The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 5, 1933, Page 4

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! ‘Page Fou DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1933 Does the Government Fulfill Boy Sells Papers | Its “Responsibility” to Vets?) to Help “Daily” i j |just entering his teens, sold papers Letters Describe Miserable Conditions While Roosevelt in Speech. to Legion Openly |in order to get enough money to do Sorte ? Ty rx J, Yalief jhis part in the DAILY WORKER Says They Will Get No Relief DRIVE, and he hopes every com- “The government,” said Roosevelt in his speech to the American Le- rade is doing the same. | gion the other night, “has a responsibility for and toward those who| | = saeraitnen en = bs rages rk , ean line is | ort of a recent conference in the suffered injury or contracted < while serving in its defense.” Canoe AHORA ie GIVE tad eCuN oT (ceareet in the Saye bean: line 18 -cor-| rae aston ep VAmeanters ot eld | b Gast sie e (ce f v nered by soya beans from an un-| © H As to the veteran who was not inj but is now only starving, | saved up money by selling old papers, | known source, while American farm-| Women in_ the Soviet Union, given | tig pRoosevelt said: “If his own c and his own state are unable, after |ang I am sending it to you. I used|ers have their.whole’ crop this year by Abdul Gochaev, whose mother was | tay reasonable effort,-to caré nd then only, should the Federal to’ read the capitalist papers until| and lots of last year's and don't know| Present at the conference: S. L. P. Believes in Ballot As the Road to Revolution Lenin Referred to S. L. P. as “Maniacs of the Fixed Idea” With “Yellow: Sectarian Streak” Letters from Farmers ays Japanese Use [Where the Workers Soya Beans to Pay for Weapons of War and Farmers Rule, (By a Farmer Correspondent) | ALBANY, N. ¥.—The American} Following is a small part of a re- This is the third and last of a series of articles on the Socialjst Labor Party, written in answer to letters which workers have writtéh to the Daily Worker requesting information about the character And history 4 of the S. L. P. The first two articles dealt with the isolation from work- ers’ struggles of the S. L. P. and its stand against fights for immediate 4 demands and for the establishment of a proletarian dictatorship. ed, for N Boot Ria t ; gt tinaity lahioweer is ; alge abe bekova, aged 65, who was} PEARS ROT IN OREGO! : government offer him hosp my mother finally showed me why I| how to get rid of it. | Hugin Taw s | ; nt) i NEY r Letters” have for Daily's” office from veterans |should read the DAILY WORKER.| We don’t have to look in a broad ee the speakers, made this state-| ee apie Goa ab ae By cecal ALLEN. % Is 4, at the nent, under Hoover, and even more under Roose- |I hope every comrade is doing the| way to find the origin of this. Man ER 3 | J her ‘ R i } oe oad Toasted teks ite res onalbihty: te. dhe alaanied vet. | Mamet ceed Magers letter: chukuo farm interests are raising lots| | “It is considered that women would | chardists “have ie ebie bereae Tl But to return to the DeLeonite form of “exceptionalism.” DeLeon argued | SEE esha es seth racer gree seesirontie soe |of sova beans, ‘The war ministry of Oppose the colletiviation and the| 25 per cent of the Hove pears. This) || Bat i rence Mo the Detsen te Mem inited States a total lack of feudal attempt to dodge Federal responsibility for feeding the starving veterans. | Contributions Received Tuesday Srey bari Me cae ated ihe, This is not TENE: THe Ketion womad | Choneands of them are raised an-/ relations. As a result a “purer” democracy existed here, making it zante 7 z acts med tatty oz ‘ C , ISTRIC’ terial, to kil e far! a 4 od ~ 4 i “4 ‘ + THe follc ong the most recent letters We have received: Hp Slovak Workers, 8.50 ay if age the spoils of victory to| does not only keep pate with the| nually on the west coast and used/ for the revolutionary party to place its main stress upon “peaceful»method: 0 20.00 |man but she would always urge her Once the workerse-—-~-—— for shipping and canning. The rea-|ang the ballot. Pekar epee son is that already enough of their | have obtained the majority vote and become, can etd feprelbtal eto early pears have been picked, packed | they have been organized into indus- |@nd further hat is the only pay. vi We, the ones who are raising cot-|man on to better work. ton, wheat, vegetables and fruit, and| Then my mother took the floor. NRA Forces Vet Out of|Vets in College Asked | 1,2, <0: | | ; | : i to it. ‘“Abstaining 1 . ’ ret +* oe St. Asi 5.90 elline far y the -| From her first words I saw that she| and canned to fill the requirements | trial unions, it will only be necessary |0f motion open O it. : * Soldiers Home; Kicked ‘to Sign Aw ay Bonuses a. K. 4.07 pe tain pice eakaeat would speak well. She told of her | of those who will have money enough | fo. the workers to take possession |from all, the struggles, of ibe ‘ Around by Relief Buros and Fight Bonus March | 32%" 5 could force the trusts to pay us the| HSS ne Ei Pea ees | ae ns ce eee ee the industries and capitaliom wit lin and lead these struggles. It splits { . | eld, rices that we sets fer sold to the landlord dn i. | . : i er | ( Vet Worker C dent) | Preekakit « sl ee rane ise for refusal to be his love. Mother! Thousands of tons of pears have|need to use force in defense of the |UP into ane Sinaphling pects a (By a Vet Worker Correspa = aimee roy daha ope . the Hornoff told about her dreadful life before} already been left on the trees to rot. | revolution, he argued, for the process the pe etween Maar a ae : Ara Readies Perea abide the revolution. “For three years I) Hundreds of thousands of tons of|of taking over the industries will be|Only di faye: nen ie Saad ace ae at es Below abd with | a bE tt | have been working “in the kolkhoz.| ears are néeded by hungry masses,/g peaceful one. Only if the capital- ee et it Me danended' to we eae 4 oa sl 24 aol- | Edison Worker @ ers rom | My children also,” she said. “Before| either as canned or dried fruit. But ists will try to take them back, then |S. L. P. have be eater Mose W Seats Corres sCAAUN bs | Secnle Ose pe | the revolution we lived in a smail! this government is not concerned wil] the workers resort to arms, See eneate Deeb Ty eréata- dis: University Committee of the TR | hut with only a bed and a wooden| about taking this excess to feed the| the capitalists will “surrender un-| : yore vi trust in the Communist, Party and Veter Association re- | bench. We wore home woven dresses @ com Our, Readers | ’ a classless society will | hungry. conditionally,’ 2 ‘ ' c out ¢ r letters ap- and wooden boots. Now Ihave anew) However, the NRA says, destroy the | set in; no dictatorship of the prole- [lis leaders Yr ipruin Rigs ie tie support, to every college A.F.L. GANGSTERS STOP SALE OF |, home, iron beds and good chairs.) fruit to “keep the prices up” to aitariat or a Communist Party Will be) charging out of whole’ cloth that gra vho once wore a uniform y WORKER | have an overcoat, shoes and goloshes.| “minimum” sale price to consumers. | necessary. Today the S. L. P., using | witiam Z. Foster as a spy, there The: letter siya “We must protet DAILY WORKE The: kolkhoz helped hy to buy @| Im the NRA code there is no’ max-/the language of the “militant” So- | Wi talltng satiate’ thay will edu, 5 en who voted for the Econ- New York imum price set at which the retailers | ists, designate this blissful state |! eneeeaty Aha fount cette i Comrade Editor: may sell, Jas “industrial democracy.” l eRhtantviish the Be date kortiy goes on further to state: I happened to be walking along} Ten truck loads of small good pears | Feudalism and Revolution ie ial tetaeat Gita lenqare Lostiedty iment in the American| 2; eas trying to sell the Daily Worker. A Were damaged in the brush by one/- DeLeon died in 1914—this iy be-|Peats a retreat. ts Snie holes aes another Veterans Association is a protest vote ie strike of ia cidetaraa ae ag ne cannery yesterday. fore he had an opportunity to ob- | wt capestaniy Dis oeheied’ to vation) a anticipated “ba fchés.” Total to date2 farted and they were holding their sie Meee lueryos com iieacit: eros tae Cael men are fed on the r a ‘ pon be a re preg DISTRICT 8 meeting at Ukrainian Hall, Sixth St., F Must Lea: | Revolution, Even then, however, | ta Fe to enter wre ay ite various hotels of the coniing Ge Hielletes ia ote moon | N. B.. Chicago. 1.00 | hetween Second and Third Ave. Some farmers Ust Learn (renin, on the basis of the experi. (sles with the Communists and other The strugele to get relief is becom-| prepayment of the bonus and urging | © Brown 50/f the A. F. of L. gangsters | to Join Workers in [ences of the suropean revolutions of | Workers ngpinst wer, for unemploy: ing more intense as t proceeds.| the repeal of all laws granting pen- T. Duffy —__ ‘Get the hell out of here with that Rumor has it that there will be even s tess relief this winter for injuries not received in war.” Total to ‘date.400.3 Communist paper.” I said, “This 4s the only working class paper and I'm Fight Against Bosses |the 19th Centuries and the Russian Revolution of 1905, as well as by a jfascism, etc. “We are prooud of our | inion |revolutionary position,” they . shout. r veterans of the working class. | DISTRICT 11 a ry 4 “ pracy Of “the, writings; Of Marx ans. tues poaibioris likessiat of the — ~—- learn to differentiate between your Sagat ces eee = mid ane tre iicrd one (By a Worker Correspondent) fe pe thas ue eee ae famous Humpty Dumpty who fell War. Vet Describes Seathios AAG eaten Aa SO Te Te | "=|. PF. of L. union.” And no onel* WAKARUSA, Ind—Please send me| re ee ible.. Today. after|fzom the wall and landed on the . es pi to an anti-working class organ-! ciub nist Total to date... 2.50) <iq onything. new cow. I live well, as the kolkhoz) the Daily Worker for one month. the Riaman Fevchitisis ped) rience | Other side. ’ Bear Mountain Relief. tion. | piareme 36) DIRERIOR 16. WALTER ‘sTErN, | is my life now.” T have been interested in the strug- i Lenin and Deteo: Job as a Chain Gang NEW YORK.—I wish to T am a world wa been out on a rel aS J. Plroto Roosevelt Economy (| abe Program Evicts Gassed | Vet. from Vets’ Home DISTRICT 15 | Total to date...83.47 | J. Oguinick, N | Sarbue Pierre yh 5 Clarte Club | Total to date 2140.46 a4 Total to date..75.70 DISTRICT 17. | Daily Worker Agent. A, F. of L, RELIEF RACKET New York City. Comrade Editor: I do not neéd to outline you the There was much Said about the nightmares of the dreadful past. All these women told about their flaming hatred of the past and their true de- votion to the Soviet Power which gave them this new life. gles of the working class for several years and have been an occasional reader of the Daily Worker. I have come to the conclusion, however, that | merely an occasional reading of the Daily Worker is insufficient. In or- Nhas indisputably shown that with- out a dictatorship of the proletariat to take the place of the machinery of state which had been completely smashed by th revolution, it would have been impossible for the working Was Lenin infiuenced by DeLeon? | The DeLeonites, running true to |their “exceptional form,” have cried |that while the Communist Party of the Soviet Union is not so bad, the \C. P. of the U. 8. A. stinks to high Me i jer for a worker to keep in constant /Class to maintain itself in power, it heaven, We have i made ap- Mountain since Dec (By a Worker Correspondent) =| 5 ,DTeTRICT 5 i Beach .1.60 | Coon Si oes or ae Coan contact with the revolutionary move- | ould have becn powerless against fllcstibn toc he, CoaUaSRI te eee come other Jersey City, Neg. |e ERM. ch— 100) mission Work Bureau workers. ‘Th NRA d the nient it is quite essential that he|@ll the internal as well as external national, they ekelaim:: and’ ty tact btitesting against workin Coming home late last Saturday | Total ‘to date $54.71 | Tots! to date_1180| Working myself in Dyker Park,| J [1@ an read at least nearly every issue of enemies of the workers’ republic. Itiwe should be its recoghized party. rain. -Three worker. I noticed a result of one of the | DISTRICT 4 | L. W. 0. | Brooklyn, I witness how a fat Job | the paper of his class. has also shown that a Communist But they always forget to add that Supply eat Fi - thal elt’s government acts. A vet-| ec maeaity, is oe set Br. en holder and delegate of the bricklayers T k it | ‘The farmers in this section are still} Party is necessary just as much after they wished to join the Cy I.—minus same protest seen by a large crowd go-| student, tthaca 25, ——__| union, going around taking the brick- ruc armer urider the influence of the bourgeois |the revolution as before. In fact it ee ct. Rear all sorts of crazy motions | Total to date 24.38 I Total to date_132.66 | ieee ne hee rete anercrsd ideologists.: ‘They do not yet see that is the main directing force in {te words, Pea ines ween ee fired right and left Tt that his name was) THEY'LL DO THEIR PART — | an hour, $12) a month, If they do| (BY ® Farmer Correspondent) thelr own plight Js not due to the tn: |Class after the revolution--the build: | Communist, Internationsl, ot Mack and that he had been gassed in| By a Worker Correspondent _| Not pay, then they will not be al-| ALBANY, N. ¥—Following are the| result of the capitalist system, and |inz of Socialism, and the creation of ame Ge te eee g { Be ease ‘thet rf the world war and had recently been| “AKRON, TIl—Goodyear, Goodrich | lowed to lay bricks and they will have] Drices we are making as truck farm-| Tesult of the capitalist, system, aud) Mos tee. soeicty, freatices ot ‘Dotan ant gee Mee pee eeetect ‘ther inhuman | evicted from a veterans’ home some- | and Firestone have laid off thou-| to work nine days a month instead of | ers on the Albany market. won by merely appealing to the capi-| The absence or presence of rem-|Seatness of DeLeon and gave him ! Eeeveent of dent Lam-| vhere in Maryland. When the ques-|sands and shortened the hours of| three to make the same amountvof| Beets, first quality, 1c per bunch; talist if iilicibne. oe by thutting the|nants of feudalism has nothing to Gredit for having invented the sys- wt :. | tioning brought out the rottenness| those remaining by giving them a| money. carrots, 50c a basket: peppers Gc a| i cenerotls Ibaderehip of the banker- (do with it, It may effect certain as-|tem™, Of Soviets. ‘This contention is ” Spee. worker on the Bear Moun-| ¢; Roosevelt clhde ast he pollbaces] cana cat. The: k jeed-up is terrific} _This ought to-be stopped. We can’t | barrel; beans unsellable; eggplants, | 0™Oe M0 eattendon pects of the revolution, but not its|P28¢_ Primarily on the report of a Peer rave to get up at 4 o'¢lock| 7 ot ersing the ctowd: « |in all these plants. General Tire has | afford to pay dues when we only|40c a barrel; cabbage, 50c-75c a bar | °°The farmers must learn that com-|Biain outlines. In the South, for in| POUBeOIs Hewspaper correspondent, Home Unt 7330 pat 1° Ot get back| “This happened at West and Rector|eut its forces almost in hall. Senti-| Teceive $39.60 a month and some of | fel. Often the farmers take ohe-third| 2° Lott" netween workers and| stance, there are still very strong Ransome, who sald that Lenin bad The Bear Mountain job is a chain) Ertciksriaggh beh odo pt ging Shin: tiie NGA mae beptictsta caters ys, cage ro nae th aries f iy Empiy barrels, which we used to| fatmers is necessary to win real re- cicero hg someaese Dy Which | works of DeLeon (this was not until Keep Your Party on the Ballot. Reg- ister Communist October 9 to 14 “= Now that there ble to get the ov And as we eat or do not eat this day to the bakers, who are on strike. is a chilly sniff Here is the way to make batter for waffles: Onn 2 cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder. going again—that is, The bankers have taken theirs into|ment sending troops to Cuba. They | their pockets via the good graces of|say to Hell with Astor and John D.| ‘their own government in Washington.|Let them protect their own interests. By HELEN LUKE tutumn in the air, we shall be if the gas has not been shut off. daily bread, let us give a thought of Can You Make ’Em| Yourself? All types of figures will find this dress becoming. It would be lovely our Plenty of money was squeezed out of us from the unions in general when we were working and part-time only. It’s the clique that was and still is working and we have to walk the streets and be forced to pay dues. Otherwise we are expelled, See EDITOR’S NOTE: We have dis- cussed this matter with the Unem- ployed Council. Their opinion is that the workers on every one of these relief jobs should organize to | demand trade union wages so long | as they are doing mechanics’ work —this to apply to those who are union members as well as those who are expelled from the union by the burocrats for inability to pay dues. All workers should demand the trade union rate whether they are bricklayers or laborers, At the pres- get for nearly nothing, are now lic apiece; new baskets, 12c apiece. We are paying 12c for the empty basket and rectiving 25c for the same sold on the market filled with tomatoes. The retail price in the stores is mostly four times to ten times what the farmers are receiving on the lief from the bosses for either, EDITOR'S NOTE: One way in which this worker can help to or- ganize the farmers in his com- munity is to write reports of condi- tions that he sees and afrange for special distribution of the Daily Worker on the days (Thursdays) market. WORKERS’ Mercy By a Worker Correspondent HERKIMER, N. Y.—Italian. boy caught blood poisoning in his hand. Parents being on charity asked W. that his reports are printed. MAILBAG The Quality of (Capitalist) the spring to help them in the com- ‘ing winter and then decided that the workers got too much, so they cooked up a plan to starve them a better way. They started to take away some of the relief by placing a charge of $3.45 for these gardens and the This will not affect the question of the dic- tatorship of the proletariat. It will, however, have the effect of acceler- ating the revolutionary movement in the South by drawing into the prole- tarian revolution the Negro masses suffering under peon conditions. Fascism and Democracy ‘The rise of fascism in a number of European countries as the last line of resistance of capitalism against the gathering revolutionary forces, should be sufficient to silence the clackers for “democracy. Fascism has shown that the capitalists, far from “surrendering unconditionally,” will go to any resort to keep them- selves in power and maintain the capitalist system, If not overthrown, capitalist democracy develops into fascism. It is a great crime against the working class to spread the illu- after the Revolution) he expressed admiration for him and gave him credit for his position on industrial unionism and his forecast that in the future governmental representa- tion would be, not from geographic areas but from industrial units, which has something of the idea of Soviets. How much of this was actually said by Lenin and how much was the im- agination of the newspaper corre- spondent will never be known. But Lenin has set down in writing his opinion of the S. L. P. ‘During the war, in his letters to Kollontai, who was at that time in the. United States organizing the opposition within the S. P. to the imperialist |war, he referred to the S. L. P. as having a “yellow sectarian streak.” “Aren’t these people hopelessly sece tarian?” he asks in another letter, 2 “Or are they maniacs of the fixed a in satin, or ribbed silk, as shown; and) ent time the government is coop- - | Workers in the shop who had a Job |sion that capitalists will simply throw |; bout 4 eaifted ith flour) we think that, for winter, it would) etating with these labor fakers, by | fate’ oftiose aid: the, egy rill’ ts they charged only 50 cents. up the sponge, for it leaves, the|isation” of WeneutS eet orean- ~ ereeimer al be very nice in lightweight wool in) allowing the’ union ‘rate only to | an right when ile’ mother would get| | They also took away the flourthat ;working class unprepared for the] tarian streak”—“hopelessly sectas 2 Pabiesbons prtenioe Beil Hajeigtlcegs ee ee Bead sd oe Lak ele eng | home again. But the boy died in ajthe government gave the unem- Dep naady tee op eae rian”—“maniacs.of the-fixed idea’— tae lard-ce’ ott -de-cl ‘ Many workers who have been un- | * Ef hi ner; the workers |ocracy in Germany helpe usher * e ; ae rd,-oF ofl) | Would suggest that the corners of tie-| employed for along time and there- | “°*S Hime, | | puiapateridanicn Bre ee Menus Ghasactatiea tian ct Put eggs in a big bowl with shorten- hg and salt and add other ingredi- its alternately while bea . Have Waffle irons hot before mixing batter, Which should be beaten thoroughly. collar be fastened to dress with snap- | fasteners, to make it stand as shown, | and to keep it out of the soup. Pattern 1620 is available in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and fore have been expelled from the union by the burocrats, are thus forced by the government to work nine days a month at $4.50 a day instead of three days a month at By a Worker Correspondent OTISVILLE, N. Y.—I, a worker,; am a patient in the T.B. sanitorium here, and am writing of the terrible get the flour, those who work for their dole get no flour. Greetings for 14th who are not on the wage work plan}Hitler in, precisely by finding dem- ocracy even in the semi-fascist Von Papen cabinet and by its fear of the “dictatorship of the proletariat.” And Socialist leaders in this coun- try today speak of the impossibility the S. L. P. And time has only | Served to develop these characteris- tics even further, to make out of the S. L. P. not only a “hopeless sect” but an anti-working class: sect. | Workers who are blinded by the ‘ 42. Size 16 takes 3%, yards 39 inch| $13.20 a day. conditions in this place. On porches A of fascism here because of the|re., # you have no waffle irons, substi- | fabric and 1% yards contrasting.) The workers on all relief jobs | the beds are piled up tehs, fifteens, Party Anniversary | |"purer” form ot democracy. ‘The 8. laa - m spel: (ie pancakes for waffles | Mlustrated step-by-step sewing in-| should report to the Unemployed | 22d twenties, with one or two feet — a (| EP has, indeed, worthy bedmates.| against thelr ane Sates words {Tm ‘niaking sandwiches of peanut | structions included with pattern, | Council, 10 E, 17th St, New York, | °f Space between them, leading to DISTRICT 5, PITTSBURGH Despite revolutionary phrases, they|tast and, If honest, they ‘oiit Tus butter, combine it with orange | on such abuses. They will help’ | Teinfection of those about to become} sonn Hubona, Pittsburgh 25 spread illusions which have the ef-/test and, if hore chen erg int marmalade for children, and with | them fight these conditions. negatives. The place is dirty, un-| Fred Davedenko, Coverdale ‘ps | fect of defending capitalism and | tind that thee see ee erat Will jweeti-relish or sliced sweet pickles | heated, and windy. ‘The food is bad,| Joe Sevar, Coverdale ‘$0| putting the workers to sleep is rs their place is in the ranks or adults. DAYTON Ohio, | ditty, and often the patients don't | jin’ pinonin, Coverdale Mb A aati ge’ thas te 4s Be task of Communist Party, a 4 Perhaps there is a bit of raw Comrade Editor: eat it. Instead of hiring workers| Ww. Pitko, Coverdale 25 y » GP, (THE END) jelery and carrot left from yesterday. for the salad use finely chopped cab- sage, sweet peppers, and celery mixed gith ‘cut tomatoes and a grated raw trot. (And onion if there are no|nubbly kind), cut into large pleces, dire cate Gena Many | Tecovery. | The patients are. afraid (hildren.) Mix with a sour cream| buttered, salted, rubbed with brown workers that have never read our| ‘© make complaints; they might be} R. shwars, Coverdale ressing. (Given Tuesday, Sept. 26.) sugar, and baked in a pan. It’s not paper say. “Only four pages?” 1 thrown out, and many of them have| G. K., Coverdale substitute a creamed vegetable for | necessary to peel it. always explain to them that the| 2° Place to go. Others here’ that 3 Ad, Pitteae . lad if you prefer. A slice of lemon pie would be great Daily Worker is a workers'| peper,| COme from Sea View Sanitorium and DISTRICT: 2 Give @ piece of breast of veal size|with this dinner, but if that's out , | other places say that conditions secessary for your family, and ask he ase’ to cut a pocket in it. “ill the pocket with this dressing. * Cut dry bread into small cubes; put. of sight cut red apples across in circular slices, raw and umpeeled, and spread with cream cheese. Put a cup of lentils in cold water With a six-page Daily Worker, the for the upkeep of the place the direc- Worcorn columns will have more room and won't have to be con- not an advertisement sheet and the three cents they spend on a Daily is three cents well’ spent for a workers paper that tells the truth of the of the absolute rest necessary for are even worse, a -“WE DO OUR PART” tors put the patients: to’ work as| Fm waiters, cleaners, etc., depriving thei | 3 J. Laine, White Pine Mich. Theodore Arvola, White Pine Mine Wm. Arvola, White Pine Mine ‘Wm. Lathe, White Pine Mine Axel. Lustic, White Pine Mine Uno Lal ite Pine Mine i ubes in a bow! Add milk | “ es of America ie Daily Worker . , Mo.—A worker cOr-/| victor Maki, Green 10 : ‘about % cup to several slices bread) | Se ee ae also shows the workers in the ships.| respondent in the Schillington Box] Julus Salsburg, Green ‘1; BY iy we LUTTINGER, MD. eb must’ go to college, medical nid 2 Gr 3 tablespoons melted butter; TODAY'S MENU mines, mills and farms that there| Co. factory tells why he wants to|Mattlles, Ontonagon jo) Chiropractic and Communism, | ‘chool and hospital for. ten years tir; drop in raw eggs, one or two, BREAKFAST are other workers struggling against | see the feathers pulled out of the| Charles Keronen, Green ore he can get a lcetise to prac epending on size of roast and your Gikeats Fa starvation and misery. Yes, we need | buzard’s wings. Laur Wasa, Green | eat ad, always been a mystery to | tice. it ‘ocketbook; stir well. Season with Wetting Ce panna the six-page Daily Worker and we| ‘The workers in this shop all looked | Victor Tul’ merman 10| educated ‘people why political radi-| But there is a reason for the va- Alt, pepper, tiny pinch sage, and still ae ae needed the six pages a good while | forward to the NRA raise in wages.| Fav, Tiltalo, ‘Nestoria cals, particularly in the Western and|garies “of the human mind, even if iniervpinch thyme, if you have them; Ae ngs ad Well, th - | Mike ; Central States, were inclined to fall | we cannot al : you have them; Coffee ago, " ‘ , they got a cut on weekly earn-| Mike |, Herman for every fake medical cult and k annot always it, In oe small finely chopped onion, a ee Another item before I close. The | ings from their boss, and lower wages. | Lauri Hannils, Herman Ty vender that wane and quack | instance, it is: probably due. to i sticks chopped celery; a bit LUNOH Daily Worker needs not only volun-| ‘They were getting 25 cents an hour be pee pee: iat frees a at came along. The | peculiar psychology which. falls for Aopped parsley if available. teers in New York to sell the Daily | for @ 48-hour-week. Now they work| witlem Besser Couper City docinedieat ate, epidemics of religious revivals, for such mounte- all together, add a bit more | res Butter Sandwiches Worker. We need more workers that | 40 hours and get $10 and are speeded | John Besonen, Copper City pee na prertete rite cere banks as Billy Sunday and Aimee if it seems too dry, and fill pe fa iio Shee are unemployed. that have no home| up so that if they do not get. out, as| Victor, Keupplie, Copper City fait sullitthiatvos; let dente brat Hutton McPherson, God’s latest gift ‘acket in meat. Don't pack tightly— ea, Waters or means of support to get out in| much work in 40 hours as they did| {jint,Donnésn, Copper city as ie Tan oe ge ee ams |t0 middle-aged men. It is this exalted ie for expansion. Sew together the smaller cities and towns and|in 48, they are sacked. ‘Anttila, Gay eae wits Hie pote. take 9 brams | spirit impatient of delay, feverishly Mt oe thee ie eee 8 rsd eases of Veal ee Te eons cee yon ait Noonan Gar abd witis ite stonnden, a Soha pi ape suite bd ambos s 4% needle, or fasten with toothpicks tu. rei dred thousand wing New Yorl fe “i e501 : . Roasted Potatoes City every night. ‘The Daily Worker Ba Hendrickson,” Copper City” aspect of most cults being thelr ten- | person embrace with such fanatical ‘If there’s too much dressing put Beked ae is not a hard paper to sell, and if A "comrade, “Cay ae Manne Coll dah eee enn 5 te shores cut to, psateal a 1 Mass, a al D . ja Lins , Mass unable eep alive spondylotherapy ths, osteopaths, chiropractor: or | that’s where the restaurants usu- or two a day and does his damndest Mari Hilk, Mass S| and B, R. A. after Abrams, her native |Don paths, opr: 8, i 4 yo Hb. fA. a what have you. It rs | ly make a mistake. This same CUCUMBER RELISH he need not be stuck with any of eign eit ‘ son and their inventor, departed trom | puneoed” witch Mathes Fa aces i cessing, with the addition of wal-|_ 1 quart pared and sliced cucum- the Daily Workers. on the number of help now employed | Hida Wissnen, Mass this sublunar world. The second fake, p ats or chestnuts, is excellent for |bers, not too large. Yes a six-page Daily Worker will| and if necessary to.cut the wages of | Bertha atte’ Sans ‘05| chiropractic, had its origin in Towa tien fad tae eae oe j uffing fowl too. 2 small onions, sliced. not be out of place with Roosevelt's | the girls who now receive the meager WAMS eran j0| and still manages to attract some|tag MD. after. bis name without Grease the roaster so it will be| 1 small green pepper, chopped. N. aestee his rotten deal in the| wage of 25 cents per hour. New| Ws Hancock. ‘to/knaves who are trying to enter the having to spend a siugle, day in isier_ to aay put pe mest snd 3 ae : one fe porcelain dish; basses zea tre tly AM. at pera pave pen eat gut 4 20 Gee Gt , madioines Soroudh fol school. ‘ . 80 of water. ‘over an ake.| sprinkle witl is. — ~~ ij x ‘e loor and who manage to delude f al take about an hour, depend- fous CaN dcstn. Dry agai Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in branch, and the number of help | 8 few fools with their pseudo-scien- (TO BE CONTINUED) \ 8 on size. When meat has baked cloves, 1 cup brown sugar, 1 table. |C1MS or stamps (coins preferred)| Write to the Daily Worker about| employed” and wages must be cut Ber 10) tific jargon matter on back of pages. ee ‘ jout’15 minutes put peeled pota- spoon white mustard seed, 1 table- fox Gila Anus Abate, pater. : Wve every event of interest to workers ly. ° * Santen ‘ponte, Mich “10| A8 We said before, the average intelll- >. 3 es to bake in same pan. Add water r} plainly name, address and style . i od 9 3 gent person cannot understand why Readers desiring. hea! formation J.-Carlson, “Bohta, Mich. 05 ne hecessary, Uncover pan to brown |SP0on grated horseradish, 1-2 tea-| number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE, | Which occurs in your factory, trade STARVATION GARDENS Leonard Maki, ‘Bota, Mich ‘10) anybody should prefer to be treated! ssouia aaaress tneff tetters Ce Dry Paw eat. spoon .tumeric, and vinegar to| Address orders to Daily Worker | union, workers’ organization or lo-| DETROIT, Mich.—The new deal is | John Palo, Bohta, Mich. +10) by an ignoramus who can get a chi- $ ic hrerlaidd ‘jhe squash should be scrubbed. (I|cover. Dilute cinegar if too strong.| Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th St.,| cality. BECOME A WORKER COR- | still on in Detroit. The welfare de- | ¥!0 Palo, Bohta, Mich. *8! ropractic “diploma” in six months} Luttinger, e-o Daily Worker 96 K isd A. Kaski,’ Bohta,’ Mich, “08 i ‘ve in mind the dark green-skinned | Heat and seal. Do not boil New York City. Patterns by mail only,! RESPONDENT! partment gave workers a garden in !y, siirs,’ Bohta, Mich. -.96'rather than by an educated physician’ st, New York City, pe SAY =

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