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—_— D AU LY WORKER, i NEW Y OKK, MONDAY, SUNE 15, 1931 Armed guards at entrance of mine at Kinlock, Pa, FORCED LABOR --- BUT NOT IN THE SOVIET UNION Vv. FORCED LABOR. : By MAX BEDACHT. The propaganda of the American capitalists about forced labor in the Soviet Union is a real tragic comedy. Imagine, if you can, an Ameri- | can capitalist after he has cut the wages in his establishment and after he has called upon his pet judge for an injunction against his work- ers to prevent them from striking against this wage cut, shed tears about forced labor in the} Soviet Union. Here, too, method is evident in the madness. | If Matthew Woll succeeds in exciting the| American workers by shouting “Sovietism is a real issue to the American people. ..the sooner this is realized the more sure will be victory of freedom over tyranny,” he is able to prevent these same workers from organiz- ing a struggle against the tyranny of wage cuts in America, from putting an end to the tyranny of company guards and police against the workers in America, from combatting the tyranny of frame-ups and deportations against the workers in Capitalist America. The propaganda about forced labor in the Soviet Union is merely the application of the motheaten strategy of crying, “Step thief!” The American capitalists systematically steal greater and greater parts of the workers’ wages through ever repeated wage cuts. At the same time they are trying by all means to yevent the workers from fightinj against ese wage cuts. For this purposw the capi- falists and their Wolls and Hillquits and Knick- erbockers are frantically crying “Stop thief!” —There is forced labor in Russia.” Millions of workers in capitalist America are out of work; they are starving. The capi- talists categorically refuse relief. The capi- talist- government just as categorically refuses unemployment insurance. The capitalist class and its government exert all their power to prevent their victims from fighting for relief and insurance. To help the capitalists in his endeavor the “Evening Posts” and “Tribunes,” the Wolls and Hillquits, cry ‘Stop thief—there is forced labor in Russia.” However, this forced labor propaganda is not merely serving a defensive purpose. It is designed primarily to serve a capitalist offen- sive. American capitalism is at war with the Soviet Union. Admiral Pratt, the chief of Na val Operations of the U. S. Navy, excused this {in Boston November 14, 1930, when he de- cared, ‘The word in which they (the USSR) live and the one in which we (the USA) live are so totally different that the two cannot | exist side by ide.” The world of profit-making and exploitation carinot exist alongside a world of socialism. The world of socialism would be an eloquent invitation to the victims of capi- talist profit-making to end it. Capitalist profit-makers never permit their victims to escape without struggle. On the con- trary; they not only use their power to prevent even demand categorically of the workers to fight for them. That is why the Wolls and Hillquits do not content themselves with pre- venting the workers from fighting against their wage-cutting capitalists and for social- ism; in addition they exert every effort to get the workers to fight against socialism and for their bosses. It was for this purpose that Mat- thew Woll raved in his news (?) service that, “The officially declared purpose of the Com- munists is to wipe out the white man’s civil- ization from the face of the earth. If the Reds can carry their plans to a logical conclusion, they will kill off the majority of the white men in a world revolution and appropriate | white women and breed a mongrel race.” To remove an obstacle in the way of the war of American capitalism against the Soviet Union, Morris Hillquit declared that- “The reign of the Soviets is almost as abhorrent as war among nations, Soviet Russia today is guilty of acts of despotism as terrible as in the days of the czar.” This outpouring of anti-Soviet poison is pure and simple propaganda. It is war propa- ganda. The war of American capitalism against the Soviet Union is not a matter of the future. This war is already on. Ex-Ambassa- dor Gerard made this clear in a recent speech when he stated, “We are at war now with a nation of murderers who have destroyed re- The feet of miners’ children at Horning, Pa. " the workers from fighting against them; they | ligion.”* However, this war into an open military attack. The reason for this is the unwillingness of the American working masses. to fight another imperialist war; especially do they dislike war on the So- viet Union. Woll and Hillquit, the New York Evening. Post and the Chicago Tribune to- gether with all other capitalist newspapers and agents, undertook the task of removing this obstacle. Their anti-Soviet lies and slanders are designed to create the necessary “holy war” spirit. It is a dirty job; but to them it is a labor of love. Ludwell Denny says in his book, “America Conquers Britain,” that when- arises to create a moral issue as a bogy.” Mr. Denny is a capitalist newspaperman ; he knows exactly what he is talking about. civilized people,’ says he, “will fight unless they believe it is a ‘holy war’... To create this ‘holy war myth’ i# therefore one of the tasks confronting the government on the eve of hos- tility.” Looking at them through the spectroscope of this capitalist need, the mad ravings of Matthew Woll can be understood as the crafty The slanders of Hillquit and the lies of the talists need to create the ‘holy war myth.” There are millions of workers in America who are and have been enjoined by capitalist court injunctions “from striking or threaten- ing to strike’ against wage cuts. Capitalist court orders prohibit American workers “from | leaving or threatening to leave the employ of | plaintiff’ (injunction granted to Lubliner and Trints in Chieago, 128). Workers who work un- der the most miserable conditions are forbid- den to struggle against them; they are or- dered to refrain from organizing; they are en- joined from “printing, publishing, issuing, cir- culating and distributing or otherwise eommu- nicating directly or indirectly, in writing or verbally to any persons, associations of per- sons or corporations or representing that there has not yet developed | ever government enters a war the necessity | “No modern | outpourings of an anti-Soviet war crusader. | Evening Post can be recognized as those ficti-| tious war atrocities which the American cap-| is a strike at the mill or plant of the complain- ant or that there is a controversy Over wages or conditions of employment, that complainant forces or requires its employees to sign or sub- scribe to the so-called yellow dog contract.” | (Injunction granted by Judge Scott of the U.S District Court of Northern lowa to the U. Gypsum Co.) | This, however, is not forced labor. Tt is cap- italist “law and order.” It is designed merel to pease capitalist incentive and r ged in dividualism. If capitalism tells a worker. “Work at my terms and for my profit, or| starve,” that is capitalist free labor. But when} a workers’ government tells a supernumerary but able-bodied capitalist in the USSR, “Do} useful work for society or society will refusg | to feed you,” that is forced labor; in fact it outright slavery. If you refuse to glorify the privilege to park for your boss’s profit at any wage he may choose to pay you, you are a damnable and contemptible traitor. A few months ago thou-! sands of workers of the American Woolen Company in Lawrence, M struck ag; further reductions of already notorious starva-| tion wages. They also resisted a new speed-up device. This speed-up would have inevitably led to more unemployment. One of the leaders of the National Textile Workers Union, and a leader of the strike—Pat Devihe—was arrest- ed and has since been sentenced to one year jand a day in the Federal Prison in Atlanta. Some 100 per cant American oe in Lawrence comments on this sentence as fol- lows “Devine and his ilk would destroy the in-| stitutions of government... and must pay the} penalty...traitors throughout the world must | pay.” Must we be told in any clearer language that a demand for higher wages in et convince “us s that aS re ist ies up in atic al | America is treachery ? However, do not be mis- led into a rash statement about this being a sign of forced labor in America. If you do you are guilty of high treason; if you do you will have to pay a heavy penalty for trying to over-} throw the government of the United States, | (To be continued.) | | | POLICE KILL 4 CASSEL WORKERS, Fierce Collisions In Germany Last Week MILWAUKEE, | the Milwaukee Sentinel of May 21 Wisconsin “Radical” Legislators Aid Bosses in Their Wis—June 8—In distribute employment than to try to! Wage-Cutting Drive what can be done to regularize and | ‘SENTENCE CONN. Ble _ JOBLESS LEADERS FOR ACTIVITIES (CONTINUED FI nington Workers Force Cops, Trooper To Permit Mass Meet ROM PAGE ONE) 2 made to hold a huge mass meeting | ;Sunday at Reservoir Park and a through the streets of | a success. | membership, | conduct | Worker on these days, j are conflicting dates, the’ Tag Days | {ing (Cable By Inprecorr.) BERLIN, June 14.—Twenty thou- sand workers at the Communist mass meeing at the Sports Palace were addressed by Thaelmann and oth- ers. Prior to. the meeting Thael- mann was arrested and taken to the station and searched for arms. Other leaders were similarly treated. Following the meeting the streets were crowded by home-going work- ers. The police attacked, using batons and firing with revolvers on the pretext that possessions are prohibited. On one street police on balconies fired, giving street police impression of being attacked. Lively firing ensued until police search- lights cleared up the misunderstand- ing. A number of food stores were raided yesterday in Hamburg. Yes- terday evening further demonstra- tions and collisions took place. Po- lice fired point blank, shooting down i including a woman and a young Fierce collisions took place yester- day in Bremen between workers and fascists and police. Three police, many fascists and workers were in- jured and twenty arrested. Police attacked a Communist dem- onstration at Lauenburg yesterday, firing and killing one and wounding two. A number of the police were mauled by the crowd. Demonstrations and collisions con- tinued in Cassel yesterday. Police kept up indiscriminate volleys through workers’ streets, killing the revolutionary Dominikovski and 90- year-old shoemaker. Many were wounded and 67 were arrested. To- |. it was shown that some workers have there appeared a large article giving @ report of a special assembly com- mittee on wage-cuts. In this report been cut from $25 a week to $10 a week. It was shown that “annual earnings of even the best paid work- ers are far below the standard of $2,400 per year established by the government.” Then the committee goes on to say that it will do noth- ing to help the workers: “helpless though the legislature may be in the matter of wage reductions... .” But this is not all. A minority report was turned in, This first report was that of the majority—‘socialists” and “progressives.” The minority report weeps as follows over the poor em- ployers: “From the standpoint of the employes, the existing situation is no more satisfactory than from the em- ployers’ point of view. . .. The pres~ ent is an exceedingly bad time for both employers and employes. . . - Tot the committee it seems ... it is far more important to consider place the responsibility for existing conditions upon employers who are doing their level best to keep at least some of their men employed.” This is the “radical” Wisconsin assembly—“progressive” and “social- ist.” In the question of wage-cuts, it will do nothing to help the work- | ers; in the question of unemploy- ment, it is sorry—for the bosses! But the Wisconsin workers, march- ing to Madison on June 13-16, led by the Unemployed Councils and the | T. U. U. L, will demand that the | assembly appropriate money for un- | employment insurance of $15 a week for each worker and $3 additional for each dependent. These . yellow betrayers, both the socialist party and the LaFollette progressives, are only the faithful servants of the Wisconsin bosses. as this incident shows. The Communist Party is the only political party which will actu- ally help the workers—ali the rest are sorry for the bosses, and don’t care at all while the workers starve. dered were crowded with angry peo- ple. There is a tense atmosphere in the workers’ quarters. seething with in- dignation. All police are armed with carbines and military ammunition. The total Cassel dead stands at four. Demonstrations and collisions and erection of barricades marked the day on Frankfort-on-Main. Com- munists addressed numerous street meetings. Disturbances lasted till midnight. Many were arrested, Similar scenes were enacted yester- day evening in Elberfeld. Street lights were turned out and barricades day spots where workers were mur- erected and many arrested, Cut out and mail at once to the Dally Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York SAVE THE DAILY $35,000 Save-The-Daily Worker Fund. We pledge to do all in our power to save our Daily by raising $35,000 Enclosed find by July 1. Name . sedeeveceeeees Clty, Scottsboro Defense Conferences June 15 Bridgeport, Conn., at 57 Cannon St. June 20 San Antonio, Texas—At Grand Union of Colored Laborers’ Hall. 315 Virginia Bivd., at 3 pm. Perth Amboy, N. J.—At 308 Elm St. at 3 p.m. NITGEDAIGET CAMP AND HOTEL PROLETARIAN VACATION PLAOK OPEN THD ENTIRE YEAR Beantifol Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 4 WEEK CAMP Prereeeatany BEAOON, ME Leng Jail ‘Terms Given Jackson, Powers and | Foster, Hartford HARTFORD, Conn., June 14.—Jo- seph Jackson. Fred Powers and George Foster, who were arrested in New Britain, Conn., for participating |in a demonstration of the unem- | ployed workers which elected a dele~ gation to present written demands, to |the mayor, for unemployment relief jon Mareh 13, received a verdict of being guilty of breach of the peace after the jury had been out for a half half hour. These three workers when they were tried in the lower court of the city of New Britain receiveg a fine of $50 a piece; workers from the start, when they announced that they would defend themselves without the assistance of either a hired or public defender invoked the wrath of the prosecuting attorney and the judge, Carl Foster, who was more subtle than the prosecutor and announced frequently during the course of the trial that he was being lenient. The state during the presentation of its case brought in about eight po- licemen including the chief of police as witnesses, The evidence that they presented was of such a nature as to make them appear as lost artgels, who would turn the other cheek when one had been slapped. None of them had ever made use of black- jacks, ond only one had made use of his fist, but that had been in self de- fense when Powers who had an over- coat in one hand and about 75 Daily Workers in the other hand made an attempt to strike him. That was the type of evidence that led the jury to find these three militant workers guilty, It was a jury of whom only capitalist just was to be expected. For the most part it was made up of Connecticut Valley tobacco growers and buyers; there were also a few in- surance adjusters. Several jurors were dismissed by the defendants be- cause of prejudices that were very pevident in their cross ogpatave yesterday afternoon by three state | troopers in Pana, Illinois. His where- | abouts is still unknown. Last reports | indicate that Sheriff Browning Rob- | inson of Franklin County, with an} army of his deputies, together with |the state troopers, surrounded the | truck coming from Williamson Coun- | ty-and escorted it through Franklin | County, preventing the holding of the meetings scheduled in Frank- | fort, Zeigler, Benton and other | towns. | Up to now, the Committee has/ not been able to locate the truck which was sent out of Springfield | by the local police, cooperating with | the state troopers. The East St. Louis section started | its march with 35 delegates, and will pick up many on the route. It} was headed by Roy Wyckoff, who was fined $25 and costs last Tues- day for speaking at an unemployed demonstration. The reign of terror {s increasing everywhere. All preparations are he told the judge that they should re- ceive sentences so as to prevent “these tramp agitators” from stirring up trouble. And the judge quite in keeping with his position and quite contrary to the lenience to which he had so often referred, sentenced J. Jackson to ten months in jail and $250 fine, Fred Powers to eight months in jail and $200 fine, and George Foster to eight months in jail ang $200 fine. During the two days through which the trial continued many workers who were in the courtroom had a chance to become acquainted with the justice that workers re- ceive. When the sentence was hand- ed out out half the spectators in the courtroom walked out in disgust. They understood that the three had been tried not for breach of the peace but for demanding relief; and | they also had been convinced that if | a breach of the peace had been com- | mitted it had been conmitted not by | parade Springfield to the Convention Hall. A delegation of striking Pennsyl- vania miners will arrive at Spring- | field. | * # « | Thousands at Mass Meet SPRINGFIELD, Ill., June 13. —} | After mass meetings of thousands | of miners at Marion, 2,000 at John-| son Gity, at which the Hunger March was endorsed, a truckload of | thirty hunger marchers was seized by the state police. The hunger marchers wereprevented from stop- | ping in the towns scheduled in} Franklin County and others where | mass meetings were arranged, and |they were brought at night to Springfield and turned over to the Springfield p@®lice who in turn drove | the truck away from the city and turned them back to the state po- |Ilice, who drove the truck tens of | miles out of Springfield and left them in Pana. A warrant to arrest Joe Tash was | issued by the Federal authorities. A number of miners’ homes in Chris~ topher were raided by the County Sheriff in an attempt to stop the expression of mass support and sol- idarity of the miners in Franklin County to the hunger march. The State Committee of the Un- employed Council succeeded in get- ting the State legislature to meet on Monday to take up the demands of the Unemployed Conference. Representatives of the Conference will address the state legislature at 4:00 pm. A representative of the state committee was grilled and beaten when calling on Walter Moody, Superintendent of State Police, protesting against the break- ing up of the delegaiion from the coal fields. President Hoover, who will visit Springfield, for a lying specch about prosperity on Wednesday, sent ad- vance guar Justice to work jointly with the state end city authorities. The ‘ederal authorities are threater!ng ceporta- tion of fyeign-born workers parti- cipating in the march. the epg Bur by thes of, ‘of the Chiergo section of the t.unger in oe of the Department of} The leader | rage ifret National Tag 26,.21;-48) Intensify Days June Districts! Activity Now! National Daily Worker will be held June 26, 27 the campaign to save the Daily Worker, Plans must be made im-| mediately to make these Tag Days | Mass organizations and | trade unions, as well as the Party | must be mobilized for | all Tag Day activities. The 28th can be set aside as Red Sunday to peak the activities and 28 in Every city, small and large, must collections for the Daily When there can be advanced or delayed a couple of days. This, however, should be } done only as @ last resort. Districts must realize that the Tag Days come at the end of the Drive, and the bulk of the $35,000 must be sent to the Daily Worker before these | dates. ‘There must be no postpone- ;ment in the work of soliciting dona- tions or any other vital activity to | save the Daily Worker. REMEM- BER THE DATES! Fill Coupen Books and Return. It is evident from the very fev that subscribers are not be- visited. This condition is re- sponsible for the half-hearted show- of districts in the middle and r west. It is also responsible for the slow development of Daily Work- er Clubs in the districts. Further lassitude in this connec- 1 will put a damper on the Daily Worker Club idea in the beginning, a disastrous outlook for the ‘Daily’. Districts! From the subscribers send out, will come the mem- ip of the Daily Worker Clubs! From meetings of D. W. Clubs will come the mass support without which the Daily cannot survive. With the survival of the Daily will come greater contact with, its readers and friends and a better paper in every way. This cannot be done without the Initial Step— the visiting of subscribers and readers; circularizing of working- class neighborhoods; mass meet- | ings, street, shop and factory meet- ings all for the single purpose of creating mass reader groups: re- volving round the Daity, discussinc, Tag Days | tance Ohio, cupon books being returned with do- | criticizing, changing, helping in every possible way, so that their paper will live and lead the strag- gles ahead! Workers Societies to the Rescue. “If every reader of the Daily were to send a dollar”, writes J. V., Alli- “in a short time the ne- cessary $35,000 would be raised. En- closed is money order for $6.” Same thought expresseq by M. L. D., Pater- son, N, J., who encloses $1. From A. B., Montello, Mass., “En- closed check for $6.40. This is col- lection for| “Daily” at Lithuanian meeting at Montello, Mass. P. W., Chicago, Ill., sends $25 part profite of Daily dance. From Middle Bronz Workers’ Club, N. Y.: “Enclosed $540 In next four weeks expect to raise $50 more. Big labor picnic scheduled om IJniy 4th at Grabbe’s Park, Sionx City, | Towa, for “Daily” benefit, There will \be dancing, sports, baseball raffles, jeats and good speakers. All workers | interested in welfare of Datly Worker invited. Subscriptions and renewals will help “Daily” in crisis! Ask your friends to subscribe! Keep Circulation Up. More bundle orders shoulg be com~ ing in. Comrades not taking full ady vantage of crucial battles in Scotts- ‘boro, Youngstown, Pittsburgh, Allen- |town, Rockford, to spread “Daily |among workers. Reading, Pa., shew- ling signs of life: “Increase bundle from 200 to 250,” writes J. M, new |D. W. Agent. “Going to call eonter- ence of readers to raise quota, also ito get them to write correspondence. We live in a socialist town and we have got to show workers here what \the sociatist yarty really is,” con- \cludes this lively letter. RUSH ORDERS FOR BEDACHT |SOVIET UNION ARTICLES! GIVE YOUR ANSWER TO HOO- VER'S PROGRAM OF HUNGER, | WAGE CUTS AND PERSECUTION! The history of all hitherto ex- isting society is the histery of class struggle —-MARX. DETROIT SPURTS IN CAMPAIGN; - DISTS. 9, 10, 12, FALLING DOWN A continuation of its splendid w $1,931.02, icky find rather than # ations. os for the past seven years. District 7 had its best day, with is se far behind that it will have to keep this up if it is to raise its qu: ork by the New York District and @ adden spurt by District 7 (Detroit) boosted Thursday's totals to the Bigh- 5 However, $403.43 must he considered ex more in the sa contribution from workers or or- This is the money which had belonged to the old sceond Res- Branch of the Workers’ Party of New York and which had heen tled $402.25 contributed, but thin distrie® a of $3,500, District 13 (California) came to life with $39, but will this be usual one-day spurt of this di ved, but must improve more to 7 attle) are still falling down badly. puting. ake up for past inactivity. riets with smaller quotas, 9 (Minnesota), 10 (Kansas City) and 12 (Se- It riet? Furthermore. $89 1s far fram District 3 (Palladeiphia) ime Ameng the 's about time they got into action, DISTRICT 4 | Unit 208 4.00 Sec. 2, affair 500 BE Peterson 1.00 WS Jewish Ciud 50.00 Prog. Bakers, 237 10.08 Unit 196 5.00 J Cairney, ‘Malden 1WO Branch 87 19.00 F Lawson Unit 33 5.00 ; Stopin, Atlantic Gary St. Nucleus 15.00 6.53 Arb. Leser Bund 6.50 2.00 | Nucleus 602 5.70 350 | 501 Unit 400 = 1.00'S Slay Buro 5.00 pieniec 16.61 | 1.00 | St Louis 10.80 M Sade, Temple, Me. 5.00 5.60 11.0 Dorehester Unit 13.00 | 270 See. 2, Unit 17 1.05 9.00 Totat [Kalman, Brighton — 1.00 | on DISTRICT 2 | 5 1 ‘ieee: Macks (G00) TOR HOls.t6 Bred A Weitz, Bronx 1.00 | DISTRICT & A Worker ae J Andreadis, Bronx 5.00) 4 Pelmuter, Wash 5.00 | 4 Worker Fy Geli & Julia 1.00 | District 100.00 | Bo noyar by York & Elliot 2100 Pat Bee era SIP, Irvington 5.00 aynak 1 Kaukakee, Il. 1.00 2nd’ Russ. Br. o/ sky be eae Workers’ Par M Jenchal 1.90 Milwankes OU? le a : Felix Zenel ’ otal 70 ik. M Gyurko 3.00 DISTRICTS atre, 6th St.) [M Jankonki 50 | picavinghcritn 1.00 has turned over J Albert, Freelan ‘St P: for fund of D. Reading, Dist. 15 4 Andereon Stash ae vy. (receipt No. J Wagner | 50 5) June 8, by Rogers Good 3 [8 ee Garbus Robt Arlington 1.50 | ¢ AmeeteDenM Ie 1.50 dow: Louis Hendus 1.00 DISTRICT 12 tetxk?. need 40, | Meet Port., Ore. 5.00 deposited fon H Barber i ic Ab "00 1924 by above | Mrs Good ar Bo © Lagiate, Spee ae branch 8300.00 | Daniel Kelcher otal 30 Int. for 7 years 103.48) Levy Dietrich ae, eee eon ante Mrs M Reinert 25 MW Gerber LA, Cal 5,00 Total $408.43 | Coe MI Worker 25 | 5! Clay. Lea. he ; L Altshatt ; 4 2. A oath! ace sph | J Kaxanjean, Phila 3.00 | UNE 32 y°4" yy i re t. Bkn Sec. FWIU Pa gigas | Otkland Din cet) B Marens une 50 S Glasson Red Bldr 2.00 Sympathizer, Bkn = 1.25 Carpenters’ Group ly. for USSIt San Bernardino: DISTRICT 4 | N Comon 4 Roch. See. C.P 10,00| F. Gayor 1 Ss Binghamton. N.Y. J Kobler 300 s y Mrs M Shaty 10.00 | Powell 1.06 See. 6, Unit 1 A Panasic 5.00 | T Gaster 32 See. 6, Unit 2 B Zmitris 5.00 | Unit 32, L. A 7 See. 6, Unit 3 2.25 | Col. at See. 6, Unit 4 5.00 | anniversa i Sec. 6, Unit 6 Com. Berkowits: See. 6, Unit & 2.25| § G Blech 1 Sec. 6 Unit 10 © Larson, Buffalo 3.75) % Bunyan 5. Sec. 4, Unit t x Chernas ¥ Lewis, Brooklyn 50 ‘otal #47.00| Beloft a) See. 1, Unit 9 3.00 DISTRICT 5 M Baran 1.00 See. 7, Unit 8 9,80 | Bildner, Hunting- A Friend 100 See. 8, Unit 2 2.25 ton, W. Va. 1.00 H Dayis 1 See. 2, Unit 3 1.00 | D P Likowich, Dr, Kaba % See. 2, Unit 3, 25| Finleyville, Pa. 1.00| Fannie Cohen = 1 Women’s Council Marracini, Goldle Coben 1.00 10, Bath Beach 10.50) Elizabeth, Pa. 00 | L, Berkowitz 1.08 N Gorelick, Bx 5.00 | Mrs F Sabo, Hiller 1.00|m J Gendler, LA 1. See. 5, Unit § 3.00 | Sympathizers, HM McGuire, L.B. 3. See. 5, Unit 27 24.00 | Hiller, Pa, 1.50 — s 4, Unit § 5.00 | Schwarts 25 | Total 960.00 See. 4, Unit 8 9.40|C Kashinsky © 28 DISTRICT 15 E $ Workers’ —— | M Bloom, Spring- club, NY 6.00| Total $10.00 | field, Mass. 8 Sec. 3, Unit 2 2.00 See. 1, Unit 18 1.50 See, 8 Unit 5 7.50 M Altshuler Bkn 6,00 Sec. 11 18. Sec, 5, Unit 29 18.60] S$ Holaman L Shayewits, Bkn — 1.00 | Chas Moschel, Cin 5.00 1.00 H Mohony, Bky 1.00 | HW Kepler Dayton. 1-40 T Triantofion, NY 2.00 | (WO Br 181 Akron 10.00 it * 2.00|Carmino, Akron — 8.35 2.00 tN. Yorker K Knieminakt, Erte 5.00 © Cowan, Erie 11.00| Unionville Lae —— | A Worker. Tot 961.15 | Greenwich 4,00 DISTRICT TF — A Citeski, Detroit 10.00 | Total 930.65 | Wasserman, Bx P Zatura, Chelsea 3.00 DISTRICT 16 | HM Winslow Harlem 2.00 | Detroit Dintrict | 38.25 | §, Wriedma p Col at Camp Beacon: W Dreyer. Detroit 00 Konort 5.00 |G HK, Detroit pig es Owens i a . Melver 416 | Tote 40! Tempe, Fila 10.58 Berkdale 4.16 DISTRICT § Total alt die. x Bantman 8.58 | Chicago: te Prev, reesived 18) Sec. 5, Unit ‘tho | Fem mite aN Total to date . S88: 3; aves Lint Wm Miller ‘ote