The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 16, 1932, Page 3

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s il ll a % DAILY WORKER, NBW YORR, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1 Canton Workers Blow Up Ordinance Buildings of Kuomintang Enemy Mass Fury Grows Over Kuomintang Treachery and Attacks Against Chinese Soviet Districts Nanking Soldiers at Tientsin Clash With Japanese in Spite of Official Nanking Attitude Enraged by the attacks by the Canton clique against the mass anti-imperialist struggle.and the preparations of the Can- ton gang to send an army against the Chinese Soviet Districts, workers in Canton, South China, yesterday blew up four ord- nance buildings in that city. The explosions caused tremendous excitement. The Canton wing of the Kuomin- tang are planning to attack the Chi- nese Soviet district at the same time that Chiang Kai-shek attacks in Hupeh Province and the Japanese advance up the Yangtze Valley against the Soviet districts. The increasingly open collabora- tion of the Kuomintang traitors with the Japanese is adding new fuel to the fury of the Chinese masses al- ready aroused by the Kuomintang betrayal of the heroic workers and Soldiers who, in defiance of the Kuo- mintang, defended the city of Shang- hai for 35 days against the combined might of the Japanese navy and army. A clash between Chinese and Japa- nese soldiers occurred yesterday in the Tangku area of Tientsin, North China. The Koumintang soldiers were checked by their officers, but the incident is a further indication that the Kuomintang is losing con- trol even over its own mercenary oops, who are more and more re- . e spon call of the national revolutionary struggle against the imperialists and their Kuomintang tools. The Japanese yesterday landed additional heavy artillery at Shang- hai. Japanese bombing planes are carrying on a campaign of deliberate frightfulness against the population of Chinese towns as far as one hun- dred miles inland from Shanghai. The town of Hangchow is being bombed daily. This campaign of terror which is directed towards breaking the resistance of the Chi- nese masses is serving to further in- furiate them. A Washington dispatch reports that Kuomintang reinforcements have reached the Honan Province city of Kwangchow, which was be- sieged by Chinese Red Army forces. The dispatch says that the Red Army forces were forced to retreat, but gives no details. Kwangchow is about 130 miles west of Nanking, one of teh centers Of the fugitive Nan- king government. 236 Behind the pacifist phrases being peddled in Geneva and Washington, the imperialists are continuing their bloody at- tacks against the revolutionary Chinese masses of Shanghai. United States, British and Japanese troops yesterday again raided the headquarters of the Communist Party and the re- volutionary trade unions in Shanghai, arresting a large number of working- class leaders. ‘The Japanese are also pushing their mobilization of troops and bombing planes for an advance into the interior, an advance against the Chinese Soviet districts, an advance which is apparently being timed to coincide with the new Anti-Com- munist campaign planned by Chiang Kai-shek against the revolutionary worker-peasant masses in the Soviet districts. A Shanghai dispatch re- ported, “Civilian passangers of the reg- alar airplane service between Shanghai and Nanking all report heayy Japanese movements to the front. It is probably significant that the Japanese Consulate Gen- oral last night gave out an official report-detailing ten alleged cases of Chinese provecation of hostilities since March 8.” The robber war against the Chinese masses is part of the worldwide of- fensive of the imperialist against the toiling masses. In China and the United States, the imperialists are answering with machine gun bullets the demands of the toiling masses for food and bet- ter conditions. The imperialists are attempting to get out of the crisis of capitalism at the expense of the masses, at the expense of the looting and partition of China, at the ex- {pense of increasing wage cuts against jthe workers in the imperialist coun- ‘tries. lynch terror and police murder of Negro and white unemployed workers. In their attacks of the working-class, the imperialists are also rapidly moving toward armed attack against workers’ Russia, for a solution of the crisis by war, by the ‘butchery of millions of workers as in the World War. Workers! Rally to the fight against imperialist war! Join and support the Communist Party, which alone leads the struggle against imperialist. war, against starvation, lynching and police terror! Demand Hands off \China, Hands off the Soviet Union! Ky. Relief Committee Meet Appeals for NEW YORK.—The national office of the Workers’ International Relief reports that the meeting of the Cen- tral Strike Relief Committee met in the field last week with all sections represented and decided that an ap- peal be sent to the National Board | of the National Miners’ Union and the National Committee of the Trade Union Unity League, calling upon them to rally the employed miners in the North and the militant unions affiliated to the T.U.UL. for the support of the strike and for the col- lection of rélief. Members of the strike committee reporting for their respective sec- tions told of the great need, the hun- ger, evictions and lack of clothes and | stressed the necessity of sending in much more relief, especially in the Harlan and Wallins Creek sections, where terror has held up relief dis- tribution. Miners Will Distribute Relief. The question of relief distribution will be met by the local comrades and miners. The task of all work- ers and workers’ organizations throughout the country is to put into immediate effect the activity pro- gram of the Workers’ International Relief as indorsed by United Front Conferences in many large and small centers earlier in the year, it was YOUTH COLUMN ERIE FLOP HOUSE SLOP MAKES YOUNG WORKER COLLAPSE AFTER EATING BUFFALO, N. ¥.—About two weeks ago, a so-called investigating com- mittee went to the Erie County flop house to test out the statement of the Unemployed Council that the food was unfit to eat. They declared that the meal was “excellent” and that the demands of the Unemployed Prevent the transport of munitions! Wang Ching-wei, Premier of the traitorous Nanking Kuomintang gov- ernment, declared yesterday that the government will continue its policy of non-resistance (and thus co- operation to the Japanese aggressions. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times reports his statement as follows: “The government will continue to refuse to be carried away by popular clamor, Mr. Wang announced, and he depreciated the war mania which, he said, had caught a,section of the nation firmly. in its cluten, but the ‘government is continuing to shape its policies in the light of sound principles and the State's real in- terests.’” Similar demagogy when peddled by Kuomintang leaders at Ueiping a few days ago aroused the fury of the Peiping workers and students to such a pitch that the Kuomintang leaders were attacked by the crowd and were only. rescued by the action of the Police and military. Imperialist ob- servers, in China have openly ex- pressed the fear that the Kuomin- tang is at the end of its rope. They admit that the masses are turning with increasing rapidity to the Chin- ese Communist Party, as the only leader in the national revolutionary struggle. Tension between the imperialist brigands increased yesterday with the discovery of a Japanese inspired Plot to seize Nantao and other parts of the native area of Shanghai and to declare these districts a part of the puppet state set up by the Japanese in Manchuria. The plot was led by Chinese tools of the Japanese, among them many leading Nanking Kuo- mintang government officials. The plot was frustrated by British and United States police from the Inter- national Settlement and French po- lice from the French ' concession. The Settlement and French police acted, it is said, on secret information from Chinese sources that the plot was afoot. 28 DELEGATES FROM KY. STRIKE AREA BREAK THROUGH TERROR; LEAVE FOR N.M.U. CONVENTION ({OONTINUVED FROM PAGE ONE) miners where the strike is still ef- fective. It will meet this week-end. ‘The conference will wrok out the policy for those miners stiJI on strike. ‘There are 10 such mines with around Council for better meals and sleeping quarters were unjustfied. Either the committee lied or was drunk because a young worker, 25 years old, collapsed there Monday as @ result of the rotten food declared by the committee to be “as good as they got at home.” This is not an isolated case. The ambulance driver, who is forced to work 24 hours a day sometimes, said that he was kept busy carrying vic- tims of the Hoover staryation govern- ment as represented in Buffalo by the Erie County Lodging House, to the hospital. Unemployed workers of Buffalo‘and of the Erie County Lodging House! Do not allow the bosses to starve you to death while they get fat on graft! Demand unemployment insurance from the grafting city government instead of lousy beds and a starvation diet! PENN-OHIO BASKET BALL TOURNAMENT SET FOR MAR, 27, APR. 3 CLEVELAND, Ohio. — The Labor Sports Union Basketball League has set March 27 and April 3rd. as dates for its District Basketball Tourna- ment. Teams from Akron, Fairport, Warren, Conneaut, Bessemer, Toledo, and Youngstown, are sending in en- tries. The games will be played at the Finnish Hall 1303 West 58th Street, and the Eintracht Gym, b309 Frank- lin Blvd. The Junior and Girls divi- sion will play at the Eintracht Gym, Play will start at 10 A. M, and con- tinue till 8 P.M. after which a dance will be held at the Finnish Hall, March 27th. Warren and Akron won the cups last year and will have plenty of competition this year from the Ar- tows, Eintracht, and the East Tech Pirates as well as other local teams. Aid of Miners) | pointed out by the W.LR. national | office yesterday. “It is especially necessary at this time to bring the Kentucky-Tennes- | see strike issue into the shops and | factories. The program of action,| which is in the hands of executive | committees of every working-class organization, must be stu#sed care- fully and the turn to tze shops with the relief campaign be made imme- diately. With an understanding of the significance of the struggle of the coal miners the workers will re- spond generously at regular weekly donations at pay day,” it was stated by W.LR. Calls ‘Nazis A Bulwark Against Communism Admits That Masses Support German C. P. ESSEN, Germany—That the Ger- man fascists are being pushed for- ward by the,German capitalists, with support of international capitalism as a bulwark against the growing power of the Communist Party in Germany and as a desperate measure to strengthen the shatteftd stabiliza- tion effected by means of foreign capitalist finance was openly revealed in a statement given the press by one of the leaders of German heavy in- dustry, Dr. Fritz Thyssen. In answer to a question as to why he favored the German Nazis, Thyssen replied “that he found suf- ficient reason for supporting Herr Hitler in the fact that he had aroused a new spriit of national- ism that is essentially healthy and necessary and serves as a bulwark against Communism.” Tn addition to this admission that the German fascists were rendering signal service to German capitalism by reviving the illusions of the Ger- man masses in the possibility of re- covery of German capitalism by a demagogic play on national patriot- ism. Thyssen at the same time re- vealed the capitalist content of the fake national- socialist propaganda propaganda broad ast by the Nazis with hte following significant state- ment as reported by ja New York Times correspondent: “Dr. Thyseen sees no danger in the Socialistic theories of the Nazis because economic pacts and not theories will determine policies. He believes that the choice, and only for Germany but for Europe, les between communism and fascism and he preferred fascism.” Asserting that fascist regime in Germany, far from antagonizing In- ternational capitalism would be wel- comed with open arms by them, Thys- sen, in answer to # question as to the Possibility of a bad effect or a Fascist Germany on one capitalist of other countries, remarked: “On the contrary. It (a fascist rule) would not improve relations with France but it should make no difference with some other coun- tries. An anti-Communist regime ought to make a favorable impres- sion in America and England.” Although the Times corresondent, when typical confusion states that he was unable to discover the “spe- cific economic program of the party which its (the Nazi) leaders say is in the process of preparation,” this pro- gram was given in no unmistakable terms by Thyssen. “We must regard the Nazis as the German equivalent of the Italian Fascists, They are the same thing. Fascism has not done badly in Italy. “I regard a Fascist State as one that in a crisis will take the meas- ures needed to bring order and then restore economic freedom when the crisis passes.” NATIONAL MINERS UNION EXPELS IRRESPONSIBLE AVELLA, Pa.—Local Union 120 of the National Miners’ Union, at its last regular membership meet- ing, approved of the decision of the executive committee to expell Frank Huntz for the misuse of organization funds. Confirming the position of the Communist Party, Thyssen admitted that “Dr, Bruening has taken much measures to a certain extent...” This is @ frank admission that elements of the fascist dictatorship have been maturing in Germany under the Bruening regime and that the Ger- Man “Socialists” by supporting Brue~ ning under the pretext of protecting his rule against the “greater” danger of Hitler have been actually carrying out the fascist policy of the German LOCAL 120, N.M.U. W. Smorag, See. Cleve Brackett, and Matt Profit, were released on bond. Last Friday in the Pineville court, attorneys Stone and Taylor success- capitalist class. ‘With the frank statement that the Communist Party of Germany which is rallying ever larger masses of workers and poor farmers to its ban- ner of uncomprising struggle against the capitalist system of hunger star- vation and war, | elections down here. | shaker, all in the primitive, unso- The po- here not a par-| year for President - ial politics are not matters of FRANKFORT, Ky. litical pot is boi ready, although thi ticularly important ng al- $ 1952 jj and Wa work. ° __Page Three work and Baby F ” Jones would find no} 2 were elected. Strike Exposes Demagogues i! Now the is boiling over. The| indu: strike are making The coal com-| pot crisis and the things hot real contention—nobody cares | P&nies’ « eae aS rho licks H and keep pi up no matter h Sra UACKE AA ODY ORs S much “depression,” has brought mass Few state and local offices’ revolt in the coal fields. The coal| are decided until next year. Of those few the election of sher- iff. of Bell County is probably the most important. The rea-} son for that is that the sheriff | has unlimited power to build | an armed force of deputies— very useful in “labor trouble.” The coal companies have so far always kept this power on their | side, and all their hired thugs are sworn in as deputy sher- iffs. Historical Hangovers Kentucky politics are pecu- liarly subject to historical in- heritance. The western and central counties are democrat- ic; first, these were the slave holding plantations which fought on the side of the South in the Civil War and are Jim Crow now. Their/| votes put through the Kentucky Jim | Crow law, applying especially to| trains and restaurants. The Eastern “Hill counties” (and they are the chief coal fields now) are normally republican. Spell bind- ers like to rave about “the rock-ribbed | republican hills.” The hill popula- tion fought for the North in the Civil War. There is discrimination and Jim Crow sentiment against the Negroes, but it has not the quality of the real Southern prejudice. In fact, it is not quite as strong as that in Western Pennsylvania or Ohio—and | is similar to the Northern variety. ‘The hill people regard the state Jim Crow law as rather a nuisance. Some | coal companies enfor e it for their | own purposes. For example, the) Black Mountain Coal Co. boasts that | there is not one Negro among their} 1,100 miners at Alva, Harlan County. | State and National Politics ‘This balance of republican, demo- cratic territories make a Kentucky election test of the popularity of the national administration, and the basis | of the test is “delivering the goods.” When there was “Coolidge prosperity” and “Hoover prosperity,” enough dem- ocrats voted republican to pile a big vote for Hoover, and Flem Sampson, republican, was elected governor. Today Hoover's name is a household | curse, and in the last election last year Ruby Laffoon, democrat, was| elected governor. | So far, the voters’ reaction has been | primitive and unthinking and merely | a swit hing back nad forth from one capitalist party to another—like the rest of the country but’ in a simpler, more archaic way. Until this year there was no Com- munist Party here, arid the capital- ists did not even find it necessary to build a social fascist movement. ‘There is no socialist party either. Political Lynasties Another curiosity of Kentucky pol- itics must be noted. ‘The hereditary principle is quite strong. In the east- ern hill counties, certain prominent families have dominated in the past. They fought with each other for po- litical power—also fought direct arm- ed feuds with ea h other. When big business, the coal business, came in, it often made use of these feuds, fin- ancing one or another native chief- tain, in order to subjugate them all. One such family is that of the Broughtons in Bell County. They have held important county office for the last 25 years. Inheriting Offices This same family illustrates also a concession-by the whole state to the hereditary principle. When the head sheriff, recently, his “nearest of kin,” of the family. died in the office of in this case his wie, was appointed to his place. Now she is running for the office | in the election this November. Her | chief deputy is her son, Floyd, who smashes meetings, arrests leaders, does the actual work of sheriff, and drives ba k truck loads of food, and does whatever he can to break the| miners’ strike. Walter Smith is county attorney of Bell County, and his brother, Saw- yer A. Smith, is prosceutor in the Federal Court at London, Kentucky. ‘The county court jails the strikers and the federal court evicts them and issues injunctions against them. Modernizing Kentucky Politics Of course, big business is not feud- alism, and the inheritance of office is not essential to it. “Baby Face” Jones, notorious circuit court judge and mortal foe of the miners, is not Kentu kian at all; he came in from Louisiana, But his family is all tied up with the coal interests. Elections are as corrupt and un- democratic as in the industrial North. Ballot boxes are stolen and stuffed, polling places are held up, men who aren’t voting “right” are killed or terrorized, votes are brought in the same way as in Chicago. Reed Patterson, chief counsel of the Bell County Coal Operators’ As- sociation campaigned for Walter Smith and “Baby Face” Jones in the last election. Patterson is the local political boss, suave, demagogic, story- teller and back-slapper and hand- phisti ated style wrich is good enough so far in Kentucky, But the coal company superintend~- ents supplemented this with more di- rect methods. Their henchmen pass~ ed word around that whoever didn’t | suing the Daily Worker for libel be- operator sheriffs and judges have had | to drop the mask and come out as open enemies of the workers. All Reed | Patterson's demagogy can not weave a new mask. Floyd Broughton kept} his on clear into the strike, tried to| pose as miners’ friend and break the | strike at the same time, and is now| ause it unmasked him. The Communist Issue The Communist issue was raised most sharply by the operators and their press, while they thought there | were not Communists in the coal fields. They painted a horrible’ pic-| ture of Communism “burning church- | es, throwing Jesus into the gutter, handing white girls over to the Ne-| groes”—and “leading minres to fight their best friends, the operators.” | ‘The result was that the miners saw | in the last charge the reason for the first charge, and lost their fear of Communism. Here and there one of them joined the Party, and in gen- eral the rest did not desert the Na- tional Miners Union because the op- erators said it was “Communist.” The “Red” Scare. It is interesting to see how the “Red Scare” of the operators’ news- papers decreased for a time when Doris Parks, on trial for distributing food to the miners, avowed herself a Communist and militantly defended the Communist position. “ Commun- ism was a bugaboo loudly summoned to the aid of the operators; when the spectre actually appeared—well that was not what they had bar- George Eastman Commits Suicide Second Millionaire to Go In Week George Easiman, billionaire cam- era magnate, committed suicide Mon- day. George Eastman is being played up as the savior of humanity. A mil- lion dollars here and a couple of} million there. A hospital for Roches- ter. And a dormitory for the Massa- | chusetts Institute of Technology. Back in Rochester ‘there’ are humped up workers, blinded by the chemicals used in Eastman’s plant. | Grown early because of tie jremen- dous speed-up, which only Henry Ford has been able to equal. When | they suffer from lack of food they | | are able to think of their great dead | boss-philanthropist. And what an| honor. | When the workers who were caught | by the spy system and fired for | bringing a leaflet into the Kodak | plant are on the breadiine, they can | think of the great friend of human- | ity whom it was their good fortune to know. George Eastman left a note which said: “My work is done. Why wait?” Correct for once. But, according to the press, Mr. Eastman finished working at least forty years ago, when he became an exploiter. And when he had forced enough profits out of the blood of his workers—he became a philan- thropist. He will be remembered—by the workers who gave their lifeblood for his millions for his capitalist fame. = The news of Eastman’s death forced the stock of the company to drop 612 points. The Eastman Co. which is part of Wall Street’s war industry, has succeeded during the crisis in keeping up a high rate of | profit at the expense of the workers | it employed. The income last year was over $20,000,000. | The death of Eastman is an ex-| ample of the decay of the capitalist | system, whose very gods are unable | to withstand the rottenness of a dem- oralizing system. NTY-WAR MEET IN PHILA, PA. Seott Nearing Main Speaker, Mar. 19 PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The Friends of the Soviet Union of this city is arranging a mass meeting to expose the war in the Far East as it affects the Chinese masses and the Soviet Union, This meeting will be a rally of workers and all anti-war eieicuus to protest the predatory aims of the | imperialists of the world. | This meeting must be a rally of workers to the defense of the Chinese | masses, Chinese Soviets and the So- | viet Union. The main speaker for the evening | will be Scott Nearing, noted writer, | economist and lecturer who recently | has returned from an extended tour | of China and Soviet Union and have first hand information about the conditions and developments in Eu- rope and Asia. There will be addi- tional speakers besides Scott Nearing. The meeting will take place at ‘Turngemeinde Hall, Broad and Col~ | year. e, the gained for at all F take new anti-Red campaign will orces now, but then, there will also be Communist votes cast this year by the most hundred per cent Anglo- Saxon American stock in the whole | cou Kentucky Desperate Businessmen. At the same time, many th dicate a cracking in the t ored republican-democratic ogy even in Western Kentucky. crisis is ploghing up some strange fields. After just having reproved Hoover and, bounced Sampson electing Lafoon, they found this La- foon administration, with a bankrupt state and bankrupt countries trying to save “public finances” by one per cent state sales tax. But the petty- bourgeoisie is not only bankrupt, but desperate. I quote from the “Lex- ington Leader,” right in the center of the Blue Grass and Tobacco plan- tation area: FRANKFORT, Ky., March 4— Frankfort today was held in the af- termath of a mass invasion. Every- where, in broken windows, tattered banners, and general disarray, were evidences of the presence of the army of 10,000 retailers, which laid siege to the capital Thursday. “Other accounts tell how the mob of infuriated corner grocers smashed into the governor's man- shion, broke up his furniture and burned holes in his carpets. Other sections of the crowd held the state house for hours, and stopped all state business, by shouting slogans and yelling.” Of course, most of these fellows will be satisfied, especially if left to pre- sent leadership, in merely defeating Lafoon next time he runs—but this incident does not show that dissatis- faction spreads through ever wider circles, from starving miners even into the ranks of the smaller busi- nessmen. Communist Party in Pittsburgh to Cele- brate Year’s Growth On March 20 the Pittsburgh dis- trict of the Communist Party will At the meeting which will be celebrate its growth during the past held at 2157 Center Avenue the party leadership and the rank and file will come together for the purpose of achieving a closer relationship be- tween both. The Communist Party is building y, the hill people of Eastern | KENTUCKY POLITICS AND (SAWMILLS WORK COMMUNISM AT 23P.C.CAPACITY IN TACOMA’ WASH. iMayor Uses City | Money to Advance Election Ambitions By “LOGGER” Because of the flattening out of the lumber industry, on which Ta- |coma largely depends, workers are in |a bad way here. The local capitalist |press sts saw-mill operation as | twenty three percent of capacity; and strangely enough, this estimation is very nearly correct. A recent con- clave of lumber barons arrived at the decision that any increase in lumber production is at present use- less; so the logging camps and mills remain shut down, and the outlook for unemployed lumberman is dark, indeed, ‘The Northern Pacific shops in So Tacoma, which in pre-Hoover days employed many hundreds of workers, are operating, in a haphazard way, about one third of the time. At pre- sent, the workers at these shops get ten days work out of each month. In other words, they are allowed wages |sufficient to maintain life in their bodies—if they are exceedingly econc- mical. In addition, even this miser- lable sum has been reduced by wage cuts. Various business men’s organiza - tions, especially formed for the pur- pose of finding jobs for the unem- ployed, have throughout the winter attempted to delude the public. Many hair-brained schemes, hailed as bril- lant by the local papers, have beem put forth te “lick unemployment.” Just before the city primary-elec- tion, Mayor Tennant, aided by one of his faithful tools wha is seeking to hold office, dug up a@ pitifull? in- adequate sum from city fund By spreading this amount very thinly among such of the unemployed t!s are registered voters, these two watthies made the most of this campaign fund taken from the city treasury. From. this fund fifteen hundred men are each supposed to receive two days work per week, for a few weeks, when the money will be exhausted. The work given the unemployed is shovel- ing mud or digging sewers, itself during daily struggles and the past, year has seen its composition changed to a party of mine and steel workers. The celebration will mark the starting point of a more intense struggle; of a strengthening of the | collective leadership of the Party. Is Your Name Among These? DISTRICT QUOTA TO FEB. 1,600 20 Received ‘Total % ot 1 316.70 Merch 1 March 1 Quote 2 18,500 33.65 352.35 28.) 3 : 289.38 4,861.54 ane 4 13.66 687.65 173 5 — 135.50 10.8 § ms 197.15 20.2 x 4875.05 16.8 * 148.64 18 9 10.48 & 10 247.08 1 48.98 ‘ 12 451 38 18 1460.31 10.8 15 435.65 ae 16 4138 39.2 uw 15.40 10.3 be 83.50 55.6 +” 37.00 18.8 111.00 nto Mise ane 11,798.65 : ——— 101.20 11,246.57 Total percentage of quote (862.30 11,789.65 Bo DISTRICT 1. Unit 12. 16.06 Chicago. MABSACAUSETTS _ | Section 7. | Bel arian, | Macedon: Reported 316.70| Unit Karl Marx Clup” 6.00 4 | Unit 10. Section 3. . 9.50 | Section 8 Section 1. . 14.00 | Section 10 + Sec. 5, Unit 508. 20.10 Peabody {unit 4 Sec. 5, Unit 612 4.71 ue Section 15. Sec. 1, Unit 111. 8.71 W. Shevchuk Worcester Sec. 6, Unit 1. F. Alanen . Unit 20 Total League 0 | wnbia Ave. on Saturday evening, March 19th at 8 p.m A comrade . 2 re 0| Metal Ww L. Deiginan . Elsie Cohen L. Mishett H, Fierstein... S. Kastote i) Joint Press Drive Comm. : gtrienda } B. Bangin « Wet. a ntesrtiaw | Grand: total Section 3. i DISTRICT 3. : ue 50} Prev. reported 674.02 | Total oonte ates yiand \Grand Total 740.48 DISTRICT 9. 346.93 orkers Indus. s 1.93 | Pfev. Peported Minnesota Pengylvania Crosby Cheater—Unit 404 1 M. Tomljanovieh 1.00 Total .... POM esti. 1.00 rand Total Grand_ Total pDIsTRICT DISTRICT 4. DISTRICT 10, Prey. reported Prey. reported —_ 126.50, owa NEW JERSEY DISTRICT 6 Moux City néelmar Prev. reported 12 Centfal Unemploed R. Kasdan 50 DISTRICT 6, Councils - 3.00 A. S, Rosen .. .. 25 Prev, teported 856.67 Poughkeepaie Onio. Total senveneee $00) M. Danyhus 1.00 | Canton { Ukrainian Schwechos| Rep. Stee! Unit 2.9: jrand Total .... 46.99 Soe., Auburn , 5.00, 8. EB. Unit 8.13 DISTRICT 11, New York City Simms’ Protest meet-| Prev. reported 404 B. Parsarsky collee-| ing collection a3 DISTRICT 33 tion at party - 8.00 M. Shuster . 60 Prev. reported Y48.21 M, Wolbrun 29 Canton Washington Harry Ruderman B. Kovfor . Carlsborg (names to be printed) J. Bourane H. Lundgren , ater)... .ssseeee B50) &. Papos 8. Scheftz . +80| M. Shualer ...., Total sees BOWS sic iyssce. EBL Oy AMUMM con ece ese G, Teitelbaum ... .25/ C. Hovalin ...... 25/Grand Total .... 149.91 S. Cotty ...:.... 100 | Massiion DISTRICT 18, Collected at the rent} sees 1.00 | California. strike —- Bronx first -80| Kingsburg reduction in rent 46.00 | 25| T. Dagger Biclyn. comrade 'T. Pastoft 50| Prev. reported ~ 200.06 Dan., Bklyn, ... K, Lombo 25 | Connecticut H. Benson . A. Paskott : 26 | Bridgeport Morris . H. Vort ...: 25) Russian M.A.8, No. 89, Lerner P. Bait 60] L. Tolstoy .... 16.00 Dutch & Ri P. Thero siT| New Haven Abe... 4 8. Oeja 10|” Women’s Counetl 11,00 [RE :60| Stavros 10] Cultural Soclety 5.00 innish . Federation) A friend 10] Collection , 10.83 ia setceees 18.85 | Springtield ——| City Comm. 1 Walter Peel .... 3.00/ Total + 4139 Women's Councils Warren | ee ays 58.15) M. Michalovich ,. 50) Grand Total ..., 241.38 Stal F.8.U.) J. Jameen rf) DISTRICT 16, 11.21/ M. Bell U re J. Lackovieh OT 17. Club, Harlem .. 11.65) M. Marmura Prev. reported Tremont Workers J. Watkins . ist oT Club 4.75 J, Hopmar . Prev. reported Section H.C. Parker , {STRICT 19. A con T. Jones ... Vv. reported, 116.00 Unit ~olorado Unit 8-a Potal ve Predericle ‘ Unit 6-A 5} I. Tanchett .... 1.00 Section 3, Grané Tota! 03 — unit 4 | DISTRICT 7, hi ERE he) Unit 12°: | Prev, reported 148.64) Section 5. | Dr s rend Yorn! .... iB768 ,. NS 19.00! Prev. reperte® 694.57 “i Section © 4 4 Uunots (TOTAL we ieee oe a CAM phe eee gure |

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