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PA LIFE What Are the City Elections Ohio District = the Elections The trict Di a of the Ohio District ‘eadership Discusses Results Lessons of the in Cleveland? and the Les is the conclusion of the resolution adopted by the Dis- istrict No. 6) on the recent elections Jand. Party members and workers who participated in the Cleve- elections are invited to state th RESOLUTION ON ELECTION CAMPAIG ADOPTED BY DIST: in | 3. We failed in our printed platform to mention (far less expose) con- | tr opinion on the resolution. —CITY OF CLEVELAND AU No. 6 ‘RICT BUR eretely the N. R. A., but also committed the grave error of limiting our program only to immediate demands increased appropriation for war pur~- Poses at the expense of the masses) without connecting it w: r tionary way out of the 4. Lastly, was the tion of the Party and thrc Party fractions and Tevolutionary minded worke Campaign. We did not utilize all t workers at our command, limiting the campaign work for I. O. Ford merely to the narrowed circle of Communist Party mem As a re~ truggles the the election ultiply tion sult of this the Were not utilized to times over the Daily Worker; work of the Commur factories and American of Labor; and to build the the Young Communist Le: Self-Criticiam and Se! We examine in a sharp self-critical Manner the above weakn: der that every member full understanding of . results and because our Par not limit itself to the liamentary limitation of fes, but continues with Campaign for I. O. Ford for and of any of the Councilman ca! “didates, that the Sthall Home Correction Similar sticker campaign for. We must continue more energetically in these last three weeks than ever before. Now not the time to relax. The election struggie is only one phase of our en- tire revolutionary struggle id the} main points of our election p ‘orm are also our fighting progr after the elections. We must warn against | . the “lesser evil” theory of support- | img one capitalist candidate against another. This right treachery to the work: We must improve the c: the light of the above po! planation and change our previous tmethods of the camps! getically exposing the applied to Cleveland’ and politics; developm struggles in the shops. unemployed and Nei posure through deeds of the bos geois parties and their Am: Federation of Labor and liber henchmen; bold presentation of our Party and its candidates to all work-| Ymg-class organizations on the basis and | Zand Owners may decide to wage a/ (and even here failing to expose the its program and leaders Cleveland workers and at all times | explaining the connection between our immediate program and revolu- tionary goal The election campaign must also be connected with the popularizing and building of the 16th Anniver- sary Campaign of the Russian Revo: lution and the Nov. the Daily Worker Drive—and, as a part of all activity, the building of a mass Communist Party and Young Communist League Comrades. To carry these tasks demands a deepening in the political life and understanding of the Party members improvement in the he units of the Party and | —and better and more concrete guid- nee on the pari of all leading com- 25. Forward to an energetic sticker | campaign for I. O. Ford. Forward to Communist leadership of the workers in the steel, metal and auto shops of Cleveland Forward to the building of mass revolutionary unions and broad op- | positions inside the American Fed- eration of Labor. of the Daily Worker and build the Communist Party. N.R.A. MINIATURE (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—A Jewish peddier on Blake Ave., East New York, has on his pushcart a few tomatoes, celery, beets and carrots. He came out at |5 a.m, and will stay until 11 p.m. Ris | earnings for the day may be 50 cents | or 60 cents. ish pusheart peddler. the struggle | children. and come from An eviction is facing them, ti k flies the Blue Eagle, Roosevelt’s mbol” of prosperity, and work for everybody. Work?—how this push- s|cart peddler would like to go back to his trade as a printer, but there-| is no work, and high above his push- cart fliés the Blue Eagle, the N.R.A. Only your sapport can help the Daily Worker continue. You like the enlarged and improved “Daily.” Support it with your dollars) Rush | them today. | Join the Communist Party 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, W. Y. Please sent nv more information on the Communist Party, HELEN Due to a sad typographical error CONDUSIED BY LUKE in Tuesday’s paper, the sense of the " final paragraphs of the excerpt from the Communist Manifesto was lost. “Phe last sentence should read: “Fo abolition of the PRESENT SYSTEM OF PRODUCTION MU: WITH IT THE ABOLITION OF the that system, |. public cad p: nphasis, On the words previously omitted.) Yesterday we went on, from the ' gbove point, to give a bare outline _ of the forms assumed by the work- dng woman's struggle against capi- ‘talism. Perhaps we were guilty of a certain hiatus in such a procedure. Our readers were asking how to women into the movement. course, it is necessary that class conscious, second, struggle in order to end capital- ism and establish socialism (an event depending obviously on the consoli- ‘ation of the power of the workers) third that they be convinced that leprect alignment is with the Party. myself a reading of the Mani- several leaflets, and the Daily + plus a few forums; a con- of the Party's actions in the workers in strikes and 3 ms and so on, in order ise their immediate standard of , unite them, and schoo] them of the insincere, cowardly and pseudo- revolutionary ws of the Socialist Party lead- and groups)—this was enough me to declare flatiy for the and growing Communist leadership, a confidence that er association and examination a 28 to the eotgeee of women to that of men, this we by experience. “No, we don’t hie for that work.” (Photo- ¢ operators). “No, we don’t = on ih the art department.” newspapers). We—we—we— don’t do this and don’t do WE the women know about Iso the bitterness of getting about half or a third the n, both © x the rest it is self-evident, that the ST BRING community of women springing from | we are coming into the movement— whether housewives, factory workers, chorus girls, or office slaves—and We'll be coming in faster as the crisis deepens. We too want to be doctors, artists, musicians, statisticians, chemists, writers, carpenters, engineers, me- chanics—in short, we want all fields open to us, and this we can hope for only under socialism, which gives . |U8 @ living, social insurance, and some time for study. We shall help to put an end to the private ownership of the sources of supplies and the means of manufacturing—and then we'll build proper cities, proper houses, proper nurseries, mechanized kit- chens! A Good Example! Here’s the note that came with a contribution that was recorded on Tuesday: “The bosses in the office (where I work) are lousier than ever this morn- ing. I enclose $1 to express my hate. “Women being a doubly oppressed group under capitalism, the fitt or- ganized form of women’s expression in the ‘Daily’ (although I am not ‘in the home’) I believe, should get my support. “Bincerely, “FANNY F.” Helping the Daily Worker Through Helen Luke Contributions received to the credit of Helen Luke in her Socialist com- petition with Michael Gold, Dr. Lut- tinger, Edward Newhouse and Jacob Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive. Stanley 10 H. Mcanik 10 Wy Ze sive . 1.00 Anonymous .. 1.30 Sera Licht & Rosenfeld . 20.00 Previous total ......... 126,92 Total to date ............9149.46 wages of men for equal work. And/| 7th meeting—| Forward to double the circulation | He is worried, this Jew- | ‘There is no} as|food at home for his wife and four | ne does not see where help will | But high above his pushcart on a| ” |Mortwages Changing Aroostook County Farmers Into Tenants A Farmer’s Open Letter to ‘County Health Association’ By a Worker Correspondent AROOSTOOK, Me. | Aroostook County, county in the U terrible. In the | VINELAND,_N. Conn tampe. culosis down again. as he rest of the cow Everything t Salem Health Association, sell is terribl, a that he has to buy is ste t form of society. As yous Very few farms are f{ live-in a country where} ons of tons of food k is stored and clothe and are rot- ur society which is the se which you "| | are fighting. While in Chicago Nov. 17 attend- the Farmers’ National Relief Conference I saw one of the most le things that is possible to in the richest land of the mother and three little FERTILIZER ing cumbrances, and on a lot of p! b4 the taxes have not been paid for} a from one to three year: | There have bet where the mortgage holders and let the farmers stay on the closed places. Usually in suc the poor farmer had a chai deem the place, p led that he pays {the taxes while he remains on the place. I am sending a dollar to help t m offices and » nd out requests r help for those who are | not able to look out for themselves. As I see it, if these societies and | associations were just a little inter- ested in this malady they would all mbine and fight the cause, and r would right itself. he good cause along. “Wish I could 4 Now for the contributions, if you | more | would go to the tax collector of Pits- sl Ss grove To ip and get from him taxes that I had to pay twice, and also ask him for the illegal interest of 8 per cent that I had to pay on the same tax that was already paid, he will give it to you, you are le to it. Southern Farmer | Says REC Has Only for me sending you anything | Alibis for Toilers imsncs d.xtat 2th malady worse than the COPE, S. C.—The R. F. C. here| con or e than leprosy, which is in| Holds Only Way to Fight Tuberculosis is to Abolish Capitalism that Breeds it (By a Farmer Correspondent) J—The following is an answer I wrote to the appeal of ty Health Association, Inc., to buy their Christmas Tuber- Katharine Whitehead, Chairman. nm: Would say that I am fighting the cause of tuberculosis, which is would be # huge joke if the situa-| the starvation plan of the present | Dear rulers of our economic system, I have lost everything that I have ever had and most of all that was dear to me. First I lost my youngest child. The following year I lost my home, all through the crazy set up of our so- ciety that exists in the richest coun- try in the world. I went to work when I was 14 years of age and worked as a pro- ducer, and not as a parasite, pro- ducing something for society, and kept this up for 35 years. When I got on the skids of this crazy sys- tem, I couldn’t stop it until it had stripped me of everything I had. When I fetched up I found myself on the level of a rat living in a hole underground. And my Christmas greetings to you are that your society join hands with other societies that are fight~ ing this crazy system of society that freezes and starves men, women and children in a land where all the necessities of life are locked up and kept away from the masses that have produced them. And in doing this you will help to eliminate the cause and the di:case will die itself, o: nearly so. Sincerely yours, H. W. SPRINGER, Pres, N. J. Farmers’ Protective Ass'n (Signature authorized.) es eee P. S—You are at liberty to have this letter published in any of the newspapers that you want, if they will print it. For mine, I Will send a copy to the workers’ press in N. Y. City and I know they will print it. So buy the Daily Worker and see. tion among the working people was Pe 5 not 80 serious. And how fs it run? You apply for work. In a few days—or weeks, a lady representa~ tive with a silk dress and tilted | sailor hat calls to investigate the | case. “Are you comfortably furnished?” Power and Gas Companies, as Well asBanks, Exploit Farmer (By a Worker Correspondent.) | O yes, you have a bed and a stove; two ragged quilts, too! you have plenty in the house. She finds, too, that it your crop, including corn and po- So she finds | took all| HINCKLEY, Calif-—Thirty-five small farmers, both Negro and white, gathered Nov, 26 at the Hinckley schoolhouse to hear about the class struggle and discuss their problems. Harry Buchanan, militant working class leader, talked on the subject of “The United Farmers’ Learue and the Cannery an ATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1938 Conference Brought Workers, Farmers Closer Together By a Farmer Correspondent NASSAU, N. Y.—Here I am back from the Natonal Farmers Conference and very enthusias- tic. I do not think that I am exaggerating when I tell you that this Conference was the most revolutionary gathering I ever witnessed in thiscountry. I mean in the sense of the so-called backward American farmer's real- ization of his great power only when united with the city worker. This perfect conviction of unity between city and country was to my mind the greatest achieve- ment of this Conference. Also the coming closer (not very close as yet) of this particu- lar type of white farm people with the colored. I mean the Negro share-croppers. I am sure that this Conference will be a great turning mark in the his- tory of ofr movement. Bosses’ Press Gave Him Bad Rub Down; Now Backs “Daily” Los Angeles, Cal. Dear Comrades: I'm out of a job but I send $1 to the Daily Worker. I was sick and went to a “cultist,” who advertised in the capitalist papers. They gave me the whole works and asked me for $105. I found out that juggling the spine doesn’t help a weak head. So I hope that the critics of the health column in the “Daily” aren’t as foolish as I am. I go out try- ing to get subscriptions and col- lections. for the Daily Worker. I got stung reading the capitalist press. I lay off it now. What I want to say is that every worker ought to try to get subscriptions id funds for the “Daily.” Sincerely yours, —S. U. THE PEDDLERS’ N. R. A. tatoes, to pay the landlord for the} food you ate (on which he charg ~* {returned front a ‘trin to the Soviet | Union, spoke about *.1e life and aims mal | of the farmers im tie Soviet Union. | The meeting was a great success, |Everyone listened with great interest |as comrade Buchanan explained how |the farmers must militantly struggle \in their day to-day battle for the ne- | cessities of life, and ended by showing j that the only way out for the | American farmers is to ullte with ) the American workers to establish |@ workers and farmers government. Conditions are very bad in Hinck~ ley Valley. Most of the farms are 2% or 30 per cent interest) while | mortgaged. Some farmers do not making said crop, and you hayen’t|even have enough bread in their had any clothes, and have lost all} |homes. Many. lack any means of hopes of getting any, in spite of the | transportation, even the lowly Model fact that cold weather is already here. She might give the husband a half day’s work. He won't need | more because you have seven or} | eight hens and a couple of pigs you | haven't sold yet to buy groceries with. You dont need corn to feed | them on. They can find enough food | for themselves. Now if one has money and an | auto to drive 12 or 15 miles to the| jor two he gets a foreman’s job because he is considered a “worthy case.” | Lots of weeks there is no money for work, in spite of the large sum appropriated for same, because the | bosses and reps are so many that | their salaries gobble most of it up. | And is it just their salaries? | would be interesting to know! Farm wages here have been as follows: white men, 40 cents; white Women and colored men and women, 30 cents. For the last two months they have gone up to 40 cents and 50 cents, usually paid in whatever the landlord has of surplus food- stuff, instead of cash. It NOTE ‘We publish letters from farmers, agricultural workers and cannery workers every Thursday. Comrades should write us of their conditions of work, their struggles to organize, etc. Please get the letters to us by Monday of each week. Assists “Daily” to Prevent March Back to the Middle Ages New York City Dear Comrades:— What is fascism? It is the march back to the middle ages, with capi- talism and religion as the standard . Impossible- Well, that all depends on the workers of the world, An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. The fight is now between fascism and Com- munism. I’m sending my 50 cents Mine AGES to help the “Daily” which calls to the workers to fight against Fas- cism and for Communism, I hope the workers get together under the banner of Communism and march to progress for all of mankind. Good luck to the Communist Party and to the Daily Worker! --A Sympathizer, county seat and see them every day | T Ford. And this is a real handicap, for Hinckley is located in the Mojave | and Agricultural Workers Industrial Union.” of San Bernardino County, recently ¢ Desert, between’ Barstow and Bakers- M. E. Babb, a small farmer field. Some of the farmers have not only had to mortgage their farms but also have to mortgage their alfalfa crops to buy gas and electric power with which to pump their irrigation water. ‘Thus the farmers are being exploited by the banks, power and gas compa- nies. ‘The Hinckley Valey farmers have already established contact with the United Farmers League and will scon have a local of that organization here. This new movement in Hinckley came about because a farmer read a West~ ern Worker and wrote to that paper, asking for some one to come out and help the farmers organize. As a re~ sult the San Bernardino Workers Cenfer contacted with the farmers of Hinckley Valley. ‘Half Week Donations Drop; (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK—He is a junk ped- dier. The price of waste paper has gone up considerably, and he goes from one rubbish barrel to the other, from one store to the other looking for waste paper. He picks up every little piece of paper he sees in the street—he has no money to hire a horse and wagon, so he found two automobile wheels with old tires on them, built a body on it and pushes it daily around East New York. If he collects # hundred pounds of paper it is worth 50 cents, and this is his day’s earnings. But'on the dirty sides of his push- cart you can notice the emblem of “Recovery with Roosevelt,” the Blue Eagle, helping the man pick papers from the barrels. ‘To keep up a six-page “Daily Work- er,” the circulation must be dombled. 10 names ‘| are still suffering. Billions of dollars Letters from Our Readers Assail the N.R. Ay HEARST AND THE N.E.A. Bronx, N. ¥. | Comrade Editor: | There appears in the N. ¥. Times full-page statements by Hearst about! the failure of the N.R.A, | Mr, Hearst tries to cover up the real fascist program of the N.R.A. in| order to blind the small business men | and the workers. I, as a worker, ask myself, how can the N.R.A. be a} benefit’ to the workers and bankers | alike. Since when do the bankers) say to the workers, “I will raise your | standard of living to a higher level, | at the expense of my own?” No. Mr. Hearst does not have to tell us that/ the N.R.A. is @ flop. We can sce this clearly. Throughout the nation the workers | are on strike, protesting against, wage | cuts. Workers are shot down and} killed, arrested and framed up. Why |; doesn’t Mr. Hearst tell the real reason | that the N.R.A. fails? Because he! is a capitalist newspaper owner 4 is himself an exploiter of labor. | is trying to cover up Mr. peste | and his fascist henchmen. He is try- | ing to cover up the capitalist system | of which he is a part, a system that | is already on the way to the grave~ yard. So I think that it is important | that Mr. W. R. Hearst be exposed | to the workers. | | | | | —T. ING THE NEW DEAL Kent, Ohio. We workers here in Kent are anxi- ous to know just what the next card | will be from the New Deal. We have suffered for the past three years through mass lay-offs, wage cuts,| starvation and misery. Now the N.R.A. is making things worse in- stead of better. There are no jobs. Those that are working make a mis- erable wage, only a few hours a week in a “share the work” program. Living conditions have gone sky high and many of the workers can not buy even enough to eat, The brain trust of the N.R.A. says we must raise less wheat and plow under @ large acreage of cotton in order to Keep the price up. At the same time thousands of workers go ragged and hungry through the streets. Tens of thousands of hogs were ground into fertilizer whole the families of poor | workers suffered and could not even afford to buy hamburger. | Just recently these Brainy Bloats)| (tools of the Wall Street money bags) have decided to pickle these hogs and give them to the people in the form Swift and Co. were allowed the contract in this district.) ‘They keep part and the workers get part. Swift and Co. cuts the hog just behind the ear and divides it with the hungry workers. Of course, if the hog is headed South, the worker doesn’t get the north end, he gets the eye holes, ear holes, teeth and whiskers, and be- lieve it or not,’ he sometimes gets a shoulder. Two families have got awfully sick on it and one woman | threw it away. Taking all this into consideration, workers should realize by this time that Roosevelt is no Saviour or in sympathy with them in their every day struggle for the vital necessities of life. Here I have just mentioned three of the most vital necessities of life: bread, meat and clothing. And we sce and know the program of the} Blue Buzzard jn regard to these. | ‘War preparations are going on at} full speed and we can almost smell) the powder of a new war. Huge ap-/ propriations have been made for air- planes, tanks and armament and a gigantic naval building program. We can not overlook the seriousness of a new world slaughter. The workers know, who fought and suffered in the last world conflict. Many of them EXAMT of salt pork. are appropriated for these instru- ments of war. We workers can do more than just merely say we will not go to war. We should do everything to prevent it. Stop the manufacture and | shipment of war materials. Fight against fascism. Talk against war to everyone you meet. M. R. CLAPPE. (Signature Authorized). ‘BUY NOW’ PARADE CELASRATES LAY-OFFS H In the midst.of the mass lag-et® (taking placé locally, the Maaeifien’ committee arranged a Buy Now parade on Oct. 31, with Gov. White the principal speaker... From the righest to the lowest fakers appeared before the public. Bankers and eme- |ployers were applauded by the mem- |bers on the reviewing stand, while the workers’ section was’ not notleed. AFL. organizers were sitting side ty |side with the worst enemies of the | working class—the Chamber of Gom- merce, bankers, ministers, and | the leaders of the Socialist The slogan of the Parade y.” One heard, here “with what?” “We only had two hours | work today.” Others say, “The banks ook our money away and now they, tell us to buy.” And another one re- | marks: “Yes, and Republic Steel oy off 300 chippers last week.” When I axed some of the vatiaeN agree they_are willingly marching to help the NRA they replied: “Tire hell, willingly, {¢ it’s our jobs.” i i i i A LOGGER REVIEWS AN NW. BR. A, PARADE Aberdeen, Wash. Last night we saw the'dong talked N. R. A. parade. It was called an N. R. A. parade, but ipour estima- tion it was a purely fascist display. First came five American flags and the American Legion~flag, next the high school band of Aberdeen, then the American-Legion Drum and Bugle Corps, the Boy Scouts of America |mext, and then came two well- groomed Newfoundland dogs. Then om mee of ee the City Councilmen of Aberdeen, foliowed by the Veterans of Foreign ; Wars, sonie of whori‘ looked as { tho they had called on John Barley- corn to giveithem courage to march in the parade. And to finish off the © parade in real fascist style came three _ ambulances. There were only about { a hundred jn the line of march, in- | cluding the ‘two cops on asthmatic motorcycles who led the-parade. No rain that night, so’the Aberdeen Chamber of Comicals can’t blame the © eather for the poor. participation. The crowd that lined the side walk consisted mostly of loggers and mill workers who were thrown out of s job by the “Blue Buzzard, —Unemployed Logger, THE CAUSE OF THE CRiIsis Chicago, Hi. Dear Editor:— If the working-people would analyze their own experience they would. }@ fine idea as to the reason for | conditions. High rents. High prices. Inadequate wages. Time payments. Very little buying power. How can things continue under’ the present isystem? A fine legacy to hand down to our children, Foreign markets interfered with by the antagonism among nations, ‘The home market curtailed by the continual increase in prices causes a stagnation of commodities and a world-wide depression, } We must show the workers the reasons for their present condition, —A. W. K. PARTY UNITS RUSH) FUNDS TO SAVE THE DAILY WORKER | | NEW YORK.—Realizing the dan- ger facing the Daily Worker numers ous Party units are rallying to ite support. ‘Two dollars .and eighty cents came from the Mitchell, 6. Dak., unit; $3.50 from an affair held by the unit in Conneaut, Ohio; $3.58 from the Heidelburg unit, East Carnegie, Pa.; $5.94 from the Con- cord, N. H, unit. The Concord Youth Club donated $1. FROM LW.0. BRANCHES NEW YORK.—Branch 503, Inter- © national Workers Order, ‘Towanda, N. Y., sent $5 to the Daily. Worker $40,000 drive. Two branches of the I.W.0, in Bethlehem, Pa., raised $10.48 for the “Daily” at an affair held recently, By PAUL LUTTINGER, MD. 2 , EFFECT OF GENERAL DISEASES ON THE EYE (Continued) Consanguinity of parentage (marriage betweeii’ closely related couples? often results in congenital ocular malformations (of, the eye) in the children when each parent suffers of a slight abnormality; one example being the disease known as retinitis pigmentosa. Tos | before may become useless and the 9 |Hess) is also seen. ———; |sociated with iritis, episcleritis. 86]and hyperopia. ous paralyses also occur. Optomet-: rists are sometimes embarassed by the sudden changes in the optical re- fraction of certain individuals. A pair of glasses bought a few weeks client blames the optical store or the optometrist, when the real cause is @ marked increase of sugar in the blood. Myopia (near-sightedness) is the condition mastly exhibited by those suffering from diabetes (sugar disease); but hyperopia (far-sighted~- Gouty individuals complain of a hot feeling in the lids, glaucoma and other occular diseases, The same may be said of rheumatism which is as- Headache and migraine (pain on the side of the head) are often due to errors of refraction which can be readily corrected by proper glasses; the most common being astigmatism The pain is usually felt over the eyes or in the forehead, migraine, vis! een, Sometimes dark patches Lot; Total to date 688.03 Col by Berman DISTRICT 6 _ Seattle Will Double Quota 22-0" 2" ‘sg | ol by Alexander 0 1.50 | enemes 80| Conneaut Unit 350 ol by Ossina 6 1 . NEW YORK.—Receipts in the Daily | Total Tuesday wis®, \GQ0%8 | colby castiss. petal erate aa | Worker $40,000 drive in the half week | Previously recorded . «++ 31,003.76 | 5 names 1.25) DISTRICT 7 |ending Dec. 4th showed a decided a gakay | Oatiny astee Solera 50 oe ee hey Ke? bait Total ....s0c0.ees. c++ $31,693.51 Paes 1.00] “Coin Cards 1, - in ie previ iS 7 DIST. No. 1 List 10726€ st 1.00 New York District No. 2, sent in| concord ¥'th © 1.00| @ names 1.00 Gey ern AB Lee, 0 $352.25, or $227.35 less than the halt Tar Dass Cot by Zupen names 4.00| Tote! Dec. 83.60 13, . .80| 10 names 1.20 z |per cent on its quota of $500, that is — =} col by Kennedy 30) Tee, 102001 so Dauatian, Sent im jalmost doubling its original quota.| Total Dee, § 19.74) Col by Brachman | rist- 102003 “| Stanley 10 Seattle leads in the drive, with Boston DIST. No. 2 toa tte -65| 3 names 1.25{ Coin Cards nM . y Goldman Col by Turtelt Total Dec. 3. quota, only $11.20 coming from that | $ Blumbere 1.00] Robbins 1.00} 11 names. 440| Total to date 2783.84 district in the past week. J Hotfenberg Dis ome Got ee wie | Seema oe Teveland, Ohio. A Friend 1.60! Col by Dosik ce e | District nie raed increased King 290| co ames Gmamer 1. aphee = its percentage “to 645 by sending | 8 Kinsborn 1.00 br gh eeaaid 1.85 cone = i Rah te at 38 | | its _ per vee eee tpi ee aug 18S] S2t by Hitrrtson 5100 Total to date ast se | $107.92. Due to a typographical er- | anti-imp 8.38] Col by Fiink “ A DISTRICT 10 ror, the appeal for funds in Wednes-| Unemp Coun Pp tans oan Gol by Conrad PEG st ner day’s issue stated that “The Jewish | Weng Women Cot by Bartus 3 names 85]. Lists, and Hungarian language group, much ein ea i‘ — 10 names 1.00| Col “by Schwarte TN Frontlowsky’ 200 Sea pie cone Seat = Fo ‘Bol 16 xy us re Bw i ae ta 2 GH Beanie. 101 ave read, “The Jewish an "s House 5.67 ‘ . Hungarian language groups have (ea ry Un . reece 2.35 tus ieee ra he hardly lifted a finger to save the| sec 15 21.90 | ne Spat epee 90 8 Daily Worker, while the Greek group, | Seo. 11 75 by Cohen Ot aecieonbe a0 |“ irerarer a ee aca co Wa Hara eee HA QS .names 2.96/ Col by Ehriivh Mitchell, 8 D ion 11 of the Clevelani Bes 18,0360 In oby 5 names 1.50 It 2.80 poe catia Pe pee a oo Caras 7 by Re Meee i = Hes ca Ee Oe marr workers ¢ m ion, 20] Col by Sheinuk Lst 106371 “| Total to dat ; N. Y,, to raise its quota first in the | SPO. 230) to names 148] 7 names 95] "Disraicr 16 Grive” Section 11 has a quota of $100, [Sta alae fi| ataee *Stoomfield of which more than half has already Cl ty acest nih ey ae eee ee been reached. Section 1, Cleveland Col by 4 names .50|A Bennitto 1.00 issues a similar challenge to Canton, ie eae .83| Col by Motin Symp. 6 2.00 Section 5; Section 3, Cleveland, chal- Esa dite oo apa canes nal eo ag lenges section 11, Toledo. Accept .00| 10 names 3.00] 4 names 90 R Marks “ these challenges through the columns in ee by Bacco 14.30 os by Kreuse l-of of the Daily Worker! so ee 10 08 3.50| Col by Burke Totel Dec. § 1 Detroit Nears Quota, 50 cet mo Albas! 10 nam Detroit, District 7, sent $164.15 in} Br 27 472) 11 names 2.20 | Col by Ro a Toe a sick ad the half week ending Dec. 4th, and| BF 3 Fier Ie a a hae! 1.00] 7, 2 Merle 109 rates 95.4 per cent. A little more hard| Br 34 ‘96 ot 2 1 . 5. TT work. comrades of Detroit, and you| Br 37 4.83 See an] Oo by Pandas, Dancers te will go over the top. Chicago sent id Pad ae. cal is Rablnowits an Cah Sa eee. 17.13 in only $34.39, compared with $286.56 | sec s 1737 cat eo Rob d 7 yy I Kahan 3.10 in the previous half week. What is | Sec 15 wel ie 190] 0ol by Womntek Les|aaditonst . a the trouble, prreincaditee yang the hed a Mi cat" by Sablas ig te On Lists, Hart. 3.20 drive in your territory’should MOVs | Seo 7, . _ es d es 1.90] Tag Da: ing at aN seed a ane es only | Sec 5, th 25 333 ee eee 1.00 ee] hae on 14 Goin Cards rig 54 per cent, weel cam~- st Col by Racbig 1.10 | Lat 100066 J Wroanelin 2.00 ‘List 138925 Col by Markel 1.00 es 8 aigning. La evecare. Chaba. Darlington 3.00 ° List 58180 Total Des. 8 63.14 fj Rawlings 1.00 6 1” n 80] Deduct on Banquet Not a cent came from the Jewish; Col by Shames Col by Breiner ‘Ust 58211 New Britain 8.01 Workers Clubs, which have raised | S,rames 1.10 Ce 198 | cae 85 —, only 77.5 percent of their quota of| 11 names 1.70| 3 names 30) 2 names a5 | total terdate sinus $2,000, and only $5 from the Interna. | Col by -28) List 107003 Col by Hartel DISTRICT 18 tional Workers Order! The I. W. O. ee ge shlieeen 451 08 opr 78) Demat 2 4 Levine ine Sebo-Kenoshe 1. Ori quota 88000 Task gael steely | od Sra | gt™ oT ‘With the drive for $40,000 so near |Col by R. M. © .25| 3 nemes e) ——— | Bul Wers 0, 5.00 to its goal, an appeal fs issued to every | Mst 111841 aso| 2 Total Dec. 5 433.16 | Racine See. ST worker to contribute, to every working | nist 106879 List 106348 a Disvaion s aye hit scpeenene nd class organization “to intensify its ac-| 6 names 6.00| 3c names 11.00] Sorning Unit Total Dec. 5 40.27 tivity. We are within reach of the row ‘a = pl .2| 9 names 2.85 Tals e date 470.86 full amount. The completion of the| coi by Goldin 5 per Cad drive will be a genuine tribute to} 9 names 17] oot by al Total io date 23's Riiatio Br. 880, bat those participating and a victory to| Col by Austin 5 names 1.44] DISTRICT 5 N. 2. 21a the American. revolutionary working| co"by wittenbere | id Clare Heidelberg ‘Unit 3.58 eae Pert class, Let's All helpt 7 names 1.80! Col by san bo! ional Reet ao mine See Col by Binsidier ‘Tetel Des. 5 9.58] Total to date 2785.30 me esi near Arete ARCO CTE with a bright zigzag outline appear in the field of vision, particularly after eyestrain following intense men- tal concentration. Scurvy is characterized by night blindness and hemorrhages in vari- ous of the eye; rickets by cata- ract and interstitial keratitis. Dizziness and nausea are often In Diabetes, cataract is frequent; retinitis, optic ‘teuritis, iritis and varl< caused by eye trouble. Chronic Nephritis (kidney disease, Bright's disease) shows. almost in- variably a.peeuliar-change in the retina known as albuminaric 5 this is also in kidney following ey t over spa s Gi the eas examination of the eye may, help greatly in the diagnosis, ‘Thus, in coma due to kidney disease, the above condition will be found. If the causes cerebral hemorrhage (a stroke) the pupils are ynequal; in aleoholic intoxication and epilepsy the pupils are usually, dilated; im other hand, th are. “pta-potnt e. ey a (contracted). (To Be Concluded) Helping the Daily Worker Through Dr. Luttinger Contributions received to the credit of Dr. Luttinger in his Socialist petition with Michael Gold, Ed Newhouse, Bijen Luke, Jacob Br and Del to raise $1,000 in the Daily Worker Drive: 3 Edison Employees . 2.00 Hammond Unit-No, 1 . 5.86 Previous total ... ++ 387.93 —_——— ‘Total te date ., 2 9907.98