The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 2, 1934, Page 6

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Page Six BY A GROUP OF PILO workers’ rd, which ended has jarred the officials of this powerful, autocratic The omp: Present demands an fight for improvement i: tions. The A. F. of L. stepped d followed the usual role of appropriating the cash for services Promised without any de: n was that the workers formed an indep lent union with ra and file control with a worker, La Vista, a motor builder, as presi- dent. Pratt and Whitney Aircraft inclined to smile in- effort of the work- , but this young in- ced independent union ers to organi exp prised not only the Pratt and Whit ney Co., but the le indus a the sacred s id of the Con- with its good old of God and the ers struck. For si: d in spite of the police, and lack of| finances. They learned plenty—so| did “Pratt and Whitney Co. The] workers learned the value of col-| lective action as a weapon and the| bosses learned that in the future| action cannot be ignored by them | Lessons Learned from Strike The wages in the factory for all TO ANOTHER TS AND MECHANICS =————"I/ of workers, factory, engineering, pilot and field operation into one economic union composed sectionally h one objective. This objective to be the raising of the economic | status of workers in all phases of | the aviation industry, each section to be supported by all in its de- ds. es, such as United which Pratt and iary, use this a parent com- | pany control the manufacturing and air operating companies. The avia- tion workers must realize that a 'Y|chain of various sectional workers | in any industr, aviation is ot weakest link. No Definite Gains | The workers have returned under | a 30-day agreement with a repre- sentative of the Boston Regional! Labor Board and the company with @ promise of satisfactory settlement. Nothing definite as to wages and recognition has been gained. How- ever, the feeling in the factory is tense. The workers are jealous of their union and a close watch is kept on those who are not 100 per cent for the organization. The workers effectively used their | economic power in some cases, as} for instance—During the strike the, of the fact cafeteria who tes the co! ion, fired a waiter who walked out in sympathy with the factory workers. When the strikers returned they discovered the waiter was not reinstated. The ; union held a meeting and decided | to retaliate and boycott the cafe-| teria. Workers fetched their lunches and refused to patronize the cafe- teria | Another instance—There is a} laundry doing a considerable volume | of business laundering workers’! and particularly in ly as strong as its} This laundry | | and DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY. But Menace | ‘Save Expense (Miners Forced Into | | | AS ONE AIR-PILOT | | Miners’ Lites By a Mine Worker Correspondent SPRINGFIELD, Ill—I am em- _ Dangerous Places By Threats of Dismissal ployed at the Old West mine, be-| longing to Panther Creek Coal) Co. I've been working here for the past ten years but never did I find Then Get Blamed for / Bosses Themselves Made Them Break Rules | 4ecidents, Although the such bad conditions as now. This} mine is controlled by the P. M. A.,| By a Mine Worker Correspondent close to 400 men are wi g| CLYDE MINE, Pa. — Some time on an average of two to three! ago, a miner working here in Clyde he: a week, The company is bent|No. 3 of the Rainey Coal had no on making as much profit as pos-| posis. The assistant boss threatened sible wit spending a penny on|to send him home unless he has repairs. air is bad, but what|his place posted up. The law is| is worse, the top is bad, the logs are| that the company furnishes all the strewn around, without cleaning,| posts and timbers. so that it’s dangerous to go a step.| The man demanded from the boss The reason for this is that the com-|a car of posts but did not get it. pany does not want to hire more | When ordered by the boss to post day men to clean up and keep the| his place or go home, and not wish- roadways in good shape. The|ing to lose a day’s work, he did the company doesn’t give a damn. ;mext best; he went into an Lin What is also bad is the condition | Worked out place and tried to knoe of the air shaft. Several weeks ago|® Post down. He did, but with the when our “lifter” went bad, it took| Post came tons of rock and slate, us three hours to get out of the| Which killed him. mine, because only five men were| Of course now the bosses are not permitted at a time up those rotten| blamed, neither is the Rainey com- stairways. In case of fire or blow|Pany. The man that got killed is up, we all would be cooked in there.| blamed because he violated a min- Yet up to now not a thing was) ing rule by going into an abandoned | done to improve this. | place and knocking the Posts down. Once in a local union a kick was| Really though every miner knows made against these conditions, but|that if this man went home, he the local politicians said, “Let's not| might have had his Iamp stopped | start any trouble, we got to wait till| the next day, he would have lost a| we get stronger \few days work, and while we may What I want to know is how can| blame the man for doing something | our union grow when we permit our| that is dangerous, and against the | |rules, we must place the whole blame on the coal company for not} furnishing the miners with the} necessary posts and timbers. | The rule should be established whereby, if any miners lose a day jor a part of a day, due to lack’ of | the necessary supplies, the coal com- |pany shall pay these men at the prevailing daymen’s wages for the lost time. This would soon stop the practices of the bosses who com- pel miners to go into abandoned places. In the last few weeks, seven men were hurt in this mine alone. Prac- tically all of these accidents are the fault of the company. No one gets fired, no one gets blamed, but the men who get hurt. Our local of the U. M. W. A. is controlled by a set of officials that do not see these things, because they are like their master, John Lewis. They be- lieve that they are here to protect the interest of the coal company and not the interest of the miners. We must change this situation, by removing out of all the union of- fices the agents of John L, and the coal companies. A CLYDE NO. 3 MINER. conditions to get worse and worse? Company Cheats Rubber Workers Grow Tired Crippled Miners Of A. F. L. Stalling Tactics By a Mine Worker Correspondent NELLIS, W. Va. —I have been | By a Worker Correspondent agreement would be ready to pre- | the JUNE 2, 1934 PMA Chiefs Hide Origin Of HR 7598 By a Mine Worker Correspondent PANA, Ill.—I was present at the recent State Committee meeting of Unemployment Councils at which a report was given by the Secretary E. Jones, on the number of local unions down state which have endorsed the Unemployment Insurance Bill HR 17598. Close to 40 locals P. M. A. and Auxiliary have given support to this bill, after} the Progressive Miner came out in an editorial openly supporting the} fake Wagner Bill. I asked one of the Board members from our district, why does the} P.M.A. officialdom support such fake stuff, when they know it is against the unemployed and also when they know that the only real bill is the one introduced by the Unemployed Councils, thru pressure on Congres- man Lundeen. The Board member told me he didn’t know, but I think it was one of those “political” moves of the P. M. A. “brain trust” at the time when they called upon us to support Nesbit and all that gang. The P. M. A. officialdom thought that by this horse trading they would get in the good graces of the N. R. A. and maybe horn in on John L., and now since they got no results and also seeing that the rank and file after all knows what is good for them, they haven't come out in the last issue of the Progressive miner, giving space and explanation to our Bill 7598 as the only bill “which really means some- thing to labor.” | The P. M. A. officials are still trying to cover up the fact that. this bill is the work of the Unem- ployed Councils for the past three years, and they are trying to make it look like it’s a Lundeen bill, We miners don’t care what it's called, but I wish the Daily would point PARTY LIFE 25, Not 2 Milli ion Convention Manifestoes Should BePrinted Non-Party Farmer Thinks Quota Too Small; Will Sacrifice and Work to Spread Them I say we should distribute 20 or | 25 million of the Eighth National | Convention Manuifesto of the Com- munist Party. This is not impos- sible or so difficult. It can be ac- complished if 25,000 Party mem- kers and sympathizers pay for and distribute an average of 1,000 pam- phlets each. Those who can't spare $1.00 can no doubt collect from those who have read the manifesto. Where it is impossible to reach all farmers, one good way is put the manifesto in cars, and hand them out on the streets and at public meetings. Hundreds and thousands of farmers’ cars are parked in towns on Saturday nights, at picture shows, etc. Also all public gather- ings of farmers should have the manifestos distributed. Those dis- tributed to farmers might be stamp- ed with the address of the National Farmers Weekly Newspaper and those to workers with the Daily Worker, etc. In order to carry out the afore- mentioned plan I am willing, if necessary, to miss many meals and many night's rest. % We must not delay until nearly | time for the November elections this fall. | E.C. Denver, Colo. mo pe te Editor’s Note. We are publishing the above let- ter to show the reaction of the non-Party masses to the Manifesto of our Party. Unfortunately our Party Districts have not approached the distribution of this Manifesto with the same enthusiasm. Up to the present time not two million but only 500,000 Manifestos have been distributed, 234,000 of which were distributed in New York Dis- trict. The rest of the country and particularly the concentration dis- tricts underestimated both the im- portance of the manifesto, and the eagerness with which it is received and read by the workers and farm= ers everywhere. We would like to accept the sugges‘ion of the com- rade who is willing to sacrifice rest and food to distribute 25 million copies. If the task is approached in this spirit by the comrades in the districts, the first two million copies can be easily put into the harsis of the workers and” farmers, and funds raised for 20 million more. Let’s go, comrades. Join the Communist Party 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name Street City AKRON, Ohio—Akron, the rubber| Sent to the membership in about | overalls and aprons. t Kk: ten days, and a Ganka Soe 3, 1 manufacturing center of the world, LAR cee 3 ne out to the workers that this Bill classes of work was low, from 40] oe e york-| Working in hundreds of different | had a large income from the work. was and is the result of the hard cents per hour up to approximately | 75 cents per hour for highly skilled labor. The average was low. The company is wealthy and retained an arrogant attitude until about 1,200 men walked out ers in the Pratt and Whitney plant.; mines, but the mine I am now} During the strike they were ap-| Working at, the Han Coal Mine; proached by the union for moral} Corp., is the most dangerous mine. traditionally a non-union city, has now about 3,500 workers organized and financial support but they evaded any definite support. Last in A, F. of L. Federal locals. | Last June the A. F. of L. with About 550 men work here. They know you will like it. One of the high points is a minimum wage of 75 cents per hour.” This 75 cents per hour is all we heard about from the officials. They work by the Communists and tens of thousands of unemployed Coun- cil members, whom the P. M. A. Officials and other labor states are veeks of struggle Were aie es or eae the aid of N.R.A. penetrated this| were determined to sell the whole | “@cking today. : piel Loge acdc | called to collect the workers’ laun- | non-union city with little or no| thing on this one point, and when UNEMPLOYED MINER. i : pues Gereatnice tien Gai Ore one Hie Sere eee |resistance from the rubber barons.| finally the agreement was read in NOTE: By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D, — rg oma a Saeed ieee obvious | 22nded. The workers had again) | What little resistance was offered | the locals, it revealed itself as being iS g overall sabvoaseenehie Havetecs. aa ji i ev ehatsihe qisle. plad villeagegie Leet | was for the purpose of camouflage. | a masterpiece for the rubber barons. We publish letters from coal ; pol e re- arises when acids are poured over now that the whole plant should) aithough nothing definite had c It does not call for a closed shop,} and ore miners, and from oil field | C°Mtly inquired regarding the symp- | Metal containing arsenic. have s‘ruck, including the Chance Vaught subsidiary, the engineering | been gained in the negotiations the union is solid and its mistakes are Coleman Claherty was sent here by Bill Green as his chief repre- not even recognition of any union. | But it contained many clauses that | workers every Saturday. We urge toms and, prevention of arsenical | The workers who come in contact with arsenic most often are those staff and the office force. Although | those of a young inexperienced or- | sentative. He set up an elaborate | ( 1 Workers in these fields to write us | poisoning. We have collected all the who remove hair from hides; : the engineers expressed their desire| ganization jacking finances. Clari- | | office in ‘the finest bank building| PAPC, 4 ver seach ite pros| of their conditions of work and | letters on this subject and are re-| Wn “emeve hait from hides; those to join the strike, no provision was| fication is necessary and such mis- | in Akron. So far, the only thing of their struggle to improve their | made to include them. Inventory was taken during the strike and with union consent, a number of workers were allowed into the plant | for this purpose. This was a mis- take. A complete stoppage is neces-| sary for success. If an emergency concession is made because of ne-/ ible so that the union can be| waole situation ena ie aie pan crank A q g gle A. F. of L. will not be ab! a i ‘ | Copper and lead ores contain a port Sethe sigh vals ves is e to|ranks solid on class struggle lines, | PU™P. or some other place, so that| organized”; second, “wait till we get| these conditions, Goodrich local New York. Arsenic compounds give the fol-| How Does Arsenical Poisoning Take t the “inside are always a wedge eae cieeker can be corrected and | the poor worker does not have com-| a rubber code; third, “wait till we| now has splits in it, about three fac- ieee * |lowing symptoms: irritation and | Place split and break a strike. | the real foundation laid for a strong | Pensation, and takes another work-| decide what we want”; fourth. “wait tions, alab' the eotapany unton existe | oto. sea ‘ later ulceration of the skin; ulcera- . a The strike also proves the the real foundation laid for a s i Tmbnt b | ti a pi ,. | On May Ist, “Daily Workers” were! tion of the * discolorati f If the skin is broken, arsenic may i ps sap the| economic militant union that will|49& man's job. till I draft a blanket agreement for | in all the large shops. There is| git} e nose; discoloration o: Be ee eae eal aa lly benefit all aviation work-| The company has its own doctors,| the industry as a whole.” one sure thing, if these workers| 1st™ibuted at the gate of the Brook-| the skin and thickening of the skin| Mter the body through a scratch or aviation industry on industrial | eventually benefit a |who play with the crippled men as 7 s ig, SE lyn Navy Yard. These papers were | on the palms and soles: irritation of | °°: In the majority of cases, how- lines combining all cl DOMFSIiIC WORKERS’ UNION COLLECTS FULL MONTH'S; WAGES FOR HOUSEWORKER | MADE ILL BY OVERWORK hough the N.R.A. protests that employers of domestics can’t be! made subject to rules and regula-| tions as to wages, hours, etc., the Union is demonstrating the power | of the organized workers to secure) better conditions. | For a year, Martha Scheffer, union member, worked for Mrs. Mina Bodzin, 247 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn. For $25 a month, Martha did-the cleaning, washing, ironing, the. cooking and window-washing, and cared for the two children. This wasn’t enough: in May, “spring cleaning” was instituted in the Bodzin household, and Mar- tha. was asked, in addition to the already crushing duties, to wash the walls and woodwork and shellac the floors. Her health broke and she had to be taken to a hospital. Her feet were seriously affected. After two weeks in the hospital the doctors advised her not to work for a month. “I’m so glad she finished the floors before she was taken | sick,” said Mrs. Bodzin. Martha was taken ill about two weeks after her previous pay-day. She received $8, and $2 for the clinic. The Union decided to de- mand a full month’s pay for her and sent a delegation consisting of one Finnish worker, (Martha), and one Japanese, one Negro, one white American and one Esthonian to the | it should be as limited as| It will be easier the next time. takes can be corrected by sound or- | ganizational activity. The workers | have returned but they are watch-| ing future developments keenly. | They realize that the bosses have | won the first round. They were able to jar this arrogant company | to a full stop and make them listen. The is full of possi- ers in the count a sacrifice for him to hire domestic |help but that he did so because his wife was not very well and strong and should not work. Can You Make ’Em | Yourself? 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size and 1% yards contrasting. trated step-by-step sewing instruc- | tions included. ; Second eet Pattern 1535 is available in sizes 26 takes 22 yards 36 inch fabric| Illus- | |of the house. call it the butchers’ mine. Every | single day some of the miners get hurt, a finger chopped off, hands| broken, legs broken, back broken, or crashed to death. When a worker gets his finger cut off or his hand broken, or leg, or anything else, they carry him if they were animals, not humans. For instance, one coal digger last year had a coal rack fall upon him and break his shoulder blades. The day the doctor sent him back to work with pick and shovel, with a shoulder blade broken in three places. | CLEVELAND NEWSIE | SPEAKS i |] DON’T know whether you have heard about the news- boys’ strike here in Cleveland, About 600 of us went out on| strike Monday, May 21. It was | about time, too. Forty cents | ja day was all we could ever i manage to make. And when you are ;the only one in the family that’s working, 40 cents don’t go very far. And some of the fellows sure have it tough. There’s my best friend, Joey. His mother’s half blind, with a cataract on her eye. His pop can’t work any more, taking tickets. He needs a new artificial leg. His leg is sore and he’s been in bed for weeks, The kid sister takes care Joey still goes to school, and can only sell papers in the afternoon. It ain’t so bad in my house. At least no one is sick. My pop ain’t worked for a year. But he looks around and gets a day’s work once in a while. Mostly mom counts on the couple of dollars I bring in to feed pop and four of us kids. But lately I haven't been able to do even that. Now this here strike has been go- ing along swell. A delegation went down to see Mayor Davis, but, of WITH OUR the rubber workers have received from the A. F. of L. is an oppor- tunity to pay $1 per month dues and listen to ballyhoo from Clah- erty and Stanley Denlinger, lawyer | Politician. | From the very beginning, Clah- | erty’s program has been one of stalling and preventing any strug- | whatsoever. At first he had He was about five months draft- | ing the agreement. Then he called the leaders of the various locals to several meetings to sell them (the | leaders) this agreement, at the same time keeping the rank and file in complete ignorance of the contents. After several weeks of officers‘ meet- | to stall a while longer. posed destination. And now as the} peak period of the season has passed there is no hope of getting anything for the workers. The rub- ber industry is seasonal, and Mr. | Claherty can use this fact to try} There are rumblings of upheav-| | als in some of the locals indicat- | ing complete dissatisfaction. The ever become disorganized again, they will have no faith in any kind of a union and many years will be re- quired to organize them again. They nylril-erwbeseyaDan.— b .. ah etao were betrayed by the A. F. of L. several years ago, and that still lingers in the minds of some of the ings, it was announced that “the YOUNG older workers. READERS Conducted by Mary Morrow, Chil- dren’s editor, The Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St.. New York City. Chicago, Ill. Dear Comrade Editor: In our troop of Young Pioneers there are two little Negro girls, They had to sell flowers so that they would be able to eat on Mother's Day. Their Mother had to make the flowers and they had to sell them. So you see that the bosses don’t care about mothers, but only to make profits for them- selves, Comradely yours, EUGENE GRASSE. ine anes The June issue of the New Pioneer is out! Be sure you get your copy. There’s lots of adven- ture in it, a grand account of the Russian explorers on the Chelyus- kin expedition, and the beginning of a serial about Russian Pioneers in China. PUZZLE CORNER See how many different ways you can arrange the numbers one conditions and organize. Please get your letters to us by Wed- nesday of each week. LETTERS FROM OUR READERS taken by almost all the men.. When we got to the entrance, the Marines and cops started to take the papers from us. I want to tell you that.a lot of the men got sore at this be- cause they had no right doing it. The “Daily Worker” is a regular newspaper and just because it says. letter to the Commandant of the Yard raising Hell and asking what right he had in having the Marines take the papers away. A GROUP OF YARD WORKMEN. ON WORKERS DEFENSE CORPS New York. Comrade Editor: There appeared recently in the Daily Worker, opinions of workers about the necessity of organizing “Workers Defense Corps.” With the rising tide of the class struggle and the simultaneous threat of fascism, I think the ques- tion of this defense of the working class is immediate and should re- ceive careful consideration. It seems to me that in order to insure the victory of the workers in the fourth- coming showdown it is essential that they be better prepared to face and muster the actual technique of struggle. I think it is especially important to spread the “Workers Defense Corps” idea among the young work- ers, because these workers are, due to lack of experience, easier prey and victims of fascist demagogy. A WHITE COLLAR WORKER. GOLD BONDS plying to them collectively: { There are two sects of symptoms, one from arsenic compounds and! one from arseniuretted hydrogen gas. Within a few hours after inhaling arseniuretted hydrogen gas, the following symptoms may appear: weakness, dizziness, headaches, vomiting, jaundice, and sooner or eyes; sore throat; hoarseness; vom- iting; abdominal pain; diarrhea, pain and numbness in the arms and legs. Arsenic is a harmless metal, but Poisoning occurs from compounds of arsenic. The most poisonous of are the. arsenical compounds most often employed; they are mixtures of arsenic and copper. When com- Pounds containing arsenic are heated, vapors arise which are/ yellow in color and have a char. acteristic garlic odor. Arseniuretted | hydrogen is a gas which has no color but a very bad smell and it enamels; those employed in de- colorizing glass and crystal; the workers employed in the preserva- tion of furs, feathers and skins; taxidermists who stuff animals; black or green bronzers; the makers of insecticides (bug-killing powders and fluids); those engaged in the chemical industry and those who prepare green dyes and paints, ever, poisoning takes place by breathing dust or the vapor from arsenic compounds or by swallow= ing small quantities of arsenic. (To be continued.) ; things the officials don’t like, it|them is white arsenic or arsenious W 0 ¢ 0 L 0 N A cunDuStED BE See = = doesn’t mean they can take it from} acid which is a solid compound. LUKE {| us. The paper ought to send a! Paris Green and Scheele’s Green BUS EXCURSION Bus leaves 50 E. 13th St., Sunday, June 3, at 8:30 A.M, —Return in the evening. Round Trip Fare. ...$1.00 — BRING LUNCH — Tents still available for the Summer Information: Nevins 8-8331 * Daily Singing led by — Baseball — Boat Leaves Tickets going fast—Get yours today! pQWorker (AYTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIOMALD. DAY and MOONLIGHT EXCURSION To HOOK MOUNTAIN on the Beautiful Steamer “CLAREMONT” (Capacity 3200) SATURDAY, JUNE 9th Dancing — Entertainment — Mass Hiking—Refreshments at city prices Returns at Midnight Daily Worker Chorus Tennis — Swimming Pier A at 1 P.M. | = to nine (1 to 9), using each num- ; El ers? e. As there was no| course, he was out. Boy, wi Both principal and interest payments . . a Gaetene the del gation decided to | plenty to tell ne We ace ane ber only once, so that they add |] are baced upon a fixed uanity of Tickets in advance $1; at Pier $1.25 wait in the park across from the on each paper sold, and the right up to.15 in every row, across and |} tlt. » cai Nel Mauiae place Tickets on sale at Daily Worker City Office, eee pees es return | to pene enesle copies. down. sible further depreciation in the U.S. | 35 E. 12th St.; Workers’ Book Shop, 50 E. of the family. ¢ building super- | The other day we had a big mass dollar zi id : intendent called a cop, demanding | meeting in the square. You should SpLivapan fedenirpd pion yorker Cirenlar D-13 upon > Thi Biy dW. O; Book Shop, 80 Auth Aye, the delegation’s arrest. The cop; j have been all the cops! Millions of Puzzle Club by sending in your 699 Prospect Ave., Bronx; Scandinavian Book ‘ singled out the Negro sees fe them. You'd think we was all Dil- answer. SOVIET AMERICAN Shop, 4012 8th Ave., Brooklyn; Co-op. Barber arrest, whereupon the delegation lingers, by the way the police sailed Club Members! At last Shop, 62 Herzl St.; Yonkers Book Shop, 27 declared if one was arrested all into us, flinging their clubs around. poe cards have been sent SECURITIES CORP. wep —_—sHudson St., Yonkers. musi be. Believe me, they don’t tickle! Some t. If don’t recei: 01 _ 80 Broad Street New Yor! Under fire of their protests the of the fellows were beaten up ter- out. you don’t reccive yours, 4 cop’ withdrew, with the threat to rible, and they arrested about 50 lense let me Rnow, F arrest them if they came again. of us. But that’s nothin’. At least ~~ Mr, Bodzin, hearing of this inci- 75 of us had been in and out of - : dent, agreed to confer with the jail for one thing or another since ee committee in the headquarters of the strike began. Smart guys. But we're smart too. = an the F.W.LU. at 60 West 45th St. Funny thing happened today. Today Joey and I walked down . Ee ‘objected to the demand for a You know, the truck drivers be-| Prospect Avenue lookin’ for some of cos full’ month’s salary for Martha and long to the A. F. of L. You'd think | the fellows. We got leafiets to give -— PROGRAM 2 4 a real union would try to help us| out. We spot Tony and Ed on the » to the mixed delegation which he J t i 4 » and support us, and not go against | corner, and give them the high sign A 1—Track Events said had apse en jeipa us. But that’s what the A. F. of L.| to follow us, because the dicks and 2—The Patriots” (Soviet Anti-war Film at 8:30 PM.) , a threat to picket his home is doing. The truckmen in’ their|cops keep their eyes open for us. i agreed to pay the other 15, a check which Martha got two days later. Mr. Bodzin’s attitude was one of heartbroken reproach for Martha. He admitted that she had been Send FIFTEEN CENTS (l5c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) | for this Anne Adams Pattern. Write union work for the same papers we do. Today every press truck has got a big sign on it—“Union Truck.” And dicks and cops followin’ so as no- They got trucks filled with gang- sters to bust up any meeting. So we walk about a block together and slip Tony and Ed a bunch of leaf- lets to give out. It says we want a Uimer Park—TODAY | 4—Artists Union 5—Mass Chorus 3—Workers Laboratory Theatre—in a new show 6—Dancing—Open Air Pavilion—Till Dawn plainly nm, address and style overworked, but thought she unl pur" “> ™ STATE! body hurts ‘em. They don’t want the| dollar for the night newsies. And Rs 2 MAX BEDACHT — 7:00 P. M. b Bays ee Mi Nee herd. } drivers to sympat! i y|do the guys eat those leaflets up! 25th AVE. STATION—WEST END LINE weenie #lso reproached her ay \Worker, don’t believe in that. They gct each} You know, this way we'll get some- S we re Ey ing as to the bh: 3 West 17th} cne io think of his own skin and| wheres. We're gonna stick to this BORE O NS an abe onee arien ar Sateen Further es explained that it meant Street, New York City. the devil with the other fellow. until we get decent conditions,

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