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eer ~ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1932 Page Three Build the Cincinnati A. F.L. Conference for Unemployment Insurance! WARREN STAGGER AND HUNGER PLAN By BILL Di DUNNE Article II \ The strike of workers in the Trum- bull plant of the Republic Steel Com- pany, Warren, Ohio, has rendered splendid service to workers in the Republic plants in other cities—and to the workers in the steel industry in general—by stripping bare the combined stagger and charity sys- tem interspersed with wage-cuts by which the company, aided always by the Amalgamated Association offi- , cials, has reduced the standard of jliving of the working class below the: subsistence level. Year after year and month after month the wages, working conditions and living standard of the Warren workers—and of workers throughout the Mahoning and Shenango Valleys ~—have been driven downward stead- ily. “Warren is a city of homes,” ac- cording to the booster literature of the local chamber of commerce. Working hand in hand with the real estate sharks, and itself one of the biggest owners of real estate develop- ments through various holding com- panies, the Republie Company has had a policy of favoring “home-own- ‘Jers” in its employment service, In other words, if a worker was paying installments on a house and lot for which he had paid an exorbitant price to real estate, building ma- terial and contracting firms in which officials of the Republic Company, their superintendents and foremen were interested, he might be given a jeb in preference to a worker who had not incurred such obligations. Typical Case. To show what this has meant for Warren workers, it is necessary to cite only typical instance: A hot mill worker—necessarily highly skilled —a heater—and highly paid during | stocteagss Chain Wc Workers tc to Jobs at Contin- ually Declining Wages $18'a Month Is Pay Drawn by Most Skillful Class of Workers “normal” times (from $100'to $200) every two weeks, working on a ton- nage basis—has a house and lot in a district of dozens of similar pro- erties, This place cost him $6,000, There is a mortgage for $1,600. He is unable to sell his property for enough to pay off the mortgage. In other words, like thousands of other Warren workers, his savings during times of steady work went into payments for a house and lot which will now be sold by the sheriff, or taken on the mortgage, and from which he will be evicted. It Slides Down. Wage-cuts in the tonnage rate, in accord with the sliding scale agree- ment of the A. A—a scale which has been downwards for three years— and cuts in the day rate to which have followed these slashes in ton- nage payments, combined with the stagger system, have brought the wages of even the most highly paid Warren workers down to and even below that of the most. exploited workers in factory production such as textile, clothing, paper box manufac- turing, electrical equipment, etc. The highest wage of which I was informed was that of rollers and heaters, who for a two weeks’ pay received something like $36—about $18 per week. Since the stagger sys- tem applies to the hot mills (30 crews from the Liberty mill, closed for two years, have ben staggered into the Trumbull plant, these sums represent an entire month’s income for these highly skilled workers. The less skilled workers, like screw | Setters, for instance, get from five to {seven dollars per week.” Complicated Staggering. The Trumbull plant is, first-of all, staggered into four six-hour shifts. The workers put in six hours in the hot mill departments and get paid only for three hours. In addition to this, the total number of workers attached to the plant (the company boasts that it is “taking care of” 5,500 workers in the Trumbull plant) is rotated through the four six-hour shifts in such a way that they work only from five to ten days per month. Wages paid by such influential companies as Republic, and the standard of living of the workers it “takes care of,” tend to become the standard for all concerns in the Ma- honing Valley with its concentrated population of industrial workers. One example of this will be sufficient to illustrate the devastating results of the “capitalist offensive in this re- spect: Between Warren and Youngstown is a plant owned by the Ohio Leather Products Co.—employing mostly girls. They have a stagger system which gives these workers three hours’ em- ployment per day at 20 cents per hour. It costs 10 cents bus fare from ‘Warren—10 cents each way. Receiv- ing 60 cents for her day’s pay, a girl aiter paying transportation has the staggering sum of 40 cents left to dissipate food, clothes and shelter— those incurable vices of the working class, The response to the strike call of the mass meeting held under the auspices of the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, in spite of the shortcomings in the prepara- tions and the general weakness in applying the tactics of the united front, has shown that the gap be- tween the skilled and highly paid and the lower skilled and lower paid workers in the industry is being wped out by the deepening crisis with its constant drive against workers through wage-cuts, mass un- employment and part-time work for starvation wages through the stagger system. It is clear, as in Warren, that in many instances the division between the skilled and unskilled, native born and foreign born, based on the great difference in working conditions, wages and economic security, has become now only a difference in the degree of poverty and misery. These are the basic facts which must be assembled, brought to the working class in the steel industry and the decisive industrial areas generally, explained in their tremen- dous meaning, made the point of de- parture by all Party district organ- izations and the unions of the Trade Union Unity League for a whole series of struggles for immediate de- mands and the unification of all working-class forces for ever broader and more decisive struggle against the capitalist offensive. “The Revolution Brought Us Happiness” Say Working Women of the tee Union CONDITIONS IN USSR FACTORY Deseribed in Letter to U. S. Women Toilers What did the October Revolution, tre anniversary of which will be ce- febrated on November 7 by the work- and peasants of all countries, * chieve for the working women of the vast country which once was Ozarist Russia? The following. letter from the working women of the factory Zi- noviev answers this question of ut- nost importance to the toiling nothers of America.—Editor. Dear comrades: We, working wo- reniof the factory bearing the name Be comrade Zinoviev (killed in 1915 y the bullet of a Czarist police- ran in connection with a strike), *cant to tell you about our achieve- nents in the Soviet Union. Yesterday and Today When we worked for the capitalist yosses our pay was very small. We ould not afford to get nurses for ‘ur children, We left them alone and ve went to work, In dark and damp corners, alone or under the care of v old mothers. Our children very ¢ten sick. Mortality was very great mong children at that time. Entirely different are conditions oday. Our children are taken care f in up-to-date nurseries located in ood light houses especially built. jabies of 2 months until 4 years are ecepted in the nurseries, When the nother goes to work she leaves her bes in the nursery> After work she akes the baby home. Social Insurance Our nursery has 200 children, The ursery personnel consists of 42 eople: One principal, one physician, 5 nurses, 14 nurse-girls and 10 other rorking people. 'To keep a baby in the nursery day nd night costs about 35 roubles a ‘Month, For keeping our babies in fe day nursery we pay according | jour wages on the average 6 roubles |- _~ month, Some working women who _ ave to provide for larger families | o not have to pay at all. The state rovides the needed funds. If a child is sick, the mother can 2 with the child. She is released ‘om work and receives her full pay ‘ ‘om the social insurance fund. (Our orking men and women are insured 5 the expense of the factory with- at the workers having to contri- ute). Revolution Brought Us Happiness” As you see, comrades, the nur- ries are a great help to us, ) these nurseries work does not fall * ard on us women workers, We have 1e opportunity to participate in so- al activities equally with the men; 1) inerease our qualification; to oc- yy responsible posts. us, working women, the Re- iution brought happiness, Working women of the factory nlorer Says “Russia Greatest_ Menace” i “By supplying Russia with ma- ‘nery and exports, theother coun- es are creating a Frankenstein that will devour them in- st t explorer, upon returning here om a visit to the Soviet Union. {n an effort to spur on the war »parations the socialist against this agent of imperialism ce "usin isthe. greatest Worker Correspondence Charlotte Cops Beat Up Negro Speaker (By a Worker Correspondent.) CHARLOTTE, N. C-—I was speak- ing at an open air meeting some time ago when a stool pigeon called the cops. I was speaking about the nine boys in Alabama and about Tom Mooney, and the cops jumped out of their cars and said, “What the hell are you damn niggers doing speak- ing on the street?” I stood my ground and told them this was a free coun- try, and they said, “Not for nig- gers.” Some young workers began to throw stones at the cops, and the cops said, “If you don’t stop, we'll shoot,” but the cops did not do any- thing for the time being because of the workers present. Later, when I walked away, and was alone with a comrade, the same stool pigeon called the cops again. They carried me down to the station and there beat me up -They said, “If you don’t stop speaking we will kill you.” But I am still speaking, and always will. Furniture Workers Win on Hours, Wages in 18 Shops in Week NEW YORK.—Eighteen shops, six upholstery and 12 mattress shops, have been settled by the Furniture Workers Industrial Union during the past week. The mattress workers won the 44-hour week and wage in- creases, security of the job and re- cognition of the union, The up- holsterers won security and recogni- tion, and the 40-hour week and $35 minimum wage. Among the shops settled was the Progress Upholstery with 30 men and the Long Island Mattress Co, with 26 men. Union headquarters are 108 East 14th St, Foster's “Toward Soviet America” is given free with a yearly subscription to the Daily Worker. INTENSIFY THE Election Campaign Every Worker Must Wear a FOSTER-FORD Vote Communist BUTTON $20 a Thousand in large quantities $3 a Hundred ‘sd Money with order or will send C.0.D. Order now from your District or from Communist Party, U.S.A. P. 0, Box 87, Station D New York, N. ¥, DISCHARGE PAPERS (By a Worker Correspondent.) KANSAS CITY, Mo—When in 1917 the registration of workers be- gan, preparatory to sending them overseas to fight for Wall St., I, al- though diischarged from the U. 8. Navy, volunteered, having fallen for the propaganda that if you volun- teered you could go where you wanted to. I volunteered for avia~ tion and was sent to Columbus, Ohio, to guard military prisoners. It was during the period of my service there that I was drawn into an argument with another soldier over what we were fighting for. I was later arrested and sentenced to 25 years in Fort Leavenworth Dis- ciplinatory Barracks, This sentence was later reduced to one year. “Yellow Discharge.” The statement I had made was that we were fighting for Wall St. I was given @ “yellow discharge.” That is the reason why the fake lead- ers at present all over the United States request that only men with “honorable discharges” be allowed to go on the bonus march to Washing- ton, ‘When we march back there again it will be for more than a bonus; it will be for what belongs to us and the working class, the entire country and everything in it. tk Sitar | (By a Worker Correspondent) ROGERS, Ark.—A vicious anti- Communis tattack was made by a man who posed as an ordained min- ister named C .W. Sanders,, on Aug. 22 at the Frisco Park here. This Sanders bore the earmarks of a re- presentative of the fascist Khaki working class outfit. Comrad* Tarr, who is the Com- munist Party candidate for the U. S. Senate, and Comrade Ferguson got up and exposed Sanders’ lies, despite the interference of 50 hooligans led | of by Sanders. As a result of the meeting, we are receiving new membership applica- tions daly, for the Party. By REBECCA GRECHT, them women and young girls, have been on strikein South River, New Shirts or the Father Cox anti-' [START CAMPAIGN FOR NEW HARVEST Raise Self-Interest of Collectivized Peasant A mass campaign to mobilize the collectivized peasants for the new harvest is under way in the Soviet Union, a dispatch from Moscow to the capitalist. press revealed. ‘The dispatch quoted “Izvestia” to the effect that in carrying through this campaign the errors committed in the preparation for the last har- yest must absolutely be avoided. “Increase the self-interest of the collectivized peasants in the results of the harvest,” “Izvestia” was quoted as concluding in a front page article connected with the opening of the campaign. As it was recently pointed out at the Party Conference of the Ukraine, the peasants’ self-interest in the har- vest is not in contrast with the col- lectivization policy which is being earnestly pursued. In the meantime, in the U.8.A., crops are allowed to rot and are being destroyed in ONY, places. MEXICAN GOV'T DEPORTS 51 WORKERS NEW YORK.—An intensified reign of terror against Mexican workers has been launched by the Mexican government, tool of American im- perialism, according to word received by the International Labor Defense today. News of this terror is being Suppressed by the government cen- sorship, and little of it leaks out to the outside world, Fifty-one revolutionary workers, it is learned, were banished last week to the desolate Islas Marias, barren islands where political prisoners are slowly tortureq to death. The fifty include several women, some of them already seriously ill. Headquarters of workers’ organiza- tions all over the country are being raided and ransacked, many workers being arrested, and the offices and buildings wrecked. The Mexican armies are being used to smash the hunger of starving workers on the capital, Per City—taking an example from President Hoover's murderous ttack on the bonus marchers, and applying it sooner, calization within the ranks of the the bosses to following the footsteps President Cosgrove is backing this force, is still a third, the government troops. A Rew Fascist Army in Ireland The Siartining cf Wie tadvlat (kare wnine hel While) army in Ietiand The recent growth of the revolutionary groups in Ireland and the radi- Irish Republican Army has turned of the German capitalists. Former Besides these two forces there | (Cable By Inprecorr) SHANGHAI, Sept. 14—The Chin- ese Press yesterday, upon the per- sonal request of Madame Sun Ch Ling, widow of Sun Yat-Sen, p lished the statement of ul Gertrude Rueggs explaining j reasons of their refusal to appeal to} the Nanking Supreme Court acainst the vicious verdict of the Kianzsu High Court sentencing them to life imprisonment on the trumped- up | evidence furnished by the impe British police. The statement declares that “the | Supreme Court will not act any dif- ferently, since the same force behind it that dictated the outra ous and savage sentence handed | down by the Kiangsu High Court.” A Thousand Tortures Describing the whole case, the statement says: “After suffering a | thousand tortures, we were con- demned to life imprisonment. We suffered threats of immediate death disease and torture, We were chained in our cells and threatened with torture with bamboo poles. Finally ‘we were deprived of every ht of defense, and as a protest ag imprisonment and farcical trial we went on a hunger strike. “Our trial has already been con- demned before the whole world as @ ghastly farce and cold-blooded | stage-play in which every Chinese law was flouted for the purpose of securing our frame-up and subse- quent sentence. We were deprived of all possibility of defense, denied counsel of our choice, obstacles were | piled up for our Chinese attorney. | He was even denied copies of the so- called documents which constituted | the main evidence against us.” | “We cannot appeal to the Supreme Court with any hope of receiving an impartial hearing.” Appeal to Masses The statement then enumerates the many violations of Chinese law al- ready committed by the Supreme the are Extended _by England | | | LONDON, Sept. 11.—In an effort to stimulate British exports to the Sov- jet Union, the Board of Trade au- thorized the extension of the crodit limit on Soviet transactions in Eng- |Jand from 12 to 18 months, it was re- vealed here yesterday, The 12 months credit limit had been a severe obstacle to the exports of British machinery. The Lanca- shire engingering industry lost thous- ands of pounds werth of exports to the Soviet Union because the 12 months limit was in force. Germany benefitted by this exporting heavily to the Soviet Union, The relative importance of exports to the Soviet Union is illustrated by the figures for the end of 1931 show- ing that 87 per cent of all British ex. ports of machinery went to the Sov- Rueggs in Appeal to Chinese People and Workers of World ‘MASS FURY RISING USSR Credits Limit |; Victims of Frame-Up Explain Refusal to Make | Appeal to Chinese Supreme Court Court during the “investigation” of the case, showing that the Supreme Court displayed the same desire to convict the accused. The statement continues: “The vicious and savare sentence against us will be condemned by the Chinese People who are op- posed to the alliance of the Kuo- mintang with the imperialists and to the interests of the imperialist slaveholders, It will be condemned by all friends of the Chinese People and supporters of the struggle a- gainst foreign aggression, “From our prison cells we have decided that appeal should be made not to the court which has already unmasked itself as an azent of the imperialists but to the Chinese | People, to the macses who are en- ged in a life and death strug- gle against imperialism, We appeal to the toiling masses and to our | friends throughout the world who | are struggling for us and against imperialism.” ALL OVER CHINA Imperialist Police Raid Communists SHANGHAI, Sept. 14.—Imperialist police in the International Settle- ment yesterday carried out wide raids | against the offices of the Chinese Communist Party and the homes of revolutionary workers. This was an | attempt to block the preparations for the mass anti-imperialist demonstra~ day. Despite the police raids, it 1s evi- dent that the demonstration will be held. Mass anger has reached the boiling point as the Japanese impe- |rialsts prepare to extend official cognition tomorrow to the puppet ate set up by Japanes? bayonets in Manchuria, Under Communist leadership, the strike movement is spreading rapidly. ‘Most of the foreign mills in Shang- hai, and especially the Japanese | mills, are already paralyzed. In this situation, the imperialist brigands are frantically mobilizing their armed forces in Shanghai and other cities. The popular fury was further intensified yesterday with the landing of Japanese marines and marines and machine guns at Nan- king. Manchurian Resistance Grows. Manchurian partisan and volunteer troops continued their fierce pressure on the Japanese invaders yesterday and carried out several successful raids against the railways, further erupting rail service and blocking the movement of Japanese reinforce- iet_ Union. ments to threatened points. workers to return to the shops under the old conditions, “pending arbitra- tion”, Terror Also Fails. When this demagogy failed, terror was resorted to, At once not only the strikers, but the workers of the entire city, were roused. Threats of the workers compelled the mayor to send out of town the deputies who hhad been sworn in for action against the strikers, When the police, with tear gas bombs, clubs, and even guns, attacked a picket demonstration of 5,000 workers — practically the entire working population of the town, they were answered with bricks and-stones and compelled to retreat as the mas- ses of workers surged around the fac- tories from 3 in the afternoon until back into the shops, The organizers of the Needle Workers Industrial Union are in the field, guiding the heroic struggle of the workers. ‘This strike in South River, the first in the town in 16 years, is an stand- ing example of the readiness of the workers to fight against wage-cuts, against hunger, It is an offensive strike for higher wages, and a strike vof women and girls who have never before participated in any struggle. Government Exposed, ‘The struggle has for the first time brought into the city the question of the necessity of militant trade union organization. Actions of the mayor, local politicians, police, the U. S, gov- ernment representative, have begun to open the republicans and demo- crats, Attacks upon the union or- ganizers as “reds” have failed to in- timidate the workers, When the police broke up a Communist election rally in South River, over 200 strik- ers marched down to the Boro Hall, demanding that the speakers be re- turned, The Communist election Program is now being brought into WORKERS OF SOUTH RIVER | KEEP SOLID FRONT Entire Town Behind Needle Strike, 1 hae ow in Fourth Week Soitth River for the first time. The strikers are now determined that they will not go back until they have won their demands, The shops in South River are closed. It is now necessary, however, to spread the strike to dress shops in Plainfield, Perth Amboy, where South River manufacturers are beginning to send their work, Build Shop Committees, The strikers must at once proceed to organize their shop committees, to strengthen the strike committee, Re- cruiting for the Needle Workers In- dustrial Union must be undertaken among the militant fighters in order to establish union leadership in every shop. Workers in other cities should show their solidarity by send- ing food and money for the strikers through the Workers International Relief, The strike can be won. The soli- darity ‘and militancy manifested by the workers of South River has set an example for all workers in the state of New Jersey, | City, July 1932, | Green to “draw up a Federal Unem- jacted by Congress rather than tions called for tomorrow and Sun- | ° JOBLESS | ment Insurance Locals Favoring Real I Delegates to Cine NEW YORK. ident Green and secretary Morrison Trade Union Committee for Unem- ployment Insurance issued tod The decision of the handpicked A FL. Vancouver convention against | unemployment in: storm of protest in t AF.L. membership, as the referendum submitted New York AFL. by Trade Union Com- mittee for Unemployment Insurance This storm of protests spread far and |wide and exerted a pressure upon our the A-F.L. officialdom that they not withstand. To relieve and divert this pressure, the Executive Council of the A. F. L. at its summer session in Atlantic instructed President could ployment Insurance Bill to be er I the legislatures of the various states (AFL. Weekly News Service 7-30- 32). Already then on August Committee charged that the 8, ou C= for unemployment insurai out of fear for would sabotage realization of unemp) ance. The broadcasts of Green and Mor- rison on Labor Day on uner ment urance Green's § September 8 for and particularly atement to the press of states and not by the federal gov- ernment fully substantiates our the part of the AFL. officialdom. Rank and File Conference Already in August, we called upon the AF.L, Rank and File member- | ship to elect rank and file delegates to a conference to be held in Cin- cial AFL. convention to bear pres- sure upon it to adopt the Workers insurance is the best proof that the A. employment insurance and are insincere in their declarations for it, as we have consistently charged,” declares a statement of the New York AF.L utive Council of ihe AF.L. declared} unemployment in- surance to be enacted by the various | charge of insincerity and sabotage on | cinnati simultaneously with the offi- | GREEN STILL OPPOSES NSURANCE; RANK AND FILE TO ACT A.F.L. Trade Union Committee for Unemploy- Calls Conference nsurance to Send Their innati, Nov, 22-23 —The repeated changes of attitude on the part of pres- of the A.F.L. towards unemployment F.L. officialdom in reality oppose un- | Unemployment Insurance Bill prov- |iding for: 1, immediate national un- |employment insurance for all work- ers; 2. The insurance to be paid at expense of the employers and the government; and 3, The unemploy- }ment insurance fund is to be ad- |ministered by a committee of work- Jers: and to enlist full weight of the AFL. membership to bear upon |Congress to enact it into law. By now, with the AFL, officialdom |so glaringly insincere, the need for |this Rank ie File Conference for Un surance becomes all the more tac All AF.L, local unions have been called upon to elect delegates to the mference and the indications are that the response will be an enthu- ic one. | The Rank and File Conference will be held in Cincinnati on November 22-23 at the time the official AF.L. Convention is held and will send a mass delegation to the official AFL. |convention to force them to go on jrecord for and really fight for real ju mployment insurance as provided the Workers’ Unemployment for Insurance Bill. . Editor’s Note:—It is fairly clear from what Green has said so far in his most recent statements on in- surance that his latest bill is intend- led to cover employed workers only, |who will have to contribute to the insurance fund through check-off on their wages, and without any assur- ance whatever that even the state |governments, to say nothing of the | federal government, will even be ask- ed to give anything. It is certain that by putting the matter on a state instead of national basis even this kind of law is made a thing of ithe far future, and will cover part of the country only. From Week-E total donations of $11,065.73 to Sept. 13. Today's list of Thursday, Sept. 8, was donated by District 13, California, w are to the “Daily.” New York District Mountains (S! At every week-end hike, pienic or part At mountain resorts, List of Sept, & follows; . Amount received ‘Thursday, Sept. 8. $570.03 $ Unit 22, See. 5: John Nesenkar Floren Ordona Albert Lenz fone | Cohen see. s, Unit 24: Stolin Rorman John H. Cuck 8. Kaufman Hellelicher Rubin Lew Slmen J. Goldminte 10 Robert Relah See, 5, Unit 12: Unit 2.00 Geo. Henry 19 Harry Friedman 6,50 Gustav Pitz 19 Ralph Greco 50 H, Therans 25 Total Recorded Fred Manneral Pi Bill Hayson N. J. Ge Sec. 2, List 5881 Helen’ Luke {10 Park Tavern s Group 50 M. Wolbrum 1.00 Camp Machva 1 Williamsburg m Wkrs, Center 4.50 Caltrer Sec. 2, Unit 18 1.65 Maggio Pauline Litmek 5.00 Lefkowitz Camp Nei Leben 25.00 Theriault Joo Loritsky 1.00 MR, Telicer 1,00 A. G, 1.00 15, Unit 10: reakanoft 05 : Kramer ‘25 A. Pine 5 Sol Brinker 25 ‘Thimmel ty This is the first substantial amount from District 13, proving how fruitful pi turned in $91.82, half of which came from the Rochester tax day collections ($24.50) and collections from various groups of Nature Friends which met at the Berkshire “Although the groups were small,” writes Y. Dix, comrades unemployed, the response revealed real proletarian spirit.” Other outstanding contributions of Sept, Tractor Auto Workers’ School, Philadelphia, $20; Boston Pienic, $18.17. where workers gather, donations and rush their response in funds to the Dally Worker! Slight Increase in ‘D.W.’ Funds Over Monday Donations | Picnics, Hikes, Camps, Contribute Liberally nd Gatherings From Iate Monday until noon Tuesday donations amounted to $675.80, bringing. hows the day’s total of $570.03, $192 of which hen a Los Angeles picnic brought in $175. contributed $125, while District 4, Butfa “and many 8 came from Camp Neie, Leben, $255 y don’t fail to appeal for the Dally Worker. bring up the financial drive, eall for F. Albornoz Dis. 3, Phitadelphis. a Total to date, Sept. 8. | A Friena A Fi Dis. 1, Boston Welssberg |A Priend J. Reedy a 8. Fisher Unit $5.00 M. Gochman PE Julius Huges 5.00 Pienic of Sept, B. Reizeg Louis Srelich: Unit 306 1.00 4, District 1 18.17 Winterman 25 P- Simons 2.00 Daily Red Sup- 8 at Miller “jo A. Barrier, per, Boston Hn. 95 | Ginter ‘29. Unit 102 1.25 Pita ayeters 10 | Rosenblatt ‘os J. Eisennagel 1.00 | Boston Back D. Woolis 10 | Farber ‘50 I. Trachtenberg 1.00 Bay Unit 8. Zabl s0| “to Tractor-Auto Kracenow 8. Richer ‘10| Sens y Kusmenko B. Bakle aolsky H. Blume E. Maller \5. Periovan Roslindale Unit Max Meltz 40 Ee Creeaee Sec. 6 party Keston Korolet Oo Sctanastik G. Pachkowski Graber ‘Situmier : | Mf. Chroniak D. Steinseboish Sec. 2, Unit 12: Friend Adamoroig le eceaman: 19 Nature Friends, M. Burak Kund | at Gone “30 Berkshire Mts, 27.12 U. Nalyshek B. Asurt et ‘eo A. Worker » H. A. Rorobik Karl Knapp 6. Kotits 9 Max Kriwitra 5.00 A. Otoric J. ¥acyno 5. Poseuia 39 Tag Day, Roch- Y. Chomak J. Welsser 7. Berett ‘os __ ester 24.50 James Rally Lapidue 0 M, Summers 4.8 P. Alensk T, Bosa 10 ‘Sivsaes 25 H. Berkowitz 3, Nagle P. Issel ete tik. 8. T. Rose 1.00 Burshe De a M .Brothers 1.00 Dis, 1 total $5 I. Rindle ‘35 | sanarice Beoqnet Loo G. Phillips 1.00 Dis, 2, New Yo Moreno S11 geile Duast ‘so R. E. Wells, H. Stockhauser Elove Preme | 2-50/ John Regis ‘so pientfe 12.00 B. Richman 00 Unit 8, Sec. Ex *50 peab Sache Gandine 1.00) 9 rR vate 24: Dis. 4 total_so1.38 Unit 3, 1.00 | prnad 50 Dis. 5, Pittsburgh Avanta Farm: | Antoney Denier .50 ©: L. Arnal 1.00 ai Giskin 1.00] 1. Vohl Ss Maes ae Lye amrel Helen Flaniig —50| Sam Ternis | 25 aichic! Lena Holhman 50 M, Gorden s ee See. 7, Unit 4: Fannie Genlo | A. Miller 109 Total Dis, 5_$3.86 Freedman Brelizky See, 2, Unit 8: J. Katz ‘M. Milman |. Rosenblatt 25 Dis. 6, Cleve. Barondes Leson 350 | Hein 25 land Nothing M. Sturnen Kapl 25\A Friend AS Pia Eee Rosenthal L, Wilson | Mrs. J. Gubernick .0; Woman's Coun- a Morris Persilv 13 Dp, Platt Aneto Carmintto 15 | ell, Br. 3 5 Abraham 05 Oshate A Friend 10 Sec, 7, Unit 4 Ritoo A. Letbowitz 1.00 Wm, Kaufman 1.00 Shanelzon Brown & Racheal .30 SA. Lawintail 19 Maria M. Gownberg 10 D. Sec. 15, Unit 2 R. Kapt M. ‘Smastrelsh Owners of Farm Ray Chabian 5 Vera Linetzky «10 Mart: 10 Ida Gettesman Nat Masset 4 Martha Toashmen .10 Sam Alex. Casteo PH Pedro L. Fisente .25 Geo, Constantine .10 Adoiph Curati hs Perry oO wee ie eke \eeenaen 10) (Dis. 7 total..$85.70 Shat 55 Gredzes 20 Rose M. 10 it List 651, See, 10 2.00 Boro Park Wkrs. Club See. 2, Unit 11 Unit 6 Dis, 2 total.s125.01 Note; Additional funds recel 58.60 Unity 100.00 $158.60 2.75 1,00 15 Dis. 8 total 94.07 et Dis. pate Tenn. Saul "Friedman