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Page Four ERIE RAILROAD TRACKMEN CHOKE IN SMOKE-FILLED TUNNEL UNDER PALISADES MOUNTAINS organized, and that is one reason why their conditions and pay is so bad. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1929 body alive. The work was under awful con- ditions. Water would drip from the ceiling of the tunnel into our ears and while we were working. For this work we were paid 36 | cents an hour for nine hours work a night—and that don’t count de- ductions. Needless to say all the track laborers on the Erie on un- sounded. During the time I was there I found the meals abso- lutely devoid of any nourishment, the food being old and overcooked. The coffee was so much dishwater, the milk skimmed, the eggs the | being shipped there from the Erie | Employment office on the Bowery, New York. The railroad’s runner took the gang, including me, over to Edgewater via the 125th St. ferry and then on the George Road bus to their trackmens’ gang, reaching there Sunday afternoon about 3:30 p. m. 4:30 the sades Mountains connecting the | We went in at 11 p. m. We | waterfront on the Hudson with | were to raise the track and tamp | | the ties. . | this garbage and for board. This was certainly overcharging the men—and mind you the chief of | Little Ferry on the main line of police of the Erie Railroad was | the Erie. running this camp for his own per- We were called about 9:45 p. | and smoke, and almost unbearable, sonal profit. m. and checked in about 10 p. m., | almost choking us at times. cheapest that could be found in the The Erie has its own police | but we could not start. work right | vicinity. force, and they treat the men like | then as several trains were to They charged us 35 cents a | dogs. It was night work in the | pass thru leaving smoke and gas meal—$1.05 a day was charged for | tunnel that gees under the Pali- | in the tunnel. (By a Worker Correspondent) I got broke and got in such a condition that I had to take the | BE iG} that came slong. I found | that the Erie Railroad wanted men to slave on their road near Edge- water, N. J. So over to Edgewater I went, The tunnel was still full of gas —THE RED PANTHER. Reap the benefits of the May Day demonstrations by getting into the Communist Party work- | ers who participated. Mississippr At about 2:30 a. m. we got some sandwiches of rotten meat and— | well, gee whiz, it makes me so dis- supper gong | gusted and mad I could skin some- Neoov men Murdered on Plantation of Walker and Hamilton in Delta, | Negro We PEONS WHIPPED §=WiTH THE SHOP PAPERS ‘New Films Produced for __ DYER FAKERS 2 had apc he hap pp comin en wah Release Thruout the USSR | ET BOSS HOLD SENSELESS IF WY cance shop paper department of the Daily Worker BACK MEN'S PAY a twice-a-week-feature, but the shop papers are not coming in as Union Officials Aid they should be. What's the trouble with some of you comrades in charge of getting out shop papers? Buried in Swamp; Police Aid Murder the Bosses Saree (By a Worker Correspondent) oe (By a Worker Correspondent) it : lieeoe . nee CHICAGO, I (By Mail) — | tirely devoted hs SeveloDMERe |e as Ge only zietee, Oe The workers of Hoffman Bros., ieee ss' 5° worse. ‘hell hale in: the of co-operative village industries, | apie oe Soon fn a of |cleaners and dyers, in Mount Ver- and, while it includes many striking the revolution, offers it, with splen- Inon, N. Y., are deeply dissatisfied south than the peonage farms, where r5 ; Fee ear 5 . Negro workers are held as slaves. |pictures and much imaginative de-|did insolence, his Es eit Se with the Dyers and Cleaners Union GOPPER BOSSES FAKERS KEEP | “BLACKLIST ALL WHITE LUGGAGE MILITANT MEN WORKERS DOWN | Anaconda Cuts Wages,| Refuse to Act to Make is n y Is ; s+4 temkin” d “October” portrayed |to horror, from joking to heroism. More Cuts Coming | Conditions Better pene ust ca ea egolinton and | Just as the juggler in “The Paris icivil war, “The General Line” is en-|Madonna” offers the divinity his | |RMISENSTEIN’S new film, “The|gave the following appreciation: al General Line,” which was re-|applauded “Clown George’s Bene- | leased by Sovkino two months ago, | fit” with all my heart, for it at} |has proven quite popular. This pic-|the same time amuses and moves | ture is quite a new departure forjand absorbs. The simple drama HER. no reason why every shop paper. should not be sent in to this department. Wake up, you comrades getting out the packing house shop papers, the auto plant shop papers, steel shop papers, etc. Don’t you want to see the shop paper department a real, established department? We'll bet you do, but you've got to snap into it and send the shop papers in. | By a Worker Correspondent BUTTE, Mont., (By Mail).—Butte| When Morris White, the wealthy is a copper mining town; they claim /leather goods manufacturer, took that this is the richest hill on earth.!over the factory of the White Lug- In this town there are thousands | gage Co., New York, four years ago By a Worker Correspondent. Extry! Extry!” _ plantation said, “Go,ahead and kill) “away. I wish something can be done The worst peonage farm I ever saw is the Hamilton and Walker planta- tion in Delta, Mississippi. Trap Jobless Negroes. I am a Negro worker and was stuck near here without a penny to my name after losing my job in Meridian. They trap Negro work- ers into going on the plantation by sending out a Negro foreman, Adams, to fool Negro workers into taking work on the farm. Seeing a| HE Auto Workers News made a corking scoop in Oakland, Cali- of men out of employment, the work-|he called the workers together and | the Oakland auto workers, and thousands of auto workers read it. fornia, in connection with the strike which started in the Fisher Body plant on June 5. Altho this paper is regularly issued in Detroit, the center of the auto industry, the special extra was issued solely for The fighting demands of the Fisher Body strikers were spread broadcast among all the auto workers in the Bay Cities, and the effect upon the workers, who learned of the fighting Auto Workers Union was great. This is one of the reasons that the strikers united in a powerful Auto Workers Union, and worked in connection with the militant local 17 of that union. That’s the stuff that gives the auto bosses nightmares. A few of the strikers demands are: ers who are working are working under the most deplorable conditions, | it is mostly all contract work. Cut Copper Wages. | Previous to June ist the miners | were receiving $5.75 per shift, about nine hours. On June ist the Ana- conda Copper Mining Company an- nounced a cut of 25 per cent, cut- | ting the wages from $5.75 to $5.50. | | Gradually the wages will be re- delivered a speech in which he prom- | ised the workers steady employment! and a “fair living.” | When the promises were not kept and the workers from the shop com- plained to the-union officials about the conditions there the answer was that the shop is in an “experimental” stage and the firm should “be given a chance to establish itself firmly.” | The Rush and Layoff Method. | Now the workers of the White} |broad general appeal of the two | tail, is scarcely likely to make the other films, “The New Babylon,” another Soy- kino release, is a spectacular film of the Franco-Prussian war and} Commune epoch. The producers are | Kozintsev and Trauberg. | E. Ivanoy-Barkov, having finished | “The Blast Furnace,” a film version of Lyashko’s novel, has begun upon ity and mimic powers. deserves to become popular.” Kurdum’s film, “Djalma,” has been shown to a thousand workers at the Kiev Central Metal Work- ers’ Club. This is the first_ full- length film released by the Kiev |Vufku works and shows the struggle between the old and new life in a Soviet village. A model picture house for Vufku |affiliated with the A. F, of L., for these officials are collaborating with |the company to conspire against the |workers’ interests. Ogly two weeks ago in the union |meeting the members who work for |Hoffman Bros. factory bitterly com- |plained about not getting their wages in time. It was said by the workers that the original pay day was every Saturday and that after la whi it was changed to Tuesday, land later again to Wednesday. But Negro who tells them of the “good | 1. Eight hour day—40 hour week. duced to the minimum, Under the “ ela new picture—‘Judah.” x c 2 ‘4 conditions and wages” on the farm, 2. Abolition of piece work, $6 a day minimum. contract system the miners make|L¥gsage Co. see that the “rush” e 2 educational films has been erected |lately they wee we eae their naturally the Negro workers are 3. Time and a half for over time. Sundays and holidays double [around seven dollars per day, work-|2%4 layoff method of operation is) gry. Living Corpse” (a film ver- |’ Odessa, with museum, library |Wages even on mesdaye fooled and trapped into accepting the | time. ing conditions are very hard, a lot |Bctually adopted for the shop. The) . f Tolstoi’s cove has been |924 recreation rooms for games and| The business agent told the work- job, They little know what is in 4. Recognition of the Shop Committee and the Union. of miners quit because they ‘cannot |WoTers are called in to work and) fn ©) Cut Steve ier with the |°ther cultural diversions for those] rs in the meeting that if the wages store for them. That is how I was 5. All strikers replaced on job without discrimination. make any money. To make seven|the “rush” game begins. The shop “Prometheus” film, ana is now be-| Visiting the picture house, jare not paid on time the shop chair- trapped. 6. Equal pay for women and young workers doing regular work. dollars or more one has to slave very bs filled bs Rie irr boxes and ing shown simultaneously all over X |man should report to him. Last 7 hard. ags, ani ie layoff is on. | Georgian Goskinprom, in its re- | Week Wednesday came around but The wages promised are $20 2% month. It did not take me long to realize that I had not gotten a job, but had allowed myself to be swa!- lowed up in a peonage farm. At the end of a month, when 1 inquired for my wages, I was given a severe beating from several of| the foremen. We were slaving har¢ on this farm, being driven to work with. whips. The hours were 14 and more hours a day. No Pay Given Slaves. I found out then that there was no pay given to the workers on the Hamilton plantation. Then I tried to escape, running away to a swamp nearby. They caught me,and return. ed=me to the farm. Here I w beaten unconscious by Hamilton and some foremen. There was hardly a spot on my body that wasn’t a mass} of bruises. I was unable to work for a month and a half. The peons on this farm are treated with unbelievable cruelty. | They are not given a single penny as pay. Their sleeping quarters are in a barn, with only a partition to} separate the men drom the women. One Day Off a Year. The faod consists of peas, corn-| bread, and fat meat. They work} seven days a week, getting thru the whole year only one day off—Christ- mas. On the fourth of July a pig is killed and fed to us, but we work- | ed just the same. Negro Woman Murdered. The ploughing starts the day after Christmas, and the peons work in the cotton and cornfields until the winter sets in. In the winter they spend their time cutting wood. The foreman, John Adams, mur- dered a peon, a woman, on May 9, 1928. She had just finished break- | fast and coming out of the cabin saw Adams beating her 12 year son.) She pleaded with him not tq beat) him so badly and Adams seized an| axe and said he would knock her brains out if she didn’t keep quiet. “Kill Her,” Says Owner. Walker, one of the owners of the the ———— she’s too old to be any more good around here.” Adams hit the woman on the head with the axe, and killed her instant- ly. To my knowledge as many as 255 women have been beaten to death on this plantation. These were buried in the swamp and no report made to the authorities, but the own- ers, Hamilton and Walker, stand in to ave the other slaves on the Ham- ilton and Walker plantation in Delta. —EX-SLAVE. NCEL JERSEY RECOUNT. EY CITY, N. J., June 19— 8 decided today to can- the recount .of the vote cast here 7. Tools to be furnished by the company, and special working clothes required for special jobs. 8. Special safety devices, respirators, goggles, gloves and masks to be furnished by the company. tla haat 5 Bringing Light to the Workers! GLARING locomotive headlight, revealing the rail bosses in the pact of packing in the boodle—that’s the masthead of the Head- light, the shop paper issued by the shop nucleus of the Communist Party in the Southern Pacific Railroad shops in San Francisco. Headlight? You bet your old boots. This shop paper has suc- ceeded in bring light to thousands of unorganized shop workers on the Southern Pacific, at the same time making it pretty dark for the rail magnates. And why shouldn't it? Letters from the Southern Pacific slaves, like the following, are not conduciv@to making the bosses happy: EDITOR HEADLIGHT: 1. I work together with thousands of slaves for our daily bread. Some of us expect to get rich some day like Henry Ford, instead of thinking of how to organize ourselves, how to improve our conditions. Look at our bosses—how they watch us all day long—how they prevent us from getting together. How they stick together in order to get more and more profit for the company. We have to: get together and to organize ourselves. Many of us think that by reading the Bible every day we will get into the Paradise. Instead of thinking of the Paradise after we are dead, we must fight for a better life—A WORKER. eae ERE’S another letter calculated to make some fat Southern Pacific boss lose some pounds of his rolls of fat. This is from a man in | the trainyard: “The introduction of the speed-up system is not new in the Train Yard. Although the business is increasing, the number of workers is decreasing. When the worker is laid off, the company does not call the same worker back to work, but those ‘lucky ones’ who remain at work are forced to do the work for those who are on permanent ‘vacation.’ “Tt is not a question how much work is to be done, he has to go home after 5 hours and 20 minutes, and the rest of the work will be sate by the others. You break your neck or not, but the work must be lone. To stop these brutalities, we the workers must join in the ranks of a militant trade union.”—-WORKER CORRESPONDENT. ae eta Wanted—Some Humor! HHERE’S one way in which nearly all the shop papers we come across can be improved—humor. You know, you can often make a laughingstock of the boss or the strawboss, and make him feel like the piece of cheese he really is. And that’s a pretty effective weapon among the workers in the shop. You notice, the bosses make use of this weapon in their “house organs,” the purpose of which is to fool ue workers into becoming willing sheep by wise-cracks of the type like is: “Bill Whoosis of the Bolt and Nut Department was seen walking on Main Street with Rose Jones of the Axle Grease Dept. Now, now, Rose, when’s the wedding coming off?” Stuff like that is not for the shop papers, but it serves the bosses’ purpose, for it brings in the personal element. Mentioning workers names in a shop paper would of course get a worker in trouble, but dirty digs at the bosses, and especially a straw boss, and mentioning his name too, will do a lot of good. * * * © Conditions are Fine—for the Boss! Midland Steel pays us, and to point out the only way we can force bosses to change these conditions: Through organization.” * * . Not a Bakery—But They've Got the Bosses * on the Griddle. OT ROLLS may sound like a bakery—but there are other kinds of hot rolls, as the workers of the Timken Roller Bearing Co. in Canton, Ohio, can tell you. the r- ; About the unemployed. When the workers wish to go to work in the mines he first must go to the bosses’ | headquarters, call the Butte Mu- jtual Labor Bureau, and give them | your life history. They ask a lot of | questions, some are quite direct. No Militants Wanted. 1.—Do you believe in unionism? 2.—Are you a Communist and do} you believe in their principles? | One must answer these questions ii the negative otherwise you will be unable to go to work in the mines. Also you must give thém references for two years; where you worked, low long you worked, why did you quit, ete. | And to prove that their system is well organized, they look up all of your references. One mistake, out you go, and you cannot go to work in Butte. When a worker answers all |these questions, they give you a |rustling card, then you can rustle}, the mines for work, without this card you cannot get a job. This card does not get you a job; you have to lok for a job a long time perhaps. | Rustling for Work. | | The rustling hours at the mines are almost at the same hour, 12 a.m. A worker can rustle but one mine a day, and there are sixteen mines in all that are working, and t> rustle all of them it will take two weeks or more, for some of these nines are a long way from town. Butte is a strong union town; al- riost all the trades in this town be- long to union, everyone except the} miners. There is no organization there. Furthermore if you try and} talk unionism, there are always stool-pigeons around to tell the boss, and then you are blacklisted from \working in the mines. Eventually the miners will be en- lightened, then there will be a very strong union there, one of the strongest in the country. —. M. Gandy Dancers Have Hard Lot on the Lehigh (By a Worker Correspondent) jlayoff. forced to increase their production |,,, jgage Co. as an organized body have | a right to insist that before the re- ling should take place, at which a Another rush begins and again a The workers constantly are| but at the same time their earnings are constantly decreasing. The exe- cutives of the White Luggage Co. give much attention to adopting) |modern efficiency methods in pro- | duction and figuring of costs but |seem wholly to forget the workers. | “Renewing” the Agreement. There is an agreement between the union and the firm which ex- pires the first of June year after year; the office of the union sends/| the firm a letter reminding it about} the expiration, and back comes a} letter acknowledging the receipt of the letter and stating that the old agreement stands, The workers of the White Lug- newal of the agreement a shop meet- discussion about formulating de- mands should be the order of busi- ress, and a representative commit- tee of the workers of the shop should be chosen and a conference with the firm arranged. The Misleaders’ Excuse. It is more than certain that the| demands of the workers from the} shop to take a stand and act to im- prove their conditions will be met with excuses and the usual answer will be given that the firm, “if troubled too much from the union will give up the business.” | How can we succeed in organizing | the luggage industry when the work- | ers of the most important shop can- not come out and show an example | of better conditions in a union shop? Only by reorganizing our forces and the establishment of militant shop committees in all‘ shops con- trolled by the union can we hope to get out of the wilderness that ex- ists for the workers in our trade. WHITE LUGGAGE WORKER. ‘wages. All the railroad camps rob the workers, and they are usually run. either ty some official of the company or someone related to an official. The food they serve you is lousy and the bunks are awful, you can hardly live ‘in them for the filthiness. —THE RED PANTHER. Communists fight on behalf of the immediate aims and interests of the working class, but in their I shipped out on the Lehigh Val- our, for a 10 hour day of slavery, and a six day week—60 hours of ard labor a week. Of the meager wages paid, $8 a week is deducted or hoard and feed in the railroad’s amp-—which is highway robbery. “The. trackmen are unorganized. Well, the first day I got to bed and sept soundly until awakened by the DIRECTED BY JOSE! FILM GUILD CINEMA |\“The White Fagle,” has begun to em! JANNING the Soviet Union. Protazanov, producer of “Three thieves,” “The Forty-first’” and vork upon a new picture entitled “The Meeting.” Barnet, producer of “The Girl With the Hat, Box,” is working up- on “The Mexican,” founded on a Jack London novel. Negotiations are going on between the Mezhrab- pom film and the Mexican govern- ment with regard fo opportunities of taking landscape films in Mex- ico. “You Mustn’t Go Into the Town!” has been shown all over Moscow and Leningrad. The theme of the picture is the drama of a Soviet scientist who finds that his son is a member of the White Guard. “Rivals” is a film of the remote Votsk district, where there are still remains of pagan life. The descrip- tion of the struggle between the active supporters of the new con- structive life and village reactionar- jes is of great interest, and the pic- tures of Votsk holidays and festivi- ties are of ethnographical value. “The Descendant of Chingis- Khan” (“Sturm uber Asie), pro- duced by Vsevolod Pudovkin, is hav- ing an enormous success in Ger- many, where it is being shown in Berlin, Munchen, Leipzig, Erfurt, Hamburg, Dresden, Dusseldorf apd elsewhere, In the Capitol, Berlin’s | biggest picture house, it was shown | amid loud applause, and the best German critics have hailed it as the | highest achievement of Russian kino-art. Pudovkin, who attended the first release at Dusseldorf, was greeted with storms of applause. Vufku has released a new film, “The Mechanism of Normal Birth,” a scientific film made under the di- rection of G. Pisemski, professor of gynecology. The process of birth has been photographed and the slow- | motion method employed. With the | aid of the latest technical improve- | ments the condition of the foetus in| the womb has been established. The latest Zelgaim theory of the rota- tory movement of the foetus is viv- idly proved, Henry Barbusse, on seeing Solov- “THE LAST COMMAND” ‘iF VON STERNBERG 52 West 8th Street ‘2ND BIG WEEK lease of “The Cloud Refuse,” pr wuresque localities of Georgia and Upper Tushetia. It describes the relations between the “old times” and youth in the village and” the victorious struggle of the latter for the new order of things. Another picture by the same or- ganization, “Verkhom na Holtye,” shows the struggle of the poor pea- santry in a Georgian village with a group of “kulaks,” setting up a pseudo “Collective Farm.” The pic- ture is composed of material taken from life. New Giskinprom educational films include: “A Day’s Work in Kara- chai,” “Georgian Health Resorts,” “Chavka” (tea industry), “Dage- stan” and “Tushetia.” The latest Armenkino films have shown the abandonment of the old theme and a tendency to choose rev- olutionary subjects. Such have been Barhudarov’s “Pyat Yablochko” and Amo Bek-Nazarov’s “House on the Volcano.” Another important film by the same group is being produced on the life of Soviet Kozatstan. Its subject is connected with the prob- lem of irrigation, which is of great importance for this republic. duced by Berishvili, shows the pic- | the workers were not paid. Thurs- day, no pay. The shop chairman, {seeing that the workers were on the jverge of revolt, telephoned the busi- jness manager who failed to come land nothing was done about it. |Workers had to wait till Saturday | or their pay. Thus the boss kept a whole week’s wages of the workers, This shop, which employs nearly 100 workers is supposed to be a union shop, but the wages are as Jow as in unorganized shops. The jboss hires union men or non-union men and nothing is said about it. Of course his is done with the consent and understanding of the union offi- cials whose chief interest is the col- \lection of dues. The workers of the Hoffman plant also complain that |time for overtime; now workers work |two or three hours overtime without rest or lunch time and despite the continuous complaints the union does nothing about it. All this shows that the A. F. of L. company union is not the kind of a union workers should belong to. The dry cleaner workers of Hoffman Bros. and other shops after ex- periencing the corruptness of the company union officials should know that the best way to protect their in- terests is to organize shop commit- tees composed of the most militant element among the workers to pro~ tect their interests and fight the cor- ruption of the A. F, of L. —DRY CLEANING WORKER. LASH THEY ARE IN WILL YOU DO nie? on Gastonia Strikers! Workers Homeless Since Destruction of W. I. R. Tent Colony Arrested on “Vagrancy” Charges Given 35 Rush Funds to the Workers International Relief USED NEED OF HELP! YOUR SHARE? the boss violates the 20 minutes rest» i solid with the officials anyway and ERE’S a letter to the Red Rivet, shop paper put out by the Com- |), ji teens one ernans they dre nine ae-. have nothing to fear from hs H munist nucleus in the Midland steel plant in Cleveland: Hed SE even cosas = js ee bai ie ia Re jev’s “Clown George’s Benefit,” L h d s te: ed to 30 im The sheriff would lock up newly “Conditions are fine in this hell-hole. We only have to put in 12 |camp, the trackmens’ camp there. ashes and sentenc artived laborers who arrived in the| hours on the night shift, and from 9 to 13 hours on the day turn. These Within an hour of my arrival they}; Days on the Chain Gang! night, so they could not find out| are nice short hours, of course. And wages; oh; yes, wages are high |gave us supper which consisted of| | g: what kind of slavery they had come] here too. 40 cents an hour day rate on most operations, when you even |stuff without any nourishment. The| | to, and try to escape. get that. You bet, conditions are fine in this shop—For the boss! But |coffee was chickory, the corned beet | | THIS MUST NOT BE ALLOWED TO CONTINUE! I and other.ex-slaves on this farm| for the workers this rotten joint is pure hell. had corns and the cabbage was a 1 escaped by hiding in the swamp and “We figure it is about time we workers got on the job to change the | lose imitation of sauerkraut. , Food and Shelter Must Be Provided for ; “my way to a railway junc-| conditions in this hole, and that’s why we are putting out this paper: to | »The wages paid the trackmen on the Strikers, Their Wives and Children! } hopping a freight and getting| show up the rotten conditions we all work under, the starvation wages | he|Lehigh Valley is 40 cents an Today Only! IN % @ commission election May 17 Hot Rolls is the name of a shop paper issued by the Communist | || cook for breakfast which con- FRIGE yi i shop nucleus in the Timken plant. Here’s an interesting bit from it: | * cabot sour belly and spuds, and } BA MARGARE? RUNNEDY'S One Union Square New York City x the Board of Elections had >: |, omeydark looking liquid which was Ll NOVEL nted 337 of the 239 districts in Pipe the Bloodhounds. Wupposed to be coffee. They also| 427 STAEET : i¢ city, William E. Decker, counsel} EDITOR, “Hot Rolls”: gave us some bread and a hose bag| — #7 BROADWAY The CONSTANT ener tincessnnncc mai dtd ty Dualit: Bowe 9 toate rh y ' the fusion candidates advised . Stoebling, clerk of the that he was preparing an ap- If we don’t drink we're more efficient machines. etuff for which the Lehigh Valley s LITTLE * PLAYHOUSE New York City. sree ean lan gia The whole plant is just full of spies. If one of the spies smells t'ackmen have to pay heavy out of {coop STORY +24 Tebune one Carnegie = Ae Went, i The fu: canna eu P. red Te-| tiquor on the breath of a worker he calls the cops to have him arrested. |t cit measly ened ead YO SE RNG 6 Mi ITS coe est T enclose $.........- sie Gaepaeenegs to feed and shelter the pda ee en in| 1s @ wonder they don’t hire bloodhounds to trail us home. It’s the: |’ Well, it wasn’t long till I got dis- . militant Gastonia strikers. Tell them to keep on striking ap *B oe eek ‘ague,| jniserable conditions that force us tp drink to forget our troubles—and f¥sted with this job and made for|———————_________ | MOROSCO Tibi WY. fein ot rods until they win. czar. Both tickets were! to pep up in order to be able to put out another day's work—TIMKEN {1 state road and headed for New/Shubert ™nvitinay asso” "| whure. and Saturday, at #: : Everybody in this plant knows that the bosses have their cellars loaded with liquor. The prohibition law was passed against the workers. WORKER. |of four sandwiches a day of dry bread and jelly or cheese, Rotten York, 119 miles away. F VILLAGE OF IN’ Mat.: Wediesday and Saturday 2:30 The it NYMPH Workérs International Relief, One Union Sqyare, Name oo. ccccescccecseeenccerseesreneseesaeresserensesees cv hasstytionary * . . 3 care isn’t a ar see ere ‘New Musical Comedy Revue Hit|JOHN DRINKWATER’S Comedy Hit yr nar’ section than a@ gandy AMMreSS oc ccccacccccccccsecsecccvccsreensceeeeesees i the Oppressed Colo.,| _S¢#d Those Shop Papers In, and Let All the Workers ‘aincer. Working on the roilroad f IN : | Know About Them. ‘ eaclhe a veal savy for small A NIGHT IN VENICE [BIRD ‘HAND City ssseseeeensesseeeeens State sevens me