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Page Four aITLY WORKER,, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1933 British Air-Navy ‘War’ For Far Eas st Conflict Jingoes Launch Dri ive F or “Bigger Navy To Match Warship Programs of Japan and United States By TOM BELL, London The magnitude of Great Britain's preparations for war have just been revealed by the com and 1 in the North Sea. assembled, with the aircraft carriers “Furious” and ‘urageous” sending 51 planes into the air to bomb the coast and act as cover for the bombarding battleship: e The motif of the exer en British apparently : or s than 14 force a t having by ships Such a c Tule out of the N the meme 1 Lord: Takes _ $40, 000 “i aily” Boston $20.900 San Francisco, 19.95 Haven, Conn., 18.94 per No less than 90 p the Scottish coast le battle fleet were m off and the w> anenve ne! neral Staff of the Ad- vill undoubtedly be inforce their argu- nlarged Budget, al- the tense in- Herah for list coun- First Place in Drive Birming ch ges lynch law by raised per cent of its ore than some of the North- Nebraska, 24.55 per only 6.9 per cent of its the Jewish Workers’ Club 10.15 per cent of their! three-fourths of the “which the “D; must have, to be ra. ‘tthin the next four | o will take the lead away from 2 Let’s go! th news of th: power to you, com- How about you cab-/} bies in New York City? Let’s hear from you! | letter jand then mj couple of di Job Ad Lures College Men To Advertise Hotel By a Work BROOKL spondent On Oct Times ask arn 5 an or unive the restaur: stating that stein, manager of the Hotel Par nreaeisaas mount Grill, wished to feeeiiy ee aaene at 2 c T saw wu 2p ting in “The N , . 1 ‘or | propose the first half hour ied phabetical us in a order, then asked the remainder to please step up toward the stage of grill. As soon as the crowd 1 sponded, newsp: appeared, taking phot: the fellows | nd writing up a “human interest” Conference to story, : hee burden! tne whole act wa ing but a menis will figure in| jh fetal ie ; | Ornstein’s Hotel Par t proclaiming, to the grill was ber lent So great was the mation that the photographers were forced to ero-naval | smash the plates | mportance. So ann the technical conclu- Ferguson Br 08, Hoboken. Sneaks in Overtime. | By a Worker Correspondent | HOROKEN, N. J.—Ferguson Bros. | Mfg. Co., manufacturers of furniture, | | are supposed to be under the N. R.| They signed up about Sent. 26, | The first, few days we worked 8 hours, | they started to work us} overtime—57 hours a week, from 7 in the morning until 5 at night, 6 ‘days a week I was the only one that refused to} work overtime, There was no kick | until yesterday morning, when I came | fice. |to the shop. The foreman said, “You don’t want to make overtime?” I) said we are Age supp ed to accord- | jing to the N. He said, “Here's | your money ea eet the hell out of | here.” Then I went to the N. R. A. ad-| ministrator. There was another man} | there, a Mr. Blum. He said he would investigate. I made the first report two weeks ago, but they didn’t do anything. I said if they don’t do anything I will write to General} Johnson, They seid I should wait a} te swpport can help the Daily Worker continue. You like | the enlarged and impzoved “Daily.” Support it with your dollars. Rush them today. burned to death. of Girls’ Hands Bleed From ‘Cleaning Women Speed-up in Glass Plant, Get $30 a Month — (By a Worke a Worker Correspondent) GAS CITY, Ind.—The Owens Dino's Glass Co. plant here is one of the | worst “speed-up” plaints in the country, | The girl workers that tape the boxes after they are filled with bottles | are worked so fast that their hands bleed. The workers on the before | used to change molds while they were cold, now they heat the molds before e ng them, and.get some awful * acinu'ets oan wo vse GOVE, in Attack Br a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—The National Clean- ing Co. is a firm that supplies clean- jing women to various buildings and jhotels, such as the McAlpin, Penn. | sylvenia, Waldorf-Astoria, ete. ‘Thes af |$30 a month for 156 hours work. The ‘mach ne el oiling; should jcleaning women in hotels get $7 a he slip and fall’sStom the machine, 0 Ci il Ny cee but they work without a day he would either’ be ground or nN UV ervice v oe of them have worked for| By » Worker Correspondent years without a day off. They work In the forepart, of the summer, e made beer bottles and they} were bulked in the car. It took ance with five workers eight hours to load a| program,” Mr. Roosevelt's “economy | ings, walls, climbing ladders to clean al federal workers under |the lamps, etc. The women employ car, so the boys, picked out the/ civil service received a 15 per cent) |are predominantly foreign-born, such youngest and st workers and|cut last April, and in addition prac- ‘as Russian, Slavic, etc, Very often | two of them loaded. a car in five| tically all departments instituted a, they support whole ramilies on their hours. We work six hours a day | payless * “furlough” of varying lengths meager pay. and our work is always piled up on} of time. Besides that, thousands were $2.50 for Seven Days us, so lots of days we can’t get | dismissed. |. These conditions prevail not only time to go to thé room or get! I August alone; the total number|i: the National Cleaning Co, but ;/a drink of water. of federal employees in Washington | they are that way generally. Ih one the cdmpany place they get as little as $2.50 for Recently had two} Was increased by 1,724, despite the the big shots from the glass|fact that 4,913 workers were fired |7 days work. bottle blowers assoviation and “they | during the month. This continued | The Building Service Employees tried to organize,the operations of | hiring and firing seems strange, until| Union, a racketeer union, is getting the machines and the operators | Closer investigation reveals that prac-|a petition out. They say that when |voted 26 to 20 against the A, F, | tically all the workers fired had been | they get enough petitions they will /L. union. The workers are de~, Civil service employees, while the new/go to Washington and try to get a manding one union,,and a militant employees are admitted without ex-| code. They charge them $1 to become junion, 26 to 20 against the com-| mination, regardless of merit, by/ |pany union with the bosses stand- | Political pull, ng over them. shows the workers | are becoming very. militant, lin the struggle and teach them The workers ‘should take the|how to organize to fight against’ Daily Worker as-it awill guide them/ these conditions. ee from Our Readers SAYS PARTY IS SQUARE SHOOTER »Oleveland, Ohio. | dues. One of the officials was over- heard in a conversation with the | that “there would be no strikes,” and the manager said, “Of course, I'm with’ you.” T call upon all cleaning workers to | join the Building Maintenance Work- ers Union, 799 Broadway, New York City, which is the only union of building maintenance workers that puts up a real fight for their in- terests. are lots of jobless members who have | musical talent. It. would pep up | some of these meetings thst seem so} Comrade Editor: | dry. Cold weather is coming on us Well, the writershas been to a few|/now. It gives the Communist Party} committee meetings in the effort to| a chance to get some people inside} elect I. O. Ford. to the Mayor's of-_| halls. I will say .the Communist} Why not make a stab at the pic- |Party is sure a square shooter that| ture game? Well, if we cannot af- knows how to drat people and ex- | ford. movies, let us haye slides such | plain things to- them in a simple|as snaps and exchange them around manner. |awhile. I would suggest scenes of The Democrats and Republicans | 2 five-ton load of coal going into a | are making a lof. of.promises of jobs, | basement of the Archbishop’s Cath- etc., while the city just had to get/|olic Church here in his shanty. “Who a loan off the money changers on | stole the new garbage can?” “The Wall Street to mii the town till the| slave market at 8 am.” “The coal taxes come in. mystery, a can of coal disappears.” We have here’s'“cmous woodyard.| I notice the speakers of the Com- It is known f ‘mn ‘coast to coast.|munist Party tend to use words in There are 1,8 j' flopping there and| their talks which are hard to. un- 2,800 eating there.’'“Election being at | Pah Publish some, history and hand, they are putting up beiter eats, | facts about Green or any labor faker | but after election I ‘am looking for | whose names ara popping up in the | trouble. May I suggest and hammer | fake papers. a bit? How come the Communist} Keep going, boys, we are on the Party don't takesadyantage? There! home stretch. SLIM. a A.F.L. Leaders Hunt Laundry Drivers’ Dues (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—A noisy organization campaign js being carried on to or- ganize the laundry drivers in greater New York by those stalwart “friends” of’ the downtrodden workers from which’ orgenization Sam Rosensweig has waxed fat and prosperous during the bosses to sell out members of his union. These “friends” have developed a new racket. They make shop chair- and some members of the executive board, and the executive board covers it up by filling it under financial reports to the members. How long will the laundry drivers be fooled by this type of leadership? i Is Your Name on This Honor Roll? Contributions received Wednesday, | Samuels 1.00/ List 11540 | DISTRICT No. 7 | DISTRICT No. ix Oct. 16 tollew: Mednick 1.00] Perkal Martin 1.00 | Raskin 50 : Hershkowltz 1.00] Lifshitz AE. 100 | Col. by Aloerovitz Total received Wednesday. ..$1,077.84| Dades 1.00) Rie "Thompson ES Anon. 10 Previously recorded 10,196.01 | Zereen oh Baker Gester “a5 4 ‘3 scat aad ys be! Finn Wkrs Boe 10°36 | Jacobson 25 Rae oa eee Xaroteketa 25) Bruse 35 i ‘otal to date ....ssccseeees 85 | + Unit 1, Sec. 1, . Alperewitz 1.00 By HELEN LUKE = DISTRICT No. 1 Sec. t 8 Nethan cans 8.81| Mayerowits 10 ss. Br. LLD. 3.00, See- 15, Unit 23 s.19| Morgenstern Unit 2, See. 1, Col. by Sedraten @ axe wo letters here which I am printing today. As resards the (‘an You Make ‘Em py Holowka 50 Sec. 2, Unit 6 15.00) Bucow sone OL eardienbic 0 first, Is that as the greatest dietician of them all, and |~ ef > : na Lists ee 86 | 10 what he discovered w ene MUST eat, and that under Capital- Yourself? by Kosiba Fishman ‘la ism the workers must ASE to eat. I would suggest to “outsider” that if ane a Hudson Sh. Un. ol. by Woltech 10 she is sincerely ir ted in feeding the workers, she should cease to be| Pattern 2541 is available in sizes) Anon. 25 | ity: Yeates | Schnieder Unit 3, Secs 1 sie 30 an outsider, and join the Wo: 2 ——_______ | 86, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50.° Lazar 5 g| cat o Martin ‘Worker 10] Mendelkem Sets er ena aoa a International Relief, at to eat or by taking away—/| Size 36 takes 3 1-4 yards 39 inch Sens re bay ae Ee 4 nai 125] Anon, +10 870 Broadway "abic and 3 1-2 yards binding, Meer “30 Hermon Fae | ple a Morris : yy Mille! , y it 10 10 0! ci 10 “Yo | Col. “by Syivestoriia. | col. by Jacobson EA 11 names names: 5 i .: 10 19/6 names 2.01 —— Dear Helen Luke | el emene 10 | Col. by Morawski | Total Oct. 18 8.40 do hope . | Zachar E : 4 10 names 2.05| Total to date 107.20 pes hope a cr its . | Sabriiie : Gr Meme 10| col. by Waloszyn | DISTRICT No. 18 sider will not offend you. nee, the Japanese workers 9 Momenst Feldiche 30) Anon, 10) 7 ‘names 70| P. Peneft 1.00 iletics ‘of foods and eat rice, the Irish eat po! H, Kominsky Toth “Yo | Goldstein 18]. Bloome -35/ rota Oct, 18 42:00] Sec. A 3.85 aly, faportant in Central Europe they ect Grossman Mayer Son eee alee +5) Total to date 737.03] Unit 114 420 extremely impor Steckler | Dressler +18) Col, by Franck Unit 110 merely the writing materials to get their starch. These | Agin eet +50) Simon 10| 2 ‘Anon. RTE ens Oe ale ak ved contains a numbe: | artificial barriers, capitalisé tariff- Yetta Blum can | Sam 10 pases: 150| Work. Ed. Club imposed tastes, endure, even after My parce Neate prncori 33 Simpig 100 | LW. A. 1.50 go to er Parts, | tinger's Gol, a1.60+ Soh, bY a ae a | Col. by Bergman .03| Kenosha 1.55 r's Col, 21.604 Serine Sel. by Goldin | Gedtars Kocter to | Kencsha Coll, 231 tor, 's Re “ care | Alev e s i. OM | % | Wald 70 Cli knowledge of nutrition |Jatest tool in the process of turning | i Morowits Seat Werk | a) Bene Holmberg TWO etty Com. 5.00| irate your column of Oct. %| ee Euiae Bist ita a bread-and- Col by Kestetsky .25 | Aiomed 248 | ‘Teitleman Bu Prank Se aot Gk! ik ae i ji ive 'ee-for-breakfas 5 oft 35 « Ge Bt es The menu for dinner is usally given | ree ang tae ee aranaeee “ ec Seslotary a ae 4 eatenen ‘10 | Totat oct. 18 661.84) Pucinston ges fel ebay as the average American diet: the| ber for. aiost of the ere iP. | Sherman *50| Sol. by Pavlor Balkin +10 | Total to date 5,683.02| Tuzof Harry Sims Sch 2 6.00 only thing that’s missing is pie and | ee 2 jon, 1.00} Wiener +9 pisTRIicT No, 3 | Bul. Mac Wkr Lie) 2, East coffee. This type of dinner is usu-| It is a mistake to say “this cook- & jr Col. by Steinberg | Col. by Goldin Edler, Balt. 5.00| Educ. Cl. 2.45 ally submitted to students of nutri- | ing business is not so important after Horenatein sae e) oes 35] Anon, Will, 1.00/ WSTLD. gehule ieee are tion to find as many faults as pos-| all.” Have you ever had your chil- Wkrs Srolamn & ati Berger decens: “10 Roe AG 3.00] pr 3. Goldman 100| Lenin Br. 42, sible. (I wish the Capitalist Sys-|dren pulling at your skirts and cry- Masket Dress Jacobs Rae Lettish Frac. 2. : ‘ vy Wers Pride Dress 7.1 Misure, tem would be submitted to some of|ing, “I am hungry!” Have you ever Home Upholst, vee 3 ae Bahleda Pad a 5 these students to “find as many|opened up your dress and taken Left Wing, ILG 22.00 pd age to] Gremmet Unit s06 ia a faults as possible.”"—H. L.) what should be a smooth round Wei ‘Ttilor Breimer {10 By Unit 517 0.00 | Col. Yutkowits ‘The only aim of your diet is to) breast bursting with nourishment for 80. Bkiyn ILD Rane 40) Bekman 2 produce a satisfied fecling after your | Your child and held in your hand List 10008 bGHL by A. Gorelick | aki by: Betnieder,” aad Total to date 1,080.41 3. Rravits meal. Your dinner is unbalanced, as osc eptaend Pentel on ee! Benois 3° Golders .10| Ehrenburg 38) Kosinee DISTRICT No, 10 | Col, by Lertman it contains too much of the starchy | Paper bag he’ led with water? Or a “ ferman [05] M. Ehrenburg Kloo H. E. Manuel, Roy- inow! 10 foods, such as potatoes, cauliflower | had to listen to the wail of a child) Rann, Torta Sel: Maret 0 rend Ark, "tea Bune Rr G@ndirice pudding, and it is lacking|ft0Wing up stunted because of the! Tlst 10004 Breithert Sol Gace hats oe Berkowits ‘os in fruits and green, Icafy vegetables, | bread and coffee diet? mae Miller 10 SISTRIOT Neg | Total Oct. 18 11.00| Col. by Goodwin You have omitted the other aims of| ,, #@ve you ever sent your man into, D'Agostino ann Bivoe mon “DISTRICT ‘No. 13) : 0 @ well-balanced diet, such as miner-| the mines with a lunch box filled Azzaretto Dora {10 | Clinton 1.00 Hicks, Portiand 1.00 10 | wi Seri als, vitamins, roughage, color, etc, | With water? ‘Then no professor has Anon, bey ahemae oy AD eave Tah aay epokans I suggest you use an entree oft? tell you. You don't have to read| Bozian Sol. by Schneider Pitts, 50 | Peterson 10 tomato juice or the’ cheapest citrus |! tm books. Then you know that) Cincar por 3 a 28 fruit in the market. Spinach and | Cookery is important and that the aor Stein Marunchak potatoes could go with the pork| instinct to reproduce {s second- oe eed 4 Sai. by Kushner Schwarts Olson vod by Krant 4 ry, 4 ntella 1.00] Zetnicl ! on. reenberg, 3 chops. A side salad of raw grated | ®"¥: - Kays—J. Reed cl. B Levi Batis and cabbage could also be{. 80 in the meantime, while we are| James B. .a8| Boreham 33] Badornlck Hah geasamera Teubin % added. | fighting for something to cook let us| i. een Falcone 100! Fazer 1.75| Novich Ratespits 10 ie a 7 ‘ushner .50| 3: Anon, rinbel 10 Steamed or baked fruit with cream, line’ fel Boers alae sod Fiala Sirota 10 Col. by Goldin 2.36 Poleky “10 or fruit salad could be used for des- | ™% fie! The proposals are: that ours Delidura i0| Sclarin 1.47 | Total Oct. 1 .50 | Seiderman 05 Sert. The cost of the meal would| ¥€ OMly write one recine a day; that aaa _ Zorger 10] Bittmen ‘Unit 11-08 3.00 Total to da 36 | Anon. +10 Hot have to be incrensed end’ c| We xive up trying to design = day’s| ae, ‘Basmati cas| Krater Col by Leyrits DISTRICT No. 13 | Weingarten 10 few cents had to be added it would|™¢nU. It is true three meals a day| Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15e) tn| gauardo barred ae Geeta oan Bainter ee easy | poneee ey eH be toward the health of the individu- | 18 8% old American custom, but un-| 70ins or stamps (coins preferred) for | List 10004 ‘Hochman 45) Landis Kochie Unit 31, BH. — 10.00| Col. by Mendel- als. | der the New Deal we are going into waaigena Adams Lceaany Write ere ad i eae .10) Wasserman an ‘nit 2,’ Holly, 2 aries i | two, and one-meal days. plainly name, address and style num~| vader * ein .05| Nelson sto Unit 4, Holly. 5. Inbaum ol fg People’ to eat ee fot WoT: | “Now, about the reolpes to be con-| Per. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE, | sy’, 333] Worker “08! col by Purenten "°| Janee Uap angiahet pe Oa depends on the housewife to have| ‘tibuted bv readers: how do vou get}, Address orders to Daily Worker| Raffacie ‘25| Apelbaum +10| ‘Tavis .08| Duffala NTWIU, Los Cohen 10 tovether that stew with noodl Pattern Department, 243 West 17th| Lavalle . htsman :05| Pannes .95| Carter Freth, Ges, Ver. 20.00| Col. by Danziger some understanding of the science 4 noodles that ity. Ferrantl : inofsky 10| Shevelson 05} Quist Wom. Coun, 4&6 4.50| Benny 18 of nutrition. I therefore think that |t0® South Slay comrades made for | Street, New York City, f hi 115| Weber 505] Col. by Lukes Teor + 8°43.00| Gedeld his all menus you print in your column | the Hunzer Marchers in Pittsburgh? (Patterns by mail only.) Pesont ‘ 110] Menmon 108| Coakley H, Holtz ‘80| Pinckoft 115 ‘What about tt d Rollo (35) List 19516 Holberg 110] Gutauckas ¥. 0.4, 112} First 110 should be carefully thoucht out end av about the soaghett! the Ital- Stefano :23) Lishinsky 1.25| Sosna 105| Koss Unit 11, A, 2.08) Danziger 05 planned with the latest knowledge |!*™ Comrades made for the Dafly| have developed since that is all they| ©. T. ‘804 Sam “30| Col, by Sehnieder Rodville R. Hersek; Lebel 125 of nutrition as a foundation. | Worker affair in New York? 'There| have to eat, now that pigs are being| S*ravitx +50)" Woolf 125| Rothman -10} Roth 5 *vecavie .80| Smolak 10 is the shish-ge-bob an a Le Forts 28] Berger 25} Stein Lack 108 | M. Rodrigues 60 | Tomeshorskt 05 “Bt d pilaf ti killed to bi Sincerely yours, \t pilaf that/| killed to bring on prosperity? Let! xesseisn 128} 115) H. Rothman Zirin 195 | N. Espinosa 60| Col. by Kamminker MISS FB. he Armenian comrades made in Bos-| some one from Norfolk tell us how| Gelernter 3s steln :25| 7 Anon. :30| Blaskis {05 Rauchberg ‘ ‘ Pappa Md | fon Ee ie the TUUL. ies make sweet potato pie, | em en warteinan 2 Brunt Ol, List 12192 Ponape 2 Total ot 18 91.82| Weinstein 38 ow about the Cuban way % i er 28) B. Cantor 60| Col. by Gianos “80 | Total to adte 296.36| Kremer i THE OTHER LETTER i abort iy ba cook Comrades, rewrite this letter, but! saivacore Ri; Deuteh [08 '30| 6 Workers 110 Glaber ss Dear Comrades: Bees Plant? What about the/try to get all the workers to help| Gambino 1251, Anon. 43 Wubers 1100! Kot "0 Greden, to ne: | Mexican way of cooling beans? What| with he column as you have be-| Gorelix 1[00/Gol. by Stein 1.00] Newlin 1.00} Lam! 35 Anon. $ What is the use of criticism if we| about the wavs of cookin rabbits|gun, ‘The men are’ not exempt, | Popoint fe Mh nad 1.00} Chester 0 her don’t offer some constructive pror} the farmers. in the United States Led, |\Gegionk ts aur eee i pbs Heal oct, 18. 030 Je | Gee. & Unit 7 11.73) Mete 1.00] Shapiro ‘S5| Total fo date 49185] Total to date 21038] Toial to date cbe.t0 * f oo ‘4 jcleaning women in the buildings get | WASHINGTON, D. C.—In accord-| nights at such jobs as washing ceil- | |@ member and 25 cents a month| |menager of a building assuring him | Lacal 810 tf the Teamsters Union, in| recent years by working deals with | men collect dues with the organizer | “| general secretary of the Commu- 5 | fighting Daily Worker. .%5| the more harmful dyes cannot be sold Bureau Letters from Worker Correspondents R egistration . Hounds Homeless Girls Flophouse- and For 156 Hours Central Office Drives Them from Camp te Finally to Jail (ay a Worker Cotcabendaeh NEW YORK.—As a single woman there I was sent to Camp Tera. | We were kept like prisoners, the pi he Central Registration Bureau at 289 Fourth avenue last summer. in need of shelter I was told to go to From lace was surrounded by police and if | anyone voiced a besih daring as to bettering the food, they were hauled ont WORKERS |_MAILBAG (NRA ATTAC ATTACKS FOOD WORKERS | VIRGINIA, Minn—In many of the | restaurants around the Iron Range j;of Northern Minnesota the N. R. A. has been put into effect. In most of the restaurants that are on the N. R. A. code, the wages of the wait- resses have been raised slightly, but wherezs before the waitresses had free food for the time they worked, now they have to pay for their food, so in reality the N. R. A. code brought them nothing but a wage- cut. | In many of the restaurants also many of the waitresses have been | laid off and this increases the speed-| [UP in the restaurants. | | Robert Minor to Speak ‘in Philadelphia Tonite PHILADELPHIA, | Pa. — Robert Minor, Communist candidate for Mayor of New York City, will be the main speaker at a gala concert this Friday, October 29, 8 p.m., at | Turngemeinde Hall, Broad and Columbia Ave. Proceeds from this concert will go to the Daily Worker. An unusually good program of entertainment has been arranged for this event. All party and mass organizations, including trade unions and cultural | bodies, are urged to send their or- ganizational contributions for the “Daily” with their representatives to this concert. At least $500 must be raised at this affair to enable Philadelphia District to catch up with the Drive. Earl Browder Speaks in Boston on Oct. 21 BOSTON, ?| | | | Mass.—Earl Browder, nist Party, U. S. A., will be the main speaker at a Daily Worker mass meeting here Saturday, Octo- ber 21, 8 p.m., at the Dudley St. Opera House, 113 Dudley St., Rox- bury. A program of revolutionary music will be given by the American Workers Chorus and the Freiheit Gesangs Ferein. The mass meeting is under the auspices of the Boston District Daily Worker Financial Campaign Com- mittee. CHICAGO I. W. O, BRANCH TO HOLD AFFAIR FOR “DAILY CHICAGO.—Branch No. 546, In- ternational Workers Order, of this city, which has already contributed $50 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive, will stage “A night in Soviet China,” cabaret style, Sunday, Oct. 22, 7 p.m, at 3155 West Roosevelt Road, the proceeds going to the Has your unit, club, union, LW.0. Branch, your organization held a collection for the Daily Worker? Help save our “Daily.” By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS To a Cockroach Boss J. F.—We like the title you have chosen for yourself and we are sure the revolution will find you in the ranks of the workers, not with the bosses. We trust that you'll continue to like our.column and we thank you for your donation. Sane Ge Mrs. A. C.—If you continue to live | on a vegetable diet, eliminating (leav- ing out) alcoholic, spicy, fried and starchy food, your attacks will dimin- ish in frequency. Drink plenty of plain water or orangeade, lemonade and limeade without sugar. If you really have gallstones, however, you'll need an operation Css or later. oe Itch—Heart Murmur L. W. N—The cause of your little girl's itch might be due to grass poi- soning; the calamine lotion you are using is very good in this condition. We prescribe it with one per cent Phenol. She may “outgrow” her heart murmur, if you take care that she does not overwork, which in her case, of course, means she should not play too strenuously. We do not prescribe medicine in such cases, any more. We are writing you privately about changing your Tesidence, reer Hair “Restorers” and Dyers Sadie—The hair dye you are using is not harmful to the general health. All hair dyes have a certain irritating action on the scalp. In New York openly, owing to the provisions of the sanitary code. The increased falling out of your hair may be a coincidence. It might be due'to other causes than the dye. Have yourself examined by a competent physician. Excuse delay by the police. The Jewish girls were discriminated against by giving them the hardest, dirtiest duties. Upon the return to the city the single girl finds things worse than ever. The Central Registration Bu- reau works in coordination with all the Jewish, Catholic and Protestant charities to see to it that they are thrown from shelter without holding these different religious organizations responsible for their condition, Miss O’Shea Arrests Girls There is a Miss O'Shea at the head of this Bureau. When some 25 giris came to her and demanded an end of this constant eviction from. dif- ferent. shelters and demanded a shel- ter for that night, Miss O’Shea had nine of them arrested for being so bold. The next ‘day she’ personally appeared in court with five co-work- ers to convict these. girls of their criminal intent to secure decent lodg- ing. Now one reads in the papers-that the Association for the Improvement of the Conditions of the Poor is rais- |ing campaign for “single unem- ployed women” for $100,000. The man at the head of this organization, Mr. Matthews, also on the Welfare Council, is the very one who advised the brutal arrest of the nine girls. Closing Down Shelters With the winter coming on and the various agencies filling up, with More applicants for jobs than ever before the N.R.A., these charity rack- ets are turning a deaf ear to the misery of the girls. Instead of more shelters opening up, those in exist- ence are closing down. ‘The Salva- tion Army closed down »and threw 200 girls into the streets. When pressed for reasons they say, “Go to the Central Registration Bureau.” So you see this place acts as a shield for all these religious charity rackets. As for the so-called free lunch places, one of these places is the Woman’s Trades Union League; at 34th St. and Lexington Ave., at the head of which is the Socialist Rose Schneiderman. Here women over 35 years cannot eat. This holds true at the Salvation Army Canteen, 32 East 29th St. and at the New York League for Girls, 38th St. and Madison Ave, Framed to Welfare Island At the Municipal Lodging House for Women, the “home” for homeless women, girls every few days are herd- ed into wagons to go to Welfare Island where they work for nothing. They cannot come back to the city, although once in a while they are allowed to come to “look for work.” If the girls come back to the Municipal Lodging House and are told that “this is no Girls have been *d up and sent to Bellevue.. When confronted with this, with interviewer, Antin re- marked, “Well, tf you are not crazy. you will be free within 10‘days.* All of the above ean be proven, -—M. K. T: lynch terror Against Tammany on Negroes—Vote Communist! MINOR FOR MAYOR™ in ‘replying to first letter} we are overwhelmed with correspondence, Pai Precocious Ejaculation H. L.—There is no food which ean “strengthen” you sexually. Most foods recommended for this. purpose, such as oysters, asparagus, mushrooms, garlic, champagne and lobster, may increase the Mints, put not the abi ity. You ought to consult your phy- sician regarding your general condi+ tion, Opacities in the Eye I. H—An opacity in the eye, a lack of transparency of a position of the eye. Frets ae cornea, the thin transparent mem. brane which covers the eye reflected as the. inner lining lids. Opacities may be found vitreous heimor and even optical nerve-endings. Opacities the cornea generally follow s the eye, but may be due’ to any agent which will cause an inflam: mation: from a sharp piece of coal to syphilis and gonorrhea. An opacity is not dangerous to life, but if in the direct line of vision, it may gre- vent vision. Opacities are gotten rid of by removing their cause, either by surgical operation (whenever feastble) or by general treatment, such as salvarsan, mercury, etc. A eaturated solution of potassium ‘iodide, ten drops, after meals is a favorite Helping Dr. Luttinger : to Win means | \