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Paze Four PARTY LIFE | C.P. Role Should Be Brought to Fore in Jobless Councils Cleveland Worker Criticizes Methods of Lo- Py eal Council in Conducting Meetings DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1938 f 5,000 New Members Gained| Worker Helps Messenger Boys for [WO in 8 Drive Weeks} gf Western Union Co. Win Victory ¢ Now Get Paid 20 Cents an Hour for Extra Work Canvassing for Greetings Ninth Week Wins 657; Prizes Offered for the || ————— > st Recruiters in Last Five Weeks os cas asain A Thanksgiving Present from the By Letters from Our} Readers Our membership drive is a success. It showed what can be done with vi inion Messengers’ a little effort. The weekly average of new members taken in so far in nine | {By a Group of Western Unio lessengers) NEW YORK.—We messengers have gained a real victory from the “During the winter months the Unemployed” Councils and other working class organizations conduct many indoor meetings especiaily open hearings | weeks of the campaign, falls only « few short of pest bared Sees" eae cas | Y ( t | R ‘ d Western Unioxt"Comoany. It was more than “gained” from the company. | and mock trials. Here in Cleveland we have had two open hearings on able argument could we give to those pessimis ie = sraattnie certian Pat fie Rell ra 0a It was actuallywrung ont” of them. And for this victory we have to thank | ROOSTING THE INTERNATIONAL | Neighborhood scale—both drawing hund ds of-workers. “To both of these, that uncmployment kills the recruiting power of the tniernatios | cen | the Daily Worker. BOOKSHOP meetings we drew workers not connected with our movement before. From Order? Think of it! 5,000 new mem- oe | By a Railroad Worker Correspondent = the point of attendance both were a¢—— success. Another good feature was next da aya 3) Imperialism, the Highest Stage oks. bers won in eigh Letters from messengers have appeared in the “Daily” showing Washington, D. 0. | NEW YORK.—The New York Cen-! brutal, vicioyssystem under which? and no new faces at’ the five MOre Ween e arive,|of Capitalism, by Lenin. tral Railroad gave us a nice Thanks-| we work. One of the bitterest I cannot urge local sympathizers | that workers not in our movement got| Meeting. It is plain, from this that ast weeks of our drive. /°" 4) State and Revolution, by Lenin, | giving Day present. They laid off] grievances —was. the soliciting of and comrades too strongly to support | up and told very simply their stories.| We Sof No organizational results, ale “jeg ape. The Eighteenth Bramaire of |75 men from Harmon to New York.| freetings andeholiday messages for the International Book Shop, 806} Program Not Brought Forward | though the night before all standing upreme We I remember a few weeks ago it was! in a paper that the New York Cen-| tral is going to put on more men.| So that shows you what kind of a humbug the New Deal is. The men| I St, N. W. Go there as often as possible and buy all the literature you can possibly afford. As for myself, I cannot, with words, Louis Bonaparte, by Karl Marx, Every worker is welcome as a new) member. Every new member won en- | titles you to a prize or premium. The hich the messengers canvassed. We were paid Sez-for every message we ucceeded in- getting. If we canvassed for four hours and only got two firms “A woman gave the story of hard-| 00m Was taken at the trial. Tt ts also ships that she and her children were | easy to”See how the-mistake in “the going through. She told of how she| leaflet waS‘made when at the meeting searched for a solution of her prob-| not’ one party member. was' present. cial ‘ium lems. i new mem- maining five Prizes prizes Hitler his | is given for the er new members only, not be- cause we want to center the attention | of our comrades upon the importance its membership at least 35 will receive a beautiful eled and cast especially urpos es ir al member recruiting ts a fountain pen and for every ten new members, a fountain pen set. member bringing in at least mbers, will become an offi- of the Order and | ronze medal with his | ed. For 20 new mem-/} will receive the same medal d for 25 members od-filled. ie oD the same are working to give us greeting messages we re- ceived only 10 cents.—This is for four hours of worl In many places we got mean and either. All of the messengers hated | this work but because of the beg- garly salaries we're getting we had | to try to increase it by canvassing, | Soon after letters appeared in| the Daily Worker from us boys, the company put through a rule to pay) the messengers 20 cents an hour |for this work. This means that | | whether or not we succeed in get- | |ting any greetings we get a guar-| antee of 20 cents an hour. | Company Tries to Evade Rule. Ey = “a the movies instead of soliciting. We see now what can be done by getting together and fighting for our rights. It shows us how quickly we can gain better conditions if we do something about it. And it's proved to us how important a paper like the Daily Worker is for us. We have many more grievances which we can overcome in the same manner by organizing and fighting. | We're waking up to the fact that, However, m order to have this| We don’t “have to take it on the | express my gratitude for what the Bookshop hes meant to me. That ;equally applies to the International Publishers and Workers Library Pub- on the right track toward a broader education; knowledge of the only truth I ever knew and information about the U.S.S.R. Long live Communism Long live the U.S.S.R. and long live the Inter- national Bookshop! Comradely, Jack O’Brien. PRAISE FOR THE NAZI EXPOSE Seffner, Fla. Editor, Daily Worker:— How she had planned suici and finally joining the ‘holy rollers’, where she found some relief for her mental anguish. This was the first with her problems—and now we must ask ourselves—did this open hearing show this woman who is responsible for her condition? Did this open hearing show her a way | out of her present condition? As this is her first attendance at a meeting called by the Unemployed Councils—did we show her what the Unemployed Council is—what the role of the U.C. is—and since the Communist candidate for mayor was the prosecutor—did we show her what the Communist Party is—or did we just confuse her more? “We are planning: more open hear- ings andtria’s. We have learned from the others. In order to make them more effé¢tive, we have decided: * of working among the younger work- cruel treatment by business firms lishers, It would be impossible for|time she had attended a mecting| “1. To make our campaign against ath is | om eee sae aaa charg Bs va = me to heap sufficient eae upon | called by the Unemployed Councils. | child misery, the outstanding issue: Other Prizes 13 | annoyed by messengers who were! company has already tried to evade | those who have made the local In-|Many workers in the audience were é x pe ae cence aepoee 7 a Every branch of 25 or more mem- | canvassing. Many times we were| paying the 20 cents by saying that |ternational Bookshop possible. It is| crying when she finished her story. | ol, WATS Polilicians and reli c which during this campaign in- | kicked out of offices and not gently! we wasted our time and went to|8teatly responsible for starting me In that crowd were many more | 48ents. n- exposing the city and county officials.te.also bring out clearly and concretely that necessary funds are available to provide. adequate relief. “4, To bring out clearly the role of the Unemployed Councils, and to re- cruit suppdérters at the hearings. ~ “5. Unemployment and Social In- surance.” —A. O., Cleveland. Cae Paes NOTE BX EDITOR: The self- criticism of. Comrade A. O. is clear. Only a few points must be emphs- sized. There are Communists in the ees who are working now | SS. chin,” as we've been doing until dit | “I think that she left confused—| Unemployed Council of Clevéland— Reich: These medals will be badges of] rom Sp days to 13, days a month, |TUlins actually put into effec we) oe” Instead “of taking Ae ae Hauer er Berea edt cleus in | that we did not prove to her that the| in the leadership of the Council. oo ee cacy the local confer. | Just enough to starve, because no-)messengers will have to put wp al going to give it right back—and|this country. I Hope the farmers| Way of the Holy Rollers was not the| How gid. if happen that this open espe- | body can live on that mone; |real struggle. In many cases the plenty of it! way out—that the Unemployed Coun- hearing-to which all parties were S d affairs of the Order 85) ciany with a wife and children, | * a Sag ales eatened Dally cil was a fighting organization for| Tequested~to send representatives, ae | Se i? a Worker with contributions towards |immediate demands—and we did not| the name of the Communist Party See ee on eee atime Geil | Tp’ | ° its support, Here 1s another dollar | combat her many illusions success-| representative was ees How ers per wek for the N f Ik h F ht : Soller | oe i Se a ot ie camps. Rail Telegrapher | Norfolk Longshoremen Fight } "=== moe Last Monday we concluded the h week of our drive. This ninth eek of recruiting resulted in 657 nbers and 112 children. nian Section again im-| proved its work and brought in 68 new | nbers this week. Our Italian com~- too, began to take the drive| riously. During the last three | the Italian Section can report |_ 54 he Italian Sectior ‘pt | Daily Western Union (By a Railroad Telegrapher) SAN DIEGO, Calif—Thanks to the did slide back eks of the drive +1902, I know all too well that such ing the nin ‘ policy of the Western Union. have taken in @ total of 5,304 new Praises Expose on Lockout and ILA Misleader (By a Marine Worker Correspondent.) NORFOLK, Va.—The longshoremen of Hampton Roads are still fighting | | back and pledge to fight to a finish. For the past eight years George Mill- | ner, third vice-president of the I. L. \fused to take it lying down. They| 1. cheap tactics has always been the|organized a rank and file action| Though they have spent thousands | committee and elected delegates to and its representative in Hampton ‘Worker for exposing the West-| Roads, has sold out the men of the J. L. A. He tells the men it is something L. A. from Hampton Roads. of dollars for representation this was REPORT OF A SUICIDE Dorchester, Mass. Dear Daily:— I am a reader of your newspaper and am very satisfied with the truth that you publish. If I wouldn’t read the Daily I wouldn’t know what's going on in the different parts of Sunday morning at 73 Prince St., Boston (North End). The name is ‘Michele Gregorio, age 53 years. After being out of work for over Role of Party Played Down “In the first place, the prepara- tions—leaders, advertised that the Democratic candidate for mayor, the councilmen of that ward, the head of the relief committee were all in- vited, but it didn’t mention the Com- munist candidate for mayor who was also invited and was the only one} to be present. “Next at the meeting itself, when resent the bosses and the Communist Party candidate for mayor as prose- cutor. I. O. Ford did a good job for Communist representative was a candidate for mayor of Cleveland and prosecutor at the trial, the role of the Party was not brought fore ward? * This’ shows a tendency manifest, not orly in Cleveland, but in many districts, to conceal the face of the Party. This is one of the reasons why our Party does not grow, work- ers are not recruited. Our Party ent increase of its weekly _ Worker bij Reema the world. : ce . ‘ern Union in its treatment of its| over which he has no control, He kept this lie up until F. R. Barrett dis- none of the bosses’ agents showed up,| representatives are not leaders only from 2 to 99 members Tast messengers, Myself being a railroad| charged two gangs of Local 978 of ?—______________| Now I wilt inform yon of snout’ |, leading comrade of the city unem-| hecause of thelr native ability, but and commercial telegrapher since|the coal trimmers. These men re-; only code or representative of the ployed movement was chosen to rep-| just because they are Communists —members of the Communist Party. ‘Their line is clear because it is the Communist Party line. The te 0 a boo! W 304 3 yr more than 50 years prior to|the M. W. U. convention, There| the first time the coal trimmers have |A1le" Deng, OWN OF HOKE Tot OVE | the Communist Party, but the inde-| of the-Party moet Selbroughe to the ws a8 children. ‘This 48| 1912, railroad opcrators and station] these delegates learned how to fight. | ever been represented outside Hamp-|)2" shot himself in the right tem-|Pendent role of the Unemployed) workers, etherwise mass ar 2 sapere jagents, through a contract that ex-|They came back, drew up their own/ ton Roads. ple and died. He left a note behina | Councils was not brought forward. | and oper trials are merely an ex- isted between the railroads and the nT |code, rejected Ryan’s agreement and} Now Millner knew that Friday which said, “‘T’m sick of eating rotten Organizational Results Poor posure of conditions and no results Western Union mpelled to} filed suit against F. R. Barrett and| would be too late to present the|food which I've been getting out of | “The Unemployed Council had its} gre obtained. new membe handle and del Jegrams make| Milner for all back pay, for the| code, but he and the other delegates |tne garbage ann eat dn the morn |@6ular meeting in the same hall the ‘The next question thet the cor- has ,'0| reports, remittan for and re-|money incurred through losses of|left Thursday night for Washington. lings and I applied everywhere for respondent raises is that even the MIAN gd, the | Dulld batteries for the Western U eat aie ships and insurance, One of oe Gessates by the mame of |neip and was denied so I've decided 19 Widows Dropped role of.the Unemployed Council ‘in e Secuon & A€ | without one cent of pay or commis-| They also are demanding $12 per| Jimmy Jones from the same local as dit all.” —i, . have, Section 20 Ukrainian Sec sion from tha company, uae te: Week per man for the full time they| Nicholls—1221—who fell in, Miliner’s ata from Pension List br Satiear been agin ‘4 aside fi the se-| tion 448, the Ttatan Section 201, an@| ceiving a measely salary of $15 to/ were locked out. net, wired back to his local the fol- a d.fot their failure to Polish Section 181. Our newly| 59 per month from the railroad, | yj lowing Monday for information Condeenessaoe ES TER by | formed Roumanian sacone aureated ‘Ask any railroad telegrapher with | shieateninerye bad cat bene! whether he stey on in Washington Een Adare: ek a en TON wor. Mine fe ery ee sae ete workers are in recruiting 170 new members during | 49 o¢ more years experience and he! was caught afding these locked out|% return back. Local 1221 held a seeeeee 28,790." nN crups- | thi d. : vou that thi ion | me Fe casi Meta | ss) pension lists here and placed on the} Council cah and does do, there is Krups- | this perio tee ay ae ie wet a We ace | men, yaaemadnaeri reac cae pay ne Total to date ...........$29,096.84| Federal Emergency Relief. | These| no reason for the worker to join. naar | wonder that with all this free forced | eee ey, made the men fight | own expense he mey stay as long as|_ DIST. No.1 Boston 5.00 Te Varsities: ee ee ‘ He Pua aries page \labor that this industrial octopus) ~". pegherat | he ie Harvard Br, Nel i ssary tings labor, thet, this Indus cee | ‘They had Witght and Clarks ct Refuse to Pay Tax Pace ee 80] mee ea 18] a, for thelr orders, |The relief | the workers into ty organteation From 1925 to 1928 I was employed | the M. W. I. U. speak at their local] They ousted him as timekeepet,| Col by Burke Un it head, Voice, insu! ee oe be th en . iliner reaféhe he| bought a_ br: names 4 m 1- a cae! a a as a Morse operator for the Western} Meetings. Milin thy d th 2] and new shovel and| 4.05) Un 1-58 when they come for their orders. e correspondent [Thion in Los Angeles. ‘There were | °xPulsion of the whole local by using | tagged it with his name, and set it) dl) Mauro | Ona i 106 Morse operators in the traffic de-| the red scare, but the rank and file| neatly in a corner to wait his re-| 10 names 80) Un 9-33 BAT partment in a single room. An equal] said 1f he takes away our I. L. A.| turn. Millner then sent Word back| Pav Cutters and Un WU AT OONBUCTED BL ‘number had already been displaced| W@ Will add one more letter to our|to the men saying he didn’t know bers aoe ‘Tote! Nov 29 122.50 ; wenen utKE years before by the “Mux.” | union name—and that will be the} whether he could do them any good] Go} by Enstedt 10| Tot to date 13469.19 e ° Work Increased, With Pay As Before | M,W- I. U. ‘They elected delegates| up in Washington or not. “That fel-| Johneon 10 DIST. No. 4 | om t e ommunis arty + Ae we deal more concretely and in Wark Inereniod: Sicnd night letters| ‘© the N.R.A. Code hearing in Wash- | low Nicholls has raised hell up here,” | O!son. pe ge och a : z > 4 blems in training and teaching the children, also | ome into use. The extra length of | "Son on Nov. 9 | said Milner. “I may have to stay| Johnson tel ecg | 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, ¥. ¥. mportance of drawing the women into the class struggle” |these telegrams increased the tele-) ,Miuner forced | himself on this| Sig ee as eee | again 28| “Col by Cherney in t eveluti y vement,” and mh. raphers burden one hundredfold egation in order to retard the} » is % a % all, they = Toe eda gins SiN gieaide thaninicd \Githout any increase in pay. If an|tapidly growing fight of these men.| demand, but Local 1221 sent him ex-| ¥ Cetlson slau ~ Please send me more information on the Communist Party. 7 ; arlneag perf ak shai operator could not show excessive or | a Blips onl tia 8, or day the | 2culy ae ; Peterson 35) 2 names oo s € most super-natural speed with « legation was to leave from Nor-| Then iner sent word to fire Jeff | Swanson =: ae Pere: You Make ‘Em fintpiex = sending machine (pur- | folk, Millner goes to Lambert's Point, | Nicholls. But instead of Local 1221 a Lune One wet | Ane 2 Yourself? | chased out of his pay), he was simply|has a talk with F. R. Barrett, and|firing Jeff Nichols they chose to| Jonson cr so euseoseenertecsecrcseuccerstaseetegag, o8e8 geaseces ease ” salsa rs * not tolerated. We had to pound| then comes back to town, calls up| Support the fight of the locked out] Co! by C Johnson 50 Total Nov 29 12.47 rey i ei cna tals feck ., | Wom out typewriters (ice wagons)| all the delegates and tells them it| men of 978 to fire Millner. Sein.» as| oe pise Ne Be L ; a i719 is available in sizes | oti] cur Angers all but dropped off. | e leaving for Washington| The M. W. I. U. has been with the| g.oenvee TE DSEGNET -ogGh MURS: chsssciscsseresessscvocesuruccscseuetneuunses; aeasee Grass LSet ing &, » 14 and 16. Size 10 takes! “4 tram chief or supervisor, better ¢ because Ryan would not|tank and file through all the strug-| Rosenquist 35 * eirbs, ‘thie. ex 4 inch fabric and % yard |; nown as a “Simon Legree” wes al-| This lie fooled all the dele- | Sle, and is still with it. Tt has pointed | Stenquist 38 Total ia a 6 i t mae, Sees haw ak |ways at our backs, slave-driving us| cates except Jeff Nicholls of Local| oUt time and again that the on'y| Zobison le purine oe eWnat s ‘ a A a \to greater speed. 1201 thing that was keeping the I. L. A.! col py Blomberg Finnish Fed, ¢ Way? Didn't they ever say anything | Skilled unassigned operators were) Present Rank and File Code | Or na”ubton Roads from being a real | Ww Carlson a 1 worth quoting?) [kept waiting around dally bal Nicholls immediately got in touch| George Milner and his tocks ona ‘Tuorbiornson Powhetan 3.00 i ¢ children | renal a Peal etiies a pa meals - ee Bai las wanna ae: aly ied the men could have a| findoom Sel Nor Oe 4 overned by per ee ae Mivtlea piped. as scheduled. On Thursday night] of that ey lneg bave’ mad cee Odacsbeon AR sr No. protecte pase ol) resenti ; fe . : os Ps, the clarity of our conception of our had to be Protected eat was SNES Presented the coal trimmers'|to oust Millner and prove they are| © Seam, J heed 0 ue #) “basic position in regard to these prob- during the peak days of so-called | “ © the hearing. This was the men and know how to fight. A.W. H Olson — & e coul: en SI jae YY oh = tal i SE aires te os weer way than yl prosperity when the operators’ mint- | ——— - + B Petercon Total to dete 166569 ej ae joting from the Communist Mani-| mum rate of pay was $125 per month | e ane M Holmberg. DIST. No. & of # 1) festo those paregraphs which brill and the company’s annual net earn- | Mi d W. t Cc t D F Lindauist HR Molton” 3s me } = antly illuminate the fact that women |ings was $15,000,000. \ es 1tles 0 WOO W Berglund City Cent Comm, * oh | send. children ere doubly exploited | 85 Per Cent Thrown Out | ‘e ik Women's Coun 2.80] By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. There is no reason why some medium j) ~ tnder capitelism, making it incumbent | ‘Then like a thief in the night came Work as D N > ee i ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS —_| should not be discovered on which we 7) om them to work with the most in-| the automatic simplex, which dis- ir ive ears oa J A Swenson Frei Mandolin Can Height Be Increased? could grow ‘the vaccine on a nutritive Hee tense zeal to abolish the system. posessed 85 per cent of the nation’s N Thorpe on . LB.L.—We regret to advise you| medium, “6utside the animal \body. Fiat > - commercial telegraphers of the right] new yoRK, — while Seattle) New Bedford wW bf Nor | CMM oo| that at your age (30) there is pos-| After all, we are crowing bacteria on (THE FADILY—AND CAPITALISM to live. In the Los Angeles offce) showed 2 bad slump in th stional | Textile) 5 vorman Roseland Lith itively no chance of increasing your | artificial media and since the vaccine | | rom the Communist Manifesto by only 22 of the 106 Morse operators| Grive quring the lest half week, a| foctinny boiveiee ieee tne COR: |G Andere Wire Chorus 10.00| height.’ ‘The leaflet you serit us is'a| virus is alive, it should also be adapt- ae Marx and Engels) 2 are SS eet Cotes Se chie the number of Districts improved decid-| $38. Why has the textile Tae Y col by E Harris Finnish were °°°| ure and unadulterated carte ant able to such cultivation. The fact 4 ; Disa cecteat face, a ah tie seta | : fier of puch nerve-wracking labor, ooy their activity to help save our) Lawrence failed to answer the New| (So ssn = ae 28.8 Lap eibar Mog atca at Aeeaiael bis ee nob been able to grow : of ihe Communists | sna toe tne’ burden, Instead fo rofien st in $286.56, d drive? Let's heat Pinner aie rote! Nov 29 13463| Un. 302, Horant Fe by five inches in five months for medium ine "DOW, hee reason for “On what foundation is the present} throwing a person on the street Nelly duty $545 th tho nae Revert aber, New ford. textile har ggary see ete ere seantal Un ton” %s| $10.00 could become a millionaire| doubting such a possibility in the family, the bourgeois family, based? | starve. liga” Clevelss ‘ to Tal tor he DIST. No. 2 Un 138 4.00| within a year. Do not be fooled by | future. As an example, we may men- 4 On capital, on private gain. In its| ‘The N. R. A. code has been ap-| week; Cleveland raised $141.65, con te praise $2 for every dollar Lawrence | unsmp Teacher 1.00) Un 128 238| the claim of Malcolm Ross that he| tion ihe fact. that. when the lepra { com 4 - lied in the Los Angeles office, but | trasied with $7.98 in the previous hal . J O'Donnell 1.00] Un 115 1.00 . A x aly Brccrouy sree die bouraecti| the Assiatant Chief Operator recently| Week period; Detroit, $96.58, against| The drive has passed the $30,000| Averane’ 200) Un 303 330 re thine aoennnaree cares Sah yee leprosy, hee % But this state of things finds its com- linformed me that two-thirds of the | $32.25; Newark, N. J., $74.03; an in-| mark. Now for the final push to put| gisenman, Loc 6 281| Un 111 14 Re f th ered, yas thought for plement in th tical absence of |remaining 22 operators are on part|crease of $70.03 over the prior half|the drive over the top. Everybody | stern 1.00| Un 4, Gary pocketbook and at the expense of the} many years.that if. could not be See ofatily among the proletariins |time, and that the file is still de-| week. Keep up the good work, Com-|help. Readers, send in your detlacey | Oct by Levine Gaal rie 2 ened 96 CORE oe ed are footie grown Coder Peay ae the 4 he r ai AF ades! i A J Garcia : y Un enoug! spent ioney 1 same may be said of spirocheta ae and in public prostitution. creasing. Aaa cag Districts and organizations, raise your! 4 To: 25 Coin Cards at st : “The bourgeois family will vanish The N. R. A. makes no provision) Seattle, despite tts poor showing,| quotas. Every cent is needed to save| 8 Rann "25| Anon, Chicago, _xo| Method. There ate no stretching ex-| pallida whigh causgs syphilis. | Botta fs @ matter of course when its com- for thousands of disposessed Morse| remained in the lead with a rating|our Daily Worker. RAISE $10,000| 3 Einstein 10 -—.|ercises which would increase organisms are now grown artificially, plement vanishes, and both will van- |telegraphers. Only a few old men| of 158.03 per cent. Boston sent in|AND MAKE THE DRIVE VICTOR. | Mt", EL eetmt ae ceateoueties | ee reer ems eeweess | dru iBe tonienar. ii ish with the vanishing of capital. | with both feet hanging in the srave| $g9.90, and rates 1227 per cent If| IOUS! Funct, NTU, oo | Total fo, aete 249188) the vertebrae. When a ps:son is| Brooklyn, Medical. Unit—W.LR. “Do you charge us with wanting were given small pensions. It was @| Seattle docsn’t wake up, Boston ot| ‘The chart below shows the st E Wal ‘30/8 T ¥, Geyser 2.00| forcibly stretched, he may become| Dr. Maximilian €éhen—We should to stop the exploitation of children/ | pitiful sight to see those silver haired | another more active District will take | ing of the Districts as of Dee. tore | rietgTesyeee iS] WW Cention _ 1.00/longer by two or three inches while|be glad to attend the house party by their parents? To this crime we jhalf deaf old men plugging along) the lead awny . . . mt ear py beg ne 4 | otal Nov 29 3.00| he is on the bed of torture. This is| thrown by the Brooklyn Medical plead guilty. jwhen their feeble minds all but! New York sent in $579.60. Not bad, Last Total scot | 1LGW, 7 names 2.40| Total to date 107.49/due to the stretching of the liga-| Unit of the Workers International “But, you will say, we destroy the] |failed to function. st. | but @ drop from the $744.07 sent, in | District Half Week todate Quota Quota | Macy, bts Giuees ments of his knee and hip joints. As) Relief, Friday evening, December 8th, Bie sor curation!’ is not thet| | blood money sweated out of the em-| rot yet sent inthe 500 It oaleed ot ane wy Camagied) | Beea'Un 410 8.00| Totat Nov 22 i00| Many people have tried to take a/ sional and ‘otter duties ‘will pert, also social, and dete~mined by the| Ployes’ hide. ‘The Western Union| the banquet about a week ago, and| 4—Buflalo 2 "246.64 1.55 | Total to dete 27-15) stretching exercise before appearing | Since the-proceeds of the party go to social conditions under which you| |should belong to the coer and Bae officially it is still among those dis-| 5—Pitts 654.45, o|un 2, sec 1 100/at the physical exsmination for| the Daily Worker, we are sending educate, by the intervention of socXty, | [C0 8 DU Of Dares es ee ecuvilie,| ticts that have failed to go over the| ¢-o4vti, — ieee srotat Nov 20 Tiap|Poleemen and firemen, but they you directly. the price of the tleket direct or indirect, by means of schools, 5-4 mrereEN GENTS (ise) i HORRY eee re: ‘|top. Rush the $500, comrades of Phil-| &—chicago— 2'606.55 Total to date s4o.o8| found that they were sometimes one- | (50c), = > ete.? The Communists have not in-| Sem 8 (5c) in| PPR ROE RR Sake | adelphia! %—Minn, — 3 Metz, Red Bldr Miscellaneous | Quarter of an inch less than their vented the intervention of society capone - Cae ae fe | Helving the Daily Worker | LW.O. Branches Help | oOmsha — Unemp Counelt WC Hancock 10.00/ normal height. ‘This is due to 8| Helping ‘the Daily Worker : lication; they do but seek to alter) this Anne Adams pattern. Write | Through Helen Luke While on the whole the Interna-|12—Seattle _ Bec 1, Un 2 ‘Total Nov. 33 10,00) OVer-compensating contraction of Thisush Luiti p Ahe character of that intervention,| Pome SURE TO STATE SIZk, | Contributions received to the credit | tional Workers Order is lagging, some | 18—Callf, — Seo 2 Totel to date 80,00) the ligaments, | hreugh Dr. Luttinger ( find to rescue education trom the in| "address orders to Daily Worker | 9f Helen Luke in her. Socialist com- | of its branches are doing good work. | {t—Conn, —— On 2-B, 1 box Pal arto Smallpox Vaccine _|_Conttibittions received to the credit ee eee | pattern Department, 243 West 17th | Petition with Michael Gold, Dr. Lut- | Branch 92, Richmond, Va., sent in $20] 16—N.c.48.c, Printed De. eee ero oe of Dr. Luttinger in hig Socialist com- : “The bourgeois clap-trap about the | ott New York Cit " | tinger, Edward Newhouse and Jacob|to the “Daily”; a movie showing by |17—Alabama Portland Sec 12 Joking aside, and in absolute serl-/ yettion “witty Michacl Gold, Edt ig tamily and education, about the hal-| See! ve | Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000| Branch 67, 8. Norwalk, Conn., was|{8—Milwaukee 5.08 eeu: es oe of our “evident intel- | Nowhous>, Ifclen Luke, Jacob Burek seas co-elation Of parent Aid child, |e Gcauslaried lato atnple ar-|2uw: Woteen Deve |broken up by the police, but the| x Sie’ wi Shop 2.00 | gence” certainly can believe the and Del to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Oecomes all the more disgusting, the | children transformed into simple ar-| Fanny F. ........ sees 1,00! branch raised $10.35 for the Daily 2,168.18 8, Lewis 1,09] contents of the clipping you sent us. | Daily Wor cer Driv 7 Store, by the action of modern in-{ ticles of commerce and instruments Bruce T, Smith 4.00 | Worker; two members of Branch 5, Cegeessiet) BV Rohde -50| Sinallpox vaccine is made from a liv-| Geo, Ey Hilt. $ 35 ) dustry, all family ties among the pro- | of labor. | Previous tote 107.22 | Paterson, IM. J. contributed $8; | iota $1,524.45 $90,050.62 $40,000 7 g.Neliion 188] ing virus which is usually grown on| Previous total. + 360.18 © etarians are torn asunder, and their| (To be concluded tomorrow) i Total to dato ., . $112.22 | Branch 109, Berwyn, IL, $5; Polish | Jewish Clubs 960.29 $1,445.51 $2,000 72.27 Un & aso! the scarified abdomen of a calf. Total to date , ++ +$360.43,