The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 16, 1933, Page 4

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DAILY WORKE Page Fou? Workers’ Solidarity Forces Job for Young Negro Worker Fight Against Discrimination Taken Up by} Bystander and 100 Join in 5 on Chain pe Injured Because Truck Was Unsafe| ( By a Negro Worker Correspondent) | TERRE HAUTE, Ind—On Oct. 10 there was a group of 11 workers, be- By a Young Worker Cantipeeaens NEW YORK.—I should lke to report « thrilling example of workers’ solidarity. There was a crowd of workers at the State Employment Bureau walt- ing one morning for about 100 jobs on the state highway construction. I/ noticed among them a young Negro worker who looked as if he could hardly Keep from bursting into tears. I® offered him a cigarette, and in the, | Boss Coins Profit O i} | Tells iow Trustee EW YORK, THURSDAY. Lumber Company Uses NRA and Relief Racket to Grab More Out of Workers "Fonend: to Donate Two Hours to “Charity”; ut of Extra Output; Workers Lose Later (By a Lumber Worker Correspondent) BELLINGHAM, Wash.—In Bellingham the Bloedel Donovan Lamber Mills employ about 600 workers on two six-hour shifts under the N. R. A. at a minimum wage of 4214 cents per hour, which, on the average, is the MBER 16, 1933 i|Union Racketeering Of A.F.L.Leaders Said} To Set World’s Record By a Negro Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—Racketeering and debasing of union labor standards are worse in the United States than any other country in the world. PARTY LIFE General Agitation Not By BILL It is necessary to speak now with Stress Development. of New Leading Forces in-T.U.U.L. Sufficient; Work Must Be Specialized, Rank-and- Filers Trained DUNNE the greatest frankness about the ques tion of developing and training leadership in the T. U. U. L, unions and in the opposition movements in the A. F. of L. and other unions. The Open Letter placed great emphasis on the speediest possible devei- opment of new leading forces. In Point (e) the Open Letter s‘ated one of conversation he told me he is from} | sides the truck drivers, going to work | maximum w: ran i Z 4 age. With the high cost of living the workers are barely able} Consider the Harlem hospital, a|the main tasks of our Party is as*~ EIT eS GE PROS Cp RG Spratt oung wife | Turned Away 375 | on the chain gang. They had shovels! to make a living for their families. ‘The time of the year when the com. |Government job, ‘Think of’ the| follows: | Commission? “din this’ ‘article we | and various tools to work on the| | highway. Also there were three men | | munity fund racketeers put on a had been out of wi | drive for funds has come around and has been sleepi! k for 10 ev Starving Workers this scheme: Under the lumber code wages the men received and are still receiving, combined with the terri- ble speed up. The bricklayer fore- “The wide development of new cadres of workers; the establish- | shall deal with -the question of the training of :mew: leadership in the trade unions: only. Other articles eee van for the last five weeks. in the driver's seat, and they had | again and these racketeers devised a regulations, the mill is only allowed ment of really collective working a Incidentally, I've been doing the | Bi 8 Nero Worker Correspondent) | iiauor, ‘The truck ‘was unsafe, as|neW scheme whereby the grafters will |to° operate’ $0 hours per weak wea| man 1 8 now on some mock charge! leading bodies of our’ movement Hon ete One tae ee same thing for some time so I know | ,.-n LANAPO! ined away 375 starr: |? had no brakes. On going up a Set the money and the mill company | under the present speed-up they pro- | 0" Speeding the men—after the job| and the improvement of the work papers eae oe ERED prop I what it means seatan bags vay 375 starv-| i the driver lost control. will get additional profits. duce on an average of 50,000 board | 18, finished, of these leading bodies by the ing workers and told them to come| some other time. I saw some of them | rhe mill company put outs bul- As a result five workers are in the letin which was placed on all of Waiting Since 2 A. M. feet. of lumber per hour, and two hours over the regular time, which The Kings Park, L. I., government hospital job hired 25 scabs last week drawing in of new capable working class elements.” On Sept. J4 the Agitprop Commise sion sent out a letter to all union and opposition fraction secretaries. siete le had been w: oi at) tha -|g0 away ing, and I know somc} | hosfatal, two in a serious condition, ? ae ae ee ae bse ers hoe little ee starving and going | one, ieouk Chapman, of 900 South |the men’s time cards. the workers are asked to contribute baat — ee bet eafeshal a ‘The opening paragraph of the short!" On Noy, 4°a°follow up letter was erat ne as thy oo be [to School hitters | Second St, with the ribs on the side) On the front page was a picture of /t0 the relief fund, would mean 100,000 |iv 4 to work the next dey whe | Statement of the Central Committee! sont. * big eed | all broken loose and a lung pune- | President Roosevelt and a statement |feet of lumber the company would would: hire 100 more scabs ne which accompanied the Open Letter|~ Gp to dateonly. seven fraction sece es SR ete ee Ralph | tured and various other injuries, and|by him supporting the drive. The | get additional profits from. Also the | men are on strike because of pelt in the Daily Worker said: |retaries have answered these ques- sd sent him beck of the Une accut |e eee eel mney, HBY~| cies Coleman, of 116 Gycamore Bt, |inside of thevpamphlet told where | WOreerenGes again) ed Nate tlal Gay tortion and racketeering on the job.| , “YoU should read this letter care- | tions—seven weplies over a period of ia d sent i back ot the line’ sont | ing nothing at home to eat. Near the | Ee ineeroend the money goes that the workers con-|® certain amount of demand for lum- |rne general peers says that| fully—study every line. Appiy the | two montheld~ aaah ae nore is Cie |school he passed by an apple stand, | ; ith a family |ttibute, stating the amounts that go|ber from this company, therefore at he oaiay not guarantee the men critical examination it makes of Where Are Fraction Secretaries? long time, | he picked up an apple that was) Coleman is 8 man with ® tay lto the different charities axid what |aome time’ during the winter lia sill againdt extortion oh’ thes ton, the work of the entire Party, to | ‘The conclusion is forced that the ea ikea 25:40 bank withelte Sa, Eee ee Ete wo youngest children |they are supposed to do with it, such | Will have to produce 100,000 feet less ‘The 53rd annual convention of the} YoUr own work, to the work of your | overwhelming Hitfority of our union SA Scssh to be theta in geen he could have it, but his teacher, | law took the two esi th as—Bellingham Welfare Association |Of lumber because there will be no| 4 ¥ of 1, was dominated by General| {faction to the work of your sec- | fraction scozetaries are mythical per- Deeomcnih. wwered, "These |r bach 0 the Meee ane fim give) to the end an ne tne sen [distributes donated fish, fruits, and|sale “for that much—causing the | Jonson ot Tes ory Sonera! | ton ot district comniiitee. Use |sonages; or that they are not pay- fellows are able to ame me ese | it back to the man, and he went into | stable evicted the wife and ce phe | vegetables as well as Red Cross flour, | Workers to lose that much time, with | of the N. R. A, Major Berry, who| this letter as @ real weapon to | ing any atiemifon to one of the vital Faping somebody if I do that.” |Sn00l, hungry. ae eee oTs ie cnis tenn | also they claim to have distributed |s two-hour loss of pay, which 'the | Came into the printers’ organization| OVe:come all obstacles that stand | issues raised.in the Open Letter;.or een it hear ‘4 | That night the boy went to a friend | around waiting for the ‘reds to come. | 0880 gallons .of. milk last year—but | grafters will gain. Sie /al givtke breaker’ Wisc Ouial 30,090 in the way of improving our Com- | that they simply do not care to re- a: T nt shgcte - of his and sat down on a chair and| But the furniture remained cee in this pamphlet they didn't state| The only way we workers can fight | acres of land in his home state ‘who munist work IN THE FACTORIES, | port to the.,Central Committee on eae clerk [ras ene pe zel ou of iy ae and a beara ee pone with that @ certain ‘percentage of the gov- against such conditions is by organ-| imported scabs at $20 a day in 1923| 2™ong the unemployed, in the mass | such questions. Bea in. "3 Well, his father an mother be-| the woman to look for a house. ernment flour went for handling ex- izing into the rank and file con-| to break the printers’ strike: a bishop, organizations. Whatever the reasons are one thing argument, in eee etn tate paved Counett. ond | Here in Terre Haute almost a year |nenses or that the milk was skim|{oge,™u, Jie rank and file con. | 00 eee een King of Utah, Sen-| The Seventeenth Meeting of the’ is certain: ‘That the Party fractions in Bre tibs. clerk his father tried to get more in his| ago 9 bunch of renegades sabotaged milk donated, by the Farmers Co-| Union which has a program of: ator Davis of Pennsylvania, who at| Central Committee has been held.| the unions ‘and opposition movement instructions did not mention erage ete ate Yield Sat oo to} the Communist Party and the Un-|onerative Association and that the 3 the very same time was under trial in| T€ question of developing and/are doing little if anything to carry thing about hiring “niggers.” Before | Ve him any in his basket. employed Council almost out of ex-' men working in this place giving out/ A minimum wage of $3 per day,! New York for stealing hundreds of| ‘taining new leadership from the! out the instfuctions of the Open Let- I bad a chance to protest against ;_2 Went to the trustee to try and) istence, but a few of the comrades |this stuff reecived a bag of groceries | time and a half for overtime, with | thousands of dollars, Frances Perkins |T2"*S of the Party and the unions| ter in the drgent task of training new this open discriminati get a basket, and found 500 trying | stuck and held the CP. and U.C.|for their wages, the groceries paid | two-hour lmit for all dead time. | of the Roosevelt-Wall Street govern. | ©SPecially was once more given special | corps of leaders fiom the ranks. worker who d to get baskets, and only 125 got in. | together. Some time back, this same for by state and federal relief, leav- | Abolition of all contract enterprise | ment, and many enemies of labor.|224 urgent emphasis. The Resolu-| As Lenin..said one time: “Byerye And this is happening every day. work. Against speed-up and short- tion states: where the desk 1emat! i E bunch of renegades, namely, J. Dukes, | ing the $1,550 the community proposes But Ruben Suny, a regular member of rs is heard the cry for new icted not to hire Negroes NOTICE: | Ofe, Mlinoki, Crosby, Jo. Wolf and |to raise for this outfit for the private | handed crews, equal pay for equal! in. 4 F. of Ly a ‘dslepate of the ae is pecoematy, pare. bolaly to |forees.” Thé Artericart’ working class Offers His Own Job. : | | a few others came back into the Un- pocketbooks that run this outfit, work for men and women and young Cleaners, Pressers and Spotters Union ‘aw into leading positions the | js showing in the wave of strike ‘ ae and I have been workers. No discrimination against new, fresh wo-kers—actives that de- | struggles cattiéd on in the face of On Saturday, Nov. 18, a special] | employed Council, Light House Mission of Philadelphia, could not get a reso- The clerk got a i . i 7 y Ww kers, regardless of race, creed, na- velop in the struggles, in order to | q, gy ttachi th of Sen ‘. ~ | | Page wil be devoted to the farm| | informed recently that they were workers, regi lution passed, neither could the rank lemagogy tféachery on the part ited ap Cerken’ eine fobs Were, ail) | question, particutariy with refer-|| heard to sey they will get in the| Another charity they propose to| tionality, or political or organiza- | sna ‘nie delegation of thtes ect Frlace, those who have shown | official leadéts”and a ‘use of force ee UP eee ae ane | ence to the Chicago conference | | Unemployed Council and break it up. |Taise $3,815 for, is the Light House/ tional affiliations, abolition of the! hearing for even 10 minutes or even| *emselves eae le in soe to | almost unexampled in the United oe doe for the | | now going on. In view of this, the| | So when we were preparing for a|Mission, which is supposed to be @|black list and clearing house, aboli- be allowed to present their resolu-| C&'Y out the Open Letter!’ States that. it.is rich in the material ce Th Now lates aes sour} Showed up. We held a good meet-| Unemployed. were allowed to stay at first son-of-a-bitch. Now let’s see your ing at ite worker's conte and we|this flop joint and soup line three one | HELP “DAILY” FOR FIRST TIME squandering more than $100,000; with for themselves in the matter of theo- rav~ | | regular Thursday section of letters| |ccunty hunter mazch they were all jhome for homeless men. It has been| tion of the job fee system. For fed-| tions, pone cemades er to have the of which leadership is. made, ‘im | | trom farmers will be transferred to | placed on important committees and | brought to the attention of the work-/eral unemployment and social in-| “with the electricians’ officials of | (Pinion that only experience in strug-| But the truly alarming results of itis tap | | the Saturday special page. | | when the time came for the demon-|ers’ organizations of Bellingham {8 | surance. New York recently squandering over | 8° adenine: ES ae aanens the inquiry. conducted by the Agit- oH z = | it hai e . . ly active u ae aon * stration there wasn’t any of them| three different occasions that $7,500,000, and the painters’ officials | Sorkers are more or lous left to ahitt | noradie teen eas Pinon Gig tempts are bing made by our frac- here, and to| hands. Who is with me?” Silence | aay ariel tien nid Costeee Git, “ad Saree eouns. of the Brotherhood of| retical training in connection with| tors to caress ngth i 4 ree and stret en the § out on ¢| then one hand, two hands, one hun-| ‘“dn't fail to expose those rats, | SAV BG ae Ot eee tney were | MIDDLETOWN, N. ¥. — Three Se es seek scat | thelr practical tasks. leadership in the decisive combat or- on too, and I | dred hands. The resu't was that, in-| |turned over.to.the police on s vag! Workers, T. Gelefis, C. Coteledis, and 27 and charged with extortion; with|, 22 make mistakes and in many | canizations of the working class—the an oe pee | oon of one hundred, one hundred) Mission Houses Drive | charge. H. Christ, when approached to help | the members betrayed on every hand instances the sharpest criticism is} unions , ane one men Went out on the 30> | Workers to Hospitals | t™ the community benetit budget | the Daily Worker contributed §2.| by the top offcials of the Ac. of L,| eveled against them, After one or| Disbelief In Our Ability, to Lead ——— = eee | SDIVAUS | i, cioo an them of $2560°76 for shrink | its ‘wan "ihe "rat: dikte’ Bey “eho | Wee shonees aria Aisles Wma eee Pere aot cnee, faperlences quite 8) ‘There is .no systematic, work belugh* inn : for Mental Diseases sc—whet kind of a racket shrinkage supported our paper. It shows that | Ployment insurance for millions of its ‘1 Le acer aun dela a liad carried on. jf this teld... The) Umiap I pp pap members, who have been out of work | fur jis, Ct eadership are too great/excuses will not avail here. ‘The | —— {is I don’t know! | (By a Worker Correspondent) | In regards t6 ‘how the mill com- | NEW YORK.—A number of patients | pany will gain. additional profits by our “Daily” is more beloved than ever by the workers and that, if they are approached they are glad to help. j in Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital beg | | to be sent away to a state hospital for | | mental diseases on account of their | economic condition and their suffer- | | Foward the $40,000 Drive for years, the A. F. of L, leadership has reduced itself to a political, cul- tural and moral zero. AFL Heads Keep for their abilities. They either drop | out of activity entirely or become! rank and filers again. Lenin explained that revolutionary | political understanding does not| come spontaneously. If it did the role of the Communist Party would) shocking condition revealed by the inquiry is the result of opportunistic tendencies expressing themselvés par- tially in the manner ‘described by Comrade Edwards in his sveech to the Seventeenth! Session. of the Cen- tral Committee: CONDLL.RD BY | ing from slow starvation in mission | be ‘quite different. Revolutionary; “vyhat are. these opportunistic HELEN LUKE houses, where they are forced to pro- Sa ttl L fi political understanding is brought to| deviations?,..[s it a disbelief m the There's a little article here on dietetic matericlism, sent by Comrade | f€8S belief in relizion to get a bed) eattie Laun Ty the working class by the Communist | masscs—that the masses will not Kangas, regerding the value of torstoes. I'm for it tooth and nail, It| ee = are cag Cork suniepet| District Past Half Wk. Total to Date Quoia % of Quota . ooo eee wee ficht? Of course the masses will shows that if . lodging houses are no r — | W k F ass, organizing,| fight. ‘This is seen so cleatly today tomatoes is : eS rs eee ere eee eee A few months of such living demor-| 1. Boston .., +$ 4747 $1,188.87 $1,200 29.07 | or: ers in ear teaching, reviewing —_ experiences, that no one can deny'it. The con- isicide. Wainres gaa | alizes a person. Some of these patients) 2. New York «01,933.74 11,073.68 20,000 55.36 | establishing a clear line of struggle) crete form of’ the ‘opportunistic rade Fangas has not included the information that a can of toma- | are alcoholic repeaters for the same| 3. Philadelphia ... 27.00 1,580.78 2,000 79. (By a Worker Correspondent) for the working class on the basis| deviations: {sw disbelief that we as foes is also a good thing to sobere-———— - | purpose of getting themselves sent} 4. Buffalo. . 920 128,83 750 11 SEATTLE, Wash.—Since the strike | Of its practical problems and the) Communists can organize and mob- Up on, but then she has evidently; Can ou "Make ‘Em | away. 5. Pittsburgh 307 av188 Com 4779 | 1 the laundvies last summer condi- | Main line of the analysis of capital-| jilize the masses, that the masses heen a decent, worker all her life and | és | ¢ Canvas ere eee : ° tins have been gradually getting | ‘st-imperialism and the strategy and| will fight ander owr gone ad fell so low as to associate with on ourself? | aati = 1 emer r 2,000 42.5 worse, The workers never know| tactics of Marxist-Leninism. This is the concrete form ef ‘ urge nts, as I did. 7 etroi! 77.61 1,428.14 2,000 714 | whether they will work four hours, Agitation and Propaganda deviations, today.” : . Pattern 1650 is available in sires | 8. Chicago 34.08 1,944.79 3,000 38.89 | six hours or eight hours. They never! It is not sufficient that general! If there is a Pebatiet 2 See abil Vitamins in Tomato Juice Preserve | 12, 14, 16, 18, and 20. Size 16 takes " 9, Minneapolis . 25.49 265.09 750 36.3 | know whether they will be told to|gitation and provaganda be carried|of the Party to organize and lead Health 4 yards 54 inch fabric and % yard etters Irom d Oman Heb... te 36.05 350 345 | come to work at 7:30, 9:09, 10:00, or |0n- ‘The work must be specialized.| American workers then What is the Here ‘ sti 1. N. and §, Dakota .. 83.62 350 93.3 || 12:00 o'clock. Mg imignt Hes we ee as ae again | good of developing more Juice : a 12. Seattle A 4 & si | ‘in many of the plants the workers|the definition of agitation and prop-| leaders? We do not mean to ady coe + | Our Readers} 2 2." Sh BE etc ae ue ouoer end” Aah eae to | St" Simone ea Shanon to, orange | d New Jeraay eas ae 22.9 | washings and prepare for work in acquaint large numbers of workers) baldly as this but certainly = . 1 for health, ON THE DAILY WORKER w Jersey ... 430.23 650 66.1 | general before the whistle blows and| With one or more special issues and|ture of a mistaken belief’ tattle rowt lopment. of | 15. Connecticut . - 94 173.08 500 34.6 | at night expected to cover the clothes, | #touse them to action on the bas‘s| spontaneous springing up of leader- the body. Vitamins A, B, and CG must | pe A | 16. N. and 8. Carolina.. 6.00 19.95 150 13.36 | run canvass through mangle and so| 0! particular issues. Propaganda is ship and faflure to understand he supplied by the dict to retain the | ! | 17. Birmingham, Ala.., (corrected) 42.65 150 284 | forth after quitting time. intended to put a number, of the body's vigorous tone. ‘Tomatoes are j Auburn, Washington, | 1g Milwaukee. 25.20 355.25 750 413 It is a common occurrence to work | basic principles of the revolutionary 3 é one of tha ver | Dear Comrades, ies Denver ne: ‘3.00 130.86 250 523 _ | five, ten, fifteen minutes and some- | ‘lass struggle before a comparatively | ranizations’ plays a ‘large part in 1 | About a week ago we wrote to you! Misccllaneous 64.00 1380 47 | times even longer without being paid | Small group of workers and convince | bringing about’ such @ situation ‘as |for en order of a bundle of five] two... Apps ee 299 | 207 It. All overtime is supposed to be see of the ae ae of these) we have désetibéd. There is here a Dailies. Already we want to increase nt | pa’d for at the rate of ‘time-and-a- Las Ay bas say a nee oe = large admixture of opportunism, | it to fifteen Dailies per day. My] , HS “ ATER. = | half.” onally, I know, that in some | Struggles of the working class agains| eee | TOTAL si %........$2,506.59 $23,056.34 $40,000 59.8% | pi where any time is allowed for| “the enc:oachments of capital” and —peorle, books, [> | husband got a sudden burst of am- 8% | plants where any t:me is allowed for people, books, pamphlets, res. Z 0 bition ae lettered a mail bag to| Jewish Workers’ Clubs . $421.40 $1,305.22 $2,000 69.7% | overtime it is on'y straight time and | for power. olutions, programs, _ outlines—for Bdults, particula carry the papers in. He will not only —— - - = = —<--——..-—. | in many eases where they have| , The successful conduct of the daily | making rapid.progress in the estab- weeable sou | handle the “Daily Worker” but “New |.jrcrowip ut” 100871 Blum | ys ‘ted! 400) Babien 100 | worked 45 minutes they will be paid | Struggles and the connection of them | lishment in..the unions of lectute which is very Masses,” “Goviet Russia’ Today,"'"Lae | sare aasees CE Gent yf ee Watmono oO for only 30 minutes, with the struggle for power is not courses, study classes and circles, dis- bor Unity” and “Labor Defendcr.” | rotet to date 295634 ‘osenberg, 50 cat. ty. aie Csl. by Bush : The worlcrs naturally resent these | Possible without Communist leader-| cuss'on clubs, night schools, etc. The } Also the little weekly “Voice of Ac-| DISTRIST Nol) Soi T3 -tommes 439) Zeser 25 | conditfons, but they ave afraid to say| Ship. It is therefore of basic im-| will to do the necessary things must | tion,” printed in Seattle, gE Zier, BE Boston 25 Mice “05 Col. by Pakula an anything for fear of being laid off. eased see oe ee potas in| also be there: Of the response from He wanted to get started immedi- spree: ve es a Hise 1 3 Cal. ‘by Loasin ue Bete “10 tues Ae igh coger Sey. of the docks and tltwaye it iregaions, | vill be ature uber areeneeiin ‘ots i ‘4 Ke 1 y , | ately, so insterd of waiting for the | Tet! 113 7S mma aS uit iiss 14) M Pavioviea “15 | have enough faith in the A. F. of L.| Should be educated systematically in| the response-4o the inquiries of the bee to come he went to the “ STRICT Ne! Foo St & Unie ‘ 2. 25 ae same iia | Unk Pepaciz 95 | Oicials of their union to take their bid ee <neiples of Communism, its | Azitprop Commission on, the part of — | ter” in Seattle and cleaned them of | a 30 See Une fas ee at 3 |: Donaas ‘Yo | troubles up with them, but many of | tategy and tactics. cur own comrades. 3 t | all the monthly periodicals they had | Comrade Louis 135 Post “1, W.E.S.L. en by Bere ) spetka ‘o5 | the workers are disheartened because| What is the situation disclosed by ther phases, of this question will peacticat Methods | left and ten Dailies, besides a few |M. Gordon 35 gol ard 30 "4 names 50 Col. by Bosga the business agent openly stated that | ® Survey conducted by the Agitprop! be dealt with in future articles, | ‘Tomatoes pamphlets. He sold all of them out|f ¥j 255 Ste PORE ty S48 Cole by Renice Zeman 25) he was forced to close his eyes to | Ss ? . . Harris 1, Unit 2. 3 names 30| Novak 0 for 3 - Here is a recipe for the orange in two days and hasn’t even gone|M. Radoff 1,00 Sec. 1, Unit 7B 1.00 Col, by Mandelki Oot. by Vissic many things that should be corrected. | Juice substitute for breakfast or any | over nearly all of the town. Besides, |. by BB. Con, See. i, Uni 7 names 70) “Maynarich as a a bier mes. there is a town, Kent, six miles north Tvs BS = J. Uni 1% us ost 1.00} Muerin 38| Helping the Daily Worker ij cu ato ju | no agen’ s Col. by Goldin : . ] Retenacon yt aa | I tell ie Cesena we need a| Kiros 30. Lise 29920 Vo§ me tec Viaeek 3 beret de De au Paneer it i | on : . : ont ions recetve e cret ; % teaspoon sugar good deal of individual initiative in om Siu me 8 names tro} OE 7 erate, of Dr. Luttinger in his Socialist com- | 1 teaspoon lemon juice | Cohen Col. by Lipechite utsky -10 i por Bi our movement. There is an open i Gash pepper and paprika | field for ambitious Comrades all over | ‘Simm 23 Cal. 'halmen "77 gf tenet, 73] Sermak BLY etc ale opti gre sae j I. . au - H These other recipes, in which to-| the U. 8. I mean especially in the} Fier" 35 cium, 8 07 oe |e s and Del to raise $1000" pipes #00 00 | mato juice ts used, are excellent. | field of literature. We were amazed | Cacy 10 "10 dames 2:10- Cb Mesmemely | - Rout 35! Daily Worker Dri \ i Tomato sauce: to find out how eager the workers | ol: by Prew os Ch by Norman 4 Col. by Ainbern ores. Rr i BD ehiatpcone fea: Bumpers are airvety disiinaioned op | fee’ rat a ae ch Star S| Guy pros? F x numbers are a lon 2 OF C8 names 60 Git. by Shiller a By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. “Dear Docior: % teaspoon salt the NRA. Ratrkee 23 Col. by Goles 10, esnes 3.60} amos 10 ” Me a octor: % teaspoon rs ter 10 Friend 3.00 & names 275 10 Is is not necessary in order to get. Bex tomas ce A port Coerade bent in| Some 2G Sia os et «| ene Owing oa ee (TE eee | 1 slice onion | Seattle after another bag full of Ut-| Anos Yo OGL by yy Line 12598 135) xoren Whitening Dark Skin to take some of the burdens i Melt the fat, add dry ingredients erature. They wanted us to get our roe 10 — 5S Saag ero as| aX. them by enlightening fueron j at, its, bundle through the “center” but we | - “xttlie 3 ol. Col. by Shapiro Kraske Joe M.—There is no medicine which | card to the limitatt ; blend thoroughly. Cook tomato juice Col. by Pres 2m 2.23 on of the MMMM fatin two ‘initiates, thea ter get it sooner if it comes to us direct. | “Solomen 05 ‘Test Tis 1630.01 of Te Yikiemen sl ptt will lighten a dark skin, The stories | Party members look at Abie | move onion and add juice gradually| Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15e) in| I do so much want to really do some~| Gottlieb 113 Tol to date 11504.61 3’ names 4.00) Sirinen in the newspapers, last year, were|UScless, not+revolutionary, ete. _ to fat and flour. Cook thoroughly, | Cols or stamps (coins preferred) for| thing for the movement myself, but| Podelsty ‘6 Lig turned in at D.W. bk eTRicT Ne - Perkovich misleading. But why should you wish | E20 that a married woman in the +> Meat loaf with tomato sauce: this Anne Adams pattern. Write| my babies keep me terribly close to os ps Proves, Woskare a HA Toit ba gl i to lighten it? movement, particularly if she has | "2 cups finely chopped cooked meat | Plainly name, address and style num-| home. They are three boys, aged) ffs 1 10 Gol. by Harkevy "J. ‘aol Nae fot] te 10 childven, docs a ahd four-fold Beeeatiany. CODD | iapeeke : As to the removal of excess hair, cups meat stock (hot) | ber. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. | four and one-half—two and one-half| Stern AD gd? sae gS" Bey 137| Seadetin, Fletemever '25| Cohen 80 {| Job to that of the man, And the fact Baty crusion Address orders to Daily Worker, | and one year, and demand most of | Fs, “10 Cole by Wetabergee | This 1.00| Cihos 180] Welsstield 25 ee only Peary ancetiod is that | thet she cannct activize herself tothe Be Gls 4 tnceseary) | Pattern Department, 243 West 17th| my time. I'm behind my husband in|, “pitt Ca Toul 11-13 ng | ee Boh Bhony Tete oe | fediotig Te eeu te fete oe eos | extent of -the-man, vanes a lotier | 1 teaspoon salt | Street, New York City. Patterns by| all he can do and will trade places Weinrite 7 Teer ee te Smee 301 at sof resin ou would be eocuee a You! dicsstisfaction,, { cine : | maily only. with him if circumstance demands |. ,Wene 23M. Bohut Bgl 4as| Davis ‘as | cl! by mol ool ns ae fe and money on tt. Most | Tnore ace iiseady~Blrth Control teaspoon peppel Seri 50 skin Add to the meat, which has been | ae it. Tas. |s cas 2100 Col, by Pearl _ S Brown “50 40 ——| Bun 50 Lalas ah the of Armenians} oiinics in yatious states and. cities, put through the grinder, the dry Helping the Daily Worker ae pas 250, 12 names 1.70 a Thomas at peter -10| Total Nov. 13 3.10] Col. by Melton .25 | Very al ive. but they ate far between. Why ate j roug! , | is fe. Pat, It neue 355 Unie 13 F Eskoln, :18| Total to date 86.05 end 28 ee hie | read crumbs and hot mest. stock. Through Helen Luke FIGURES SPEAK LOUDER THAN |<)" 25.00 Col. by Rise aUie 13 ‘s 7 ” ime not the cliniss/ef the American Birth Add the well beaten eggs and season-| —Gontripy heed received to the credit BALLYHOO, wiles” 4.02 Ga, Fong Fh 1.85 HF Sil 1.50 Ese uae we Cider As a Laxative Control Lieacté advertised in the ings. Pour into baking dish. Set| or Helen Lube at leet Accinlies-cons- Louisville, Ky. 2:00 13 names 130 | Te ee a ae P. 8. F, Albany—with many peo- | D2!Y Wozker, or aul clinic where |, Gish in a pan of hot water and bake | petition with Michael Gold, Dr. Lut-| We all read with great interest |< Tag: Gt memes 160 Peas 45) A, Jacobson —_1.00| ple, cider (unfermented apple juice) er ot nan he FeHADLY. ee _ in @ moderate oven until mixture 15 | tinger, Edward Newhouse and Jacob | your article about the Federal relief 2100 Gal, by Shuster DISTRICT 2438 | rota Nov, 12 io | HAS a laxative effect; but so have all| ‘ined. | firm. Serve with tomato sauce. (The | Burck’ to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 | administrator, Hopkins, FE en MC a a a) 1287| Total to date 355.25 | fruit juices, including grape juice. Aj “I have ‘néatd.ot individual women ‘above recipe.) Daily Werker Drive. Womens 12.80 1d 00 2.30 LW. 0. gallon or even a quart a day is too| ‘who have‘gaparticular experience) | Yours comradely, Under his Department of our Boas |Weckers School : 4 (03 ramet NO oe ints ——-| E. Flat. Wers. Sch. | much, If two or three glasses have | forming citfos-for the purpose of do+ V. M. Kangas. thule Government, they have just finished Bera Park Wotlhce 7 umn 1.00 Total to date ‘Total Nov. 13 45.33 | List 102779 fio effect, do. not try more. Cider|ing what the! Moctors and other or- | .. Speaking of tomatoes reminds mej prog Wks, Cult, Glub registering all the unemployed work- ne Rap CAL We, Gaeta ok ee cal | ciapeme ie ot See aie sO lspritetnia’ aay organte acid called malic | ganizations have not*attempted to ef a not standard, but dizzy Yar Pravicts: total ie et te ys eel 3 20 G. tugo 0 | Herma “38 §. Francisco 2193) Levahlts 128 acid and can be substituted to or- do, Supply Uthjs information and of my own invention, and one ot Total to da ab 4 30 ©, Crowell, Dec. ’ ramen on. “20! ange juice or other fruit juices, pro- | materia’ ae? | eee, Yer cecidenly “the ‘ pigetire! what thereetice tous i Bi 1.50! otat Nov. 13 30 Wels jo | mUsdanetA. 100) Ghitarens Bre | Vided' you obtain an unadulterated| “Will you give us your views on the j _ mother. layers and on top. It went over big. 8 ey BlVE | Dsily Worker Cal. by Lavine Total to date 1964.79 | Maki -35| Total Nov. 12 40.53| 10-J,Z.Kremer 50] product free from the preservative | Subject of Birth Control? Would not _ I was once siuck with a hungry | (Get it nice and brown on top.) them out, only certain ones that will Fete rey el 1.30 Coe ee dame, 1 DR Recorded | Hendrickson :48| Total to date 829.33} Col. by Wishingrad Bensoate of Soda, which is usually|an advertisement on the Women’s 1 and scarcely any food but a| Ripe tomatoes could doubtless he | KeeP it a secret. Wise 234 4 names Wer Soe ie EEA | bate Be tates 1.00 added. Page help toward; this? Perhaps wed basket of green tomatoes. I} done the same way, but with less| One of the clerks that was on the} Neighbor 0 P.W.C, Library Total to date 268.09 1L.D. ” —_-20.00| 10 names 1.00 FO a ins ~| you'll Say" yon are noi on the man- ace “fritters,” which the family|sugar, And now Comrade K. has| job tells us that the figures show| Kasurnskt zB ye DIST. ——| Col. by B. Sporn We print the following interesting | agement of the newspaper—at least i ‘t like. Then I sliced the to-/ got me so hungry for tomatoes I'll/ there is greater unemployment now ‘ts _ Library ee orf i meh roy Hd Fate) 9 names “78 | letter with the object of starting «| your word would bear some \ and baked them in layers with | have to forage the cafeteriss for| than there has been any time since | Sh aay D. Brencit 10 ‘DIST. No. 15. | Total Nov, 18 1s,a9}iscussion on the subject among the “Fraternally: yours, 4 _ brawn sugar and bacon between the e, right away, 1929, Kentucky Red. D5 Cal. Op Shatin D. Miller 20! M. B. Btevers to date 1004.47 | Teaders of the Daily Worker; ‘Constanee ML® ‘ a

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