The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 15, 1933, Page 4

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Paze Four DAILY WORKER; NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, VEMBER 15, 1933 City Hospitals Work : : Urges Political Discussions © 12 Hours a Night for Only $30 a Month ‘to Strengthen Unit Activity Food Workers ed F Drivers ; m N.Y. Ps bers Drivers Cut Out | Of Tulsa Victims | of Straight Pay By Ice | Company Wholesalers Terrorize small Ordeylies in N 8 Grocers to Keep Prices High : Weed PARTY LIFE Worker Describes Visit of Gangsters to Enforee N. R. A. Charges Two Letters from N. Y. Party Members Warn Against Bureaucracy and Inactivity | | (SERS ES, | S : jHat Badly Cooked Food in Unsanitary Rooms; | By a Worker Correspondent) . + rAd * . NEW YORK.—I should like to report on the wholesale racketeering Dormitor 1es Overrun with Bedbugs among the small shop keepers, On Oct, 23 the Bakers’ Association, including such companies as Darling, Peckter, etc., raised its prices on bread and rolls. On Oct, 31 the makers of sliced bread raised their prices from 10 cents to 11 cents a loaf. By a Hospital Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—Conditions in New York City hospitals arc bad for por- ters, window cleaners, kitchen help, and especially for orderlies, who put in the longest time and receive the least pay—$30 a month with board and bed. We are quoting ‘today two letters from comrades in the New York Dis- We believe that the situation } trict dealing with the inner life of units. reflected in these letters is not confined to New York District, but that it The improvement of the inner Hfe (—) a => ‘TR i —] i=) r=) = — is a general one throughout the Party, In addition to these prices. the® — ann — | Bees small e terrorized into | the N.R.A. prices were and what he (By a Worker Correspondent) | Some who have been hired since that date are getting more, but they are (By a Worker Correspondent) of the units is closely connected with the problem of fluctuation of mem- maintain 2 prices on jis to do to maintain them | *TUEGA, Okla—Down hew in Tusa |Peee ee MUSKEGON HEIGHTS, Mich —| bership, with recruiting, and with thes all thei warned that | I also want to state the means that | ¥. are having the iui poe it Brie | The food is of a poor quality and is badly cooked. The dining rooms are | 1. xtona Lake Ice Co. is located jeevelonment of revolutionary mass if they dare to sell under certain the Home Relief Bureaus are taking | i, ‘NRA. humbue ther rouble With "unsanitary and ‘some of them are ino— Ei ik. the HOG epee eq | Work. The leading committees of the | Party and the. ¥..C. L. the hardest’ Shade” prices they will to pay d to government pork dis NRA. humbug that everyone else | hacements, A sfzcial policeman with |in over-crowded dormitories. Nurses| 1" the Heighis, manufacturing 80) party, as wellas the unit leadership, | is the bureaucracy of the unit. heads. ‘a bond of $200, I know of one bakery Food relief tickets will be (48, €XPeriencing. Those who had hopes | 7 mee are much better off in comparison, | Sling both kinds of ice. Before the | must ‘devote serious consideration to| As a member. of the Party for th «SIG a lees A el pai Niced, to the amount of meat a | 0% setting jobs have not secured them | & club is frequestly i attendance | iT csey get trom four kovdive tunes) rae end Wien there were fewer! accuser that Se rien 20 qaobtEe Have esc ae itanuelatescarity “bend of asking the families whether or j Jobs ene were able to earn enough |r re is no standard scale of pay | of living. bid ice pera aee: paying its truck | socsions devoted to revolutionary | for leadership; practically the same $200 as evidence that she would| not they use pork. Later, no doubt, | ‘0,861 DY on have lost t at In the | o conditions for the same work. | Discrimination is very pronounced, | {PVF 7 per week, plus a commis-| work only, but political meetings, | bureau, with slight changes, has ex- charge certain prices this question will be unnecessary. The | j)— ie bile aa erred ra tab Bedb: in Dormitori jespecially against male employes. Rion ie ape indred- | where the work of the unit is dis-| isted during this ‘period. Terrorized By Gangsters checks will be reduced anyhow, ee Te Se uae, Ber on tell pales — paige ee ea | tt !8 useless to complain to the hos- Seen menace cussed and where political and theo-| “One point’ Which I ‘particularly toh sue ag de " Rehr ee 4 x | a sperity has returned. he dormitories are over-crow " 4 u ~ 4 ic af a el ih t Th whom I trade was | Whether a family uses pork or not.! Soin of these T Pers’ have! fedised aid overrun Win aedcNER ee: Gas pital authorities. Employes get no thing, to live on. ‘The toe company | retical discussions on the general} want to stress is how the young as ad And what this meat will be like, only those know who have ever worked | under the dirty, filthy conditions in | government meat packing houses. Letters From Readers About the Daily Worker wages of everyone wor! for them | |and the prices of things have gone | | up from 25 to 200 per ce: | Some of the Greek restaurant men | | here used to h | man, helping out during the rush |hours at noon and an hour in the | |evening, about three hours a day in| all. For this they paid 50 cents a |day and meals. This wasn’t much, | but the workers could get by on it.| |The Greeks are not permitted to do | this any more, so those extra people | | are on the street | ve a girl, sometimes ! - tients in the wards have plenty of the latter also. Conditions in New York State hos- pitals are much better in every way —more pi etter chances of promo- tion, less red tape, less discrimina~- tion, better standardized, especially as regards pay’and conditions of liv- ing. Hudson County, New Jersey, and Jersey City hospital employees are far better paid. The conditions of liv- ing are much higher than in New York City, which being the richest satisfaction and are likely to be dis- missed for protesting, as they have | no organization of their own. The nurses haye an association but | it is like a company union; other- | wise, they would not put in 12 hours a night straight. On days they get a break of two or three hours. | Living-out money of $20 a month has been discontinued. New employes do not get this allowance, so that an employee who gets $20 a month with board and bed is forced to live in. Sea View Hospital, Farm Colony, Staten Island, pays as little as $10 then, as well as now, was able to pay @ 20 per cent dividend on its stock, watered and all. | This ice company has now used’ the N. R. A. as an excuse to boost us price, not to big business but to ae small consumer, by setting a price of 60 cents a hundred on all orders under 100 pounds in weight, | but leaving the price, that they never have lowered, of 40 cents to the busi- ness. When we had what was called prosperity the driver had the cream problems and concrete tasks of the Party are held. “No Political Life In My Unit” “Last Wednesday, I attended for the first time the meeting of Unit 3, Section 8. The meeting started at 9:15. The organizer sat down at the table and pulled out a mass of papers—the Section Letter, the Dis- trict Letter, last minute instructions, etc. Rapidly he ran through para- graph after paragraph—we could | well as older comrades become neu- | tralized. | “During my first six months in the | Party I was given from five to eight | assignments per week, ~which were faithfully carried out.~ Because of this willingness to carry out all as- gnments moreiand more activity | was piled on me and on five or six |of the activeeomrades of the unit, | which had a membership of about-25. Some comrades tittered at his hurr, The organizer only stopped his read hardly hear him he read so fast.) “Although +I-was put forward a3 = leader at our point of concentration, | which was in. Negro territory, my SHORTCOMINGS IN THE DAILY. | the police and military forces, they| Several of the big restaurants h | nee i y. of the trade and the customer that 4 | sals, whi ve Kansas City, Mo. say, so what can we do? | paid $7 ane 20 eo Saeiia nee See eres: Soprany ies See mnannenens to em~| missed the ice man could go to the Beye ea the Laney pe called oH “os cele atid’ nye shenb stacey cad I’ take it that what our readers |{> their full time workers. Now they | pitals out. in 12 hours on nights | Povees Who are generally eX-Pa"| cash and cary station and get his! Senments. No effort was Mace re|the workers, “Were usually ignoted iy Worker seller Inaturally | Want to know more about is our! pay $i4 a week, but they deduct the |Siraight and on. day time with two | Hemes0F Gh~_ mates and ate put e'/ ice, but now most people go to the | eae ee ea a ey do with, But | snd the demands of the’ workers were nok with number of | Party, its organization, how we) are | additional amount they have to pay! or tire hours cet for a80- sonal. A York cep institution: cash and cazry station to save money, | more serious than that was the fact | Seldom reacted to in time to gain workers. The paper is liked very | S0ing to take power, how nese |for board, whether the workers want | vacation of 21 days is given at the Patients’ Skulls Fractured Ana the driver gets the trade of those | that no effort was made to relate| very much organtzationally. ; ‘ : ish a w rs armers ern- a re 4 Toate Bey o : bota much and it shame, pa a instrimentalifies which eters ‘ eae not. 4 __ |end of a year's service, but one must} q large number of the patients,| "Now the ice sanipain is also taking | the directives to the particular con- | ‘Another very bad Hable the bue Browd out in Sil ib real gat fuel feedun! tor] he $ indries paid $8 and $9 per! often wait longer. especially alcoholics, who come to the] advantage of th ti & | ditions of our neighborhood. reau has is that of electing or ap~ Daily Worker, | ¥# oe | Week, Lo they have now rearranged) Pay is stopped for the sick. One | city hospitals for treatment, particu- +f pOe te Vactnte MaMhat oa AIRS Je: ‘The district letter Ponting committees to carry on der- Pee meen aces 4 jaea |e, How's, and boosted hell out of | must work at Jeast six hours or the|fariy at Bellevue, have ‘fractured| por Bar’,of the Pay from the driver] Jc" song ‘mobilization at a local tain activities and then change the ly woul not be a goo lea | their prices, and the girls don’t earn y’s pay wi x 0! and put ig en- icy | deci: ym Sarid more what the ultimate solution of| Our soldiers down here have been | nar i ry of about 4 which, for three months of the year, Z gl Weare : . te 2 our Party is, the steps necessary to| relieved. Roosevelt, has relieved them | ¢3,000 eae oie jaa ie erin. Se Ee ata, eee ithe has good luck, he can average |®clivities of | the | American Neds, ees as SER: peck’ in aaa ae reach our revolutionary goal? |of about everything they had—and plus g p 1 eScerscagewa i about-40 cents an hour, but for the| nothing about O'Brien's maneuvers.| (oy So <a Rael aidis Frank Bi bere is a laugh. They voted for him: | te Sits Eos webolnare eee os orderlies usually side in with these | other nine months his averave drons | Nobody raised the question of what | aad wit yeh expiant, ated subscriptio worker's corre = rown. | ° ae , ‘wm. ) is more than that of a phys! “| cowardly and brutal policemen. to about 50 cents a da: i of OF unit could do in our territory.) Mtirely against thelr own decisions. pondence, t more ope ak | Not many Spanish War veterans are] jess the physician holds a high ex-|""patients who are poor and without | this he must carry’ churee aconemes| Instead, the Organizer said, “Com-| “Because of this lack of lesder- face of th y Worker Editorial Note: The above letter lpfrens pede are vane aed ecutive position, such as director OF | triends are experimented upon as if | to get any business and take full re-|7ades, don’t forget the leaflets.” | ship, understanding and, co-opera- Workers’ me and gather raises some very important short- | Der month to $6, $8 and in a 7ery CT they were guinea pigs. sponsibility. Somebody added: “We should all| tion, the comrades gradually reach One thing of our read comings that have been taken up | ie y Infested With Spies A lot of clothing, shoes and other} “Now he must bi show up at the armory.” Later as-|a situation where assignments be- e: P | few cases $15 a month. A few who| y, tal: in ‘i i uy his own driver's attention to is that there is in the| by the Daily Worker editorial staff. | Wore penidhanhey ap polittealiy,. hills New York City be mis are he hospital supplies are made in prisons, | jicense and if he should have an ac- | Signments were made for an open come of secondary importance, t Worker a lack! We propose to write a series of | ut off trom the vous at first, nave [sot eeh Spies Lats Goiace a such as Sing Sing. cident where the blame can be forced | ®i meeting to take place the fol-| “To overcome these conditions it.is explanation of,| articles dealing with answers to the |}, is ab first, have | get good salaries. These are a few facts not gener-| on him he must als lowing day, but there was no dis-| absolu ‘ bri P rd jbeen put back on. Mi d orderlies are often in- fa ‘The hospital. employees 0 take the chance i tely necessary to break away real remedy for the! many questions raised in this let- | Some big office holders who di urses, 6m his OC ee eee ployees | of losing his license and whatever | cussion on how to turn this mecting from our sectarian shell and involve eat co: vies ; : = *t- | Some big office holders who drew! qifferent or brutal to patients. This | appeal to you for needed help. e ints & Goaats Oh wate a neal crisis we are the workers| ter. Also, a question and answer | fancy compensations are still getting t be due to the conditions under Setar ae ne else they put on him. s ‘ posing ou more of the American elements’ as er and want.| column will be established to deal |them. One disabled Spanish War) ciich they work. The orderlies often| ‘The writer of this report should |,,2°Te { only one way out for anti-fascists” and how to bring for-| jeaders in the Party units, It 1s also ty well about! with the many questions around | veter, 7 os ‘ $ which they work. iS these workers and that is for them | Ward the role of the Party as the necessary to organize study circles to veteran, who was getting $20 per| have to do the work of porters and| apply to the Medical Workers a i leat their own can see| these points. We are attempting |month reecived a letter from the! /9¥° ' 98 1-3| Lene Broad to organize and fight the conditions ! consistent fighter against fascism.’ raise the polivical understanding of y i clot! itorials Ree Teves pare 2 ‘in some cases kitchen work for League, Room 303, 799 iway, ‘And this. question is of great im-| bs plent: 2nd clothing and lots} more and more in our editorials with the rest of the down-trodden bes 8 some of our functionaries. oy OF ae wise S| more ant our editorials, | Pension Bureau telling him that his| cents a day, eat poor food and sleep! for help in organization. Ke EE Higa ta neie atin sinoe aie Alene | ° a of empty re they going} news stories and articles to deal | pension would be mate! increased. | ” workers. ayy = will int sie Mi. Unit 9, Section 5. [ to get hold of these nece What | with concrete questions of struggle |'a week later they wrote him and! — _ STE Tastse Gate eel Seis is the solution, the way out? What| in strikes, unemployment insurance vould eontinued ‘ “T took tt d do we as Cot and relief campaigns, and the revo- ha ane a $18 ' Se ae bose: | A a Bec. 1, Unit? “60 | rineopistsict 19 | 44! “I took the floor and brought out; The Open Letter dealt with the way? lutionary way out. Tein iden ot teorperiy (avo. cede epor Ss Ow al y OPrKe? | se ois 2% i , the necessity of using the Section) problem raised in these letters, and These : ‘ : traasiiicts to teasers cad to cut the 4 Seo. “i Unit 8 1.00| Total Nov 11 4,00 | Letter, etc., as a guide, and not 2s a| demanded that the Party take steps ae : te ty | Tao ee, ome Me Se Gaini New Readers] ce? 2)mreee ge Mea iiee mmm ef deat wi ate Soe at ete. in your paper, but how do you| _ Every dollar you send to the Daily | 2°4‘to do away with unionism. ‘This| alning \ any e Ann Arbor 3186 | Ureka Unit Bell 1¢) ued this to th Hons Jn the | states: expect to solve industrial disputes?| Worker ts a blow im the face of | he denies, but his every act contra-| Eas oe ei eae bara 10 | rotai aor. ai ta | emtlctantit actioin Ag a esl the| .cAC the mene time: the. Fatty The rich have the money, the goods,/ Fascism. dicts him. | ew YORK:—Workers throughout | Totel Saturday 574.68 Lists Rehn ‘10 | Total to date 422/35 | comrade: iS must carry on‘ a systematic strug- a 4 | E cam I ‘ S quickly grasped the nece: 2s We have a -Aocialiss Party down! tn. country are not only more willing | Previously List 50055 tas | Horvath 50 | District 13 \sity of doing more than distributing | Sl¢ ag@inst the bureaucratic isola~ here. I have been to two of their|inan ever before to support the Daily | "cred 21877.95 | oo) ee ovinas one <i2| Anon, Pet. 100 TT nafiete aed coming te the| tion of the apparatus from the meetings. About 12 members attend, ly but are more! Total to date 22152. zi 35 ae] x 3 Party masses, against the suppres- bi ‘ : Worker financially smith 3 District 7 « counter demonstration. We assigned’ sion of inner Party democracy, for cthalesacscarsctaaaainaie digas esc ten ee ee wee Oe eee “3 | Snider 25 | Fount B%sate ‘neaga | comrades to visit the local Socialict| {ne development of political Ria he ena me ee readers, it is shown in 1a (ngs cae Frances : Whe ere "| headquarters, and a couple of youth a _| tym 2.50 Ralolt "35. District 14 the lower organizations, parti . ceived from those active in the $40, ea7 | Bovinas Sod iis John Reed Club, clubs which had previously invited : K Graphie -25 | Vas 25 g larly in the factory nuclel, for the 000 Drive. 3 T10| Sec. 2 Unit 2 2.62] New 3.00 | us to send them speakers. The mocd fa fine Zep | Detroit fas Co. F. Null, of Mansfield, Ohio, who 05! Bleger: S| sce. 2 Unit 14 222|P, Schulz ving 100|5¢ the comrades which had until| “evclopment of initiative in the | has sent in lists with ve pace ae Sal by Stankevica a Bee. 2 Unit 6 Ryd u gheneser ‘oil's then been, “let’s get through with lower are pasion Fei [nour jin the $40,000 Drive, has also in-| Sue 2 names . | ee | this meeting and get home,” changed.| Brovement, “9 co Robs Its Workers creased his bundle sale pa! aot, pe ee nny besten 2.50 4 Gans ot eh The ee Benet to ie nee | ie? g SEEN, LURE | . . Worker from ‘five''to fifty daily an arses 33 | List 50046 . Delery _.75 | est r Comrades, what are we doing to 4 . Matt: ‘ 4 Unit 5 est and enthusiasm to do work, as ‘ As a decided contrast to the article on birth control as a cure for un- | For Charity Drive to 100 on Saturdays. He writes: “I} Anderson Gr ont one 1.60 | Sec. 5, Unit 2° 5.00] ORY tp \they realized that here was an op-|CaITy out this section of the Open employment, reviewed in yesterday's column, T'd like to quote from another | Te Ee eee Rar cr ent ae: sell eras a | 9 names 95 | ol. by Karamkus | | Tis, portunity for the Party to take the | Tater | tet in this columin We ine irely di | al : 6 names ‘87| 7 names 70} 5 : “fascist work-| this problem in column. We in- article of an entirely different stamp,—also from the Birth Control Review, | (py Child Worker Correspondent) | are able to organize a wider distri-| Martinson = .80/ oo), 'by Ross Col. by ‘Tamassian | {3st 82068 leadersiiip of the anti-fascist work: | ve ie organizers od well as rank and which treats of cugenics in relation to the current economic system. DETROIT, Mich—The Detroit City| bution and circulation.” Comrade| *mkervine 18) 5 names 2.00 | Rapiel a0) Sep ers and isolate the fake anti. | 7 i pect This tract was published previous to the other, though it could well fol- | Gas Co., one of the public utilities in| Null is planaing:to build up another | rotat 11-11 o.97 | O°, by Pekieh | Rachitan 3g | Hunts leaders.” J. M., Brooklyn, / and file comrades to write us their dow it as a refutation o this city, decided to put some men to| Daily Worker carrier route in Mans- | Total to date 1176.62 | ool by ‘Kornbiath |Col. by Newman 25 | Morris B a Whit Aeddeeehip | ee, Why are our unit meet- This paper, called “The Dominance | face value. This is bound to lead to | work, which is very much out of the| field. Splendid work, Comrade Null.| ,?Niion ” N® gay | 4 names 3.00|N. Mandeberg <0 | Gopding bake ria shastivity aad Tack P' ings so uninteresting? What steps €f Economic written by H. J.|a false genetic valuation of indivi-| ordinary. The work is to give each Mansfield, which. had an original : SOE COMBUS Bene ‘35 | Col. by Kaye za of aitereet jare we teking to change this situa- Mulle:, id delivered at Third | duals, of classes, and of races, so|gas-user an individual line. Many| quota of $15 in the Drive to save our 38 og). by Sher | Reiser | Bindok . ‘tion? We want to hear from the International Eugeaics Congress, I long as this system laste.” And listen |gas users have individual lines, bub| fighting paper, ‘as already raised ‘sg ) OT names 1.00 | Buislay Fe Sea RARE TEE rete Hult nasite ancl | Barty -on: thseQrenty So. wish I could quote it in full, for I} to this: im many cases there are as many as $21.35 and obiained a sub for the “3 | Col. by Kyros an J, Bindok tions whic! le youth and a arty 1 fuestion. got a lot of satisfaction out of read- Eugenics Under Capitalism four or five houses on one line. This| “Daily.” Here are two good examples con uyeatain | Deyory > Kan 3 . 7 ing it. z “This brings us to the consideration | !8 to prevent the leakage of one gas| worth following, comrades! = ‘Sharkey 5.00 | Hanalin - ae But it is very long. It appeared ‘i line from affecting many houses, at From Minneapolis "95 | Preedin 1,00 | Fellman 33 Vist 2950 . ° in the October, 1932, issue. It’s prob- of what should be the eugenic goal? 2 | Woldsmidt 1.00 | Col. by Mard 15 tn 1 so! t t fbly available on file at the public |S0 long as present conditions con- |one time. a Ben Abelson, Minneapolis, Minn., 33 | Powel 1.00 | Georgeson BGs hee nr om (4 ommunts ar y. i Moonie ee on fle at the Public | tinue, the ideology of the people must | asked the foreman of one partic-| 4 active with collection lists, and not | Spicier Sur] “SGteney alan feo by Jogsa 1.99 Roman 3 , Remead i entire. |be in the main a reflection of that of | lar job being done, and he said it| only is he turning in money in the | Buchwald GM) Wore 300 | col, by Rete 1°?) Kantoritz 50 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Te heeds no reviewing by me—some | the’ now dominant class, es) the | Fas Rie Hed Be as no Pata $40,000 campaign, but writes: “ Fran eerae At) | mawards 4.00 | Toth i ern aa | ‘i t ak for thems standards, the criteria of merit, of e utility SS y t they | year ago I sold about five cor Siegel q Borgetto .50 | Gross y ‘ on ie inate ce sete ‘THIS, | that class will be accepted. Naturally, | could save profits by having this kind] {ne Daily Worker a week, now I sell © foldinan = Ferman 290/01. by Tony | Shaweln b4 Please send me more information on the Communist Party. “We might as well admit that the | those in power will idealize their own |of work done in this part of the| from 50 to 75, besides I've been get- | C., Maxwell 50] Rudigin “50 | Stone 09: eee 3 , forces at work are quite beyond the | Characteristics, particularly those | year when the campaign for the De-/ting a few subscribers.” He pledges | “Gaideron t9'59 | Paddy, Salook 1.50 | Hoport ae “control of us es eugenists, in the so. | Which brought them to dominance. | troit Community Fund has just been|to double his sales of the “Daily”| cohen 50 cues i a eee 35 | Beiyie SCABIES i ccc occas’ ciety in which we live. For they are|. “Would not most of them believe |launched under the hypocritical slo-|by Spring. He suggests that a week-| Rye lok tw linea BS | Pavlevskys fundamental economic forces. Galton | 2 the production of bigger and better | gan, “help them hold on.” ly report from the Minneapolis Dis- rig 25 14 ‘nsines 3.80 | Bush “js | Dobroton Yived too early to appreciate the | business men, who could see us| So what do the utility bosses do, but | trict on the situation there would} Pottack 3 Volunteers ee Bi Zakabiobs 1 aoa algae EOS AROS Peli MRI principle brought ovt by Marx that | through bigger and better depres- | to ask even the lowest paid gas work-/| interest more workers in Minne-| Pampanek 125 | Collection ¥ists Stine” is | ANG. “ : the practices of mankind, in any age, sions? There would also be room for jers, without a hint of losing their | apolis in the Daily Worker. He points| len -35 | D. Horowitz Col by Anchor | J. Sak Z ~ are. on m of the economic | Various accessory gentry . . . some | jobs, to give a day’s pay for the Fund.! out that of the extra “Minnesota edi- oe niles " 3 ah peas 1.10 | Worker TM eg is system and material technique exist- | S4fe and sane scientists to invent bet-| I heard a Negro worker complain tion” last spring he sold 50 “Dailys” in). Bo $0 48 sinthne a1 | G2 By Stenest 25) Tote! Mate alos ! a ae thcuienies ter poison gas and to harmonize sci- | to the boss about giving his day’s payjone day. Let’s have the report, | Ccl. by Cagma: emmerl Lm gee ee District 15 img in that age. He thought that they y. ng Senulty me “eollld be moulded, willy-nilly, from | ence with useful superstition. And jfor the fund. “I have five to support, | Comrades! > eae 10 | Bunde Col. by Pinter 15 | Col. by Valley Without, into conformity with the ab- | Pethaps the most benighted elements | and I can’t afford a day's pay,” he Drive Quickening = - Malkin Po casnines iad Rage Bi ees oar! a siractions of an idealist intellectual, |COWd be cajoled or coerced into |said. But the boss with a silly erin} ane entire $40,000 Drive ts taking| AB telian Com ‘10| 10 names 2.95 | A'tetena aq 'South Unit 195 But the organization of society today | d¢veloping themselves into more cal- on his face replied, “But look at all a ke ize th boy 1:35 | Ochim 3.85 | Taylor 30, Symp. x “Ys such as to make the primary mo- | !0Us slaves, who could work longer |the fun you have with those kids of | Grower fanine the Say Watker Net | ae meee |e Gol. by Toss | “dl of action, at least among the |MOUrs on a cheaper grade of beans. | yours.” His statement was as dumb] o, nis the Sa fi Fant 1 but ac 30) Pride 30 | 8 names, 95 | Total toa Gominant section, the profit motive.” | Not that this fantasy would ever be | as the look on his face. How can any!tual plans are ‘being made by the| Nerwesian 35] Bohrer 135] Gol by Wikdnewekt ¢ | [2 atch r “Little Place for Chil o realized, for, as I have shown, eugenics | worker have fun with his children RIA t01 supe the Ci rset aa -25 |. Anon. 35 8 “|B. Bond oi : je for Chiiaren. under our social system cannot work.” | when he sees them going hungry? | Press and es Pually the D ae List 65006 bs Ei brats c PRR 9 gh “Then, a paragraph amusing and| ‘Then, near the end of the treatise: |” workers! When the bosses ask you | po sy 2n4 espe tty ict ‘to Bre, Sine. 00 “ot i true: “ orkers et you | for criticizing its slave-codes for the 38 19 Unit 105 00 ¥ : 73 ORE RES crodt cystem’ leaves tt ‘Only the pee revolution in} with a hint of firing you from your! working class, Coming to the finan- ne (32 10. 5. Boker 18 ¥ rare St place for children, In general, they | tora position Chace Ce cong us in | Job, to contribute to such @ fund, hurl cial aid of our fighting paper, Mar-| Friena Maw 20; By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. | who consider. themselves Mirxists.to < 5 5 y | to # position where we can properly back! “Cash relief for u Liblen. a0: 00 join my sister and myself in this Fe not profitable investments. Their | judge, from a truly social point of |tpe” berelela ripe pir eH cus Gordon, even and one-HAlt Years |" yernngs 95 | potat Nov. 11 24.20 ANSWER TO QUESTIONS weekly contributions. In. this fash- cost is excessive, the dividends are|view, what characters are most e ployed; Aisa old, of New York, gave ten cents he] - sima ‘Mexander "9g | Treshak 30| Total to date 384.25 © ot’ ictal ion ta cal Cae ms Daily ‘uncertain, they are likely to depreci-| worthy of a man ” and then: {School supplies, proper medical care, | saved and collected an additional 25| Sharaet E. Berkman Br. 1.45 | Col, by Dekold Sua Care of Artifi Eyes . Ilp* Worker ate in value, are practically non-|“... the day was coon coming when | 224 shoes and clothing for their ehil- | cents from his mother, sister and two| Savschek F. Tace, — ‘$0 cot, by ‘Conen A ¥. ©. L. Member, Brooklyn—A and your coe to srow bisger aid transferable, and they do not mature | there would be fundamental econo- | 2": at rd a eae in ee 35 cents yes. | | Kuerel Roach eae tg The as | gee saturated solution (1 teaspoonful to pee ay aaied ae Aki: o soon enough. One child may be neces-|mic and social changes, which would ‘ shina cipasing Aabe De dott Soya st Total I-11 212.93 | Kitcher nA ——". |a glass of water) of boric acid is the With comradely gree | _) Sary for continuance of an estate,| utterly change the complexion of as & H. Stern Pipe Co. Hoid affairs, contribute, raise funds, — a3 ‘Total to Gate Bins Hoffman ipo Total Nov. 11 cheapest and best fluid for washing . RR ” but each additional one weakens it.|eugenic problems. But in our day Stri set new records for the Daily Worker. | Siiham to sty iq | Brinkman 35 a prothesis (artificial eye). At the ei a Y KEEN. or the great masses, who have no| the handwriting on the wall is mani-| Strikers See Through |trepare for the Daily Worker Tag| Lean DISTRICT No, i, | Smermann 38 OB end of a year the surfaces of the <a is » each extra child commonly] fest, and they are fools who blind bor Bo: rd’ Tri ick: Day on Novy. 24th, 25th and 26th, feta N. ©. Pitts 2.00 eae rordan 10m glass get rough and the eye must be Sulphur Ointment for the Itch more intensified slavery for | themselves to it. Let us rather pre- La ara s ‘S| New York Comrades: Keep in mind inberger = «10. Grasso 1.00! Sane 7 Br. 2114, Chicago 145 | changed. The stump inside your| 1. R. Utiéa—From your descrip- the parents, and an additional unit| pare with open eyes to face our new the Entertainment and Dance for the “36 | Total 11-11 ib ert 10 | Bao; Sayerevitte. 3:00 | Obit. (eye cavity) is probably too tion, it seems that the disease’ ie of human unhappiness, itself...” | problems. ‘There is no use in argu- (By a Worker Correspondent) Daily Worker by the United Front “18 | Total to date 47d.ng | Schwarte 10 2008! Kenosha” @.78| small, In\such cases we use the| Scabies, commonly, known as the itch, Mr. Mulier also competently spikes|ing about the effects in a hundred| NEW YORK.—While the pickets | Supporters this Friday evening, Nov. 10 | DISTRICT No. 6 Brandt: 8 | 148, Cleveland Snellen or “reform” eye, which is| Sulphur ointment is the best remedy the notion that proletarian women | years or more, of the continued dif-|at the L. & H. Stern Pipe Co. were |1%th, at Webster Hall, 125 E. 1th mr} Setar errleas on in “05 | 144, Memphis lighter and can be blown so as to! for it. Thanks for your r have a lot of kids out of choice, writ-| ferential reproduction of different | Picketing, they were approached by | St. and the John Reed Club “Cock- tan -00 | Peterson ip eeaaee eee conform to the contour of the orbit, leeyeere teens %, ing, among other well-chosen words,| classes, when the very basis for the|@ certain Mr. Ballieson, of the|eyed World Party” for the “Daily” Len | ‘Total 11-11 fe | cote 95 | 509, San Franc. unison with its fell Helping the Daily Worker “ ad Baugh . and move in w! ellow) Helping the ly Worl these: “Do male eugenists suffer from | existence of these classes as such will | Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, | this Saturday night at 430 Sixth Ave. 1.00 Total to date | 887.25 | col. ‘by voden 108, Neatocket on the other side. Ask for such a he 4 the illusion that most intelligent | soon be swept away...” who came over with the boss and a} Enjoyable events, both! | pierre | 10) mama glass eye where you bought the one ThroughiDr. Luttinger sh women love to be pregnant and to| And a grand and glorious con-|cop and tried to tell the pickets Cie ee 20/ "Hudson 1.90 o°k, bY Grandson you have now. If you cannot obtain ae : endure the physical disabilities, and | clusion: “.... the possibilities of the | that the strike was over, because it' NEW YORK —Due to lack of 30.00 R. J. Bachelder .50 _ _ Baltimore any satisfaction please let us hear Contributions received to the credit the difficulties of maintaining a job,| future of eugenics under such con-|Was settled by the National Labor |space, the names of a number of vod | A Canadian Vet 100 rota Nov. 11 18.61 from you again. of Dr, Luttinger in his Socialist eon that pregnancy involves in our so-|ditions are unlimited and inspiring, | Board. But we know that the strike | organizations that sent in outstand- 14 | ond. SEEDY gg | Total to date 1406.14 The following letter and sugges-/ Petition with “Michael Gold, Edward. = clety? It is up to us, if we want eugenics | 18 not settled, and won’t be settled/ing contributions to the Daily 6.4! 8. Peskin x piinaie tion speak for themselves: BG rine felen tiny Jacob And here is some of the most cheer- | that functions, to work for it in the | until the boss gives in to our de-!Worker Banquet last Sunday were ~ ie a to raise $1,000 in the $46, ful news in the entire tract: only way now practicable, by first | mands. left out of Tuesday’s edition. maaan Este ae Sarid Bethlehem, Pa., Daily Worker Drive: . “The results of extensive scientific | turning our hand to help throw over| We workers are wise to Mr. Bal-| The Freiheit Gésang Ferein gave 38. J. Gerbert Argo (18.19 Noy. 11, 1933. | Medical Unit, W.LR. $ 25.00 investigations show us that there is} the incubus of the old, outworn so- | lieson, who is nothing but a strike- | $58.37; a Group of Professional So- 1.4) A. Polagin Rockford Sec. Dear Doctor Luttinger—Being fully Mariette: no scientific basis for the conclusion | ciety.” breaker for the bosses. So is the! ciel Workers, $62; the East New Ped Ge veligsilbaa es | ie: Ae at im accord with the suggestion of my |ary 4 sg bag that the socially lower classes or tech- ican eae eat aa, National Labor Board, which is only | York Workers’ Club, $65; the Left 275 | Polish TLD, _ 3.00 | Total Nov. ii aso | i709 $33 sister and professional colleague, |=“ Weinrith +" 100 nically less advanced races, really Helping the Daily Worker trying to send us back te work|Group of Local No. 38, International 2.00 | Packard Shop Unit | Total to date 1942.50 | 138 5.60 Nellie Keen, as to weekly contribu-|#. Wenger . 2 have a genetically inferior intel- vthout considering our demands. | Ladies Garment: Workers, $46; the A Bice) 1-35 | Reported by 38 14.75 @ Through Helen Luk ws Mg 0] | 10 i it. net tion by the fans of your column, I/H. Stringer . . 50 lectual equipment, since the differ- ig e They cooperated with the bosses|Bronx Workers’ Club, $50; Branch "50 Soni 5! Printed, Wkrs Cni- | 7 Sr hereby enclose 50 cents. | , ences between their averages are'to| Contributions received to the credit | who locked out 500 workers for un-|No. 32, International Workers Order, 00 gage as Western | 10 It is only since I began readi ae ne Searne be fully accounted for by the known | of oan hy Socialist com-|ionism, by not forcing them to take |$35; Brownsville Youth Center, $40; bin pistitét 9 $80 Iie 1.40 | your Art Comittee ruteinigen Adolphe Dupas ,. i) » 5 : , effects of environment. petition with Michael Gold, Dr. Lut-|the workers back. Unit 17, Section 15, Communist sa onl a 24) | that I have recovered some of the re- | Bore Pk. Wkrs. Ensemble, 1.60 _ Going still further: tinger, Edward Newhouse and Jacob] ‘The Stern strikers are ready to |Party $20; Unit 25, of the same Sec- 4,32] Unit 1 150 ect for th fession of medicine, Wm! F. Miller . | “Naturally, the apologists for the | Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000|fight to the finish for the Inde-|tion, $18: Middle Bronx Workers L ‘30 | Johnson 98 ‘teo | that Z haye loct through contact with | Previous : existing order would have us| Daily Worker Drive. pendent Smoking Pipe Makers Un-!Club, $25; Bronx Cooperative $75; wets BAL rotte wi HH bs ‘Total Nov. 11 Total Nov. 11. 170.28 | the peatunion bes rig pharmacist, eee accept appearances at their Total to date ........,....9%6.22 ion, even after nine weeks on strike. |to mention only a few Ukrain Toll 9.25 Sec. 1, Unit 10 9.10| Total to date 288.32! Total fo date 1849.11! I call upon all professional. men Total to date s,s.

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