The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 18, 1934, Page 6

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Page Six WORKERS’ HEALTH | Daily Worker Mes lical ATHLETE'S FOOT We have received tions about “athlete's will try to answer day's column This condition is also « worm, nd technica cs and ery little to d end mild to ca rry in nothing to do with worm It is cont ommon your daily half of all|s people have ne time or other, but only a re ‘made un- comfortable. complete- jy cured, i s recurs. It is not se In the s the skin be- tween a he toes begins to peel and sc y become soggy and crack very tiny blisters are co! disease may spread to ot rts of the foot appearing atches of redness, scaling, b! and pimples. of t condition as dry as possi changes of sock: with a not a patent medicine, but be obtained by name at most dru es.) This cure most cases within two weeks. If the oint- ment is too strong for your skin and irritates it, you can mix it half and half with vaseline. Ringworm sometimes appears in the groin. It can be treated with the same ointment. rcnnat Board } In more severe cases when the so ma ques- | skin is raw and oozing, you will not hat we|be able to apply this ointment at them all in to-| first. You est your feet as} much as possible and keep the! dry. Gauze pads between the toc and talcum powder help. When the any medicine that your ig advertisers suggest. very serious complications ; | have occurred from the use of med- icine like ine, mercury, lysol, carbolic ete. Don’t make ble for yourself by performing skin has become dry ou can start using Whitfields. If at deal of skin red, oozing and to stay in bed a few] @ wet dressing of boric| Then th calamine lotion eve: 's. When the rawness has gone you can start treating it as you would a mild case. In severe cases, W: rapid spread, pain, swelling or a 1 and soothed | ing generally si or any other complication, you must, of course, call a doctor. The most important thing you should know about taking care of ringworm of. the feet is to avoid experiments on the only have! feet. you ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS All letters pertaining to medical advice should be addressed to the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board, 50 E, 13th St. New York City, and not to any individual doctor. IN THE HOME HELEN LUKE By “Coming Events... many, the hor of the September/|ning. “Dark clouds hang low over i ad-|the international horizons. Russia mits that “economic distr ss has|and Japan literally are at each been grip} . and/| others’ throats. France, Russia and instead of t g ttle Hansels|Czecho-Slovakia have formed an and Gretels out into the forests, the | alliance against Germany.” Russia is fathers and mothe place. That is why the 1,500,000 little soldiers are missing. They never even reached the recruiting office. Reading further we learn that un- til recently knowledge and gadgets for birth control, formerly the “mon- opoly” of the rich, had spread to the working class, so that noble marriage-and-babe-loving (bache- lor) leader, Herr Hitler, horrified by this immoral state of affairs, closed the stations giving information (to the masses) and banned adve: and sale of devices. The Fuhrer also banned abortions, which investigators said equalled births in number. After pages of this and similar stuff, with additional talk about the new Sterilization Law, the author (Dr. Wm. Seaver. Woods) proceeds to describe the Reich’s “enormous eff chi They pan out to be nothing special beyond the few mother-and- child centers and ordinary hospital and nurse services common to any large capitalist land, plus a. pain- fully inadequate insurance (for only some mothers, , evidently) which provides a minimum of care and time at birth, giving the mother a magnificent allowance of four to| ten dollars cash, the fund being “supported by the workers and em- ployers, the former paying two thirds of the expenses.” about for. the cause of the; of ” low birthrate of Ger-| shameless piece of demagogy begin- have decided | falsely cast as an agressor, not to let them come in the first | mentioned twice. Yiand 40. Size 16 takes 2% yards in behalf of the mother and | Don’t imagine the proud papa is | neglected. If his, family is large enough he can get a pretty badge | decorated with an eagle and five eaglets to show that he is children.” Marriage loans are described, and many maudlin paragraphs devoted to the new (b2ck to the cookstove IF any). This series on birthrates and such serves as a cloak to put across propaganda for the pres- ervation of the old-style individ- uclistic heme, on which (with its myriad of “houschold prob- lems” that disappear under social- ism) these ladies’ home magazines depord for their existence and profits. It serves to stir up nationalistic feciing: to conceal, not reveal the Telation between infant and mother death rates and economic system; to confuse carefully the issues, leaving the impression that Russi2’s high birth and low death rates are achieved in spite of and net because of her socialistic sys- tem. Following the spiteful article in the August issue on the Soviet creche-systems, etc., tl issue pre- sents Fascism in a highly sympa- thetic light, adoring Hitler, and not merely whitewashing Mussolini’s treacherous betrayal of the masses but actually gilding and performing it. The article by Von Ziekursch, “Remove the Profit from Legalized Killing,” calling for nationalization “rich in| “Women's Movement’ | ” the munitions industry, is a and The marked trend to fascism in! the women’s magazines represents a! serious menace and needs to be ex- posed and fought with determina- tion and persistence. Can You Make ’Em Yourself? | Paiicrn 1945 is available in sizes | 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, | inch fabric and 2% yards contrast- | |ing. Illustrated step-by-step se ing instructions included. Ad 1945 | Send FIFTEEN CENTS (lie) 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 Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th St., New York. City. Free Herndon and Scottsboro Boys “It pleased me greatiy 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 International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East llth St. New York City SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND $15,000 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1934 C.P. UNIT HELPS BRING MILITANT PROGRAM TO BUTTE MINE STRIKERS Mobilizes Meeting of Local Meeting 700 to Aid Struggle Rank and File iRevolt at Roda By a Mine Worker Caccnidbedeslt RODA, Va.— Last Saturday was our regular meeting day. The rank and file committee decided to bring up the question of demanding a ‘ closed shop in the local. Mr. Sax-| _BY_& Worker Correspondent ton, the new District President, had|..2UTTE., Mont.— Yesterday, Aug. been ng to visit the Roda | 1, the Communist Party unit held Ic Someone tipped him and its first public meeting on the min- Bill Minton, district secretary, off |¢rS’ Strike here. The purpose of} to what was planned, and while the the meeting was to explain the | meeting was in progress they both came in The local president immediately turned over the meeting to them | and they began making their flow- ery speeches, telling the miners what the New Deal had done for them, and what their great leaders, John L. Lewis, and so on, had done | to get the New Deal for them, and how their When the miners began to take the stand and expose the true condi- tions, however, Saxton said we ought to be willing to share our litle bit of work with the thou- sands who have no jobs at all. A Negro worker had been elected to the mine committee. Mr. Min- ton expressed his pleasure at this | election, and then on Saturday he said the company had this N worker on the spot and was layinz for a chance to fire him, and ad- vised him to ri n from the com- mittee. A cor that the whole committee had bet- ter resign, and let Mr. Ingles, the superintendent, apnoint whom he wanted. The miners gave Mr. Mir- ton to understand that they would | have whom they wanted on the committee. When the chairman of the mine committee made his report he told | that the miners had lost every case they had before the boerd, and told | of one’case where the board failed to agree, and an umpire was called, who was operator, and the worker W ‘ He then sai e would not take any move cases to the hoard. hut | would settle them at the drift-| mouth. Then Mr. Minton said he thought we had done pretty at the board, first cases we had lost. Our com- rade told him we would not lose any more Mr. Saxton said he could promise ig but to enforce the con- nothin: tract. One miner told him the con- well tract had only loopholes for the|everything we could sell to try to ;operatcrs, and shackles for the|get food for our children and med- miner He replied Sues you're|icine for our baby. As long as right, son. I hope you'll get to|the money lasted we could get med- write the next one.” The miner|icine but when the money was said: “I do intend to, or at least | gone, the doctor (my husband had} help write it, and if T couldn’t write| been cut to pay for the doctor | a better one than this I wouldn’t|through the company office for) have any. We are only working |three years), Dr. Brezill, flatly re-| two days a week, aryl we can’t get |fused to doctor our baby unless | ip half the time, much less the|we had the money. He said, “Tl pay days these fakers talk }guess the baby needs mi about.” |, 1 went to the relief office to try Now the workers in this newly- | |to get milk but they told me they | organized field. where there was never a union before, are beginning | to understand these officials’ lies, | and now they are saying we will have to do the same thing the min- ers of District 2 in Pennsylvania are doing, take the leadership away from these crooks, NOTE We publish letters from caal and ore miners, and from oil field workers, every Saturdey. We urge workers in these fields to write us of their conditions of work and of their struggles to organize. Piease get your letters to us by Wednesday of each week. A Mass Circulation of our “Daily” Means a Quickening Tempo in Class | Struggle. BROTHERS (Continued from last week) “All of us will just stand still when they tell us to fire. Remember last time when we had to fight with the strikers at that automobile factory? We didn’t like it, did we? And some of us didn’t shoot when we were su- posed to. Let's make it all of us now. There are not more than 40 of us. If we all stick to it, we'll be all right. How many of you are with me?” Almost every hand went up. “It's got to be everyone,” tinued Bill. “I spoke to the other fellows today. They're with us. How about you, Charlie?” “I—oh, that’s what we're here for, I suppose, to keep law and order.” “Whose law and whose order? The factory owner wants us to protect himself, his property and his pro- fits. Don’t all of the people pay taxes to keep the National Guard? And yet he gets all this protection. Why don’t we protect the strikers? They pay taxes too. But they have no property to protect. They have only their two hands which do the pay had been increased. | that these were the} con- | Helps to Popislarias Mass Picketing Tacties / Way to Win Demands Party's interest in this strike as well as all other strikes and struggles of the workers the world over. Also | the effectiveness of militancy, mass | picketing and general strikes was |to be pointed out, too—all this on |the basis of the experience of the | peae struggles of the workers, their victories and defeats and why they took the course they did. An ap- ees was to be made to members of the miners’ union to bring up the question of mass picketing at the next union meeting. The meeting was attended by 700. | About 250 or 300 members of the | miners’ union were present. The program of the unit was carried out to the letter, and in addition a member of the miners’ union spoke on ‘the necessity of mass picketing and how it can revive the interest of all in the strike and thus increase the chances for victory. In response to the question as! ing how many in the audience were in favor of mass picketing a ma-) jority, by far, raised their hands. Only three raised their hands sig- nifying their opposition to it. This meeting must be followed up with meetings at the mines at which the workers and those sym- pathetic to them will be called on to commence mass picketing. Ac- tion of this kind can bring out, into the fore, ths militancy and courage that the workers of Butte | refer to with pride when recounting the past history of their struggles. Bosses Killed My Baby, Writes Wife of Mine de then told him | By a Worker Correspondent 1 ARTINIS, Ky—I am a_ coal miner's wife, and was born and raised in Kentucky. I will tell you} jhow the capitalists caused al | death of my baby girl. | Before the baby was born my {husband worked in the coal mines | for 23 cents a ton, and half the| time I had to go hungry, My hus- band worked hard all day and then | ometimes didn’t have anything for | supper when his day's work was |done. Before the baby came I had | to go hungry for days at a time! jand when I could get anything it| |was something I could hardly eat. | Corn bread and pinto beans is reg-| ular with the miners. | So baby came into the world a | little half-starved child. My two jOldest children had stood by the} bea and cried with hunger when baby was coming. After that my |husband got T. B. and we sold just couldn’t give me anything to, |iuy milk for the baby. So just | what little milk I could borrow from | the neighbors is all baby had. Just before baby died I tried to) get the doctor to come to see her. |He said, “I can’t fool with that kid, I'm going to the show. So |baby struggled along and tried to live so hard till she was 14 months | jand nine days old, but she finally | jhad to die, and the dirty bosses are to blame. They are starving little children | to death every day, so I am begging | to workers everywhere to unite and |help me to fight against having your children and mine being starved to death by the dirty cap- jitalists in Harlan County. Miners jand their families haven't got any) | Privilege there. T! a nickels worth of peanuts, when one of the gun thugs named Ike Young saw him and told him to halt. The little boy didn’t stop TUSTICE = IN OLD KENTUCKY and the thug shot him in the bac!. and said he thought he had stole: the peanuts. There was a poor Negro who wer to Harlan to get work. He aske some of the men if they had : union there, and the thugs hearc him and took him for a ride. They took him across the mountain and cut him all to pieces with switches | and the next day the poor fellow | was found there dead. It will make any honest person | that has reasonable sense wake up and unite and fight for the righi to live. little, naked, half-starved children, I am one of the poor mistreated | |company of miners’ wives. Pennsylvania Miners Fight Cut in Relief By a Worker Correspondent EXPORT, Pa.—Apzroximately 300 | miners and their wives and others| attended an Unemployment Coun- | cil’s meeting here at Export on July 14, Miners and others are suffering from lack of food and other neces- sities, and are flocking to the Un- employment Council. A county committee is success- fully being organized. to meet Re- lief officials at the County Relief Headquarters in Greensburg, te A little 13-year old poy went to demands, he has many weapons. He has the law on his side. He calls in the police and us to protect his property. He hires gangsters to beat up the strikers, and scabs to keep his factory going. That’s the kind of law we have to keep.” “Bill's right,” said Frank. “Why should we care about the bosses? The strikers are the same as us.” Next morning the strikers stood, a solid mass outside the factory. Word had gone round that the boss was bringing in scabs to work in their Places. They waited, tense and ex- pectant. They had not long to wait. The first truck drove up filled with strike-breakers. On the running board and on the motor were the company police with guns levelled. The strikers’ anger broke loose. “Come on,” cried one, “let's show them we're not afraid.” They rushed forward to the trucks. The company police fired. Two strikers fell, wounded. The whole mass of workers pushed forward in spite of the company guns. A scab yelled out, “Why don’t those guards help us?” work and make profits for the boss, And the boss can squeeze the work- ers as much as he likes and cut their wages still lower. When the workers can’t stand it any more and they sec their families with not enough food or clothes, they stop work and go out on strike. That is their only weapon. But when the boss doesn’t want to give in to their The workers stopped at once, as though they just remembered the guards. They turned around to the soldiers who were facing them. The captain called out, “Throw your bombs.” A few raised their arms—with gas protest against a relief cut of 20 I am the mother of two} oe Negr o-White! ‘Solidarity in’ ‘South Growing | By a Mine Worker Correspondent | BESSEMER, Ala.—The night of | August 1st marked a large step for- ward toward the unity of the Negro | and white workers. | Local No, 1 (formerly the unem- |Ployed local) of the Mill, Mine and |Smelters Union staged a little min- strel show to raise money to send |delegates to the union’s National | Convention. -Both Negro and white workers participated in the pro- |gram, 200 workers were present, of whom about 10 per cent were white | workers. | The singing was contributed by Negro women, two qua:tets and two soloists. The Negro songs, which express the deep revolutionary spirit of an oppressed people, were well received. The refreshments—ice cream and peanuts—were all served from the same freezer to the Negro and white alike. Another significant thing was the workers’ discipline. Thzee Ne- gro and four white workers ap- |pointed as guards to keep order in | Case anyone came drunk and started ja fuss. As it was, no disorder of any sort occurred. The object of | worker discipline was to keep the | police away. The Negro vice-president of the} union acted as Master of Cere-| |monies. Hobson, a white worker and secretary of the union, spoke on the value of organization. He referred to Wilson's war adminis- tration as having offered ihe workers a chance to organize—but he claimed the workers refused this chance, Now Roosevelt has offered jlabor the chance to organize and we should gvasp it. Hobson, although honest in his convictions, does not see through the lies and fakery of |Roozevelt. Right here in Bessemer |the T, C. I. and other companies are openly trying to smash the |benafide unions while already the company unions have started with |Scabs as the nucleus, This is the same Local of the I. |U. M. M. S W. that unanimously jendorsed the Workers Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill H R. 7598 a few veeks ago, The growing solidarity of white “nd Negro unemployed workers will “ove to be a mighty weapon in the cuggle for decent zelicf. Answers Murray’s Attack on “‘Daily”’ By a Mine Worker | Correspondent TARENTUM, Pa—In our last. || -cgular local meeting, _ local |} . 2242, U.M.W.A., of Curtis- ville, Pa., a group was organized by John Murray of District No. 5 against the Coal Digger and Daily Worker, because these pa- pers tell the truth about what the leaders. of the U.M.W.A. are doing to the workers, In this group of the local they meade a motion to stop the read- ing of the Daily Worker and the Coal Digger, and they said if the workers were caught reading or selling it they would be sus- pended from the union. We sell five Daily Workers ev- ery day and 15 on Saturday, and 100 copies of the Coal Digger monthly. Now we are going to try to get three times as many subscribers as we had before and sell more papers than ever. For the start I am sending in three subscribers, one year each, for |@ peanut stand and bought him per cent. WITH OUR YOUNG READERS East ca “a7 ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PICTURE PUZZLE Hay +. wood Paiier + sun Hayviood Patterson. Thaelmann, Angel + OH + urn + donkey— key = Angelo Herndon. Conducted by Mary Morrow, Chil- dren’s editor, The Daily Worker, 50 Er + nest Tail + man = Srnst, the | the Saturday ea edition, 13th St.. New York City. had Lee DOT No Ane es T? DOT No. 5 y ‘The new puzzle club members are: Mar- | re! Minette, Syivia Fox, Bill Hall, Bsthe: Leonard Stogel, Bernice Sandler, aa Appel, Martin Shindler, Arthur 2 Shirley Bay, Rose Jacobs, Evelyn Kehn, Emma Skrtich, Bernard Kabacoff. Work out the Dotto puzzle and mail it in, then you can hecome a member of the Daily Worker Puzzle Club. You can paste it on the back of a penny post card. bombs clutched in their hands. Charlie's arm went up. too. Others “Throw your bombs,” the captain. remained still. Adveniures of Tim and Laoesnaed I contribute §$...... wena heed for the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals and Defense. NAME slowly. Someone called out from the crowd, “Charlie!” screamed Instead, the few arms came down|Dan. He ran towards his brother, A man stepped forward—Charilie's arm came down. It was his brother, arms outstretched. Bill was right. These men were their brothers. could not pay rent. PARTY LIFE YCL Mobilizing Against War National Youth Day, Sept. 1 Leadership Issues Directives for Carrying Thru Preliminary Demonstration International Youth Day its 20th anniversary on Sopt. 1 as a day of struggle against imperialis: war of the toiling youth in all coun- tries. At this time the danger of war is more real. This is seen in the sharpened relations in Centra! Europe, of Hitler to throw the starving Ger- man workers and peasants into war, in the increased provocations of Japan against the Soviet Union. In the United States rapid strides to- ward war are shown by increased war preparations, by the growing fascist terror, and the increased lynchings of Negroes. Here in New York, too, the brutal attempts of the San Francisco bosses to smash the Party, Y.C.L, and other workers’ organizations, are aped by LaGuar- dia in his attempt to register all “regular” labor leaders and the es- tablishment of a Police Rifle Corps of 1,200 “to handle labor troubles.” In the light of these develop- ments, the Y.C.L. and Party must energetically come forward and mo- bilize thousands of youth, 2s well as | adults, Day, On this day, not only is it neces- Sary to express our desire to strug- gle against war, but also to demon- strate the spirit of internationalism which binds the working class youth of all countries. The Communist Party of the New York District is continuing its gen- erally healthy approach towards for International Youth the youth in helping to mobilize | for International Youth Day. The enthusiasm of the splendid Nation-| al Youth Day demonstration no doubt is still fresh in the minds of the Party members and has already marked a new conception of tho role of the Party 2mong the mass of youth in New York. In the lisht of this the Party has undertaken the following steps in order to in- sure a mass demonstration on Sep- tember 1: 1. To initiate a broad diccussion among the Party membership on the significance of Internatione] Youth Day. 2. The Sections of the Party, to- gether with the Y.C.L. to organize preliminary demonstrations for International Youth Day. 3. That a statemont be printed in the Daily Worker in the name of the Party District Bureau, mobili: ing the mass organizations for sup- port of International Youth Day. 4. That the Party fraction of the | T.U.U.C. undertake to mobilize ya- rious trade unions for International | Youth Day and see to it that the Trade Union papers contain ma-| terial on International Youth Day. 5. Thet 2 leading Party comrade | write an article for the Party press calling for a mass mobilization. 6 That all Party shop papers in- clude material on International Youth Day and wherever possible a special International Youth Day issue be turned out. 7. That the Party issue a leafiet of 50,000 copies for International Youth Day and 10,000 stickers. marks , in the desperate attempts | Y 8. That the Party instruct the lite erature department to make 20,000 copies of the special 1.Y.D, Young Worker, and 10,000 copies of the pamphlet “20 Years After.” The above steps show the deter= mination of the Party to build the L. among the masses'of young workers and students, and this is further proved by the task the | Party has set itself to recruit hun- | dreds of young workers for the Y.C.L. in preparation for Interna- tional Youth Day as well as to work towards the establishment of Y.C.L, nuclei wherever Party nuclei exist, This is a concrete illustration of the steps that the Party in the New York District is taking to carry out the resolution of the Eighth Party Convention on Y.C.L. work, A. STERN, rier See Handbeok for Y.C.L.’ers The Y.C.L. should have a hand- book for its purpose, program and history. Such a handbook would include brief econdémic lessons; the program of the Party; how to han- \dle discussion groups; how to sell the Daily Worker under all condi- |tions; the programs of the differ jent organizations of militant work- ers; how to go about union or mass organization activity; how to write, print, and distribute leaflets under | all conditions; songs of the revolu- tionary movement; slogan paint- ing; and countless other things that a Y.C.L.er should know and do, For instance, such problems as the education of beginners should be given authoritative guidance, Those who wish to become organ- izevs should be given the tests of the organizer and how to best _pre- pare for such tesis, etc. Every phase of activity of a Y.C.L’er 3| would find a place in such a hand- book and would scon become the handy reference book for all the problems of the Y.C.L. This hand- book would give direction to the advancement of the Y.C.Ler and would permit the rapid and au- thoritative education of the awake ening youth of the United States. Comradely, P.M. Y¥.C.L,, Brooklyn, * Note by Editor The National Office of the Y.C.L, is preparing a handbook. However, this handbook, while dealing with jie most important organizational tasks of the League l not answer jall the points ra‘ in the com- |rade's letter. It will in the main, |deal with the organizational prob- jlems of the Y.C.L. in giving leader- ship to the youth in the shops, ‘ade unions, “Y's,” schools. Other material issued will supply infor- mation on conducting classes. There is in print a program of the Young Communist International, a song book, and recently a pamphlet on “How to Sell the Daily Worker,” be | which can purchased from | Youth Publishers, Box 23, Station | D, New York City. | NATIONAL ORG. DEPT., Y.04L ‘WRONG AND TO FIGHT RIGHT WAY EVICTIONS By a Worker Correspondgat DECATUR, Il—A worker's fur- niture on North College St. was put out on the boulevard because he The worker LEADER) ALLIANCE was a member of the Llinois Work- ers Alliance, so he notified the cr- ganization of his predicament. Many workers were notified to come to the scene of the eviction at eight o'clock that evening to set the fur- niture back into the house. At the specified time they came together in front of the house. A young worker suggested that they begin setting it back at once so the family could get settled for the night, but Joe Good, one of the leaders, maintained they could not set it back. When asked what they could do, he suggesied they spread a tarpaulin ovcr the furniture, let it set until morning, then look for a house for the worker and his family. This same young worker who suggested setting the furni- ture back asked: “What will become of the family for tonight, crawl under the tar- paulin also?” Mr. Good didn’t know about that, this was the only logical way, he said. When put on the spot, Mr. Good crawfished, took his men, and left. At 8:30 the Unemployment Council workers cengregated. This time there was no hesitating, but a steady aim. The doors were opened, the furniture set back into the house, and the family slept under a roof that night. Unless Every Section and Unit in the Party Throws Its Forces Vigor- ously Into the Circulation Drive, the Daily Worker Remains Une known to Thousands of Workers. TRIAL SUB OFFER. DAILY WORKER 50 E. 13th St., New York City Send me the Daily Worker every day for two months. I enclose §1 (check or money order) Name ... Address... City. ~ State . Note: This offer does not apply to re- newals, nor does it hold good for Man- and Bronx. | BOOST “DAILY” DRIVE— Ruild the “Daily WIN A $10 PRIZE! Worker” Contest Join the letter-writing centest, open to all workers. Write a 300-word letter on “Why Workers Should Read the Doily Worker.” Letters will be judged for clarity of ideas and simplicity of language. Judges; CLARENCE HATHAWAY, JAMES CASEY, HARRY GANNES, Winner's letter will be published in the Daily Worker and in leaflet form. Next best letters will also be printed, with honorable mention given t¢ their writers. CONTEST CLOSES AUGUST 20th. DAILY WORKER — 50 East 13th St., New York ds pt at i

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