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~~. sok Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER GUTTER S OF NEW YORK Demand Release of of Benjamin from Gallup, N. M, Jail ‘Organizer of Jobless Arrested After Escape from Stockade NEW YORK- ing the rel Benjamin S organiza- ial Committee of toge' been To the Working Class Women of America: Which Way? Communist Party Election Meets Today and Sunday ieee RDA 7:00—“Free Le for Assembly, will speak; march fr engweed and Prospect to Wilkins and Inter- vale Aves. Co: e to Tremcnt and Southern Boulevard. :00—Williane J. Burroughs, cand te for Comptroller, A. E. Z. Church, Ralph and Chauncey S » fo ly;. M. O'~in, for Assembiy, Open-Air D1 ard after torchlight parade ind Washington Ave., Bronx. rt Jvdere: Benjamin L for Alder- uger Aves. after torch light 2a, Bronx. resident, 3 Open-Air Section $:6@—Ben Geld, candidate for Al Meetings in Borough of Brocki SUNDAY. 2:00—Ben Gold, candidate for Aldermanic President, opens up Soccer sue of Sports’ Union, Jefferson Oval, Jefferson Park, :30—-Mex Bed , for Communist Party, 15th St. c Irving Plaza Hall, and Irving Piace, Aus) Internaticnal Workers’ Order, Youth aS (Brooklyn) A — Ne iPone Br. Speakers of othe for. Brownsville Workers! 3:00—Ben Gold, Greek Sx zkers’ Club, 269 W. 23th St. 8:00—Ben Gold, Bronx Workers’ Clnb, 1610 Boston Road, Bronx. Hoffman’s 8:00—Robert Minor, antttinn for Mayor, Prespect Mansion, 722 Pros- peet Ave. RESTAURANT 10: net Minor, alee Co-operative, 2800 Bronx Park East, Audi- torium. & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner sansa Aves. Minor and Other City | | Candidates, to Speak at Carnegie Hall, Oct. 31 NEW YORK.—Robert Minor, Com- | munist candidate for Mayor, will | speak at a mass meeting in Carnegic | FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS City Events Needle Trades Fractions Meet An emergency meeting‘ of all fractions in the needle trades will SOKAL CAFETERIA |. 1689 PITKIN AVENUE 2.” WORKERS—EAT AT THE Hall, 57th Street ahd 7th Avenue, on| . Oct. 30th, at 7 Tuesday evening, Oct. 31, at which! arp. All comrades must be at the Workers’ Center, 50 | the Mayoralty candidates of the other | parties will also speak. The meeting is arranged by the Citizen’s Budget Commission. The speeches, which will be broad- Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Brooklyn, N. Y¥. th St. Secretariat, Dist. Nat Hopkinson Ave, Home Made Meals at BRIGHTON BEACH WORKERS CENTER | cast, are limited to fifteen minu' Meeting 3200 Coney Island Avenue | for each candidate. United Beaut' C € icians and Hairdyess- ‘ar Brighton Beach Ave.) Admission is free and doors will be| ers Union hold a mass Soa Reasonal operators in New 230 p.m. at | | open at 8 p.m. en Light Parade ‘in Bronx to Demand ; Tompkins Square 6-058 |l| Leon Blum’s Release Restaurant DOWNTOWN ticians code. | Meeting Vv: rd, a cultural Negro id a meeting tomorrow , at 650 Lenox Ave., NEW YO@K.—A torchlight parade and demonstration for the release of Leon Blum, framed leader of the Laundry Workers Industrial U , will take place today at 6:90 at Wilkins and le | Bronx. _ The | by the International Labor Defen: |is supported by many labor and fr: | ternal organizations. | ‘The delegation elected to go to atmosphere Il radicals meet it. New York 32 EL 12th JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Burroughs at Election Rally Williana Burroughs, Communist | election rally and dance held by} m Young Communist League Bet. 12 & 13 | Albany to present a demand for the| tonight, 132 Myrtle Ave. Brooklyn, | Welcome to Our Comrades | unconditienal release of Blum, will| James Lerner, candidate for assem- | [be given a send-off. blyman, will also speak, NOTICE! TICE! | > RUSSIAN ART SHOP Inc. PEASANT HANDICRAFTS MOVED TO 9 West 42nd Street Large Selection of Gifts, Toys and Novelties from the Soviet Union, 10% Discount to. Readers ¢ of th lection Dance Page ph Brandt, Communist candi- te for alderman, will speak at an tection danee held by the Young Communist League tonight, at Stuy- no, 9th Street and Second mission 25c, BRANCH AT 107 E. 14th Street | | vesant Avenue, ily Worker | Bedacht at Symposium | Max Bedecht, member of the Cen- | tral Committee of the Communist Party, will represent the Communist Party at an election symposium in | which all five major political parties will present their views on “Whom Should Young People Vote For,” to- morrow, 2.30 p. m. at Irving Plaza, | 15th St. and Irving Place. ceptionally. High Quality Suits and Overcoats at Exceptionally Low Prices MAX TRAIGER One Price Clothing Store CORRECT STYLES—FINE FABRICS | Orenara-968 168 STANTON STREET&®: n'en $ “Mention the Daily Worker and Get 10% Special Reduction! Anti-Nazi Demonstration in Yorkville An anti-Nazi demonstration will be held tonight, 8 p. m. at Labor Temple, | 247 E, 84th St. | |Raincoat Workers STOUGHTON, Mass., Oct. 27.— | Workers of the "Stoughton Garment |Co., a raincoat factory here, de- clared a strike when the company refused to grant their demands for *WORKINGMEN OF ALL COUNTRIES! You Need Natural, Undoped and Unproceszed Health Foods to Give You Health and Strength in Your Struggle for Power. .. Come to Our Store or Send for Our Health Guide Free.— 10% DISCOUNT TO ALL WHO BRING OR SEND THIS AD ALONG! HEALTH FOODS DiSTRIBUTORS 29 EAST 34th STREET (Near Lexington Avenue) New York City. — Phone: LExington 2-6926 and hi, has pe ed wages. The company in working overtime land paying less than even the blanket code of the N.R.A. calls for. The workers organized a local | of the Needle Trades Workers’ In- |dustrial Union and are working to sweatshops on this section. Only your support can help the Daily Worker continue, You like the enlarged and improved “Daily.” Support # with your dollars, Rush them today, "Ail Comrades Meet’ at the HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proleiarion Eriees 0 wu. 194 ST. WOBKKMG CRN TER Comm., C.P., U.S.A. | Beauticians and Hairdressers’ | ixth Ave. Prom-| speakers will discuss the beau- | of Domestic Workers | problems of the domes- | | didate for Comptroller, will speak | Strike for More Pay a 40-hour week, union recognition | spread the strike to other raincoat | ‘Whalen, Easley | —- | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Lynching Is Halted By State’s Attorney Lynchers Named by Daily Worker Not Arrested BALTIMORE, Oct. 27.—Attorney | General William Prejion Lane stated | yesterday that the “inquiry” into the) lynching of George Armwood would | be shifted early next week to Prin-| cess Anne, scene of the crime. Lane’s | statement was made soon after his return from Richmorid, Va., where he had gone to oppose the granting by the U. 8. Cirewit Court of a “Certificate of probable, cause” to prevent the legal lynching of Euel Lee, who was hanged here early yes- | | terday morning, after a heroic two- year battle by the International La- | bor Defense to save Kim. | The Attorney-General made no ef- fort to’ investigate the high State and couinty officials named by Capt. Spencer in his affidavit as members of the mob which lynched Armwood. | Meanwhile, State's Attorney Robins of Somerset County, ’one of the offi- cials named in: Spencer's affidavit, | has discontinued even his pretense of | state yee his fellow lynchers and | | | } | | stated yesterday he was “resting on his oars.” While refusing to see a workers’ delegation, headed by William L. | Patterson, Gov. Albert C. Ritchie yesterday received an inter-racial | group of Negro reformists and white imperialists headed by Judge Joseph | Ulman, of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore. The delegation expressed itself as “profoundly shocked” over | the Armwood lynching, but made no | protest against the legal lynching of Euel Lee, set by Gov. Ritchie for that | night, | Even on the Armwood case, the delegation made no protest on the failure of the authorities to arrest | the mob leaders and guilty officials, | although these were named by the Daily Worker in its exposure last Wednesday. in Plot Against tue Soviet Union everybody else connected with the operation of the coal code, will have in the coal regions. “A copy of my letter was sent | also to Mr. Green, who is in sym- pathy with the idea of having such an appeal made to the head of the RFC.” | “Mr, Green” is of course William | Green, president of the A. F. of L,, | and John L. Lewis is the strike-break- ing president of the United Mine | Workers of America, besides being a | part of Roosevelt's slave-ctde appa- | ratus, These biackguards cannot contain their rage as the Daily Worker takes up the fight of the millions of op- pressed, gtound down, starved and) deceived workers of the United Siates | against the main weapon of their class enemy, the NRA. The Daily Worker has consistently, day by day since the first promul- gation of the NRA provisions, ex- posed their vicious anti-working class character, exposed them as a char-/} ter of slavery for the American work- | exposed them asa part of the ‘ar preparations of the Roosevelt government, It is this struggle of the Daily Worker in behalf of the oppressed workers of America that these slimy people are now attempting to use as a weapon of attack against the So- viet Union, while carrying on their consistent campaign for the suppres- sion of the Datly Worker, Tt is becaus® the leadership of the Daily Worker and the Communist | Party is to be found wherever a completely militant, correct struggle is waged against the war-p-eparing, slave-making strike-breakir NRA; that they attempt to strike ooth at | the Soviet Union and the NRA. It is because it is the Daily Worker which has shown the blue buzzard as the standard under which the government murders workers on the picket lines, that they are attempting to use the government’s hatred of the Daily Worker as a weapon against the Soviet Union, It is because the Daily Worker is the only newspaper in English in the United States which fights the bat- tles of the workers, that they try to make this struggle a reason for an attack on the workers’ fatherland, where the workers have power, and there can be no NRA codes of slavery. \Call for Anti-Nazy Rally on Sunday (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) will march up 96th Ct. and Third Aye., then over to Second Ave., and then back to the Labor Temple, There, a mass meeting will be held in front of the temple with English and German speakers. Simultaneously ‘on Saturday there will be an anti-Nazi demonstration at 131st St, and Lenox Ave. at 8 p. m., to protest aaginst the Nazi official, Griebl, at the Harlem Hos- pital. Another such demonstration will be held at. 126th Bt. and Lenox Ave. Both these opeti alt meetings will be under the auspices of the International Labor Defense and the | League of Struggle for Negro Rights. On Sunday, there will be’ a mass meeting at 3 p.m; in Finnish Hall, | 15 West 126th St., to protest against | the Nazi Griebl. The meeting will | | also protest against the mob lynching of the Negro worker Armwood at | Princess Anne and the legal lynching of Euel Lee by the Maryland au- thorities. Has your unit, club, union, 1.W.0. Branch, your organization held a collection for the Daily Worker? Help save ow “Daily.” HARLEM MEETING TONIGHT NEW YORK.—A protest meet- ing a®ainst the legal murder of Enel Lee by the State of Mary- land will be held tonight at the corner of 131st St. and Lenox Ave. The meeting is jointly called by the Harlem James Mat- thews Branch of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the Harlem Section of the Inter- national Labor Defense. Anti-Fascists March ‘ek veal « On Italian Consulate NEW YORK.— While Mussolini’s followers are celebrating today the eleventh anniversary of the Fascist march on Rome, Anti-Fascists will march on the Itelian Consulate here to demand through Consul General Antonio Grossardi the liberation of all potitical prisoners in Italy. ‘Thousands of prisoners of all poli- tical beliefs are being held in Ital- ian prisons and on detention islands. ‘They include the New York Times’ former literary correspondent Rendi, intellectuals like Ernesto Rossi, Bruno Baur, Feltcita Ferrero, as well as the heroic Antonio Gramci, leader of the Italian Communist Party and | Honorary Chairman of the Commu- nist International, who has been im- prisoned since 1926. ‘There will be speakers representing | the Italian United Front Committee, Unita ‘Operaia, Stampa Libera, Maz-| zinian Branch of the Italian Repub- lican Party, C.P.L.A., General” De- fense Committee, the I.W.W., and other organizations determined to fight fascism. ‘The demonstrators will concentrate 10 AM. at 72nd St. and First Ave., and march to the Italian Consulate at 73nd St. and Lexington Ave., 11 AM. City-Wide Canvass To Spread Election Issue of the ‘Daily’ Distribution of 50,000 Copies Planned in Workers’ Sections NEW YORK.—Fifty thousand copies of today’s New York City Elec- tion Edition of the Daily Worker will be distributed Sunday in house-to- house canvassing of the workers’ neighborhoods. Here is the list of stations at which you can get organizational assistance, literature, and the “Daily.” These} headquarters are to be utilized thru- out the campaign. Pick your station out of the list «nd take active part in the campaign to bring the pro-)| gram of the Communist Party betore | the masses! . eres 96 Avenue 165 Bast Broadway, Olu. 31 Secoud Avenue, Zukumft Workers Club. YORKVILLE 350 Bast Bist Street, LOWER HARLEM at W. 118th Bt. Esthonisn Hell, WASHINGTON HEICHTS SOL W. 16lst St.. Workers Center. East Side Workers 61 Graham Avene. 48 Ten Eyck Stree! Russian Mutual Scclety, Clay Street. 285 Rodney Street, Bridge Pinca Workers Club. 341 Melrose St., Italian Workers 226 Throop Ave., I.W.0. Schule. 216 57th Street. 136 15th Street. 189 Sumner Avenue. 133 Myrtle Avenue. 201 Wykoft Street. 240 Columbia Street. 1109 43th Street. 1373 43rd Street. 1006 70th Street. 27th Street and Mermaid Ave., Coney Is- land Workers Citb, Club. 87 Boy 25th St., Beach Workers Club. 40th St., between 7th ond 8th Ave. Fin- nish Hall. MIDTOWN 419 West S3rd_Strect. 56 West 28th Strest. 302 Kast 29th St., East Side Unemployed Council. EAST HARLEM 1838 Madison Ave., Hariem Progressive Youth Club. UPPER. HARLEM 109 West 133rd St.. Themployed Council. B RO} Ist Assembly—615 F/ 140th St. Qnd Assembly—Elsmore Hail, 170 St. and Walton Ave. ard “Astombly—ODe Foredt Ave. &h Assembly—Sholam Alechem Cooper Mouse, Giles Place. LONG ISLAND CITY 42-08 Twenty-S-vonth CORONA 100-02 No. Boulevard Against Tammany lynch terror on Negroes—Vote Communist! | 28, 1933 Mistrial Declared | for Seven Gangsters ‘inNeedle Union Raid) ‘Trial to Continue With] ~ New Jury mistrial was de- | clared yesterday in the case of the) | Seven gangsters who are being tried | for their blcody attack on the Needle | Trades Workers Industrial Union last | j April, which resulted in the murder of a fur worker and a gangster. The decision ordering a new trial was made by Jvdge Collins, at the General Sessions Court, after the ew S PORT dward Lot Running for a Candidate as HEN Fiorello LaGuardia, the flamboy: ae fusionist takes his stepdaughter Jean to kindergarten, the occasion is recorded © in detail by every paper in town. When John a bs myself | ) was assistant manager of my class ball team”) O’Brien is ap- — Chief Bury Hatchet in the Back during a vanishing Acngricc:: ceremony he rates front page in the rotogravures, When the Recovery Party candidate, Joseph V. (‘recover eighth juror identified two of the gangsters as having participated in a hold-up. The jury was dismissed and a new jury is now being selected. Although these gangsters, in the pay of the Associated Fur Menufac- turers were‘responsible for the death of two and the serious injury of sev- eral workers, they are being tried on the charge of first and second degree assault “with knives, pipes and guns.” The trial, which is expected to last | several weeks, has already heard the | testimony of several of the victims. of their gangster bullets. These will | he beard again as the new trial pro- | ceeds. From the first, however, it has been clear that every protection is being given the gangstersand those | who motivated the attack, by the As- sistant District Attorney, Mandelson. The gangster raid on the union headquarters following on the murder of Morris Langer, fur organizer, was instigated by the fur bosses to ter- rorize the fur workers from joining the Industrial Union and to murder the union leaders. Porto Rican “Daily” Seller Brutally Beaten) on Streets of Harlem NEW YORK.—John Trujilo, a Porto Rican. worker, was savagely attacked Thursday night by white hoodlums while selling the Daily Worker at 100th Street and Broadway. Beaten unconscious with rubber hose, Tru- jillo woke up to find himself on the pavement at Lenox Ave and 12Ist St. He had evidently been taken by automobile while unconscious from the beating and thrown into the Har- jem Negro section as a warning to keep out of the white section. The Harlem James Matthews Branch of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights yesterday denounced the attack as a direct result of the pelice-inspired lynch incitement in the capitalist press. Herman Mc- Kawain, chairman of the branch, de- clared the hoodlums had: evidently taken their cue from the brutal orders of Police Commissioner Bolan to bring in a Negro “dead or alive.” Young Fascists, Led by DAR, Terrorize Workers of Jamaica JAMAICA, I. I. — The Jamaica Workers Center, 148-29 Tibut Ave., is rallying the workers of Jamaica to fight against the terror and destruc- |tion of workers’ property being car- ried on by a group of young Fascists | Who call themselves the National So- ciety of Paul Revere. The group is sponsored by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Like the Ku Klux Klan, they ride through the streets of Jamaica on horses, and hoid anti-Red meetings at which they declare their chief aim is to wipe out Communism. At one of these meetings, Mrs. George H. L. rosseau, honorary president general of the D. A. R.,»Was guest spéaker. Landlord Refuses to Take Relief Voucher: Evicts Family of 4 NEW YORK.—Because his land- ‘lord, Mike Leopold, will neither ac- cept nor cash his Home Relief Bureau voucher, Joseph Remmnick, his sick wife, and their two small children, | were evicted from 186 Amboy St., Brooklyn. Remnick, jobless for a year and a half, has peid his rent regularly for | the past six months. He took the relief voucher to ten other landlords jin the Brownsville section, in an effort to find reoms, but no landlord would actept it. In the building in which he previously Hved, there are eight more families receiving relief. The landlord doesn't want relief cli- jents, and this is an effort» to run them out. A backed by a Governme: UNION OF Soviet Socialist Republics GOLD BONDS (DUE 1943) Interest Payable Quarterly Investment in these bonds provides protection for your funds against loss resulting from 7% possible further depre Both principal and interest payments.ate based upon a fixed quantity of gold, Interest is paid quarterly, in American currency, al the Bonds are issued in denominations of 100 roubles. (A gold rouble contains 0.774234 grams of pure gold.) The Siate Bank of the U..S.R, will repurchase these bonds on demand of the year from date of purchase, at par and accrued interest. Circular fully describing hfs issue will be sent upon request. : Soviet American Securities Corp. 90-82 Bread Street, New York. Goli Bond nt which always has paid ciation inthe U.S. dollar. prevailing rate of exchange, holder at any time after one Tel. HAnover 2-6955 the tin boxes”) McKee enters his free suite at the Biltmore, nine leg men assigned to cover him jump to the telephones. ‘The most spectacular campaign ac- tivities of Bob Minor fail to rate a paragraph. Although at least two reporters I’ve talked to claim they filed a full report, never a w the Communist Mayoralty candidate's | at a City Hall hearing reached type outside the Dey; ‘Worker: THER channels of publicity have to be developed and quick. The Election Street Run of the Labor Sports Union is just the thing. You have to sce the news recl shots of the Free Tom Mooney run at the last Olympics to realize the effectiveness of this medium. There was the tremendous stadium packed and waiting tensely for the next event. From the angie of the ca- mera the stands were a gigantic inert horseshoe around the cleared field. The figures of the half dozen runners bobbed up immediately in front of the camera, speeding across the track into the open field. There was a stir, then a com- motion. Before the runners were arrested 70,000 spectators had seen the “Free Tom Mooney” placards. Before the day was over it was the main topic of conversation in 70,- 000 households. To be sure, the runners were sent up for six months each, They only got out a short time ago. But no such poss*ility exists in New York where the Labor Sports Union has evolved a technique for these things. A permit has been secured, a course mapped out. It’s not a long course, only a mjle and a half, you don't have to be a weasel fo last it, You dress in the Finnish Hall at 125th and Lenox Avenue, get your placard and run, I HAD a sort of wild idea about doing sosething of the sort a few years ago, Old John Macy, who was one of the pioneer literary Socialists in this country but turned kind of sour in later years, happened to dis- cover some municipal scandal that burned him up. It was not a par- ticularly flagrant scandal but John had discovered it himself and be- came terribly proud and indignant. He may have been a little tight. He said he had been a Marxist all along and it was grand to feel young again and let’s carry through the idea that had come up earlier in the evening apropos of something else. ‘There was a girl around and the three of us were going to parade up Fifth Avenue wearing shorts, also placards exposing the scandal. No- body who hasn’t known Macy knows how funny this is. The old Gautier- Mayakovsky / epater les bourgeois stuff. We had fun dressing but the first person we bumped into in the hall- way was a policeman. He was. off duty and not especially cqncerned about the adventure. He did assure us that arrest was a certainty. The girl had a job she couldn't risk and Macy wasn’t going to go through with it without her. He said the two of us would look ridiculous. I wasn't indignant enough to insist. I related this story as a form of penance and to say how different this other thing is. I repeat, a permit has been secured, a course map| out, dressing rooms pro- vide Anybody who'd like to see Bob Minor elected and is willing to run a few blocks through Harlem at 3 o'clock next Saturday (Nov. 4) ean indicate his entry at the } dramatic reading of the Nazi letter; s nion, 813 Broadway “Daily” office. No entry your name. Bring strips fee, just and don’t worry about embarrassing moments, you'll be running with a crowd unless you're exceptionally good. ‘There'll be medals, gold, silver and bronze, if you are. Metropolitan Workers’ ‘Soccer | League Schedule for Tomorrow A-1 Italian Americans, vs. Red Sparks, 3 p.m., Jefferson Park, Fichte, 3 p.m., Betsy Ecuadore_vs. Head Park. Italia vs. Olympic, 1 p.m., Hudson Park. A-2 Hinsdale * vs. Spartacus, 1 p.m., Thomas sence Park, xi Dauntless vs. Hero, 11 a.m., 64th St.-Central Park. Olympic ys. Maple, 11 am; Betsy Head Park. Herzl vs. Italian Americans; 1 p.in., Gravesend be -2 Spartacus, 3 pm, Juventus vs. Hudson Park. Fichte vs. I, W. 0., 11 a.m, Asi Park. C-1 Spartacus vs. N. Y. Hungarians, 2 p.m., McCombs Dam Park. Red Sparks vs. Brownsville, 3 p. McCarren Park. C-2 Greek Spartacus vs. Maple, 1 p.m., Betsy Head Park. aE Games Falcon ys. Roma, 3 p.m., Crotona Park. " Prospect vs. Manabi, 1 p.m., Cro- tona Park. abe Red Sparks vs. French, 3 McCombs Dam ae Prospect vs. Bronx Hungarians, 1 a.m., Crotona cae eee Harlem vs. Youth Culture, 3 p.m., 64th St.-Central Park. French vs. Nonpareil, 1 p.m., 64th St.-Central ae we Adriatic vs. South American, am., sineeene Oval, Hinsdale vs. Fichte, i a.m., Thomas Jefferson Park, Helping the Daily Worker Through Ed. Newhouse 12 Contributions received to the credit of Edward Newhouse in his competition with Michael Gold, and Dr, Luttinger to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker drive. Third day: Pelino Del .. Collected by Sulli Molly Green Walter .... Previous Total Total to date .....+- Banquet for Feingold in Boston BOSTON.—As an expression of ap- preciation to I. H, Feingold of the work he has done in the past three and a half years in the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union and the workers movement. as a.whole, the workers of Boston are holding a Fare- well Banquet for him tomorrow 7.30 p. m,, at 42 Wenonah St. The ban- quet will also greet the new manager, H. L. Davidson. Bringing Chicago: 304 N. Michigan Blvd. All Arrangements for Relatives FROM THE SOVIET UNION to the United States and other countries can be . made through “INTOURIST,” Inc., representatives in the U. 8. A. of the Soviet State Travel Bureau FOR INFORMATION APPLY INTOURIST, inc, 545 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Boston: 110 Boylston St, TORGSIN , orders enable your relatives eT, Soviet Russia to purchase all sorts of domestic or imported articles at low prices, re irgsin apply to your orders 01 bank, ingatiles Msted pt or thelr anthorized ‘Am: ra Transport Corp. A Express Co. Gdynia-America Line Hias. Icor, Biro-Bidjan, Corp. Manufacturers Trust Co. Public Nat'l Bank & Trust Co. R.C.A. Commun’cations, Inc, Union Tours, Inc. Hudson Co. National Bank, Bayonne, N. J. ‘The Pennsylvania Co. Phila Union Savings Bank, Pitts. Amalgamated Trust & Sav- ings Bank, Chicago in Soviet Russia there are Torgsin stores in over 1,000 localities. Torgsin orders may be sent to anyone, in any quantity. To Cities That TORGSIN stores, Torgsin mails Have Ne, your order by, percel post, PRICES REDUCED about 50 Per Cent effort to catch up in the Socialist ©