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| DAILY WORKER, NEW “ORK, WEDNI THE MORGAN-THOMAS BLOCK- AIDERS FEAR |Kansas City, April 5th WYKOFF ST. WORKERS Worker Tells of Experiences on the South| Brooklyn Hunger Front | ily Service of Kansas City has been | consistently choking off relief and and Embittered, Mothers Declare} Readiness to Fight for Food Hungry (By a Worker NEW YORK.—We knocke tenement house on Wykoff St., South Brooklyn. Although this) Twenty. The hearing will take place building has been standing for over a half century; the worker- | at the Workers Center, 751 Orange | Correspondent) | d at one door in a dilapidated tenants have not as yet been blessed with the “benefits” of the} Edison Company’s electricity! A young working-class m and listened eagerly to our me in almost every other house in No money to pay rent. Deep in and the baker. The Morgan-Thomas »—- “Block-Aiders” fear to tread on{ ‘Wyckoff Street, because there are no | nickels and dimes to collect to save the millions in the pockets of the capitalists, “My husband has been out of | work so long I can’t remember when it was he brought home a pay en- velope,” one woman said, with bitter- ness in her voice. “My boys have to stay home from school because they have no pants to wear.” Hungry Children. We peered through the front door and met the wide-open eyes of little childlren staring at us in the dark- ness, Unkempt, sleepy-eyed, hunger- ridden faces sitting around the house with not a shred of clothing on! Naked! In the richest country in the world, and warehouses bursting with food and clothing; but because the bosses cannot make a profit they prefer to let the needs of life rot and decay. No Help From Home Relief. “The Home Relief Bureau prom- | ised to investigate our case, but so | disgust and contempt for the capital- far we haven't heard from them.” | ist-controlled charity mongers. In desperation she took the children directly to the office of the bureau. “They told me the kids didn’t look as if they needed help. Do they have to look like skeletons before they can other answered our questions ssage. The same story here as the neighborhood. Gas cut off. | debt to the £rocer, the butcher | get clothes and something to eat, 1| replied.” An embittered workingclass mother listened for the first time to our side of the unemployment issue and the need for immediate relief. We told her that only through the solidarity of the workers, not only. in the neighborhood but throughout the city can genuine immediate relief be wrung from the boss-controlled char- ity agencies. And for this purpose we are organizing demonstrations of all the workingclass families in the neighborhoods to march down to the Home Relief. Bureau in one solid | mass, not to beg but to demand in no | uncertain terms food and clothing for ourselves and our childlren. An expression of hope crossed her face. Here at last is an organization (the Unemployed Council) that can do something real and concrete for the unemployed workers. “You can count me in on the dem- onstration,” she answered, in a spirit of comradeship and solidarity for the Unemployed Council, and one of With slight variations, we heard the same story of struggle against starvation in the other homes we visited, the same welcome to our message R. 8. Scores Silence of Press on Mine Strike Shenandoah, Pa. Dear Editor: Please allow me a little space in the columns of your valuable paper to publish an article which might let the people or public know what is really taking place in the anthracite region at the present time, just to show the people how the miners are being discriminated against by the operators and the district officers who are double crossing us every way they can. I# seems to me that this is about the only paper which will publish the truth; our local paper and the paper in the vicinity of my locality are ab- solutely against the miners and speak for the operators and the officers who class us as the insurgents. Well we might be insurgent, but we are insurging the right remedy. The miners are carrying on a mili. tant fight against the state troopers sent in by the bosses, and our own district president has a lot to do with their coming here also. The men are forcing the strike against their grow- ing grievances and hunger. Yesterday five of our local boys were arrested while on picket duty | and were put in jail until $500 bail men cannot talk to any one, for just as soon as we do we get a club broken over our head by the troopers. The boys who are being held did not do the damage that the paper states. Some of the older miners tell me that they were never trated so rough by th troopers as they are now. | and less food, Milk is unknown to| To Hold Open Hearing On Starvation In KANSAS CITY, Mo.—An open hearing of misery and starvation in the Armourdale section of Kansas City, Kansas, is being arranged by the Unemployed Council for ‘Tues- | | day ,April 5. | For the last few months the Fam-~- forcing the unemployed workers and their children to get along on less the Armourdale children. An open challenge is being issued to Mayor McCombs, to Mr. Kent, the head of the Family Service, and to Mrs. | Street. CRISIS TOLAST LONG TIME SAYS | HOOVER ADVISER Strawn Says Workers to Pay More Taxes NEW YORK.—The economic crisis will last a. long time and “no human | being could predict when the de- pression would end,” said Silas H. Strawn, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce and close friend of Hoover, in a speech at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel Mon- day night. Strawn insisted that “government | expenditures” be cut down, but) omitted mentioning the |cutting down of war expenditures. He wants all relief work cut down, and at the same time taxes increased, because, he said, “the government budget must be balanced in some way.” Strawn said that the cost of gov- ernment had risen from $3,000,000,000 lo 1913 to $13,000,000,000 in 1931. But he did not point out that the increase in war expenditures has srown faster than any other ex- penditures and that in the city and| state government at least half of | capitalist politicians, 200 FIGHT TO Women Slugged by Police Los ANGELES. C Calif—Over 200 Now the collieries in Mahanoy City, Shamokin and Silver Creek are abandoned for one year to 18 months and the committee of the above col- lieries were called into conferences by the operators to take a cut in wages at a flat rate of $5.96 per day. This committee refused even if they | are hard up but they would not work for such a price. | ‘Then hte business men say the men are lazy and don't want to| work. Well, they see one part of, the story, but not the other. The jpaper here will not print the piece | to benefit the miners so that the public will know what is really going on and taking place. They can not see where the company broke the contract first by offering such a rate | for hte miners, but they see when the papers states so. Funny isn’t it. | was furnished and held for court, the P. Oo You Should Get the New “Save the Daily Worker” Handsome Certificate! THIS CERTIFI “This is to certify that $5.00 or more were added to the $50,000 Fighting Fund to save the Daily Communist Party, U.S.A., through the revolutionary activities of...... seseeeecese (Seal) mittee—Emanuel Levin.” (Signed) To every worker or club collecting or contributing $5.00 or more to the Daily Worker Fighting Fund, hte above cer- tificate will be issted. It is printed in two colors on bond paper, 81% by 11 inches, for suitable framing, a memento of the revo- lutionary effort to save the Dail. months of January to April, 1932. Every worker can easily get one by doing a little work in the present campaign to save the Daily Worker. Every worker will have the opportunity thus to help save the Daily Worker, and at the same time preserve with this handsome certificate. @ central organ of the WRlutionary activities of CATE KEADS;: Worker, teh central organ of the Dealy Worker Management Com- ly Worker, during the historical the memory of this campaign workers, housewives and children, of the Boil Heights neighborhood, part- icipated in a fight to stop an evic- tion of an unemployed woman and | her small child. Although the furni- | ture was not put back in the house, the workers, wor up such a valiant fight, that it forced the fake charities to get the vorker a place to live. When the Unemployed Council fared to put back the furniture, landlord immediately 1e police, 20 policemen and plainclothes men responded to the call and im- _ mediately proceeded to bat up men, | women and children. They succeeded in breaking the demonstration by arresting the mi- |the miners violated the contract for litant leaders “of the Unemployed | Council. Lillian Dinkin, Meyer Bay- lin and Bertha Goldstein. Baylin was | released that night on $100 bail. Lil- lian Dinkin and Bertha Goldstein, both members of the youth section of over to the Juvenile Court. Both were released the next day. The police received quite a shock to their “morals.” when Lillian Din- kin, after being loaded in the squad car, raised her skirt and revealed badly bruised and swollen knees as the direct evidence of police brutality for the workers to see. Workers! Join the Unemployed Council, Build Block Committees! “Relief” Agency In Haverhill, Mass., Is Completely Closed BOSTON, Mass.—Haverhill closed down its emergency relief last Wed- nesday and 987 families remained without the few dollars a |week, which was just about enough to keep off the specter of death, The local unemployment commit- tee is preparing a mass meeting to be called in the City Hall on April 11 to protest this action and force the city to give relief. Also, arations are being made for a Hun- ger March Conference for April 14 at 2 Sheppard St., Haverhill. All organizations, employed and unem- ployed workers are urged to send delegates and make it a real fight- ing State Hunger March for May 1 and 2 in Boston, Concert. to Support Polish Prisoners The Relief Committee for the sup- port of the political prisoners in Mialystock, Poland, is arranging a concbert, April 23, 8 p. m, at 2075 Clinton Ave. All procedes will go for relief work among the 12,000 politcial prisoners in Poland, Tickets may be obtained Every Worker Should Have One! Ny \, fe | laser R/S A i lee CGE CST Every Worker’s Club Should Have One! from Dr. H. Goodman, 1948 Prospect. Ave., Bronx, War is immient! Order your | University student, who pointed out | tion across the Kentucky state line. the expenditures} go for grafting | STOP EVICTION | foon. and Children! _ men and children put | locked | self in the house and called the ' the Unemployed Council were turned | Prep-| company controlled Council, Tennessee Governor Defends Gun Thugs Against Studen Governor of Kentuck y Refuses to Assure Safety to Delegation NASHVILLE, Tenn.—“We {chists and Communists entering the state of Tennesse |have our lives and property to protect. |come here, the proper way is through invitation. they should stay out!” This was the answer given to the? committee sent by the National Stu- dent League delegation to Kentucky by Governor Horton of Tennesee. The committee had come to protest against the use of Tennesee officials in forcing them out of the state of Kentucky and to demand guarantee of safe passage through Tennesee, Previous to making this statement, answered by Robert Hall, Columbia that the National Student League was not a Communist organization. Governor Horton threatened the students with arrest on vagrancy charges if they remained in Ten- nessee. He flatly refused to take any | steps to insure their safety. Claiming that he could call the militia out only in case of a “great uprising,” Horton denied the right of the students to travel from one state to another over a Federal highway and announced that he would take no action against the use of armed force to compel the student delega- “The Governor,” he said, “can’t take up every case of assault and battery. I don’t know about Ken- tucky, but you have no right in Tennessee to go into coal mines that belong to private individuals unless you have the owners’ per- mission, We bave mine inspectors te make investigations, Private property belongs to individuals, and any one who goes on that property without permission commits @ crime.” This was an open defense of the use of armed force to deny the stu- dent delegation the lementaryshrdl dent delegation the elementary rights guaranteed them under the Consti- tution, The refusal to take action against the violation of those rights emphasized once again the complete solidarity of the government, state and federal, with the coal operators. At Frankfort, a second student del- egation read a petition listing the charges of the students against the Kentucky officials to Governor Laf- Bom Hall speaking for the National oe Ea a Student League, demanded that o Anar- V don’t want Bolsheviks, Ve students to If v Otherwise ter proceedings be started Waiter S. Smith, County Atto: Bell County and that the whole sit- uation be investigated. Governor" Laffon refu any such action. 7 a kindly, patel initely turned down all the demands of the students and supported the | fascist attack of the Bell County thugs and deputy sheriffs upon the National Student League delegation. In reply to the statement of the governor that the students were just as safe as he was, Robert Hall asked whether Laffoon would guarantee their safety in Kentucky. The Goy ernor denied that he would, saying: “No, I can’t guarantee safety to anybody in Kentucky.” I cannot guarantee you safety if you return io the Harlan or Bell County coal fields, nor I can guarantee you safety until you leave the state, I don’t know what you can do about having Smith or any of the officials arrested there.” This was a clear self-exposure of Laffoon’s demagogic attempt to make the students believe he sympathized with them while simultaneously re- ‘fusing to take any steps for insuring their safety. Despite the fact that the students | haye been on the road almost steadily for the last twenty-seven hours, they intend travelling to Washington through West Virginia, A petition has been drawn up demanding a Federal investigation of the entire matter and Congressional a@tion for gauranteeing of their rights to travel through Harlan and Bell Counties. It was announced last night that against to take Governor Laffoon had received over | | 3,000 protest telegrams from college clubs, professors, student organiza- tions and friends and relatives of the students all over the country. Sena- tor La Follette received a telegram signed by eleven professors in Col- | umbia Univrsity including three im-| portant departmental heads asking that he move for a Federal inves- | tigation of conditions in Harlan and Bell Counties, ‘MASS ACTION FORCES RELIEF IN CALIFORNIA Tnemployed Take. Over Council and De- nounce Grafters FATHER COX IS PREPARING NEW HUNGER STUNTS Wants Million to Put Him Up As President PITTSBURGH, March 29.—Again RICHMOND, Cal. — Following) emonstration and parade 250 un-/| employed workers laid the following | demands before the Richmond City } Council and by their organized pressure won immediate action: 1. $5 weekly cash relief for the head | of each family, $3 extra for each dependent; 2. No evictions of unem- | ployed or part time workers; 3. Gas, electric and water bills of unem- ployed and part time workers to be paid by the city; 4. No discrimina- tion against Negro foreign-born, young workers lor single workers; | 5. The stoppage of payments of in-| stallments on houses, furniutre and cars for unemployed and part time workers during period of unemploy- ment, The demands were presented by Florence Crook, workers’ candidate | for the Board of Education, after | which the workers took possessior? of | the City Chambers and turned the | council meeting into a worker’s open forum: Unemployed workers backed by shop workers from the Standard Oil, Sante Fe Railroad and Ford’s took | the floor denouncing the system of starvation forced upon the workers by the ruling class in Richmond, and demanding immediate relief for the needy case, particularly for 350 workers whose lights and gas have been turned off. Two of hte couneiimen answered | the workers and said that the de- thands wére out of reason. Jack Irwin, field organizer for the Com- munist Party took the floor and completely exposed the graft of the espe- cially in their attack on Florence | Crook by cutting off her relief, gas and lights, Comrade Irwin told the City Coun- | cilmen and Mayor that if they did demonstrations would follow. ‘The pressure of the workers stop- ped further evasion of the demands by the officials and forced a promise of immediate action for all needy workers who were in the demonstra- tion were given food, and their lights and gas were turned on. CAN'T EARN LIVING, KILLS SELF CHICAGO, March 26.—Unable to earn a@ living, Max Lipman, a silk | salesman, killed himself. Lipman, he could no longer keep up payments | bundle of the April 2 Daily Worker now! expenses, | self nominated for president, not give relief to the unemployed | and cease their attacks on the for- | eign born that more and greater 4 cases. The next morning unemployed | left a note to his wife explaining that | on his insurance or earn his living, supported by the business men of this city, Father James R. Cox is planning an “unemployed political convention” for St. Louis in August where he expects a million unem- ployed. Father Cox, a Catholic priest, | who led about 10,000 unemployed on a disastrous jaunt to Washington, which he called a “hunger march,” is trying to rouse the jobless to nominate as a presidential candi- date. Father Cox's main slogan is that the unemployed should starve as | good Americans and should not put | up a militant fight in their demand for relief. Father Cox’s hunger march, as his present venture, is financed only by Pittsburgh businessmen. Cox has designated a blue shirt as the insigna of the march of St. Louis. Besides the fact that he wants him- Cox has not told the unemployed how they will feed themselves. Cops Deny Communist Candidate Rig ht to) Speak in Iowa Town COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa.—Coun- cil Bluffs police again resorted to dictatorial methods when they inter- | fered with H. W. Smith, Communist for Mayor, who was invited to speak during the intermission period to the crowd, ‘by the management of the dance hall known as Blachy’s Hall, Whne Smith attempted to enter the hall, he was refused permission to enter by the police, who following their usual role attempted to agitate trouble, and then lay it on to the Communists, When the Winter Winds Begin to Blow You will ne it warm and corny Camp Nitgedaiget rest in the proleta atmosphere provided lotel—you will also find it well heated with steam heat, \P hot water and provements, The food is elenn a fresh and especially well prepared. ‘ SPECIAL RATES FOR WEEK- ENDS For further information call the— COOPERATIVE OFFICE 3800 Bronx Park Enst Tol--Bsterbrook 1400 ESD AY, MARCH Ra Tele 1932 Page Three ys Medals. A 1Bo Bonkers Propose 20 ne aes Workers Pack ney of | t 2.C. Cut for Lawrence Mass, City Workers Court at Trial of Six ‘Prosecutor Demands Death Penalty As “Onlv Means” of Stamping Out Communism ATLANTA, March 29.—Workers, two-thirds of them colored, packed the court room here on March 23 to demon- strate their protest against the efforts of the state of Georgia The 1,500 city emplo; to burn six revolutionary workers in the chair for the “crime” been paid for 10 weeks, the! of organizing white and Negro workers together in the revo- no money. The Boston unions of the Tr: Union +— re id A. W. Co. would not agree League. The q izers and workers fighting against of WRENCE, Mass.—A cut for city em The A. W. Co. cificially 10 per cer it amounted to as much as 40 p cent. Hundreds have been dis inated against and thousafds work money to Lawrence, unless ror against working-class orfian- of |the city employees starvatio were cut 20 per cent. ne The Unemployed Council and Deca Trade Union Unity League Local CW. A: Me ?? Or ti called upon all city workers not to Labor De- Panizatlons acecpt any wage-cuts and join in fense attorneys de ne ok a united fight against wage-cuts and : ‘ g s nged the constitutionality t St t Ht g sid fh sent magecitzod os ialeged we onmatworaisy) at State Hunger to send delegates to the Hung |March Conference, which will take place April 4, in preparation for the State Hunger March on May 1and 2. ate is seeking to railroad’ the six nizers to the elec- | tute was enacted class as a the March Conference Delegates Elected for tric chair, by the white ruling ure for suppressing ruggles of | tk Negro slav It later Whe R. Tour Shows amended in i208.” 1 twas ug” up | March to Meet In in 1930 for the y . Mass Interest In “a tec Pe a and white workers for conditions and against their) BOSTON, Mass—Twenty-two or- enizations met in conference on Sunday, March 27, at the call of the dt Unemployed Council to discuss the é 5 ees cea unemployed situation and make aie day re the opening of the| svarations for the State Hunger al. Gr Fain, the policeman |isarch which is to take pl: who led the raid on the workers’; March. which is to take place on meeting, has since been kicked off M&Y 1 and 2. the police force for drunkenness. It was pointed out by the dele- Assistant Solicitor-General John | ates and reporter that this hunger H, Hudson has demanded the death |™arch must be used to continue the penalty for the arrested workers as fight for increase of the meager un- the only means of “curbing” the |¢mPleyed relief that ts given out to growth of Communism in the South, | few, and to demand regular relief |The LL.D. attorneys are demanding |f0F all jobless, along with the dé- Ne : the removal of Hudson on the|™and of endorsing the Workers’ | Trade Union Unity League are |orounds of rabid prejudice against | Unemployed Insurance Bill. | sweeping across the country and|the defendants and of plain, unvar-| The delegates present pledged te drawing masses of workers to hear |nished crookedness in the exercise further the work of the conference the story of the Kentucky strike and | of his office. |by approaching other organizations to take up the struggle for better | Local boss papers yesterday quoted |in their vicinity and to co-operate conditions. | Governor Richard B. Russell, Jr., to|With the Unemployed Council to The Bellam tour which is now |the effect that he “had no state-| form Block Committees, which is the holding 34 meetings in Minnesota,|ment” to make on the charges|major point of activity at present. Wisconsin, scored splendid results in | against Hudson, Financing of the Hunger March was | many industrial towns. Indiana Har-| These local papers have been|taken up at length and every or- | bor workers turned out to the largest | forced to admit that the attempt to| ganization pledged to raise a mazxi- indoor meeting ever held there with | railroad the six organizers to the | mum of $25, besides collecting money 700 workers enthusiastically cheering |¢lectric chair has roused widespread |0n the lists, which wera already sent |th Sovit films, In Hammond, In- | indignation in Atlanta, The Atlante /Out. They also pledge to demand. | diana 250 jammed a small hall and | Constitution states that the case has | that the cities teed: aut Rome ‘ti 100 stood three hours without leaving | “@Toused the ire of Communists and hunger march delegates. \the room. In Cloquet, a paper mill | their sympathizers as well as the! The conference constituted itself indignation of yersons appealing for|as a permanent body and elected @ | | Miners’ Struggles «: court lawye! sta Peat, Biedenkapp, to Speak in Minn., Toeenna: and ING.) NEW YORK.—Two workers Inter- national Relief tours headed respec- | tively by John J. Ballam. labor | leader and editor and Fred J. Bieden- Vou, national organizer for the | quated ted suicide | and lumber town, the largest collec- | ( i | 5 | tion on. record. was taken for the Bees spezch under the con- committee of 18 to carry on the | Kentucky-Tennesee strikiing miners |” ye a work, whcih was fot ulated in the relief, Protests from working-class or-|Tesolution such las organization of meetings issuing of leaflets aid other |forms of agitation. April 10 and 24 |was chosen as tag days to collect funds in a real mass campaign. Along with the hunger march re- solution, resolutions were adopted in connection with the Anti-War Week and for the release of all workers jailed in Boston. At the second meeting which will take place on April 17, at 11 pm. at 751 Washington St., Boston, all delegates elected for the Hunger March will be present. ganizations are pouring in from all |world. The Canadian Labor De-| |fense League has sent the following protest, addressed to Governor Rich- | ard B. Russell, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.: “We, of the Canadian Labor De- fense League, protest vigorously against your law authorities. The contemptible methods of law offi- cers in digging up old and obsolete laws to frame workers, who are fighting for their existence, we roundly condemn. We pledge our- selyes to support the aroused work- ers of the United States in their struggle against this unbridled ter- HALF DOLLAR CAMPAIGN |New York, Detroit, Connecticut and Boston in the Lead—Momentum Now At Highest Pitch Half dollars and more half dollars! Just 8,722 since March 16! But still not enough to reach quotas April Ist. The daily receipts of half dollars keeps growing and will increase for the next couple of weeks. The machinery of organization and long mailing lists set in motion is just getting inte speed. TO SAVE THE DAILY WORKER! The drive must not stop at this time. All districts must reach their quotas. Most catch up with New York, Detroit, Connecticut and Boston! Which district will reach its quota first? Watch this daily report! In Superior, March 26th more than | 500 crowded in a hall with 250 seating | capacity and all remained for three hours. W. I. R. branches were formed at every town. Company stool pigeons infest all | meetings. But the workers are not intimidated. In the iron mine country, Iron- wood, all tickets for the meeting have been sold out in advance. So intense is the interest in the struggle among the iron miners that the workers have insisted that three meetings be held during the weekend so that no one will miss the message of solid- arity. Ballam leaves for Southern Min- nesota to open up new territory where five more meetings will be held upon completion of the Wis- consin lap. Fred Biedenkapp swings his tour into the Pittsburgh district this weekend, holding meetings at Mc- Keesport, March 29; Carnegie, March 30; Brownsville, March 31; Pitts- burgh, Workers Center(, 2157 Center Aveuue, April 1; Ambridge, April 2. Biedenkapp is scheduled to arrive in Jamestown, N. Y., for a -mass meeting on April 4. The schedule for New York State is as follows: Bing- hampton, April 5; Utica, April 6; Syracuse, April 7; Niagara Falls, April 8; Buffalo, April 9; and Roch- ester April 10 at 2 p. m. One Cent, for Two What have you done in the half- dollar campaign? Weeks Work, Pay eee z $e f Ohio Miner | 25 as is 0 eae ae as is CLEVELAND, Ohio.=-A coal| ~~ a = Rae are we miner of the Hocking Valley |$ 671.47 1. Boston , 193 1,658 104 Mining Company worked steadily | 11,894.32 2. New York 18,803 5,588 13,215 29.7 for two weeks and received as his 828.02 3. Philade)phia 6,437 93 6,344 14 pay a check for 1 cent. 193.74 4. Buffalo 2,818 69 2,112 31° He loaded 53 tons of coal and 260.18 5. Pittsburgh 2,057 7 1,980 36 | received 45 cents for “deadwork,” | 1,147.71 6. Cleveland 6,273 567 5,706 9. giving him a total of $28.01 for | 1,290.63 7. Detroit 6,221 202 5,419 | two weeks of back-breaking work.) 1,343.29 8. Chicago 11,232 917 10,315 i Not satisfied with making the 393.69 9, Minneapolis 3,273 59 3,214 18 miner work for 14 a week, the 69,67 10. Kansas City 1,485 “4 1,461 16 company deducted $20 for his 10.51 11. N. & S. Dakota 279 “ 279 0. store account, $4 for rent, $3 for 239.79 12. Seattle 2,351 30 2,321 12 coal, 4 cents for the burial fund, 657.21 13. San Francisco 2,708 22 2,686 & and he was docked 50 cents, mak- 419.83 15. Connecticut 1,896 236 1,660 124 ing a total of $28, 15.40 16. N.&S.Carolina 269 269 0. With the remaining penny the 90.25 17. South 125 5 120 4 company told him to pay doctor 63.75 18. Butte 292 19 273 62 bills, buy school books, clothing 164.75 19. Denver 49% 21 471 42 and other necessities for his : — children, $19,754.21 68,225, 8,722 59,503 12.8 146.01 Miscellaneous .. Defend the Soviet Union against the attack of the bossest $19,900.22 YOUR FIFTY CENTS WILL HELP SAVE THE DAILY WORKER! WRAP THIS COUPON WITH YOUR 50 CENTS Send to 50 BAST t3th SY. Fy ghh NEW YORK CITY, Comet erty OSA. | NAMO Kase cs cases Shade eiveee Se halsey J diode dlepesegels eee Address ...... «CMBR sakes Sake ods BURR ess weseete 70, 000 Half Dollars. by April Ist