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DAILY WORKER, NEW | YORK, SATURDAY, JAN ARY 24. 1931 2 Page Three _ WISCONSIN DAIRY F ARMERS LOSING COWS AND FARMS | Unemployed Steel Workers’ Families Starve Slowly in Rockefellers’ Rich Domain “Relief” Is $1 for a Family of Four for Sixteen Days il | cil for a Real Fight a Wan Correspondent) (By PUEBLO, Colo.—Here in the “Steel City of the West” the economic crisis has hit and hit hard. The Minnequa Steel plant, | the backbone of the industry here, on which thousands of work-| ers depend for a living is working at a very low point of pro- duction. | Of course the steel workers are the first to feel the crisis \ in unemployment. At the best only a few days per month to In other rords the stagger system is used throughout the plant. Thou- give some other worker a chance for a shift or two. ands have been thrown out permanently, Steel Workers, Organize an Unemployed Coun- Spanish workers are the hardest hit | Crisis Brings Battering | to Young Workers [se With tens of thousands of youn; starvation level, those still in the | terrific pace. Now, more than any other time, that their place is side by side wi against wage-cuts, speed-up and for ig workers unemployed and on a near- factories are being driven at a more » young workers are coming to realize ith the adult workers in the struggle unemployment relief. AYS SPARROWS POINT LIKE JAIL FOR CONDITIONS | Workers “Turning to Organization Now Baltimore, Md, aily Worker: Dear Comrades: When we read in the Daily Worker find the conditions from all over | 2 industrial towns going worse. But. te in the Bethlehem Steel Co, at arrows Point the conditions of the tkers is compared with the con- ts of Sing Sing on the speed-up tem, wage cuts and lay-offs. arles Schwab is the champion in | line, ethlehem Steel Co. is located in island of Sparrows Point, 13 miles 4 Baltimore, and the workers they to pay 40 cents every day for $t car fares and many workers juse the steel mill is only. run- 40 per cent they go there pay- ithe 40 cents looking to get a * ce to get a turn. Short Time Work. ‘er the wage cuts and the mur- is Speed-up system today we find liany Wepartments working 2 days a week, In the»sheet mill department he workers they. work two, three | lays in every 15. In the galvanizing lepartment—where acids and fumes ll the place and-where the workers ' ey got to-spend 75 cents only for coves every day and in two, three sars time they get T. B. they had a vage cut of 50 per cent and now ey are only working two, three days every fifteen. Ev ywhere the workers are very ympathetic to the Communist Party. ith the other workers. Today I put Daily Worker on the bench and | ree workers they were reading to- | ther. So on January 19 many steel rkers they will take part in the —P, Ss. COLD AND WET unger on the Job, Is Not Real Relief IONCORD, Cal.—The Contra Costa hway department serves as a ns to advertise the generosity ot county politicians. But this gen- ity gives the few workers hired more than three days a week and etimes, if it rains, no work, or one day a week. We must go to the job on our own time and the same way—so we put in a jour day, or more, on an 8-hour ‘We must report at seven, when rk is supposedly from 8 to 4:30, we usually take until 5 o'clock to ck to the garage. ‘Cold, Wet Work. > have to slop around with wet after rain, and if it starts to rain we are working, we must con- working out in the open, Many are down to the last penny and no rubbers or raincoats, and in jaiserable wet and cold, and dirty we must watch the rich para- and robbers ride by in warm 2s and fine cars. ort Te ent; grubbing weeds, burning <= & ciearing brush, etc., in the —| s along the road. They would the us on the job. Single men are sed to die without even this ible “rel Jobless. Will Fight, have been thrown out from the refinery, the Associated and refinerie, and from the farms we are working for a miserable FO! ce until the refineries take us But at the rate of unemploy- iow, they will never rehire us, to E WwW. ve going to starve quietly? Are ag to run away to the hills? ‘e will organize a Trade Union | seague and Unemployed Coun- : bis fight the boss exploiters. -A Worker. as they are discriminated against and | thousands come in for the winter | ‘ery time -we= distributed leaflets | ley received them and discussed | from the beet fields, Bessemer City, the proletarian sec- |tion, home of the steel workers, has a breadline, Starvation was so ram- Be that the city was forced to do something. At the so-called work~ |men’s relief station over 200 families |receive two quarts of milk and two loaves of bread daily for an average size family. But to even get this jerumb one must be a citizen of Pu- eblo, without work or food, give the | |names of the former employers and |get a card from your city grocer en- | titling you to relief. The capitalist paper even states further that more relief stations will be opened. All money is raised by donations to carry on this work. The committee in charge states that $1 will feed a family of four for 16 days. This is not living, but slow starvation. Workers of Pueblo organize and fight. Fight for the Unemployment \Insurance Bill, where every worker ment war funds. Make the C, FI. | come across with the millions of dol- | lars that we have produced. Workers, don’t starve, but fight like | hell. —O. J. Cc. TRIMMING FIR" TRIMS DOWN PAY Started to Cut Wages Long / Ago Chicago, Tl To the Daily Worker :— All the horrors of capitalist speed up, wage cuts and oppression are at Work here in the Phoenix Trimming Company of 200 N. Racine Avenue. Eight months ago this firm started on a wage slashing campaign to be- gin witb. The silk winders had a weekly wage on day work of $24 for 50 hours. This firm put them on | |any more than $12, They have to work a great deal harder to earn this miserable wage. Along with it a ten per cent re- | the workers. | Twisters who made $18, steam box workers who had the same wages were reduced to $16.20 Workers of this shop, can you bear it any longer. We have the strength, the courage, the power to fight back. We can’t stand this any longer. It means either slow murder by star- vation or else fight and strike—J.K. Profits of Jail Labor Goes to the Bosses, Not Workers Philadelphia, Pa. Daily Worker: . [have just come out of the Holmes- burg County Prison of Philadelphia after a long term served because I was active in the picket line in a strike about nine months ago. At this prison new machinery has been installed for shoe making, weav- ing and tailoring. All the profits made from these products manufac- tured at this jail will go to the muni- cipality of Philadelphia, while the prisoners are dressed in rags and shoes that weigh three pounds a pair. And in addition the prisoners suffer from malnutrition because of poor food. And yet the capitalists have the nerve to talk about Russian forced convict labor! England, Ark. Farm gets $25 per week from the govern- | piece rates and now they don’t earn} duction was imposed on the rest of} they asked the boss when they would | (By a Worker PHILADELPHIA.—Slash mills of the northeast (Kensin; ers cannot live on such a basis. At the Henry Disston Co., stee! tool | ers, most departments are working an average of 2 days per week. A cut plant of 10 per cent. for a five and a half week, or a total of $55. A couple of years ago they | still worked three days, so the men made 30 per week. |days a week, Now the wages have been slashed jin half, or $5 per day, with only one day’s work a week. Imagine it if you can. Try to be strong on $5 wages per week if you have a family to feed, or even if a man is single. and Port Richmond is growing in in- | tensity. —C. RB. SP. RAILROAD C0 Boss Racers Call It} “Better Times” Sacramento, Cal. Daily Worker: The boss pape say times are get- ting better in California. The South~ ern Pacific railroad are working three | | days a week through January, don’t know what they will do in February, ‘They laid off ten boilermakers and | helpers permanently last week. And get back to work; he told them to | | stay home until they were called and | that might be never. Some of these men have worked for the S. P. Co. thirteen years, scabbed in 1922, helped them out during the | job, Now they are turning them out to starve so they will not have to cut in on their big profits. It seems to me like people would get wise some- time and not listen to these lying capitalists’ bosses. When they ask them to scab on their fellow work- men a scab cuts his own throat as well as every other working man’s throat. —Unemployed Shop Worker. Two Hungry Workers Shot in Fruit Grove EL CENTRO, Calif—Fred Smith, 46, died in the County Hospital here today of gunshot wounds suffered on January 7th, while helping himself to some fruit in a rich farmers’ orchard. A. O. Smith, owner of the orchard, told police that he shot the worker when he caught him taking “his fruit.” The worker explained before his death that he was starving and went into the grove for enquge: fruit for a meal. ers Live in Worst Kind of Shacks for Houses (By a Farmer Correspondent) LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—A corres- Pondent for the Chicago Tribune came to England, Ark., and tried to compare conditions among farmers here tothe conditions prevailing among the farmers in “old” Eng- land. This fellow was not merely funny, he also lied deliberately. The poor farmer in southern United States is far worse off than the English farmer, Terrible Housin. Glance at the “house” of the poor stance. A small one wall rough shack, papered inside in any old way. Scores of cracks letting in the sunlight, the cold and the rain. No furniture to speak of. Absolute pov- erty reigns supreme. This is the rule, not the exception here. A de- mand for better housing conditions is very much in order. There are thousands of farm communities im the South even worse off. The building of the United Farm- ers League and the distribution of | Commun’st Hterature is .a blessing farmer at England, Ark. for in- for us farmers here, ‘ | plant, normally employing 3,000 work- was effected last week throughout the | Years ago they paid $10 per day Lately they worked two or three | ‘The misery throughout Kensington | strike with the promise of a lifetime | Phila. Metal Bosses Start Wage Slashing Drive Against the Workers Organize Into the Metal Workers League for Struggle Against This Attack! Correspondent) es of wages coupled with part- time is the condition now existing in most of the large metal gton) district. At the David Lupton Co. metal sash and other metal pro- | ducts plant from four to five days a month is the part time allotted to many of the workers in > several departments. Some weeks one | day, some weeks two days. The work- | BOY SCOUT PLAN | Starving “Workers Southern Cal. | The Daily Worer: | worers is the sending of Boy Scouts Stocton, Cal. | vassing for jobs for the unemployed. | | worker is willing to work for 35 cents an hour. That's a lie, but many of us have to do so. This scheme hurts us worers who are holding odd jobs, enough off now. How the hell can | we live decent if we are compelled to | work for such wages. | The city pays $3 a day and less, | according to the work, starving a married man and working him at the . hd time is an insult as well as a | KEEPS LAVING OFF ‘eae of the swells have arriveed | home from Governor Rolph’s spree or reception. We have prohibition, but | they didn’t have it at this swell af- fair. | Mr. Rolph not only refused to talk |to the unemployed delegates, but he insulted them by his cowardly man- ner. rounded by police and militia. Funny how afraid they are of the unarmed unemployed. They would | | shae worse if we were a marching jarmy of well-equipped troops pre- ;pared for war. Der Tag, that’s the | day when all must be paid. —M. “Charity Saleswoman Gets Graft,” Exposes Worker in Knit Shop (By a Worker Correspondent.) NEW YORK.—Your columns have been exposing the graft in the vari- ous charitable unemployment organ- izations. Frankly, I have been rather | doubtful. However, today an impor- tant example of this sort of thing came to my attention. I work for a firm which manufac- tures sweaters, A woman represent- ing herself as a member of an un- employed committee, headed by in- fluential and wealthy people, includ- ing a judge, came in and purchased several dozen sweaters for the unem~- ployed. After giving her a price for the merchandise, she requested 5 per cent commission, saying we could higher the price if necessary Here is an example of where some of the funds go to. Starting from the very lowest ranks as buyers, 5 per cent is chopped off immediately. I can just imagine how the percen- tage of graft increases at each suc- cessive step, before the clothing finally reaches the unemployed. Ford Opens for Three Days Then Closes Again Indefinitely oun. @ Worcorr) ITLAND, Jan. 20.—The local Ford ihe opened after its “inven- tory period” for “full time produc- tion” and now is closed. It ran two days. The local press made it ap- pear as if the Portland unemployed situation was helped by this “open- ing.” This is part of the national Ford procedure to help delude the workers. The local “relief” fund of $300,000 only .figures up to $144,000 spent Somebody received a nice pay check to help “relieve” unemployment. The Portland workers were relieved alright. There have been five sui- cides in Portland this month already end the press is admitting that the prospects of getting a job are becom- ing scarcer, HITS AT JOBLESS in The latest capitalist insult to the | around from house to house, can- | The rotten part is the fact that the | Scouts are telling how the starving | We are bad | He had the state buildings sur- | Miners’ Families in Butte. Montana Are On Hunger Level Butte, Montana. My Dear Comrades: With 5,000 miners here there is starvation and misery, About 3,000 or 4,000 miners are working and they are working two weeks on and one week off. So that all workers are starving. And those 4,000 produced more for the capi- talists than when 10,000 were work- ing years ago. Many poor families are starving here. —0. C. OREGON DAIRY FARMERS HIT BY DROP IN PRICES Need to Fight Greedy Bankers Myrtle Point, Ore. Dear Comrades: WORKING CLASS WOMEN SUFFER MUCH IN CRISIS Must Fight Side By Side With Men Denver, Col. Daily Worker:— ‘We read a lot in the capitalist press | about the good work the charitable | organizations are doing among the Poor. But the workers out of jobs | and hungry who apply to these or- ganizations for help have a different story to tell, Here in Denver a widow out of a job, with no money to buy food and | clothing for herself and five children the youngest of whom is two years old, applied to the welfare depart- ment for help, and was told to come back in a week and they would see | what they could do for her. At the | end of a week she went back; but was told that she would have to wait another week. After waiting two | Weeks she was given a dollar and a | half. Eight days later, they gave | her two dollars and a half, but when she went back a week later she was told they could do no more for her, that the welfare department could jonly help her one month, and she |would have to wait six months be- |fore she could get any more help | from them. Worked For Low Pay. try in the state of Oregon and is the chief industry in two counties. Butterfat is usually about 40 cents at this time of year, and cheese at the factory about 30 cents. The prices are now 25 cents for butterfat and 17 cents for cheese. These prices mean that the dairy- | ‘her ten year old boy worked on a | tributions in the cities are holding |farm, but the wages were so low that | | Many are going broke. The milk dis- she could not save any money, now | their prices fairly well, but there are she can not find work, is unable to |so many unemployed and part time pay her rent, or buy fuel, and has to | workers that their sales have dropped pick up coal on the railroad track, | from one quarter to one half, All the food they. have is the little With grain being burned in the their friends are able to give them. | growing districts instead of coal one And because this mother is unable to | Would suppose that dairy feed would provide for her children the welfare | be cheaper but it is not. Jt has come department threatens to take them | down some, but the feed companies | from her, and railroads add most of the grain ‘ " growers’ losses to thei rprofits. e We women of the working slass are | ‘Taxes in the, principal dairy centers suffering more from unemployment. ‘ And we must join our men in the un;,| “°° unusally high, being as much as employment demonstrations and twice what they are in other parts of hunger marches that are taking place | | the state, Rents are correspondingly | all over the country. And we must | high. |fight for the Workers Social Insur- | Dair¥ prices are closely connected janes Bill, which the unemployed with the conditions of the industrial| councils of the Trade Union Unity | workers, as they are the chief con-| | League will present to Congress, Feb- | sumers. When they have wage cuts ruary 10. —D. E. E. THOMPSON GIVES BIG WAGE SLASH large before the crisis but it now is| reaching unprecedented proportions. | And Many Lay-offs in Restaurants With the lumber industry at 30 per | cent capacity many workers cannot) buy even this poor substitute if they | have any bread to put it on. A strong Lumber Workers Indus-| trial Union and United Farmers) League would help conditions greatly but we well know that for fundamen- tal and permanent improvement we! must have a Workers and Farmers | Government, a Soviet America. May| Daily Worker: | it-soon come. —™.W.S, cook and lunch counter man out of TEXTILE STRIKES IN PHILADELPHIA Chicago, Ill. work through the greed of John R. ‘Thompson Co. who rob the people and the workers all the time. They have laid off hundreds of us who | need work to keep our families from | harder than ever. Please advise work- | Battle Wage Cuts i am ers to boycott these slave drivers who Many Mills have not contributed one cent for the _— relief of the poor starving workers (By a Worker Correspondent.) they have laid off. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan. 21.— Strikes in the hosiery and other tex- more and stand in line one to three ported in the Daily Worker the fol- hours to get a lousy meal ticket from lowing shops are now tied up by! those lying fat masters of graft and| strikes declared this week, corruption, the Volunteers of Amer-| The Lucille Mills, American and| ica. Walk back three or more miles | Bristol’ Streets paid the workers) slice of meat so thin you can se€ | ers of this shop went oh strike Mon- through it and not fit to feed even a day. dog and a cup half full of coffee, All Out at Spurtex Mills. so weak (one pound to 20 gallons of| The Franklin shop, better known water) it tasted like dishwater. as the Spurtex Mills, near Kensing- over again the next day. There are| Today the biggest hosiery strike of thousands who are out of work and | 2! was declared by an unanimous starving, at least 500,000 in Chicago vote of the 1,500 workers of the four area and what has the boasted goy- | Shops of the United States Hosiery Co. ernor’s relief commission done? | Three of the shops are located in dally and mark time and fritter away | Franklin and the U, 8, mill had their the fund to relieve ihe starving un- | W8ses cut, employed workers and we get no re- Weavers Strike. lief. At the Erben-Harding Woolen Co., T am a firm Communist but they Those Who Produce Starve and Freeze, While the Idle Rich Revel in Luxuries What Was the Richest Dairy Center Now the Scene of Bankruptcy and Misery Unity of City Workers and Farmers Can Force Relief, Aid From Bankers’ Gov’t Rice Lake, Wiscon. Dear Sir:— As I was in the city of Superior and while I was waiting for my train I happened to notice one of your papers that is I mean one page of the paper, and from what I have read in that page I think it must be a good paper. So I am asking you to send me a sample of the paper. Also would you care to send |a few samples out in our part of the country. I feel confident there are lots of people I think would be very interested in-it. We live in the richest dairy state in the world and our Bar= ton County took the lead in thes- if Dairying is the third largest indus- | All last summer this woman and | men are lucky if they can break even. | |rightfully work daily. one-half hour for lunch, which is not | |the workers even got less, | young workers were the ones United States for dairy and now you might say we are all on the rocks. Men are losing farms. So many jhave sold their good milk cows off | just because of hard times. Me and once. Now we only own one cow. We have no job. My husband and boys are without |underwear, footwear. It is so freez- |ingly cold tonight, 38 below zero. My children go to school with barely |nothing for their dinners, This is what we have to do. Farmers and Workers, Unite! |men and women with fur coats on |and big, rich automobiles, and you hear and read in the papers about the movie stars of Hollywood and how |much money they spend and so much of everything, while we, the farmers that feed them all, have to starve and freeze. Yes, we need to join hands and fight. If we don’t the rich will | S80 poor, —Mr. and Mrs. A. C, S00D SPIRIT IN | DANBURY STRIKE Tell Why Th They Came Out on | Strike “Danbury, Conn. To the Editor of the Daily Worker: I am a worker in the fur shops of Danbury. I was asked to write about the conditions that prevail at the | factories. A few of the reasons why the people are out on strike today are | the hours that we have to work—nine and one-half is more than we can We only have j enough time for any working man. The machines that some of the workers have to work on are so dan- Berous that very often many of them ‘e being injured, some very seri- |ously. Then there are other mi ee should have fans to draw e waste so that the workers would mt have to breathe it into their sys- tems and no doubt cause many ill- jMesses that are quite frequent among | the workers and their families. The acids which are used on every | skin are very dangerous to the worker |as they burn right through the clothes | t to the skin. The fumes of special acids get into the eyes of the work- ers and makes the hair red. The young workers that work in the fur shops are more liable to harm | from these’ conditions than the older workers. Yet there are many of them doing this work. Low Wages. The wages of the workers range from $16 to $25 a week. Some of and the that got the loweest paid wages. With these wages it was very difficult to live. @ 20 to 25 per cent cut. The answer to that cut was given by the workers | when they united and declared a strike. The strie has been on now for more than two weeks. The spirit of the strikers cannot be broken. The way the young workers have been ac- tive on the picket line, in getting re- lef, has shown that they are ready to fight with all their might to get back the wage-cut. two days a week at very low wages with a new wage cut of 15 per cent for this wek walked out Monday. Additional strikes are expected the weavers were compelled to workdaily at various hosiery mills. starvation. ‘They cut/wages 25 per cent for the | remainder of the workers, who work On the S Li acai | tile plants of Philadephia are break- | A number of us including myself | ing out regularly. In adition to the | are compelled to walk three miles or | shops already out as previously re- and wait in line for hours, sometimes stockings instead of money Saturday. | until next day to get a lousy bowl of | Not being able to eat the stockings burnt soup, stale bread and rotten | or buy food with them all the work- Thousands Hungry. ton Avenue, is now closed and 150 Everyday there are thousands | Workers including all the girls at this turned away hungry, who start aji| Plant having declared a strike. Headed by the arch robber of the | Philadelphia and one in Langhorne, people, George F. Getz, who got his | Pa- in the coal business, they just dilly | The ‘hosiery knitters of both the have no one to organize us or sign up members in this part of town, it ie oe Editorial Note: Boycott, at best, is an auxiliary and passive weapon in fighting the bosses. Organiza- tion and struggle on the job under revolutionary union leadership, or- ganization and fight for unemploy- ment relief under the Unemployed Council leadership, these two are the main weapons in fighting for better conditions, hours, wages and unemployment insurance. And it is in these channels primarily, and not that of boycott, that the work- ers’ struggle must be led. TAKE A LIST TO WORK WITH YOU FOR JOBLESS INSURANCE] Philadelphia Pa. Daily Worker: Although efforts are being made to hide the epidemic of disease now Prevalent in Philadelphia these ef~ forts are not successful. In fact, after nearly everybody conscious knew about it, the astute Philadelphia Record sent its report ers to interview “prominent” physi- clans yesterday. Even this organ of bigger and better advertising had to admit that the “prominent” physicians agreed that this year there was am unusual Bosses Try to Hide Spread of Influenza Among Jobless Workers of Philadelphia jump in mild cases bronchial and gastro-intestinal flu. The Record claims that few cases have turned into pneumonia or re- sulted in death, but admits that exact figures on the number strick- en are not available, A further ad- mission is that physicians inter- viewed were unanimous in saying that thousands of homes and hun- dreds of offices and factories have been swept by the highly contagious disease. These conditions have been pre- valent for more than three weeks and are worsening daily, my husband owned 160 acres of land | We go in the cities and see rich | be out killing us off because we are | How do the bosses expect the | workers to live when they give them | BUFFALO JOBLESS COUNCIL FIGHTS EVICTION JUDGE Judge Says Workers Have No Rights Buffalo, N. Y, Daily Worker:— The Unemployed Council at Buf- falo, N. Y. is organizing House and Block committees to rouse and organ- ize workers for the necessity of struggling against and resisting evic- | tions which are becoming more num- erous each day. William Leach, 139 Cedar Street a | Buffalo Negro worker, with a family, | received an eviction order from the court. The Unemployed Council or- \ganized the neighborhood to defend has worker against eviction. the trial, Zara Ackerman, a | member of the U, C. acted as witness, Pap lakieed the unemployment situ- in Buffalo, such as the Mayor's fake * ‘Mane a-block” drive, the $1,000,- 000 appropriation for a bigger and more brutal police force, the swelling floods of workers turned into the | streets to starve, etc, The witness describes what took ace in the court-room. Protest Eviction, “We came to court at 9:30 a. m. | Two workers from the League of Struggle for Negro Rights were ‘also present. The judge came and ran a cold eye thru the list of eviction or- ders and began to dispense “justice.” This was done like so much piece- work and speed-up was well in evi- dence. After granting many evic- |tions (all in the same hurried :nan- ner) and telling the landlords to go to the city clerk and sue the unem~ pleyed workers for rent, asked if there were any other ca’ This time there were only a few swered. “Well you should have coma We were here all the time since 9:30 sitting in the front row and did not hear the name calied,” I an- swered. ‘Wel l,you should have come up before this;” he barked back. “I represent the Unemployed Coun- cil of Buff we protest his vorker, who ! as always tent when able to get work, who has steadily appealed to the city ‘employment agencies for work, with- out sucess, who has been refused help |by the organized charities and who, in addition has a sick wife to take |care of. To turn them out into the {cold and the streets would be dire cruelty. “A worker has no rights unless he pays rent,” said the Judge and with that final thrust postponed the evic- tion for a bare week. “But the Unemployed Council of Buffalo is more than ever determined to carry on the fight, to organize the | unemployed, to resist eviction with mass action,” —E. S. SENTENCE ROSE CLARK IN IN DAYTON Militant Organizer Is Persecuted Dayton, Ohio. Daily Worker: Rose Clark, organizer of the Com- munist Party of Dayton, has been |Sentenced to the workhouse for 60 days and $50 and costs. She started to serve her sentence Jan. 5. She wa scharged with disturbing the peace and speaking without a permit. She was arrested last July when she led the unemployed workers of Dayton to |the city hall to present the Unem- | ployment Insurance Bill. | On Aug. 1 she again went out and | held a meeting in Library Park in | spite of the police, There were about | 350 workers who were anxiously wait- ing to hear her speak. Before she even had a chance to get up and say anything the police arrested her. The workers at this meeting were more militant than at the demonstration. By then they learned that “Johnny the law after all wasn’t their friend.” Now the judge, prosecutor, police and the other parasites are satisfied that at last they have succseded in vailroading Rose Clark to jail