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P= DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1933 Page Six Anthracite Union Penna. Miner’s Wife Asks Women to Aid Men on Picket Line ’ “If This Strike Is Lost Our Conditions Will Be| Even Worse; Our Husbands Are Fighting and We Must Help” Letters Describe Bosses’ Terror and Discrimination Against Negro Workers cay ee bee : [Negro Workers Segregated _—_Gimbel Store 0 set Negroes Beaten | Mislead Strike and Try to Keep Miners f . . ° : ‘ rike ani i ee) 1 for Protesting | In Cincinnati “Dog Houses”, Bars Negroes |" °° “vightine for Better Conditions at Discrimination. 1 Worker Correspo from Its Ball yy a Worker Correspondent Bs, CINCINNATI, Ohic.—Here in the steel division at College Hill, where By J. SCRANTON, Pa., Oct. 20.—Twenty {the streets of Archbald and then established their pickets at the (By a Woman Correspondent) UNIONTOWN, Pa.—The strike of the coal miners has reached the stage where every woman and every girl must take an active part in it to help our men folks to win better working and living conditions. This is neces- Sary because John L. Lewis and William Feeney, who betrayed us in 1922, By a Worker Correspondent CLEARWATER, Fla. — Clearwater | jhas a population of appr | 8,000. Fruit growing and tourists are the main industries of this section Both of these ind | the Negro workers have been segregated from the white workers, who live | | a stone’s throw from the sub-division, a stranger will soon distinguish the By a Worker Correspondent see dog houses ‘e 700 families live. In the white Negro homes from the homes of the lily white. A street and an unkept: park divides the two sections. On one side you called homes,?@—————— STAMFORD, Conn.—The Friends NEW YORK.--Gimbel Bros. de-} partment store has been working its employes to death since the N.R.A. code was accepted. Instead of raising wages, which would have been of thousand anthracite coal miners in the Glen Alden Coal Co., the biggest company in the anthracite area, have gone on strike. The strike was called by the Anthracite Miners Union of Pennsylvania, led by Rinaldo Cap- three approaches to the mines. At 5:30 the state and town police ‘ried to smash the picket lines and ive us from the streets, but the, vuld not break the miners’ lines. When they broke our lines in one place we tormed them again in another are again trying to betray us. This time they are being supported by sda : th Thi Maloney. Thi eS = rai - The season lasts app n n they have water, gas and some benefit to their employes, they} pellini and jomas Maloney. eo | ii ‘ President Roosevelt and Governor @-— ——————_——— ete ll a eeran roonthn of the year, Business | electric, while in the Negro section |! the Soviet Union of Stamford con-| Gecided instead to invite all their em-| pressure of the rank and file mem- Hora We ele ache until Pinchot 5 xth of the families have ‘ributed $3 toward the $40,000 drive.| ployes to the Grand Annual Ball to| bers of this union, forced the spread- fee Sancian sap pe ee mee & Se a not tehord to tos tats ounce | ATIC ATIC MAINE'S if we are not to starve this coming | during the working se | them the remainder of the year. The insignificant men manage to make profits enough to last) SU ries. m here is to make the work- stand that their miserable “Please include this in the amount sent in by the Stamford section,” which heretofore only executives of| the store had been invited. Of course, ing of the strike from the Hudson |Co., and Penn Anthracite Co. The Anthracite union was organ- At 7:20, when the pickets from Eynon section started back to their homes, about 30 state . winter. Last winter many of our men i legonkare eS they received plenty of publicity from | ‘ 4 Went to work with empty dinner | Fight 7-Day Code tae they) ta “et while | CORdition is not hesven-sent, but is | Asks the secretary of the F. 8. U.| tre caoitatist press for their “demo- | ized several months ago, after the |PCllce, Gennes see ei bucket. Thousands of us women went | Puarae: working, alone selves | the fault of the mn. Branch, | cratic” move. Those who do not work| United Mine Workers of America led! «14, ond beat them, and drove By a Mine Worker Correspondent PRINCETON, Ind. — The miners here in the coal fields are up in arms. The results of the N.R.A. are showing up in every hamlet, and the miners are now talking of taking action through the rank and file to | force the six-hour day and five days , So they may have the last to the compa to dri eat. with y store time and again | w a scrip and buy something to Most of the time we went back | the empty bag. Our children without license, most arefooted in tl a pint of milk a day. | alive after the se | The Negroes who than the white w | working season, are ¢ starvation af | parted. All tha | ployed is to apr city welfare. aS0} ers during the| y facing| s have de-} left to the unem- y for relief to the Letters from Our Readers DON’T FILE YOUR “DAILIES”— { GIVE THEM AWAY So, comrades, we must learn to value our work in building so power- every day, the were not included. However, the Gimbel Bros. man- agement was faced with a problem.| There are a number of Negro kitchen workers employed and the problem was how to exclude them from the invited. The Negroes were given in- vitations with the hope that they} “contingents,” by the John Boylan machine, was unable longer to control the miners. Cappellini and Maloney were called in to organize the new union to pre- vent militant rank and file action under the leadership of the Rank and File Opposition, The spread of the strike to Glen Alden was delayed by Cappellini as long as possible to crush them through the woods. One of the state cossacks broke and tore the tlag the pickets were carrying, ‘Lhe fiag does not mean anything to the police when the bosses’ prof- its are at stake. In the afternoon of the same day after the pickets were placed at tke approaches to picket the after- Nia wa CES oo eae 3 ashing’ ake) x. r for the working class. | erat 4 A This was the only thing they had to| ty ct cack weet tae cel Appeal to Washington Eraukiyn Noe. fio) S| Weapae | would not accept them. But to the| the workers’ militancy. Cappellini|noon shift, Joe Dougher and Al. eat Shaevonnome | ‘The discrimination against the Ne-| Comrade Editor: peeves oe mes aioe uSe} dismay of the bosses, these workers | spoke against mass picketing, in the| Biondi, another mine leader, were White ou! is were working in| ‘The district officials have entered| 8t0es has proved more than they) The question has come up as to| o oot weanon of knowledge to hun- | “id accept the invitation. cae on ng ara ncen Strike. |_| welking the street when four town ng coal our chil | the N.R.A. coal code as a seven-day code whereby go on the s the workers are sub- The officials of the miners prom- ised a union field in Gibson County | at the beginning of the N.R.A. Now the miners are taking action. However, the mines where the trouble started are still operating and will continue to do so in all prob- unless the miners follow a program of mass action. Prospects at is lost our conditions | p every scab We can go re and fight cipation in ngth of present are favorable to the scabs here, as the district officials are ask- that kind, there is a prospect that the scabs will be granted a charter by the U.M.W.A. The policy of the offi- cials of the U.M.W.A. was that they instructed the rank and file to be good and stay away from these scab the N.R.A. would look out st The local Red Cross clothes to the necdy week, serving something like 250 fam. ilies, whereas there are now about 600 families who are in destitute cir- cumstances but too proud to deman their own. The nemployed Council has brought the relief up from 75 cents per fam of 12 to $3. For larger familit re still demanding more relief—$10 per week for heads of fam- ilies and $3 per week for each addi- ‘as distribut ing here las | tional one in the family. The Negroes became com- and during the last can bear. ed u | their co , at least during the} | election campaign period. | } What happened? Washington in-| formed the Clearwater politicians of this outrage—Negroes daring to c | plain. In one evening several white politicians called on two Negroes and| | “took them for a ride.” They drove| | them 30 miles out of town, stripped | | them of their clothes and beat them] into unconsciousness. whether workers should leave copie: of the “Daily” and pamphlets in t read them, and then file them away in their cellars. This seems foolish as many workers should be introduced to our literature and the best way of doing it, is to leave it where workers may come across it. It was not so very long ago that I knew very little about the movement} in spite of my class-consciousness | and I would know just as much now if some comrade had not given me a | ime telling them, “This will teach you to complain to Washington.” When they had beaten the Negroes | into unconsciousness a second time, | | they left. them. | ‘It is obvious that the act of the} | lynchers was designed to terrorize the | !whole Negro ghetto, The lynchers failed to achieve their aim. The Ne-| gro workers became more determined than ever to carry on their struggle Please let me have your opinion. S. B. eee (You answer the question yourself, comrade, when you say you would not have known more about the movement, if someone had not hand- ed you a copy of the Daily Worker. | The Daily Worker and all our litera- ture should get into the hands of the greatest possible number of workers. against Jim-Crowism, starvation and| It is best to give the Daily Worker Synehi terror, | and other literature directly to a Having learned for the first time| Worker. If that is not possible, it | of a movement which fights for Ne-| Should be left in a place where work- {gro rights, they enthusiastically | ers congregate and are sure to find | adopted the new idea that was| it—Lditor.) > | brought to them and became inter-| | ested in joining the organized move-| | ment of white and Negro workers.) | In the face of all this terror, the Ne-| Comrade Editor: | groes have proven their willingness| When I heard Comrade Hathaway to organize and struggle for the over- | "Porting about changing the Daily throw of this Jim-Crow system. | Worker to six pages and asking the = readers for suggestions as to how to | POSTERS FOR “DAILY” Cicero, Il. dreds of thousands of workers. eople, with so many workers in various shops. These workers must be reached with the “Daily.” | My suggestion is that the “Daily” | print handy posters advertising the “Daily” and leave vacant space for address where the “Daily” could be bought. : | These posters should be circulated |in every state, city and town, so the | workers will know where they can get it. | comrade Bator: “=e™ > Louisiana Bosses After indicating to us further that they are the tool of the bourgeoisie, the A. F. of L.’s convention is now a thing of the past, but not forgotten. | Perhaps by the light of the “glit- | ering diamonds,” the workers who! with their hard-earned money sup- port the A. F. of L. will be able to glean something from the “conven- tion” by reading the squib quoted below clipped from a 100 per cent capitalist newspaper, the Washing- ton Post. “Labor Leaders’ Diamonds Out- Glitter Society Opera.” “High Official Explains $10,000,000 Stones Were Just Gifts.” “More diamonds than are usually seen at the Metropolitan Opera are in evidence at the meetings of the American Federation of Labor. “Almost every labor leader is be- decked with diamonds; diamond horseshoe pins, diamond cuff links, |ments bf local authorities said that 'Moore had been arrested for ques- The ball was scheduled for Satur- day, Oct. 14, at 9:30 p.m. On Satur- them that though he was heartbrok- they could not attend the ball, that the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, at which the ball was taking place, would not permit Negroes into the grand ball-/ room, He asked them to return their in- vitations and then, to buy them off, to pay for this insult, handed them theater tickets for that same evening Fake “Confession” LABADIEVILLE, La. Oct. 20.— Labadieville authorities last week jus- tified the brutal lynching last Wed- nesday night of Freddy Moore with a belated and concocted statement that young Moore had “confessed” to year old white girl. Previous state- tioning in connection with the mur- der, and that no formal charges had been filed against him. Today, the lynch white-washing authorities de- clared that “charges were to have been filed today.” They continued to to‘Justify’ Lynching : the slaying of Louisiana Larose, 15-|) Cappellini and Maloney tried their best to sell out the Hudson and Penn they would fight for the conditions. | en about it, he hat; This was a maneuver to prove to Bee dae ae eset trot] the, NWA.) Board tliat “they; Mac loney and Cappelini, were capable of keeping the miners from fight- ing the bosses and in this way bid for recognition under the N.R.A. At the same time this maneuver split the miners’ forces into two groups, one group fighting for rec- ognition for the U. M. W. of A. and the other group fighting for the capable of misleading the miners. Cappelini Misled Strike Maloney and Cappelini first called the Penn Anthracite Co. miners out on strike for recognition of the new union and reinstatement of 25 iners who were discharged for ining the new union. Conditions were completely forgotten; no de- mands were raised for the unem- ployed or employed miners. The miners in the Hudson Coal Co. collieries at Jermyn and Gravity Slope came ont on strike demand- ing: 1) The colliery rate sheet rates to be paid for all mining, mechan- ical mining the same as hand min- ing. 2) Not to load over two-cars per man per shift. 3) Home town miners to get the preference of jobs, At this time Schuster, the sec- retary of the new union, issued a police, Chief Kelly and three pa- trolmen, Siddons, Popparelli and : >| eubrwray diel ther s where| The workers today more than ever a, 7. anthracite strikes. i I remember | ject to be called to work any of the , they] subway trains and other places where | 3 day morning, Mr. Healy, one of the| @nthracite : . Stol ack, drove up alongside them four children got killed | a thee doer thaetoas aaa | ¢ ston of | workers congregate. A good many of | 2re Teady to buy, read and support) managers, called together the group| Cappelini_and Maloney told the|in a car, grabbed Dougher and | he NERA cote’ Is: othe " ming that| my acquaintances and friends buy'| the “Daily,” so let's rally ourselves. | o¢ Nearo workers and with an oily|miners to fight for recognition of|shoyed him into the car and clubbed | code | Washington will take an interest in| the “Daily” and all the pamphlets,| Here is Cicero, a town of 60,000| voice dripping false sentiments, told|their new union first, then later|and beat him savagely, over the back, in the ribs and in the stom- ach; then threw him in jail and had a justice of the peace, P. J. Cummings, come to the jail and give him a hearing. Dougher de- manded the right to call his at- torney on the phone. This Chief Kelly refused. Dougher then waived a hearing and was taken to the state police barracks and the state police tried to accuse him of hav- ing something to do with dynamit- ; ing the scabs to split time with the | Beaten Twice ..| copy of the “Daily.” That single copy | so that they would not feel “out of the | i do | i Oi Gifinn Ainployess AE Eve Been “aan chers waited until the Ne-| 8S led me to become a subscriber to| TMD. | things” eee ce eae OE te anton | ES 8 HOU ie asa neat out three years | groes regained consciousness, then|Y0Ur Paper and made me a regular|, » 1 pugs BUY DIAMONDS | —— Hal". Oceans ae a. Peat oy % fae the Rank and File opposition In the absence of an agreement of| they repeated the beatings, all the| Visitor to the Workers’ Book Shop. |“ ** . | Sasson eee elo eiral edd fol pear ti opiea trap mia age en ES | y repeated the beatings, a he | oard they were the ones most|against individual terror, because we know from an organizational point of view it would gain us nothing but give the police the ex- cuse they want to terrorize us workers. Dougher is now under $1,000 bail, charged with inciting to riot, dis- orderly conduct, resisting arrest and disturbing the peace. Cappelini Sells Out Cappelini and Maloney a month ago promised the miners of the Penn Anthracite and the Hudson Coal Co, they would call a gen- eral strike, but they keep calling it off from week to week until now it may be too late as some of the miners are going back to work dis- couraged. The task of the Rank and File opposition now is to establish an action committee in every town, with committees in every local union and with a delegated top apparatus for the county. 1) Send committees from every ~, eimai 7 rofess mystification on how the u s: ery , A ‘ |make the “Daily” best understand- | iamond fobs, diamonds, diamonds! fenchiepang got into the jail to seize|Statement in the press telling the|town and every local to Cappelini, f 7 Ks |Baltimore Workers 4 | able to. the worker readers, he re- ‘A conservative estimate places the | +1. young plantation worker. Hudson Coal Co, miners and all| Maloney and Schuster to demand some people, and is very good with- out it. | And speaking about that banquet “oa (he He = Ly b ported ‘that 1,000 letters with sug- j gestions were received. Comrade Hathaway's report thrilled | me and my conclusion was that we are stronger today than at any time Big Protest; Demand Death to the Lynchers —_—— | | ent convention near $10,000,000.” valye of diamonds worn at the pres- I can also state that thos: I saw. both men and women, were dressed in the height of fashion. One would never guess that they even pretended frame-up of Jatzowitz has enraged! this militant union calling on ail the prosecution and the local bosses,| Workers to put the Drive over the Evidence is accumulating of police|top. The Trade Union Unity Koffersehmid 4 g 1 P. Spector 1 T. Glockier 5. Party-Novack 4. 2, 6 1 ep. ® NEW YORK.—Herman MeKawain, chairman of the James Matthews Branch of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, last week called on the miners except the Penn Anthracite miners to stay at work. This was a maneuver to neutralize the strike for conditions and keep it a fight for the recognition of the new they build a mass picket line with all the miners from all of the col- lieries concentrating on one col- liery until it is closed and then moving to the next colliery, etc. employment once they leave, of their own accord or otherwise. This powerful organization has ac- Pamphlets (No. 34). After reading this excellent booklet, prepared un- der the direction of the Labor Re- soaked in oil of cloves until the sucker has paid a goodly sum, by which time the tooth is ready for the forceps and the “boss” or “professor,” as he is SS BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. 20.—Over| in the pa union. 2) To immediately call a general 4 Bee SS ine ure HORN 1,000 Negro and white workers gath-| 1 am a continuous reader of the| to represent the workers. Negro. People ang: we and Nesro| When the Hudson Coal Go,/strike of all companies. . Bers oe Sige: at s eis [ered in the Plaza Wednesday in a|«Daily” since its beginning. Also was —JACK O'BRIEN. ee Ve ‘protes' i: a eae raha miners came out on strike Joe| 3) To raise the demands, the col- banguct to 3 Nygard was a real red-hot : cr enthusiasm | protest demonstration against the) a reader of all the peers during the agra serageea ae, & vee rah Haag eae P. anq|Dowgher, the leader of the rank|liery rate sheet rates to be paid Thave not scen t ince the send-off of the marchers to Washington in | lynching of George Armwood, and the |S. P. time up to 1917. But there was | THIS IS THE SPIRIT! | gnth Garolina casried out by smail|22¢ fle opposition of District No.|for all mining, mechanical mining Fegard to the Scottsboro case, The skit presented by the Workers’ Labora- | attempt of Gov. Ritchie and other|never a papcr like the Daily Worker,| “May this dollar, gotten with many fo 8 an PP QS BY, -|1, mobilized the miners of Arch-|the same as hand mining. ° - 's whistle, all right. (Don’t ask me about the food | State officials to rush Euel ‘Lee to/that represents so ably the entire | drops of a worker's sweat, pay for | (yn Bly ree pay gis ~|bald into a mass meeting of three| 4) Not over two cars per shift I ale an olive and a piece of prune cake.) Well, this | the gallows. The demonstration was| Working class. And there surely never | one drop of Revoluti Tae, [ee Ue ee ea local unions, Local 1682, Local 1707| per man. See neneeiianhtiie Ect adhe eakr ieee 2 ©*S | arranged before the lynching of| Was a paper that received 1,000 sug-|OR® rop onary Ink,” /lynchers free access to the jails to} 454 Local $25, and raised the de-| 5) Home town miners to get the Pee secee ten Ge Pepcetoea i Y Mak § Armwood, to support the delegation} gestions. And you know Socialists| Writes J. Brant. Thanks, Comrade./take out their victims. mands of: preference of jobs. oS ade aor dapat ecen Uan ou ake MM! which left this ‘morning for Anna-| did not care for workers’ suggestions.| We hope there are 40,000 like you,| McKawain declared Sans te clycee 1) The colliery rate sheet rates} 6) The opening of all collieries Sie Of. whic goes, “—of Solomon, Yourself? polis to demand executive clemency} e ent protest camp: aares Bye to be paid for all mining, mechan-|with a guarantee of 40 weeks’ LaGuardia, O'Brien and McKee!” — he ; for Lee. The demonstrators de-| ~~ |Leasue of Struggle for Negro Rishts, | ica] mining the same as hand min-| work per year by cutting down the eGuardia, sees ica Bh We el cree Al on Me manded death to the lynchers of W k ° Mid pete ies Pie caren agen ing. hours, with the same pay. ¢ 7/18, 20, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size | eee the omeie wie | orKers in 1 and Far Vi est inst. Negroes, the police man- Bau Byes yy emma Des Sante AND SAD NEWS! 16 takes 344 yards 39 inch fabric and | “NC “YRCHETS. , |hunts in the city’s parks, and the ps Comrades, the drive is lagging. Russian Stuffed Cabbage | 44 yard contrasting. Illustrated step-| _ Wednesday's brutal lynching on the} 66 M4 99 \\wnch-murder of James Matthews on 2) Paine Haw aineres tb Bat ite Not ‘A coming in. Bills gues, fae seca ie | Kastern Shore was dramatized by the a (0) erense oO al " “oul ized tal Dee oe ae flys espa Tag hh ad 5 sized head of cabbage by-step sewing instructions. BDpearaiics’of & Tres ane orion | y Welfare Island, wou'd be utilized to)" 4) The opening of all collieries|No money to pay them with. The ne pound of chopped Seetan Sith a NGeete a ae | arouse the people of Bare, peal’ with a guarantee of 40 weeks’ work} capitalists demand payment. Mor- | @ noose around his neck and an| NEW YORK.—From the Pacific) J New York; N. i Se ter | tes |e. gea by cutting down the thous ;apa, wonty give: sha Daly ee Two or three cups of boiled rice | Smitabion allows -udidetmenine nin” to the Atlantis cous e Pacific} Joneen, New York; N. Stroia, P.| out the South, with same pay. dough. Dry-bones Mellon | won't. Lal ‘Ten chOtaae! eigtincates of white parbers aa aes panivationt sittieie, One x cae Seu * _ The miners were very enthusias-| It’s up to you, ‘workers! The “Daily” eee bath the misat tnd cook cu had been collected for presentation | Daily Worker by supporting the) N.H. Castana, Dearborn, Mich. to) Hunger Strike for |the Gravity Slope. Next morning! dollars! Rush your donation today meat is dor Mix with the boiled| | to Gov. Ritchie in behalf of Euel Lec. | $40,000 Drive, upon whose success] a Socialist competition in collecting | M Fat: about 3,000 pickets turned out and) to Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New Tice, salt, and pepper. Drop the cab- ip ke, Eject N ao Hee ns Daily” depends. ee ee aut “o the Daily | Better and ore Mats | at 3:30 in the morning paraded ' York City, ? bage into boiling salted water for TrovoKe lec egro Los Angeles has pledged to raise) Worker $40,! Las ——-— —- aici tive witarites, or long Coot on Work Datel gr $1,000 in cash by November ‘th, eyes begat ait cat ap ky pra barbed i loosen the outside leaves slightly. orkers in May Day ana in conducting an intensive! Contributions received Thursday,| f€ on the war vee! eS uaneula Take out, cool, start folding back the Case in Monticello | campaign for subscriptions for the} Oct. 19, 1933: and ek as sii geass re witha breaking them, as you | Pradienibie ' eed ponner Bare sol reveled mee ++ 8 | 895.65 Fares hod strike at the institu- wuld opening a rose. When about u rca nse, \ of Li . a set of Lenin’s books} Previously recorded ........ 11,273.85 six or elght layers are folded back, Cee N. ¥., Oct. 20—| will be awarded to organizations tion. They hha ir bined ye ve Dr ini tac tent tie Grete lcious Provocaiion against Negro) excceding their quotas. A city-wide| Total to date ...............#11,860.50 | £000 served beomes better. We go: RMD ft. fine. Inthe cavity pees sympathizers and difficulty in select~ | concert and mass meeting for the} DIST. No. 1 DIST, No. 2 | food “in small quantity, an Lei mest and rice. Start folding ‘back ee oy marked the opening of the | “Daily” will be held on November| #. &. Hill, 4. Frederickson” 1.00 quality,” they stated. i the leaves, placing « spoonful of Tat Wack eth Gaeowincce shaceee| ea $0] Send D.w. 5:00 h Is So ‘ Meat and rice between each teat growing out of the May First dem- |, The editors of the Rodo Shim-| 5.2" Roun a9] Glgz Pe deem Woolworth Is Source e leaves are back and the | ~| bun, of San Francisco, contributed . ‘ i! Gatbage is, whole aguin, tie it up| Seka oe the ee When Negro| $! for the “Daily.” South Slavic] ee Dut “soo Raia: ay ae Many Sweatshops s ; put into a baking worker ni | Workers Club, “Zcra,” Richmond, 3 Reichardt 50} Cc nt) a ert otha the whole | of court, although the court took no | in Oakland, Calif., sent $3.50. M. Zilman dh B. Wolfe '50' Co. has at last been decorated with the ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS } Rep iakceer ee as the Yelieese “either sprinkio a little on Reten agelnsh a eee | eft 85, donation was sent by the! Server. ‘sol A 16| blazing order of the Blue Buzzard. Occupational Diseases toait in the chair more than 10 mice DM ce HAS ‘clioeae aioe ont | |. Two five-hour sessions netted aly, wane! Lumber Workers Union,| Lettonian wng. | G. Bader ‘30| This company has earned this em-| p, M, R.—As a beginning you ought utes, the operation consisting in the Gye 16, but t makes it too ret 7 | | four jurors, The difficulty in ob-| Of Seattle, Wash., with a letter en-| Men's Assoc. 10.00) G. Bada uco|blem for refusing to allow former] to read “Dangerous Jobs,” by Grace famous treatment of changing cotton . rich tor taining jurors willing to aid in the | losing an emergency resolution by, Col. by W.Vincent, | Einhelt 50) employes under contract to obtain| Burnham, one of the International i again, in case a dash of gossip js al- | attempts to insti League of Spok: W: Co. Union Wir. y : tt igate an outbreak,| League of Spokane, Wash., sent tually ruined countless thousands Of} search Association, you can get in acs. ent Se In addition to provocation of Ne~| $1.50. Bevel small manufacturers who tried. to| touch" yt te wecutive secretary, | SAUe%, advises the. patient to better 4 MS Seis oth ed eee groes, the tires on automobiles of | Mre. Frances Miller, Boseman, Cal by M- Cohen | |make goods for them with slave| Robert W. Dunn, Room 634, 80 E./ nis famous “viper bridges” inserted hi oo. ig oe Madden e ear-| friends and sympathizers were punc- | Montana, sent 40 cents, with a let. ie sace 38 | workers, 80 that Woolworth’s could/ 11h st,, who will be glad to give you| “some day 1 shots tan so fi yor 5 ation—, tured while parked near the court | ter telling about the poverty of the| 50, I. Cohen “Go| Undersell every other independent further information in regard to the hy ‘a leone at, 799 Broadway, New York City. “4 ~ el'eately brown: or they may be fight.” pienie held at a, 35 lunch at noon time. e "fled in melted. butter, turning. tre- By a Worker Correspondent (| Fa, where terror reigns against! - ie We publish the following letter for| COUSTS of the workers and left behind | | guently so that all sides may be CLEVELAND, O—An unemployed | ‘he workers, netted $10.50 for the Sines 1S) The meeting of Red Wook long-| te benefit of our readers: tfete 18 hoping you wll not forget ed | cpa 99 Spots Shbeitiang [ in Sd atone " in regard to the order of meals in| Send FIFTEEN CENTS ‘(15c) in| around the streets every day looking |Atkansas came an anonymous cone J. Bares 41|Daily Worker was called by the| phone CO ttopaths and ‘other “Fraternaily yours, our menus, that most workers in fac-| coins or stamps (coins preferred) for| for work, was hired by the Malleable | ttibution of $1, This contributor ee a¢/Rank ani File Action Committee | conics of the medical profession who “Dr. Wm. Mendelson.” tories or in large cities are not home| this Anne Adams pattern. Write|Casting Co. After he was examined | Writes that he was at one time a ©. see. the Unit 12 10:16 of the International Longshore- prey upon the workers, leads me to| , We Should be glad to publish any ire tcostter onic the ieote a oor Ber SURE 10 STATE Bae 1 Pa doctor, the doctor toldhimthat| member of that “joke Socialist : See, 11, Unit 12 6.00] TESS Sracolaen and ee sted write a few words on the quacks,| da'2, ie eee rane med er in the mot ig an T. 4 le company could not use - | Party.” Sec. 15, Unit 37 10.00) Tir a “ ” who | US on dental racketeering. evening, the dinner must be eaten in} Address orders to Daily Worker|cause his heart 1s too big "Tue men | ‘Theodore Sitea, of Chicago, Tl See 1, Unit 2-8 240| Eight locals were represented. The | er i aa rene ers ato reer : , the evening. Pattern Department, 243 West 17th |is only 40 years old and has 4 family. | collecting funds for the “Daily” Sec, 3 Unit 2 ao) CC®, approved by the meeting, was much per. Helping Dr. Lutti "+ Also, those workers who ate con-| Street, New York City. The doctor told him that the best | calls on all Roumanian workers in ise, nis 8 an.00 | Pepsented: by. Sher setion Groby (BAG |" ce. well knoied geutlamell of {tls Pine eee ‘fined to desks or machines find that (Patterns by mail only.) thing for him to do is to go to the|the United Siates to hel Seo. 1. Unit 20 .eg/ not the W.M.LU. It was endovsed | ore es a ee to W “the monotony makes one very drowsy Good Will Industry and learn to| “Daily,” and isenes ye the] % ¥, ¥ See. 2, Unit 2-B 415) by the national convention of the | specics is using the radio to advertice after a heavy mest-meal. These| which is not rare any more, Those | make baskets. especially to his fellow Roumanten| A.B: Ree Siete te nie) Se leteee be ie G86 sted, We macthoeron tian tones in| Al Nile ¢ Workers carry a lunch or have a|who wish will rearrange the meal! You can see, comrades, that this is| comrades, C. Cojorean, J. Domeae erie cea ag tae Tee ef weer et thete ane the conduct of his practice, that is, Previou petal | light lurch in a restaurant—or for| order, eating the dinner at noon, and |capitalist justice and Roosevelt’s|riu, Detroit: he =; , | Pledging full support of their ac- # ‘ ey ick nan, Have nonsiat aiclate lash for sapper Nie Deel? », Detroit; N. Hofman, Cleve-| ‘rotat oct. 19 ‘Total Oct. 19 133.61/tion in repudiating the I.L.A. of-| mass production. He employs about — economic reasons, . land; J, M. Burja, Milwaukee; D.| ‘tote! to date 657.81] Total to dete 5776.62 | ficials, 10 dentists whom he mercilessly ex- Total to date «+ esruecserets S24ME q . ae _ Croutons: Cut stale bread into 1-3 _ inch slices, remove crusts, and spread slices thinly with butter. Cut into 1-3 house, workers in that territory. Shane | Ridge Finnish Federation, Colum- ‘bus, Mont., sent $2, ' H. E. Manuel, of Royalton, Tex:, Malleable Casting Co. Group Theatre, Bromberg. 20. W.E.S.L. No. ANN OS Sch saShe Pe spor sPorso Ry tysaoOD SRP OP ASP PPOASOH SATA ORAN<MORSSM PEA merchant in every town that they were located in. Many Woolworth girls are com- °"' pelled to go to their work even with- particular field in which you might become interested. You can get a copy of the pamphlet for five cents for the benefit of the readers of the Daily Worker these “cotton pushers” and “gold brick” venders of den- tistry.