The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 15, 1931, Page 3

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CALL WESTMORELAND MINERS vteyg TO JOIN STRIKE AND FORCE STARVATION FROM MINE FIELDS Miner Tells How Company Robs Workers At Mines and Company Stores Forced to Work in Water Doing Heavy Work For No Pay Hermeine, Pa. Daily Worker:— Conditions in the Westmoreland Coal Mines and the prices in the Coal Company store are terrible. Im the mines you have to work in water and you have to drag rails 50 feet or more and carry posts to their places and the company don’t give the right weight on the cars we load. For the cars that weigh 8,000 pounds we get credit for only 4,00 to 3.000 pounds. We have to load screen coal and we do not get paid for any coal that goes through the screen. We also have’ to load slate for nothing and do a lot of other dead work. Miners Robbed. ‘When pay day comes the miners get $15 to $20 for two weeks work and some make less. And what lit- tle we make in the mines we have to spend in the company store, which charges twice as much as the other stores. If the miners don’t buy in the company stores, they can’t work in the mines. The company takes off for rent, store, power, electricity and other things and the miners do not get any cash out of the few dol- lars they earn. The coal companies steal from the miners right and left. Miners of the Westmoreland field, you know the conditions of the mines. The officials and the bosses are misleading you by telling you that the National Miners Union is composed of “Reds” and are not fighting for the rights of the work~ ers. Every miner knows that the National Miners Union is now lead- ing the great fight against the bos- ses that has ever taken place in the mine fields. The sooner the miners in the Westmoreland fields get be- hind the National Miners Union, the sooner we will better our conditions. Come out 100 per cent on strike. Do not listen to the lies spread by the bosses and their stool pigeons. We must understand that the reason the bosses are against the N.M.U, is be- cause the N.M.U. is the only union in the mine fields that is fighting the mine owners. —A Miner. 50) AT PUTNAM JOIN RHODE ISLAND STRIKE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) wage increase and a forty-eight hour week. State police have been sent to the mill in an effort to break the strike, “ee a PROVIDENCE, R. I, July 14— ‘The mass picket line in front of the Royal Silk Mill in Pawtucket proved effective today in preventing any at- tempt of the company to reopen. According to the local press over 2,000 workers participated. The ra- dio announced that the picket dem- onstration at two occassions pre- vented the efforts of the police to break them up. Joseph’ Ott; president of the Royal Weaving Co. printed notices that he would attempt to reopen mill no. 4 with scabs this morning. When he heard about the mobilization for picketing it seems that he changed his mind and informed the press that the attempt to reopen would not be made. The mass picketing gthis morning was a guarantee against Joe Ott changing his mind again. According to unverified reports some 20 strikers were arrested at the Royal picket demonstration this morning and the line was finally dispersed. The police were armed with tear gas and riot guns. WORKERS CLASH 5. WITH FASCISTS {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) calm” in the face of the sharp turn of the government towards fascism. ‘The collapse of the Danat Bank of Germany, which endangered the entire financial structure, has swept through other countries of Europe. All banks in Hungary have been closed by the government to forestall collapse. This has resultéd in the virtual collapse of the economic life of Hungary. The masses are in a panic and rumors of war are being broadcast in Hungary. The Merkur- bank of Vienna crashed. The Bank of Dacia of Jassy, Rumania, one of the largest banks in that country, crashed. Many more bank crashes are expected as the conditions grows worse in Germany. Wall Street banks, also, are heavily involved in the crash of the Danat Bank, though the American capital- ist press keeps this fact silent. The German Reichsbank is begin- ning to print new money which is| not exchangeable on the world mark- et. This undoubtedly is the first step to inflation and a collapse of the German currency. Stock ex- changes in Germany and other Eu- ropean countries have closed to hide the extent of the collapse from the cutting deep into the living stand- ards of the masses. GIVE YOUR ANSWER TO HOO- VER'S PROGRAM OF HUNGER, ‘WAGE CUTS AND PERSECUTION! Bead the Labor Defender on the Boottaboro case. A few thousand workers gathered at the open-air mass meetings in Pawtucket and Onleyville (Provi- dence) yesterday afternoon. These meetings prepared for the picketing this morning. The efforts of the reactionary Polish groups in Central Falls to break the strike with the help of Frank Faber, the ex-strike commit- tee member who was expelled be- cause of his sellout attempt, is still being made. A bosses’ citizens com- mittee has been set up, which will try to defeat the workers through so-called arbitration. The strike committee of the General Fabrics has fssued the following statement on the present situation: “The strike of the General Fab- rics workers has stood solid for two months for the following demands: 1, No more than four looms to a weaver. 2. All weaving jobs to be mixed: no jobs of bags only, or of any one article. 3. The price on the chiffons, georgettes, flat crepes and white bags to be $2.20 per 100,- 000 picks; the price on brown bags to be $2.60 per 100.000 picks. 4. The 10 per cent bonus for fhe night shift and the 5 per cent bonus for the afternoon shift to be restored. 5. A price list on all styles of work to be posted inside the mill where all workers can see it, 6. Only 1 fixer to a section; the number of looms per section to be agreed upon by a conference between the fixers and the management. 7. A_ standard pay of $15 per week for the drop wire girls. 8. No discrimination and recognition of the mill commit- tee. THIS IS THE ISSUE IN THE STRIKE. The workers refuse to be confused by anti-red drive lies, etc. WE WORKERS KNOW WHAT WE WANT AND HOW TO GET IT! “The employers, seeing that the workers would not be swayed from their purpose, resorted to the usual methods of violence. The announce- ment of the company that it would re-open its mill with scabs brought out the entire body of the strikers in a peaceful mass picketing demon- stration, which was supported by the people of Central Falls. The trouble at the mill was provoked entirely by the police. The brutal methods of the police, attacks on young girls, tear gas, threats with pistols, ma- chine guns, etc., is well known to all men, women and children in Central Falls. The continual hounding of the entire working-class population of the Bowery by the police pro- voked the resistance of these work- ers for a second time (after the strikers and the strike leaders had retired). “Unable to break the spirit of the strikers first by starvation and then by unprovoked violence, the em- ployers now resort to the third method of strike-breaking. They at- tempt to divide the strikers’ ranks. They bring in the so-called Citi- zen’s Committee, who represent the employers but pose as neutrals, to try to sell out our strike. This is nothing new, the employers did the same thing in the Lawrence strike, in the Passaic strike, etc. Frank Faber, a strike committee member who lined up with this attempted sell-out move, who without the au- thority of the strike committee con- ferred with the police and Supt. .| Manton, has been decisively repudi- ated by the strike committee. “The strike committee, as the elected representatives of the work- ers, declares its full confidence in the National Textile Workers’ Union, which is leading the strike with us. Only the strike committee can nego- tiate for the strikers and the strike can only be settled by a vote of the mass of the strikers. The strike committee, from the beginning, has held itself in readiness and is ready now to meet with the employers and negotiate for a settlement of the strike on the basis of the workers’ demands. Until this is done the workers will stand by their rights to continue the strike” ~ Typical Scene of Cold Blooded Murder by the Executioners of Chiang Kai Shek PROTEST MURDER OF HSIANG AND DEPORTATION OF MACHADO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ernment to deport to fascist Vene- zuela Edwardo Machado, militant fighter against U. S. imperialism and editor of “Vida Obrera,” Spanish- language Communist paper pub- lished in the United States. Macha- do has been ordered by the Depart- ment of Labor to report Friday, July 17, at Ellis Island for deporta- tion that afternoon to . Venezuela, where he faces death or life impri onment and the most revolting tor- tures in the dungeons of Dictator Gomez, the murderous tool of Wall Street. In an appeal to the workers to fight against the deportation of Ma- chado, the International Labor De- fense points ov “Outside of China, there is prob ably no more furious terror raging than in Venezuela.” His deporta- tion is a death sentence: “This means death. Not only death, but the most brutal tortures imagin- able. Machado must be snatched from the hands of the execu- tioner. Like Tao Hsuan Li, who also faces deportation to death in China, his life is in your hands.” Eduardo Machado was {born in Caracas, Venezuela, where he dis- tinguished himself for his .activities against the Gomez regime, which for over 22 years has maintained a bloody dictatorship of that country, thanks to a brutal and continued terror supported by Yankee imper- ialism. In 1919 Machado was one of the leaders of the Students’ Feder- ation of Venezuela. In 1924 he was forced to leave the country. He ar- rived in Cuba, where he continued the struggle against the dictatorship in Venezuela while at the same time participating in the island’s labor movement. From Cuba he went to Mexico, where he also continued his revolutionary activities. In 1927 he came to New York and immediately took part in the strug- gles of the Latin-American workers against the exploitation of which they are victams, He helped in the founding of the Spanish Workers’ Center and served for some time as secretary. He was also active in Eu- rope and in Trinidad, B. W. I, and has a long record of activity in the cause of the working class. Workers! All out Wednesday in New York in militant protest against the deportation of Comrade Machado. Protest the murder of Comrade Hsiang and the white terror against the Chinese workers and peasants, Afro-American Advises Its Readers LL.D, and LSNR Alone Represent Scottsboro 9 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! mother “of one of the condemned boys is refused permission to speak at a public mass meeting in the interest of her son at which meet- ing funds were being raised to save him from the electric chair.” Mrs. Patterson, mother of one of the Scottsboro victims, was denied the floor at the 22nd Annual Con- ference of the N. A. A. C. P. held in Pittsburgh, June 30 to July 5. Mrs. Wright, mother of two of the boys, was denied the floor at a pub- lic mass meeting in Salem Church, New York City, on July 28. Monies collected by the N. A. A. C. P. have not been turned over to the two or- ganizations authorized by the parents and the boys for their defense. The parents have publicly charged that these monies are being used by the N. A. A. C. P. leaders to hamper the defense of their sons. The Afro-American’s editorial, which is captioned “The Reds Are Ahead,” further points out the great- er effectiveness of the methods of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the International Labor Defense in mobilizing the workers of the whole world, and several groups of famous European and American writers and scientists in defense of the nine innocent Scottsboro boys and of the outraged Negro People. It declares: “It may be treasonable to say It, however, as the Scottsboro case stands today, the Communists have the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People licked. “The Reds are not only national, they are international A word from Moscow sent bricks hurtling against the windows of American consulates in European countries. U, S. consuls there who have never heard of any Alabama town under the name of Scottsboro, have been forced to cable home that foreign- ers are protesting against the legal lynching of these eight black boys down in Dixie.” (Eight of the nine framed-up boys were sentenced to burn in the original “trial.” The case of the ninth resulted in a mis- trial.—Ed. Daily Worker). Paper Brands N. A. A. C. P. “Useless” Another Negro newspaper, the East Tennessee News, in its current issue brands the N. A. A, C. P. as “useless” and its Field Secretary, William Pickens, as a “stage come- dian”. In an editorial captioned “The I. L. D. and N. A, A. C. P., this paper declares, in part: “At a recent Boston meeting ~-., William Pickens, N. A. A. C, P, fleld secretary, found it difficult to explain just why he persists in directing his vituperative outbursts at the I. L. D., in view of his let- ter and donation pledging support to their defense movement shortly after the boys were taken into cus- tody. “Eugene Gordon, writer of note, in penning an account of the re- cent Boston meeting at which Pickens was one of the speakers, describes the activities of the stage comedian in a very amusing man- ner as he states: “Then came Mr. William Pick- ens, and the audience forgot where it was an guffawed. Pickens has that effect on one, it seems. He appeared to like it, Launching im- mediately into an account of his visit at Scottsboro, he described the case with all the noted Pick- ensian humor. The audience was now in a festive frame of mind. Those who had sat slumped in their seats, evidently expecting to hear sordid details of an unpleas- ant story, perked tp and smacked their lips. It was as if, having been bored by tenth-rate stunts at a vaudeville show, their favorite comedian had suddenly come upon the stage. The chief laughing point of the speaker's talk was his description of the difficulties of the nine boys would have encoun- tered trying to rape two white prostitutes atop a sandpile on a flat car, Every time he alluded to that point the audience forgot its surroundings, its culture, its apings, and laughed aloud. It was a great show’.” “And such a descrpition of the mistrial is about the same as has been applied to him on numerous occasions before as he cavorts over the country at the expense of the unsuspecting group who are duped into paying their funds into the useless National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.” Smash Betrayal! Demonstrate Au- gust First! Negro workers! Fight the betrayal of the nine Scottsboro boys by the N. A. A. C. P. leaders! Support the demand of the parents that they stop collecting money in the names of the boys! Join the mass revolution- ary fight to save the boys and to smash race and class oppression. De- monstrate August First for the re- lease of the boys and against im- perialist preparations for war, against the plans of the bosses to attack the Soviet Union and crush the ‘strug- gles of the German and Chinese masses! Gather fad Many Coal Fields; Strikers Must Have COVERDALE, Pa. July 14.—A mass picket line of nearly 400 today stopped 102 more from going into the Pittsburgh Terminal Mine No, 8 here. There will be bigger mass picketing tomorrow to bring out the others. Particularly the women pickets are making arrangements to appear in sufficient force to defy the ban placed on women picketing. Pittsburgh Terminal mines are be- ing re-struck by degrees, and the im- mediate problem of the Library sec- tion, in which most of these mines are located, is to crystallize the in- tense, smouldering resentment of those in the mines, and build the mass picket lines outside, to turn this dribbling out of miners once forced back’to work into an open stampede out of the mines. After Coverdale comes Horning, Mollen- auer, and Castle Shannon, and others, wen PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 14.—Six delegates from historic Harlan coun- ty, Kentucky, came into Pittsburgh today, two days ahead of schedule, to attend the United Front National Miners Conference which will take place Wednesday and Thursday. ‘They are the first contingent of a delegation of 30 which is on the road, “The Kentucky miners are so in- terested in this National Conference and in the National Union,” said their spokesman, Alford, “that they started out just any way they could, in their cars without tires and they are rushing here to get in just as soon as they can. We want to go around and tell the Pennsylvania miners a few things about Ken- tucky.” Alford and the first six will get their chance. Preparations are made to tour them around the strike area here between now and Wednes- day at 11 a. m., fast time, when the conference of five or six hundred delegates get into session. Alford sat in the N. M. U. office here and told » story that has an old familiar ring, about conditions in Kentucky and United Mine Work- ers officials’ treachery. About three months ago, 4,000 miners in Harlan county went on strike, spontaneously. They could not stand the bad air caused by brattices being left down and all sorts of company schemes to save a few dollars at the expense of the miners. They revolted against @ wage cut from 40 cents a ton with @ little pay for dead work, down to 32 cents with no pay for dead work. This cut was on February 1. They didn’t like the 16 and 17 hour day. Company stores were charging them 40 per cent above the prices in other stores. House rent was $10 for four rooms, in old rotting houses with every facility absent. Cars that used to weigh, six years ago, from 40 to 50 hundred weight, were now cynically weighed by the companies at 21 to 37 ewt. The Harlan strike started as an unorganized strike. The men them- selves, hearing stories of the ancient militancy of the United Mine Work- ers, went ahead and organized lo- cals, and got charters for some of them, Then they began to be disillu- sioned. The Lewis organizers never came within fifty miles of the scene where miners were literally fighting for their lives against a horde of 300 gangsters and company gunmen made over night into “deputy sher- iffs” and given machine guns and bombs to go out and kill strikers. William Turnblazer, Lewis’ district president of Kentucky and Tennes- see, has his headquarters at Jellico, Tenn. He never has come any clos- er to the battlefield than Pineyville, 35 miles from Harlan. Turnblazer made an agreement with the governor to send in militia, and sent word to the strikers that the militia were to protect them from depuized mine guards. The militiamen actually preserved neu- trality for 24 hours, Alford says. Then their officers were moved to a hotel in Harlan whith is a meeting place for the coal operators, which in fact is generally knowns as “The Operators’ Hotel.” From that mo- ment on, the situation changed. The militia had orders to harass the strikers. The miners still feel that the rank and file of the militia are not against them, but they want to seé the militia go. Relief became a problem. Local relief committees did heroic work, canvassing all adjacent parts of Vir- ginia, Tennessee, and even Ilinois. But the strikers thought that a real union should do more than this. Their communications to the U.M.W. international office at Indianapolis remaining unanswered, they sent delegations to see “Mr. Lewis.” These delegations came back con- siderably angered because they had the door slammed in their faces at Indianapolis. Not a cent of relief did the UM. W. send into Harlan county, while Lewis continued to draw his $1,000 and expenses every month. So, the Harlan miners are rep- resented in the United Front National Conference. They “take a big inter- est in the National Miners Union and the strike in Pennsylvania,” and the strikers of Pennsylvania, Eastern Ohio and West Virginia are going to take a big interest in Kentucky. PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 14~—~The reemevivania -Ohio Striking Miners Relief Committee today (July 13) ily the following telegram to Gov- ernor Pinchot: “Thousands of miners striking against starvation together with their wives and children including babes in the arms are being evicted from company houses by deputized Relief feat. former Coal and Iron Police and| other deputies under the protection | of state police. The deputies fre- quently smash the few sticks of fur- niture that represent all the fami- lies possess. For example, in the Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Company mines where you negotiated an agree- ment between the company and the United Mine Workers of America and where the miners reject this slave agreement, many hundreds of miners have been served with evic- tion notices. Cases of eviction in- clude 21 families thrown out of their homes in Newfields with one family with five children living under an apple tree for days and other fami- lies forced to live in stables, chicken- coops and garages since their evic- tion and still other familes without shelter of any kind. Henderson Coal Company deputies seized the furni- ture of three families last week at Hendersonville and moved it miles down the road and threw it out on the roadside in a@ rain storm with no shelter for the families whatever. Saturday, deputies, laughing and making a holiday sport of the occa- sion broke into a miner's home at Atlasburg and smashed the furniture by throwing it out of a second story window. These are but instances. Many women and children of evicted families must have shelter. This situation demands that you provide at once one thousand tents from the military stores of the Naional Guard to be turned over to us for shelter of the evicted families in this emer- gency.” The telegram is signed by I. Hawkins, as district secretary of the Pennsylvania Ohio Striking Miners Relief Committee. Hawkins is a Ne- gro striking miner from the Penn- sylvania fields, Sele om AVELLA, Pa., July 14—The two week's pay slips of the Pittsburgh ‘Terminal Coal Company mine here called “P & W” mine, shows what peonage and slavery the United Mine Workers scab contract brings the miners. One who went back to work under that contract, or better said, was forced by the terror of the state police and the deputies to go back, shows a sample pay Slip. For two week’s work he is given credit for loading 536 hundred pounds of coal, for which the wage is $12.06, and is given credit for six yards on @ yardage basis, for which he is promised $3.60. But he doesn’t get any of the money. The company charges him with $5 at the company store, six cents for smithing, $1 for. doctor, $3.20 for explosives, 40 cents for miners’ lamps, then adds it up and finds he has $6 still coming to him, and takes the six bucks for “rent.” “P & W” miners are all anxious for a picket line and the signal to walk out on strike again. And that will be soon. ADMITS CHINESE MASSES FOR REDS | NEW YORK. — A Shanghai Ren- go News Agency dispatch published in yesterday’s New York Times gives the lie to the claims of Wall Street’s tool, Chiang Kai Shek, of ‘huge successes” against the Chinese Red armies. The dispatch quotes a high British officer as saying “it was high- ly improbable that the Chinese gov- ernment troops would be able to sup- press Red forces in Kiangsi Province.” The officer, just returned from a month’s inspection tour of the pro- vince, as an imperialist ally of the traitor Chiang Kai Shek, admits that the Kuomintang’s troops “were demoralized and military command- ers pocketed war funds supplied by the Nanking government.” “The troops,” he said, “had not been paid for months, and, conse- quently, they had taken to looting.” He admitted that the Kuomin- tang troops were terrorizing the Chinese people, and said the mas- ses “were more favorably disposed toward the Reds than to the troops sent to protect the populace.” Camp for Workers’ Children in Maine ‘This summer a Pioneer camp will be conducted near Rockland, Maine, for workers’ children. The camp will open July 20 and will remain open four weeks. The camp fee is only three dollars a week. Those comrades who would like to send their children to camp but who can not spare the money should write to the camp and arrangements may possibly be made for them. Children between the ages of 8 and 15 are eli- gible. For information about the camp write to Ailene Holmes, Box 45, Long Cove, Maine, Aug. 1 United Front Conference July 15 BALTIMORE, Md, July 14—A general united front conference to prepare the August Ist demonstra- tions in this city and vicinity, will be held on Wednesday July 15th, 8 p. m, at 9 So. Greene Street. Work- ing class fraternal organizations, shop groups. clugs, etc. will be rep- resented to this conference. Detailed plans will be formulated at this con- ference for the Anti-war parade and the demonstration which will take place August Ist, 1 p.m. at the City Hall Plaza. All workers’ organiza- tions are urged to send delegates to this conference Many Districts Still Far Below in the ‘Daily’ Drive; New York Doubles Quot week) a centage. made by Dist which raised to 57, Distri increasing its jumped into tt District 1 (Bos prisingly poor week, making on 6 Districts Below & Six dis (Kansas (Seattle), South), especially must mak during the next few their full quc Distr have x showing districts and 16 (the South) w their quotas ute a cent during gotten to Come o biggest gain of the v both of show the workers w for your paper! Every district must speed up ef forts to reach its quo Picnics and other affairs will help a great deal in this respect. The drive will not end until every district has com- pleted its quota. Check Circulation Drops. The circulation figures this week show a tendency to drop, which mus he checked b ythe comtades in the districts. The tables show a drop of 1,498 from |the previous week This is mostly due to in the Pittsburgh sale of the Daily ar We nged on a broade Worker is entering and more vigor the task drop of basis with m of orga must wet down to the serious business of regaining this lost circulation as quickly asx possible. The com- mobilize correspondence news and tion of the Detroit Pa Detroit will soon again take place on the page schedule. member, Detroit, we are keeping Act im- date open for you! mediately! due to a drop of 50 e interesting gains are shown in ster, N. Y. with an increase nd'in Akron, wtih an increase Denve Carrier Routes. routes routes must depend membership t the contacts hay must be followe: my districts are ¢ glacting following up expiring subs, Now, the summer months here, this impor- tant phase of Daily Worker active ity must be stimulated. Comrades are urged to canvass all lists of subseribers overdue and expiring which are sent to th Reps each month with a vi renew- ing subs and calling readers to meetings of Daily Worker Clubs FIN a er LATION z « #E x 4 * 2 2 Ses = ~ ce : ae 3 Se uo Bs 28. 9s = as fy 7S 4g 48 as "S "es 78 lL. Boston 825.14 aa 405 58S 2N. ¥. 19974.96 287 67 3. Phils. 1410.98 3286 4. Buffalo 3 2s 5. Pitts. 5176 39 fois 6 Cleveland 1915.29 804 2508 7 Detroit [1918.16 8 Chicago 3395.42, ® Mnple. 450.11 10 Kans.Cty 153.00 1L Agric, 17.38 12 Seattle 890.25 18 Callt. 968. 18. Conn, 08s, 16 South 30.50 17 Birming. 555.31 18 Butte . 85.25 3 19 Denver 153.25 127 210 Unorg. 108 oS 34,050.34 45.58 979,, S445 32596 81042 41215 39719—1408 DISTRICTS MUST SPEED UP AND FILL QUOTAS; TURN IN COUPON BOOKS! Workers who do not want their names published because of pos- sible persecution this in sending in their tions, Collectors should who contribute whether their names printed. eS le With contributions Satu ing only $398.99, w s erably below the districts that are means practically all York) and 17 (Birminghs to be putting all their e the drive in an effort to quotas. So far they have doing this, Outside of New York, on should indicate contribu~ ask thoxe they want rday not been uly District 3 (Philadelphia) went over $100 on Saturday. Only dribbles c from Districts 6 (Cleveland), troit), 8 (Chicago) and 1 nia). smaller ones, Only about from the showing; this is due to the the Tag Days were not pri ganized and that outsta: DISTRICT 1 { Scandinavian Club, | Long Cove, Finnish Wkrs. Springfield, Vt. Total DISTRICT 2 A. Blin NJ. Ukr. Women’s Wrks. Soc. NYO 35.15 Col. by Ukr. Wo- men’s Wrks. Soc., N. ¥. C1 Sogowski 0 | Saulig 50 | Kalecht 250 Worono oO Bowushi 250 | ‘Prunasht 50) Komard. 1.00 | Tag Day Col.: Women’s Coun, Bx, 4.07 ¥. cL. B13 | See. 6 Unit 6 98 Women’s Council, Brownsville 10.45 Food Wks. Union 87 Sec. 7, Unit 9 18.05 Unit 9, See. 7 Newark Fretheit dol, Orch. 3.00 fed by work- Camp Kin- ay 4 s107 4 DISTRICT 3 7. Hanover, Phila. 1.00 G.W, Eavnent, Bed- Total ‘These districts, as well 8 (C e fact that or- operly nding Anacostia, D.C.1 Ivan M. Ruskin A, Miloft Total DIST Day money had ati orkers, t in every collection and ‘see that your districts send the money to the Daily at once. Coupon booke must be turned in now. 8 today try- ng collections on them a ne them back to the you got full or not t Daily Worker the district or- at the coupon d th being held up. r num. field of rker Clubs campaign for 15,000 every source of count in activity A contrib $5 was credited n the Da f to Unit 4 Section 6, District 2. This money ributed by a worker, An- toni, Monaco. San Francisco, Cal. 16.50 Total $16.50 DISTRICT 15 45.00 $104.75 ee PRICT 4 Total $15.00 Ukr. Un. oilers, DISTRICT 17 Rochester, N.Y.: 10.00 8, L. Lee, Birming- —— ham, Ala. Total $10.00 — DISTRICT 5 "Totat 50 Ukr. Women’s Wrks. Total DISTRIC | Ukr. Women’ Soc., Cleveland versal, Pa Total all dist, $ 398.98 Prev. received 33,343.41 Total to date $83,742.40 DISTRICT 2 Money for fol. has been accounted M. 1.00 ron, Ohio 5.00 | 1.00 . 0 Total $12.00 se Abramson, NYC ao DISTRICT 7 » Abramson, NYC 5a Ukr. Un. Toilers, 6. 50 Flint, teh. 575 | 0. Perouwagian, F. Mesich, Di z c, 25 Anonymo' we ntitian, N.C. 3s troit M.Chbiliian, Bklyn, 25 DISTRICT 15 Total Money for fol. has DISTRICTS not yet ben rec, Soc,, Hammond, Ind. Milwaukee Ukr. Women’s Wrks. | |, Chicago Sympathizer, Chi. from D.W. Rep. at New Haven, Coan.: Ome Linden, District ip © K. Malulix, K, Malulik, N. Manelik, N. Manulek, N.Y.C. M. Jankoyski, New 26 Hal 25 M. Zavor, N. Haven 25 $26.20 | S. Wolkowez, New DISTRICT 12 |" Haven 25 L enclose 2 50 cent piece to build the D. W. Sustaining Fund ............. (Put cross here) to the Daily Worker Beginning .......... NAME Send me information on Daily Worker Clubs

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