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Hai Page Fout NORFOLK TOILERS, NEGRO, WHITE, WRITE FROM SHOPS AND HOMES NORFOLK TOBACCO DAILY WORK “NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1933 av Norfolk Docker Gives Reason |R. R. Workers Don’t) Berkley Corkers Enrich | Notiolk Coal Trimmers Norfolk LL. A. Men SOPRA RINSE . See Any Benefits from|Colona by 95c. an Hr.; ee | i aa i i Under P. Cond Adopt Own Code; « WORKERS SLAVE WhyDailyShou!ld BeSupported| The Blue Buzzard A F of L. Broke Union| nder Peonage Conditions Adopt Own Code; ' 4 . y eg ——_— } By a Worker Correspondent, ~) By a Worker Correspondent ze ar a a A | R epu di ate i ci . sy» . aa UTH, —There is a| COLONA SHIPYARD, BERKLEY. ial i i i a p ; FOR $7.00 W AG E States “Daily” Has Won Right to Be Daily lot of dissatisfaction among us work. | —Wages-are low, work is hard in the Union Misleaders Sanction Ad eae ie Bene @ — Paper-of Norfolk Toilers ‘ers at the Seaboard R. R. shop. We| Yard. Sometimes we stay around all| ment and Aid in Keeping Slave Conditions Men Run. Misleadés | a Factor - Group Issues Oe Ai ctr | are the lowest paid in the shop. We| day and don't get Wye degen reel Meo ———— : n d ¥ v <j aaa By AL NDER WRIGHT | got cut from $2.00 to $1.80 last June. | a corker in the yard, Our Sa tibions By a Worker Correspondent | which the men don’t get-a cent for; Out of Local Union 4 x Call for Organization Fiabe aun Cobieeuntet | The boss tries to make us feel and/ used to be a little better before the) rw 7. 1. a, longshoremen were! The LA, at Work : i Negro Docker and Communis believe that he is very good to us, We| A. F. of L. came down. It Jim-Crowed| | pean’ Meetings J ERIE? ; NORFOLK, Va.—Some of the reasons why Norfolk workers should read | yse¢o get an average of 5 days a| us and broke the corkers union. Cork- evicted from their homes. ‘One of} We men know that we have a By Tobacco Workers Protective | 11° Daily Worker. | week, now we don’t get more than 4/ ing is pretty skilled work and is| them ‘belonged to the gangs laid) written contract signed with our! \ >orn Va—A conference of : NORFOLK sega The tobacco 1—It was the only paper that went into the heart of the South and | days at the most. I don’t see where| worth every bit of a dollar an hour.| off July 1st at Lamberts Point in| union that we are to trim rr Lapa sie rank and file delegates of Interne- . Ei lt ad packers of| carried front page news of the Scottsboro case, and showed up the whole | the N.R.A. is doing us the least bit of | We get 55c an hour and less, but} violation of an ‘agreement with the| coming to the Points. Millner the | tional Longshorémen’s Association 1 stemmers, floormen ar pa = asiquennt: Beicie OF the Goath agitnebdue- Neere neni | good. | have to turn out twice as much cork-| union, and tacitly supported by I-L.A.| vice-president and business manager locals of Hampton Roads, repudiated | Se, ATRCRICR DO ea oy Ge tEe ncie teen thet (nomesoees ace Beer ‘Our conditions and low wages are| ing than we did two years ago when| officials, Milner, Alston and other| knows it to, but he lets the seaman) {1 on-out asreoment of local and | called to organize and nan ees on that seis at “ ~~ | bringing dowh the conditions of the| the wages were about the same and' burocrats, The longshoremen who are on the coal boats trim the coal—they| 1,.\ignal leaders and drafted a code , demands put forward by this organ-| oy onthe es on i ecroa ] L, A MEMBERS | Gorkere inthe shops generally, for| we had more to do. | working—helieve me—are not much’ do this against tke own will—while| for coal trimmers,. tobe peesented @eetion and.amde Known to them tp) and, all stoune eae 2 Lie Fhe | both black and white. The whites) Ben Colona, the contractor, gets! better off. than those unemployed.) the bread is taken out of our mouths. i washington at the marine indus the leaflet to be ributed among) Negroes, against, Jir BOTOR A. ore | are beginning to see this. You can| paid at the rate’ of $1.50 an hour so| The average earnings per man at| Then these officials turn ayound and). ty hearings. i A. them. ete ecpad ls py a Bear rete E POSE LE ADERS, feel the stir around you. Nobody! you see he makes 95c each’ from 79| Lamberts Point and Sewells Point are| say “this is something we can’t con-| ‘The conference was officially called abasic ar eget peers ie oe ea gn et pptrnat ea d b | seems to have much confidence in corkers for every hour they labor. He; no more than $5 a week, although] trol,” and if the men say anything; py the union locals, under pressure.” fs Jobs and non’ | thes Mapas reese toe pias ene Se | the A. F. of L. Jim-Crow leadership.| smokes cigars and lives in a palace.| enough ships come and load and| about this he calls them agitators and! of the men, led by rank and file ac- mn “ pd kopatne re ia UnERPITeS. t x venue N Benefit from | I'm looking to see the growth of a| You see how they are robbing us, és-| unload to give all the men encugh| threatens to throw them out of the! tion committees. The code drafted or asthe boss G tell Chem: an 0) SYS | Daee amine ers oy aft eG ag 9 s | yank and file movement within the| pecially us Negroes. But we are tired| work and'living wages. But thcy are| L-L.A. which is gocd as saying: “You'll! js one proposed. to the committees ist them if they get too no: Saleaae bie evictions \ Lene ti he Joining Union Seen | shop, that will one time repeat the| of all this and we are just waiting| robbed out of it—that is, especially | lose ycur job.” | by the Marine Workers Industrial wi me company 1s trying co Kept) Wee oe strike of 1919 and this time win, be-| for a stat. I know its those hated} the coal trimmers by the operation of; 1 want to describe some of the con-| Union. bt ak debe are len Er ac Sites By a Winker’ Corsehpondint caluse of rank and file leadership and| (hated by the bosses) “reds” that will| self-trimming ships—which is further’ qiticns at the Points. ‘The ton m Official Run Ont of Local i. vate ERO ig . Helped Gord a We have organized ourselves at the | militant polices. Negro Worker. ‘ give us the start we want. in violation of the’ agreement—and) pe on hand at all times to sat: Se ee bale te et . s Daeacein vadok aster beh Ol nini ‘ ¢ aoe | the bosses. So shanty’s are built for| “reds,” the members of Local m ht side by side h the| Old LP terre §.8.-Line. If ever there | ig Tee a tee - Wea 5 | them, These are built right under, Ousted (George Millner, vice-president m to. We e little Russell C ion of| Was a place that needed a New. Deal ee aan t oa d tect of the I. L. A. and business man and aren’t even allow ts t tis the Old Dominion, We all or- he: pier and about a hundred feat) of the T. TD. A. % be rooms and. aren't even allowed Its constant itis @ us es | ‘ | from the dock where the ships are| *g2r, from their local meetings. The ul wash up after work ffame-up ganized about 6 months age and.si f b stated that th rill t gps apes : nihil we have organized times. have got! OY Oo nem O e re rye | loaded. All the dirts and dust from| members stated that they wilt not an eae cont os!’ We can smi worse than before. I. would like to : | the dumping of coal blows right into| follow on Jee De owe them and win better conditions by know why they don’t consider us as/ : i j the shanty. and setties.on the bunks;| [Oh cama way to fight for better le ganizing, Negro and white wor the’ only paper that ex-| union men. ‘Thre is something wrong. | R l a! the as at Nad te Meteny tae | condition oF ees ae tne Li Sea a The fleeaders le on the same color as the floor. The| Conditions. Ad Spay kis pseu a ee ? q 3 pees Seay * We can’ A rstand. why we have ass U Ss Or O ess e | flocr is full of holes and the damp- pn cellste the: conterelice ‘Ranke mne for our demands P. and N.S. S. Co. We can’t. understand. why we { ? as i File Committee for all Hampton ¥ ‘PeMeeedairne Black Boats.” It will be the paper| to put our money in the union and | hess. coming” right through them).> oo; coal trimmers and longshore- % to tear the cover off Millner and| yet not be recognized as union men. “ag Be | ag oe pag: cover ik ond eee sap aver hae been’ issued. It calls upon s show up aked t They just keep putting us off from . . 7 *. ss6r . . . | my and when you walk into one of} , 5 = 10¢ AN HOUR IS Re one manth to another. We are ione- Organizer Reviews Past Struggles; White Workers Join in Fights ines snanties it smetls trst tke one) Gimumittees send delegates to Waste You remember the g: and 6| ing to see the time, when things are : 8 ese . . | thing’ and then another, And since) jnston and fight for enforcement of st LOG CU [T ERS PAY that wore laid off at Lamberts Point better at the Old Dominion dock. | Union Members Support Fight; Joint Action of Negro and White work is teken away from these men) their own code, st > last July by R. Barres? I’m sure that When we walked out the first time! | aye of them have no other home to) eal Se hee —— you do. Well, a committee of six| if we had the right men. as leaders) inet) i i | Bones = Men Must Fight for vent to the offices of the Ledger Dis-| we could have been recognizd as) By JOE. BENSON tile tenes Mave to Der. tome 8 0 | fashion in denarce, of| the high chh"|.. 95 bad tovttie ailsery, if they: only’ WHITE WORKER IN 13 en us gz patch and Virginian the papers| union men by now. But Géorge Mill-| secretary of the Unemployed Council | 15 dollars a week. The landlords have) stable and police, who were met with) so4% jie’ they want to say something Measly Wages Due _ | that thousands of longshoremen read| ner and ‘his friends didn’t do\ right.) |, organized so that tenants cannot| a mass demonstration and a struggle.) oicut it they are thrown out of there. e ah eeece aR and support. ‘These pape Milner Betrays and Sells out Old) Wide masses of Negro and |’ move eee ee ee ee ee oe eee ee eee aera ir ta | ret, these, mort axe amembers: of, the ¢ Al I FOR UNITY OF te B 7 ; to print rd about this. i y time we go to rise) white workers are Deing roused |C22 Snow. o e0e tet ang ee ee oe oe ent ee tine .. they*pay dues as if they were! sourH NORFOLE. Va At the| “Ir we want a-paper to print our| up for our rights, he gives us some| vt of the ayarkers We. (ates thee previous landlords. | landlords would persist in evicting g all rights and privileges of! Ropers Lumber Mill they are paying| news and voice our conditions, we| kind of dope to hold us back from i REDS : Eyen more vicious is the attempt to) hungry fanfilies, Hundreds of names} jinion membership. But the only nent] NORFOLK TOILERS oer canta. an hour for cutting and/ must support the Daily W ‘'The| our rights on the dock. We haye to’ lief Ordinance and the Tenants | impose a garnishee on tvages for non-| have already been gathered on a spe- | have is. what Miliner “and the| 5 7 aying up heavy logs, Tell me this| Daily Worker is in the midst_of a| pull 1,600 Ibs. of freight to.a man—| Program of Action—both pro- | Payment of rent. ‘They will succeed) cial petition for the tenant's demands, ocses give them. Yet’ if these men Sap js not slavery? I understand that| drive for 000, which must be, more than a horse can pull, and if) aiobl th ainemalayed in doing this unless the tenants —/ including many white tenants. This) could pay rent anywhere else, they Bld Trades Worker hey are going to increase it two| raised within two. months. You must) we can’t pull ig we are fired. posed Dy, er ployed | Negro and white—organize thousands | fail will undoubtedly witness a mass) would noi have to sleep in these damp | g. cents an hour next week. ‘The blessed| support it so that it can continue Conditions Bad Council. The Relief Ordinance | strong to defeat this devilish eal rent strike if the landlords refuse to| sour smelling black bunks. Plenty) Does Work of 2 Men Blue Eagle! Men sometimes get hired| voicing our needs and fighting for| We have eleven gangs with 27 to 30) demands weekly cash relief and guar-| The tenants of Berkley are again in| lower rents and stop evicsions. 10,000) of coal is shipped from the piers to ‘and work a week or two and then| our demands. Subscribe to it and! men to a gang. Some gangs don’t| anteed security for all unemployed the forefront of this strugglg—it was calls to action are at present being) sunny every one of us with a good WokroLe Vas tae snihae don't get paid unless they threaten| make it the daily paper that you) make more than five dollars a week.| ang part-time workers at the expense they who: struck last eas hati circulated ‘for the. tenants program—/iiving, but we are being deprived of! or Nertolk known as Seer a@dlaw. suit : | read. Write for it and get others to Old Workers Fired | of the city, large. corporations and| Cheaper rents and the stopping of it will be presented soon in the form) ¢he right’ to live by the illegal self- i | They owe Mr. Reertson four dol-/| two weeks work. I me friends help him get a hungry. But the price is 12c an hour under the bonnie Blue Fagle—When | speaking working class daily paper) ye you get it! CITY REFUSES WORKERS WATER} By a Negro Vet | NORFOLK, Va.— Last winter the city cut off water in hundreds of} homes. Many got their water back by putting up a struggle with the) support of the Unemployed Council,| many did not. These people couldn't} pay their water rent as they were out) of jobs or money to buy even food. Our kind city fathers at that time| wouldn’t let us erect our own pumps to well our own water from the river and they still have this as a law) to be obeyed and respected. write for it and support it. The bosses are preparing to drive u: We m struggles in Norfolk Worker, that we have. MUST BUY AT HIGH PRICES IN FERTILIZER PLANT By a Worker Correspondent MONEY POINT, NORFOLK, Va.— ‘They rush and drives at the Robertson Fertilizer Co. different acids--and through our clothes arid skin. The and 15¢ is taken off for water. 5c pie in the shop cost us léc. same with cigarettes and things. we lose our. jobs. | days. Most of the old workers who has into deeper| been with the company 25 and 30) the Federal st prepare for mass) years have been fired. They have) workers Unemployment -and Social Tn these strug-| no means to make @ living now. And| rnsurance Bill. The ‘local bill has al- - — and this Negro family is| gles, we cannot do-without our Daily| all since we have been organized @S| ready been presented to the City ‘ the only fighting English) union men. We haven't got buttons) Goyncil, The bill was ‘sneered and t like the other longshoremen. We) the City Manager called upon the don’t even get the general longshore | police to eject the spokesman-of :the | scale. We gets ‘36 an hour straight) Gouncil. But since.then steps have | time and .54 for Sundays and holi-| been taken to get into the white and! And Millner and his friends. have not done a thing since our last walkout to help us men or prepare s all day here| us for bettering our conditions. Many of ws are now beginning to chemicals eat| see through the schemes of Millner, For a| and we are getting ready for a show- | full day of ten hours we make $1.50| down. We will either make a real i A} union out of it, with union rights, or The} bust it up altogether. We have re- other| ceived and discussed the call and the If we are not good customers,| code of the Marine Workers Indus- ‘We are all Negroes| trial Union. And this code certainly and the white bosses think we ought| hits us men with some real points | the banks, pending the-enactment by | Government . of*. the | colored neighborhoods and into mass organizations. The bill has been dis- tributed in thousands of copies and hundreds of petitions are being en- dorsed pledging support and struggle for, the bill. With these almost a thousand pamphlets dealing With’ the Roosevelt Slavery program and the need for Unemployment Insurance have been widely distributed and sold. Further special appeals have been addressed to the white- workers ap- pealing for unity in-the struggle and showing very clearly how the bosses, evictions. Many were arrested and| jailed during this struggle. As the effects of the NJR.A. and the deepen- ing crisis become sharper and the} landlords see a widespread decline in) the collection of rents, they are again} trying to carry through mess evic- tions. But again they have been tem-/| porarily halted. Smash Evictions | Two weeks ago in Berkley two Ne-; gro families were set back in militant, | Tobacco Workers Must) Eat Without Washing) Filth From Hands By a Worker Correspondent NORFOLK, Va. — The tobacco workers are in slavery in Norfolk. I want to tell you how we women work- of an ordinance to the City Counci But only daily plugging, steady or-} ganizational work and the self ac- tivity of the tenants. themselves are the enly conditions that will win vic-) tory. Naturally, the enemy taking } oteps to thwart this militant program by the use of legal and exira-legal | actively used among the white work- ers to spread lies and slander about) the Negro masses and the Unem-) ployed Council. Free speech and the| right of public assembly and petition | is. strictly forbidden as far as the} Unemployed Council and other work- | ing class organizations are concerned. | Emergency ordinances were enacted | last fall for the purpose of throttling the cry for bread and the growing | realization of common interests of black and white hungry workers. White Workers Protest Artest | up, blask filthy trimming of coal. It’s my opinion we heed a union that will fight. The LL.A. is no longer such a weapon. Its a thorn in our our white slave-t We, mus! d2siroy I ether and put the raat control, and bosses, and the < and file in full Negro Mother Calls For Tenant Action, By a Worker Correspondent hs NORFOLK, Ve.—t live at the lower end-of Charlotte St. this street thére is.a big open sewer.| The cdor from: this ss 5 i it and lay knee desp, feat up the sireet. ides and a blessing to} | e hen perhaps: we will get a} | terror. Police and stool pigeons are} chance to live. | | Series At the end of! There are thousands of white workers here and like myself, they have found things hard voing for’the past few. years, But at the same time, we havi been educated to believe that it wag, a mark of good citizenship to get! along the best we can and not grumble: But we-are beginning: to wake up! pe? All Brambleton is talking about the of leaflets which have come into our hands from the Unemployed Council, International Labor Defense. They are the answers to questions of why our grinning bosses have» the heart, to cut our .wages;» why «relief is so voiten and why those. who are supposed tobe our. friends -always take the side of the’ bosses. I work in a big building downtown <| 28a night watchman. They fired the | old watehman because he was getting Atty | 00 old and L am young. The didn't give a rap how the old man ¥ Many of us did put up pumps but| to be thankful for all these blessings.) and conditions. and city had exploited color division| ers are treated in the American! Last Monday, Sept. 25th, neat ‘The ity won't do a thing about it. fe KF mere oe ae after ; had to destroy them when the city| It is a terrible blue buzzard and not) Yours for success, and prejudice to systematically cut/ Tobacco Co. plant. | and 3,others Were tried in the Cor-| It uses all our taxes to pay off the) RUNS i All is seats wil oe | openly threatened to poison all the) a kindly eagle. OF2: Dominion: Lonsiorege, down and finally cut off relief: We work in dirty, dusty gritty and poration Court before a grand, jury,) bankers and build fine schools and Zo\Srwails 0 found cut the a wells ad springs. Fesfiliser. Slave. Loe Se White Workers Respond half rotten tobacco all morning and/ after months and months of /inten-| parks in the richer sections. pnelarnegp mes cureryeonsd pact + | = In the concrete steps we are taking| at noon our hands are so filty that| tional delay, for violation of the vici-, So our children are always in dan- night and’ propanteanehare ro - al to follow up this work through yean-| they are not fit to hang to our sides.) ous anti-free speech law. This law) ser of desease from this n sewer. ated. Ry dollar building foe vasing we are finding’ an unusual| Yet we have no place to wash before] prohibits all meetings, gatherings and) This will continue yntil we tenants! ¢15 99 ‘No. that was too easy. They Yesponse among the whites. On visit-| We eat. en assemblies in public streets, squares| of this sircet organize and refuse to feurid they oduld Gre the wtet 60 ing white labor unions on behalf of} We pile into the street, like cattle| and parks without written permission | pay rent until cur Iandlor d their | oa make. the: watchmen eR it. all tad the bill we egain find a good response | to get food from anywhere we can.) from the City manager. The court) government corset this terrible con-| 3) inv fired him and hire a mee = among the rank and file — even) The streets at noon are lined with) was packed with white and coloréd) dition, Negro Mother. | “"\. building worers have gob to though their leaders génerally show, Push carts loaded with food, in old) workers, In a tense atmostphere, the| petoiamtes om DLaAe | cedures lace audahite: Inmet b open hostility. At one of the meetings} black and rusty pots, not fit for a! defense witnesses and attorney ex-| On S2turday the Daily Worker has) snot thoy tell us about cael 2 of the Amalgamated Labor League—| dog. Covered with filth and fies, we posed this ordinance as naked class g paces, Increase your bundle order! superiority over the Ne Reesee = By HELEN LUKE @ new onganization controlled by So-| have to force this down our already] legislation. ‘The bosses’ jury doubled po. saturddy! \ nent eines tein eu itinee D : cialist burocrats and other insincere| sickened stomachs. We must stand] the fine from $25 to $50 for Benson wider : ‘ ‘Today I get a vacation, as thé “column” has been written in Pennacook, (an You Make ’Em)| clements, police were called in to ar-| out there and eat it or take it back) and the others were given a minimum | --_+__ a oR RE ta N. H., by a contributing comrade. She sends a day's menus, with recipes, and | > rest Joe Benson -who had managed} to our work bench,’ which is more) of $5 fines. All cases will be sent on to here they are. Yourself? to get the floor. thraugh soine rank| filthy. é the State Court of Appeals. where Comrade Editor: September 29. and file members. ‘The S. P. eden ape cornely Dat piel ot scan. ral oa vatigiiaret these laws on be eon- ii: i “ ” ha iT when son, | tested. open sympathy coming _ Up to this very day the section “In the Home” has not had menus and | ait nape ie BONED | aa aul eatinonch, ebb instea eee arte Sort on Re pag ec Hee ee eee Metin aaand ot Dulles bing NRA. in Norfolk: ‘The cop had to| that they build garages for the bosses) dicates that they are rapidly over- mere, Ga eink $0 soak ie bere {trae mates the light and fluffy. | leave in the face of rank and file pro-| cars and company trucks. They don't) coming the bosses race poison and ‘The menus have not contained} For creamed cauliflower, reheat test. The bill was read and heartily| sive abr for us and want us to| color prejudice. They are beginnin”, enough nourishment for a nard- | boiled cauliflower, separated into applauded. The leaders refused to like Ni oi to take the blinkers off ae eyes anc a working man and lively children. |flowerets, then put into white sauce. | act on it, hiding behind the excuse legro Woman Worker. | asking the keenest questions abou Pt Menus in this order: Breakfast,|To make the sauce, melt 2 table-/| | that they were against charity and the traditional policies and prop~ Lunch, Dinner, are for the bourgeois class of people who sleep until noon breakfast in bed—then play around | all afternoon to get enough appetite | to fool with a four or six-course so- | called dinner at night. But this is not | for ordinary people wo work all| day, so why should the papers con- tain such things at all? | | ‘The first thing every working-man’s spoons butter, add 2 tablespoons flour mixed with 14 teaspoon salt and a dash pepper; stir until well blended. Pour on milk gradually, while stir- ring constantly. Bring to a boiling point. Boil 2 minutes. For chocolate rice pudding, heat 2 cups milk. Add 114 squares choco- late cut into small pieces, 1% tea- spoon salt, 42 cup sugar, %4 teaspoon for work, Since*this incident many workcss have become disillusioned in! this outfit, which they joined out of the burning desire for class unity and rank disgust with the A. F. of L. leaders in the City. ‘The Carpenters Union promised to take the matter of endorsing the bill up at their next business meeting, Last week at the meeting of the Fra- Seaman’ 's Wife Reports | Boss Justice in Va. By a Worker Correspondent NORFOLK, Va—I am a housewife living on Brambleton Ave. My hus- band is a seaman and recently shipped out at low wages and hard work, leaving me at home alone. ganda of their masters — who rob black and white, We must admit that we have the tendency of building barriers against ourselves by altogether inflating the color prejudices of the Southern white toiling masses and this hinders the development of the struggle. They! are more willing to listen than we are ready to approach—and concretely | By PAUL LUsitNGER, MD. ANSWEES TO QUESTIONS a Signs of Syphilis W. M.: You'll find the signs of| syphilis described in this column on September 1st. Don't worry until you inflammation of the ovaries (at the beginning there is excessive menstru- ation), and surgical removal of the ovazies, You co net tell us how much you weigh, so we must assume, from the rest of your letter that your evazies are not functioning properly for one of the other reasons, What wife has to think of in buying food | vanilla. Cook until chocolate is well | ternal Order of Americans the reac-| ‘There 4s a man who runs a big) explain our policies to titem. I was) nin appente three wake atten sour| We kal Xeoccn 4s can only be dex is economy. At the same time she| blended with ‘other ingredients. | tionary trustees tried to use rough! furniture and loan store on this same| forcefully reminded of this when. a) «ingigevation,” If you ould get the| * ination, but as long -wants food that is nutritious for the | family. Now that the price of food is | Going up, she has to count her pennies | “Still. more closely, and yet get the same | amount of nourishment. | T am enclosing a simple menu for one day, with inexpensive and infal- | lible recipes. | I am hoping the women readers will | take more interest in the section and Moisen 1-tablespoon -cornstarch and stir well into mixture, add 2 cups cooked e, and pour mixture into baking dish. Bake about 20 minutes. Serve with thin cream, (Serves six or eight.) ‘To make the soup: Scald 1 quart milk with 1 slice onion, remove onion, and thicken milk with 4 tablespoons flour diluted with cold water until house tactics on a Council spckes- man, raising the “Red Bogey,” but they were more than surprised when | they were rebuffed by some of their ) members who thought we had a right | to present such a petition. In this way, linking this up with the fight against evictions and the immediate fight for needy families. a proper foundation is being laid for building Hors Are Fire Traps street, C. L. Hardee, He is the same) man that tried to put a sick woman out of one of his houses last winter. (He was stopped by the Norfolk Un- employed Council—Ed.) A man named Brown borrowed fif- teen dollers off him at high interest. I know the man and was there when he borrowed the money, but did not sign my name as I could not take the white woman of Brambleton said to| me “Yes, these colored folks have got to live and be protected just as good as we—not only must we demand bread for our kids, but for their kids to, and whats more we white folks | should be in the fore of such a strug- gle.” Under the further blows of the crisis and the rapid disillusionment girl to be examined in the meantime, something might be done to either yeassuré you cr to give you a pre- ventive injection. As you are out of work, you are entitled to our services free of charge. » » Gonorrhea! Relapse (?) &8 you ssem to have been otherwise hy during thece two years, there is ho Yeason to worry, Your remarks about physitians are unfortunately only too true, As. you have no’ money to ‘lege, there is no rveason why: you should not come up to sce us. Please excuse the delay our answer: We receive dally fi . State, ideas ’ * in Roosevelt's sweet promises and the} Kelly B., Racine, Wis.: Pvcia your | £0 to 50 Jetiar i De aged Pin ash eee ees souan We oii reas oe spots being Rake the Unemployed Council and prepar-| responsibility. The other day I re-| hunger program of Truxton and Co.| fetter, ib does not seem to us thot! can be a cred ia! the calyeetied ! fe. ii doubse Botlaey” ablemidg Gonistanitiy ing for mass actions that will force} ceived a-notice from the court in! the tactic of the militent united front you have had a relanse. It souncs € i i hae fiw, oie 9 oupe raw: or canted | | the City Council to come across with) connection with this loan. I went to| of all toilers regardless of race, opin-| yatier like a case cf chvonie glee .| yo eae TODAY'S MEN) |tomatoes with 2 teaspoons sugar 15 | | decent relief — and not degrading) Hardee's store and told him that I! ion and affiliation is being confirmed) which you are nursing by over-treat- | Correction BREAKFAST |minutes, add % teaspoon soda and} charity. The City and the Bosses! was not going to have anything to| and understood. The Unemployed| ment, You better stop those potes Due to an error which occurred in Hot Baked Apples {rub through sieve; add to milk, Add | per cleverly used the N.R.A. bally-| do with it. He got mad and called| Councils are now preparing for mass! sium permangenate injections. Ali?! Oot: Sth issue of the Daily Worker th "Tonst Maple Syrup 1-3 cup butéer, 1'teaspoon salt, and | | noo to slash most of the relief. me names, When T objected to this| demonstrations to win cash relief and| two years of it, we should think that) inder the title of “Chiropractic and Coffee Milk ¥% teaspoon pepper. é he hit me and knocked me down.| cheaper rents, Struggles are bound) anybody would be sick of them. Try) Coy; ein ER, hi ae 3 . To make the soft ‘molasses ginger- | At the moment, the workers of Then he had me arrested and taken| to be sharp this wintr, and the Un-| not to do anything at all for a month |, mivapebatrnetE eH sant ft , DINNER bread, put 1-3 cup butter and 1 cup Norfolk are even more aroused over| to jail by saying I was drunk, though| employed Council will grow by leaps! and then let us know how you feel. Breaded Pork Chops Gravy 1 Mashed Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower molasses in saucepan and cook until boiling point is reached. Add % cup| the Tenants Program of Action which calls for cheaper rents and better I have witnesses to prove that I was il all week, and bounds as the only organization of the hungry working class of Nor- * * . “The second fake, chizopractic, ha its ovigin in Towa and still manages to’ Bos Butter sour milk, 1 egg ‘(well-beaten) and {, housing conditions and the end of| At the police court, I fiqured I could| folk. bY peng ce dakgur id attract some kneves: who are trying Chocolate Rice Pudding and Cream | following ingrédients ‘sifted together: evictions. The majority of the homes| get a square deal. But uaa ‘@ sur- pai OMS Cars Coce T. R. There are no unnecessary pink the practice of medicine eons 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons ginger, 1%, in Norfolk are nothing but firetraps-| prise coming. I paid a colored lawyer op:..ticns In Soviet Russia. | ‘There | Wircugh this tzapdoor and who man- SUPPER Cream of Tomato Soup Crackers or Croutons Hot Gingerbread and Whipped Cream Tea Milk Cee ee” Instead of French toast, pineapple | toast may be served: Dip slices of bread into a thin egg batter and fry of saute (saute simply means to cook | iy @ small quantity of fat in a fry-| teaspoons soda, %3 teaspoon salt. Beat vigorously. Fill buttered--small tins 2-3 full, or a loaf pan. Bake 15 min- utes in moderate oven, (350 F.) Water in” which boiled makes a good starch for: cat- tons, Mmitislins, and laces. Comrad v. The order of meals in our menus’ will be explained later. M. Kangas. NOTE: rice has been | Pattern 1624 1s available in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44, Size 34 takes 3%4 yards 39-inch -fabric and \% yard contrasting. Iustrated ‘step- by-step. sewing instructions included with this pattern, Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write vermin and rat ridden, miserably -damp.as most of the city is below water level. Being surrounded by water, without sea or tide buffers or proper drainage system, wher big gales blow in and around Norfolk, streets are inundated, bedrooms are flooded with water mercilessly com- ing through ceiling,. floor and un- .Plastered walls. More than 20° work- ers lives have heen lost through to defend me but he sold me out. He told me that there were a lot of white men against me and that 1 had better plead guilty gli take a fine. I had paid him six @ollars. Tt didn’t seem to matter to Spindle who was right or wrong. The big colored lawyer didn’t seem troubled either. In fact, the lawyer and the judge seemed good friends. I was fined seven dollars and told to bring to BOXMAKERS GET NOTHING FROM BLUE EAGLE By°a Worker Correspondent | SOUTH NORFOLK—At the Bonds Box Factory we go to work five min- | utes before we ought to. The men are treated like dogs. About 500 colored men and boys slave here.) Under the Blue Eagle we are sup-| posed to get no less than 25c an hour but we are making less than that fore, henze, since (bm! hm!) seeing that, because, owing to, for much as, consequentiy—-we leave to your own judément and you may draw your own conclusions! * * . Ca of Avs MLF.M.: The main causes of scanty, egular or entire absence of the menses in young persons are: (adi- puschea ages to delude a few fools with their pseudo-seientifie jargon. The last of the 3 buffoons, “ Brinkely, vas on the point of his. million when the Federal Commission closed his radio stat in Ohio, and thercky stopped lucrative practice of “grafting goat. testicles on sexually-exhausted Meth= cdist ‘armers anxious to prolong vigor.” “5 : ip r —H. I, | plainly name, address and style num- | typhoid as a result of this—the city| the court as soon as I got it. That’s| even though the Blue Eagle flics in’ postty (cxcessive weight), heredity, paisa oe NIG ae was gd ites ig OE eae a pe |ber, BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. | pays @ million to the bankers each) justice in ® boss court. our noses, We are unhappy and dis-| jnfantilism of the genital organs (lack| — Readers desiring health fmformation p with powdered sugar and) The method for making the baked Address orders to ‘Daily Worker | year,. but not a nenny can be found) But they have got a big surprise) contented. Let the Reds come and of development) diseases of the thy-| shod address their Ietters yo Dr. Fauld erushed pineapple. rpples I “lifted” from Comrade Kan- A teaspoon of baking powder added gas’ letter and printed it yesterday, hk, 4 Pattern Department, 243 West. 17th St, New York City, to protect, Workers from floods and ‘disease, For 3 and.4 room shacks like coming. The International Labor De-| tense is on the case teach us how to organize and fight, Box to Coffin Slave, roid gland, continual absorption of certain poison, tumors of the ovaries, Luttinger, ¢-9 Daily Worker, 33 E. 18th St, New York City. |