The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 13, 1933, Page 4

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al DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1933 Paze Four PARTY LIFE Better Preparation Is Urged for Speakers at Party Meets _ Training of New Speakers Must Not Be Over- looked, Party District Committee Insists ‘The following letter from a New York comrade raises a very im- portant question for our entire Party, which has the task of increasing not only the amount of agitation, but its quality It seems to me that there is a dire necessity for the Party to be more strict in whom it allows to speak for the Party. It is my belief that some- times a poor speech may hurt all thee _ good results you may have gained in the industrial field or neighborhood me" type. The only way to show him eilectively is to te armed with facts. —"T. S. M., New York.” ‘This letter was referred to the New comrades are can or not, because it happe to be the wish of the section to ha open air meetings. The section ai vises the units to have these meetings | once a the us as follows “We agree in the main with the criticism of this correspondent in re~ spect to the quality of some of the in. nt not being con- ades can phrases. assignments is on of workers continue of The District Committee j taking the matter up with the section | committees and section directors of | agitation and propaganda “Tt is impossible, in a city like New reason we and jin | meeting. Besid jagitators are rty members ar |not only throt nes concerning topics | marily through practice. most importance to} “The District Committee has tine The District Agit-|and again made plans for public a thorough investi- | speaking classes in the sections and Ww agitprop work is being}has been sending out a weekly re- by the comrades in | search bulletin to all sections, con- and from that sutdy sug-| taining facts and data as guides to the speakers. ‘The problem raised is one that gest. me ec training of the comrades in the units. ° tation and p ganda wi mrades veloped politically There mi membership has occupied the atten- tion of the district for some time. It must be admitted, however, that we have not achieved any great suc- is a “show efforts must be redoubled.” | Join the Communist Party | {5 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Picase send me more information on the Communist Party. NAME eR) 2, York District Committee, who write | cess in this respect, and therefore our | {runs on, with lon Western Union N.R.A. Code Doubles More Bitter Winter Ahead Says Street Car Worker /Older Men, Long Ago Promised Pension, Suffer Hardest (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill—The coming win- ter months promise little good for the employees of the Chicago Surface |Lines. The sweaty, slippery rails, |combined with fast’ schedules and s made by Party speakers in| short layover time, promise nothing | | but back-breaking toil for the crews. |is well aware of the situation and is|'The schedules are so cut to the bone | that you can hardly make time, even jin fair weather, and as soon as the | weather gets dirty they go to smash, | with the result of grumbling passen- York, to assign the leading comrades | gers, who are forced to wait for cars | the Party to cover every street/in the rain and wind for a long| new speakers and|time. Especially hard will it be for| ined and developed | the old men who slaved away for 40} gh classes, but pri-|or 50 years to fill the coffers of the | Chicago, California Make ' Big Gains in Fund Drive various traction magnates or pirates. These old men were promised a | Pension by the companies, union fak- jers and the City Council as long as three years ago. They are carrying on, being short-winded, with aches in | their bones, trying to keep up with {the younger men, and the elusive ;pension is further away than ever. requires the initiative of the sections, |It is about time to put pressure on|tum each half week. and the devotion of attention to the | this unholy trinity of union, company and politicians, to get what they have Every point proposed by this cor- | promised with such assurance. Every- | California. rose from the lowly sixth respondent with regard to the raising | one would benefit by the retiring of | position it occupied in the previous of the political understanding of the | the old men on pensions; the younger | half week to third position, displacing |men would benefit by getting better |runs,, the extra men would get on | the regular list and a number of un- | employed would be hired | ‘There is a shortage of runs on the Chicago Surface Lines. | mizing administration was always th Jam have to encounter real traffic on the lines before they would | put some of them on. Why not put | Pressure on the company to put more running time | and increased lay-over time? Men are worked to death on some lines. And why keep the jerky, unsafe on: {man cars? Some of them are carr, ing more passengers than the tw men cars. Only a few months ago the City Council passed an ordinance | forbidding the collec’ of fares or issuing of transfers while the cars are in motion. The ordinance was passed, ‘is it being obeyed? The company expects the one-man car operators to disregard this ordinance and the City | Council does not bat an eye | ‘The men cannot put pressure on through the unio (Division 241, Amalgamated Associ: n of Street | and Electric Railw: of America) be- cause, beginning with the Inter Compelled to Solicit Trade for Three Weeks jership in'the Daily Worker $40,000| | Rushing $254.31 in the last half | |52.39 per cent to 77.8 per cent. the The econo- | corded in the last half week. ready to take some of them off, but) | However, with a number of the dis- For Four Hours a Day (By a Western Union Correspondent) NEW YORK.—{o show how Western Union Telegraph Co. messengers are being exploited, I will explain the method used in paying these em- Pioyes. The territory around the office is divided into four routes, northeast, | southeast, northwest and southwest. These routes are in turn divided into| | zones, A,B, C, D and so forth, de-*—— | pending ‘on.the size of the territory. ; double-up | Eash office has a different rating! additional 40 per cent cut. system amounts to an I have | for each zone. A busy office would| written to the Washington Informa- have office. | a tower rating than a slower| tion Bureau, 1322 New York Ave. | The rating is so fixed that | Washington, D. C., for a copy of the | messengers ‘don’t earn more than $8|N. R. A. code the Western Union @ week | Telegraph Co. signed, and I have not When the Westem Union Tele-| heard from them. graph Coz signed the N. R. A. code ‘Three weeks before holidays, mes~ | (a mysterious code that Western|sengers are compelled to go out | Union employes have not seen) a/ soliciting for four hours every day. | doubling-system was introduced. The | During these three weeks messen- | territory was divided into two routes,| gers earn on the average about $6 a | east and west. A messenger has to| week. | walk twice as far for one zone. Un-| Messengers are required to change | der the four-route system he would} their uniforms once every week on | get two zones. | their own time, losing about two | The rating on zones was cut twice | hours, before the N. R. A. code was signed.| I wish you would do something to These two cuts still remain. The| organize these exploited messengers. NEW YORK.—The race for lead-; $14.89 on a pledge of $20; section 3, $5.85 on @ balance of its $40 pledge; Section 4, $49.81 on a pledge of $50; | section 5, $9.86; section 7, $28.67 on a pledge of $50; section 8 raised nothing; section 10, $18.80 on a pledge of $20; section 11, $5 on pledge of $20; section 12, $14.10 on a pledge of $20. Sections 3 and 9 show what can be done by battling to save our Daily Worker, and the other sections should follow their examples. Districts Improving Slowly While many of the. Districts showed an improvement, in the last half week, the Drive is still altogether too slow and quick action must be taken. We have raised only 54.48 per cent of the total $40,000 quota, not a good showing on the whole. Only 7 Districts have passed the 50 per cent mark Drive takes on an increased momen- | week to help save our fighting paper, | Philadelphia by the thin margin of 0.11 per cent. In one half week Cali- fornia increased its percentage from largest increase in percentage re- Seattle continued its hold on second position, while Boston by increasing its percentage to 95.1 per cent, took hold on the lead.} jan even firmer jtricts doing” splendid work of late, ieee is no telling as to which may | nose out District 1 before long. with 6 Districts in the previous half | Chicago Does Well week. Detroit slowed down in the Outside 6f New York, Chicago Dis- | ast half week. More affairs must be | trict sent the largest amount, $301.24 | held for the Daily Worker, more col- in the last half week, compared with| lection lists spread if we are to save |$100.79 in. the previous half week,|OUur “Daily” so it can carry on the but is still below the 50 per cent mark. | battle against the intensified hunger New York, also below the 50 per cent| Program announced by Roosevelt, mark, sent in $651.86, compared with | 2gainst the wave of lynch terror and $550.16 in the previous half week. | against the military and thug terror | Since publication in the Daily | used against our striking brother- | Worker on Nov. 2nd, of the pledzes| Workers. |made by the Chicago sections in the| Below is the chart showing how | Drive, records show that Section 9,/each District stands in the Drive. raised $76.05 in one week, that is | Study it. GET INTO ACTION! The $26.94 over.its pledge of $50. Fine|fight is to save our most powerful work, Section 9! Section 2 raised) weapon in our struggle against our | $22.20 orf acpledge of $20. Section 1,| oppressor. DO YOUR SHARE! _ Messengers’ Work, With No Rate Rise >. Railway Worker Warns Workers of Hred Spies Tells How | Organized Men Forced Spy to Get Out By a Worker Correspondent I sure was happy to read an article heavily loaded trucks of express from 7a.m. to 7 p. m., all day every other the following morning, for a measly $45 per month. the American Railway Express Co. at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., where I was ap- pointed Night Depot Agent in charge of a group of men and express mes- sengers. They gave me a title, Night Depot Agent, and I was responsible for thousands of dollars worth of gerchandise, money and valuables, working from 6 p.m. to 7 am. at a Later they raised me a little. Learned How Workers Are Framed Here is where I learned how work~ ers are framed up and discharged when they are not needed any more, and how they are gypped out of over- time and seniority rights. One night I needed extra help. I hired a man over 45 and I got hell. Another time I hired a Negro and I got hell. I joined the union, but the boss was always successful in getting a rat to report back. One night about 11 p.m. the boss called me up on the job and asked me: Do you belong to the union. I said yes. He said: Why, I am sur- prised, the position you hold, and belonging to a union. I said: I am a worker and always with the work- ers. The title of foreman or agent will not change me. The work here is being properly done, the men are with me 100 per cent, and I am go- ing to see that the men are paid for all overtime and get seniority rights. I was not fired. At one time a rat was put in to spy on us, but the men, being or- ganized 100 per cent, it did not take long to discover his aim. The boys | made it.so hot for him that he lasted lone shift and quit. | I say there is no filthier, nor viler creature than the man who will pro- few pieces of silver. Let us, there- fore, be on guard against these slimy creatures and their small, thin, dirty work by organiz'ng our movement one hund-ed fold by joining a Rail- | road Industrial Union. in the “Daily” by a “Railway Express Worker.” I for one started to work for the old Northern Pacific Express Co. at St. Paul in the fall of 1903, where we slaved like mules pulling Sunday, and a week bfor Christmas it was from 7 a. m. to one and two After the war I went to work for straight salary of $145 per month.) ceed to sell his fellow men for a) went back to 581. above the average weekly number of: of the campaign. But it is not as gcod as sustained effo is can achieve. ‘The Hungarians maintained their standard with 155 new members; the Jewish section slipped back to 187 after four weeks of well over 200. Our Ukrainian comrades, after maintaining a standard of around 50 new members per week, in the sixth week slipped back to 29. The Youth Section alone can regis- ter an improvement in the sixth week. From an average of 11 new members per week the first five weeks, they jumped to 55 new members in the sixth week. All other sections slipped back. The next two weeks are crucial weeks. They must show whether the r-W.0. is really engaged in an organ- ized drive for new members, or whe- ther it permits its recruiting cam- paign to run by itself. Forward to one thousand new mem- bers per week for the duration of the drive. A Proletarian Fraternal Organizution One of our handicaps in the drive of the International Workers Order for 40,000 members by January Ist, is sectarianism. Our comrades delil erately belittle the value of the Order as a mutual benefit society. One of our leading comrades in Chicago in- forms us that: “Our branches are not interested especially in building the organization as a fraternal o:de:, but build it as a class organization.” This sounds very radical, but is it? Letters from Our Readers WRITE FOR THE DAILY WORKER. Little Rock, Ark, Comrade Editor: We readers mst report our activ~ ity. Write up our successful strug- gles that others may draw conclu- sions from these experiences. We are not a group of pollyana’s. We like to know of the little victories, yes. But as well to learn from our errors. ers’ Correspondence part of our day to day work, along with bringing the Daily Worker to new readers, as part of the “new turn,” and as a step toward a mass revolutionary workers’ paper and a Party. LAUDS EXPOSURE OF GRAFT BY DAILY WORKER. Williamson, W. Va. Comrade Editor: Five hundred and eighty-one is a good result, It new members needed for the success | Comrades, let us make the Work- | SlowProgress in New Member Marks 6th Week of [WO Dri Youth Section Alone Records Gain As 55 N Young Workers Join Organization By MAX BEDACHT ] ‘The sixth week of the membership drive of the International Work’ Order broke the continuity of the upward development of the drive. T first week brought 387 new members; the second week brought 469; t) third week 535; the fourthe week 646; the fifth week 774. The sixth wi A “class organization” means exactly nothing. The question what service does the organizat! render to the working class? T yardstick by which the fighting |ingclass character of the organizat | is measured Is the value of that. vice to the workingclass. Thus, instance, the value of a mili union cannot be measured by}?! degree of its avowal of revolutio’ aims. It must be. measured efficiency with which it functions: an instrument of struggle for t solution of immediate problems of t workers, such as wages, hours, tret ment, general working conditions, é The more efficient a union. is in t | defense of such immediate intere |of the workers, the, more revolutic ary will be the effect of its fur i On the other hand, the mc Tiy the leadership of the uni sees the fundamental revolutiont purpose of all workers’ struggles, t more efficient will it be in organi¢i | the immediate struggles. The International Workers Ore has as its immediate purpose of € | istence the organization of muti benefits. If we take that purpc away from it, the Order has no be for its being. Surely the I.W.O. | not a substitute for the political par of the working class, the Commun) Party; it surely is not a substitr for the revolutionary unions; it ts r a substitute for the LL.D. or for a other proletarian organizatic Neither is it a mere auxiliary to of these organizations. The International Workers Or¢ is a proletarian mutual benefit ciety. Its value for the working cla class, its class character must judged: 1) By the value of the Order f the workers as s benefit society, .: ability to organize for the workers maximum of protection at a minimu of cost, and 2) By its efforts to help the wor | ers solve those problems which ma. them seek the protection of membe ship in mutual benefit societies. ‘The value of the Order as a bene society stands first because this is #! reson for its existence. The effe, tiveness of the Order in helping? ~ workers to solve those problems ¥ } make them join mutual benefit sc ties, is the yardstick of the cs. character of the Order. The International Workers Order a working organization not becau it does not care about its immedia benefit features and cares only abo revolution, but precisely because b sides organizing benefits for ti workers it also tries to help the worl ers solye those problems which pi them in need of benefits. That why our Order leads in the strugg be CONDUCTED B inal f, n. Mah 3. - ‘ial insurance. That is wh 2 2 nal President, Wm. Mahon ( —— — se eres as JOHN KRYZAK. Your item about the R.F.C. graft- | for soci ee SUSE is a real scab manufacturer in De-} District Past Half Wk. Total to date Quota OSE ers in Williamson appearing in the | our Order leads in the struggle 1 At ul de, Helen S., sends us a copy cf @ significant and troit and as such called police and} 1. Boston $92.00 $1,141.40 1,200 1 (Editor's Note: The present task | Daily of Oct. 31 is received and has| social insurance. That is why o1 ‘ bets oh | pay its _membersh illuminating form-letter which was evidently sent from a Paris fashion | gorillas and a judge to heip him break] 2. New.:York » 651.86 9,570.88 20,000 473 | of the railroad worker is to form | been put into circulation here. Order propagandizes { syndicate of ome sort, to the editors of newspapers and magazines here. | the heads of the pickets and also} 3. Philadelphia . 104.82 1,563.78 2,000 zigs | Qeposition groups inside the old | ‘The local R-F.C. officials are wild. | to fight for safe and sanitary workir ge i | sl fi 7) and} i I Brotherhoods.) F. conditions. That is why our Orde Up to the final paragraph, it reads as follows: break the strike at his factory) ar 4. Buffalo The Daily item is true and the R.F.C. ss scala abner 5 ase ri ending with the “brave” members of 5° pittsburgi : a bese Hed i knows it. The workers are pleased | Shows its members that the \ * Sotel Rit ; i — | individual Chicago depots (who are| @ — en 23.40 454.78 4548 | Has your unit, club, union, I.W.O. | with the exposure of graft. insecurity which drives them to a\co- Hotel Fits, (Can You Make ‘Em |never on the shortege lists if they} § Cleveland 89.35 836.10 418 | Branch, your organization held a | —y. c. | the protection of mutual benefit Ngenendy Yourself? are conductors—the Company allows) 7 Detroit 119.80 1,850.53 Bis. | -pellecHion fer the’ Dally’ Worker? ENJOYS SELLING DAILY | Cletles rests upon the capitalist ¢ them to steal ¢ number of Chicago seveceess SOLMA 1,910.71 38.2 leip save our “Daily.” WORKER. em of exploitation. } Soe TORS fares, or gene! “on the| 9. Minneapolis 10.00 239.4 : Our Order is a working class fre a Z Pattern 1648 is available in sines| yng” and’ are in most cases piain| 10. Omalia, Nen ne sed padjua Prom oromcwarerr et —— Plentywood, Montana. | ternal organization not because it bt Fashions are mixed with | 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 36 | stool-pigeons for the company) all the| 31, N. dHd”’S, Dak ee ‘hired 22.8 | Total Nov. 9 2.00) Jugo-Slay Buro Comrade Editor: littles the importance and the val. politics ng t ean front,| takes 3% yards 39 inch fabric and | om, P quis nian eral buacks akota .. i 83.62 23.8 | Total to date 126.63) Sogetio 10.25] JI like the job of selling the Daily | of mutual help, but because it ay these de creation in| % yard contrasting. eee ae Crd DIL Gue Actes, he | oa Soetee 15.78 422.21 B44 fp AT Ne S| Glumec nei? | Worker, and wish I could give alll proaches the problem of mutual he! German, ks ago, of a way they engineered the recent wage-| 1% California T7819 77.8 | Cannon. 2.00} No. 2 1.00 | my time to that; it’s a great paper | from the standpoint of the workir Nazi fashio h the purpose | cuts, changes of basic time and other| 14 New Jersey . 387.12 59.5 ete eae ey oie 5.00 | £0 Us workers, not so good for the|class. There is therefore no reaso of ontablia t an indepen- | Swindles for the Company made even| 15. Connecticut 163.77 327 | TR | pox Wwirs. Oss 489 | Parasites. I want to especially fre to be ashamed of function. Cn lent Germe hion, at least one * -ov/beatel hicago car-| 16. N 1S. Car "3. | Total Nov. 9 20.15! 8. Thompson, — tulate Michael Gold first, then | benefit society. On the contrary, that is distiretly Aryan, women all ee oes gail tare wi Si BRGRGEENR ATA 1889 ay |e eccale 0 | se ae Dr, Luttinger on their work. ‘I also | benefit features of the Order are tt over Europe up the dis- is “Atiweukes ea ands | sie’ sso | pers ‘oy, See; 7295 | read atout sports for the first time | actual reason for its existence. ‘The cuss: 2 nz 2, 4.00 oe ‘ “4. | t in my life, get a great kick out of | are the immediate purpose of its or to follc f ee i 30.3 1.00 50 | Newhouse’s way of writing it up. Here | ganization; they are the fundament( ieee Wer our scr wean on sneer 43 43 | is 50 eonts for the D. W, from my/ base of its effort to organise mass ene Aanee, : al Pp mittees ng : 716: 214 || 25 | sister. of workers wit of the mili "7 ‘i shtabula Un. | ‘Un. 9118.00 | —— tae repetitio Be ate amilitery| | shall take up the question of sched-) TOTAL Seeawcaanens $1,751.84 $21,395.75 54.48 | “Backman Bea eitsh “tens. launched: in: eaily'| | ules and pees pete oe depot | Jewish Workers’ Clubs ..$110.45 $973.82 48.69 cg < athe y, = scale; and also the question of a new | s eee 5 ; i March, at the time the Nazis eee , < | 5 Pulkinen -25 Total No. 9 116.14 'agreement with higher pay and pen-} LOS ANGELES TOPS QUOTA y Un. 31 Women’s Cl. 2.05 | Total to date 1910.71 jsions on a city-wide scale. 1 ow ; li. | Gn. 34 Bymp. 23| DIST, No. 9 - from the » seab | $1,090 to be ‘4 evenly between | £¢° Total to date 800 ill truly S ee aie, | Shp. DIST. Xo. y 3.00 1 aDOnE and the Daily é, \q * y will be responsib: * bs r { Finnish Fed., Total to dete 23/.°) eR i eeeal wes The) old row of gell-uut | oe me eave teacned a Cumae Che io | Eee 240) Wronely ‘Credited. to oe ne eaee, & great dea! Ii jartists, Quinlan, Taler and Kehoe, |i0 "Tite Snes Conert Sunday night | cq}, ‘by Beroda col: by Prank, PWO.| Home: Ass'n 6.08 | Women's Bec, the peaked ones worn by young) and also the Board members, must |'" Trinity “Auditorium with 1,200} 10 names 2.45 | 10 names Auto Wkrs. U., Wakefield” 2.00 | Nazis, are seen e atly at Ri-| | absolutely be kept off these commit- | CTowding the tall. eae Col. by. Senn ae re 3.00 | Add 2.00 viera resorts as feminine compan- | ° . names 2.85 | Gree! rs, Cl. v ast e p F tees. Nobody but rank and fillers; ‘The net-funds raised for the Red| List 59660 Col. by Wi ‘Wendt = Bene ror beach péjamss | |men who are not lick-spittles, union | Press were insreased to $900 at this) 3 memes 6 0 names ust By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. jing to cure “loss of manhood” ime cope. Wits of tie min: | stool-pigeons, supervisors or callers | affair, with-the'objective of $1,000 sure | “gv Frere! Col, by Lipsntte, “| Pol. Chainber ANSWER TO QUESTIONS __ glandular pills is a swindler. El pe ee ree Bl shall be selected on tt. to bo reached by the end of this week.| 8 names ue ee Prenatal Care, Childbirth, Cost | AS to “Remosept it is a, Sep usee pene wae GICrates ese | In the next article we will print|'The original 5] 10 nami ‘ of Delivery. ge aginal tablet; i i i | quota for Los Angeles hed Labor, Hamt. her ee Beane vee revelations about the private graft of | was approzimately #300 tor the Dafly| 3} 2m ales Bertram E, Chieago:—By this otete caipiet tty eateee oe Caget Evanson, the General Superintendent | Worker but. was voluntarily raised to| Col. by Pich ates time we trust your Wife is safely . . . ‘ able to lead her non-German sisters | lof Transportation, in connection with | ¢5 Z iy . by Charneckski : Can One Catch Syphilis Again? b LD . Asada | 5 00. i" e . 4, Un. @ delivered, There is such a difier- into the new Nazi fashion of going | | th bic Col. by Soenkor ti “ Say | e sale of uniforms. Watch this) fos Angeles: will continue to ral “i ence in the prices that various hos-| MoDermott:—Yes, if is ‘ -up at all. = P ise :—Yes, If one without any make up at all. Euro- | | paper regularly! fimds for thé, “Dally.” the ‘tents hems pitals and obstetricians are charging | pletely ci of tha disenda: een women from Paris to Bagdad j —M. Nelson. | anniversary of the Dally Worker will | 0 ames that it is impossible to estimate the | statement you read must have sti! P: | (Signature Authorized). | pe celebrated at ® banquet here on yee uso, ba costs. In due time, meres quoted from an old-fashioned boo ee ot ices in patting f Epo es Cot. by Crote! and prenatal care, if you have any |use gaivarsan C606) and the Wi across such fashions is, of course,| W t U oD grin specific questions to ask, there is a|serman Fae : — ” | reaction. In‘ those "easy to imagine: every woman ap-| estern Unions | Total Thurpday .... $ 586.26 | Col. by Eisen, 0 | greater chance of receiving an early |syphilis was probably never ‘pearing publicly in such a Nazi- ' 4 ; ‘otol previously recorded ... 20,809.55| Schule 2 - ——|reply when you limit yourself to| pletely cured, and therefore, Jackel, for example, js staging i tures. nee Cot by Sega ree omens 240| Total to date agent [ORE at # time, ond infection could take pl Tittle street dem ation for Fas ii | enh é date ..........$21,395.75 eS navere 13 | Colby Skarmiic 2.40 DIST. No. 13 * . spirochaetes still being in the : ant H ae | Col. by Galardt, anita .10! Got by Jacoby Line oe Gol be Timon ny berg maar perpen shia abs rae cre eee ina Bo tinsn pp ner cia! Messenger Boy Tells Bilin ee soo | Tish Wers. Ct Gol. by Kornbluth | | 1 names 4.65 | Colby Ovagameniam) Smith ‘33 | William M. Evanston, Ii.—There | thanks to the arsenical and mercuz a imme: or m) i | LL.D. M re 1.00) A. He names 85 | Col. by Schneider 2 Housewives 5! Karo “as is no such disease as sciatic rheu-|ial treatments and to the Ws I have been having an argume ‘What the Reality Is Sims 8) & 9Stllen 3) cu by tenne | ie ates aaa] A workers 32] oem © |matism. What 1s usually called sci |man test by which we ean check 1 vey oes i ato Wad de ©! Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in| Hitegrove j 38 Kath reser a3 names i Bosrdian a eh ge | canara: Sourleie anne oe 9 atfer tie tea? pect Boer eimion. She didn’t want me to tear re Sane (coins preferred) for| By a Western ca lop susngent aa a ceo 10 preeed is bhi bane 3B Tent ak 8 Soeineueen faites ron rey ive igen sa becksne “ 01 2 t about is Anne lams pattern, Write} BROOKLYN, N. Y.—We see a few) 5. Wel MacLaughiin Col. by Stein Col. by Baron ‘DIST. is of "make Beecnre on the at id sail, plainly name, address and style num-|men seated side by side us young | NTWU, New Dawdail ames 3.50 ‘Astrauskas 05 | sorte bs clated with the Joints, not the infected. We. have \s palieus oe “it because I might get into, jail) ee BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. | boys awalting their turn to go out for | prrio"4 45.00) Fitzsimmons .50| Col. by Rosenberg Petraites :05| “Bayonne as |Nerves. Heat, electric massage, dict- |has had three chanores i Ape! 1 ee See itd eel ‘Address orders to Dally Worker,{a call, for a few measly pennies, Vamcaiays oil aneeeae Hort 00| Col by Klein Fh SOE ad nepal ering and sunshine are the best : i Se Aleve mast feel, to have| Pattern Department, 243 West 17th|These men are way past their prime) Fesbody | 4.00/ J. connelly Br. tno | TMS 1, 120) 8 nares 1.00] “John a5) vinnisn Fea, Tat Aaah the iigtislan you eae Helping the Daily Worker ; feel, a .50 | Col e Col. a J a : EP their sons not only in jail, but sen-| Street, New York City. Patterns by of Fete rperaie early waltord’)248| Ware. Senool 3881) (12 ma Soy 18 it Pena ebb en kee | pane ci, Se | peut eaty ep eR Gersapathe Hos" aot Through Dr. Luttinger f@erenced to burn in the chair though | ™Ally only, We wear a ridiculously cut old-| Ashburniam »-1.00| Pioneers” Tue.” All peter ate ie ieee ee 1.00) chiropractor, tard fa been fie Pathetic: about| Helping the Daily Worker |*ashioned uniform; | large Reavy | otat nov. 9 ail ‘ep? ash | Ge meeion sé|-roest-wor''s “auaa | “otieec me ae | Tel awr. ae tand and Rex of De. Littinger in is Soe allt ‘com. Fe cate’ an aid) net anower thet| Through Helen Lake | ng, "ight ating” pants elon | anne | Home 1 gk ere [aL ake a | em Ps ag Piet gu) deoquen We Caro, M. oveRemog. Pelion, Wh, Michael old, Bdwan "ane, but wrote some lines to the ; i . a pecdiecs | 1e0| een See .: Rey . No. ‘Wakefield 2.00) L.D.S., Y'th Br. 5.34 jacques V., |, ¥.—“Remog- | Newhouse, Helen Luke, Jacob B *, ji u i e] ne is = 3 le nm . 10, le a ys. di x ss : a eee the SC Eeceuntey to | petition with Michael Gold, Dr. Lut- Lene oe aa e| ote Endors 1a fee. ion. oat ty oledindn)s 2 Phan ; 135 | pase, wo. 8) | Tot We date, $68.77 eiaity in the female, We do not ead OREN EME Fi 7 i sorts ¥ s c. 5, Un. names een, 33 |B. 3 .00° Bensonht aims i i Pucrere to do something about this] ieee eo eace S000 int the: avoo0g| TAINS and freak weather and are the| ¢ Uanp, roters -33/ Gn. is Col ay Biene Moni 'vec.” | Betton, noox. “aay Banani a8 | we’ know, thst the sex hormones [Jackson it om) st H ,000 | 4 . . a 01 . x N rang f gg ene, apt Lt hae tae | Daily Worker Drive jteast paid. Com, Louis s.. .25| Un. 17 Col. by Mendalin Washington DO 1.80 | 3" Holmin, chi. 1100] See 1a" Gok g5|When taken by mouth (in the form) R. I. .... ML humen endurance: Total to date $26.22 | The Western Union Telegraph Co. | J. O'Donnell “=~1.00| Un. 11 Feldman 1.00] Baltimore Hun- Col. by Haas, ces "(of tablets, pills or fluids) are de-|R. Nelson . . ; Armwood 4 ‘ A | janie % nardly posts beautiful pictures of | Barbusse Meet..10.00| Weinberg Bell 1.00 | . garian Fed. -35| ‘Total Nov. ® 21.11 |stroyed by the gastric and intesti-| Anna Schiffbaum -There's going to be a big Anti-| Bae tcaeeisc Fi healthy looking boys on the walls,| x peo" is) en oats A each “30 | Total to date 1717.08 Inal juices, When given by hypo-|S. Fleming .. A uynch Congress at Baltimore on| some imme jately. from stores, and | with flattering captions. They do not | anon. 1.00 | Sec. 15, Un. Seligman 1100 | ‘Total Nov. ® 1100 =. Okerstrom dermic needle, some of the female|E. Burck . .. b hem to 870 B ‘om, “Nov. 17 and 18. The W. I. R. ur-/ bring them to 870 Broadway. see the thin, small, undernourished | J. Schustack 50} Un, 2 Kabbo .25 | Total to date 1553. -80| Hon. "1.00 |Sex harmones are effective but not | E. And gently needs canned goods to feed) If I can possibly find time I'll col-|and under-paid boys at all; some- | Pinu. Fed. Un. 4 Rosenberg 1.00 DIST. No. 4 35 ‘ ——jthe male. We trust that the male Previous, total nae : task he delegates. They ask me to/lect some myself. (I'm a pretty good|how they see only health where il] Sous” — §$.%| um Ge Lor $95 Dante ee, “35 | Total Nov, #4100 sex harmones will soon be isolated. Ratoana figs fOr. > \ppeel here to the women to collect | collector for my size.) !health flourishes, Brookirn —150| Un. 29 0 ester 38 ste 89-00lTn the meantime, any person claim-! ‘Total to date ....

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