The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 2, 1932, Page 3

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| Hammond Workers Driven ‘To Work for Car Company For Wages Paid in Beans Corporation Required by tae: Law to Pave Street | Uses | Forced Labor esr Order ‘Bach Week Worth Less Than $2 Is Only Weekly Pay (By a Worker Correspondent) ‘HAMMOND, Ind. — Conkey Ave., between Holman and Calumet Ave- nues, was paved 10 years ago with conerete. The center of the street, shoWever, was not paved with con- crete because of the street car tracks there, All these years the street car com- pany did not pave this street al- though it wes required by law to do £9. The comp2ny was recently sol end it is now called Calumet Rail- ways, Inc, Today the street is being paved, but net at the expens2 of the com-} pany. Through forced labor the work- ers ere ‘being made to shoulder the ‘urden themselves, “Cooperation” ‘The strect car company is furn- ishing the materiel, crushed stone end ter. The benevolent mayor and , the city are furnishing the city trucks end other machinery operated by a few city paid employes; and Mrs. Myztie Meara, township trustee, is furn‘shing the laborers. What a racket! These men are working for a $4 or $5 grocery order @ week, a grocery order which any- body can buy for less than $2 cash. ‘The men can’t select their own food. Most of the food they get consists of beans. They can get no vegetables like lettuce or radishes, though these vegetables are in season, and are now Ar? You On This “Daily” List DISTRICT 2 ‘M. Vitous, New York City Hicksville, N. ¥. Harry Pearson selling at very low prices. The men work in the sun in swel- tering heat, with the temperature hovering at 100 degrees or over in the shade. Soon benevolent mayors will be forcing workers into mills, mines and factories to work for beans. And the {small business and professional men will be eating out of the garbage cans because the workers will have noth- ing but beans instead of money. FORD TELLS OF VETS STRUGGLE Speaks at Big Meeting | In Baltimore {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) DATLY WORKER, NEW YOR K, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1932 HOOVER’S MURDER SQUADS GUARD ROADS TO CAPITAL of the vets as a victory, Ford de- clared. “But a few more such ‘vic-| tories’ and the doom of capitalism | will be sealed. Incidentally, where | wer ethe self-styled ‘friends of the | Bonus marchers’ on ‘Bloody Thurs- day’ Wher ewere Patman and Borah | and Thomas? Where was Waters? They were everywhere in Washing- ton. Not one of them raised voices | demanding the withdrawal of the troops. But the Communists were there on ‘Bloody Thursday’ on Fri- day, and.every day, fighting side by Side with the veterans.” Seaman Tells of Hunger W. C. McCuston, secretary of the! Marine Workers Industrial Union in Joseph Russell Baltimore, spoke before Ford. He Oe told of starvation throughout the J. Hagen s state, Jim-crowism and the persecu- a tion of Negroes. He told of the unemployment mass meeting held last Wednesday by the A. F. of L. Gov. Ritchie who has said that no starvation or jim-crowism exists in Maryland, and Mayor Jackson of Baltimore were present, but not a Single Negro. The A. F. of L. de- manded that Jim-crow schools be ‘y9| constructed with union labor. Flizabeth Pearson Lena Barne, Glen Cove, L. I. A. Borodavehuk, Syosset, N. ¥. Spartacus Greek Workers’ Club, N-Y.C. soo DISTRICT 1, BOSTON V. K. Shab, Cambridge, Mass, Anonymous, Cambridge, M: HW, W. L. ana, Cambridge, Marius Martinson, Long Cove, ©, Stenguest, Long Cove, Me. G, Safaren, Long Cove, Maine — Alti Zitko, Rockland, Me. Einar J. Hendrickson, Long Cove, Me. 50 ein Emanasionn, Losig Osve,, Me. _. 150 Orphan Jones Victory ias. Kaura, Wassen, Me. 1 i ‘Arvo Kunsela, Monson, Me. 222 ‘10| MeCuston compared this action with the fight put up by the Inter- national Labor Defense and the Communist Party in forcing a new trial and removal from a death cell are Mutanen, Monson, Mo. melin, Monson, Me. Vasitato, Munson, M ry Partanen, Warren, M st Ellonen, St. George, Me tl Leldloff, Providence, R. 1. ——— 1.00 of Orphan Jones, and the juricial Unit 1—15, Cleveland, 0. Dawson Nnox, Boston, Mass. ‘Thomas Lopez, E. Boston, Charles Durkeralas, E. Bosto Manoel Sandos, E. Boston, M: John Tantapy, E. Boston, mes Athan, E. Boston, Ma: recognition of the right of Negroes to sit on juries. He called on Negro and white workers to unite behing Fosfer and) | Ford. Thousands are unemployed in this city, with suicides mounting. Six} | such deaths were reported the very| day of Ford’s meeting. Workers at the meeting pointed out that relief was cut in half a month ago, and) that the Sparrows Point ste2] mill outside Baltimore reduced its force from 12,000 to 4,000, with six wage cuts and another coming this month. . ‘Tretalas, E. Boston, Mass. J, Kanaky, E. Boston, Mass. ‘Nick Stefano, E. Boston, Ma DISTRICT 2, NEW YORK “American Lithuanian’ Workers Literary Society, New York City $i Jack Prokop, Parksville, N. ¥. F, Bassin, Parksville, N. ¥. E. Asband, Parksville, N. Y. Rose Brnzinsky, Parksville, N.Y. —— Morris Sirots, Brooklyn, N, Y. — A. Pushkin, Brooklyn, N.Y. Hirsch, Brooklyn, N. DISTRICT 3, PHILADELPH Aryusha Davidowitz, wen D.C. + ry s. Minken, ‘Wash., D. ‘00| The city itself fired 1,000 laborers a} DISIRICT 5, PrrrsBuRGH | week ago and reduczd the number of | Antonin Rea, Washington, Pa, ° iy neve, Pstonere ig 4 hed days’ city work to maximum of two Gus. Scarlatta, Fairmont, W. Vi a week. Vida Auville, Fairmont, W, Va. Loute Auvilla, Fairmont, W. Vaccocc 10 DISTRICT 6, CLEVELAND The Plenum of the Ukrainian United Toilers Org. Cleveland, 0. Ogre Foster in Buffalo BUFFALO, Aug. 1. — Filling two halls to capacity, 2,000 workers heard William Z. Foster, Communist can- didate for president, when he snoke here Friday night. At least one-' third of the audience consisted of Negro workers. Hundreds were turned away by the police after the halls became filled. Men, women and children began to arrive at the hall as early as 6 o'clock. At 7.30 the main hall was packed to capacity. DISTRICT 14, NE J. Servidio, Lyndhurst, N. J. Pietio Marieni, Lyndhurst, M. Sicotra, Lyndhurst, A. Aniorelli, Lyndhurs' DISTRICT 15, CONNECTICUT New Britain New Britain Unit of C. P., Scandinavian Club, Russian Educational Club, F. Stakira, A. Passo,-J. Miano, Gust, Karling, J. Varanelli 4.00 Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Cheer Foster When Foster entered the hall, the workers, Negro and white, rose to their feet cheering and singing the International, The workers in the second hall heard Foster through an amplifier, but later demanded that he appear in person, hi electricity, swimming, fishi sonable rates. Communicate with Tom Jessor, April Farm, Coopersburg, Pa. driven the hungry, tattered war veterans out of Washington on Bloody After the armed forces of the Hoover Wall St. Government had | Thursday, troops with machine guns continued to patrol the roads lead- ing into the city, threatening any group of veterans who attempted to return to demand their back-pay with death, Protest Against “Socialist” Inspired Terror in Milwaukee HUNGER FACES VETS IN PENNA. \Johnstown Press in| Slander Campaign (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) city. Once out it is difficult for the yeterans to return. Vets Starving. Actual starvation is sweeping through the camp. Some of the marchers have had nothing to eat since last Thursday. that some of the vets had in many days was coffee and apple sauce, which was served in the camp last night. Some of the veterans are actually starving to death. W.E.S.L. In Relief Drive. The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League set up its headquarters yes- terday at 105 Clinton St. The League issued a call today to workers | throughout the country to send food | to this headquarters at once. The Workers’ International Relief is working with the Central Rank and the marchers. Special calls were sent to Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Philadelphia to rush food at once to | the starving veterans. Urge Workers’ Support. The Workers’ League issued leaflets today to the workers of Johnstown, calling on thém to support the veterans’ fight for the bonus. The workers of Johnstown have a fine record of struggle behind them, great sections having participated in the great steel strike of 1919, which was led by William Z. Foster, now Communist candidate for President of the United States. The local press, especially the Johnstown Tribune, is carrying on a vicious campaign of slander against the vets with the aim of arousing a lynch spirit against them. In commenting editorially on the arrival of the marchers in the city the Tribune said, “Johnstown faces a crisis. We must protect ourselves against the bonus army.” Caills.Vets Criminals. This vile sheet of the steel bosses even went further in its campaign of lying by calling the veterans crim- Have Your Own Picnic With 250 Tickets . 500 Tickets . 750 Tickets . 20 15 PICN TICKETS NOW READY! DISCOUNTS TO ORGANIZATIONS! Cents Each Cents Each +.12% Cents Each 1000 Tickets ............... 10 Cents Each Tickets at Gate Will Be 35 Cents AUGUST 21st, 1932 Peasanlt Bay Park MASS ORGANIZATIONS Us! ic iWTVS NO MON SLHMOLL ‘The only meal | | trict: ® Bebritz, Hungarian Editor, Speaks in Pa.-Ohio Next Week YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio—The In- jternational Labor Defense announces that Louis Bebritz, editor of the |Hungarian workers’ paper; Uj Elore, against whom deportation proceed- ings are now in force, will speak at the following meetings in this dis- Aug. 3, Ukrainian Hall Youngstown; Aug. 4, Farrel, Pa. Aug. 5, in Hungarian, at a banquet and mass meeting in Youngstown, |and Aug. 6, at Warren,Ohio. ‘These meetings will serve as a part of the fight against the Dies Bill and for Mooney and the Scottsboro boys. inals and degenerates. The paper called the citizenry to stand ready | to protect the town against the in- vaders, Following the lead given by the Tribune a “Community Organiza- | tion” organized for the purpose of “protecting property, life” went into action, in calling for war on said it would tolerate measures” in dealing with the vets. women and |It advised the townsmen to keep| File Committee of the W.ES.L. in| guard over their homes “every keur order to get food immediately for|/and every minute of the day.” Drive On Militants. All veterans suspected of being members of the Workers’ Ex-Ser- vicemen’s League or <cympathetic jwith a militant rank and file policy Ex-Servicemen’s| are driven out of the Ideal Park] Pin- | Camp by the state police, chot’s troopers have encircled the vets’ p. The army of 7,000 are practicall® prisoners of war. Mili- tary police, with clubs, are attempt- ing to enforce strict military discip- line in the camp. ONY ieten 1,000 Score Vet Murder, CLEVELAND, Oh i o—Approxi- mately 1,000 workers participated in a united front demonstration, held at the Public Square to protest the bloody attack upon the war veterans in Washington. Amongst the organ- izations participating were the Work- ers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League, Com- munist Party, Young Communist League, Workers’ International Re- lief and the Trade Union Unity League. Pare a Canadian Vets Protest. OTTAWA, Canada—A resolution of protest against the terror in Wash- ington was sent by the Working Class Ex-Servicemen’s League of Canada to the Department of Justice in Washington. The resolution says, in part: “We, the Ex-Servicemen of the Canadian Expeditionary Forces as-) sembled in Ottawa this date, July 30, for a purpose identical with our comrades of the American Expedi- tionary Forces in Washington, D. C., emphatically protest the use of the armed forces of the U. S. govern- ment against our comrades who fought shoulder to shoulder with us in the World War.” * . . unanimously adopted a resolution to fighting together with tne entire! Chicago Vets Blame Hoover. © | condemn the action of the puppets | working-class, | CHICAGO, Ill—Leslie Raymond|of the Wall Street government) To discuss all of these questions) Hurt, Chicago secretary of the Work- ers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League, with headquarters at 2733 Hirsch Boule- vard, issued the following statement: “The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League places the responsibility for the killing of William Hushka, ex- serviceman, at the door of President Hoover, the U. S, Congress and the ruling class. “We call upon all working-class organizations, and especially local unions of the A, F. of L,, to join in support of our struggle, which is a ‘struggle for the right to live.” 4 TO CALL NATL VET CONFERENCE |W. E.S. L. Statement on “Bloody Thursday” (CONTINUED FROM ORGANIZATIONS CALL FOR FIGHT PAGE ONE) railroads and to the rich ger billions of dollars to the bankers, the | | Dare alyzed with fear. | House, jan ominous glare. B Page Thre Events of Bloody Thursday Recounted By an Eye Witness Each Man Put Up A iA HiachtAws As the Bonus Army, Was Evicted One By One from Billets 4 Women and Children Lay C ‘hoking on the ¥ Ground As Troops Hurled Gas “| By NATHANIEL HONIG. mi “The Federal Government will pay the funeral expenses of William J Huska, the bonus marchers who was slain in a clash with metropolle tan police..... expenses not to exceed $100 and a flag to drape his COffin. ...006.” —Washington Star, July 3L oh SR ta duly 28, 195: rushed to the aid of the men who Workers, rt r this date well. | w It will go down in history as one of the red letter days of trug gle in America. As that day world war ve being evicted. The police tried le winging tactics. The red it with a steady showe# y sent five of the po- ce to the hospital. The police werd , over 20,000 { morning, & lite and its vicinty been entrenched Washington Anacostia for over two m Starving, they had come to dem full payment of the Bonus. Murder—In the Shadow of the Capitol. it the entire police ae e, the attempt to drive the veterans out of town was con tinued shortly after noon. nile the 's who occupied the On that day, beneath the very |Southern billet on Pennsylvania and shadow of the U. S. Capitol, and| Third were out eating chow, over & within a stone's throw of the White | scor lice took possession of the police and federal | build The vets rushed the build troops murdered and maimed war vete choked the women and children of the veterans with tear gas, and re- duced the shacks which the bonus marchers had patiently built up, to smouldering ruins. Ss On that day the flames of the vet-|to erans’ shacks and tents illuminated the dome of the Capitol building with Blooded Murder. hed with the swinging Thousands of vets d the sidewalks and urged the uthern vets on in their attempt drive the police out. The vets charged up the narrow, wooden’ stair flew back and forth. Sud- hout warning, a series of netuated the air. A cop, ued to fire into the ‘The events of Thursday, July 28 are | g well worth recounting, that the work- \ers and poor farmers of this countr may keep them in mind. ody even as Hushka lay mo- Fear Grips the Gov't Officials. on the ground. July 28 found the government off-| The police began to shoot reckless- \clals, in the White House, almost ly right th the ranks sof the Their stool- e rushing the build- |pigeons among the veterans reporte: Th, |does not stop even at murder to to them that each day thedanguage avoid payments rightfully due the|of the veterans was growing more veterans and relief to the millions|menacing. The bonus marchers were ie vets were stunned. Fooled by ses of W: 's that the pol- Unemployed Council Seores Hoan | who are unemployed. | | The leaders of the Democratic} MILWAUKEE, Wis., Atg. 1—The| Party, including Roosevelt, their bre-| International Labor Defense and the Sidential candidate, are exposed by employed Council in a (int call|their silence after Bloody Thursday issued yesterday urged the workers | 2S supporters of Hoover's unjustified | of Milwaukee to \join in a united) and murderous actions. 1 protest. against the brutal clubbing! Finally, the complete bankruptcy | and arrest of workers who came to|0f the policies of Waters and his) \the relief buro July 27 to demand | advisors is proven, a policy of isolat- unemployment relief. ing the veterans from the great mass) In this demonstration Hawkins | 0f the toilers who are also suffering | and Teschner, unemployed workers, | from the crisis, a policy of crawling | were arrested after being beaten up| before capitalist politicians rather| by the police, In the patrol wagon tha na reliance on the mass strength ice would |cooperate with the vets, |they had not expected the police to resort to murder, They were blinded no longer taking stock in the “p: sive” lay-me-down-and-die the fascist Waters. They were talk-| with rage. ing of action. They began a man-hunt for the The booing of Waters was growing |policeman who had murdered their louder with every speech the “Hitler | buddy. The killer, however, had been |of America” (as he likes to imagine |spirited away by other policemen. himself) made. The conferences| Glassford, who had been hiding called by the Rank and File Cor in the building, behind his scores mittee of the Bonus Matchers, and)of cops, came out to try to “calm” the nightly open air meetings of the|the vets with his usuaul soft-soap. Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League | But this time “Glad-Hand” Glassford. were drawing greater and greater|was booed down. He didn’t hang numbers of veterans. around, after a brick thrown by a “Revolution is being threa bonus marcher hit him. the police continued to beat them. of the veterans and the unemployed, |Mr. Hoover and Mr. Curtis we: The Trops Are Called Out. This group, | the vetérans, | “no half way | a policy of cowardly retreat in the face of Hoover's attacks. These po- licies have not tended to strengthen the fight for the bonus, but only to nake out of the great movement of the veterans an instrument to pro-| mote the interest of self-seeking politicians. The Bonus movement, learning these lessons, must now advance to a higher stage. The Workers. Ex-| Servicemen’s League calls upon all veterans to carry forward the fight; it pledges: itself to devote all its| strength and energy for a further| rallying of greater masses of ex- servicemen for a new offensive for th ebonus, an offensive which we propose to wage together with the The statement of the Unemployed | Council and the International Labor Defense: “The International Labor Defense and Unemployed Councils hold | Mayor Hoan directly responsible for |the brutality of the police and the beating of those unemployed workers who demanded relief and milk for) their children. “The Unemployed Council demands cash relief of $12 a week and $2 for each dependent, instead of 4 cents |worth of charity a day, The Unem- {ployed Councils and International Labor Defense also protests against |the policy of the Outdoor Relief | snoopers coming into unemployed |workers’ homes, ransacking the | houses, bulldozing and terrorizing the | unemployed masses who are fighting women and children. |for unemployment . insurance and “The Unemployed Council also de- immediate unemployment relief, mands that on all county jobs where; The W. E. S. L. has had a correct unemployed workers are used they be } policy. We again emphasize the paid in full cash at the minimum| main points in our policy, together rate of 60 cents an hour. with our proposals for the continu- “The Unemployed Council and In-/| @nce of the struggle to win the bonus. ternational Labor Defense is calling} 1) Leadership by the rank and file @ meeting in front of the 14th and_| veterans themselves and the rejection Fond du Lac Street relief station at|of the self-impesed leadership of 9 a. m,, Thursday, July 28, to pro. | Waters who now proposes to isolate test against the tactics of the re-|the Bonus Army on a Maryland farm, lief officials as well as the police) | with no further efforts to force the campaign of terror. Washington government to pay the “The Intérnational Labor Defense | bonus, and his efforts to liquidate will also assign its attorneys to de- | the bonus fight into his new “Khaki fend the unemployed workers that/| Shirt’ scheme to make the bonus were arrested, Hawkins and Tesch-|Movement a tail to the kite of old ner.” | Party politicians. 2) Unity of all veterans through- The Jugoslav branch of the ILD.| out the country, which cannot be also sent a resolution of protest /achieved by soparating the bonus against the Washington terror. army on some “fuedal estate,” but SSL NG ‘only by the militant veterans going 500 In Schenectady Protest. | into all parts of the country to or- PORNROBLADS) 2ui te At 4) ganize the mass of the veterans and spirited rally called by the Inter-|to rouse them for a renewed, broader national Labor Defense at Crescent|and more determined fight to win |Park, Thursday night, 500 workers| the bonus and immediate unemploy- and ex-servicemen were addressed by | ment relief. |Sadie Van Vean, Jack Rand and) 3) Unity with the unemployed Melvin Letelle and passed a re: esolu-| workers and with the masses of tion of protest at the outrageous) workers still in the factories and treatment of the ex-servicemen in| who have suffered wage cuts in al Washington. broad mass movélment. Wrest ef 4) Rejection of Waters’ policy of | 2,000 Jobless Show Solidarity | alliances with self seekilng capitalist WILMINGTON, Del—About 2,000] politicians and a relfance only on| unemployed workers of Wilmington the mass strength of the veterans| against the veterans * Washington. |and to rally the broad mass of the | Pi veterans who have so far been in- “Part of Imperialist Drive," FSU | volved in the movement the WESL The New York district of the F.) proposes to the bonus army, to local S. U. adopted a resolution of protest bodies of all veterans’ organizations against the bloodthirsty attack of| throughout the country the calling] Hoover's forces of American impe-|of a National Conference of Vet- Tialism upon the veterans fighting] erans to decide on a course of action against hunger in Washington. We | that will strengthen and broaden regard this brutal attack as part of|the fight for the bonus. The Hoover the general imperialist campaign of | attack on th eveterans must be made terrorization and oppression of work-| the basis for raliying new thousands ers which is the prelude to an open|in the fight against the reactionary attack on the Soviet Union,” said| policies and starvation program ithe resolution, which Bloody Thursday typifies, |by General | Chief of Staff of the U. S. Army. |huge iron gates of the White House | called for the troops. | with immdiate evacuation, |pigeon Waters assured Police Chief |too long a time to wait to drive the | the veterans were evicted one by oni |to evict other bonus marchers from | |from Anacostia drew Douglass MacArth Tht ming quiet followed. cken, President Hoover clanged shut, to keep Mr. Hoover army troops, cavalrymen, jsecure in his hiding place tanks, were rushed in In the week previous, the veterans vers, Camp Meade, Fert had been threatened several t ton, in action against an une but each | armed army, of workingmen, war vet- time the government had been forced ans came to Washington to demand to back down by the bonus marchers’ | the Bonus due them. grim determination. Soon real war scenes ensued, in the The Veterans Thought Differently. | shadow of the Capitol dome. Finally, the day for jeviction of| First, the cavalry would advance, the veterans was set for August 4./clearing the streets of spectators, wha There would be no resistance, stool-|were with the veterans almost to a man, A “line” would be established, and the infantrymen would {follow and “mop up,” hurling forth a barrage of tear gas. Tear gas bombs were hurled |into every shack. Women and chile dren lay chocking on the ground. Then the tanks would lumber up, and then the supply wagons, loaded with munitions and tear bombs. Then the cavalrymen would again advance, Fire, sky-high flames, followed in the path of the troops, as they ap- plied torches to the shacks and tents of the veterans billeted on Pennsyle jvania and Third. Soon the Penn- vania Ave! camp — ironically nough named “Camp Glassford” by General Glassford. The veterans} thought differently about the maiter. | It was decided that August 4 was veterans from Washington. At 10 a. m., police and government Officials suddenly swooped down on 100 Texas veterans, encamped in a building on Pennsylavnia Ave. and 3rd Street, and ordered the vets out. The police and government men were told to go to hell. Meanwhile about 100 of the police were brought to the scene by General Glassford. Ropes were around the Texas billet. streached Forcibly, each man putting up a still fight. Just before this occurrence, Waters | Waters, was reduced to charcoal. had addressed the veterans at Unarmed, save with bricks, the vets meeting and had called on the vet-/only slowly gave way before the erans to allow themselves to be evic- | sword-thrusts of the cavalrymen and ted. He spoke vaguely about having | the, bayonet-lunges of the infantry. enough money to shelter them all at|A veteran from Nashville, Tenn. had Camp Bartlettt, which was a pri- jhis ear slashed off by the sabre of @ yately owned ground. | cavalryman. The .vets .booed .Waters .down.| And all the while the flames con- “What do you think we are, chil-/tinued to soar higher and higher. dren,?” they asked him, Waters| Clothing, bedding, the pitiful few thought. he still was able to exercise | possessions of the vets were consumed. his czar-like tactics. “Will you move; The vets were driven from pillar to or not,?” he demanded. A loud! post all over the city. chorus of “No’s” answered him. Tens of thousands of Washington The news of the eviction jof the | people watched this spectacle of mure Texas men spread like wild-fire|derous brutality by a capitalist gov- among the veterans in all the billets.)ernment against workers who had Five thousand of the veterans at An-/fought for that government. And acostia rushed immediately to the | the citizens of Washington, for the assistance of the men encamped on} | most part, jeered at the police and Pennsylvania and Third. The police | the troops in ae ae and government began their attempt * Editor's Note:—The next install- a partly-wrecked building they had/ ment of this vivid eye witness ace o¢eupied. | count of Washington’s Bloody As they did so, a truck-load of vets| Thursday will appear in tomorrow's up. They eof the Daily Worker. al Those seeking temporary or permanent rooms and apartments in New York and those contemplating auto travel share-expense trips will find the CLASSIFIED COLUMN of the DAILY WORKER of special appeal CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5c. A WORD ; —Let us be mutaually helpfull— ae

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