The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 27, 1932, Page 3

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ay 0 | | i AllIs Not Quiet on the Potomac, Veteran in Anacostia Says War Misleaders Have Headed the Bonus March in Attempt to Beheaded It (By a Bonus Marcher) CAMP ANAOOSTIA.—On the Potomac, all is not quiet. The invading army of ex-heroés, now hoboes, are camped in vacant buildings, lots, swamps, all over the city. biggest camp. Over 8,000 are in this camp alone. This is the Between 19,000 and 20,000 are in Washington. This camp is on low ground. As a result of the rain, it is aseaof mud. Everything is being done to discourage the vets. There are ex-soldiers here from every section of the country, all good projetarian elements—all potential reyolutionists. Many are still imbued with patriotism, but it seems to me more of a gesture of desperation like: like a small boy whistling through a graveyard. They have lost their pa- triotism, at least most of it. We must replace this bunk patriotism with the real thing—patriotism for our class. The misleaders are exposing them- selves. They headed this movement to behead it; but the revolutionary aspect is too great for them. The rank and file will force the leaders either to go with them or will kick them out, The task of our comrades here is to hasten this break. Stool Pigeons The camp is honeyemobed with stool pigeons. Communists seem to be the bugaboos of the leaders. Men are being expelled from camps sus- pected of being Communists. Still the rank and file are beginning to see through the tactics of the fake leaders. Not only men, but women and children are here. The spirit is not quite the same as in 1917. There is not the boisterous enthusiasm of youth but the more mature quiet determination of middle age! Demagogues are abundant, pro- mises are profuse, backslapping is the order of the day. Politicians are at- tempting to utilize the ocasion to further their own political aggrandi- zement; but the applause is only perfunctory in spite of the efforts of the stool pigeons to stimulate en- thusiasm, The vets are not content with words. Deeds is what they are here for. Words, no matter how euphonious to the ear, are not satis- fying to the stomach. Latrines to the south of us, the Capitol to the north. So we are out of luck whichever way the wind blows. The stench is equally unbear- able from eithef direction. The rain with all its discomfort has its ad- vantages. Demagogues do not ad- ress us in the rain. The W. E. S. L. is quietly active. ‘The leaders here ban al] demonstra- tions; but we are pointing out that jonly mass pressure is forcing the {govrnment to feed us. Mass pressure ‘has forced the Congress to consider ,the bill. Only mass pressure will force them to give us our back pay. Only a revolutionary working-class organization such as the W, E. S. L. will successfully lead such a move- ment. We are continually connecting the Payment of the bonus with unem- |ployment insurance. The fakers link it up with the five billion prosperity (for whom?) loan. Vets are still pouring in. The workers and ex- \ploited masses are with us; but we ‘must not fall asleep on the job. The comrades at home must help out. Mass pressure can be applied at home as well as here. The charity (?) organizations are ‘conspicuous by their absence. The Red Cross, K. C, etc., are not even here. There is no money in tamp ‘and so they cannot sell cigarettes. \The Salvation Army has a tent. They ‘supply cheap writing paper and an- ‘tiquated Magazines. I guess they will have a million-dollar drive on account of this. The soul spatchers are on the job. They are telling us that Jesus is for the bonus. Maybe, but I doubt. Anyhow we would rather have the millions of workers demon- strate. I think they can do more than ‘a gink dead 2,000 years. Lindros, Baltimore Steel Worker, Dead; Old Revolutionist BALTIMORE, June 26, — Oscar ‘Lindroos, a worker active in the re- \volutionary movement, died here testerday. The altimore Section committee of the Communist Party has issued the following statement: “Oscar Lindroos, a charter mem- ber of the Communist Party died to- cay. Comrade Lindroos worked for over 12 years in the Bethlehem Steel Mill, in altimore, Md,, as a heater. “The inhuman s>eed-up, miserably low wages paid them by Schwab, was emioatsle for the untimely death of ‘our beloved comrade; Comrade Lindroos was very aetive among the Finnish workers, always faithful to the interests of the work- ing class and a true proletarian fol- Jower of Lenin: “His death must be replaced by Correspondence Briefs NEW WAGE CUT IN ARMOUR’S CHICAGO, IIL Dear Comrmades: Another wage-cut in Armours of 1@ per cent, the third direct cut, was effective June 12th. Some of the workers were kidded into the belief that the cut would bring more work for unemployed, but instead of this, 75 were laid off in one department in two days. My wages after three cuts barely, in fact do not, allow me to pay all my bills for immediate necessities. After the cuts they speed-up on us. We had a large gang and killed 500 sheep per hour. Now with five men we kill 800 and 900 an hour. Mostly they speed us up on the chain. We must be organized into the Packing House Workers Industrial Union to stop this and win back our cuts. ARMOUR WORKER. oe ls 300 DESERT AMERICAN LEGION (By a Worker Correspondent) PEEKSK LL, N. ¥.—Over 300 mem- bers of the American Legion in Peek- sill have turned in their membership cards, The ex-soldiers rebelled against the betrayals of the leader- ship in the fight for the bonus. Fe Tas FURNITURE WORKERS FIRED (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Tll—Three large furni- ture stores closed their doors heré last week. More are on the verge. Employees of a large store actually cried when the announcement of closing was made. Théy feared to be thrown into the army of unemployed. | Yt-4s“time that workers realize that we must fight determinedly for Un- employment insurance at the ex- pense of the government war funds and the rich bosses. (hone LODGING HOUSE CUTS RATIONS (By 2 Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK — Municipal logzing houses are feeding one meal of slop @ day now. They claim shortage of funds. . Cane teers SACRAMENTO, Calif. Dear Comrades: ‘The Community Chest in this city is on @ garbage collecting spree. They have established headquarters in an old building and have workers who are unemployed running all over town collecting it and “conditioning” it in the headquarters. They will squawk on the Radio or in the Bee about being $30,000 in the hole. If they are, it is not from feeding the un- employed but from graft and salaries. Jenkins, the head of it, gets $5,000 a year and many officials get $200 a month. Their jobs are to sit in the offices and slander the workers who come in looking for relief. They claim to have only 550 families in this town of 94,000 needing relief. SACRAMENTO WORKER CALVIN, Va. Dear Comrades: I have been through most all the coal fields in Virginia. It is awful to see what the people are going thru with. Everybody hungry and begging for something to eat, and many fam- ilies having to go to the mountains and dig herbs for a living. These people are living in the heart of the Virginia coal fields, and there are thousands of men cut off with large families because they talked in favor of union labor. Yours truly, A WORKER. Will Vote Communist After Seeing Party Work, Says Woman (By a worker Oo Correspondent) NEW YORK.—Last week I had to go with @ delegation of workers to force an employment agency on Sixth Avenue to return the money of a working woman. This worker had paid $4 to the agency for a job as laundress but had to work 16-17 hours a day and also had to work on Sun- day. The boss wouldn't give this working woman time off to go to mass and the worker could not stand the long hours. We got three-fifths of her fee back and she was very happy. The fact that other workers would fight for her was a new ex- perience in her life. Working women were waiting in this agency when the delegation was ‘there and yesterday one of these “| working women came up to me and told me how good she felt about the whole matter and informed me that as going to vote “Communist” Communists fight for the DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1932 Page Thret By DOUGLAS MCDONALD In a bleak half-block on the north- east corner of West and Springs Streets—only a few blocks from Wall Street—homeless and unemployed men are living in holes duge out of the ground, in shacks sunk into de- serted cellars, in dog-houses made of boxes pieced together, Over 250 unemployed have been living here, harassed by the police and starving for many months. This igs in Manhattan, in the heart of New York City. On the north end of this block, walled in (and the unemployed walled out) by a high tight board fence, the-new freight station of the New York Central is being built. But the south half is barren and unfenced the houses having been torn down. The unsightly cellar holes and piles of broken brick are all that remain. All, that’ is, except the homes of the unemployed, the miserable shacks and boxes flimsily erected in the shallow holes where ‘houses formerly stood. There are perhaps fifty of these shacks, though the number is difficult to estimate because many of them are small coffin-like boxes, hidden behind somewhat larger shacks, and concealed from the wind and from view in holes. Homes under Capitalism In one shack, made—as are all the shacks—from pieces of wooden boxes, strips of rusty tin or sheet iron picked up from dump heaps, a stove had been improvised from a common Jard tin, a hole cut in the bottom and old pieces of rusty stove-pipe at- tached and fastened together so that the chimney reached up through the low leaky roof. In filthy bunks ar- ranged in one corner, taking up half the space of the small room, three men, Negro workers, have lived and slept through the winter months, going out daily on the hopeless quest for work. One of the men was a skilled worker, a carpenter and mol- der, but had had no work for seven months, The other two—all three real workers who had been self- supporting all their lives — were unskilled laborers. A cripple lived a few feet away in a dog-house—8 by 3 feet, and 2 1-2 feet high—lined with pieces of corrguated cardboard torn from discarded paper boxes, and bedded down with newspapers. It was so low that he could only lie down after crawling through the tiny square hole that served as door. An- other man, who had been working on the stock market for two years be- fore the ‘depression, lived in a wretched hut—wretched despite the effort to give a semblance of home- likeness to a mongrel nailing together of nondescript boards and pieces of tin—stood in the door of his hut,... and trembling from hunger, ‘Three-fourths of the 250 men are Negro workers, always the hardest hit among the masses. But in these, huts are also . Mexicans, Italians, Spanish and a few Irish. They are | bona fide workers, many of whom | had wives and children to take care of, but whose families have long ago been dispersed, or have died. As we talk with them, we find that one has been living here four months, an- other six months, another eight months, All had jobs at one time, and lived in rooms or in rented apartments which, poor as they might be, were better than the cave-~ huts they now occupied, One man, an Italian, had been in business he said,—had run a bowling ailey on Avenue A for several yeras. Pick up Some Food How do they live? They pick up waste wood for their fires, to keep warm, to heat water, to cook a car- rot or a potato they pick up around the market. Some odd job may be picked up once or so in a week, bringing in a dime or a quarter— cleaning up a mess in a yard or a cellar, watching a truck for a half- hour while the driver gets his lunch, some such trivial task—and then a few wieners are bought, or a loaf of bread. Why don’t they go to the Muni- cipal Lodging Houze on the East will rally | River? One and all agree that the It Always Eastes the Same to These Starving, Jobless Men Sampling the stew cae from Gecarded rotten vegetables at the “jungle” ‘built up by. the 2 workers at Charlton and West Streets, New York, DOG HOUSES FOR MEN IN RICH METROPOLIS New York Unemployed Live Hounded by Police and Starving for Months in Caves, than their miserable caves. They re- celve the most miserable thin soup in the bread lines arid the coldest and most uncomfortbale sleeping quarters. And, on top of this, the most contemptuous (contemptible) treatment the city charities can ar- range. They must stand in line, waiting long in the rain and cold, for the soup, for the chance to sleep on bare floors. Very often they are soaked through and chilled through before the city’s generosity is granted. And even then, at five o'clock in the morning, they are all routed out to stand again in the cold for two or three hours before they can get ad- mittanee again, All the unemployed agree in the statement that only as the very last resort would they apply to the Municipal Lodging House for either food or a place to sleep. Told of Unemployed Council The police have been trying for months to break up the colony of unemployed at. West and Spring Streets. They fear the exposure of such conditions in the richest city in the world. Every week some police- men strolls through the place telling the men they must clear out by ‘the first of the week.’ Until the con- tractor, who has charge of the con- struction of the New York Central freight house on the same block, protested against it because of the danger to his job, the police fre- quently, set fire to their shacks and burned them down. And whenever a robbery is committed anywhere in the city, or upon whatever flimsy excuse, the police rush threateningly among these homeless men, seeking to fas- ten the charge upon some of them. These workers were told of the Unemployed Councils, and are eager to join. Their spirit is not broken. They are ready to unite with the workers of their own class to fight for better conditions and the right to @ job. AMSIOVN TROTSKY Hi, somebody must have turned this thing upside down! Trotsky in Attempt to Neaken Defense of the Soviet Union and China As a further contribution to the mobilization of war against China, the Chinese Revolution and the Sov- iet Union, Trotsky released for the press his speeches and articles on the “Problems of the Chinese Revolu- tion.” The outstanding feature of these articles and speeches is their counter- revolutionary misrepresentation of the position of the world Commun- ist Party and its leader, comrade Stalin, on the problems of the Chin- ese Revolution. Their importance to the working class is relevant only in so far as they indicate once more! the counter-revolutionary nature of , their author. Trotsky reiterates his attempts to smuggle within the working class his opportunist ideas by covering it with his usual pseudo revolutionary phrases. He tries to weaken the de- fense of China, the Chinese Revolu- tion and the Soviet Union by slan- dering the Communist Party and comrade Stalin. And this under the| cover of his “immense devotion” to sinbtigeips cacy moses Pacrsrabation SoR Communists Lead Workers’ Struggle for the Right to Vote U.S. Officers Inspect Plants GUN THUGS STOP | to Speed Preparations tor War| CONVENTION IN Lament Fact Idle Machines Not All Mobilized | Munitions for At the same time that Hoover is putting forward his hypocritical “peace” proposals to the “disarma- ment” conference at Geneva, United States Army College officers are | making a survey of Pittsburgh mills and factories to advise their owners ee te 250 unemployed BOSSES SPEED World Crisis Grows More Acute (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) also’ be forced to default and even to declare a moratorium on all debts. defaulted. In the meantime, the sharpening differences between the imperialist powers and suspicion of proposal to advance additional loans to the Danubian states in an effort to stave off the complete collapse of capitalist economy. Armed Clashes With Troops There is wide unrest in all of the creasing armed clashes between the Starving workers and ruined peasan- try on one hand, and the state police and troops on the other. In this desperate situation, the capitalist are more and more turning to war as the capitalist “way out” of the crisis. French imperialism, as the leader of the anti-Soviet front, has made marked gains recently in drawing Germany into the Anti- Soviet war front. The German Jun- ker dictatorship, headed by von Papen, has just offered France a mi- litary alliance in exchange for con- cessions on reparation payments. France Rejects Hoover Proposal Open opposition is evident in Eu- ropean and Japanese imperialist cir- cles to the Hoover sham “disarma- ment” proposals, which aim to strengthen the military power of the United States at the expense of cuts in the armed forces of Wall Street’s imperialist tools. Premier Herriot of France has announced his opposition to the Hoover proposal. He has coun- an international force under the League of Nations, which is mainly controlled by France. Rather Guns Than Silk Jugoslavia, one of the French vas- sal states, has bluntly stated its op- Posjtion to any plan to reduce arma- ments. This declaration was made by Premier Marinkovitch who, it is reported, has rushed back to Yugo- slavia from Geneva “to deal with a threatened domestic political crisis.” ‘The Japanese have been similarly blunt in declaring their opposition to any arms cut whatever. They have cynically declared that they would rather produce munitions for use against China and the Soviet Union than produce silk for which there is hardly any demand as a result of the crisis. Fascist Italy is supporting the Hoo- ver, proposal in so far as it gives them parity with the French Navy. Mus- solini is not averse to reducing the Italian regular army, so long as his Black Shirt military organizations are left intact. British Secretly Oppose Cuts The British imperialists, subtle dip- lomats, are putting up a screen of pacifist demagogy behind which to cover their secret opposition to the Hoover proposals which aim at es- tablishing parity for the American Navy with the British Navy and re- ducing the naval strength of Japan. All of the “disarmament” proposals of the imperialist powers have three very definite aims: 1) to weaken and disarm the rival imperialist powers, 2) to strengthen the anti-Soviet war front; and 3) to deceive the mass2s and achieve a peaceful transition into war, ‘The only genuine disarmament pro- posals offered at the conference were made by the Soviet delegation, who first offered a plan for complete dis- armament, and later, a plan for par- tial disarmament. Both plans were rejected forthright by the imperialist war mongers. PICKET HAT SHOP. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 26. — The workers from the Lincoln mil- linery shop, locked out three weeks ago, are still picketing as actively as on the first day. ‘SIAM ARMY PHILADELPHIA WON'T PAY WAGES PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 26.—~ | City employes wil not be paid July i, it is said here, because the treas- ury is $5,825,000 short on the more than eleven million needed for semi-annual interest DRIVE FOR WAR {lions more promised that their pa- Greece and Bulgaria have already | each other have so far defeated the | Danubian countries, marked with in- | tered with the French proposal for! on means to switch over quickly to war production. They went through Westinghouse Electric, Mosta Machine, Jones and Laughlin Steel and Iron Safety Ap- Pliance plants. Thousands of idle machines met their eyes. Lamenting the fact that these machines were not already mob- ilized for turning out war muni- tions, Capt. McMahon said that “here we have to rely on the pa- trietism of mannfacturers to plan for wartime needs of the country.” Pittsburgh manufacturers remem-. bering the swollen profits they col- lécted during the last war at the expense of the slaughter of millions of workers and the misery of mil- triotism would be on tap whenever needed. At about the same time, Liberty magazine came out with a jingoistic article by ex-Gen. William Mitchel, urging huge war preparations. Mit- chell writes: “The United States is faced not only the possibility of war with Japan in the comparatively near | future but with the extreme like- lihood of it sooner or later.” He added that the Japanese are “working with desperation to make themselves the. strongest .military power in the world. Their principal aim in doing this is to fight the one great white power in the Pacific Ocean, the United States,” | While these developments reflect the sharpening antagonismr between |Japan and American imperialism in the struggle for the control and NEWTON SPEAKS AN HOUR FROM TREE IN PARK (CONTINUED PROM PAGE. ONE) gress in the District in which De Priest is runnig for re-election. Climbs Tree. Newton, seeing the extensive pre- parations for an attack on the meet- ing, climbed the tallest tree in the park, refused to descend or be silent on police orders, and spoke for over an hour in the face of everything the Police and fire department could do to get him down. ‘They finally got Newton down and arrested him, but not before news of situation reached the Washington Park Forum. A hundred workers started immediately from the forum for Ellis Park to defend Newton and the right to meef. The police ar- rested some of them on the way. In all, twelve were arrested, in- cluding Newton and Poindexter, Ne- gro worker and Communist candidate for congress from the Second District. | Three women were arested. Fined for Testifying. All wefe ordered released in Court Saturday morning, but Poindexter was fined $100 for insisting on teésti- fying in his own way as to what hap- pened. Poindexter was dragged roughly out of court and back to jail by three uniformed police and two plain clothesmen from the “Red Squad.” Mass meetings protesting the breaking up of the Ellis Park meet- ing will be held tonight. DePriest Evicts Unemployed. Yesterday afternoon, an unem- ployed worker’s family was evicted from a house on which DePriest holds a mortgage. Thousands of men, women and children, assembled and moved the furniture back. Ten squads of police watched, but the militancy of the crowd was so great the police did not attack. Picket Against Forced Labor. Friday morning over a thousand unemployed workers picketed the flop house at 116 South Green St., de- nouncing forced labor. A number of the jobless spoke to the crowd, de- fying all attempts of the police to break up the picket line. Demonstate at Convention. ‘There will be a mass demonstra- tion of unemployed and part time workers at Honore and Jackson Boul. evard, Monday at 11 a. m., at the time the Democratic Party national convention opens a short distance away. The demonstration is in pro- test against the Democratic Party's starvation program for the jobless. A.F.L, Sends Scabs to J. Miller Shop; Two Quit, Join Strike NEW YORK.—The attempt of the A. F. of L. Boot and Sho? Workers’ Union to break the strike at I. Miller, where hundreds of workers have been out for weeks against a wage-cut, stands exposed, Two men sent in by the A. F. of L. have walked out and joined the strike. They report a great shortage in the stock on hand, with lack of experienced help. Twenty-five men are on the fourth floor, trying to learn operation of the city debt, | lasters ahs Struggle for the control and looti of China, the war prepar: both powers are primarily against the Soviet Union, whose ex- | istence challenges the robber policy| of world imperialism. DID YOU EVER? I By HAP iD you ever? Did I ever? |™ Did you ever see the Senate give | the veterans a break? Did you ever? No, 1 never! The Senate teils the workers: “You will give and we shall take!” while Dector Hoover soothes the bankers’ | hellyache, ID you ever? Did I ever? Did you ever see the dif-fer-ence } | between a wet and dry? Did you ever? No, I never! They keep the quarrel brewing | just to put across their lie. Their | quarrel’s only moonshine for to tank the hungry guy. ID you ever? Did I ever? Did you ever see a boxing-match that was an honest show Did you ever? Hardly ever! The fight-fan pays the money and the grafter gets the dough. It's just another racket aimed to hit the masses low! I'll say, K. 0. Jobless Protest Before Democrats A.F.L. Against Bonus Demands of Vets CHICAGO, Ill, June 26—A whole series of mass meetings about the} city mobilize the workers and unem- | ployed workers today for a mass demonstration against Democratic Party starvation policies. The demon- stration will be tomorrow, when the Democratic National Convention | opens. | The A.F.L. is further committed to the starvation schemes of the Demo- crats by its president, Green, who has announced in an interview that he will not ask the veterans’ bonus be supported, he regards that as a matter for the American Legion. The American Legion officers are against the bonus. Green's only plan for re-| lief of the unemployed is Hoover's end Garner's proposal for funds to be given cities for building some time in the future. “Red Drive” Candidates, As it becomes increasingly eviden that Roosevelt lacks the necessary. two-thirds for his nomination, the utterances of lesser candidates are given attention. Reed of Missouri, yesterday made a speech oyer Colum. bia Broadcasting service in which he called for more drastic opposition to Communism. Garner, speaker of the House of Representatives, has already declared that if he is elected presi- dent, he will use the whole force of the government to stop the spread of Communism. Roosevelt got a few more votes) when J. “Ham” Lewis released the 28 pledged to him. jan | pected, JELLICO, TENN. Harlan and Bell, Kyy Mine Guards Halt 100 Delegates MEET AT CHATTANOOGA |Over 100 atCommunist State Convention JELLICO, Tenn, June 2%— More than 50 police and mine owners’ gun thugs from Harlan and Bell counties, Kentucky, lined up to Prevent the Jellico, Campbell county, Tennesee, Communist Con- vention called to meet here Satur- day. Over a hundred worker, miner and farmer delegates were prevented from meeting. Jellico is near the Tennesee-Kentucky state line, eee er State Convention CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., June 26, —The starving workers and jobless workers of Tenné are in general barred from v ig by the poll tax law here. You can not vote in Ten- nessee until you pay a tax of $2.50 The fig) gainst this disfranchising of the w s will be oné of the main issues at the Communist convention. Over a hundred delegates from workers’ mass organizations, local unions, Communist Party units and unemployed organizations were as- sembling in Chattanooga early today for the Tennesee state. convention of the Communist Election Campaign. Thirty-five delegates have sent credentials from three International Labor Defense branches; eight from International Worker Order branch; 33 from three block come mittees of the unemployed couneils; even from two locals of the National Miners Union; two from a group of Negro ex-service men; four from Communist Party units, and the rest so far here are from workers’ clubs and fraternal organizations. Many more delegates are ex- including delegates from farmers’ meetings, for htree more N. M. VU, locals, and from Negro organizations. Three hundred ex-servicemen, meeting here Saturday to demand the soldiers’ bonus be granted, elected seven delegates to the Communist state convention. Four of the dele- gates are Negroes. ¢ International Notes MUNITIONS SENT TO JAPAN FROM ENGLAND LONDON, June 26.—Six hundred forty tons of munitions produced by a British Government factory were loaded on a vessel lying at the Lon- don docks. The vessel is east bound, and even the laborite Dr. Cullen had to admit that the munitions are “going to Japan.” He is reported to have pro- tested to the Prime Minister against this. 92 ste Noe Kaiser and Son Meet with Bankers To “Review” German Events 5 LONDON, June 26.—Former Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Ger- many conferred with his father, the |former kaiser, at the Dutch seaside | resort of Zandvoort, Holland. Several monarchist politicians and German bankers participated in the parley, it is reported here. They “reviewed” recents events in Ger- many and took stock of the pro- gresses made by the monarehists in thtir efforts to restore the Hohen- zollerns on the throne. Demonstration Before Bronx Court Mon. In Irish Workers Triai NEW YORK. — Workers will dem- onstrate before the Magistrate's Court, 16lst St. and Brook Avenue, Bronx, Monday morning at 10 o'clock where four members of the Irzh Workers’ Club come up for = charged with felonious assault, the International Labor Defense an- nounced, The workers, Moriarity, Rooney, . Mallallay and McCairnay were ar- rested and beaten up Wednesday nite following an eviction fight on E, 147th St., in which a large crowd of work- ers took part. BUY Mimeograph Supplies By mail order and save 50% Ink $1 pd tb. Union Square Mimeo Supply (Formerly Prolet Mimo) 108 E. 14th St., N. Y. C. Algonquin 4-4763 Room 203 ba NAACP Cringes, ‘The National Association for Ad- vancement of Colored People made its usual slayish gesture to the Demo- ie took their request, “under advise- ment”.

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