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me Lisiia Vy Osean asa. AUavah, Vy Aus Zi, loi Page Three — XU == Fe cP rs BS rreSRSsS EE = Three Workers on City Island, New York Relief Job, Die When Exposed to the Cold; Were Starved and Sick “Relief” Undermining Health of Thousands of : Unemployed Workers New York, N. Y. Dear Editor Daily Worker: I am one of those married men who were “fortunate” enough to get the three days’ work which is arranged by the | bankers’ committee, headed by Tammany grafters, On Thursday morning, Jan. 15, 1 went down to City Island, where our group works. It was very cold and the frost severe, but there in that wilderness it was The workers, some in ragged clothes, were shivering (and there isn’t even a place to warm up). We took our tools and walked out Big Jobless Army in Johnstown Johnstown, Pa. Fe worse. to the road, but all of a sudden I saw | Comrades: A few words about conditions on employment in Johnstown. I see in Comrade Foster's article that we have 9,000,000 of unemployed in this coun- try. (The last survey made by the Daily Worker in its issue of January 4 shows 10,000,000 workers fully un- employed now.—Ed.) In the Bethlehem Steel Co, in Johnstown there worked 18,000 men and more than half of them were laid off altogether. The other half work one day in two weeks. If you call this employment then I don't know what He was a Spanish worker, 32 yea it is. Here in Bethlehem Steel Co. | 2ld, out of work for months. It w: at least 15,000 men are unemployed ‘gradual death by slow starvation on or three-fourths of the whole force. |the breadlines. He could not stand the exposure after being weakened . and collapsed. More Mulcting on I see no Way. out unless we work- in Pitteburch | ers organize and fight for the Un- . Bee: |employment Insurance Bill. road. even let us stay a minute. like @ rag, without any care. ‘three ; Without any care. When the ambu- Jance arrived there was nobody to be saved. He’ was dead. i Pittsburgh, Pa. ees To the Editor: NEW YORK.—Lashed by the cold ur: y | Wind, undernourished and poorly clad, b 2 Livi f baa eel we Pitts two workers on the Prosser committee burgh Press reports that “a drive |park work at City Island, dropped will be launched at @ dinner tonight | dead last Saturday fi os by the Rev. W. R. Farmer, D.D., to| 4 08 pai Nig selec ccllect, e fd , $140,000 for’ the ¥. W. ©. A, They had asked the fofteman, In the very same paper the Red Cross asks Pittsburgh's aid for only | Brown, to warm up, but were refused. $300,000, which is part of the $10,000, | They collapsed soon after and:died in the ambulance. G00 that the said Red | i v ‘ | to relieve us of, Cross intends When stripped of their clothing it |was found they had no underwear or No, Shonrg for | socks. ‘ Chilercn CHICAGO LENIN MEET JAN. 21 ‘Emphasize Success of 5-Year Plan CHICAGO, Jan. 18—The class con- ; Syracuse, N."Y. Daily Worker: | The children of an unemployed Workes here were unable to attend School because they had no shoes. The jobless worker was arrested and taken kefore the jude, but the judge, hearing the worker's militant pro- tests, released him. The children were sent worn, ill- fitting shoes and returned to school amidst the feering and sneers of the veachers. Unemployed workers must join the Unemployed Councils and ) fight for the Unemployment Insur- ance Bill. | world will commemorate the death ot Lenin, the great leader of the success- | ful Bolshevik revolution, on January 2lst, construction: of the Soviet Union, which will be completed in four years, is the successful continuation ot |Lenin’s work and teaching. While the capitalist countries are in the midst of severe economic crisis, and ‘millions of workers are walking the Dawrdax Plonte On iy THM Rlast Philadelphia, Pa. @ Spanish. worker who was with us | collapse and fall while walking to the The Tammany watchman did not We were ordered to “go on” ahd four men took this fellow worker and carried him into a shack. He was put there just |’ ‘That happened at 8 a. m. and only at 11 a. m. the ambulance came. For hours the worker was lying |Scious workers throughout the entire | The Five Year Plan of socialist | CRIPPLED IN FALL, EVICTION THREAT HANGS OVER HIM Appeals to Workers to Fight for Insurance New York, N. Y. Daily Worker: I wish to call the attention of all |comrades and fellow workers to one case of many as to how the workers’ compensation law is applied. And this particular case is a concrete ex- ample of this fake law of the capi- | talistie system. But in so doing the | writer must give facts which can be verified. This is the case of Frank George: Of Italian birth, but with a residence of 30 years in America, residing at 87 Borden Ave., Long Island City, near the Vernon-Jackson I. R. T. station. And this is the story told in broken English and the writer will try to | give the details as he told them with- | out exaggeration. Scaffold Breaks. Some four years ago. a scaffold breke on which he was working. The | fall thus incurred fractured his spine |and also caused a rupture, rendering | this man incapable of doing any work | and only after being confined to his | bed for months has he recovered suf- | S ficiently to take care of himself. His case came before the board of work- jing mans compensation and he was | awarded $2,000 for his injury, but this | award came only after 33 months. of Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1.—Unemployment insurance at the rate of $25 a week for each anemployed worker and $5 additional for each dependant. 2.—The creation of a National Unemployment Insurance Fund to be raised by: (a) using all war funds for unemployment tnsurance; (b) @ levy on all capital and property in excess of $25,000; (c) a tax 3.—That the Unemployment insurance Fund thus created shall be administered by a Workers’ Commission elected solely by employed and unemployed workers. All who sign the lists now being circulated by the Workers Na- tional Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance or its sub- sidiary organizations, demand that congress shall pass the bill, in fts final form as (possibly) amended by the mass meetings which ratify it and elect the mass delegation to present it to congress, or as (pos- sibly) amended by the mass delegation itself. The final form of the |] bill will follow the general line of the three points printed above. Oe Lae | All workers are called upon to help collect signatures for this bill, Get the co-operation of all workers you know in the sig- nature drive. All organizations should activize their members in the collection of signatures. Write to the National Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West 15th St. New York City, for signature blanks. SS |total disability. In the meantime, ;ans®ered? No, a thousand times“no. jrent on his humble home had/If there is no law for such cases, then mounted up to the sum of $990 and | lei the answer be more demonstra- some lawyer had a garnishee against |tions. An increased drive for unem- jbis insurance for the sum of $260.| ployed insurance that the injurea | Though how this was maneuvered he | workers may live. | was unable to explain and he further | low-workers, let us face the capital- stated that he had signed no papers | istic system with a solid front uhti! jor hired no lawyer. |such conditions are abolished in this Threatened With Eviction. \the richest country in the world This man has six children depen-| Workers, unite! dent on him to provide food and shelter. And~his case is closed be- | (eying 1 nist Fe appeal, He is broken in health ‘ ea Som | ‘on all incomes of $5,000 a year. and, of necessity, broke financially. Je | He is two months in arrears in rent, | which means threatened eviction. | He has tried every available means ing 2,200 metal workers struck i to get his case into court. So far he Ludenschied, Rhineland, against has met with no success. This man | Wage-cuts, under revolutionary lead- nes appealed to the Communist Party | ¢rship. as the last court of appeals, for he has stated he has received no charity from the so-called charitable ‘nstitu- tions, though these fake charities have received eight or nine million | |dollars from the workers, |situation and the tasks of the Party ! Comrades, shall his appeal go un- A plenary session of the Centre 17th of January. orders on hunger marches, etc. for the two weeks. from these tables. paign. lowing an increase last week of 40. Pittsburgh a real gain. crease of 50 daily. - District 15, Connecticut, shows an 99. Springfield, Mass, Least Excusable Tm last week's tables, the total increase in the Daily Worker campaign for 60,000 circulation ap- peared as 2527. This figure was boosted by extra This week, the total decrease is 1040, leaving a net gain of 1487 This gain is apart from the extra orders on the Lenin Memorial Edition, Sat- urday, amounting to 33,350, which are excluded The largest gain for the week is in Phila- delphia, which put on 136, the largest increase in the district since the beginning of the cam- This is due, mostly, to the formation of the Red Builders News Club two weeks ago. District 9, Minneapolis, shows a solid gain of 39, following another gain of 44 last week. Dis- trict 10, Kansas City, puts on a gain of 46, fol- (istrict 5), aided by extra orders, put on 103. This week she lost only 37, showing District 17, Birmingham, put on a solid in- This, however, is the result of a second order for 1,000 from Danbury and 60 from Come alive, fel- » Meets BERLIN, Jan. 20—Yesterday morn- Sommittee of the German Commu- nist Party met from the 15th to the Thaelmann deliv- ered a report analyzing the politica! Fifty-one participated in the discus- Lock OUT TO HIT 50000 IN BRITAIN |Railroad Men Prepare for Strike | With more than 000 weavers out |in a lock-out enforced by the bosses | to put over a wage cut, it is expected, | according to cable rep trom Lon- | don, that 500,000 tex workers will | be effected within a day or two | The 150,000 striking miners in the | South Wales coal fields are expected | to return to work in a few days, after | a strike of nearly three weeks against | vage cuts. A sell-out agreement was drawn up between the bosses and the Jlabor government postponing the wage cut to a future date, A strike is threatening on the Bri- | tish railroads in view of the an- |nouncement of the railroad owners |that they intend to cut wages of all ladult railroad workers by $1.50 a week. The National Wage Board is now meeting to discuss the pending wage cut Under pressure of the ran! T. Cramp, general se National Union of Railwaymen, and a collaborator of the slimy MacDon- ald government, ‘said that the proposal of the employers would make it inipossible tor a large num- ber of railwaymen to jead any kind of life worth spea of. He faye |a wage cut, but not one of such to force resistance and file, 0 sion sent s pre- unani mass ship, decisio: jouble the Party mem make the new unions mass org: tions, create the political shop stem inall factories, strengthen work among th Seocialist’ wor create new forms of the United Front movement y anti-fascist delegate conferences, masses ete, and to mobilize the against fascist. terror. Extra Thea AWhorse Our Negro Comrades PRE HELPINGE— To GET 60 000 CincuLaTion Dat WYANORKER eee follows 0 Last week increase of Here are the tables: By Districts e total press run on thi Edition was 72,900. 555 New Subs and Renewals For Week During the past we: and. 19%-renewals were received were dropped from the list during the, week Daily Worker: Thac the canitalists are busily and hastily preparing another blood bath for workers and farmers worse than | the last war can be seen from the utterance of Furman Rush, as re- ported in the Philadelphia Record as follows: “Furman Rush, pride of Palmyra, N J., sees another war in the offing. He made his prediction the other night at @ reunion of Philadelnhtans who served overseas in the 103rd En- gSineers, 28th Division. “Boys, we're busy,” he told his for- mer buddies, “No depression in our line. Business is brisk. Look out for another war.” Rush stepped right out of the army into a job in a powder making plant. Missouri Miners Being Laid Off Minden Mines, Mo. Daily Worker: ‘Well here we are with Hoover's prosperity staring us in the face. Many miners and fellow-workers and their families, old and young, are slowly. starving. ‘The mines are laying off many, old and young, makes no difference to istreets without jobs and actually ' Starving, in the Soviet Union there is |no unemployment. These meetings are taking place in |a period of acute and sharp political and economical situation. Because ot the successes of the Five Year Plan and the growing world crisis of capi- talism, the attack on the Soviet Union by the imperialist countries is imminent. More than ever before, the workers must be ready for thé defense of the U. S, S. R. and at the same time they must mobilize the workers and poor farmers for strug- gle against their own oppressors, The necessity of building the Communist Party, Young Communist League, Trade Union Unity League, must be brought before the masses. The meet- ings on the occasion of this anniver- sary must be utilized by the class conscious workers for the mobilization of broad masses for the overthrow of the present capitalist system, At the same time, the workers will commemorate the murder of Lieb- knecht and R. Luxemburg, in 1919, who were murdered by the German social fascists, Ebert, Scheidemann, and Noske, the saviors of German capitalism. Y The main speaker at the Chicago Lenin Memorial wil] be E. Browder, member of the CC of the CPUSA. A revolutionary play, and music, will be the features of the program. Ad- mission 25 cents. Unemployed free, Jail Red Editor In Germany for Articles; (Cable by Inprecorr) | , Jan. 19—The Supreme Court at Leipzig sentenced the re- sponsible editor of the International Press Correspondence, Heinrich Kur- the foundation was Interrupted by proletarian coun- ter-demonstrations. Workers demon- strated in the Leipzigerstrasse ‘where many were arrested. Workers’ dem- of 243, trict 18, Butte, drops by 23. District shows a decrease of 32, Chicago Now Leads Chicago leads in the 3-cornered race, with Philadelphia second and Detroit last. District 13, California; loses 22 this week. Dis- lers New York in these tables gro for tho preceding week, 19, Denver, Summary By Cities Daily Worker Circulation Increases 1487 in 2 Weeks; Lenin Edition Press Run Is 72,000 Orders on Lenin Memorial Edition, 33,350 Extra order Lenin Memorial Edition totalled 33. not shown in the tables wl came the spe in for 350 and are were received a ‘They Mont., 200 : New Haven, Memorial Lenin 3 new subscriptions A total of 131 Summary of Subscriptions Summary Jan. 10 Jan. 17 Drop in Detroit Overdue 4646 4445 Some districts show a decrease due, apparent- < " Paid in adv: 5819 6247 ly, to the false idea that the 50,000 circulation z Be. 6 as Ris F beaoeal campaign”is over. Nothing is further from the $ eae ee ag 2: $e 8 Total + 10465 truth, The Central Committee, determined to a $2 86 GR a4 Sees F cag Ree as het ly Lan nati ae Pe 3 or no oe on ae| District Apparatus The biggest and least exonsable trop wasin [2S * 170L SRL 1720 7584 9285 9304 9 Must Be Strengthened 8. Phila. B84 924 1672 1808 126 4 C Detrolt.' Last week's order was not stimulated ~|« puttalo 28t 397 636 681 —5) Tn districts where Daily Worker circulation by extra orders, This week, the figure goes | 5, pitts. BOE) 498° 108103 871.” rain tncrease) the reason Yany safely be down by 599. This is a serious drop. It shows | ¢ Cleveland . 998 1010 2055 2008 13} Oto th si hapebra?: a Nee naa that leading bodies in the district down to the | 7 Detroit sa00. 1076 e900 tog: —be0 | SUD? fo the lack of & strong apparstos i ag cele ah om agate chal a dey abe 1680 255 3108 933 —a7a| f0F distribution. Daily Worker representatives Prrucie ech fic neo: oie al eal hymna ‘18 638 1017 1056 go] in the districts, sections and units who do not Li pgedly iia eter HAG rege: | \eiteinos 378 ost’ 98 46| function satisfactorily, should be ranoved and carried out, One of the great weaknesses in | !! Aerie. 98 (93H 1| replaced by comrades who are capable of in- ihe: dinisiet 4a the ab of a Red Builders | '2 Settle 970 13 volving every member of the Party and the News Club, This, in spite. of the fact that 1876 Young Communist League in one of the ma- Detroit has shaueand® of wibgiplesed, ind ts 430 jor campaigns of the Party at the present time. of 53 By decision of the Central Committee, the one of the most important industrial centers 139 Daily Worker should be the ord © ais in the country, . A club must be formed imme- | is Butte 98 bite sie Nl baits reeves isentt lated MRS do: be dhe “Dbl” ito ee Woks or ldo hemes Pl ness at every unit meeting. Papers should be bed ora: iin eo regularly sold before factory gates, in the Table for Chicago shows a decrease of 773. {apa 20007 91930 20609 —y0s0 Piteele and fram home odo ‘f However, last week, due to extra orders, the in- ER pnt dy Mac asic PH Seite Daily Worker representatives who do not get crease was 1016, making a net gain for Chicago | orders on the Lenin Memorial Edition, ‘The fizures of | the cooperation of the Party in the 60,000 circu- lation campaign should inform the national of- fice of the “Daily” and steps will be taken to wipe out any neglect or indifference on the part | of any leading comrades. “Daily” Vital in Lenin Recruiting Drive new Lenin Rec ing Drive to draw workers into the Communist Party, the Daily Worker will be one of the principal means of aequainting workers with the policies and pro- gram of the Party. A Daily Worker seller be- fore the factory gates is an effective contact- maker with employed workers who learn thru the paper how to protect themselves against wage-cuts and discharges. To the unemployed workers on the streets, the Daily Worker has Proved an eye-opener as to the activities of the Communist Barty and a weapon in firht- ing starvation and evictions, and for imme- diate unemployment relief. MASSES OF NEW YORK JOBLESS BATTLE POLICE IN DEMONSTRATION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | ward the city hall. Richard B, Moore, | of tne Harlem Tenants League, a Ne- gro worker, also a member of the | delegation, climbed on the base of’ the statue and repeated the informa- | app and another worker from the delegation got up again to continue the report, when the police attacked, Before this, a half dozen cops on foot had tried to force their way in on the east side of the crowd, where the numbers were less, and found themselves up against a dele- | gation from the Food Workers’ In- dustrial Union, who know all about cops. That squad of Tammany slug- gers retreated. The fight was $0 swift and fast that it did not even in- terrupt the speakers. After that about fifty police, ine cluding several mouned, were massed, and struck the crowd in a combined charge, where it was weakest. There was no mobile force of the workers defense corps to rally at the threat ened point or to, take the attacking force in the rear. After a pushing and slugging match for five minutes, the police smashed their way in and tore down the speakers, Mounted Cons Trample Hungry Workers; Squ ds of Dicks Beat Up Individuals Mounted Police. Then the mounted police were let and for half an hour Park Row mbe! St. to Mail Sa of ing hoofs trampling into crowds, of police and detectives on foot in groups of two or three poune- on isolated individuals, and beat~ 1em up. The crowd, with its broken still held its ground. and yelling, and individuals 1 by the Jammany svaien But between rom beoing abtac sluggers tance in some ) and 3 p.m of the demonstration was put up de: the bulk these 25,000 York had put up the most militant und on the whole the most successful e tor a long time ambulance and patrol wagon in; several were arrested, and injured. police made New many The a show of not us- ing club The Police Commissioner had publicly stated they would be un- armed and “courteous.” Great use ot charging nted cemen was nade, ho! hoofs taking the plac? of the usual black But even his fake was not well maintained. When a couple of jobless had one | sunted cop half off his horse, he | ulied a gun on them. - The Daily | | Worker reporter personally saw a me po | A otin mounted policeman riding up and down after the fight at Franklin's statue, handing out blackjacks to the patrolmen. Two and a Half Hours. The demonstration started betore noon. The sidewalks all around city hall square were packed by. 12:30. 42 entrances to the square were blocked by a solid lines of police, which was later doubled. Squads of mounted police were posted all about inside. Heavy platoons of police were massed on each side of the entrance to city hall. There was a patrolman every twenty feet all around the railing which surrounds the square. Mount- ed police were about 80 feet apart in the street all around the square, | Broadway, Mail St., and Park Roy. ‘There was a second, thinner line of cops around the square on the euyt- side edge of the sidewalk. Cops were thick on the opposite side of Broqd- way and Mail Street. This was the heaviest police mob- ilization used so far against the tarving jobless of New York. While the fighting went on at Franklin's statue, one flaming sign remained fixed to the pedastal. It said, “The government answers the demands of the jobless with black- jacks and police brutality. We de- mand Unemployment Insurance!” ting Mayor Practically Tells the Unemployed to Go on Starving; “Can’t Do Anything” Alderman Corrigan, acting Mayor , 1 absence of Mayor Walker, re-4 Pt the demands of the unem- when the delegation walked nto the city hall and presented them. | He admitted there was great unem- | ployment and starvation and said | that the city “was doing all it can,” | but it couldn't do anything else. The uner ed Gelegation arrived | at the City Hall at 1:55 p.m. They | rted into the building by a | cop’ Two members of the | aber of uniformed and plain- | delegation were practically thrown | out of the city hall—Patrick O’Boyle, of the downtown Unemployed Coun- cil and Ed. Stevens of the Midtown | Unemployed Council Four Spokesmen. Four spokesmen, G. Biedenkapp, | Richard B. Moore, Frieda Jackson, of | the United Councils of Working Class Women, and Charles Oberkirsh, ot the Food Workers’ Industrial Union, spoke for the unemployed workers. | At first Biedenkapp protested be- cause of the ejection of the other | twe members of the delegation. Then | each of the spokesmen showed up the starvation faced by the New York | junemployed; how capitalism drives | workers to hunger and suicide, and the intention of the unemployed to fight for their demands. Then the 12.-All employment agencies, such as the City Free Employment Bureau, State Labor Depaftment, Social Ser- vice Exchange, Y. M. GC. A., ¥. W. C. A. and the Welfare Council shall con- duct their work through the City Board composed of the workers. Corrigan didn’t seem to like the reference made by all of the speak- ers to the Soviet Union, where capi- talism has been overthrown and there is no unemployment. He offered to pay the fare of any ten who wanted to go back to the Soviet Union. He admitted “under the present system of society we can do nething more.’ He said he had @ stenographer pres- ent and would take the demands “un- der advisement.” In closing the inteyview Biedenkapp said: “I desire to state very emphati- cally we are not asking for charity. The unemployed workers whe are of- fered nothing here will cantinue to fight against starvation until they get adequate immediate relief and ynem- ployment insurance.” The following are the names of 8 injured workers: out. M. DJ LARIO, all his teeth knocked wut. JOHN HIDALGO, possible fractured skull, severe lacerations, broken arm, a hospital case. . ROSE ROSEN, 45 years old, frac- jdemands were presented as follows: | tured arm. | 1. $15 for each unemployed work- ANGELO FARARA, severe laeera~ ie up to $25 for families. | tions. | 3 2. No evictions of the Unemployed. | 3. Free gas, light and coal ies of the unemployed. | HERBERT LEVY. | 4 20 per cent reduction in rents! DORTHY ROSS, wrenched back. | up ‘to $50 per month. A. BERNAL, 73 S. Oxford St. 5. Free food and clothing for the | Someone, no doubt a worker, was children of the unemployed provided | seen carried out on a tsértcher from in the schools. city hall inte an ambulance. There 6. Opening up of all yacant apart- | is a rumor that a comrade was killed. men armories and public buildings| Five cops are reported ta have been to house the unemployed. \injured in their attempt to beat the | 7. No discrimination of workers | hunger-marchers, because of race, color, nationality or | sex. 8. ALBERT BURNS, for | head and arm. lacerations \ of ORGANIZE TO END All schools and public halls be } | Opened as meeting places for the un- | STARVATION; DEMAND | employed. | nt 1 it | 9. ‘The immediate release of Harry | RELIEF 1! | Raymond, the delegate of the unem- on March 6th CAMP AND HOTEL 10. The unconditional release of | Nesin, Stone and Lealess, the October | btaticy | 4 4 beaten by the police. | 11. That the distribution of all re- lief, cash, food and clothing shall be conducted by a City Board, composed | of workers from factories, shop coun- | ceils and the Unemnloyed Councils; | this board to be directly elected by the w The City Board of | Wo: for Unemployment Emergen- \cy Relief shall constitute a City Em- | ployment Bureau in place of all pri- | vate and city agencies. VROLPTARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere ef s tr oe « § Py Sign SC Bee Bee in 3-Cornered Race 3g 3g ag dg de Be G ’ The three-cornered race between Chicago, De- i $3022 32 23 Chis ey Lethe troit and Philadelphia shows a new development. cmatoe Chicago and Philadelphia have forged ahead. cua, toe VOCAL oe Detroit dropped. . | ‘ Ot 124 64 12k 185188 Now Chicago leads, having gained a daily ae ae AB pene tie ‘circulation so far in the drive of 1312, or 38 rahe ba agi nary ue bye * Per cent of its quota. Philadelphia has passed 4 M Detroit by making a total Laat of 683 or 28 | gattimore. Ww a on BE K+) a oy Per cent of its quota. Detroit has retained a Wash., D.C. BA £08 2 1% 435 od gain of only 516 which is 16 per cent of its Buffalo 62 213 63 218 275 25 quota. 6L 60) 120-18 1 ? 149-813-304 8 Be Large Cities Should Add ss so to as * To Red Builders Clubs Rdg cia Although Red Builders News Clubs have shown ts fie Ao @ rapid increase since the start of the 60,000 clr- Ali aa aad culation drive, there are still some large cities where such siube bare not yet bean formed se AOR aa Philadelphia is a good example of circulation in- see ane aie: May ae crease via its newly formed Red Builders News 83 339-319 ae a Club. Such large cities as Seattle, San Francisco, 89 92 175 aah 6 , Detroit and Cleveland, are losing a | superior as } a 95 splendid opportunity in rounding up hundreds | KansasCity . 88 101 29 IL 120 180 at of eis hp ae | subscribers through newsboys | Seattle 17 4530 76 453830 D who spend most of their time in spreading the | Portland BU A PU RB Ns a oe Dally Worker throughout working class cn: LosAns’ pA edie bent] Ra a6 borhoods. Unemployed workers who form the ba gad at ee ee Red Builders N . 214 5-203 -803R. pening. ET eee TREE OT. | aaemmngaiors<cs ae) Mg Whcaby SHE AN ate the paper at 1 cent and selling for 3 206 100 316 100 io We pledge to build RE} CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E.13TH ST., NEW YORK CITY RED SHOCK TROOPS $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY Enclosed find .... 101 K EMERGENOY FUND NAME OOPS fi | For FUND