The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 5, 1932, Page 3

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| | f ‘f : | i iy ‘RALLY THE JOBLESS FOR THE TUUL DRIVE FOR NEW MEMBERS Food Workers Suggest that Unemployed | Become Active in Job Agencies (By a Worker Correspondent.) union. We could divide the number NEW YORK —If we are to realize | hus arrived at into little groups | lour part of the quota set by the | numbering two or three workers and T.U.U.L. for May 1 the building up | {orm them into Food Workers’ Un- of concrete system is absolutely | ¢mployed Councils. Those small nigcessary by the F.W.LU. In the | Sroups could be given definite as: | face of the fact that the unem-|signments, .for instance, to work | ployed situation amongst the hotel | 4mongst the unemployed, An ex- | and restaurant workers grows more | Céllent opportunity to this effect | acute day after day, and inasmuch | Presents itself in the employment | as the economic situation indicates | agencies on Sixth Ave. and the vari- very clearly that this will continue | us hotel clubs, etc, which are al- to be the case for at least another | ways overcrowded with unemployed two years before we could experience | workers who for one grievance or the first symptoms of improvement, | another could easily be organized if any at all, it becomes apparent | into the union. that it would be well for the union| ‘This procedure would naturally to devote more attention to the or-| create a systematical routine of | ganization of the unemployed, of | work, It would do lots of good to- which there are in New York only | wards stimulating the members into BOSSES RETREAT BEFORE CENTRAL Two Mines Strike Against 50 Per Cent Wage-Cut (By a Worker Correspondent.) SEWARD, Pa,—Two mines, the Crosyan Mehan Coal Co, and the Diamond Smokeless Coal, are out on strike in Indiana County, Cen- tral Pennsylvania, We have held @ series of organization meetings in both camps, have organized strong strike and relief commit- tees and rallied over 75 per cent of the striking miners at a strike meeting April 2, Fifty-four of the miners joined the National Miners’ Union. The meeting passed a resolution to hold - a joint meeting wtih the miners from Dilltown and Boltz. For this ser i g z | Hi about 100,000 walking the street, and not merely leave anything to the unemployed councils. This would be doubly worth consideration in view WY of the coming elections. To this end, I would suggest to the comrades that they should hold a members of the union who would be willing to help us build a stronger | Why the New Factory Came to Belmar, N. J. | (By a Worker Correspondent.) BELMAR, N. J.—The loca] capital- ist press, known as the coast adver- tiser, recently boasted of Belmar’s first industry and went on for an entire column complimenting its rapid success, The writer wishes to clarify the situation, both for the “rugged indi- vidualist” who edits the trash sheet which endeavors to make the work- ers believe that their factory boss is a second Christ, and for the work- ers in the factory in order that they may begin to take steps to liberate themselves from servitude. ‘The Universal Brassiere and Just- rite Corset Co., 1 E. 33rd St., New York City, owns this factory. The action. ous and systematical fashion, will w |be able to materialize our desire for la strong union which will force its way and program into the shops. Shop work is our most important task, but it could be combined with | general check-up of all unemployed | &@ more intensive campaign amongst the unemployed. FRANK DUVAL, j bosses have seen fit to discontinue operations in the big city, so that | they might engage cheaper and un- organized labor in this small town. They see fit to hire girls still of the school age. They see fit to hire a beginner piece-worker to earn $3 the first week on the job, $5 for the second week, $9 for the third week, and they see fit that she neverearns over $15 a week after that. A day in this factory is from 8 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. The workers work six days a week, ‘This, workers, is the philanthropy of the boss. He is giving the work- ers a chance to earn bread—bread without butter. ‘Wake up, workers of this mill! Or- ganize! Unionize! DN. 10 Per Cent Cut in Olds Motor Company (By a Worker Correspondent) LANSING, Mich—The Olds Motor Co. has just given a 10 per cent cut. ‘The workers were coming in to work carrying lunch baskets with just a little’ more than a crust of bread. When the Michigan Manufacturers Association decide to take a few more slices off the workers’ pay check it is called an “effort to bring back prosperity.” But when workers meet to protest starvation wages and demand our share of what we produce so that our children might grow up healthy and strong it is called conspiracy. We 5 Cents An Hour in (By 2 Worker Correspondent.) MILWAUKEE, Wis.—I am giving you the dope on one of the factories in the “socialist” town of Milwaukee which is ruled by the high-geared babbit Mayor Hoan and his side- Kick, Riot Gun Benson. ‘This hat factory, the Slocum Straw Works, has always worked on the stagger system at two to three months’ periods at a time. In 1931 they paid $1.75 a dozen for trim- ming and lining hats. Now they pay 15, 20 and 25 cents. No such prices ever existed here before. We have a foreman here by the name of Bill Kingsporn. Some bird, Bill. He was born with agrouch He raises proper hell with the He finds something to kick about all the time. The place is run on the Henry Ford system. They run over the hats are hoodlums and what have you, then they look over their law books to see what charges to make. ‘We want these “gentlemen” to know that we will not take their wage-cuts with a smile. We have held our little organization together in spite of their police terrorism and will not give up the fight. ‘We get a few copies of the Daily Worker here every day. It’s the only thing that has kept us alive. Its guiding pages must never be stopped wy the bosses. We will do all we can in Lansing to keep up the Daily Worker. Milwaukee Factory and if they find one stitch wrong they make the worker do the whole rack over again for nothing. They haye guts enough to say this is not forced labor. One woman passed the remark that she was cut on day work $10 month. The day workers have all been cut. What few are now in the place are working for 5 cents an hour, Girls come to work and are for- bidden to punch the clock. They keep these girls waiting for hours. They are called in turns to work. This is close to real slavery. And it shows signs of getting worse. The workers here had better get busy and organize. Elect a shop commit- tee and get in touch with the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union. Organization means power against the robber bosses. wM. “Pure Marxists” of the Proletarian Party Indianapolis, Ind. Dear Comrades: We are very interested in your re- ployed Council mobilized over a thousand workers in November at the § & FRA i F | | i 2 Bee for equality for the Negro masses, and the renegades were happy that things were quiet in Kokomo. Today, after af ew months, the story is different. Our “uneducated,” Taw workers in the Party, through Patient day to day work, have come genuises” And so it is that “raw” workers, following the correct program and line of the Communist International, can develop a mass movement and can become leaders and learn about Every workers’ club and Branch that has not been Day Daily Worker! 4, .,, Only if we work in a seriy! heard from will be listed in the | je meeting the miners have secured a large hail a tKramer, Pa, which is half way between both camps, The coal company at Dilltown | has already failed in an attempt to furnish moonshine to the strikers and in this manner disrupt the strike, The strike is so effective that the Coal Mine has stated that he will wages and reinstate all blacklisted miners, Furniture Strike _ In Boston Solid | Struck Twice In One Month; Another Shop Coming Out BOSTON, Mass.—The workers of the Bay State Upholstery Company, who are on their second strike within one month, are standing solid in the face of police intimidation on the Picket line and false rumors spread by the bosses to disrupt them. The workers struck the first time against a 10 and 15 per cent ‘wage- cut, affecting different categories of workers, After conceding to the workers’ demands in the first strike, and promising no discrimination, the boss broke the agreement and fired two strikers, precipitating the second Strike. ‘The company’s plans to have their. orders filled at the Providence shop is being frustrated. Committees have been at work bringing down the workers in the shop. Already 82 of @ total of 92 workers are out and for all practical purposes the factory is at a standstill. Request for affiliation to the Fur- niture Workers’ Industrial Union are coming in from Gardener, Mass., where the workers of the O. W. Sie- berts Co. are faced with a 15 per cent wage-cut. An organizer of the Trade Union Unity League is now there, in conference with the work- ers, Despite their occupation with the strike activity, committees are at work preparing for the city confer- ence of furniture workers to take Place at the end of the month. Progress is reported in the arrange- ment of a dance on May 5 in Dor- chester Manor, to further popularize the union among the workers, LawrenceWelfareHead Tells Worker “No Aid to Jobless Foreigners” LAWKENCE, Mass—The Unem- ployed Council of Lawrence has established a block committee of needy, unemployed workers and went with them to the City Welfare De- partment for relief. Comrade Perry, who headed the five families, was told to get out by Mr. Riley, the head. Riley told him they give no relief to foreigners. ‘The Unemployed Council is pre- paring to go to the mayor and de- mand that there be no discrimina- tion against foreign born. Preparatory work is being done in Lawrence for the great hunger march A big mass meeting is being arranged for the Lawrence Commons on Saturday, April 9, at 2pm. TRY TO FRAME L. 1. WORKERS Williams and Archer Held for Deportation LAURENCE, L. I. — The trial of comrades Williams and Archer in the Laurence Court House on March 29th was held in the midst of an armed camp of state troopers and boss of the Diamond Smokeless: | take back the 50 per cent cut in | | Despite Police vAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1932 NEW YORK.—Before an enthu- siastic crowd of over thousand stu- dents in the Plymouth Theater, the National Student League delegation to Kentucky reported the results of their trip and issued an appeal to the ‘| students of America to support the Kentucky miners, There were more than ten speakers who dealt with each phase of the trip and related in detail the manner in whioh, for the first time, a student delegation had come into conflict with the fascist forces of the capl- talist state. ‘The keynote of the entire meeting Was the general sentiment: “If this is what they do to students, what do they do to striking miners?” Every call to action by the speakers in sup- Port of the struggles of the working class was met with wildly enthusiastic response, Speaking for the students on the first bus, Robert Hall of Columbia University concluded his speech by @ stirring call for solidarity of the students with the Kentucky miners. Donald Henderson, instructor in |economics at Columbia University j@nd executive secretary of the Na- tional Student League outlined the political coriclusions which the stu- |dents of America must draw from the trip. “For the first time,” said Hen- derson, “are the students conscious of themselves as a social force. For the first time are they definitely lining themselves up with, and un- der the leadership of, the revolu- tionary working-class,” Carrying this determination to par- | ticipate in all the struggles of the working class further, Elinor Curtis, | another member of the student dele- | gation, said: “We belong with the miners and | are a part of the working class. We | will break down the barriers which the bosses have set up between our- Page Three Students Report Ky. Trip; ' Pledge Support to Miners selves and the working class. We will work to make the miners strike and all the struggles of the working class @ success.” Pointing to the terror which met the National Student League dele- gation as part of the general terror offensive of the bosses, Elinor Curtis drew the attention of the students to the lynch terror exercised against the Negroes. Especially did she, in the name of the National Student League, call for support of the fight to free the nine Scottsboro boys. “We have no illusions as to what the courts will or will not do,” she said. “It is only mass action that can free them. We ask you to go to your colleges and mass organiza~ tions and get them to take part in the April 6th demonstrations this week against the atempted legal lynching of the Scottsboro boys and against the new imperialist war which the capitalist class is pre- paring to hurl us into.” ‘The announcement of the expulsion from Columbia University of Reed Harris brought forth a stormy protest and a pledge of a nation wide college fight to reinstate him. In a telegram to the meeting, Harris stated that he considered his expulsion due to the unqualified support he had given to the Kentucky trip of the students. A resolution of protest against his expulsion was unanimously adopted at the meeting to be sent to President Butler of Columbia University and to the Board of Trustees. Resolutions demanding the free- ing of the Scottsboro boys, the free- ing of all arrested Kentucky miners and strike leaders were unanimously adopted at the meeting. Jim Garland, 25 year old Kentucky | miner, spoke and told in detail the terror and starvation conditions un- der which the miners live and work A collection was taken for relief of the miners. | | NEW YORK.—The murder by Mrs, Winifred Finlay Fosdick, wife of Raymond Blaine Fosdick, attorney and trustee of the Rockefeller Foun- dation, of her two children and her own suicide, besides illustrating the mental degeneration of the para~ sitic members of the capitalist class, brings to light th edirect hook-up of the educational system, the church, the so-called “altruistic” Rockefeller Foundation and the barons of Wall St. Raymond Fosdick, brother of Harry Emerson. Fosdick, the Rockefeller- controlled preacher, after receiving = contro! mittee of the democratic national convention in 1912, This was the and fathers into the imperialist bloodbath of 1914-18, As special representative of the secretary of war on the Mexican bor- Mexican workers and peasants by giving the utmost possible support to the Wall Street-controlled mili- tarist butchers in Mexico. RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 BUILD THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West 26 Issues $1 Name ..cescscarwormresereccsscnsssesess BHCC sec sihecsssesneonanene Western Worker Campaign Committee Murder Reveals Career of Fosdick, Rocketeller Agent. After participating directly in the bloody slaughter of workers as civil- jan aid of General Pershsing in 1918, Fosdick was found by the bosses fully prepared to take his place in the “pacifist” tool of the imperialist na- tions, the League of Nations. He was under-secretary of that organization during the years 1919 and 1920, the very years when under the cloak of pacifism the League of Nations was carrying out its bloody war of inter- vention against the Workers’ Father- land, the Soviet Union. For his services in sitting behind the lines_and sending hundreds of thousands of workers to death through telephone communications with the front line trenches, Fosdick was awarded the Distinguished Ser- vice Medal by the United States gov- ernment. _| FIRE WORKERS ON CHARITY “JOBS” Get Cut Off from All Relief in Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—Six work- ers on the “chain gang,” a relief scheme, have been fired and refused any ald, among those fired are John Adams, Leo York, Howard Baily and Sandis Wycoff; these workers have on the average of four children that need food, clothing and that they may attend school. With this fireing of workers that have worked on the “chain gang” for a small basket, proves the lie of Governor Leslie that there would be no hunger in this state. Mayor Sullivan also stated last winter that there would be no starvation in the city of Indianapolis. The workers of Washington Town- ship are being mobilized for a mass protest meeting to be held April 4, 10 a. m. in front of the trustees office. Maggie Maxwell, the trustee, will be called upon by a committee demand- tng food for these workers and their families, and to demand no more stoppage of groceries, MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA IN PHILADELPHIA PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—A mandolin orchestra has been organized here under the auspices of the Workers International Relief. Players of mandolins, mandobasses mandocellos, concertinos ete are invited to join and help to make it a mass orchestra. Rehearsals are held at 173 No. 3lst Street, every Friday at 9 p.m." IT! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c teversee SHAte sesreesereeessereess | | | MINERS ROUTE | U.M.IW. A. FAKERS & IN SHAMOKIN Rank and File Expose Brennon and Kennedy In Pa. Meeting (By a Worker Correspondent) SHAMOKIN, Pa, — The interna- tional secretary of the United Mine Workers of America, Kennedy and the district president of district 9 were greeted with boos and cat calls when they tried to address a meeting at the Moose Hall here April 1. Kennedy managed to speak but was tied up with questions from the rank and file and gave contra~ dictory answers, which proved that he was @ traitor and a liar, The miners denounced him such. The Brennon machine tried all the tricks they knew to stop the flow of questions that came from the miners. They even threatened to close the meeting, The miners, how- ever, called the hand of the fakers and forced them to face the music, When Brennen took the floor the place was in an uproar. Boos and shouts accusing him of being a traitor greete him from all corners cover up his treachery the miners interrupte him with embarrassing questions. The burgess, notorious for break- ing up workers’ meetings, tried to quiet the miners, but they booed him down too. It was brought out in the meeting that Breenen ordered the state troops to break the recent insurgent strike. When Brennon denied sending for the troops a number of the com- mittee who had been in Harrisburg to find out who sent them, took the floor and repeated the governor's answer, which was that Brennon had requested the troops. Most of the miners left the hall before Davis, who was sent in by John L, Lewis, had a chance to speak, SPOKANE LODGING FORCED TO KEEP OPEN BY JOBLESS SPOKANE, Wash.—-The city had plans to shut the relief station for the migratory workers, known as the | Billet on FE. Trent Ave. But the Un- employed Council organized such a strong protest that the mayor and thecouncil decided to keep it open for another 15 days after they had decided to close it, on April 1, and | Ployed families. There were about twelve or fifteen hundred men and women at the mass meeting previous to the parade, In the mass meeting the speakers succeeded in exposing the misleading tactics of the leadership of the local socialist party, John McKay. Mc~ Kay did his best to sabotage the demonstration by organizing another one @ couple of hours before. But he failed miserably. There was @ parade of about 500, with several hundred walking on the sidewalks. Frisco Hospital Tries to Stop Work of Painters SAN FRANCISCO,, Oalif.—The San Francisco City Hospital was the scene recently of a workers’ protest against the Associated Charities and the city, who take advantage of the starvation of the workers and com- pel them to slave for a basket of rotten groceries. In the past the city spent $14,000 on the job of painting its huge iron fences. Today it compels unemployed painters and helpers to slave, paint~ ing the fence, for a pittance in gro- ceries. The National Painters’ Union, which was formed after'a number of the rank and file were forced by the American Federation of Labor union grafters to break off from the brotherhood, led the protest picket. They were joined by the Downtown Unemployed Council. Almost immediately after the) workers began the protest-picket the hospital authorities ordered the men working on the fence to quit work~- ing, fearing that the workers might join the pickets. The workers on the job showe open sympathy with the protesting workers. Slogans were to cut no water off of the unem- | displayed demanding union wages for the men at work, condemning the city and charities grafters and calling upon those at work to join with the unemployed. 50 EAST 13th ST. YOUR FIFTY CENTS WILL HELP SAVE THE WRAP THIS COUPON WITH YOUR 50 CENTS MAY DAY PLANS © Below Is the Program for the Great Historica] May Day Daily Worker for 1982, the Biggest Issue in U. 8. History Bs ‘The National Office of the Daily Worker is putting the following plan into motion IMMEDIATELY. A letter now being prepared will be sent to every subscriber checking up on books, urging immediate action for the May Day issue, telling if the seriousness of the situation which is still facing the workers’ paper. Wth this letter will be enclosed « form for greetings, and a blank for soliciting a commercial ad from local business men for this iseue, There will be instructions as to methods of soliciting ads. A similar letter will go to every branch of every mass organization in the United States, enclosing a similar form for organizations, Every wotker and organization who has contributed to save the Daily Worker will be listed in the May Day issue, and three organizations whe have not given will be listed under a separate head. This plan is being sent in detail to all districts and functionaries te be transmitted to every member of the Party. This is all in conjunction with the Half-Dollar Campaign and the ending of the fight to get $50,000 to save the Daily Worker. It is still TO SAVE THE DAILY WORKER! The Daily Worker has no been saved yet, because the workers have not done everything they. ean, and done it in large enough numbers! It is directly up to the workers, and the fight from now until May Day must be intensified on every front! PREPARE FOR MAY LAY! HALF DOLLAR CAMPAIGN Less Than 20 Per Cent of All 50 Cent Pieces Are Now In But They Must Be By May Day! The districts are sending in their half dollars steadily, but slowly, from all sources, and all districts seem to keep their pace, the slew ones still lagging, the responsive ones still holding their lead and even in- creasing it, New York is far in the lead, with almost 40 per cent of iis complete quota in half dollars. But since the beginning of the half-dollar campaign on March 16, Joss than 15,000 of the 70,000 have come in. There iy some hope of the intensification of the Half Dollar Drive between now and April 15, and that every quota. will have been reached by that time, but now the is shifting into the campaign to complete quotas AND ALSO to get greetings, ads and bundle orders for the MAY DAY DAILY WORKER. Every worker and workers’ organization that has given to the Daily Worker will be listed in the May Day issue, It will be the biggest of the year, and probably the biggest in the history of the ly Worker, PREPARE FOR MAY DAY WITH HALF DOLLARS! PREPARE FOR MAY DAY WITH GREETINGS! PREPARE FOR MAY DAY WITH ADS FROM BUSINESS MEN! PEPARE FOR MAY DAY BY ORDERING BUNDLES NOW! Watch this daily report of the half dollars— a2 <i a3 : 3 # 2 iy & 3 5 3 H 3 i } i is é a i a as és $ 636.21 1. Boston 1,851 254 1587 13.7. 12,839.08 3. New York 18,803 1487 11,328 30.7 901,60 3, Philadelphia 6,437 238 6,199 37 233.04 = 4, Buffalo 2,818 181 2,687 5. 294.43 5, Pittsburgh 3,057 145 1912 Lf 1,198.27 6. Cleveland 2,273 681 5,592 104 1,362.72 7. Detroit 6,221 960 5,261 149 1,801.13 8. Chicago 11,232 1,831 9,201 162 41239 9, Minneepolis 3,273 96 3,171 28 79.67 10, Kansas City 1,685 “ 143 28 13.51 11. N,& 5. Dakota 279 6 rir) 22 236.29 12. Seattle 2,351 11 23.374 32 662.71 13. San Francisco - 2,708 3B 2,673 LL. 452.78 15, Connecticut, 1,896 301 1,595 15.2. 1640 16.N.&8.Carolina’ 269 2 287 A 198.95 17. South 125 6 99 i. 70.50 18. Butte 283 2 360 109 165.45 19. Denver 493 2 3 470 43 ——— ee ed $21,565.53 68,225 133% 35,851 Isr 146.51 Misceliantous j $21,712.06 , * 2 FEBRUARY 26-27 New Bpmpehire DISTRICT {Massachusetts oy See ce Talend bi Previously reported, 363.48 J. Hogenian, Providence : 10 ie butien, aahoy” re} ‘ Ad M. Ginivuorl, Roylsten 3 ‘900.20 DISTRICT 8 %, Harkonen 1.80) A friend Yellow Spring 10.00 Previously reported 6283.48 |. Makt “30 — New York City 3. Harkonen 50 10 Myak, 30 |. Messi 238 — 5 Det 00 | 3t aio 3 | prerarcr tanenisus A. Hausman 1.00 | A. H. 115 | Previously 87.06 ©. Meisler 5.00 |W. 8. AB | A friend Grenk 4.00 Section 1 Unit 1A 13.50 KR. -20 | TWO Br $53, Dearborn 5,00 Section 1 Unit 3B 1.00 | M. N. ar 4 , Detroit 50 Section 1 Unit 4B 2.0 | Russian Net Mutual Aid — | Detroit ($100 Section 2 Unit 3 1.00| Soc Br 77 Buffalo 6.68 43. Section 2 Unit 3 125/ R.A, Stohr, Bolivar 1.00 — Section 3 Unit 9-4 2.25 | Russian Mut Ald Soe 53.00 Section 4 Unit 9 13.66 | Rochester 5.00 District 7 Section 6 Unit 10 1.00 | Moliver 8.00| Collected by &. Hanns Seotion 7 A Ferber 3.05 | Coste & List 79 100 Unit 7 3.50 | Moliver “$8 | Catierine, Johinen 1.09 Ukr Toilers Org. 5.00 | A M Welling Watervitet 1.00 it 4 Followers of the Trail Sylvia Makt 50 Camp, Peekskill 32.90 | Vaino Maki $0 Julius ‘Rosenzweig 5.00 Anna Gokinehn 150 4. Sabbath 2.00 117.80 | This ‘Tenuney 135 Max & Bella 1.00 | DISTRICT Henry Palo 35 M. Brook 1,50 | Previously reported — 106.35 | Junnola "35 Ross “50 | Jack Taetf, Pittsburgh 0 35 Adie Horowite 100 | Bin Unit 3.00 | Collected by M. Serich Aaron Lewis 50 | North Side Unit 2.50 1.00 Berths Abrahams 1.00 | ¥ Sam Mazor 1.00 | Abe Kravet 1.00 | Padewer 50 ‘ank Rochman 1.00 D. Zellin 50 | ¥. Cooper 1.00 s Chas. Boxer 1.00 4 is -50|P. Mangen, Weston 3.00 | 8 Georget? J Minnie Mehiman 1.00 Pete George 1.08 Sarah 50 | 33.40 | Collected by B Weytovich Green 50 | ru 400 50 | 196.76 | John Mtkuie 380 Blinek 1.00 DISTRICT $--Obie Paul 38 A. friend 1.00 | Previously reported, 588.06 Wm Dryer eT Henriette 50|%. W. Res, Cleveland 1.00/8 3s Zalman 50 | Unit 2-4 5 6 1.00 | J » Small collection 1.60 | Nathan Davis 1.00 | Ukrain Women Séue | yj | Unit 223 Kaptinote 35 | Asoo West Sie 10.88 | 85.31 | Unit 2-20 Gianos 1.25 | Collected by D Carpenter | ——— | Fisher 5.50 Michael 1.00 | 6338.79 |L Fisher 200 | Arenengel Cebrial 1.00 | Previously ‘reported’ iat |Unit 330 °° = ale [arceanesl Ores ae Lithuen. Women Wks. | Unit 2-24 2.75 | Prophet Isaiah 30 Br 28, Balti. 5.00 | Hungar. Dist. Ex. . | Prophet Jeremiah ey Pennsy! Bick & Death Assn 5.00 | Prophet Ezekiel WFSsr. Phila. §.18 | Hungarian Printers TOU Prophet Daniel 3) Ukrain. Soc. Ohi 18.00 group 5.00 | Prophet Melchizede Workers of Bethlehem 10.95 | Unit 2-20 Gianos 1.50 | Prophet Nicodemus j J. Stabari Bethlehem 1.00 | Unit 1102 Steffan “31 | Com Wm Nauwmeen 1.00 Unit 2-20 1.00 | Unit C-4 Affair 3.28 | 37.13 | N Hernik 1.00 | Collected by B Benson | Unit 3-34 Pitts 6.50 |M Mahalsian 1.00 665.94 | A worker, Columbus 10 |M H Gray Loo | Previously reported 94.25 | John Reave, Dayton 2.50|Sam Gamar a.) DISTRICT 4—New York |W Kepler 1.50 |? Werholtx "38 A. Harkonen, Alpine 1.00 | Sect. Johnson, Toledo 5.00 | Lithu~ 2 Ass. Br 82 3.30. DAILY WORKER! Send to

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