The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 30, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, 'W YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1932 fugu Three “NOT ONE CENT TO BANKERS, ALL FUNDS TO THE UNEMPLOYED” Nat’l Guardsmen Lecture Oregon School; Give War Demonstration to Kids 100 Children Forced to Propaganda Dear Comrades: Here is an incident that every worker should hear aboat. It shows how the capitalists are preparing the school children! for a war against the Soviet U: On May 13 the National Guards and the American Legion came over to the Roseburg High@— School and gave a demonstration in the Assembly of about 400 high school students. First the principal of the school turned the meeting over to a mem- ber of the American Leagion who spoke on “patriotism.” He prated or several minutes on “The Man Vithout a Country” and then pro- seded to compare all workers who protest against the hunger and mis- ery of unemployment to “The Man Without Country.” After this speaker was through he turned the meeting over to the cap- tain of the National Guards. This fellow told the purpase of the Guards. He said, there is a great need of| protection because “Communism is growing so fast.” After this speech was over the captain brought in a squad of guards to show us the machine gun work. ‘They mounted it and pointed it right over the heads of the students. =D. Cc. VETS DEMAND OPEN ELECTIONS Worker Vets Score Secret Ballot WASHINGTON, D. C., June 29.— Heavy pressure of the rank and file worker veterans has forced the com- mitte: of seven of the Bonus Ex- peditionary Forces to make a gesture toward democratic elections. But a gesture, indeed, is all the “High Command” has made. For the “elections” which the present “leaders” of the B.EF. have an- nounced wil] take place Friday, are to be conducted through the secret ballot—that is, ballot boxes under con- trol of the military clique will be placed in the various camps and the veterans will be asked to vote for a slate of hand-picked candidates. Demand Open Elections S. J. Stember, leader of the Work- ers Ex-Servicemen’'s League, an- nounced today in the headquarters at 905 “I” Stréet that the Provisional Bonus March Committee and the masses of veterans supporting their orogram would demand open elections and free discussion in all camps and billets. “Not a word was said in the latest program of the Committee of Seven about the fight for the bonus,” said Stember. “The election call is not genuine, but is a blind thrown up by the committee in order to fool the veterans into believing that they will have rank and file leadership, whereas in truth they will have a new hand picked crowd of lobbyers and police agents.” Stember said that the Workers’ Ex- Servicemen’s League would send speakers to the camps to ask for a vote on @ resolution calling for dem- ocratic rank and file control and a mass demonstration before congress. Hold to Camp Meigs Although Police Chief Glassford and the Washington Commissioners have cut off the water supply at Camp Meigs, they have failed to drive out the men encamped there. Four hun- dred veterans from Pennsylvania met and agreed to move en masse to Camp Meigs to aid the men there if the police carry out their threat to try forcible evacuation measures. The powerful force of the radio, the Salvation Army, churchmen of various denominations are well en- trenched here and are doing their bit to bamboozle and mesmerize the ragged, hungry army which fought and bled for “freedom’s cause.” A certain Judge Rutherford from Kansas, a treacherous, despi¢able re- ligious fanatic, togethér with hun-|~ @réds of his henchmen is doing his bit to defeat the bonus with thun- derous, ominous warnings against the “spectre Communism.” His loud son- orous voice can be heard bellowing forth the wrath of Jéhovdh against the Soviet Union. Rutherford’s speeches are all high- ly political. He tells the vets that they can be led from the path of Satan and out of the depression thru @ coalition (fascist) government. “Did you get fixed up?” said a Rutherford man as he da religious pamphlet in front of his deeply lined weary face. The vet took one and looked it over. A sly cola smile curled the ‘Rushford man's bloodless lips, “iat what about our bonus?” asked one yet whose fingers of his right hand were shot off. “Will Jée- hovah bring me my dough?—the bas- _tards. It’s all the bunk, mén.” A group surrounded him, The Rutherford man disappeared. ‘Bx-Servicemén’s nued. 7 police approach that no reds will je Committee of Listen to Anti-Soviet| inion. | Correspondence Briefs JAILED SELLING PAMPHLETS New York. Daily Worker: At an open-air workers’ meeting I was selling the booklet published by the Workers’ Ex-Serviczmen’s League, “Close Ranks.” A cop atrested me and called me a bum. I told him we were heroes in 1917. So he dragged me off to jail. POLICE DIRECT CAPITOL NEWSPAPERS Washington, D. 0. Daily Worker: An official government count of the bonus marchers in Washington runs from, 30,000 to 31,500. Newspipers, all under orders direct from the| White House and Glassford, have been ordered to “publish no in- creases” of the bonus marchers, J. M. DISCRIMINATION AGAINST SINGLE WORKERS £ Buffalo, N. Y. Daily Worker: It is true that our comrades dem- onstrated against charities but never paid any attention to single workers, Married workers get some kind of help, but single workers are discrim- inated against. It is time now to fight for single workers, also against charities, so they should get some help. Also when there is a collection for the community fund in indus- tries, capitalists take out of the pay. checks of single men more than of married, Former Daily Worker Salesman. aay ae A BLOW AT JIM CROWISM WASHINGTON, D. 0.—The veter- ang, even from the South, are mixing quite freely with the Negro vets in the camps here. R. C. (ae ae JIMCROWISM IN CINCINNATI Cincinnati. To Daily Worker: I find that in Cincinnati the workers, Negro and white, are divided. I am demanding of the Communist Party to investigate this matter. Ne- gro and white workers must be joined hand in hand as comrades. Such Jim-Crowism as this cannot and must not be. Worker, LAUDS C.P, ELECTION PLATFORM Dear Workers: The greatest thing that ever hap- pened for the laboring classes, Negro and white, is the Communists’ stand in this election campaign. This country ang every other country must wake up and set these bosses down. From Worker. . . EXPOSE S.L.P. QUACKS Canton, Ohio, Dear Comrades: Tonight the S. L. Party held a meeting and after about a two-hour talk of these fakers to about 50 work- ers, they let us ask questions. I’ve only been with the Communist move- ment for a short time, but it did not seem to be hard for some comrades and myself to ask these wonderful revolutionists (as they called them- selves) questions, which they could not answer without exposing them- selves as flunkies of Wall Street. The whole meeting turned into a fight be- |* tween practically all the workers present and these labor betrayers with the exception of a few stool- pigeons who were hanging around. Comradely yours, K. 8, Philadelphia Workers’ KidsCampSeeks Funds PHILADELPHIA, June 28—For the purpose of enabling as many working class children as possible to spend vacations in the country in- stead of dirty, city streets, the Work- ers International Relief is conduct- ing a campaign to raise funds to carry out its program. A plan for “adopting” children of unemployed workers is being carried out by the camp during the present. summér, when its season opens July 9 Workers and organizations are urged to send contirbutions to the W. I. R., 629 Chestnut St., Philadel- phia. —_—_— VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 4. Equal rights for the Negroes and it eeerioinettan for the Black It, Seven. WHILE SHAM PEACE TALK GOES ON These 800-million candle power searchlights guard New York from an air attack, the captain is telling the general. They are stationed at forts near the harbor. The imperialists admit that the huge bombing planes they are devolping are capable of wiping out huge cities and their populations. While indulging in sham peace talk, all of the imperialist powers are rusting War preparations and. building huge air forces to deal death and destruction to the toiling population of the world. An example of the horrors of air attacks was given at Shanghai, South China, when Japanese bombing planes rained death on the densely popu- lated working class district of Chapei. Flood Threatens Millions InChina Dyke Repair Funds Used for War The criminal failure of the Chin- ese Kuomintang government to re- pair the dykes and carry out other flood control projects is threatening millions of Chinese with fresh dis- aster as a result of the rapid rise of the Yangtze River. Vast areas the Yangtze Valley are already flood- ed, with many thousands of new re- fugees. Taxes collected for dyke repairs are being used to finance the Kuo- mintang’s war against the reyolu- tionary workers and peasants in the Soviet districts and the developing civil war between the Nanking and Canton factions of the Kuomintang, Nanking gunboats, commanded by Admiral Chan Chak, yesterday seized $500,000 worth of munitions that were shipped by sea to Canton. Gen, Chen, Canton commander, sent six bombing planes in pursuit of Admir- al Chan’s gunboat. The planes at- tacked a British gunboat by mistake, They later located Chan’s gunboats, but failed to inflict any damage. Open hostilities between Nanking and Canton are predicted in Chinese and foreign circles. Kwangsi Province militarists have requested Canton’s permission to send an army through Kwangtung Province, in which Canton is situated, to attack the supply lines of a Chin- ese Red Army operating in Kwangsi Province. Canton has denied per- mission,-fearing a trick on the part of the Kwangsi militarists who are supporting Chiang Kai-shek and his Nanking Government. The Canton gang has been outmanouvered by the Chinese Red Armies in Kiangsi and Fukien Provinces and forced to aban- don their ambitions to invade the territory of the Central Soviet Gov- ernment in Kiangsi Province. THREAT MARTIAL LAW IN GERMANY To Crush Workers’ Fight Against Fascism BERLIN, June 29,—A further ad- vance toward an open fascist dic- tatorship looms throughout Germany as the Von Papen Government threatens to establish martial law in an effort to resist the rising tide of the workers’ struggle. The militant participation of the German workers in the struggle against the fascist measures of the Von Papen Government is “worrying” the fascists who openly call for a more intensified and ruthless reaction. A dispatch from) Munich quotes Hitler's chief Lieutentnt, Joseph Goe- bbels as stating that the national socialists (fascists) would judge the Von Papen government solely ac- cording to its actions and not its words. The dispatch adds that Goeb- bels made such a statement at a meeting of districts commanders which was held in Munich yester- day to discuss the electoral platform. The government fears that the coming election will give the fascists and the nationalists less than half the Reichstag seats and is therefore trying to win the unconditional support of the Catholics. If the leaders of the Catholic Centre Party, former Chancellor Bruening, will not yield to the government’s pressure, it is assured that the Reichstag will be dissolved again soon Bids the election. The restoration of the monarchy “well, then, we'll elect a committee | was proposed at a cauofis meeting of of @ hundred veterans. Such| Nationalists last Satdrday. Alfred a committee will tolerate the mil-| Hugenberg, nationalist leader, de- itary police, Such @ committee back- ed by the march will make Con- gress hear our de: a | clared that he favots the return of the old monarchy “as a way of end-|' ing the potttpel Lg in Germany.” Scottsboro-MooneyTag| Day to Be Held July 9, 10, in Cleveland, Ohio CLEVELAND, O—The Interna- tional Labor Defense is arranging a place on Saturday and Sunday, July 9-10 in order to raise funds to con- tinue the fight to release the Scotts- boro boys, Tom Mooney and all class war prisoners. Tag Day Stations will be as follows: East Side: South Slav Hall, 5607 St. Clair Ave. Lithuanian Hall, 920 E. 79th St. International Workers Order Hall, 926 East 105th Street. E. S. Hungarian Home, 11123 Buck- eye Road. Rayford and Jackson Hall, Scovill Ave. Pulaski Hall, 6628 Chambers Ave. West Side: I. L. D,, 1426 W. 3rd St. Room 311, W. S. Hungarian Hall, 4309 Lorain Ukrainian Labor Temple, 1051 Au- burn Ave In connection with the Scottsboro. Mooney Campaign, the International Labor Defense is ararnging for a large mass meeting to take place on Friday, July 15th at the Slovenian Auditorium, 6417 St. Clair Ave. At this meeting, Mary Mooney, 84 year old) mother of Tom Mooney, and Richard B. Moore, brilliant Negro revolutionary leader, and national or- ganizer of the ILD will speak. Russia a Wonderful Land, Says American Electrical Worker Dear Comrades: On May 10th I was sent down here by the State Chemical Trust to work. My wages are 5.80 rubles per work- ing day and 25 days per month. We work five days and get one free day. Our hours are from seven to four, We get an hour and a half for lunch. At present we are errecting sub- stations. When the one we are on now is finished, we have three more to build. Out here you have to be everything. I am supposed to be an electrician, but as we have to cut and drill our own steel and iron to shape, I am learning to become an ironworker as well. It’s very good experience. We cut our own bolts, threads, etc. We do the outside con- struction of the sub-stations. Healthier in U. S. S. R. I am healthier and stronger now than ever before. I can carry a piece of iron that I never could in your shop. You ask me about conditions, I have visited several homes since my arrival forty two days ago and have eaten plenty in all of them. I see no starvation. Things aren't fine by any means but everyone has the prime necssities, food, a place to sleep. Naturally everyone doesn’t earn the same. In a family of four or so, with cooking done at home, things are very good. To eat out is rather expensive as some com- modities are more hard to get than others. This is so because the So- viet Union must still export some products in order to get machinery. As it is, the Russian workers have more now than they ever had under the Tzar. They tell me so. Vacations. After working a certain time, oné gets his month’s vacation with pay and compensation if he is sick. I know a fellow from N. Y., who left for Caucasia for a vacation after working six months in Moscow. This summer a doctor told Harry Eisman he must go to a place to rest because he is very nervous. (Harry is the N. Y. Pioneer who was sent to the USSR. by the Pioneers to save him from boss frame-up—Ed). Yes, Russia is @ wonderful lgnd. We are working to build towards Socialism and that is not an overnight job, especially where we have to rockon with all the capitalist nations. 3804 Comradely, —Irving VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 3. Emergency relief for the poor farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; ex- emption of poor farmers from tion of rents or debts, Negro Delegates Foully Abused Scottsboro-Mooney Tag Day to take| * Democratic Paper in Frenzy of Hatred CHATTANOOGA, Tent, June 29.— The “Chattanooga Times” a demo- cratic paper here owned by the New York Times publishers, devotes a col- umn to the Communist state conven- tion helq here Sunday. The article in the Chattanooga Times is one long outburst of insult and invective, di- rected against workers in general and especially against individual Negro delegates. The article shows studied, deliber- ate and loathsome hatred for the Negro workers in every line. Negro delegates are referred to vari- ously, by name, as “a squat dwarf,” “a hare lipped Negro with a tusk,” ete, Mrs. Williams, mother of one of the Stotsboro boys is never called Mrs,, but always “Mamie” Williams, and the writer represents her as “describing with relish” the terrible fate which the white ruling class has scheduled for her son, and her own attempts to save him. The white del- egates are described as “a handful of foreigners,” ent at the convention are deliberately lied about. Negro workers and white workers will answer this foul screen by voting Communist, against the democratic lords of the slave whip and the lynch- ing post. SCAB HERDER KILLS STRIKE SYMPATHIZER | Ohio Miners to March in Two Counties and Demand Relief (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) $220,000 to keep the National Guard | in the strike field, without counting |,, the amounts spent for deputies and mine guards. The hunger march-/ ers demand that the guardsmen be sent home and the money it costs) to keep the national guard be turned over to the relief of the strikers and other unemployed workers. The marchers are also demanding | food and clothes for their children, | and direct financial relief from the| county and state for the families of unemployed workers. ere he GAYLORD, Ohio, June 29.—In the} Glen Run mine here 250 men were} on the picket line. Seven scabs got into the mine. It took two carloads of guards to get in the seven scabs. ‘These seven are all Negroes. They told pickets they didn’t want to scab, but couldn't help themselves. “When we were working,” they said, “we were hungry. When the Strike started, we came out. There wasn’t any strike relief and the state relief depot refused to give our chil- dren anything to eat. “Nothing here for niggers,” is what the state relief kitchen toid our kids. If we could get something for our kids to eat we wouldn't scab,” According to reports, this state re- lief kitchen, besides fanning the flames of race hatred, also preaches capitalist politics. The head of the kitchen belongs to some fake social- ist outfit, He says he wants the state “to own everything,” but is op- posed to “Communism.” ‘The United Mine Workers has re-| fused steadily to send any relief in to the strikers. Although they pre- tend to lead the strike, appeals to both the International and the dis- trict office for relief have been met by “passing the buck.” The Crab- apple local sent a letter to the dis- trict office and to the International office at Indianapolis. Lewis in In- dianapolis wrote ba that relief | date for the resumption of payments Various | and the numbers pres-| |for the International.” The district | | found a mass meeting instead of a DEBT PARLEY, ARMS MEET IN COLLAPSE Imperialists FE ail to| Smooth Out Antagonisms GERMAN MASSES PROTEST Oppose Payment of War Tribute The Lausanne Conference on war debts and reparations yes- terday followed the Geneva “Disarmament” conference into complete failure and bank- ruptey, with the imperialist powers unable to overcome their antagonisms. The French delegates re- fused to recede from their de- mands that Germany set a definite on the huge war tribute levied by the victor powers in the last World War. The German delegates, headed by Chancellor Von Papen, were unable to commit themselves in the face of the iron resistance of the German masses to further sacrifices and im- poverishment. Von Papen’s offer to the French of a military alliance against the Soviet Union failed com-| pletely to satisfy the French who are doubtful that the German junkers| can carry out the alliance in the face of the revolutionary situation in Germany and the hatred of the Ger- man masses of the French imperial- ists. The attempts of Prime Minister MacDonald of England to induce the French to tone down their demands jin order to build the united front against the Soviet Union were un- successful, Huge demonstrations against fur- |ther reparation payments were. held | throughout Germany yesterday, the thirteenth anniversary of the sign- ing of the Versailles Treaty. The powerful Communist press expressed | ; outspoken opposition to further pay- | ments, “Rote Fahne” Communist paper, declaring: “For thirteen years the hard- working German people have been | bearing the slave chains of the dis- | graceful peace that took away the largest portions of thelr country and delivered millions of Germans to national enslavement as well as to social exploitation by imperial- ist powers and which in addition to date has squeezed out 68,000,- 000,000 marks (about $16,320,000- 600).” Washington dispatches report pri- vate information that the conference will adjourn without effecting any) solution of the imperialist differences. | At Geneva, the imperialists con- | tinued their sham manouvers on “arms cuts” and “disarmament,” with part of the French arms delegation pretending to look with favor on the Hoover “arms cut” proposals which {aim to weaken the imperialist rivals of Wall Street, while the main body of the French delegation expressed | the official opposition of the French Government to the Hooyer plan, The British continued its refusal to com- mit itself definitely on the Hoover plan, MacDonald promising to offer a British counter plan within tNe next few days. was a matter for the district, not president, Lee Hall, wrote back that the International always took care of relief, and referred them to India~ napolis, The Workers’ International | Relief has opened six kitchens, but} there is need for many more. Urgent | appeals for funds are being sent out. Sentiment is growing among the} miners for the National Miners’ Union, At a Bannock Ohio camp, where Cinque and Pacifico were sup- poseq to speak, the W.LR. secretary local meeting. Neither Cinque nor Pacifico put in an appearance. The local oficials tried to keep the W.LR. secretary from speaking, but the miners shouted him down. When local U. M. W, A. men made all sorts of charges against the W.LR. and the N.M.U. the miners answered these statements themselves. Several local unions of the U.M.W.A. have sent in demands to the N.M.U. for speak- ers. In response to these demands | the N.M.U, is holding mass meetings at several camps. One will be held this week at Yorkville. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 4. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt. AUGUST 21st STAND READY!. Daily alorter PICNIC |Was Slugged in Jail| | ter circulated to its clients by a New |taken was Edward A. Sandler, who | OTHER BANKS WRECKED TO SAVE DAWES; FORTY SHUT IN THREE WEEKS Show Banks, Railroads Profi ed by Federal Reconstruction Finance Greanicntaa (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | sing news of a three-day run on two of the biggest. downtown banks, the| Continental Illinois and the First National. Continuous Piracy. The lifting of the $80,000,000 by the Dawes bank is only the most recent instance of a consistent policy of the Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration—a policy calling for the dis- tribution of millions to the banks and railroads of the country. During the two months’ period be- tween February 2 and March 31, the| Corporation was “authorized” to make loans to 935 institutions. As a result of the “935 institutions,” 858 were banks and the remaining frac- i? tion—-77—were building and loan as-| Sociations, insurance companies, mortgage loans, joint stock land} banks, live stock credit organiza- tions, agricultural credit corporations | and other big farm groups. | Banks Get Lion’s Share. | According to the Federal Reserve | Bulletin of April, 1932, published by | the Federal Reserve Board, of the $238,739,939 “authorized,” banks re- eeived $125,417,000 and railroads (who | in turn handed it over to the banks| to whom most of them are indebted) | received $56,113,756. Barely $11,000,- |000 remained, therefore, for the! “smaller fry.” The railroads have asked for $400,000,000 from the R.F.C., and up to June 18 forty-two roads have had FOSTER OUT THRU MASS PRESSURE By Police crowd with tear gas bombs and with | clubs. About 20 local workers and Yeaders of the unemployed were ar- | rested as police smashed into the| shouting crowd, One of those thus got 17,500 votes when he ran last | year as Communist candidate for school board member. Sandler was dragged down from a lamp post where he attempted to address the workers and protest the jailing of Foster. ‘The arrest of Foster was made by Capt. Hynes of the notorious ‘Red| Squad’ after the car came to a stop at | the Plaza where the demonstration | was to be held. It was Phelps, one of | Hynes’ men who shot Basil Dell, an|a unemployed worker, and the demon-! stration was organized to protest the | shooting, as well to denounce the ac- tion of the police last Sunday in) Preventing Foster from speaking at} the Open Forum hall before which | 3,000 workers had gathered shouting, | “We Want Foster!” Rushed To Jail. Foster was yanked out of the car, | dragged to a police car nearby and} rushed off to the city jail. With him} in the car were Stanley Warren, re-| presenting the International Labor} Defense and J. H. Dickson, repre- senting the Unemployed Council of Los Angeles. Early yesterday morning the Plaza, scene of the demonstration, resembled an armed camp. Between six and seven hundred Legionaires, \armed| with sawed-off shotguns, clubs and| blackjacks were lined up on all sides | of the Plaza, and approximately 500 | Policemen were held in readiness, mounted on horses. | “Red Squad” In Charge, ~ Directing the Legionaires and po-| lice thugs was Hynes, head of the “Red Squad,” whose members had patrolled the Square all morning, with sub-manchine guns held in| readiness as thé workers shouted, “We Want Foster!” and displayed placards protesting police brutality and demanding the right, cf free| speech. A huge number of workers were injured as a result of police clubbing and many temporarily blinded by tear gas bombs. |vestment firms approved loans amounting to $177,- | 374,000, according to the Commercial Financial Chronicle. The chief beneficiaries, all of whom have slashed wages of the railroad |men 15 per cent and over, are the |New York Central; Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific; Chicago, Mil- waukee, St. Paul and Pacific; West- ern Pacific; Savannah and Atlanta Railway; St. Paul, San Francisco Missouri and North Arkan- sas Railroad; Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, and others. Banks Listed. Banks who have received huge sums from the Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation, as well as large amounts that came to them through “loans” originally advanced to the railroads, include: Chase National | First National of Chicago, New York Trust Co., Continental Illinois Bank and Trust Co, of Chicago; Harris Trust and Savings, Chicago; Mis- sissippi Valley Trust Co. of St. Louis; J. P. Morgan & Co.; Kuhn, Loeb & Co., Guaranty Trust Co., and others. The cynical piracy of the Recon- struction Finance Corporation is re=- vealed in its legal “advisors,” who include two such “impartial” indi- viduals as George Roberts and Mor- ton G. Bogue. Roberts is a partner in Secretary Stimson’s law firm— Winthrop, Stinson, Putnam and Roberts. Hef is vice-president o Bonbright & Co. (Morgan allies) and director of several Morgan-controlled utilities: the American & Foreign Power Co. (a subsidiary of Electric Bond & Share); Niagara Hudson Power Corp., and others in the same roup, “Rich Uncle.” How the Reconstruction Finance | Corporation is considered a “rich uncle” by scores of flimsy corpora- tions is seen in a characteristic let- York brokerage firm, Pirnie, Simons Pred | & Co., with office: 17 E. 45t) < | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE onE) |“ Co» with offloes at ge Offering bonds of one of its in- which will yield from 8% to 20%,” the letter says: “You probably know that the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion has recently extended to the Prudence Co, an initial loan of $1,- 500,000, and we have it on good authority that an additional amount which will bring the total to $20,- 000,000 has already been, or should shortly be granted. 1 « « ouch splendid incomes in investments of this type are now possible only because of the depressed times.” New “Loans”, WASHINGTON, June 29.—Follow- |ing the $80,000,000 raid on the Re- construction Finance Corporation by Dawes’ “Central Republic and Trust Co.” of Chicago, the Interstate Com- merce Commission today approved of “loan” of $8,000,000 to the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad recommended by the cor- | poration. A& the same time the LC.C. was asked by the St, Louis-San Francisco Railway Company to approve a loan of $3,390,086 granted the company by the Reconstruction Finance Cor- | poration, NEW YORK. ~ the New York Central was today granted a “loan” of $13,600,000, making a total of $17, 999,999, received from the Recon: struction Finance Corporation. Church Aids Bankers, CHICAGO, June 29. — The chure old reliable pillar of capitalism, can to the aid of the bankers this wee Conspicuous among these was t Rt. Rev. Msgr, C. S. Maguire, che cellor of the archdiocese of Chica who urged desperate depositc many of. whom had lost life’s s: ings, to be “sane and reasonably AVANTA FARM ULSTER PARK, NEW YORK WORKERS RECREATION PLACE Located one-half mile from station Fresh milk, improved bathing, 700 spring chickens and all kinds of vegetables growing for guests, DIRECTIONS:—West Shore train. For week-ends $3.75 round trip. By motomt Albany 9W Route. By bus: Capitol Greyhound Bus Terminal. By steemtoat to Kingston to Ulster Park 220 by train. THE WESTERN WORKER RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 Name CHI serssaroeseces PLEASANT BAY PARK _A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West BUILD IT! 26 Issues $1 Western Worker Campaign Committee 1164 MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif, SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c Street ....00.

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