japanese against the Soviet | Union, the Washington Government | iis alarmed by the reports of “riots and | other disorders in Japan itself.” It fears that the revolutionary masses of | Japan ‘will smash the plans of their | imperialists for armed intervention against the Soviet Union. State De- partment officials confirmed the re- ports of armed struggles by the Jap- | anese workers and peasants against | their imperialist oppressors. Another fear exercising the State Department | is that, short of a direct attack by the | Japanese, the firm peace policy of | the Soviet Union will prevent the | Soviet Union being pushed into war | lby the Japanese imperialists. Aj) | Washington dispatch to the New York Times clearly expresses this fear: “Information here is that Stalin is sufficiently committed to a pro- gram of peace te accept even the | Joss of the Chinese Eastern Railway particularly in view of the fact that there may be famine in the Soviet States before the Winter ends. Vet Russia, as previously reported, has concentrated about 100,000 trcope in the Manchurian trouble zone, and to points there she now has @ fairly good two-track railway,” The speculation about a possible famine in the Soviet Union can at ence be set down as a wish-fulfill- ment of the imperialists, “Several. sub-surface factors, all perplexing and all far removed either from Geneva or Washington, are the sources of worry.” The Times dispatch states: “Tae any. y is not confined to the State Depart~ ment. In the foreign embassies ad- vices from governments abroad are to the same genezal effect: that the cloaked moves being made by Japan in Manchuria, at Shanghai and at home carry bodings of perils not hitherto fully envisaged.” ‘The dispatch quotes State Depart- ment officials as admitting that the | Japanese war foves do “not fit at all jinto Japanese explanation of her | pacific policies in the Orient, or into her announced ‘ntentions to contract mediately, {t tends to confirm the | Boray and others: that Japan is ‘eeiag Warough’ with large annexation | on the mainiend. are definitely puzzled | activities of Japan, They \ by | Ambassador to Moscow, similar to the | her expeditiouary forces almost im- | view steAlly maintained by Senator | out infringing on U. 8. imperialist interests. The Soviet government yesterday declared that Judas Stern, who at- tempted last Saturday to assas~- sinate Dr. Fritz von Twordowski, German diplomat has confessed that he intended to kill the German Ambassador to Moscow, von Dirk- sen, not on Twordowski. Stern de- elared he had been instigated by Polish agents who sought to jockev Germany inte the Anti-Soviet front. He admitted haying aa oc- complice named Vassiliev who is now also under arrest, Further re- velations made by Stern are being kept temporarily secret in interests of @ full investigation. Plans are being made to hold a public trial soon in order to further expose be- fore the world proletariat the vi- cious war plots of the imperialists against the Soviet Union, The plot to assassinate the German attempt a few months ago to procure | the assassination of the Japanese | Ambassador, together with the re- velations in the Washington dispatei of the extent of the Japanese war mobilization against the Soviet Union, clearly show that the imperialists are moving toward an early attack against the Soviet Union. Workers! Ring the Soviet Union with an iron defense! Stop the war | provocations against the peaceful | Soviet Union! Prevent the transnori | lof arms and munitions to the Far| East! Demand the withdrawal of all Japanese troops from Manchuria and other parts of China! Demand the withdrawal of all imperialist armed forces from China! Hail the Rising Chinese Soviets! Hail the achieve- | ments of Socialist Construction in the | Soviet Union! Hail the revolutionary struggles of the Japanese masses! | Drive out the diplomatic agents of Japanese imperialism which is but- |chering the Chinese and Japanese | masses and pushing its war moves | against the Soviet Union; Demon- strate against the Japanese j m+ perialists! Defend the Soviet Union! 1 . Trade Union Column The Trade Union Column, con- | taining the conclusion of the “Re- | solution on Situation in the Ma- | rine Industry and Strengthening | of M, W, 1, U.” is not published today because of lack of space, It | | will be printed in the next issue of THE FORD MASSAC RE AND THE GERMAN ELECTIONS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | ing im larger numbers every day to the Communist Party. ‘The capitalist press correspondents admit that Comrade Thaelman will poll from 7 to & million votes, In fascist c! s it has been estimated that the Communist Party vote will be from 8 t 0 10 million. ‘There will be enough opposition votes to prevent the election of Hin« denberg on the first ballot. It will be impossible in the second election for Hindenberg to muster & DECISIVE majority. The election of Hindenberg can mean nothing but @ still more rapid extension of fascist measures against the working class under the pressure of the Hitlerites. It is obvious, therefore, that the social democrat support of Hinden- berg is only another step toward opening the road for fascism. The di- viding line today between the Hindenberg-Bruenin; ernment and open fascism of the Hitler brand is' Social democrat gov- f the thinnest kind. With the aid of the social democracy and its trade union bureaucrats the standard of living of the German has been slashed again and again through wage cuts, reduction of unemployment relief, reduction of line services of all kinds, etc. ‘The Communist Party alone represents the interests of the explolted German population. All other parties are in the anti-wofking rT and anti-Soviet front. The way out for the masses ts 3 Soviet Germany. This is the ores of the Communist Party and this is the slogan for which new mi German workers, intellectuals and ruined section of the lower 7 class will vote this coming Sunday. ‘The rapid deepening of the crisis of dle in the United States and the! wave of terror and suppression directed against the American class has the greatest significance in the struggle of our brother against the social democrat traitors. ee It is even possible that the ‘Ford massacre will have a decisive influence in the German elections. It is certain that the clear drawing of the class lines in the German elections and the terrific crisis of German capitalism with its intolerable burdens on the toiling population herald the rise of new revolutionary struggle in the principal country of central Europe. DEMONSTRATE IN CHICAGO AGAINST WAR, TODAY. Meet in Front of the, Japanese Consulate at Tribune Tower | CHICAGO, Ill—A mass demonstra- | tion against the robber war on China | jand the plot to attack the Soviet | Union is being organized by the Dis- | trict Committee of the |Communist | Party and Young Communist League | and will be. held this afternoon | at 12 o'clock noon in front of | the Japanese Consulate at the Tribune Tower Building, 435 |Michi- gan Ave. | Fifty thousand! eaflets have been issued explaining the invasion of China by the Japanese imperialist army, with its slaughter of men, women and children and its prooca- | tions against the Soviet Union. ‘The workers in this country, the leaflet said, must mobilize in masses to stop the war mongers |by setting up anti-war committees in the fac- tories in the neighborhoods, mass or- | ganizations, etc. It calls to the work- ers to stop transportation of arm: | and ammunition; for the expulsion of the Japanese diplomatic representa~ | tive in the United States. Raise the slogan of all war funds for the un- employed! Hands off the Chinese , Soviets! Hands off the Soviet Union. Similar demonstrations are to take | place in front of the governmental | buildings in |Milwaukee, St. Louis, Mo.; and Indianapolis, Ind. ‘Mimeograph . Supplies Mimeographs, $15 up, repaired. pre: Stencile $2.25, Ink $1, Bore Paper, Mimo, White and Coloreé Paper, Write for price list. PROLET MIMO 108 B. 14th St., N, ¥. C., Near Usios Sq. Phene ALi gonguin 4.4762 Room 203 Mosselprom Candy IMPORT PROM SOVIET RUSSIA 5 1b, Can olden Prult Filled Mixture Plus Poxztage Many Other Varieties tn Stock RED STAR lar rhag* Saar on 49 EB. 12th St, N. ¥. ——_—_————~» When the Winter Winds Regis to Blow You will find it warm and cosy Camp Nitgedaiget You can rest in the proletarian comradely atmosphere prov! in the Hotel—you will also it well heated with steam hot water and many other provements. The food te elem and fresh and especially well prepared, SPECIAL BATES FOR WEEK. 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