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eage Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1934 Telegraph Workers Respond to Call of United Committee Postal Clerks (A. F. of [.) Local movement for industrial unionism. Garceupond ant || Stool Pigeon Who Had Tried to Provoke N DIEGO, Calif.— Saturday | 251 N. ¥. As you can The enclosed item is one of praise foe 5 a night, May 14, at 8 pm. the pas-|read i item, John N. Bishop, for Mr. Bishop. But he is far from) INDIANAPOLIS, _ Ind.— Workers Workers to Acts of Violence Is Exposed * - senger liner Yale, docked in the San| State President of the Federation popular with the men. Every time) 3! ess pans Agreracpentre ads es x : , —, Diego harbor. Despite ihe 1 and also first vice-president of the|he used to get up to speak at meet-| disgusted by their intolerable ci <4 : : { Will Follow Up Idea of| A. W. U. E. Treachery |e. ee ee end ‘file 1 Brooklyn local has finally made ings, the audience would groan andj ditions of work, caused by the N.| we have in Gloversville now two| the union. I told him that it was = > hee Y choremen here, the boat was wn-|800d as & labor leader. He has|prepare to go to sleep. His use of| R. A. are trying to form an inde-| shop nuclei and one street nucleus,| very important and a confidential Shop I aper, Says Against Younger loaded. The Yale carried its own| been promoted to the position of the old style oratory, full of empty,| Pendent union. They are handi-| units organized during and after | message. It was enclosed in a plain » Boys Exposed ene board, and though 50 or| foreman. trite, meaningless phrases nauseates| capped, however, by Fred Gallo- | the strike. envelope with nothing written on One Tanager ys BEO 60 longshoremen stood on the docks! Bishop has “had a meteoric|the men. But, as reactionary and| way, Indianapolis’ foremost labor! The members of the shop nuclei| the top, but inside the envelope a By a Telegraph Correspondent NEW YORK, N. Y.—Your valu- able paper fell into my hands ac- cidentally, but I am the right per- son to whom it was addressed, as I was demoted from a manager’s job to another position. The United) ly to} Commitee of Action is a step in h brevity it success-|the right direction. By a Telegraph Worker Correspondent N. Y.—I want to thank ur paper you issue con- you for graph w the point I.L.A. Leaders Weaken Fight | Against 5 cabs By a Marine Worker Correspond. |RISE of a BOOTLICKE By a Post Office Worker to smash craft unionism in the Correspondent post office. Like all A, F. of L. BROOKLN, N. Y.—I am enclosing bureaucrats, Mr. Bishop, together a clipping from the Federation Bul-| With the local officers, have raised letin of the National Federation of the red scare to crush this growing during the unloading, nothing was done. The I.L.A. here has not as yet elected a Central Strike Committee, and as a result the actions of the workers are neither coordinated nor united. The picketing is not or-|them, and finally climbed into his ganized. The workers therefore are| present position as foreman. the whole strike | sheer perserverance and hard work,” | says the leaflet. Mr. Bishop’s career} has been one of _back-scratching with Democratic politicians ranks.” Before closing permit me to em- phasizes the viciousness of the last | to his new associates (the bosses) | that kindness and fairness . . .| career in our organization by his|demagogue, he has “risen from the| misleader, reformist, | and boot-licking. He has hobnobbed | Sentence of the clipping. Note that) tem and a_ bonus and | the editor of the Bulletin hopes that} works backwards, ¢ | ward-heelers, obtained favors from|Mr. Bishop “will continue to teach} tory, working nine hours daily in R Quotas Cut Packinghouse | How Gloversville ShopNucleus Uncovered a Stool Pigeon Workers’ Pay By a Packinghouse Worker and sellout artist. Conditions in the plant are bad | due to an excessive speed-up sys- plan which In the box fac- groups of four, they have a cer- tain quota working nine hours PARTY LIFE are not attending the meeting of|mark was made. The letter ene the street unit. We did not report | closed was of an important nature, to the unit in what shop nuclei were | but something that I wanted the formed, although we reported that | enemies to know. nuclei were organized. When the letter was delivered to All these methods we adopted as; the given Comrade I found that a precaution against spies. | the envelope was changed. Now we However, in order to coordinate; will get this stool pigeon’s picture the work we have set up a bureau | and Party book and the job is com- wi It certainly| scattered and Mr. Bishop has worked hard, ex-| bring forth good relationship and| daily in groups of four, they have|on which there is a represen‘ative | pleted. fully covered the whole gamut of | Crystallizes the sentiment of the} weakened. Jerting all his efforts to break a| cooperation.” In other words, @| a certain quota which can only be/ of every unit, | Comradely yours, L. L, betrayals of the AW.UE. — mass of telegraph employes. MY) ‘The scabs were taken into a ware- | 7@nk-and-file movement which aims| policy of class collaboration. produced by laboring at neck-| Three weeks ago one worker mee Rae te ails t ntion the | friend, who is a lineman, thinks he| penever, af Saat — dene | Knows the representatives of the| close connection of the slave-driver | jant d t t thi it | 11 the A.W.U.E. officials. | 20% department on this commit~} aoe et the |tee and will approach him for The. whole commercial department | | 1) Jags | More information. | is demoralized by Carroll's senseless | The memesaerscpok un eee terrorism. He is hated by all the] vi ss ood 7 ‘pr fight and won many concessions.| employes our local president, | .© . Coloa is seen sneaking in a out of |SOme of us encouraged the boys, hi ate office after licking his | knowing they were right and their| 3 “a ss" "fight is our fight. Any dent in the house, and the warehouse was then heavily guarded by police. The at-| mosphere was very tense; motor-| cycle cops and dicks were greatly | in evidence. The longshoremen| stuck around, and despite the heavy | ° Teulectitgu gives io the aecaty On| By Communist police and sheriffs, the boat owners were evidently afraid to take the scabs ashore. Dining Car Workers Helped Party Activity | and white, men and | ceived $60 to $70 a week for a 60 | to 70 hour week. break speed. At the end of the day if only eight hours quota is produced they are docked an hour, despite the fact that they have worked the full nine. Formerly the skilled labor, Negro women, re- Now with a job and of keeping thein is a Com- | Smaller force they have to pro- CORRECTION The resolution published in the Daily Worker of May 2nd, refers to the Kenosha Section, instead of Milwaukee, as erroneously stated. Milwaukee has a Negro population of 8,000, whereas Ken- osha has only 200, This has been called to our attention by com- rades who point out that the joined the Party and became very active. He has won the confidence | of many members. While many | courageous members were very care- | ful in distributing leaflets, he fear- | lessly distributed them in front of | the factory, not being afraid to be! fired. | I began to suspect this fellow. He told me all kinds of stories about | i aera : " ‘ad Around 11 at night | By a Railroad Worker Correspond. % 2 fay X hold: the position of anan- eee, monopoly makes it easier| +. scabs were taken midstream on | ow, x N. D. C--Since the| Munist Party on the job, The | duce the same amount of work'| conferences of A F. of L. Organtzers, | quota of five Negroes to be <a than the cler- | 20°F US When we are ready. edinng ll Prag | ASHINGTON, D. C.—Sine! eee for half of their former salary. | with some fascist elements of the| reernited was far too small for ager I am rse off than the cler- a barge where they were to spend ri eo ve it looks| Communists are the best fighters | / : ical or ope: g slave. It is my dis-| The recent issue if the “Tele-| tne night | Communist Party got active it looks} ¢ "i workers and every worker | Galloway, who scld out the/|leather union. There is one official| Milwaukee, taetotisl to put “pressure” on|8t@Ph World,” organ of the fake| 3 * |like they've taken over this place.) O° oa join the Party and help | Hayes Body Strike a few years |of the union who openly fights every “ov etapa ta della gece union of the A. W. U. E, shows aj The Communist Party has Issued | pyerywhere you go you see leaflets} “he y iP militant move and raised the anti-| ti picture of the code hearing in Washington. Blast my Irish soul if the boys sitting on the front bench are not the representatives of the! messengers’ union. | | Another important thing which should be publicized by the messen- ger union is the following excerpt jfrom this flunky magazine: “Our prosopal that messengers be paid a minimum of 25c per hour is | limited to messengers who are 21 | years of age or over, because in gen-| jeral messengers who are less than| |21 years can be considered as tem-| \porary, They are not entitled to| the same consideration as other| | employes.” | | In other words the A. W. U. E.| officials who helped the company | |force the boys into the company) | union don't care what they earn, or how rotten their conditions of work| are. This should be made known to, | every messenger. | On pay day I expect to contribute something to this struggle. I left. my copy of your paper i the washroom where it was read by the clerks. A shop paper is a good idea, and I am planning to speak to another manager to share in a donation which I will send to you. I will look for your paper on the news. stand next Friday. 3 11-Hour Day on Subway Stands By a Subway Worker Cor- respondent | NEW YORK —I would like to | inform you that the agents on the news and candy stands of the new Eighth Avenue subway work much more than 40 hours a@ week as the N. R. A. is sup- | Posed to demand Those working in the daytime | Work 11 hours a day, six days a | Week, ight workers work nine | hours a night, six nights a week. } They are not allowed to sit dur- { ing this time or smoke. If they Subscribe to the Daily Worker. One month daily or six months | a leaflet calling on the longshore-| from the Communist Party in Sun- men to organize a rank and file|nyside Yards stuck up all over the Central Strike Committee and de-| piace, and in the crew rooms they're fense, relief and picketing commit-| pasted up so the bosses have to use| tees. During the distribution of the | soap and hot water to get them off, | leaflets on the waterfront, Neary,| and all the men are talking Com-| the local misleader of the LL.A., at-|munist Party. | tempted to provoke Gordon of the} ‘This place is clean as a whistle | Communist Party into a fight, say-| now: you'd never recognize it, It ing that the Party was subsidized) yseq io be the cooks and waiters | by the boat owners and shippers. came in and reported and stuck However, the sentiment of the rank d all waiting for a run, and file longshoremen was with | but ne braces eerie | & but now if we report at eight o’clock Gordon, so Neary desisted. The} we can be sure we will go out at Communist Party has also issued eight-thirty or nine and our pay| “Don’t Scab” leaflets widely thru-| starts at eight o'clock. out) the city. Every time we come in we get a slip from the agent to go to cer-| “ t ] |tain cars for meals, and yesterday | Girls Hands Are |I heard the Inspector tell the Din-| | ing Car agent to feed the men with- | iout asking any questions. | Swollen by Speed- These leaflets sure get around, | and every one is talking about them. | bd |Every time the men come together | Up In Rubber Co they talk, and the other day, when| . *\the Congressional Limited was run- | ning down to Washington, there | By a Worker Correspondent = were leaflets exposing our condi-| BOSTON, MASS. — The Cam-|tions on every berth and every seat bridge Rubber Co. is a real hell|in every car on the train, Some of} lead the struggle for better con- | 28% is endeavoring to entice the ditions, For more information about the Communist Party write to Communist Party, 50 E. 13th St, New York City, All names and addresses will be kept strictly confidential. Penn. Railroad Uses PWA Fund Against Strikers By a RailroadWorker Oorrespondent NEWARK, N. J.—The P. W. A. $77,000,000 fund given to electrify the Pennsylvania Railroad is not to give jobs, as it is announced by Roosevelt and the NRA, but is really a strikebreaking measure. It is used in this way: | Workers had been hired by the Gibbs and Hill Engineering Co., hich is owned by the Pennsyl- venia Railroad, uncer the con- struction wage scale which is twice as much as the railroad workers union in process of formation to affiliate with the A. F. of L. He is missing no chances to divide the workers while posing as their best friend. The following ex- ample is a clear cut specimen of his tactics: To hasten the process of soli- darity a dance was proposed in which the workers, Negro and white, would participate. A few “100 perecenters” objected and a heated argument arose. Labor mis-leader Galloway saw & golden opportunity to kiss all actions and at the same time carry out the A. F. of L. formula of dividing the workers. “Listen this will never do,” he said. “These Negroes pay dues the same as you do and are entitled to the same considerations. But don’t forget the fact that there is a city ordi- nance forbidding just such things.” The Party has exposed him at every turn in his quest for money and political advancement. The workers have explained to them that their interests can be served only by placing control into the hands of the rank and file where Join the Communist Party red campaign We have organized | a rank and file movement to re- move him. | Last Saturday this spy came to idea me and made a proposition that we shall give that given official a good Ps eee pel oS. scare by taking him for a ride. I|| Please send me more informa- immediately understood that he was an agent provocateur, but I made believe that I have full confidence in him, and explained him that the Party is against it. I met him a little later and gave him a letter to deliver to a responsible Comrade of | TRAVEL| ‘Holland America Line Prepares For Soviet and Palestine Tours tion on the Communist Party. Name Street City are caught reading a paper | of the Saturday edition fot 75 | hole. The ammonia fumes are one|the passengers wanted to know| get Nevertheless, the construc-| i* ‘ightfully belongs. gazine they can be imme- cs Send your subscription to | of the worst features. The coe: Waehnet, what they said ‘aoe true.| tion workers were not satisfied The S. S. Statendam, flagship of the Holland-America ie Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St. | pany until recently has done|and we told them about how bad and struck, demanding a wage * * * > New York City. | nothing to provide a decent ven-| conditions was. One Senator said Line, will sail on June 29th for the U. S. S. R., Europe and the He tilating system or protective masks. | it looked like this place was going About a month ago one girl|to be cleaned out and taken over worker died from tuberculosis di-|by the Communist Party. to the hospital. A few weeks ago the Y¥.C.L. nucleus got out a bul- letin exposing this unhealthy ven- tilation, and as a result the bosses ‘Laundry Strikers that would keep up with the rising | living costs, The workers were misled in true without mass picketing, demon- strations or struggle. Outside of the strikers themselves, very few railroad workers were aware that Letters from TOWARD STRONGER DEMON- STRATIONS IN LOS ANGELES Los Angeles, Cal. Palestine. Personally conducted tours of the Soviet Union, Poland, Roumania and Palestine are being offered. The third A. F. of L. fashion. They were 0 R ad i > rectly traceable to the rotten con- Note: — The best guarantee of | without a broad rank-and-file ur e er. $s edhe Nea reece tat oe PTT to Jewish cooking. ditions. Two other girls were sent| gaining better conditions on the | committee and militan ueadership: os i being unusually roomy and well ap- pointed. Another feature of the S, S. Stat- endam is the new Jewish kitchen, Mitchell Luftman of the Luftman Travel Agenzy is planning to con- duct a group in a tour of the U.S.S.R., Poland, Roumania and ish | . % installed for the convenience of| Palestine. This group will also sail “Y : oe were forced to install better ven- | . |a strike was on, on the Pennsyl-| Observations on the May Day group " HELEN U tilation. | Of Muskegon Mich. bean souk y meeting in Los Atigeles: those passengers who prefer or are|on the S. S. Statendam. i HILE the Domestic Work-) is out of the tomatoes so that you| I the Making Room the speed- | ae The Pennsylvania Railroad, fol-| 1. As formerly, most of the ban- - 4 alia 4 can add and cook a small peeled | ers’ Union was formulat-| and diced egg-plant without burn- | ing a code calling for $20 a) ing it. Season with salt and pep- | week minimum for full-time! Pet Simmer uitil egg-plant is | up is so terrific that the girls go home with swollen hands. Here’s how it's done. A few days ago the forelady came around and told Clubbed and Gassed (By a Worker Correspondent) lowing the grant of the P. W. A. fund, made a statement that the construction work from now on will be handled by the railroad in- ners are all crowded together near the speaker, blotting each other out and the speaker, so, that to most people assembled, there is no | soft. each girl they would have to turn . stead of the contractor, and that|SpeaXer, but merely a voice from the houseworkers, a 48-hour) pis may be served as a side dish: | Ut more every hour in order to|, MUSKEGON, Mich, May 24.—| all unemployed railroad workers| microphone. A few of the banner- week (overtime permitted |or, over a generous helping of cian | make enough (we work piece work) | The laundry strike here is still in} will be given first preference. carriers are beginning to scatter to only in emergency and to be| Dolled rice (with or without a strip, to come up to the lousy N-R.A. $4| Prue first ttempt of lice tial OG baer ae eanieyed a During the and a aut : 4 Cues | vi i i k, or else they would be fired. | attempt of open police | workers were transferred and their > ra compensat or two of crisp bacon on the side) |S Week, of ee ep red leroy in the. eliy af Muskegon | tena Ite Geet of the Rebel Players, the banner- +}it is practi in- aacancy practically a meal, and an in of plovers right of é | expensive one in summer when to- bt 1 by em-|matces are plentiful. Those who mbloyment instirance. | like the sweet-sour flavor can add You se, they don’t call it a wage cut, which it actually is. If all the girls continued to turn out as much as before the bosses} Mich., was t+ grabbing of a Mus- kegon wom ‘ striker and an at- | tempt made to force her into a so-| | At other points our work is only part time. When it rains we are sent home without pay. We work for wages that are carriers would have done well to lower their banners. fists came from the center of the 2. The singing and raising of By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. ‘eike oo to organize’ and| lemon juice, a healthful addition | couldnt’ get away with it. But they called squad car. The mass senti-| only one-half of the wages paid ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS health and life from unskillful abors | listine proportional minimum w: thoroughgoing code | particularly in summer. i erves four: as meal, two.) (As side | approach each girl individually and| ment at the strike was so great that the police were obliged to go with- to the construction workers, whose jobs we now hold. The P. W. A. crowd, whereas the edge of it, near Main St., where Capt. Hynes dis- Abortions in Russia tions. On the other hand, the health authorities encourage the | threaten her with loss of her job.| | The result is, each works harder, | and a new piece work rate is set | for all household help (e. g.. cooks and gsovernesses $30 vw valets and first butlers $25) tributed himself, was not militant. Whether it was due to the nearness Mrs. T. ¥Y. G.—According to a cir- cular of the Commissariat of Health, out their woman prisoner. To bring about the terror effect, acted in the role of a strike- breaker. women to use various contraceptive methods. ae —the| Can You Make ’Em bourgeois ladies have also been re- Y 9 ported working on housework codes: ourself? these “prominent women” of Wash- z ington Philadelphia being| Pattern 1680 is available in sizes “groun: under government | 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size superv: The codes they drew up call for | Tic. Illustrated step-by-step sewing a sixty-hour week, with $10 weekly | instructions included. for worker iving in” and $16 and | $17 for those ‘living out.” Quite a| difference between codes by bosses | ‘nd codes by workers! | As reported here yesterday. one| xf the excuses of the administra- ton for not making a domestic | workers’ code was that codes may | be submitted only by organized | groups of employers, and employers | of domestics are not organized. | | and | not 5 | |36 requires 4%% yards 39 inch fab- | up, as a basis for lowering still fur- ther the rate. In the shoemaking department the women lasters have to work harder than the men lasters at lower wages. Among the men there | is favoritism in assigning jobs. Some barely can last out the day, while others do almost nothing for the same wage. Looks like the old policy: of “divide and rule.” In the Spreader Room the chemi- cals in the air eat a set of work- er’s clothes off every two weeks, and the ventilation is terrible. The bosses have a semi-official spying system and if any worker opens his mouth to protest he is fired. Nevertheless, we are mak- |the state police began a hand-to- |hand battle with the women strik- ers. In the muddle two leading workers were hurt badly. Seeing that this method would not disperse the crowd of about 300 sympathiz- ers, the police came out with their | clubs and tear gas. Out of the melee three militant sympathizers. were arrested. Men sympathetic with the women strik- ers fought side by side with the wo- men to protect them from the police clubs. * We are striking for wages we law- fully deserve through the N.R. A., | but seeing the boss with aid of po- lice are breaking the code and forcing it through for what they will give. The Gibbs & Hill is a dummy company owned by the P. R, R. It is still operating with the same bosses on the same job—only the striking workers are out. The struggle must continue for better working conditions and union wages with a rank-and-file pro- gram and leadership. Socialist-Controlled Group Leaves Jobless Worker in the Lurch isl, Se ag 7th Worker Correspondence you printed a letter from an unemployed of Hynes, or that people were new, cannot be definitely said. Undoubt- edly both helped. It is for our peo- ple to blot out Hynes and to line themselves at the edge of the crowd thus in the singing and arm-raising to be able to encourage others. The edges, especially the Main St. edge, where I was watching, was unstable. There was an ebb and flow of at least 5,000 that did not find the demonstration interesting enough or spirited enough to hold them there. 3. Our singing is usually weak, as it was especially in this demon- stration. We should have singing teams of three or four—scattered throughout the crowd. When one person sings by himself, surrounded dated February 12, 1926, it is strictly | forbidden to interrupt a pregnancy artificially after the third month. Those who are spreading rumors to aged, or even openly advocated by the government, are lying. The Soviet authorities recognize that abortion is a social, as well as a physiological anomaly. It is clas- Sified as a social disease, not as anormal condition. It is true that abortion may be performed legally in Russia; but the operation is subjected to numerous conditions, all calculated to protect the health of the woman. Thus, be- sides the three-month limit men- the effect that abortion is encour- | The main reason which induced the Sovet authorities to legalize abortion was the protection of the workingwoman. Under the capital- istic scheme, there are only two ways of attacking the problem of abortion: the first is to realize that it is the product of capitalistic ex- ploitation and to attack it from this angle means to attack the capitale istic “system” on which it is based. This, of course, wouldn’t do! The other method, is to consider abor= tion as a crime and to punish it. In neither case can the problem be studied and remedied. As a way out of the dilemma, bourgeois | morals of the rich with their char= acteristic hypocrisy, brand those who resort to abortions as immoral “Tiet no rich dames ‘blind and ey bsg bys -|_ What are we paying taxes for?| Harrisburg worker which told of | by non-singers, it is very discourag- | tioned above, an abortion has to be) 244 depraved, They will not admit fool’ you.” says the (April) Da- bata or SreeEr Pano Beni For protection? Or for clubbing and the treatment he got at the hands) ing to the singer and the non-sing- peepee me mie ce mpg fa that eer infcriiy of abortions under mestic Workers’ News. “They ar 4 gassing? ‘ - i ams organized oe ue domestic | loge apie nit ot a pnd : Bie: inlets. Vie mee ae days. A midwife is not allowed to Eno Capirelnn. Sone me care gus. te workers, and we must answer them | by organizing ourselves.” | Open air meetings by groups of | domestic workers are now being conducted in Yorkville and Harlem, usually near agencies. In Regard to Women's Anti-War | ditions and to increase our wages. ‘Kress Store Pays 29 Cents an Hour Steamship Line Makes ‘Stenographer Purchase Her Own Stationery By a Worker Correspondent strength and encourage non-singers to sing. 4, There was no band—an abso- lute necessity for keeping up morale. 5. There were no effigies, no picturesque floats, another necessity long used in New York, but not here. perform an abortion: only a licensed surgeon. When a married woman is pregnant for the first time, the operation is seldom performed; un- less there are some reasons which would tend to undermine her health if allowed to carry the child to term. economic insecurity and material want. The main sufferers of this policy are the women of the work- ingclass. The rich can always get |a skilled surgeon to perform the | operation but the poor working- woman must resort to quacks, mid- wives and charlatans whose want of ‘ess ‘, If a doctor performs an abortion! _. beh lem it | skill is the cause of a frightful holo- Wages : MAYWOOD, Ill—I am an un- 6. At all our demonstrations it) outside of a hospital or clinic, for ied Pala eee pdt oe) By a Worker Correspondent | employed secretary and stenogra- makes a bad impression on outsiders | private gain, he Le punished ‘with |Caust of women whose lives could ences ti fort | * lower Manhattan, Friday, May 25 | ABERDEEN, Wash.—Kress & Co., pher and am greatly interested in to be approached by vendors of the three years’ imprisonment. In other “Rave been saved if the operation | f : r | i “ ” “Daily” mal < | Were permitted to be performed (today), 7 P. M., at Irving Plaza; | | this huge chain store which makes avery aa which I read almost aii ap besinning of rid piper oes Nek | openly by skilled surgeons. But our for Yorkville. Saturcay, May 26, millions of dollars profits every | of local and state relief agencies, in = share | short-sighted captains of industry at 2 P. M.. at Labor Temple (84th St. and Third Ave.), and for Har-| lem. Saturday, May 26, at 8 P. M,,! at TI, W. O. Hall, 415 Lenox Av near 131st St. steady are paid at the rate of 29) Hawaiian S. S. Line in Chicago up| leaned from him that the fire ; ; im- | allowed to go to work for two weeks again, the Soviet autorities 4 For & oe ean, ‘ cents per hour. | until about eight months Saat P| thing he did was to appeal for help Sain pete’ ee bende after the operation and is paid sick ce een Heian ts te aa y night there is also On Saturdays or days prior to) ‘The Williams Line is a subsidiary | ‘0 the Taxpayers’ Protective League,| cojtection! There should have been | Denefit, just as if she were sick with |r. conted and selentific if thelr schetluled an affair at 8:30 at the i ialist- OnE ee ee iu other disease. The Russian sur- eI a German Workers’ Club, 1501 Third holidays, extra girls are hired to|Line of the American-Hawaiian, | S0cialist-controlied unemployment 3¢ teast 50 $1 bills raised in the | ®2Y ia |2PProach to the problem of abor- See. wherp an illezal Brown Book TEES ae ee eee | an ante 38 Oe Bent OL Bara ee ee eee et gee ed no| 2 in unison. I, for one, am guilty Sreeioeray ate epuratinn “Rich | ton. Only by legalizing and safe~ | hag resting e rate of 21 cents per hour. On| per—who handles both lines here, 3 st al ley showed no| « ‘ oll: guarding this, can we hope to st | Brats out ay Coney ke Saturdays many of the girls get|also the O. & O. Line, Hopper gets| terest in his plight, but that the wil for ‘the night SPs, in the Do eerie San eae five | ail the factors involved and fade | Gisposed of, and where a splendid only from four to six hours of work.|a salary ee ee (for og Pregpiiay pease ro Be oS Mason Opera House. Comrades Fiori ie Soni to aha aontiat solution which will make it unueces- . i During working hours the man-|tacting and getting on the good | ; , or rare to resort to what et ils strate, poceated iy tn ager has a watehful eye upon the |side of the shippers). has a banie| te relief offices, but. stood outside | should Mag Sencniobicig, doe emer epn nny aeeonrtinas after all, an abnormal. condition ny See ate tis ored by the girls to see that they are always |9ccount of over $250,000, has an 80 | the building while he entered and | for our big demonstrat a * A special committee passes upon her Yen, tits are filme ini fdesia Which = for Meeker youth ee or busy. acre farm up in Michigan (all paid | fusht his battle alone. Be o CBee! gh ge Se SUP UCR On Bod JE COnsere ciel |depict the dangers of clandestine ‘The ‘youth movement anon’ we all Organization of the girls in the| for) with a beautiful home, on NOT: wae ¥ steeten stead Pitches peat ae Hay lenene, pee 1 secret) abortion. The beds in the times have our fullest. co-operation | | Kress Stores throughout the entire ia he raises cherries as a side| publish eee every Friday | when they see a lot of dollar bills. |" z: ra Bis agunds’ Subltnt hospitals are allotted, first, to and support. U. S. is the onl; to th ee é | 1 strong pro who are unemployed, next “” And a ow Minutes in the Kitchen | | iaarale conaiiueantee ss Bate e: The Williams Line and A-H have| from workers in the ica & Seg mar ener ae ane abortions is being conducted by the a i 2 ‘ke a fare to ° So much doing these days, it’s | pera Sue the same offices in N. Y, and on the| tion and communication indus- |More nel . ft ie revolutionary | Soviet health authorities. There are siiale Workess, , hard to squeeze in a recipe now | ORGANIZER OF ANTI-SOviET | Pacific Coast, and have the same| ‘ties—railroad, marine, surface | Our financi ee ine e ie ‘sands | SPecial exhibitions which tour the | those who have more than three ve hav iv , 1 sailing schedule, and one man in| lines, subway, elevated lines, ex- | movement, and there are thou country and whose object it is to! children. and then, though we have received WAR IN DAIREN the fut ti nd ad some good ones again. Here's a re- Chicago, Detroit and Rochester} Press Bade pans: truck tng taxi e ec har Pe a Paatas ati rs “ err hS ol i —i - 7 i ile - - a) Peowng Surnmer dish suggested by| Send FIFTEEN. CENTS (1Se) in Sie a wakiee Che hate ool Hey ese tne eee ee Tieeiee) ieltfeee oa t the big demonstration. And those — ALL COMRADES WELCOME — Russian and Oriental Kitchen a jolly girl comrade with whom I/coins or stamps (coins preferred) | got into a conversation but who for this Anne Adams patters. Write didn’t tell me her name. |plainly name, address and_style/ Lightly brown in a tablespoon or| number. BE SURE TO STATE} two of fat a large finely chopped , SIZE. year, condemns its hired girls to starvation and the worst kind of slavery. The regular girls who are working supplied with funds by the Japan- ese imperialists, arrived here today at this South Manchurian port on his way to Harbin, where he will or- I was greatly interested in the |article “Labor rouses the Water- front” by Marguerite Young, espe- jcially in regard to the Williams |Line. I worked for the American- liams operates from the South At- lantic and A-H from the North At- | lantic. | I had to buy pencils out of my | | own salary and make my own note- when he asked for help at a time when his wife lay dead at home. I have since talked to the com- rade who wrote this letter and munications industries—post of- fice, telephone, telegraph, etc. We urge workers from these in- dustries to write us of their con- ditions of work, and their strug- demonstration the salesmen of the “Western” and the “Daily” should get together and decide on definite section territories that each is to cover. with $5 bills, make it five ones, and distribute it to friends for them to raise in the air! There are different ways to win A proletarian woman can have an abortion performed free of charge, owing to the system of insurance which covers such cases. She is not (fear that by thus safeguarding the | victims of its exploitation, capital- | ism may run short of cannon fodder | and pleasure flesh. NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes Comradely Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE i 4, ‘Sails - . FOOD — POPULAR PRICES onion. Add four tomatoes, washed| Address orders to Daily Worker | ganize “agitators” for Japan to help | books out of yellow second sheets to} gles to organize. Please get these | over different elements and I hope eURe and cut small. Cook over low fire, | Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th| in preparations for war against the| keep the budget while this man| letters to us hy Tuesday of each | these I suggest meet with your ap- || 848 Broadway tet. 1atn # 11th st. near 14th Street, New York City about 5 minutes, until enough juice St., New York City. Soviet Union. Hopper took out shippers to dine. week, 3 NON-PARTY, » —>