The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 23, 1932, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

_ aR NNR rere SETTm rn seone Wail Street’s war and hunger U. S. Battleship Wyoming, with its big guns ready to deal out death to workers for the protection of Wall Street's right to rob and murder. President, Herbert Hoover, inspects DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK One of the millions of workers to a living death in the last world in the trenches, Wholesale slaughte war on China indicates the dreadfuln are preparing. Carolina Tetcile Sisikers Vote Against Wage Slash (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tive support of the unemp! d, tell- ing them to keep their hands off this “hosiery” strike. He even joined the local police and press in characterizing the courage- | ous unemployed as “hoodlums, wreck- ing crews and rioting agitators,” thus jeuts and for better conditions spread the «strike to surrounding | mills, to work out demands for all factories and workers including. the unemployed. to let the bosses set an example in cooperation by imme- diately granting all the workers de- oange and for the immediate release of the 20 workers arrested. paving the way for the arrest oesires protest of 20 unemployed leaders.) Bradley, leading the committee of) hosiery workers, failed to see the | broad class needs of the workers—| widespread continuous wage cuts in all local factories as well as in the} hosiery mills and extreme suffering | of the unemployed, who now exist on | ‘SEEK TO BAN RED GERMAN UNIONS, “ing one unity of all he ployed and unemployed, Negro and | _ Unit 1, Seattle Ford Gates Unit, Denver the most miserable charity: rations, Teceiying only $1.25 in groeeries per Week from the Salvation Army: The leader of the commmittee also failed to see that was a sertous blow ‘at the hosiery workers themselves | and strengthened the bosses position, Bradley, joins the bosses’ police and focal press against “outsiders” and advocates “free cooperation” * with the bosses, quickly forgetting the bosses cooperative spirit when they three times eut wages since, April 1. Yesterday “free co-operation” led him to break the workers’ picket. lines) to permit the bosses to ship out silk after the workers had. stubbornly refused to let the silk pass. This shows hot’ a worker pushed forward to leadership, beginning pos- | sibly with the best intentions but with limited understanding, can under’ pressure become a bo8sés’ tool, dividing workers by a narrow craft outiock and destroying all militancy by shortsidedly accepting the bosses fear of. “violence.” Yet workers having faith in ‘Brad- ley believe that the keeping out of “outsiders” will avoid a betrayel such as the U. T, W. Marion ‘sell-out which is ctill fresh in the workers’ minds, although Bradley is stow ac- tually. following the line Hoffman. To avoid’ these dangers and guar- antee winning the strike, “fhe Na- tional Textile Workers Uniom-is urg- em- in the white, PRIVATE COP KILUS NEGRO (By a Worker Correspondent) DEZATUR, Ill.—A special police- Negro in this town one night last Pig Tho peliceman’s excuse ws + he wes attecked, but the Negro be body showed it had been shot in the back. a Greetings re tie Daily | Worker Anti-War Day DISTRICT 12, SEATTLE Unit 9, Seatle John Reed Club, Seatile .««- 1.00 ‘Unit 10, Seattle DISTRICT .13, SAN FRANCISCO E. Helbig, San Francisco ...:1 $2.00 DISTRICT 19, DENVER- Collected by Railroad Unit, Denver, Colo.: Railroad Worker, Denver ‘Railroad Worker, Denver Phil Brown, Denver M. Petrulis, Denver Dolnick, Denver R. Barta, Denver Wm. Deitrich, Denver | Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season miles from Phi feipa Rus Hoge ‘om, . Running water, Glectricity, swimming, tishing, ete: Ren: fonsble (Foter, Comeamnleats “with “ons Jessor, April Farm, Coopersburg, Pa. Eth SuN.¥,0. 7. \ {ADDRESS ia rs painst wage- | employed by wealthy “residents | here chot and kilied an unidentified | 1.00) Contribute to the: $100,000 Fighting Fund of the Communist Election Campaign Day WORKER ‘Confer on Outlawing | | C. P. Today | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) |pointees of the von Papen dictator- ship. Highly significant is the fact that “Bloodhound” Noske, _social- Cemocratic municipal president of Hanover, was retained, together with |Zorgiebel, police president of Dort- |mund, jin the heavy industry Ruhr section, | Noske led’ in the murderous as- saylts on the heroic German revolu- tionary workers in the 1919 struggles j and is held by the workers to be di- jrectly responsible for the fiendish | killing of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. Zorgiebel, as police chief | of Berlin, directed the shooting and | clubbing of workers during the May |Day fighting in the proletarian dis- | tricts of Wedding and Neukolen in } 1929. Street Fighting. Meanwhile; street, fighting contiinu- ed throughout Germany déspite} threats by the government that par- ticipants in “riotous” demonstrations would be faced with the firing squad. Clashes occurred in Koenigsberg, Hamburg and other cities. In Ham- burg. ten persons, including three policemen, were injured in a street fight. “Decision” Nn Dictatership. Tomorrow (Saturday) is set for |the marionette show in Leipzig, when | the highest court of the Reich will) | meet to pass upon the “legality” of | |the proclamation of the Prussian| | dictatorship by the von Papen gov- ‘ernment and his “national socialist” allies. Today Hugo Heimannsberg, Berlin | Bolice chief, was taken out of his bed | | at 4 o'clock in the morning by a squad | jof soldiers and jailed, under the mar- | | tial jaw declared here, in the mili-| |tary section of the Moabit prison. It is expected that he will not be de-) | tained very long, the arrest being! |Made because Heimannsberg was somewhat reluctant to give up his | perch. Writers Leave. A striking sidelight on the fierce eS igegd raging in Germany is of- fered by the action of a number of radical bourgeois writers in leaving the country. Chief among these are Emil Ludwig, who recently interview- ed Stalin in Moscow; Eric Maria Re- marque, author of “All Quiet on the Western Front”, and a number of lesser literary personages. The “Boer- senzeitung,” speaking for the Hitler fascists suggests that the two famous novelists, Henrich Mann and Lion Feuchtwanger, “would do well in the future to confine their writings to travels in Bavaria.” Henrich Mann recently endorsed the call for the International Congress Against War initiated by Romain Rolland, Henri Barbusse, Theodore Dreiser and other well-known writers, and which will be held in Paris August 21-24. eb Urge Monarchy, The immediate establishment of a monarchy is the formula proposed for Germany by Captain Hans Tauscher, until last year representative in the U. S. of the Krupp munitions works, ‘who arrived in New York on the 8.8. Deutschland yesterday. |thorities know that the talk is all VETS REFUSE TO GET OUT OF THE CAPITOL Rank and i File Prepare | Mass Protest Against | Police Order (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 4% to 312%. It was previously re- |quiried that two years must elapse | |Coming from Basle and Schauffhau- | in the struggle against tine persecu- fe the certifi could be boi | ers Soa nb sa lt te the take | sen, where she had addressed militant | tion of the Negro masses ing off of the two year clause was} one of the demands put forward by | |the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. | The ehtire capitalist press here, | spot made historic because Lenin | that he lived in burning over “the disgrace to the|! executive mansion must be guarded like a fortress to protect the occu- | pants” "—Washington Post, feverishly | supports the move to shove the bonus marchers out of the capitol. Glassford Drops Silk Gloves. Orders were sent today to the 1500 men hilleted in “Camp Glassford” tl leave the premises today. All the | maimed, disfigured and sentenced war in which millions were killed x of civilians in the present rebber ess of the new world war the bosses , SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1932 On Augusi yeuth and aduit, will demons: Mis. . Wright Pays Tribute to Lenin . Scottsboro Mother Visits Visits § Swiss Home of Lenin During European Tour Points Out That Millions Follow Leninist Teachings By J. LOUIS ENGDAHL, ZURICH, Switzerland (By Mail).— | Scottsboro demonstrations, Mrs. Ada | Wright, Scottsboro mothers, on her arrival in Zurich, first visited the | lived here during the crucial years) in the world war, 1916-1917. The one-room apartment in which he lived is now marked by a tablet of white marble carrying an inserip- tion as follows: “Here lived from February 21, 1916 until April 2, 1917,,LENIN, the Leader") of the Russian Revolution.” | “Lenin lived here during the last war and carried on his struggle) the ct TTED FRONT IS BURNING ISSUE, SAYSTHAELMANN 3 Questions es poterence wer: Vi (CONTIN union memb in the growing campaign for the lib- jeration of our children in Alabama, co ign retain ) in the party? What dces e in the ef in ‘the itied front? Does rst step to destroy e ly the united front | United States.” Among t closely with Le: who worked ve ides de sire for Page Five These ndous demonstration ist War. anti-war demonstration, ainst Imperi “DISARMAMENT” P ARLEY ENDS IN Ace bie | Litvinoff Bien D el re J The Geneva “disarmament” con nee prepared to adjourn yesterday Opening with the sham’ pledge. for | Trostel, secretar national Red Aid (int bor Defense), who has been spe: at all the Scottsboro det S in Switzerland. He is a the parliament for the ca includes Zurich. The Scottsboro demonstrations id at Berne, Basle and Schuffhausen were the largest gatherings beld in recent years in these Swiss cities, al- pati nton that vets have been ordered out of the | against war,” declared Ada Wright. | though they did not approach the capitol by August 4. Glassford’s| statement to the press was that while | he hoped to “avoid subjecting the ex. soldiers to undue hardships, his eli- mination campaign would be “relent- | less’ and “not so gradual.” This ritzy police chief has dropped his siik- glove technique and is talking cold turkey now, Fear—both political and physical has gripped the authorities. The growing rank and file movement— under sponsorship of the Central Rank and File Committee is the prin- cipal target now of all the capital’s secret and open police agencies, the press. and district government. Significantly enough, the first to receive notice to move out of the half-wrecked buildings was the billet named after Glassford, who had posed as a “friend” of the veterans. The excuse given for the notice to evacuate, is that the government needs the property for construction of public buildings. Notices are be- ing sent to other billets in the city. The situation here is packed with dynamite. The governmental au- over town and through Anacostia that the “marines -wouldn’t fire on their buddies.” The vets are certain that their buddies in the army and navy would confé out solidly for | them, The call of the rank and file vets} for continued picketing of the White | House shoots terror into the Chief Executive. The newspapers report today that even Senator Bingham, his bossom friend, and the president’s secretary were unable to get through the barred gates into the White House. “Force, If Necessary”’—Glassford. General Glassford—the police agent witih the now famous silk-glove man- ner has dropped his genteel mask and stands bare as @ uniformed thug. “My instructions are’—he told the rank and file veterans about to begin their march to the White House—“To use force if necessary.” He blamed his instructions, of course, upon the dis- trict commissioners. He is eager to continue his role of “friend” of the marchers. But the mask is about off now. The procession of wax dummy leaders set up by the secret service authorities to lead the vets out of the capitol continues, Today, they resur- rect the “Steel-spined Robertson” as the local press dramatically describes the ex-circus barker from the West Coast. The Washington Herald, July 21, stated, “The colorful Robertson, whose crippled back is supported by a steel brace, ahnounced he would lead his men away soon on the top of box cars, The insurgent Califor- nians will barnstorm the United States mustering votes against their Congressional .enemies and will re- turn when Congress convenes,” the paper said, Return? Washington plans to make it a one-way trip? Once out —— Also Raincoats, Windbreakers, Sh« Bags and Trunks at the lowest prices in the PATRONIZE A FIRM THAT PATRONIZES WHEN GOING ON YOUR Aes asad ON Visit —— THE RELIABLE DOREVA, Inc. 152-154 BOWERY (Near Broome St.) UNDERSELLS ALI, This firm sells everything in the men’s line. oes, Boots, city, Drop in and convince yourself. Comrades and Sympathizers! OUR RED PRESS | against which we must struggle, “Now we are in the midst of a new war and new war preparations aided by the teachings of Leninism. | It is a great inspiration to me to) | know that we can bring forward very | | successfully the struggle against war magnitude nor the militancy of the Sacco-Vanzetti demonstrations of 1927. However, the Scottsboro cam- paign is rapidly growing in this di- rection, and the present tour of the Scottsboro mother is helping im- mersely to accelerate the struggle. | of the capitol, there will be one huge sigh of relief from the White House. Now Withhold Food Waters? This play-at-Mussolini hoaxer from Oregon—has just sprung his latest maneuyer—that of . with- holding all food supplies addressed to the B. E. F., from any contingent except that under his autocratic con- trol, Glassford—at first shadowboxing and proclaiming opposition to Wat- ers’ plan, has agreed. All foodstuffs and funds marked B. E. F. will be confiscated,with his consent, by Wat- ers, The remainder he said gener- ously, Will be divided equally among the other contingents. Since the masses throughout the country know of the bonus marchers as the B. E. F. the vast majority of the s upplies will be sen tunder the name, Waters secretly went into court and incor-| porated the B. E. F. It is now Bonus Expeditionary Force, Inc. with Wat- ers as grand mogul—along with a duo of underling fakers. Robertson—about ready ‘to lead | his contingent and as many more as | he can muster, out of the city—| “threatens” to picket the hotels in| Washington for food. It is note- worthy that he refused to picket the White House with the rank and fil- ers—but now makes wordy gesture about picketing hotels—in order to shunt the veterans from the real task. The Central Rank and File Com- mittee of the Bonus Marchers coun- ters with the demand that a Central Food Commissary and Finance De- partment established. All food and money donated will be distributed through this medium to all vets re- gardless of “veteran organizational affiliations, political opinion, color or, creed.” Widest publicity: strict financial accountings: an inventory.and distri- bution system are demanded by the rank and filers. _ They point out that the name B. E. F., through the publicity given by the militancy and heroism of the bonus marchers has resulted in the donation of large quantities of: food and money—and sent here under the name B.E.F, Therefore, all donations should be ‘specifically marked for the Bonus Marchers in Washington—and that the name BEF be omitted to prevent confiscation by Waters. \ “Arrest the Agitators.” * In the meanwhile the Wasington Post particularly, and the other pap- ers are following suit cries for the blood of the. veterans “Arrest the Agitators” its editorial July 21 shouts. “Stubborn attempts were made to reach the hWite House grounds in spite of the policie.... The Disitrict Commissioners have instructed Chief of Police Glassford to use force if necessary to prevent disorders and’ to stop the picketing of the White House, Every veteran who disregards these necessary regulations become liable to arrest......The iron hand does not apply to veterans who re- spect the Jaw and conduct them- selves in an orderly manner, It is the || tremendous. radical group, which has been tainted by Communism, that is responsible for this fanatical scheme to bring pressure to bear upon the President. The sooner the District can get rid FORD HITS RELIEF © CUT IN CHESTER Radio Will Announce Foster Meet (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) this city. Within the last few weeks relief has been cut from $6 to $4 per family. Jim-Crowism is rampant. While white workers got one dollar | per child. Negroes got oniy a half aj dollar, ‘Bpeed-up at the Sun Ship Yard is Hideous accidents occur daily. Wage cuts are constantly being made, shut down in June, the total force of 3,000 workers were thrown out of | work. A promise was made to reopen the factory in July but so far there | are no such signs, The city welfare commission says hat no more relief will be distri buted. Boss politicians are making | promise—but that’s all. The Demo- | crats are now active, organizing clubs and making special promises to | Negroes. Malakai, local Negro, exposed all | these conditions at the Ford meeting. “I speak,” said Malakai,” and stand for the Communist Party because its stands 100 per cent for equal rights, no discrimination, no segregation— and fights for them!” He called on workers to rally to unemployed dem- onstrations, to demand that the city stop shutting off water and give ade- | quate relief. A John Reed dramatic troups from Philadelphia put on two “Vote Red” skits which pleased the workers tre- mendously, Many workers left their names for the Vote-Communist Club and other election activities. ar ie Hit Ban on Foster-Ford Meet In Lawrence BOSTON, Mass., July 22. — On hearing thet a Ford-Foster meeting Scheduled .to take place in Law- rencé, Mass.,. will not be allowed by ‘the authorities, T. N. Carlson, Sec- retary of the New England District of the ILD, forwarded a demand to | City Marshall Vose of Lawrence that the orders be rescinded and the meeting of the Ford-Foster campiagn be allowed without any further in- terference. of this element the better it will be for ‘the whole country.” How they fear this “pressure to bear” upon the President! Two weeks ago the press did not talk this way. Then it was “They have a right—” angle. But with the growing militancy of the men—and the ranks are not being depleted— bear that in mind, regardless of the hullybaloo of the capitalist press, their tone is changing fast. And it is up to the workers throughout the country to demonstrate their soli- What Is Your Unit Doing for the Daily Worker Circulation Drive? e When the Nabisco factory | reduction,” the conference pre- part of the - ed to end its labors with another to break In the fight ageinst thi Papen government and fascism, ts an | Siam pledge to the same effect. sais of Conninuntse party | A resolution, backed by the United 4 ae ¢ | States, France, England and_ Ital with the Social-Democratic proclaimed “the ‘concrete results” of nounces the Imperialist sults” the down a program for negotiations ‘aimed at ng up the frantic war of the imperialists and toiling masses of the crete results” were. resolution lays alist. war mongers. pr)- h the danger overhanging a |the conference, without stating what remselves as “deeply” ime |_ “Why does the C. P. fight the pol- | —____ —— od with the danger hanging over y of the so-called “lesser evil”? Is | civi on from the potential wi sian example. applicable to UMW.A MINERS [bombardment from the air.” 7 zi olf RS VY elke LIZ }made no against the ae Thaelmann Replies. |bombardment now being condticted 1 thiaiues sitieabiiin "edn wade jot JOIN THE NAL by the Japanese against Chinese the Communist Farty gave clear an- eitZe%/e civilian populations. They offered swer, free from evasion. The ques- | | indefinite “recommendations” for a tions developed a dij m of pri Te @ setae vie atonal io appens DaMes Ford to Speak for fighting unity of, the German to Strikers working | “Never will reaction be swept aside| BALLAIRE, Ohio, July 22—Forty exept through batile. But who dis- members of the U. M. W, A. local of the Crabapple mine of the Clarkson Coal Co. in the Fairpoint section ; signed up with the National Miners | Union at a mass meeting addressed | teday by the N. M. U. Organizer decisive battle. We Communists’ de- | Stuart. | mand only one ‘condition’ in the |. Phe Communist Party is organizing question of unity: the’ ebidition “of | fF @ mass election meeting in the \pattle. Ask your leaders, Social-|Fairpoint section August 11 where | | Democratic comrades. why they keep| James W. Ford, Communist candi- | |four million organized workers stind- | ate for Vive-President, will address jing with guns at their fect, while | the miners. | fascisim is marching. They want| Sentiment is rapidly developing all | | nothing else and they can do nothing| through this section for affiliation of | else, for they want to be the physi-|‘he whole membership with the Na- | cians of capitalism. A victorious rev- | oral Miners Union. olution is impossible in an alliance| The miners at the meeting today. |with the policy and the leadership |@eCided unanimously to call another of the Social-Democratic Perty. They | "ieeting Monday for the election of are a hindrance to: the revolution,|® United front strike committee and a delegation to proceed to the com- missoners of Belmont County to Today the whole working cla: is|demand that the county supply im- confronted with the question of uni-| mediate relief in place of the soup |ted fight to smash fascisim. It is kitchens cut off by the state com- | therefore not decisive whether the | missioners last week. | Workers who are fighting with us in|}, The mass meeting also discussed |the anti-fascist campaign carry the| the possibility of the united front Party beck of the Social-Democratic | delegation taking the initative in o! | Party or of the Reichsbanner in | ganizing a country-wide hunger their pockets. What is decisive is|march to enforce the demands in their readiness, and their will to|case the county commissioners re- class? the Soci y ers a5 well, these | who go to Hindenburg, 'those who hold the proletariat back from the Only the} Demo- | | Burning Questi struggle unitedly.. What is decisive] is the decd! When. the millions of | |Social-Democratic and organized | |workers fight with us unitedly, then Papen will tomorrow become Pappen | (@ play on words—Pappen in German |means pasteboard—Ed. Note.) Thaelmann closed his replies. to the questions put to him with the ap- peal to the Social-Democratic work- ers present to carry into the ranks of the Social-Democratic Party the conviction that through united strug- gle, the: workers can block the path of the bourgeoisie toward a. fascist dictatorship. This question. depends | entirely on the strength of the fight- jing proletariat. As soon as the Ger- man working class recognizes as its ;own the path which has been taken by the Russian workers and peasants, and strikes out on this path, the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie will be destroyed.” . . Adopt Resolution. Before the conclusion of the con- ference the delegates drafted and adopted a resume of the quéstions| and discussion, saying that Thael- |mann’s replies to their questions “are |the basis for the development of a fighting unitied front of the workers of all tendencies and for the carrying through of the anti-fascist campaign.” “The Communist” (July), Earl Browder writes on the problems of placing the party on a war footing. arity with the vets now on the fir- ing line in Washington. Demonstrations of ‘solidarity must be organized: the jobless and the part time workers—as well as the rest of the veterans should flood Hoover and the Washington authorities with pro- tests and demands. Hands off the |bonus marchers must be dinn¢ed in Hoover's ears. And the turn of the capitol’s authorities toward the treat- ment of the veterans with force must be protested in flaming terms from al parts of the land, Tuse relief. Following the Rail and River. Coal Company's announcement that it intended to seal its three mains fromerly. employing 1,600 miners in | the Bellaire section, miners of No. 3, | at Stewarts, No. 4 at Big Run, No. 6 | at McClainsville sent a petition to | the superintenden asking reemploy- | ment advancing no demands, The | basic ‘cause of this back to work movement was the cutting off the | children’s reiief and the refusal of | the U! M. W. A. to carry on a relief campaign. The mines here have been shut down since April 1. The company, which belongs to the Canadian Paci- | fic Railroad, has transferred its | orders to the West Virginia fields | where the 22 1-2 cent per ton scale prevails. The U. M. W. A. policy in the Rail River situation,. which was evident from officials proposals early in the lockout.,is to negotiate with the com- pany on the basis of the scale in the competitive fields, the 22 1-2 cent | basis. | RUSSIAN ART SHOP. PEASANTS’ HANDICRAFTS 100 East 1th St. N. Y. C. Imports from U.S.S.R, (Russia) Tea, Candy, Cigarettes, Smocks, Toys, Shawis, Novelties, Woodcarving, Lacquered Work Phone ALgonquin 4-0094 Avanta Farm ULSTER PARK, NEW YORK WORKERS RECREATION PLACE RATES: $12.00 and $10.00 Located one-half mile from station Fresh milk, improved bathing, 700 spring chickens and all kinds of vegetables Btowing for guests, DIRECTIONS:—West Shore train. wesk-sads $0.76 round ictp. BY a Albany 9W Route. By bu: Greyhound Bus Terminal. By to Kingston to Ulster Park 220 |future convention to discuss “aboli- tion” of aerial bombardment. , Disarm Rivals The delegates professed themsélves as “profoundly convinced” of the, ne- cessity of lightening the burden of armaments, but they resolutely! de clined to engage in any reduction of arms. All of their “arm cuts” pro- posals were aimed at disarming their \rivals but not themselves. They vaguely “committed” themselves to ‘limit land and naval armaments, but Jeft the details for some future meet- ing. This is merely another effort. to deceive the masses. Litvinoff Exposes Swindle ference is ‘clearly seen in the hypo- The shameless swindle of the ¢on- critical statement of Hugh Gibson, | of the American delegation, that the | resolution “contains the maximum agreement which can now. be achieved.” That this “agreement” is in effect no reement, Gibson ad- further statement ‘that “contains nothing™:to preclude us from pressing ‘at later stages for more definite, more far- reaching measure! ndle was sharply denouneed m Litvinoff, head of the So- who, however, was the chairman, mits in ti the resolut t and Dutch g@i- S “joined Litvinoff in attacking solution. |14 Thrilling Days 14 in the SOVIET UNION See the November 7: CELEBRATIONS at the Fifteenth hase of the Russian Revolution — $215.00 up Exclusive World Tourists, Ine. Ittn- vrary includes , Leningrad-Moséow. ivanovo Vosnesensk and a baie farm Sailing Oct. 20th on ine S.S. Bremen—Berengaria./ Stuttgart Tour also includes modern ¢hird class trans-Atlantic passage in com- fortable cabins with running water, three my per day en route and in the U. » Sleepers, sightseeing, and Soviet id for 20 daysr Shorter tours as low as $185.00 World Tourists, Ine 175 Fifth Avenue -.. New York City ‘ Phone AL 4-0656-7-8 ¥ SOVIET TOURS CAN ALSO BE PUR- CHASED AT THE FOLLOWING ~ BRANCHES 0 N. Clatk st, 7 Clifford = 808 Engineers ___775. Washingt ra Chestnut St., Rm. .C.409 Colm tan tage

Other pages from this issue: