The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 11, 1934, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Six DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1934 AS ONE AIR-PILOT TO ANOTHER —<--——— BY A GROUP OF PILOTS AND MECHANICS executive , panies manufacturing equipment from those engaged. in transporta- tion.” With this in mind they will | Split the boodle three ways. Instead of one holding company there Will be three. .There will be a stock shuffie, a slight change of names, land another triumph registered f: Leighton W. Rogers, vice-president of the Aeronautic Chamber of Commerce, which rep- resents 95 per cent of the aviation industry both transport and manu- factuzing in its membership, has made an important transport and Manufacturing in its membership, thas made an important announce-|law and profits. United Airlines ment. The Chamber will move from}Transport Corp. will contzol the N. Y. C. to Washington. This was |passenger business, United Aircraft influenced by the fact that over 40|Corp; and Boeing Airplane Co, will similar i tutions are located in | hold the stock of the manufacturing the capital. companies, Forty million dollars Mr. Rogers states that “adequate wil be involved in this lily-white representation of all branches of | transaction. The manufacturing the ‘industry’ make it imperative |groups in the East “expect” to ac- quire the Chance Vought Corp; Hamilton Standard Propeller, Nor- Aircraft, Pratt and Whitney ft, United Airports of Conn.; and 99 per cent of Sikorsky Avia- tion Corp.; We also expect they will. The av on workers in Hartford in that we establish executive offices in Washington.” “During the last year the chambe> has negotiated the aircraft codes and its several departments will be so arranged as to facilitate cooperation with the N. R.A membership can be ‘The best served by locating in the capi- | view of the results of their recent tal’s ne:ve center, The tion rike will have no difficulty re-| codes presented by the chamber |straining their chee:s over the are ja model of sacrificial seivice | financial shuffle. Their participa- to the membership. Sample — | tion in any benefits will depend on Article 4. Sec, 1 “No employee | the strength and application of their :|fine union. They do not “expect” any assistance from Congress. shall be paid less than 15 dollars r week in the North and 13 dollars per of week in the South in places more than 50,000 population—Nor| Two hundred thousand dollars Jess than 14 dollars per week in the|worth of munitions purchased North and 12 dollars per week in|here by Bolivia prior to May the South in places of less than |28 will be exempt from the presi- 50,000 population. — Except that|dential banning of such shipments mechanics licensed by the Depart-|to S. America. The State Dept. de- ment of Commerce shall be paid jclared the munitions contracted for not less than 16 dollars per week./in good faith; theirfore the ex- (D) Transport pilots as licensed by | emption. Aivplanes, spare parts, the Department of Commerce shall jaerial bombs, hand grenades and be paid not less than 20 dollars per|mortar ammunition comprise this week. (E). Limited commercial|shipment by the Curtiss Wright Pilots as licensed by the Department | Export Co. ~of Commerce shall be paid not less than 15 dollars per week.”—Mini- mum wages! They did a swell job —they should—they were well paid. The aviation worke:s failed to appreciate the altruistic efforts of the chamber. They went on strike in a number of places. The result was the usual one. They were gassed, clubbed by police. and viciously attacked in the local press. The N. R. A. stepped in—The A. F. of L. officials weie stepped on by their own locals, who stepped out. Independent unions started and are growing—at present aviation conditions are in a turmoil. So-9-0 | the chamber moyes to Washington Events are moving rapidly. The A. F. of L. is well awa:e of this and is looking blue. The N. R. A. eagle is also feeling as well as looking |™mutually agreed upon. plue. | The Say msn of eee 3 . + , |mames, and a camouflage of confer- ack tke bine ‘Workers — well—they | ones and press publicity will result in the same old racket emerging The codes sponsored by the cham-/ with a different handle—made in ber have made a great many Of | wall Street. them see another color. The} chamber did a swell job there be-| cause it is a good colo:—and fast. | It won't fade. | Another aviation shuffle is now being negotiated. |Mr. La Motte Cohu, the Wall St. stock juggler who controls a number of aviation companies, is again in the headline: He was formerly president of Avia- tion Corp.; E. L. Cord the big bad wolf of aviation, got control of Avia- tion Corp. E. L, Cord, the big pad Motte Cohu because he wouldn’t play nice—just a big happy family. Mr. Cohu is now doing a little shuffling for the National Aviation Corp. to acquire Eastern Air Lines and Air Investors, Inc. The latter company consists mainly of stocks in aviation companies. The money involved in the transaction has not been divulged but it is indicated that an exchange of stock will be NOTE: We publish ietters from coal and ore miners, and from oil field werkers, every Saturday. We urge workers in these fields to write us of their conditions of work and of their struggles to organ- ize. Please get your letters to us by Vféednesday of each week. | Officials of United Aircraft andj Transport Company said they “ex- pect” the coming Congress to enact legislation “which will probably make it necessary to separate con IN THE HOME By HELEN LUKE Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 1941 is available in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50. Size 36 takes 3% yards 36-inch fabric and 1 yard contrasting. Ilus'rated | step-oy-step sewing instructions in- cluded. Briefs When the Staten Island Woman's Council held its regular meeting very recently the husband of one of the members came to report the @eath of his wife, who had been ill.-The members of the Council made a collection for flowers for the bier of the dead comrade. Total contributions amounted to over eight dollars. The husband. however, immediately proposed that instead of devoting this substantial sum to the purchase of flowers, it be contributed to the Herndon- Scottsboro defense fund, which has been done. Lines trom the Land of the Vanishing Carrot | The comrade who sent us the English recipe for steamed carrot | pudding last fall again wrote, speaking of her efforts to reach | the farm women; and, touching on the wretched conditions of the farmers, speaks of the “half a hun- dred blood suckers, commission men, railroads, bankers, implement | companies, insurance companies, A. A.A. officials, that fasten them- | selves on the farm product; the impoverishment of the farm homes, actually reaching the point of star- vation during the drought.” She sees also the “conservatism, JavSuit-contract-bound aititude of the farmer, between which and Open rebellion he continually va- cillates; the slavery to day-long chores, the inarticulateness of farm | women; the steady movement left | under the leadership of the Party,” | and concludes her letter: | “You may remember me as M. G., who sent you a recipe for carrot pudding. Too hot fo cook eatrot pudding here now (it’s been es high as 117 degrees), and when it’s cold enough in the fall there | may not be a carrot left in/ Nebraska.” haere * inst H. C. of L. Spreads ‘ to Chicago +. Watch this column next week fer important announcement oF steps being taken by Chicago wemen to lay basis for deter- mined and broad struggles (in line War Agai | | Send FIFTEEN CENTS (13¢) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write ‘ith simil: . re ee eee val plainly name, address and_ style si a prof iz number. BE SURE TO STATE feed, for cheaper milk, for free | si7p. teheol lunches for children of impoverished parents, and similar vital demands, Address orders to Daily Worker | Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th 1 St, New York City. 7 Qs UMW Leaders Use Red Seare ‘To S plit Miners : a Mine Worker Correspondent GALLUP, N. Mex. — August the 2nd the organizer of the United | Mine Workers of America called a meeting in the Gamerco mine, They | said they had 65 members, so as | the National Miners Union had over »|that amount they sent a committee | | up to meet them, but when they got | | there they found only six men from | the mines. The committee went in and asked for the floor, and got it. Cur com- mittee said they were there to call a meeting of all miners to unite them for a fight, regardless of their union belief, as the bosses could see the split, and that was the way they liked it. We must unite the workers first for a better standard of living, and get a committee from all the miners to work up the demands to put before the company. Here is the stand the scab leader Fontackeo took. The N.M.U. is just |a hideout for the Communist Party, | and we will have nothing to do with! them, he said. I know the miners have room for a fight, he stated, but only if they join the U.M.W.A. will we fight for them, and then we won't have to strike to get our de- mands, as we have three men paid by U.M.W.A. to fight with the gov- ernment to get us a square deal, Then a bad egg got up and said, “If we do unite the miners and the company will not accept our de- mands, what shall we do? We can't strike. So we must join the Now is there any man that can believe that the N.M.U. is Commu- nist, when we have 650 members in Gallup alone who we are sure are not Communists, just real fighting miners ready to fight the bosses at any time, and when they do strike they do not pay a $1 fine to fakers like John Lewis. So we, the miners of Gallup, can see very clearly that the U.M.W.A. does not want to unite the miners for a fight, but to unite them for the bosses, for the next war which is very near. We used to have strikes with the U.M.W.A. without bringing in the government, so why not now, and we can still have them by build- ing the N.M.U. like the Gallup min- ers. True, we don’t have all the min- ers, but the ones we don’t have are the type that don’t want a union, or they are just thugs or yellow! bellies. The N.M.U, is the oniy union for the miners with clean leader- ship. So get up and build it, it is your duty. AER, Se NOTE:—This worker is correct | in his denunciation of the no- | fight, splitting tactics of the | U.M.W.A. leadership in Gallup. However, althcugh it is easy to understand his disgust with the U.M.W.A., he is making a serious | error in assuming that the mem- bers of the U.M.W.A. are “the type | that don’t want a union, thugs, or yellow bellies.” These workers are | misled by the poisonous pro-boss propaganda, which is spread by | these labor agents of the mine owners, It is necessary to convince the honest workers in the U.M.W.A. of | the sell-out nature of the policies | | | You REMEMBER THE LAST TIME WE SAW TIM awd MARGY THEY HAD JUST HELPED ANEGRO BOY FROM THE WATER ONTO THEIR RAFT. THis 1S WHAT HE TELLS THEM. ES Brothers Charlie Clemens was a new mem- ber of the National Guard. He had Jeft the farm just a year after his older brother Dan. At home, both of them had helped support the large family of brothers and | sisters. Dan worked in a mill a) short way from home. When that | closed down, he left for good.! Charlie hired out to other farmer: did small jobs, but when he could find no more work, he too left. | There was not enough to do on) the farm anyhow, since his pa sold | most of the cows. From one place to another Charlie went looking for work. Finally he joined the National Guard. At least he could get three meais a day and a roof over his head. And one thing was as good as another. Although he didn’t like it so very well. Of course, drilling was something he expected. And it was all right when they had to search the woods for that rich baby when it was kidnapped. But when they had to do their first strike duty, that was different. He didn’t think it would bother him so much. Oh, well, he just wouldn’t think about it. Strikers didn’t mean anything to him. Now they were sending them off again to put down some labor trouble in a distant town. In the morning they were piled into trucks. | It was a long ride through the country. They passed farm houses that seemed about to tumble over end skinny cows in the pestures. The fields were burnt dry. He remembered the beautiful sloping | fields around his father’s farm, The | I COME FROM THE OTHER SIDE OF THE TOWN,SO 1 DIDN'T KNOW ANY OF THE Bessemer,Ala.,Relie Controlled by T.C.I. United Strength of egro and White Being Built to Fight Starvation Campaign By an Ore Miner Correspondent BESSEMER, Ala—The situation at the Muscoda Mine of Tennessee Coal and Iron RR. Co. is getting worse, while the company is striv- ing to get the miners into a com- pany union. The mine is shut down now. The Welfare is stalling the miners, try- ing to keep them off the relief as long as they can—and then give them as little as they can when a miner does get relief. Here are two examples. One Negro miner, who has a family of four, gets a $3.14 food check which is supposed to last two weeks. Another Negro miner with 10 in the femily gets the following: 4 lbs. of lard, 2 small packages of meal, 2 cans each of salmon, beef and tomatoes, and four cans of milk. This is sup- posed to do for two weeks. It will not be long until actual starvation spreads over Red Mountain. T. C. I. controls the Welfare. Mrs. Maddox, the Bessemer Relief Administrator, is the wife of A. D. Maddox, the T.C.I. labor agent. Thus, when T.C.I. says the rebellious miners will be starved into good company men, it is no idle threat. The T.C.I. is trying to win back the Negro workers for good com- pany men by patting them on the back at every turn, and promising them good jobs in the place of. the white miners. This is the T.C.I. method of smashing the union while Roosevelt and the N.R.A. look on and do nothing. The _ workers themselves are already preparing a real fight to keep the union and smash the company union. The scabs are being treated very well by T.C.I. to keep them in line with the company. For instance, T.C.I. doesn’t cut anything out of a scab’s pay check (when the min- ers came back after the strike their first check was cut about 66 per cent for everything imaginable). The scabs get their pay checks in the office, so the union miners can’t see what they get. Besides this, the T.C.I. tells the scabs they have first choice in everything. Rev. King Chandler, a fake preacher, is talking up the company union, trying to get union men to drop out of the union and be scabs. All the scabs carry guns. Hubbard Matthews, one of the bully type scabs, said that if he was a com- pany guard all the union men would be in hell in 10 minutes. When pany office for carrying a gun, they let him go free. Sam Coola and Tom McGowan, company guards, testified that Matthews didn’t carry a gun. The union men have seen his gun seyeral times. This shows clearly how T.C.I. controls the Bes- semer police and courts and uses them to protect the damn scabs. The company union has about 16 scab members. like Matthews and Chandier. For the last meeting they held, the company kept the camps dark un- pany thugs sent union men home and told them to stay there if they know what was good for them. The union men are already talking about smashing up the company union and running the scabs off Red Mountain. The tasks of the union are to force the welfare to give more re- lief, without discrimination against Negro miners, to strengthen th union and prepare a fight for bet: recognition when the mine starts work, and to smash the company union once and for all, and run the scabs off Red Mountain. To do this the union must build the united strength of Negro and white miners firmer than ever, so the T.C.I. cannot put over starva- divided working class. of their officials, to show how the officials are working not for the interests of the miners but of the bosses, and to build up a militant opposition under honest rank and file leadership, within this local of the U.M.W.A. We must guard | against the mistake of assuming that all workers who do not yet understand the need for a mili- tant, class struggle line of action in trade unions are scabs or bosses’ agents. We must, of course, be on the look-out for the scabs and stool- pigeons, but we must remember that there are numbers of honest workers within the A. F. of L. who do not as yet understand the re- actionary role of the A. F. of L. leadership. To educate these workers to the need of militant | rank and file leadership, and then build a united front of the rank and file of the U.M.W.A. and the N.M.U, to fight for better condi- tions and against the attacks of the mine owners should be the aim of our correspondent. WITH OUR YOUNG READERS jast letter from home wasn’t so cheerful. thing un there, too. “Say,” said Charlie, suddenly, to his friend Bill. “My brother Dan's in this town. When do you think we'll get there?” “Oh, late in the afternoon, I guess.” ‘ “Gee, I hove I get a chance to look him up.” “Yes,” said Bill, “Fat chance. They'll keep us busy, chucking gas bombs at guys. Rotten business.” The trucks drove throuzh the city, and out to the very edge of |it where there was a large factory. A little, fat man was talking ex- citedly with the sheriff. When he saw the trucks his face broke out in smiles. “Ah!” he said. “Every- thing will be all right now. Those strike:s would have burned the If you can find at least two of them write th> names en a post-card, and send it in, Then you can become a BoyS, BUT THEY WERE REAL FRIENOLY So L WAS PLAYING LEAP FROG WITH THEM, WHEN ADVENTURES OF TIM AND MARGY- watci For them in NEXT Ween's PAPE The drought dried every- | District Officials Try To Gag Russeltown, Pa., Strike Against Layoffs By a Mine Worker Correspondent RUSSELTOWN, Pa.— At Russel- town No. 2, where over 800 men worked, over 150 of the men have | been laid off. Those laid off are all | picked out, those that support the | militant leadership of the local, fighting for better conditions. | There is. still a motion on the | books that no one be laid off, that | we will share the work. The reg- | ular meeting last night went on rec- ord to call all the men to a special} meeting. ‘Sunday, July 29, to tak |final action. This local has had | many cases that went to the district | with no results, every case lost. |. John Murray, District board mem- ber, also appointed, did his bit to carry out the policies of the district against any strike. He was also an- ‘swered. These two gentlemen and East SOME TouGH-Lookin factory. Lock at the windows, all smashed.” The sheriff nodded sympathetically. Around the factory building many striking workers were picketing. They stcod silently watching the troops jump down from the trucks. Quickly, the troops stationed them- celves along the street. The men | stayed at each of the machine guns | that were set around. Nothing hap- | pened the rest of the late after- noon. The strikers slowly left the factory and went to their homes. That evening when they were in around talking. “Golly,” said one guard, “I’m glad things went smooth today.” “Yes, but what about tomorrow? That’s when the dirty work will begin,” said Bill. EACH ROW OF Pic- TURES STANDS FOR A DIFFERENT WORKING-CLASS PRISONER, rromber of the Daily Worker Prazte Club. The names of new members will be printed next week, *FERA Strike city police took him to the com- | It is run by rats | til the meeting was over, and com- | ter wages, 7-hour day, and union} tion wages and conditions on a (CAME ALONG. ONE SAID, THERE'S A MOVING TARGET for the night, little groups gathered | Welfare Officials ‘Try to Starve Miners Into Company Union In Gallup Is _ Going Strong By a Miner Worker Correspondent GALLUP, New Mexico. — The’ |FERA strike is going good. The workers have made up there minds to remain on strike till the 20 per cent cut is restored. The workers had an open air meeting on Saturday and they got the support from the N. M. U. of Gallup, and today they received a wire from Alburquerque saying the common labor union there had a committee to meet the Gallup work- evs and go with them to Santa Fe, to present their demands, so we hope to see the FERA workers of | Alburquerque fall in line with the Gallup FERA workers, for they too have received a 20 per cent cut, but they got theirs earlier than the workers in Gallup. | But when they cut the workers here they had a good fight on their hands. Those blacklisted miners jare sure fighters, they can’t put anything over on them with just s ig we cut you out. It dont work, The government is saying to the workers today we are going to cut your hours and raise your wages. | But in this case some one is doing he other thing by cutting the | wages and raising the hours. So |that is what the New Deal means |to the workers in the state of New | Mgaico: | To all labor unions, send in pro- |tests to Governor Huckenhull. | Santa Fe, New Mexico; H. L. Hop- |kius, National FERA adm., Wash- jinston, D. C.; Dempsey, State N. R. | A. Director Santa Fe, N. M.; H. owers, FERA adm. McKinley County, Gallup, New Mex.; Miss M. |Daniels McKinley, Relief Secy., | Gallup, New Mex. \No, Comrade, Johnson | Is a Rich Manufacturer | | By a Mine Worker Correspondent CLINTON, Ind.—Can this be true | that General Hugh S. Johnson, the |NRA Administrator, is starving to | death, and looking for a chance to| |make him some money? We know} that since the NRA has been in) effect in many places scores of | workers have been unemployed. But s it possible that the administrator | himself would be in this condition? | If it is true that General John- }son is in such starving condition, | the only way out is for him to join | the fight for the Unemployment In- ; surance and a Soviet America, Earn Expenses Selling “Daily” | Get Daily Worker Subscribers! | PARTY LIFE Study Groups Formed in Ore Mines, Steel Mills in South Comrades in Birmingham District Striving to | Raise Political Level of Party | pamphlet the comrades pay for the pamphlets so we can order more In the July 25th issue of the “Daily” the Party Life Column car- ried a criticism of the attempts} material. made (or not made) to raise the} There are from five to nine in Marxist-Leninist education of our | each study group. There are study comrades to a higher level. Perhaps| groups in three large Ore mines the example of the work started in| and one large steel mill. In addi+ Bessemer, Alabama, will help the} tion to this the Section Commit comrades in. other places to begin | tees are made up mostly of miners this very important work. and steel workers. When the Section Committee in This beginning, it appears at Section 7, District 17, decided to| present, will go forward. We antice devote one half hour of each meet-|ipate starting more study groups, ing to study, we found that we/| especially among the women and could not get the necessary material|the young workers. The experi- from the District Literature Agent.|ences we have and the success of Then we sent immediately to the se study groups will make Bes- Workers Book Shop (New York) | se 2 testing ground for this for ten copies of the Communist in this District. Manifesto. In addition to this, one | J. C., Birmingham, Alabama, comrade wrote to a friend in New | asking him to get a group friends, who are Party s to donate literature for this important work. The r sult was that we received twen'! copies of the Communist Manifesto, ten covies of Browder’s Report to the Eighth National Convention and ten copies of The Way Out. This literature was used as fol- lows: Section Committees in Sec- tion 7 and 7A are studying the Manifesto, two Ore Mine Unit Buros are studying Comrade Brow- der’s Report, one Ore Mine Unit Buro and one Steel Mill Unit Buro are studying The Way Out, one Y.} Cc. L. Ore Mine groun (just recruited) is studying the Mani- festo and another Y. C. L. Ore Mine group is studying The Way Out. Each of these groups devote one half hour of their meetings to study as follows: 15 minutes cf reading and 15 minutes of questions and discus: The comrades are very enth! stic about this mcthod of study and have shown a real in- Office Workers Union is Organizing Wall Street Workers In relation to the Party Life Column of July 28th, entitled “Wall Street White Collar Workers Need Organization.” there is a Wall Street Group within the Office. Workers Union, which is beginning to function. The points brought) out in the column were well taken and the Office Workers Union is beginning to act. ‘We know that there are many sympathizers both inside and out-' side of mass organizations, and also within the Party and the Y. C. L, who work in the financial district, who would be anxious to work with, this newly formed group. But they co not yet know of its existence, Most of them read the “Daily.” An announcement in the column | to the effect that all those inter- | ested in this highly important work should get in touch with the Wail | Street Group, c-o Office Workers | Union, 114 West 14th St., would be a terest. of great help in establishing cons In order that the study group | tacts and accelerating our work, continues after we finish a! THE WALL STREET GROUP. Dr. LUTTINGER ADVISES ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Obstetrics Sensitization to Tobacco Yama-Yama — Some individuals are sensitive to tobacco. This means that a very small amount is liable | to produce signs of severe poisons | ing; just as the eating of one straw- berry will produce a rash in those who are sensitized to those berries. Standard, denicotinized and mens tholated brands do not differ from | each other in this respect, Chilomena—Obstetrics is a branch of medicine which deals with the care of women during child birth. | It_is scientific midwifery. The ob- stetrician uses version, anesthesia, forceps and cesarean section, which the midwife is not qualified to do. Bromidrosis Bernard S.—In view of the many our mine committee are to take up| | the layoff today and report on Sun- day’s special meeting. We have a joint agreement which jis not worth the paper it is written on. The boss has a right to hire and fire. Many of the men left. They have taken out their tools. The mine worked two days last week and two/ days this week. The local turned over to the Logan’s Ferry miners $72.25 to aid them in their fight. Conducted by Mary Morrow. Chil- dren’s editor, The Daily Worker, 50 13th St., New York City. " GUYS; FOR YA. SEE WHOCAN Hi THE LITTLE NIGGER” so THEY THREW STONES A ME ANDI RAN IN THE WATER AND SWAM OU “Gee,” said Charlie, those guys looked awful mean.” “Why shouldn't they?” said Bill. “You've got to be tough if you have | “some of | to fight. And that’s what they’re | doin’. And all they want is decent pay.” - | “Yeeh? How do you know?” | | piped up Frank—‘probably gettin’ more deugh than you are.” “Maybe. But guys don't }around getting their heads bi jif they're getting enoush.” | was talxing loud new. | gathered round him, “Tomorrow, we got to see that, those strikers behave. You heard | | the captain. He says to throw the gas bombs and give them the machine gun if we have to. And who are those guys out there? Are they criminals? No, they’re our cwn people, our own brothers.” “Aw, heck, we've got to make a living, too. And they only go around wrecking things,” said Bud. “You'd wreck things, too,” said Art, “if the Icusy boss kent making life miserable and handed out wages only fit for starving. it’s rotten when we have to and fight our own people.” “Sure it is,” said Frank, what can we do?” (To be continued next week) go) a Bill Others | tovast [RIATIE| WEEK'S PUZZLE: remedies. you have used to minimize the objectionable odor of the per-| spiration, there is hardly anything | left for us to sugges‘, except to try more salt in your diet. It seems that in some cases, the addition of an extra amount of salt to the vege- tables and other food, has a benefi- cial effect on the odor of ihe per- A Swindler Jailed Joaquin R., Los Angeles—You'll be pleased to learn that the “doctor” who swindled you has just. heen sentenced to 180 days in-jail; L. R. Mogle is not a physician, but a roe ita wko also practiced chiropractic vi “ade spiration. Have you eliminated eggs | justing” eae NT aera and the cabbage family from your also by prayer or instruction, How diet? If not, you might try to get/a scientific Marxist could fall for | along without these sulphur-con- such a fraud is beyond our under= | is taining foods, ‘tanding. |$.O.. COMRADES! Unemployed! Men! Women! Boys! Girls! Friends of the Daily Worker: Ina dozen cities new Red Builders have shown that anyone can rel from 25 to 150 copies of the Daily Worker cach day on street corners, at factories, trolley junc- tions, in homes—everywhere! Why don’t you get into this Parade of Red Builders? Earn expenses and at the came time help the Daily Worker in a march toward 20,000 new readers! If you live in or near the cities listed below go to the addresses given and say: “I want to help the Daily Worker, give me tay first bundle and assign me a good loca- tien.” (Each new Red Builder gets 25 copier free each day for two weeks!) NEW YORK CITY ——— 3) E. 12th St. BOSTON 919 Washington St, PHILADELPHIA ee 46.N. 8th St. i Recut BUFFALO Sweaters $1; Aprons 40¢: 185, Virginia st. Caps 2c; cash with order; CLEVELAND send sizes. postpaid. 1522 Prospect Ave. CHICAGO DETROIT 2019 West Diysiion St. 5061 11th St, NEWARK MILWAUKEE 7 Chariton st. 110 W. North Ave. If you live in or near any other city write direct to the Circulation Department, 50 E. 13th St., Now York City, We'll put you on the job at once! | | | Free Herndon and Scottsboro Boys! “It pleased me greatly to have received your letter today if I did receive unpleasant news a few minutes before. It didn’t weaken my courage and faith whatever so long as I know you will stick by me... .” Letter from Haywood Patterson, Kilby Prison, June 29, 1934, $15,000 §SCOTTSBORO-HEENDON EMERGENCY FUND International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East 11th St. New York City I contribute $.. and Defense. NAME $15,000 ..for the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals | ADDRESS “Since the Georgia Supreme Court upheld my sentence of 18 to 20 years, the bosses and their jail tools have increased the pressure on me. I am deathly sick as a result of the mur- dervous treatment accerded me during my two years of con- finement. My only hopes of ever being in the ranks again is in your strength.” Letter from Angelo Herndon, Fulton Tower Jail, June 7, 1934.

Other pages from this issue: