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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 24, 193 Preparing for Arrival or tretch Out Working Day At Los Angeles Hospital Departure Must Be Done On Employes’ Own Time By a Hospital Worker LOS ANGELES, Cal.—In a letin issued by Norman R. Marti of the Los Angeles County General hospital (salary $8,000 per year) hospital workers are told that eight hours constitutes a day’s work. The same bulletin calls attention to an ordinance which makes it necessary to put in more than eight hours. Superintendent Martin also points out that there is a large army of unemployed to take the jobs of any ers who don’t “co-operat in the coui d work pul- endent “notices” workers charge their civilian clothes for work clothes during the eight-hour tour of duty instead of on their own time. The eagle eye of the superintendent also notices that many workers are em- ployed at a considerable distance from the time clock, yet they reach only a minute or twe ‘Commencing at nee,” says Superintendent Martin, “every em- ployee will be expected to work a full eight hours. clothes or preparing for arrival or departure will be done on the em- ploye’s own time and not on the county’s.” This means that many workers will be compelled to work from 15 minutes to one hour longer every day. Hospital workers got a 10 per cent cut in salary and in many cases meals provided for some of the workers were cut out. There is no overtime pay for those who often have to work more than eight hours in emergency cases. Still an- Jother pay cut is expected, but | Martin still comes and goes when | he pleases regardless of Bulletin No. 1273. Any changing of | Answer Is NO to Roosevelts Query By a Worker Correspondent “ARE YOU BETTER OFF TO- DAY THAN YOU WERE A YEAR AGO?” e ans NO —for the Bakelit cago. face the N.R.A. i 47'> hours a week for 60 cents an hour and earned a tota existed we of $28.50. Now with the N.R.A. code we work 35 hours at 60 cents an hour and earn $21 a week. We know that we almost pro- duce the same amount of value on account of the speed-up sys- tem. This means a loss of $7.50 to each of us every week. Our loss is the bosses’ gain. We are plan- ning to vote Communist this election and hone others will fol- low our example. ‘Loses All His Cash In Bath House Thru City’s Negligence Greer-Byrd Machine Building Hudson Motor Company Union Use Resentment Agains AFL Misleaders Split Ranks (By a Worker Correspondent) to ANN ARBOR, Mich.—At the end of the recent A. F. of L. auto con-} General ference held in Detroit, it was pre- | dicted by the Daily Worker that | Board. having |failed to get their company union | resolution adopted, would attempt! the Greer-Byrd forces, to engineer a split in the A. F. of L. ranks. come true. At the last meeting of the Hudson local of the A. F. of L., of which Greer is president, he and his 15 appointed delegates to the confer- ence set about raking the A. F. of L. over the coals. Greer, who has always been the most vicious kind of burocrat, criticized the A. F. of L. burocracy. Greer, who is notori- ous for his well oiled machine for preventing rank and file discussion from the floor, ranted at great This prediction has | t two A. F. of L. big shots to en-| Block Movement for list support for the A. F. of L., but | i: they were booed off the floor. ‘The | Rank and File | Workers are all disguseted with the} + | A. F. of L, and Greer is taking | Control | advantage of the sentiment to break | away and set up fascist company | crowds of mis-leaders and work for unions, controlled by Hudson’s and | one united industrial union of the Motors through himself| whole auto industry, under rank jand Richard L. Byrd of the Labor| and file control. A resolution to this effect was introduced at the meeting, but the Greer machine | succeeded in tabling it. The Hudson Workers must not be |fcoled by the Greer-Byrd brand o: | fascist demagogy. Arthur J. Gre: | who receives $50 a week from the union and no telling how much | else from other sources, has a long | record of the most cynical labor | misleadership to his credit. He is |a former secret-service man. He stops at nothing to maintain his dictatorship over the union. Only | recently he declared that “Unem- | ployment Insurance is only for lazy | men.” Richard Byrd who, If the Hudson workers have to choose between the Greer-Byrd gang and the Green-Collins mob, .| they are between the devil and the deep blue sea. One is as bad as | the other. What the Hudson Workers must do is repudiate both of these One or Two Days’ Work A Week in as former PARTY LIFE |Two Meetings Show Right, Wrong Way to Sell ‘Daily’ Describes Paper—Small Big Sale at Small By H. FRIEDMAN Much has been said and written on the necessity of utilizing open| air meetings for advertising our rev- | literature olutionary press and among the masses, yet the instruc- tions and urgent appeals to that effect are not always heeded. Re- ently I atiended two open air meetings and their results cor- responded with the conduct of the leading comrades insofar as bene- fitting our press and literature. Let me describe the good meeting first: It took place on Sunday after- noon at Seventh St. and Avenue A, down-town. The Sunday afternoon meetings on that corner have be- come a tradition. The workers at- tending these meetings know who we are. The overwhelming amajority of them are with us. Still, when Sale When He Does Not Rally Where Speaker great part of the audience there were “new” people attracted to the | scene by the music and the display ~ of banners and placards. Some of the speakers who addressed the demonstration were known leaders in our movement. The names of capitalist papers were mentioned frequently. Now, was this not the most fitting moment to give our Daily Worker and the Morning Freiheit (in the case of the Jewish speaker) a dramatic welcome to the thousands of the East Side masses? and why not pick up a pamphlet— in Jewish or in English—and cite a few passages? Is it below our dig- nity to tell the workers that we are not manufacturing our facts and statements out of thin air, but they are a result of painstaking research work done by responsible research- ers and that our writings contain ‘ safety director for General Motors,| the Daily Worker builder came i ‘ By a Wik OR LE ee stean-rotir"tae-| TUTE Creek Area aved that company around with the Monday morning ee nore fae > eri eond 3 orl ‘orrespondent ties o} the #reen-Col ins eee |dollars at the expense cf w issue of the Daily Worker, the| ya. Tok PIS i NEW YORK—I had a little| Greer, who was one of the leacins | 5. a Steel Worker Correspondent |life rnd limb, has thorouzhly ex-| chairman dispiayed a copy of our| ; Ch eR ae tena | exposed? the whole rotten sell-out | ‘TURTLE CREEK, Pa—The times! P0Sed Bimssit 63 a, eer Ot 1? | Re Oana aca mice | The result—Negligible sale of lites . W. A. when I came to this city | ©*P°S Fines weds Hiker: eoeOuekeg Wad? clvere daa-tueett by jhis activity..on the ng about 150, analyzed) y+ recently. I was trying to be thrifty, | Policy of the A. F. of L, oe here are very sn 1. vs 1s ee Bos Hudson ‘a few heedlines, called at-|7@U"e nor has our press been canpucTep Bx so as to Keep away from the lousy |Rimself up as a "Snenl of the |in ke just work one or two days| now have nothing to tention to a few important articles | brought home to the workers. HELEN LURR relief as long as I could. So one) 725k file auto-workers. iw i : a YS | either cf these two labor fakers. | contained in that issue. Then, | eae day 1 went to the muninipal bath | THe: Crpen:Colins Machin sets. week, Men eocn Yer ya a e es ae — comrade Shulman, one of the| ‘ One Thing and Another on 24th St, SUED, See _.____—_____ | fhe Job; as ‘soon as: the boss comes, speakers, held up to the public view | Join the pate Z E Ti dhalsaiicencaeu MInATEE GH jae Retide: them home: 10 190ks) Drea Drud ery Forced two pamphlets dealing with the| é A reader to comment on a] want to try as soon as the weather] so.at/biace, every Kind of the) Wil ‘ Be tt pen eae Here in| | subjects that he had been discussing || Communist Party Jetter from a nurse, which appeared | has decided to be decent and erated hoodlums, hang around. | 1 son nne and down. They call the workers | in his speech, urged the workers to ony wate near our column, (This nurse had been discharged for holding out against increasingly heavy duties; the superintendent of nurses, her- self Jewish, had tried to speed girls by threatening he opposition of twe The letter appeared an ar- off a bit.) Can You Make "Em Yourself? Pattern 1932 is available in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38 and| explained to him that he was carry- | 40, Size 16 takes 3% yards 36-inch our column en- ric. Illustrated step-by-step sem- ticie right | titled ‘Anti-Semitism Shown 17) in instructions included, Israel Zion Hospital.” After read- ing it I felt ! commenting on it, and that your column is the proper) | place for it. In my opinion the | nurse who wrote the letter is wrong in charging the heads of the hospital with anti-semitism. It is| simply because those particular | wish girls of that hospital were | he ory to the heads, and didn’t let themselves be exploited. “The bosses always use races and | nationalities against each other if| it helps them to promote their in-| terests. “The reason this nurse was dis- charged was because she spoke up, | and especially on the question ot exploitation and rationalization, I think that she should have tried | to rally the other nurses on that While I was in the shower room they unlocked the door and swiped | my purse with all the money I ad. When I asked the caretaker of the place who those men were, he | told me he didn’t know. When I | ing a key, he said nobody else can have a key, and nobody else was| helping him. When I showed him | | the key where they had left it, he| was surprised. I was surprised, too. | that the whole place was taken | care of by one man, instead of five or six responsible men. As I said, that was all the money I had, and it is gone. Now I am stranded in this city. I went down | to the central relief bureau to ask| for some fare to go back where I come from. They informed me} I should stay here and have lodg- ing and three “square” meals every When I asked, is it cheaper 0 keep men in this city for a| long time than to give them $10} fare, they said they don’t spend /| | cash money for such cases. You can imagine by this fact what kind of relief tney will give | as long as I stay here. |any time on the job when they have! | something to do. | | I.don’t know ‘how we're going to| ‘Use N.R.A. As Tool | for Company Union a ae reir ae oe | j that way. I am 60, my daughter! w ‘ | Edith 13, and my son Raymond 9. | 4 A ae foe Vip ae ase | Every time we go to the welfare and chain of bondage being wound ground before she went for an au- dience with the superintendent .. . “I am comradely, | tions that workers use as much as | “RAE B.” To Utilize Those Bothersome Rinds | From San Antonio, Texas, comes | a recipe for an inexpensive sweet: “Dear Comrade Helen: “To make a delicious watermelon | jelly, use the following recipe: | “Take the rind of a whole water- | melon, cut off the skin and the/ pink melon, leaving the white rind. Cut this in small pieces, add three and a half cups of sugar and % teaspoon salt. Let it cook for about two hours; then add lemon to suit the taste, and cook for thirty min- utes longer. It is then ready to eat or one may put it in jars. “Comradely yours, “SARAH EF.” (We tried this with one-fourth the given amounts. Apparently we cut the rind in pieces too large for it was not done at the given time. We had to add water and cook longer, though the juice “jelled” nicely at two hours. It seems the pieces should be half-inch cubes or smaller. Juice of two lemons to recipe as given would suit the taste for us: jelly is very good.) Comrade George S. of Chicago sent a hot recipe for a cool drink which we submit for the lucky com- rades who can still rustle together | pattern Department, 243 W. 17th the .ingredients: : Mint Julep: 2 tbsp. sugar; 3 tzsp.| St. New York City. lemon juice; 3 springs fresh mint; | 1 pint ginger ale. Crush the mint: ex WX eh eet, ORK Mirtle eg Send FIFTEEN CENTS (lc) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly name, address and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Daily Worker! I don’t blame the thieves as much as I blame the city administration that doesn’t take care of institu- it takes care of the big banks with | extra police forces. | 10 Hours’ Work on Job As Hot As Five | By a Worker correspondent The workers of the Falk Corpo- ration, Negroes and white workers, had to work on a hot metal job almost as hot as fire for 10 hours, and if they refused to work on this job, they would be laid off. } For about three months the Falk Corporation has hired some new young white workers, and has not hired a single Negro worker at all. Only three out of the many Ne- gro workers that were laid off were put back to work. Many white and Negro wozkers| are still laid off and have not been called back to work. When they ask the boss to be put back to work, the boss tells them he will keep them in mind. Twenty thousand new readers by Sept. Ist means 20,000 addi- tional recruits for organized class | struggle, | Letters from | being paid for around the neck of the betrayed and defenseless American workers and farmers by the Wall Street controlled N.R.A. the Wilson & Bennett Co., 65th St. and Menard Ave, in a letter to its employes June 23 explained the “New Deal Game.” Basing their arguments on public statements made by General John- son and President Roosevelt, it points out the fact that the N.R.A. does not mean organization for the workers, and in a poorly concealed manner makes it clear that this! ask for something, they tell us thet than a workhouse. company will not tolerate any union in this shop. They claim to be treating the workers on an equal basis, regard- less of whether they are union men or not, but discharged five workers because they visited a mass meet- ing called by the Amalgamated As- sociation of the A. F. of L. and one for organizing the present Wilson & Bennett local of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, This company pays the girls and women 22 to 32 cents and men 33 to 45 cents of the 50 per cent in- flated dollar per hour for work under such conditions that workers out of work for five years quit after a few days. The girls are allowed to enter the washroom only at two definite short periods daily. If you don’t wear a good pair of shoes zone you are laid off for a week, ete. As a result of a leaflet circulated by the Wilson & Bennett local of the S.M.W.I.U. exposing the rotten conditions, time and a half is now certain overtime work, Our Readers | | it’s too much. | I just read the Daily Worker. It says that two Willions i spent on wa: preparations. workingman starves. I tell cvery- jone to read the Daily Worker. | On Sick Yomen In “Rest House”: By a Worker Correspondent | McKEES ROCK. Pa.—After hav-/| ing read Sender Garlin’s article in the Daily Worker of July 11 inj} which he pointed out how old John D. spends his vacations and rest, the correspondent of this little arti- cle will add some data. One worker's wife here, who was physically run down because of child birth, needed rest and proper nourishment. The husband had been unemployed for four years, so the local Health Clinic offered the wife a chance to rest, in one of their health zesorts, some miles out from the city of Pittsburgh. This rest home proved to be nothing more After the wife and the infant had arrived at their place of rest, the next day the mother was es- to duty. The duty was in the nursery talting care of a half dozen er co infants, this beins done ev day in turns by each mother two to three hours, for | After having performed the nursery | |duty, they were assigned to other |duty, such as cleaning walls, mop- ping the floors, setting the beds in| ‘Joint Action Gets Him Relief After Other Ways Failed, By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—The other day, an unemployed worker came to the Herzl St. block local with the fol- lowing story: He once owned a stationery store. The slave work he put in his store) finally knocked him out. He be- came very sick. When he came to himself again he looked for means to satisfy his family’s needs. A father of four children, hungry and half naked, he appeaied to the Home Relief} | Bureau for aid. He filled out his application and was told to wait. He waited. He waited six months, till he did get a job that befitted a Rocsevelt con- centration camp. It was hard work, and his health | couldn’t bear the strain, He was) again without a job and no means of living. Finaliy everything went toward | double pneumonia, with his gas and electric shut off. He recuperated from his sickness, and after wait- ing for many days he got a job) from the H. R. B., a job chopping | | wood. While working, a chunk of | wood jumped back into his face, | hit his jaw, and knocked four teeth the dormitory, washing clothes in the laundry and kitchen help. The very grouchy, nurse, always) | stumbled whether the work was being done well or bad. Supervision over letters and phone calls is very strict. One must not write, nor, when’ speaking ove: the phone, utter any word about the drudging conditions in which one is kept. These are the kind of rest homes the workers get, compared with old John D., who enjoys the fruits of others’ toil. NOTE. We publish letters from steel, metal and auto workers every Tuesday. We urge woriers in these industries to write us of their working conditions and of their efforts to organize. Plecle supplement their knowledge by buy- ing and reading workers’ literature. Result—Both literature and Daily oes were fairly well disposed of. The bad meeting: This was on Rutgers Square, the winding up point of Friday’s demonstration for Thaelmann’s freedom. There were over 3,000 people on the square. A 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name .. Street, City ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Tired and Itchy Feet H. Hoosepian, Philadelphia. Try syonzing your feet with rubbing lechol the end of the day's v . leaving piedgets of cotton be- twecn the toes where the scales form and the skin peels off. If this does nos help try al’ernate cold and warm footbaths, before going to sleep. Read the articles on the care of the feet, appeering in “Health.” Have your urine exam- ined by a reliable laboratory, If you have no money, you may send a@ sample to us, by parcel pos‘, in a clean, well stoppsred glass bottle. pie ae at Prodctermination of Sex Marvin Wick, Tenino, Wash. There is no scientific data on the relation of the mothers’ diet to the cex of the unborn child. It is claimed tha‘ a starvation diet fa- vors male offspring; but if this were true, the workers under the capi- talistic scheme of society would have died out long ago for lack of mates. All claims made by quacks and psuedo-scientists regarding their ability to influence the sex of the fetus have no scientific basis. It is conceivable, however, that science will ultimately sclve the problem ef changing the number of chromo- somes of the human spermatozoa. oe ee Strengh of Boric Acid Max Hornick. The solution of boric acid you use (two ‘easpoon- fuls to a pint of water) is not too strong. As a matter of fact, you could not use a stronger solution because the proportion of one tea- spoonful to a glass of water (% pint) forms a saturated solu- tion of boric acid. If this is suffi- cient to relieve itching of the scalp, it may be used indefinitely. Boric acid is a very mild antiseptic. ete * Iodine Requirements of the Body By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. j you ought to know, is only one | thousandth part of a gram; while the tiny grain is one fifteenth of of a gram. Now, all we need to prevent the common (colloid) form of gcitre is to ingest (eat) one tenth of a milligram of iodine, daily, for only 15 or 20 days out of the year. This is accomplished when the. drinking water contains one part of iodine per billion parts of water. Only when the amount of iodine’ in the drinking water | Sinks to one-tenth part per billion, | does the incidence of goitre rise to 2 to 3 per cent of the population, In Detroit, Cleveland and the en- tire region of the Great Lakes, the amount of iodine in the drinking water is below the above minimal amounts. . 8 * Dilaudid “Drug Student” — Dilaudid is a narcotic drug, a derivative of mor- phine. The manufacturers claim that it acts quicker than morphine and causes less undesirable symp- toms. It is habit-forming and comes under the Federal Narcotic Regu- lations. ele All-Night Pharmacy T. B. Burnside Avenue — There are a number of drugstores open all night in the Bronx, The near- est one to you is the Professional Pharmacy, 2021 Grand Concourse, near Burnside Avenue, Bronx. Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 103—GR. 17-0135 | out. | juice and sugar; add | | Trouble upon trouble, and it) get the letters to us by Friday of = UI | T TIN KY eae aie, pour actus over} A Red Builder on every busy | NECESSITY FOR SIMPLICITY “Daily” every day in large type and eee ae ire oe the pee raphe ills eed a erie Sens iy suieens OR. J US Uy S cracked ice, strain, and serve. | street corner in the country means | IN LANGUAGE very simple language so cgi Pe ony aa k f data |} OMc* Hours: 2-10 AM. 1-2, 6.3 P.M | ‘y in ge so every A mow where you got your da‘a 3 | (We have received also some re-| a tremendous step toward the | Dear Comrade: i worker can understand it. This wesc, inka eee Cleveland Veterans about iodine. If it is from a text- PRONE: | DICEENS -9019 cipes for baked dishes which we! dictatorship of the proletariat! After reading and studying Com-| should state very briefly but clearly : , J 107 BRISTOL STREET He Doesn’t Like Camp NITGEDAIGET Beacon-cn-the-Hudson, N. Y. f TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER rade Browder’s speech which ap- peared some time ago, I can’t help but compliment not only on the contents of his speech but also the real workers language that he used in relating to the workers the prog- ress, shortcomings, and future work of our Party. I am certain that with such an example set by the Secretary of our Party, our comrades all over the country will taken since the open letter. I sell the “Daily” every day and) | I still find that a great many of | the workers just get a copy or two what the Communist Party is striv- ing for, how we organize, our role in the trade unions also what we mean by inter-party democracy. Above all I think the articles should be written more simply and shorter and in larger type. reetings. acL lead pipes and hit me. the editorials should be somewhat With the best of revclutionary Giving chase we soon caught up with them, There was a patrolman there whom we asked to arrest Finkelstein, of 538 Hopkinson Ave., forgot that his unempioyed tenant only owed him for three days rent. The worker took his dispossess | and came to the H. R. B. While there, he met a comrade, member of Branch 133 of the International Workers Order, who sent him to| the Co-operative Barber Shop, 62 Herzl St. A comrade was imme- diately found, they went to the H. R. B., and they received immediate to hear the translation. When the! next speaker proceeded to translate! the speech, about five minutes of speaking, crowds of people to move Called to Meet Today CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 23.—In a letter to all Cleveland veterans who marched in the mass funeral of Vinnie Williams and Salvadore Ar- zentini, the Celevland Veterans, Rank and File Committee called upen 211 veterans to attend a mass meeting on Tucs., July 24, at 8 p. m. at the Unemployment Council heedquar- and (3) for the Workers Unemvloy- ment Insurance Bill will be ex- plained. book, the sooner you correct it, the better. The whole human thyroid gland contains onlf from 10 to 25 milli- grams of iodine. A milligram, as | DR. EMIL EICHEL | DENTIST H ha E. 93rd St. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8538 Fours: m. Sun. 9 tol Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn WILLIAM BELL. OFFICIAL Optometrist SEH $15,000 k ii i i I tional Labor Defense Daily Worker and then they say they don’t want these gangsters. He refused until] 204 go toward the exits, ‘To be Furniture Workers Unions | meaty Rea ae Be 50 East 13th St. it any more. The only reason for| ‘hey had had sufficient time to| petectiy frank, a good majority of| Wins Gains in Los Angeles ee aes Bits ; New York, N. ¥. this lack of interest in our paper | U2 away. Then he ironically asked | the audience were conscious of the New Yorl y Send me the Daily Worker every day for two months. I enclose 31 (check or money order). j is that it isn’t attractive enough or | | else it is too advanced. This condition of our paper us to identify the men who had attacked the meeting. This shows how LaGuardia’s thugs will even should be overcome as rapidiy as| help a gangster if the purpose is possible. I am sure if the paper is | to fight against the workingclass.|that such an attitude was disgrace- purpose of the meeting, thy were composed mostly of left-wing or- ganizations and Communist groups. Since this was so, don’t you think) LOS ANGELES, July 15 (By Mail) —The workers in the Sterling | Furniture Plant have again stopped a wage cut. This time, under the leadership of the Furniture Workers’ I advance $...... Liberty Bends $.. toward the Bail Fund SPECIAL HERNDON BAIL FUND } : do likewise, and it will be the be- ters, 3631 Central Ave. 's Sick and Death 106 EAST 14th STREET | But You'll Have the ginning of drawing the great masses|¥. C. VERS MEET LAGUARDIA| Tlief i cthhe ietiet -atatax that savresponael {sc maaent raaa 6 Near Fourth Ave, N. ¥. C. 4 Ti f Y Lif of workers into the party. POLICE PORE, SES EE OBY Over AB | the call by the rank and file Deere, | i ume 90, our e Hitherto it seemed to me that New York City. ee a ie Rasen tetess te cormnitiee sare than a hundred H . Comrade Browder’s (as well as a| Dear Editor: Sic thw Gineerree th a het ha | veterans and C. ©. C. boys marched is A Workers’ eal ep chon great many other leaders of our| Our Y.C.L. Unit held an open air bs ee practi Sere Cee ed the eens ‘sactign sare Colina Free An elo Her ndon! | : $14 a Week — $2.65 a Day Party) reports and analysis were| meeting at 8ist St. and Ist Ave.,| P&¢® done for him. started with about 20 vote:ans, but & Ke PY Finest Food, accommodations. Excellent too far advanced for the average| Friday night. Present there, was was shortly enlarged to over a ‘ | : a, L Sega noua va pee tat nate workers. This applies to the fea-|an organized band of hoodlums!by the behavior of the whole meet-} hundred. » mi 20 anslle see Pleat Soares BRS if eg piesa eee: ante sk inas's. ue tor camp. ture articles as well as to most of | who tried to break up the meeting,|ing at the last part of the mesting.| ay) veterans should attend the|| >> yi amon © ‘otlahe windsor Geaaeat ae i Fridays and Saturdays, at 10 A. M. and the news items in the Daily Worker.| We repulsed them, at the expense|I listened to Willi Muenzenberg, th2| mocting on July 24 where the rank || ™ I am deathly sick as a result of the murderous treatment ac- ‘ 7 P.M. song a ee East However, I do want to say that the|of several Comrades being badly|Communist Deputy, and I was ‘aiid’ file lhe for: (1) paymeat corded me during my two years of confinement. My only hopes of : abrook 8- “Daily” has improved 100 per cent| beaten. While I was trying to re-;2Teatly impressed by his specch,| of the bonus, (2) -epeal of tae|| ever being in the ranks again is in your. strength."—From a letter : | since I first started reading it in| store order, they returned with |®lthougn I understand very little) poo--velt Metional Economy Act, | from Angelo Herndon—Fulton Tower Jail, June 7, 1934. 5 1929. Most of this improvement has | German. However, I was anxious ; $15,090 Nos. for Angelo Herndon with the understanding NAMIC esse eccsecesesecsess :AAMTOSS...650es i cas w hbemieD kale: s'eibve made more interesting we will’ be D.R. jful to the German Communist|Industrial Union, they not only}| that this will be returned as soon as this Bail is released. able to sell a great many more and, PERS SOE Hens wa Comrade and to the Party which he| Called a stoppege, but extracted a Certificates will be icsed for this;Bail Fund guaranteeing its Ree ce, ASG ES alee awe Stabe IS see consecuently will get the workers}; CONDEMNS DISORDER AT _ | represents? twe-fold promiso from the shop|| return as agzced. . | into the party because we can no} MEETING. I think their mass exodus from | bosses. Note: This offer does not appiy to renewals, nor does it hold good | longer cry about the workers being | Brooklyn, N. Y. |the meeting during the t:anslation| The bosses agreed to attempt no Name for Manhattan and Bronx. satisfied and under the influence of | Dear Editor: |of the speech of Comrade Willi was,moze wage cuts in any department, | Mh gt oan haar) ap a hab perettis Seg, TS te Sn Ee the reformist organizations. On Friday, July 6, I attended a| quite unnecessary, and was not in!nor to hire more piece-workers to! In concluding I would suggest a/meeting at the Madison Square| keeping with the revolutionary spirit| spread out the work, except with the Address .... Sates sie tbep antigens bilge kiveees cbr CURE Peeters! '—Help the Drive for 20,000 NEW READERS— got 'or preamble to appear in the ist Garden, I was greatly disappointed of the German working class. consent of the workers in the shop,