The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 7, 1931, Page 3

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val ss, ATLY WORKER, NEW YORK. TUESDAY, JULY 7, 19 31 er YOUNG WORKERS TOIL IN MILLER SHOE FOR $10 AND $12 PER WEEK Shoe and Slipper Workers Have Suffered Many Wage-cuts; Terror Increasing Leather Workers Industrial Union Calls All k Workers to Organize (By A Shae Woker) NEW YORK, N. Y.—The conditions in the shoe industry are intolerable. The campaign to cut the wages in which the bosses have long engaged still goes on. Cuts are taking place every day for the ones who are working, unemployment is increasing. The standard of living of thé workers are at the level of misery, starvation wages and speed up system put the workers in a complete slavery. There is no shoe factory in the country where the work-| ers are more enslaved than in the I. Miller Plant at Long Is- | land City. In this factory the work- ers are not only subject to miserable low wages and relentless speed-up but also and very much to the espionage that enters into their very homes and private lives. The workers are subject to pay $50 deposit to be ad- mitted into shop. Under fear of dis- crimination and terrorism the work- ers don’t talk to each other, afraid that they may loose their jobs. Re- cently 3 workers were fired for the only reason that they were suspected of being union members. The average wage of the worker is no more than $20 to $30 a week, working from 10 to 12 hours a day. A big number of young workers of 14 to 22 years old get only 10 to 14 dollars a week. In the shop there is a company union system in order to fool the workers and they must pay 10 cents weekly to the chairman. This way all the other factories follow I. Miller’s ex- ample as a president of the Board of Trade. Wage Cuts The workers of the Elco Shoe Co., have suffered a wage cut of 15 to 20 percent. Also, the workers of the Slipper Industry have suffered a wage cut of 30 to 35 pecent. These are the conditions in every shoe factory. Must Fight | But the shoe workers have start- | | ed to resist these conditions and are putting a fight wherever wage cuts | are taking place. In order to block these fights of the workers the scab agents of the bosses, the Boot and Shoe “Union” tries to mislead the | shoe workers with fake slogans to| | organize the shoe workers—and the | allies are the renegades of the Com- | munist Party, the Lovestone group— who are dealing the shoe workers! into the ranks of the Boot and Shoe But the shoe workers will not be fool- ed by all these manoeuvers and nice | phrases of the renegades. | The shoe workers know that the only union they can look up to is the Shoe and Leather Workers In- dustrial Union (former Independent Shoe Workers Union,) which is the | real union able to fight the bosses | for better conditions. The workers | | did not forget.the brilliant struggles that the Independent Shoe Workers | | made for them and they are looking | now and accepting the leadership of ; this union. It is the duty of every | class conscious worker to join: the union and to help to carry on the | struggle for improvement of condi- | tions in the Shoe shops. | A F of L Fakers Help Bosses Fire Workers MILWAUKEE, Wis.—I am a member of the Painters Union, local 392, of wr A. F. of L. I worked in the car shop in the coach department of the C. M., and St. P. railway. About a month ago, Ed Risco, the workman of this department, came over to me and advised me to take a two weeks vacation (but not with pay), I refused to do so. That same day I went to Ed Radtke, a big shot in the painters’ local, and told him what passed between” me and Risco. I demanded that the union take care on the interests of its members. Next day Risco came over to me, and transferred me to the lousiest and the dirtiest job in the shop. The Greatest terror was inaugurated against me. It was obvious that I | ; department, naturally, I was the first | to be laid off. ‘You can see fellow workers, that the bosses work together with their agents of the A. F. of L. After I ap- | pealed to Radtke for help, the next | day I got a worse job, and several | weeks later the boss got rid of me entirely. The A. F. of L. fakers work | | together to worsen the living condi- | | tion of the workers—any harm which | the boss wishes to place on the work- | ers {8 absolutely supported by the A. F. of L. fakers. Fellow workers, fight against the A. F. of'L., fakers! Organize a rank and file block against the fakers, and wipe them | off the face of the earth. Affiliate | your union to the TUUL! | A Rank and File Worker, Painters | FAGAN ORGANIZES fEeETIN WELECOIY & U.MWwa. ONLY, SCABS INVITED By BURCK (oc Steel Worker, Driven Mad by Heat, Suicides ¢ ROTEST DEMONST McKeesport, Pa. Daily Worker: On July 1 a young working man by the name of John Lepinsky was drag- ged out of the river here dead after jumping off the 15th Street bridge. After slaving many years in the Tin- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) plate Factory this is how he ends up. The conditions in the mill in the |Of the ninth, 14-year-old Roy | summer time are unbearable. Work- Wright, a mistrial occurred | ers claim that it is around 150 de-|and this boy is now facing a} grees in the mill. Many of the work- | i | ers come home exhausted. They can- joo lM ss i not sleep in their miserable homes,| The action of the attorneys the rooms being stuffy and hot, of the International Labor Defense The Tinplate workers should get | and the League of Struggle for Negro | together in the Metal Workers In- | Rights in taking an appeal to the) dustrial Union and demand shorter | Supreme Court of Alabama has auto- hours in the summer and vacations | matically stayed the legal lynching with pay like the workers are getting | of the eight condemned boys. The in the Soviet Union. | workers, however, realize that the —A STEEL WORKER. same ruling class which railroaded REACTION T0 TRY zc 40 JAPAN TOILER courts and that the boys cannot be saved by merely appealing “from | Caesar unto Caesar.” | Realizing that only the greatest or- OVER COUNTRY JULY 9 AGAINST SCOTTSBORO COURT LYNCH VERDICT 'UTLW. ACTS TO. SELL STRIKE, ALLENTOWN ‘The demonstration will be held at} sabe M AGE ONE) 7.30 Thursday evening, in the Edge-|to resume mags picketing and to wood Park. The International Labor | elect a broad strike committee, one Defense of Ohio is mobilizing its en- | to every twenty-five strikers. An ap- tire membership and its thousands | peal to the silk workers here to send of sympathizers for the demonstra- | 100 delegates to the Paterson confer- tion. Defying the brutal terror of ;} ence was made, the bosses and their police, the work-| If the intentions of the United Tex- ers are rallying grimly to thé mass|tile Workers misleaders are carried | fight to save the boys. They refuse | out, the Allentown strike will be an- to be intimidated. They will defend | other link in the long chain of black | their right to the streets, their right | betrayals of the U. T. W. Kelly, a | to free speech, their right to protest | prominent U. T. W. official was ex- against the murders of workers by the | pelled from the Philadelphia Uphols- | bosses. A permit has been applied /terers Weavers Local when he concur |for, but the meeting will be held,|red in McMahon's sellout proposal | permit or no permit. |that the weavers take a 14 per cent | wage cut against which they struck! Chicago Workers Are Angered by the fOr many months. The United Tex- Betrayal of Boys tile Workers supplied scabs to break CHICAGO, July 6.—Angered at the the strike and later expelled the mil- | RATIONS ALL (CONTINUE! | | | |the gaps must \ranks of the workers experi | practical work in the factories {neers in Socia |Non-membership in the Co: | Party is no barrier; on the con! | values capa Jers and the Part; | The fifth problem is j changed relations toward bourgeois technical in (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) merly the chief sourc sufficient owing t {velopment of the system. New coal and |are being successfully jand Kuzbas. A fiv | engineering and tec | necessary. Engine |cians are also necessary | stand the policy of the working |and are prepared to carry out the |same conscientiously | ‘The stage has arrived when the workers must create their own tech- jnical intelligentzia. No Ss can |exist without its |The Soviet goverr jopening tec h | workers in all, br es of industry {Tens of thousands are studying, but |the production of capable engineers, jete., takes time. In the meantime, be filled fr cl schools shock troops togethi graduates must forr tarian intelligenzia the general staff of Soc non-Party workers must receive cial consideration and must be ap- | pointed to responsible posts, demon- strating that the Communist Party le workers. The a phere of “mutual confi dence and mutual control” (Lenin must exist between non-Party work- Two years ago the best tr | tions of this intelligenzzia was in-| fected with the disease of sabotage Today the situation is changed The remnants of capitalism in the town and country have been| | smashed. The hopes of vention harbored by the bourgeois intelligen- | zia proved illusory for the moment. Te result is that there are clear signs of a change. of heart among certain sections of the bourgeois intel! zia - formerly- hostile to the Sovie' system. The sabotagers still exist and will 8 exist, bu d. Thea ide towards the old intelligenzia change. The desire for co- operation, together with efforts to improve the material sit n of the intelligenzia, must be stre: The sixth problem is t cumulation. Previous sources Soviet accumu! mm are now insu eient. The history of capitalist velopment shows that no you of ac- of | condit | subjective factors, Stalin ia Speech to Soviet Economists Sets Forth New Methods to Speed Vietory striving to develop industrially has succeeded without outside assistance in the form of credits, ete. On this umption has refused Soviet U hoping that lack of tk Id cripple in- 1 erred and he Union had rees of accumulation development despite The Soviet Union dous tasks. Scores oubles were necessary upplied chiefly by light ‘e and transport. y, above all, en- ntribute to accu- ing wastage, in intto- boyco new conditions of develop- emand new methods of work. and economic leaders must t only the general conditions be up and sim- permit leaders the possi- bili learning what happens to all parts of the apparatus. Collec- tive leadership must develop into in- dual responsibility. A chair- th a few assistants, must remaining must de- members of the co! scend into pract work to their own advantage and that of the cause, The current production program can be carried out. All objective for so doing are present. ent depends on the the will to win, Accomp! the employment of new methods, etc, Have we the will to win? Yes! fore, the program must be ied 6ut! (Tremendous ap- plause.) Dreiser Right, Says Former UI W Member Daily Worker This is to let you know thet Mr. Dreiser's report that I read a few | days ago in the papers about the bad conditions in the mining re- gion ts correct. I have been a mem- ber of the United Mine Workers of America and I know that this or- ganization has never done any- thing for its members. The U.M. W.A. works only for the big mine owners and the corporations. The leaders are all racketeers interested in collecting dues and drawing fat D. P. ies. STEEL WORKERS SEND S101: TAG DAY FUNDS STILL BEING HELD UP was not wanted in the shop. Just a savage attacks by the bosses and itant local for putting up a strong | Workers who do not want their a grand Daily Worker celebration i = y e 8 2 { blished bee: of = ly 19! week ago, a layoff took place in our Local (302, A. F. of L.) | Sanized mass pressure on the Ala-/ 1° 3AACP. tools on the Scottsboro | fight against wage cuts and refusing] Sintec persecation should, indicate | - tet 'rin 5 ig ° : bama boss lynchers and thelr courts | > ‘ense and the brutal jail sentences |t0 accept the U. T. W. sellout. | thie in sending in thete contriby- | (Cleveland), 7 ; Arrested in Raids of, can save and free the nine boys, the \nanded out to cight fighters for the| Kelly and McDonald have thruout| who contribute whether thes waue | GE) 4°41 nia) are falling Rubel Ice Corp. Cuts Wages Twice—Ice Work- | Last Two Years [ine acsthoe tromendawe demonstra, (freedom of the Scottsboro hoys, the| the duration of the Allentown strike,| thelr names, printed. 0 from 6 from 7, $26.15 rse Or: oat E jfor another tremendous demonstra-| — ers of Chicago will hold two tre-|to serve their sellout purposes, tried| istrict 2 (New York) is still set- | 70M 8 and nothing trom 13, which . erss Organize! ‘ By mea, jtion against this frightful outrage| - eso. demonstrations on July 9,\to confuse the strikers by saying| ting 2 fast pace. Of Thursday 2 ec ; > ; 2 x a5 y 9./ y ai contributions of €62 Agi the above figures include Ti (By a Worker Correspondent) _| organized the bosses would not dare| NEW YORK.—Forty revolutionary | eee ey fue People and the! Gne demonstration will be held at|that the National Textile Workers | ory "Disirict contributed 400-85 funds, “which have been aise NEW YORK.—For many years I| slash our wages and speed-up us| Japanese workers will be brought to| ™ iaihiy Paria Ogden and Randolph Sts., the other /Union and the Communist Party were | We neat ne een et its ner have been employed by the Rubel like they have in the past. I know|trial at Tokio, July 7, after more}, oy ju. wroughout the country, | a5 Washington Park, 51 and Vin-| Working with the bosses. The U. T.| jog work, sending in $801, while Ice Corporation and we always used| of no work where the workers are|than a year's incarceration after the | e¥,™il! thunder anew their demand cones Sts. Both will begin at 7.30 W- misleaders stooped to the lowest | : and all to be paid $6.00 for eight hours work. | speeded up like in the ice plants. |raids of March, 15, 1928, and April| {0 the release of the nine victims | m The demonstration will pro-|Gemagogy to retain their grip upon | so (cieveland) sent Our wages were cut to $5.00 and on| Fellow workers, organize and think | 16, 1929. Ee ee | Of Alabama bose justice. | test the Scottsboro boss court lynch | the strikers the better to lead them mount, $130.89. waite June 22, we received the news that | for yourselves. Be ready to walk out Despite their long imprisonment aay ree Clty, the local United | verdict, the betrayal of the boys by | into the conference Wednesday —| yank @r Boe sppie Fine ace | Districts 3. (Philadelphign, our ‘pay is coming down another | and strike and be ready for picket{and mistreatment all of the com-|*TMt Scottsboro Conimittee, has| tne jeaders of the NAACP, Congress- | there to kill their militant strike and | comrades: These unemployed and ), 9 (Minneapolis) and 13 notch—this time to $4.50 a day. | duty too, for Mr. Rubel, will resort |rades, including a woman comrade, | Called @ protest mass meeting for | man De Priest and other Uncle Tom herd them back into the mill upon | aera. paid ate orkers have ~} had not been heard We ask each other what is the| to bringing in scabs to break the|Sekiko Tanno, show a good spirit; | TBursday evening, July 9, at St.! reformists, as well as the jailing of | basis of empty promises and U.| 2moie: ‘Arrange p f which means: rush those Hot agen Twer 1s that we ere| strike. Join the Trade Union Unity| At the opening of the session Com- | Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th St. All/the eight workers for their activity | 7" W- Pressure. [eee oak ne ae ere anya aun fat not organized. If we were really’ League. rade Gaku Sano, one of the leading | Workers and their organizations are iz “i Ing in mobilizing the masses for the de- aH . _ rititaexn e figures of the Communist movement | bed hs support this meeting and | tense of rap ae Mis ppt sb) lire iaioG ane Seats “Workers Club vaere ae . % in Japan demanded the trial be , the fight to free the boys. | | i Coenegl Medes bai Eagle Pencil Worker Tells How to Organize to lopesad te the Guile | ie ek | Fea ee: CHARLOTTE, N, C—‘Summer va- Total sSio1 Bue ee Fight Speed-Up The infamous raids upon the revo- | Barberton Workers to Defy Police | Ms. Norris to Address Cleveland cation” for some 75,000 textile work- | bienise angen S| Detroit : Nhe eee ; lutionary workers organizations was | Terror | protean mee ee RAGA Loca? wilde rails Gn thin a Garten IC pedro i, Gemee ee Daily Worker: 1m N ¥: [then the prices are cut and we're|initiated by: the fuedal-bourgeois| BARBERTON, ©, July 6—In this) CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 6—The | °'S SIANs ® stinkin, Nov 1.00 | Rumanian Work- (3 naan a4 Tighty girls 4 back where we were, only this time| government in an attempt to kill the | city where on June 26 a demonstra- | Workers of Cleveland are called to vicinity shut down without definite) "Moulton: NYC. 1.00 | ere Club E: Nelman oe WOrke On enalls Sot, “epertment | working twice as fast for the same | workers movement and force worse | tion of Negro and white workers pro-|® Monster protest meeting at Slov-| date of reopening. haar aera im E. Foster 4 ath abies Gollan Brae eee eens amount of, money. | conditions upon the Japanese Work- | testing against the Scottsboro out- sie pee ya 6409 St. Clair Ave., |— af eens es DEALT DL Maik CT mr iene rod , miohs are! Cutting of prices per piece has | rs and peasants. rage and the murder by Barberton | Thursday evening, July 9, to support | 1 ' ©. Berg, Bloom- ‘DISTRE ‘ e Bee ig —— § hours ®| become a very usual thing in F-10,| The trial will probably last until| police of Louis Alexander, a mili-| the fight for the freedom of the tbe | ead Nee scieska af thos ala mail fe aeenas Fim cron: fhe a ne make a living. We never know when to expect an September. We, the workers here | tant Negro worker, was brutally at-| Scottsboro victims. nocent boys Hemet arene Unit 1 dure Bone ete wet Come in on Sat-| envelope with 10 per cent minus, | ust protest against the oppression | tacked by police and Legion thugs,|_ The meeting will be addressed by|” stop the legal murder of the nine | %z,Danmla Bell, N.J. [OP Ot | Re Ahola ‘50 urday whether they want to or not.| Bit we girls of F-10 are getting | 224 brutalities visited upon our class| thu workers will again take the | Mrs. Norris, mother of Clarence Nor-| , bei : ths! a, resale Seay ae lUult 16 sce o Fred icant Zo To make sure that we don't take are geit/né | brothers in the far east |ris, one of the framed- : Ragnar sing! | Scer x umes | ee Haake 33 up space for nothing, we have a Wise to these schemes. We are tired ‘astern countries. | streets on July 9 in a militant pro- be 3. Leal ‘amed-up boys, and | Fight the boss terror against the | $e & Unie & Total $606 = Brass 4 4 of wage cuts and nine hours of speed test against the frightful crime be-|>y J. Louis Engdahl, General Sec- | Negté. People?’ ieee | eaoee eee 25 iM, me sosu esta vient its “|up every day. We are cevaulecng a enh, a Nank R e eees Demand ” the removal from the | " |u Bostyanke, t ‘enctfekson = man steps out, there is a good sub.|ePartment Grievance Committee | ‘ror im ‘he July Labor Defender. | bosses and their courts. RAG Te bebe. death cells of the eight boys in Kil- | | Askieys Pat | A. Wilson a AaVitA to ngeed “ub op, that will stick up for our rights, To Demonstrate Before Detroit | by Prison! ee Seen 1Se | mal re 4 The password in F-10 is speed-up.| Get in on it, girls; if you are MINERS NEED FOOD CLOTHING Eee Demand their right to receive 33 |W. Sumonte ‘s0| ¥. Sumto 22s It we don't rush, we can't make | asked to join do co, for it's protess ‘ ly 9 SETROIT, July 6.—The local) mail and literature, and to hold | Soc Unit 6, $01 |J. Kolos | verti = thing. If we do United Front Scottsboro Defense| private interviews with their par- No. 11, B: 5.00 | . Let. LL. :00 | Ed Mutat: ‘dar the tome hocks ve whould mo pg dvs | ENTS TO WIN THE STRIKE Committee has called 2 mass dem-| ents and attorneys! ¥ gee'5, Unitas 130 Mite ee a: — E- galco™ as ¥ onstration for July 9 before the De-| Demand the dismissal of the | gcc. x ° $098 | i irinmiong: : | eoanauel br troit City Hall to protest against| charges against 14-year-old Roy | S¢e. 2, Unit 16 1.37 | Tag day donations |} eee wo Sec. 4, Unit 1 65 | Mate Wage-Cut Forced on Pocketbook Makers (CONTINUED FROM FAGE ONE) | Eviction is 2 real form of terror. oo ies renee of the Me eeregy of Nene wee, a as ee” Kael x Bak > Tents are needed at i \- ie Oonees: on re- is et A | J. Simmonelli, | Be Easton, Pa. ined. But I, continued working, 1|of groups of ten, with captains of tens | oa1 seit cceital abs Reyes ahaha The demonstration is arranged on| this boy! Demand a jury of work- | Unit « 451 | Rochester 1.00} Tete : vt jag hae peruano nk that my health would soon be ru-|and captains of hundreds, and by a| 4. which to set them ft piguae the eve of the day originally set for| ers, at least half of them Negroes! | Unit 7 11.17 ‘Total ~Foas | ,, Minneaolis, Sttun.e worked in different factories, but ‘bat beech ae vas ie eileen Touche ae cases, the use of the land is donated | the legal lynching of these boys. The! Down with the bosses lynch sys- | Unit 9 woaL DISTRICT 5 | Ac debaade Zo my job and have been out of work |The the company cut the wage 10 tee bbe pribe: i princi ot Te- | by friendly farmers or other property | Workers of Detroit, Negro and white,| tem! Down with the national op- Untt 10 ious OR A Friend ‘25 Fees the tine, Per cent, We could not stand it and| "nut even those paacend lines wouta |O™HETS. Places have been prepared must come out to this demonstration! pression of the Negro people! uate as Pre | emus coe le F etna pe 3 About 3 months ago a pocketbook | N° Went on strike. We struck sev-| he more effective if the soles of hu- |%0r tents at Harmarville, Whet@ Pit: | | yyy 4.00 |3. Stevaentic He Anterte ee and trink factory moved to this eral days and we lost. We were not|man feet were thot exposed to tee chot’s coal and iron police, supposedly os “| Elizabeth 11.89 | J. Lorko Total $3.50 organized and had nobody to lead demobiléged on June 30 are still as | Unie 2 £08 | 2, Bapie DISTRICT 12 town and advertised for girls. I got sharp rocks of mining town roads and % i i | dersey City 8.84 | P. Steban P. Tyron, Seatth a fob for $8.00 a week—they prom- the strike. Many of the girls went hillsides. And in the final analysis, active a ever, with deputy sheriff's * | Outes Ban | J. Strvasnie | P Cxreae Soutt ‘aA fsed a talse later on. As soon as 1|2°K: but I did not. 1 would rather |organize your numbers as you will badges pinned on their yellow dog Deputy sheriffs, gunmen, thugs are knocking upon the doors of the | wait 4 rs] Brentocrbeestesr | Seattle Diets 3.50 started to work I geban to feel that | St@*Ve and die than work for $7.00| (and they should be organized) |W forms. Twelve strikers’ families | company-owned shacks in which the miners live, point their guns and club| $6. wikiyn v.c.t, 174 | Workers ac Am | Astoria Dist’ Agee T was speeded-up—never in my life|® Week. We must get together and nothing can replace actual strength, | Mave already been evicted at Har-| the miners and even their wives. At all hours of the night and day these $. WklnmVCl. 14 |, Prides. Pe. 10175) Ya Daye, ol. by did I work so hard and fast, And|0'8anize for a real strike and force) the’ force of big numbers. nape | thugs say: “Go to work or you'll be evicted tomorrow.” | ni | ra, Pa.” so, OO ee besides, the smell of the leather and|‘M® bosses towpay us a living wage | Rash funds and clothing and Ground has been obtained for tents The miners on strike against starvation in Pennsylvania, Ohio and | | Total $108.00 Total $32.28 paint was terrible, 1 felt that | ®"4 reduce the speed-up. shoes to the Pennsylvania Ohio |%% Coverdale, where groups of three | West Virginia issue this call for tents, Many have already been evicted. | Dis vRictS Springfield: Mauss tevin Gaia Gaile. ehected “anid aA Ohne Gh Striking Miners Relief Committee, |®¢ visiting house to house those | Many hundreds have received eviction notices. Cleveland Let- | Unit K 11.50 ‘orking Girl. 611 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh! forced back to work in the Pittsburgh All workers and sympathizers, all camps and cooperatives that have bye foreman K ; Evictions are multiplying. Miners aeBuDMy and Genie a oie iS | tents in storage, or know where to get tents, should gather them AT ONCE Stamtord Nucleus, om forced into company towns over per= |and ship them to Pittsburgh TODAY, If at all possible, pay expressage | Cone. entucky Landlord Gyps Worker of Pay jods of years, face eviction by thou- obey is Faget ean bre evictions or fast freight charges in advance. ee) Louisville, Ky. her the bill for my labor, which was | sands and have no place to go. Part |Can be made less terrible, HELP EN’ ! HE! : | py Pete: $28.45 and she refused to pay me the of the company town scheme was| At Newficlds land has been eel ENN napa RUSLAN shore be Bek ct sta | meee te Unlt 10 DISTRICT 19° ‘an you give the landloris some | money. that no other houses were built — | cured for barracks, and lumber hay. | Ukr. Workers’ Denver, col. Ta, purvelty? Here is the name of one} My uncle share crops for her on| while the miners lived in company |been donated to build them, but tha 8 L ANIA, OHIO, WEST VIRGINIA | Pe i hates _ ° 1 Of them: Mrs, W. D, Landy of Louis-| one-half basis, but in reality all he | houses. Now when they are to be| relief needs $20 for other supplies, | STRIKING MINERS RELIEF COMMITTEE | gmeetion: + Me ‘Total 84.50 is % She vagaey 280 acre faim | gets is 15 cents an hour. Tam trying | driven by force from these homes, | nails, etc., to put up the barracks, | 611 Penn Ave. Pittsburgh Pa. | batt 4 ; a) 108 Total all dist @ 985.15 “ritance. id some work for | to get the share croppers here inter- | they have no place to sleep, no place Send tents and money, food and i 2 ‘$ " Unie 10 19.57 1. Marthal 00 | e rece: v«. and when I was finished I gave |ested in the United Farmers League. | to keep their children under shelter. | clothing and shoes. | Contributions to_purchase tents can, also be sent to the above a Solel Oa 0 \S ee _ $) iting :

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