Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
———— BARBUSSE ON THAELMANN! “Do You Know Thaelmann?” Begins on Feature Page This Saturday Daily QWorker CENTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL) Vol. XI, No. 137 <®* |\German Sailor Saved From Nazi Ship By I. L. D. || Was Being Returned in Chains After Being Shanghaied N. Y. WORKERS ACT Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the Act of March 8, 1879. | Wednesday's picket line of 50 marine workers NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1934 Marine Workers Demand Release of Thaelmann Party. The Marine Workers Industrial Union, which WEATHER: Fair and cooler. Employers Prepare for Strikebreaking in Pittsburgh REPUBLIC MEN WIN | a AMERICA’S ON CLASS DAILY LY WORKI NEWSPAPER (Six Pages) Price 3 Cents | $200 Fine Is Penalty Bill Court ! For Mentioning Of Rights in (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Iil., June 7—Karl ‘Weirton Steel Bosses Fire 116 Union Men As Date For National Strike Nears Members of Committee of Ten Differ on How To Proceed GREEN CALLS TIGHE Wore Anti-Nazi Button, and striking sailors from two ships in front of | organized Wednesday's picket line, at a meeting |Youngstown Steel Men|| Lockner, leader’ of the Cook || Protest to Roosevelt on His Sole “Crime” German Consulate, 17 Battery Place, Large crowds | that same evening elected a special Thaelmann | D + W. County Unemployment Council Bice . ; on the sidewalks applauded the placards demand- | Committee to develop further action in the cam- | ‘on’t Want Steel [ee onanag Blacklisting TRU VY, > Aes Baia ing the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann, longshore- | paign for the liberation of Thaelmann and other Labor Board fasting te Fe ey eee NEW YORK.—By twenty man, and heroic leader of the German Communist | anti-fascist fighters in Germany and this country. teeter pene nae tome SOE OR BULLETIN two minutes, a German anti- fascist sailor was saved from almost certain death at the hands of the Hitler murder- gangs, Wednesday night. The sailor, Theodore Eg- geleng, 26, was already in chains in the brig of the German ship, the “Albert Ballin,” which was get- ting ready to leave for Fascist Ger- many, where torture and death awaited him, when he was rescued through a writ of habeas corpus brought by Sol H. Cohen, Interna- tional Labor Defense . lawyer, brought into the case by the Ger- man Workers’ Club. At 1 am. Tuesday, Eggeleng, with two anti-fascist friends, was re- SAVED FROM NAZIS Theodore Eggeleng, seaman res- cued at the last moment from va in Nazi ship’s brig in New ork. Demands Spain’s Farm Strike Grows; 10 Are Killed! New York, Philadelphia Workers to Picket Nazi Consulates Daily NEW YORK.—The steady march of delegations on the German Consulate, 17 Bat- Union Delegation to Nazi Consulate Freedom for Thaelmann Foster Dives Trade Unions Aid Thalmann By T. W. SHANE, Jr. Special to the Daily Worker PITTSBURGH, June 7. Steel companies are attempt- | jing to tighten their hold on} the workers as the strike date draws nearer with a per- mit for an Amalgamated As- sociation (A. F. of F.) meet- ing refused for next Sunday in | Homestead, an anti-strike resolution | |passed by an assemblage of Du Quesne’s “best” citizens, and a del- egation inspired by the Chamber |of Commerce from McKeesport }about to depart for Washington | to lodge a protest against the strike |with Federal authorities. Steel and tempt of court today. Lockner was present in court to attend the trial of a worker named Levarchuck, who was charged with disorderly conduct as 8 result of militant activities, and am attempt was made to deny Levarchuck a jury trial. Lockner came forward to protest the denial of the elementary rights of the defendant. The vi- cious sentence was immediately imposed, | Mass Picket at Brooklyn Pier | Monday Noon WAHINGTON, D. C., June 7.— President Roosevelt refused to se@ the Committee of Ten of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers late today. The Committee of Ten, elected at the last national convention of | the union, waited at the White House. The committee wanted to | lay their position regarding the steel strike before Roosevelt. The Committee of Ten left after see ing only Marvin McIntyre, secre- tary to Roosevelt. They said they would try again tomorrow to see Roosevelt. By MARGUERITE YOUNG Daily Worker Washington Bureat turning from the Yorkville Labor _~ e i i ‘+ A |Metal Workers Industrial Union 7 5, r , Temple to the “Albert Ballin,” on - Fascists Planning to pd ee ae eet Anti-Nazi Struggle Is meetings have also been banned in ou Oy a= rine — oo which he worked as a sailor. . . : * lomestead. a vO 0) e malgamate On the way they passed a saat B ri d 4 e Pp Ort) Set Up Dictatorship |'Thacimann, leader of the Fight of All Trade At the Duquesne meeting Mayor |Call All N. Y. Workers | association delegation walked beer joint. The bouncer and a By a Coup German Communist Party, Unionists J. 8. Crawford denounced the strike To Demonstrate in | out of a conference with As- couple of his huskies were stand- ing outside. One of them saw an anti-fascist button on the lapel of one of the three, and started a City Couneil ‘Backs HR 7598 MADRID, June 7—Despite fas- cist terror against the workers, in| which ten have already been killed will be continued this morning with a delegation from the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union. The entire membership of the NEW YORK.—The fight for the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann, long- shoreman and leader of the reyolu- as a “blind destructive tendency, a | vital thrust at the very hearth stone | of our community,’ and demanded | | continuation of the “employees rep- | Support of Dockers of Labor One of sistant Secretary McGrady late today. i resentation” (com) i | NEW YORK.—A mass demon-| them, Mel Moore, explained eee Airy pe would by attacks of the Civi IGuard, the| Joint Council of the Union will] tionary workers of Germany, is the| The last oer ae daprengun arc Pst of longshoremen, seamen | “As we see it they wanted us i endanger ‘his life when he got back Rec, strike of the agricultural workers is| demand in the delegation, which will] fight of every trade unionist, the| steaq Lodge of the Amalgamated |#d workers of all industries in lchange the demands in our res« to the boat, Eggeleng and his com-| Relief Strike of 3.000 | Pteading throughout Spain with) demand the safety and freedom of Trade Union Unity League declares| Association of Iron, Steel and Tin |Support of the striking west coast) cinticn as drafted by the A. A. panions began to run. The cops/ ?. more than 1,000,000 out. |Thaclmann and all other anti-|in a ringing call for mass defense of | Workers (AF.L.), was marked by | Jongshoremen has been called for| Gonyention.” Another delezete, Lou fired their guns. Eegeleng was) Looms; Men Demand The Federation of Workers of the| fascist fighters in Germany. All| Thaelmann, signed by William Z.|the receipt of a letter from the| Monday noon at the docks of the | Kelsey, refused to go into the con- caught. One of the others was shot | $12 Weekl Soil, with a membership _Set at| shops controlled by the union have ae General Secretary of the | Tighe office, laying down the policy | Am pee erean bess P a ference with McGrady as the en- in the leg. | y 2,000,000, called a general strike yes-| been urged by the Joint Council to| League and foremost labor leader in| against the S. M. W. I. U. in no| Pier 6 of the Bush Terminal. 42nd | tire groun were asked to do by Sec« The anti-fascist was hauled off to court, where he was held in $100 bail. The German Workers’ Club raised the money. On Wednesday, just as Eggeleng and the attorney .were..coming out. of the courtroom after paying a fine of $10, two men who said they were marine police seized Eggeleng and dragged him off to the “Albert } Ballin.” The write of habeas corpus or- dering the captain of the boat to release Eggeleng was secured at Special to the Daily Worker | BRIDGEPORT, Conn. June 7—By | unanimous vote, the “Socialist” City Council here was forced to endorse the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill (H.R. 7598) on Monday night. The Workers’ Bill, now in the Congressional Commititee on Labor and Education, was lifted from the “miscellaneous file” and quietly passed without any publicity | terday for increased wages. They | also addressed an appeal to 2,000,000 syndicalist unorganized agricultural workers to join the struggle. Be- sides being a strike for improved conditions, the walkout is aimed at the growingly fascist government which has repealed legislation pre- viously adopted on demand of the agricultural workers. The government, in an effort to stop the strike, issued a decree de- claring that harvesting of the crop was a “public *service,” and that a send similar protest delegations. Daily Picketing Plans for continuing the daily picketing of the Consulate were dis- cussed Wednesday night at an en- larged meeting of the National Ex- ecutive Commmittee of the Inter- national Labor Defense, at which representatives of several unions and mass organizations were present. The meeting also formulated plans to draw all I. L. D. districts and branches and affiliated organiza- the United States. The Call, issued to all trade unions and trade un- ionists, follows: oat Mere To all Trade Unions and Trade Unionists. * Brothers: The attempt on the part of the Nazi government to guillotine Ernst | Thaelmann, the leader of the rev- olutionary workers of Germany, is a challenge to every trade unionist, to every worker, not alone in Germany but in the entire world, including {uncertain terms, The communica- tion demanded the expulsion and | \exclusion of all Communists, and |continued vigilance of the A. A. |members to guard against left wing propaganda, An attempt was made | by one member to discover whether Forbeck’s signature was affixed, but |the secretary, Slater, blocked the move, After a long wait, a motion to | receive the letter was made and (Continued on Page 2) St. and First Ave., Brooklyn, by the Rank and File Action Commit- tee of the International Longshore- men’s Association. | The longshoremen on pier 6 at- tempted to walk out on strike when the crew of the 8.S. Texan struck several days ago, but were driven back to work by delegates of the I. L. A. The men refused to load cargo on the Texan until Joseph P. Ryan’s delegates ordered them back to work, “By joining hands with the west retary of Labor Perkins Secretary Perkins glossed over the incident saying she simply asked |the union leaders to draft “some- thing specific’ and adding a long explanaticn about a question raised by steel workers. Late developments in a day of redoubled efforts to head off the national steel strike included: Company Unicn Propaganda President Green of the A. F. of L. telegraphed International Pres- ident Tighe of the A. A. to come 4pm. The ship was scheduled to strike wouid be against the law. | tions actively into the nationwide) the ynit; _ coast men it will be easier for us| to Washington at once. He is to ‘ail at midnight ies the action. The press is carrying rumors to| campaign for the liberation of oil clita U. S. Support | e to win better conditions and wages | confer with Johnson here. i For bowie Coben waite to Ban tm scdgeport, an cinta city | apie thet the fascist groups Thasimane Hee Striker Shot at (Gare ai mer "Ss [Beta "Rat ad the writ to the captain. At five undér the terror let loose on the Philadelphia Picketing | Rank and File Committee. | y minutes to ten, the captain, secing that he could not shake the de- termined lawyer, came out of his hiding place and accepted the writ ordering him to release the anti- fascist sailor. But would he obey the order? A small group of German work- ers waited anxiously on the pier to know the answer. At 11:30 the “Al- of war industry, steel, brass, textile and machine works, the Socialist Party City Central Committee, be- cause of pressure by the rank and file, was forced to back the Work- ers’ Bill early in May. Growing mass demand for the Bill has now forced the W‘Socialist” city admin- istration to give official endorse- ment to the Workers’ Bill. Bridgeport, the fortieth city to agricultural workers, is preparing for a coup and the establishment of | an open fascist dictatorship. Fascist Military Coup Reporied in Lithuania; | Led by “Iron Wolf” | | occas | Philadelphia workers will start picketing of the Nazi Consulate in that city at 11 o‘clock this morning. A meeting held on the waterfront yesterday morning in support of the strike preparations of Philadelphia longshoremen, adopted resolutions demanding the release of Thael- mann, and pledged support of the picketing of the Consulate. All the reactionary forces in this country support the Hitler terror regime. The reactionary and fascist forces in this country are giving full support to Hitler and his Nazi agents in this country. All revolutionary workers, all class conscious workers, all trade union- (Continued on Page 2) Remington Plant |Cincinnati Textile Mill Walks Out | Special to the Daily Worker “Brother workers! Build up the united front! Take immediate action! Let our slogans be: Not a ship sails to the west coast! | No west coast ship loaded or dis- charged!” The rank and file committee has called on all unions and labor or- | ganizations in the city to support the longshoremen on the picket line | to confer on the strike situation and he remarked. “It may be serious— it may not be,” and N. R. A. Ad- ministrator Johnson received Wat- |son McKee, N. R. A. Compliance Board Director and Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce of McKees- port, Pa., and a group of company union members from the National Tube Co., plant there. The group in” 4 CINCINNATI, Ohio, June 7. —| i furthered the Iron and Steel Insti- ee ne nae ORE ereentyeeaa endorse the Bill, has an industrial BULLETIN In New York, the Jacob Dainoff Eleven hundred Remington Type-|Monday. » | | | tute’s propaganda campaign against Sear h twelve just as they were | PoPUlation of about 150,,000. BERLIN, June 7.—Latest re- writer Co. strikers deficd the in-| |the strike by declaring to all 5 beginning to give up hope, Eggeleng | stepped off the ship into the arms of his cheering comrades. Promptly at 12 midnight the “Al- bert Ballin” lifted anchor and sailed away. Out of the murderous grasp of the fascists, the German Work- ers and the I. L. D. had wrested the young anti-fascist sailor. Meanwhile a strike on all city relief projects, a strike involving 3,000 relief workers’ looms, On Tuesday, the Unemployed Relief Workers League voted to strike | Monday, June 11, unless their de- mands for minimum wages of $12 a week are granted. Jack Bergin, a Socialist in the ports from Lithuania declare that the fascist military coup was | blocked, and its leader, ex- Premier Valdemaris, was arrested. a 8h: ie TILSIT, Germany, June 7.—Re- ports that a fascist military coup has been attempted in Lithuania, and counter-reports that it has failed, were transmitted here from (Continued on Page 3) NOTICE Tickets on day of Excur- sion can be bought at the Pier only. WESL Calls Upon Vets To Support Strike Struggles Urges Joint Actions To |Structions of their A. F. of L. of-) |ficials to stay home, and carried on | mass picketine, completely shutting down the plant. Although one striker was shot by a company | thug, the mass picketing continues. Three automobiles in which scabs were riding have been burned. The windows of the plant were smashed. The Stearn Foster textile plant Frisco Dockers Vote Down | Individual Settlement Plans | SAN FRANCISCO, June 7—Strik- ing longshoremen of this port voted | 2,401 to 78 against the proposed | settlement plan of dealing with the shipowners port by port. This dis- poses the claim of Lee J. Holman, deposed president of the Frisco representatives in hearing that they held a strike vote yesterday and (Continued on Page 2) ‘Miners of Weirton Steel on Strike ° ‘ district of the International Long- Wilk Price Ri a tae ets tying romno by the German News Bu-|ient Smetane, ater fving to.Xo-| SpeedFightfor Bonus |scn' ytiqcune te finite Pet cnoremen's Assoeation, that 1.000| , JS@ =a news of the action taken at!" 3¢ js rep “ Seg ? the te wages of fifteen cents an hour and | Strikers are ready to join his coun- ported that the fascist | The “Iron Wolf’ e name of the n Congress +64, 3 is es | Ee tie coup took place uyder the leader- | fascist organization supporting Val- er for recognition of the union, The|ter-union on the basis of the in alns 0. Union Will Mostly Aid Hairy Companies Small Farmers To Get Little Advantage; Hits Consumers NEW YORK.—Of the advance in the price of milk, which will go up 1 cent on Monday, June 11, in New York City and most of the up-state cities and towns by a ruling of the Milk Control Division of the State! Department of Agriculture, the farmers will only get a little more than half this increase, although the reason given for the raise is re- lief for the farmers. According to the announced prices, farmers will get an increase of 28 cents per 100 pounds of milk sold as fluid in the New York met- ropolitan area. This amounts to a shade less than 6-10 of a cent. The profits of the dealers will be in- creased 4-10 of a cent. At the same time, farmers will suffer because the higher retail price will cut consump- tion, increasing the amount of milk sold in manufactured form, as sur- plus paid for at a lower rate. The dealers will continue making enor- mous profits while the farmers will get a smaller check since the rate of profits of the dealers will not be The workers are demanding $12 weekly cash wages instead of the present $5.80 and weekly box of groceries. HE most important single United Stetes—Minneapolis, and with still bigger strikes ing class. fighting, revolutionary newspaper. But to do its job well, to do it revolutionary working class in its strug- gles is its daily press. Today, with giant strikes flaring up everywhere in the troit, Bir.ningham, the Pacific Coast — the steel and other industries, a powerful daily revolutionary paper is more than ever indispensable to the victory of the workers in these class ‘battles, Reaching out into every corner of this vast coun- try, collecting news of strikes, relief struggles, trade union developments and other vital matters, the Daily Worker becomes the living nerve of the work- The workers can have no better organ- izer and agitator in its daily struggle than a live, Daily Worker—the only working class daily nows- paper in English in the whole United States—must ship of former Premier Augustinas Valdameras. Troops, it is declared, eecupied all public buildings. Val- demeras sent an ultimatum to Pres- Bring Daily Worker to the Masses! APPEAL OF CENTRAL COMMITTEE, COMMUNIST PARTY, U. S. A. weapon of a Toledo, De- impending in light successfully, the demeras. Valdemeras was the first premier of Lithuania in 1918, and foreign minister in various cabinets until 1926, existed. These millions represent untouched virgin soil in our efforts to make the Daily Worker truly @ paper with a nation-wide mass circulation. * * * S THE first step in the effort to reach this mass circulation, the Communist Party is initiating a drive for readers with the goal of reaching a total of 75,000 daily readers by September 1. Every effort must be bent to attain this goal. Only when we succeed in placing a copy of our paper in the hands of every worker in the thousands of indus- trial plants, in the mines, the docks and harbors, and on the railroads, can this campaign be a suc- cess, These tens of thousands of workers will be- come regular readers. 2f the Daily Worker once they have read a copy’ or two. Today, more than ever before, with the jagged ing of giant strikes illuminating the Amer- ican sky, the whole working class needs its fighting orgen. Let us make the Daily Worker, the fighting workers’ paper, the daily guide and leader of the NEW YORK. — The Executive Committee of the Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League today issued a call for countrywide support of the strike struggles and fight of the veterans to compel the present ses- sion of Congress to pass the veterans back pay bill (bonus). The call pointed out in part that throughout the country there are more than 2,000,000 unemployed and disabled veterans and hundreds of thousands of dependents and other victims of the imperialist war of 1914-1918 and that veterans working yet are being speeded up with all. other workers. The veterans are called upon to show the greatest solidarity with their fellow workers, Negro and white in all strikes. The Call di- rected that all posts of the W. E. 8. L. and all groups carry out the! following actions at once: 1, Issue a statement to the strikers and to the residents of the city in which the strike is, show- ing your support for the strikers. 2.. Appeal to all veterans in the ranks of those who may still be working in the shops and factories on strike, calling upon them to lay down their tools and join the strikers. 3. Organize committees of vet- erans to try to reach those who are still in the factory. Contact the vet- erans who are on strike, form joint committees to visit all veteran or- Powell strike continues. The Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union is preparing for strike at the Covington, Ky., and Newport works. and Middletown _ steel Provocative Terror Continues in Ala.; Homes Are Bombed || (Special to the Daily Worker) BIRMINGHAM, June 7.—As part} |of their campaign of provocation, |agents of the mining bosses last| night set off a bomb at the home of a Negro coal miner employed by the | | Tennessee Coal and Iron Co. | In a scare-headline the Birming- ham Post today declared: “Commu- | nists Blamed for Acts.” Eight homes of coal miners were burned Tuesday night. That this is part of the provocation drive is seen from the fact that it is the ore miners and not the coal miners who are now on strike. dividual port settlement plan. Bruce Pfeiffer and John Lavoi, striking seamen, were seriously stabbed by a scab from the steamer Santa Lucia, when they Sadenvored | to persuade him to join the The two are believed dying at the | Marine Hospital. |To Tax Utilities ; Mayor Stops Clause Against Pay Cuts NEW YORK —A bill levying a small tax on the billion dollar utility companies of this city was signed today by Mayor LaGuardia. The bill wiil bring in about $5,-) 000,000 it is estimated. The annual |“ income of the utilities here runs | “ into the hundreds of millions. Be- sides they have enormous surpluses which remain untouched. La Guardia refused to incorporate into the tax bill any clauses that would prevent the companies from taking the taxes out of the wages of their employees or the con- sumers. Small Farmers, Hit by Drought. | Get No Relief, Face Hunger | Vote To Stay Out Until Action of Steel Workers BROWNSVILLE, Pa., June 7. | The Isabella mine of the Weirton | Steel Co., struck the second time | this year and the main demand is pas all the members of the com- pany union, the Independent Miners Brotherhood, be discharged! The | first strike lasted nearly two weeks. jand the Weirton Company signed | an agreement with the U.M.W.A. Since then, however, the Weirton Company attempted to bring in— the quiet, of course — more into the mine. The ,” knowing the com- pany was back of them, tried to }lord it over the union men. This | resulted in a fight in which recent- ly two members of the U.M.W.A, were attacked, one shot, the other | slugged. The following morning the mine struck, There have been no arrest of the attackers. The story is that they “got away.” Sheriff Hackney and the State Troopers “always get their man.” but not in the case when it is to the advantage of their masters, the steel companies and the coal operators, to let the man or men escape. The local newspapers are stating ~ \ @ lowered by the fall in consumption.) yeach hundreds of th a whole American working class in its resolute strug- | ganizations, calling upon them to| (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) | offered $3 apiece by an agent. In| that the strike is not authorized x A further development in the at- Only when ay Bene St es TS ene ig gle.@ assist the strike, particularly in| oyHICAGO, June hl aenvougnout| Bis desperation he shot his cattle| and the 800 Isabella miners will tempts of the milk control division eularty. by those cities where Legion Posts may jand then killed himself. Other| have to pay the penalty of $1 a day “ST to ensure control of the metropoli-| 8S of thousands of workers in every big indus- Let us reach—and top—the goal of 75,000 Daily | 14 in the control of the officers who| the Middle West, misery and ‘star~ | tarmers in the commmunity have| for each. day of the strike, tan milk market by the larger dis-| ‘tial center, and by thousands of farmers in the Worker readers by September 1st! are supporting the bosses against vation is following in the wake oF been forced to sell cows for as little} The miners’ answer to this was - tributors is the anaouncement of| great agricultural areas, can it actually fulfill its Make the Daily Worker; the newspaper of the | the workers. oe Daceeanis eeecaes e areas © | as $1.80 a head. ; | to vote not to go back to work un- possible milk sales at ®c a quart mission as the blazing torchbearer of the proleta- working masses, a real mas3 newspaper! 4, Hold mass meetings under your ¢, - d acai . Sempra gee at In Alamo, S. D., a mass meeting! tj) they see what the steel workers tn paper cartons by the Borden Co.| rian struggle in America. The Central Committee of the Communist | own auspices, cetting sunport for the|1°°4 of cows, and of rising struggles | farmers recently sent a demand) will do, District U.M.W.A. officials The solutions Lies ; ate Nee There are important industrial towns with only Perty of the United States of America calls upon strikers. At the same time, call on| in South Dakota for ‘drought rallo? |to the farm relief administration in| attempted to send the men back, able of cle palaney ie y I y " Hace one or two readers of the Daily Worker. There azo every Communist Farty District, Section and Unit, the veterans present to join the ane scalvedl in Chicago ‘today, | Washington for emergency aid to | but were not successful. The com- est companies and are solutions millions of workers in this country who hi s . by Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Leazue, Ve * | save their cattle. The telegram told} pany announced that the mine is which seck tc lower the price with- 2: ze ir = ates Ling on! ‘ail: fade: unionists, on: all: workers ‘and poor exvlaining our aims and pri | In New Auburn, Wi: cr,| of the desperate conditions of the! closed for an indefinite period. Ths out increasing the farmers’ price ta} 8° @ sie topy of the Daily Worker, a large fermers to individually -r4 collectively get be- “Tf Congress is still in sccsion, pass | who was wna to fe ie | commnanity where all crops are aj men do not believe it eat crs pase near cost of production and without! Pro" m of whom weuld become reguia: readers hind ts Doty Werker Prins, EO Re tetris v 3 ok en Pear he pe | ve rae peeve haartgg actin, dealers. profite, if they only knew that such ihera! resstutions dem-adine tre vote on| becaus> of the lors of h total loss and pasturage has been| taining picket lines mornings and [eens he dealers. prone. Soe cane 75,000 Daily Workers by September 1st! ‘the bonus at this session, attempted to sell the cows, He was burned out by the blazing sun. _| evenings { ; A has enomenione BE ceebiaeeimmee ae