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Page Four T WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1934 Buick Local \Industrial; PARTY LIFE WORKERS’ HEALTH Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS On the other hand, pain = which is made w Constipation e = anay be due io Mrs. F. C., Tampa, Fla.—Among a any rate these merely he ills of the day. none guesses. Only by physical examini common the n i by the use of X-rays is the can a correct diagnosis be than abuse, ma irregularities Ice bags tend to relieve pain, but bit of having move never cure the underlying cause. once in two or three da For example, the idea which is wice daily is norma prevalent among workers, that an pation i appendix can be cured by ing it with an ice bag is decid- edly incorrect. The appendix is so The cure of ody ularly. At cert Union Defends Its Members By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—I am employed by the Presto Lock Co., 70 Washington St., Brooklyn. This shop can be placed in the category of heavy metal, which is a basic war indus- try. This shop is now organized 90 per cent by the Stee] and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union. The three key departments, namely, the tool and die making department, the power press department and the polishing department, are 100 per cent organized. A drive is now on | GRAFT AT FORD'S By An Automobile Worker Cerre-done for the Ford Exposition in spondent Chicago. DETROIT, Mich.—Who are the | boxed and the Ford executive ad- thieves—the Ford workers or the/| ministration seized the opportunity Ford executive administration? This |to get stainless steel and monel question was brouzht to my notice | metal sinks made for their country when I happened to see a Ford worker being questioned because the Ford Service Department happened to find about 15 cents worth of bolts and nuts in his bench box. They even insisted on taking this man home to search his place. They pressed upon him that taking material from the Ford plant was the absolute crime. Supposing every worker took their yachts and speedboats. and they find two lifeboats This was too good to be} and town homes, lamps and water | Those who want to prove whether | I lie or not can go to the High Line | will after breakfast utes at the toilet luding veget- tuffs, meat, fish If there is not the diet add agar sufficient bu '|Ice bags, therefore deep that it is absolutly impossible for it to be affected by the ice. The ice merely soothes the reflected pain in the area overlying the appendix.| shop passed a decision that if any may be danger-| workers were to be laid off or fired, ous because they give a false sense|the non-union help would be the of security. Ice bags to the skin can | first ones to go. be harmful if applied directly with- | On Thursday ie <a sday, Aug. 16, 1934, two out a cloth or towel betwen the b8g/ union girls from the assembly de-| to organize the other departments 100 per cent. Some time ago the workers of the away material from the Ford plant, they would only be pikers compared to the amount of material sent out by these Ford executives. some of the Ford workers may take material, all they could carry would | have to be taken in their pockets or lunch boxes, but the Ford execu- tives use trucks. Thousands of dol- Jars worth of material and finished | articles with the time and labor of | While | py ZZ = in THE MooeL obtainable at drugstores), two level| 2nd the skin. a the bag a Ae | partment were lald off, On Friday | teaspoons three times daily with| paar rey on ici ee skin | Morning, Aug. 17, 1934, the shop meals. You 0 aid in lubricat- | “me without removing it, , |Chairman and the department com- may be harmed. Ice bags should, aggre ragaeey therefore, be kept on for perhaps S, morning am.| only an hour and removed for half an hour, etc. The douche twice a day will ing the bowels b3 oil in tablespoon dos evening, till it starts to leak through he rectum. Then the dose may rob- | mittees demanded that the fore- | man reinstate the girls immediately. | The foreman asked for 24 hours to | think it over. This was refused | him and he refused to reinstate the vi used the last nine | = - Rests be the pevbonal’ ton of | ftom Ford barges being rebuilt and i dmini and | V-8 motors with propellers being | Hard execs scmntnls ators. Ae tauely cg ie aa te: BIE | file. | For example, not three months| two aluminum decks, and all these| The immediate task of the rank ago 12 chicken coops were made up | for the personal use of Ford execu- | Disgusted With Dillon Tactics By a Worker Correspondent DETROIT, Mich.—At a meeting | several weeks ago of the Buick lo-| : cal in Flint, which is an affiliate of | coolers, and other knicknacks for| the a. F, of L., Francis Dillon, na-| | tional organizer in the. auto in- ing while drunk and created a scene that is the talk of the town. When Dillon staggered into the} meeting, all was quiet and peace- ful. With a roar he grabbed the gavel from the hand of the as- tonished chairman, and told the workers that the orders of Bill |Green in regards to the “purging” |of the Communists from the A. F. |of L. were about to be initiated by |no less a person | Dillon. that Francis At the next meeting William Col- lins of sell-out fame arrived in the role of peacemaker with unfor- tunate results. The rank and file had issued a leaflet explaining and exposing the fakers. Mr. Collins had received one of these leaflets and was indiscreet enough to Jaunch an attack on the rank and and file in the auto locals is plain, Long-Winded Speakers Our Unit, 10L, Section 17, had \@ discussion last Tuesday on the | good and welfare of the unit and the Communist Party. One subject which most of the comrades dis- cussed was the bad features of our demonstrations, and why they are not bigger and more effective than they are now. There were many points discussed that were men- tioned many times before in the “Daily,” such as: The comrades making a picnic out of the demon- stration, the little group of com- rades who stand talking to one another, not concerned with what going on nor with what the Speakers have to say. The entire unit voted that I, as organizer, should write to you, asking you for Space in the Daily Worker, if pos- sible, for the opening of a discus- sion on what is wrong with our demonstrations and how to improve them, Communist Party Members Criticise Demonstrations |- at Mass Meetings Make |> Demonstrators Impatient ; When we arrived at the congress- man’s office, we found machine guns on the roofs of all the corner houses, besides the usual police pro- - tection. The people who probably had never heard or seen of such | happenings, came into the streets | to listen to us. | But what happened? One bad \Speaker after another began to | Speak, each one speeking longer jthan the other. Also the chairman |Speaking before and after each | Speaker, until the crowd losing pa- | tience, began leaving. When the | Section Committee’s attention was |called to the fact that we will soon jbe left with a handful of demon- strators, they only shrugged their shoulders, and answered. “There are two more speakers, and the crowd must have more patience.” The result was that the demon- | stration did not have the same ef- jfect when we left as when we he cut down to a tablespoon each arate s m i i: ‘di tives under fictitious works orders.| to carry on a persistent campaign| It was quite evident that our! ry and later Tanith albcgetor. ably have no effect upon your con-| girls, Immediately the workers |" Kes ee re ee en Two Ford roofers are out shingling | of exposure aaa agitation i the | comrades feel that there is some- | Started. ere bpd coe ers igt dition, whatsoever, good or bad. shut off thi 7 i everybody |™en worked on material for almos' "i 4 th Saale _|and the few demonstrators who ee nap | shu se oman aand everybody | three weeks making them up, To| Private homes, and a brickload of | coming months so that when the| thing vitally wrong with the ar-/ were left, were exposed to the den: wed sae Ree | Sapped work, including the wnor-| 14° tings es much oe possible they | Sheet copper flashing with all the | auto season starts the illusions the |'@ngements of our demonstrations. | ger of the police and their machine es a Aluminum Poisoning |ganized. Within five minutes the scares PincEy aee aa ee night | other necessary material was sent) workers have in regards to these| We find that even demonstrations | guns, Pains Following Childbirth u eteraheF'm ibreathin , sh.. 2fifi ..| girls were reinstated and we went Sitk As thay ie a finished ihey | 2way a few days ago. misleaders will be completely | that start out well, get to be fail-| ns E. G., Florida—There has been} back to work. ee ie Ria fe vg ei =I For further information ask/SMashed, and to actively build a| Utes before they end. For example,! Wherein lies the trouble? Is it R. A. New York.—There a great deal written about alumi-| Because of this, the prestige of | “re Shipped ie peers ue Oe ae or Williams, chiefs of the | Tamk and file movement that will| the last Thaelmann demonstration: | due to our comrades’ laziness? Is ew important facts that you num compounds in food. As &| the union was well established. We | a atAat tk eres a ay tor Geant ance departments, or Mid-| Unite with the rank and file of the | There was one big meeting at Union | there something wrong with our ar- omitted from your letter point of fact, a 378-page book has/ are now certain that within a week | iy Came on six to eli ” would be very helpful in deciding what your trouble is. These facts are the following: (1) your age; (2) the number of babies you have had; (3) whether the last delivery was normal or instrumental. ‘The attacks of severe pain on the right side below the breasts going all the way up to the chest and to} the shoulders a month after child- birth, may be due to gall bladder | trouble. Gall bladder disease is a frequent complication of pregnancy. IN THE The Women’s Paris That Webster Hall was so packed | with perspiring women and men last Friday (a torrid night) as to| create a shortage of chairs, testified to the eagerness of the people to hear the message of the returned | delegates from the Paris Anti-War Congrt and it appears not only toilers but a growing number of other sections of the population | have realized the danger of war and | are determined to fight it. | By HELEN LUKE been written by Dr. E. E. Smith on} we will be 100 per cent organized this subject. But because of the| into the Steel and Metal Yorkers’ | expense involved and because the | Industrial Union. Mellon interests can drown ee PEER IN See eee tion in scientific propaganda, the * question of food poisoning by alumi- | Jones & Laughlin Corp. num utensils has not been settled. i | It will remain for a Socialist society Tries To Get Worker to do. In fact, the Soviet Union is) already interested in this problem. | Meanwhile, unless the aluminum is | of very poor (rough) grade, don’t | worry about it. | HOME ‘To Dig His Own Grave’ | By a Worker Correspondent | AMBRIDGE, Pa.—The Jones end | Laughlin Steel Corp. of Aliquippa, | |Pa., tells the workers that the| | “outside union” collects $1.63 per| |month from each worker and does | |not help the worker, but the com- | pany union costs nothing and helps | the workers. The bosses are trying | to make the worker dig his own | grave. I wish that every worker would join his own union and give these | marvelous Congress!” Rosa de-| bosses and companies a lesson of scribed delegates from Indo-China |how we can put them down by who told of the intense suffering | Struggle. Now is the time to unite. | Anti-War Congress going to tell you more about that worked on beer-coolers for the same Ford executive administration. Re- steel and monel metal was being | dleton, or perhaps DeBlanche, di- | rector of transport, or Rooney, the | cently a_lot of work in stainless | chief of service in the administra- | tion building. RADIO REPAIR RACKET By a Radio Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—Big stores adver- | tise that they fix radios, Then they send a man up who is called a radio serviceman. It is his job to get as much as possible out of the cus- tomer. He tells the customer that a very bad short circuit is in the set and it will cost $12 to fix it. If he gets the customer's consent he takes the radio out of the home and brings it to the store. A man who is called a radio mechanic then does the actual repairing. Now the usual trouble with any radio is what is called condensor or resistor trouble. A condensor can usually be bought for 5 to 10 cents 10 cents for the defective part, less 25 cents for the radio mechanic's time (pay as low as $9 per week), less 75 cents radio serviceman’s part. Now a radio serviceman is nothing but a high class pressure salesman, talking the customer into the high price and is therefore very valuable to the boss, to gyp the customer out of his hard earned money. A radio mechanic who does the actual fixing is liked by the boss the other way around, because he can’t do any cheating for him. It shouldn't cost more than $2 to fix the average radio, that is, figur- ing a union rate of $1.25 per hour, in their land; of masses so starved that mothers sell or kill their chil- dren, that they go to the forest and eat herbs and leayes, yet man- aged to send delegates to the Con- gress who pledged to return to carry on their work. (To Be Concluded.) Delegate after delegate, all dif- | fering widely in appearance and| personality, took the platform to| describe their impressions of the | Paris meeting, to bring a message | of solidarity from the women of | the world assembled there, to im- part the enthusiasm she felt for the work ahead in building more com- mittees against war and reaching Can You Make ’Em Yourself? 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14. Size 10 takes 1% yards 54 incH fabric and % yards 36 inch contrasting. Illus- Pattern 2027 is available in sizes| That yellow skunk, Green, of the| A. F. of L, said last Sunday that | the Communists are supported by | Russia and should be deported. | Dear comrades, I know what Green | Says is a lie. | We all know how food went up. | If we keep separate we are all going | to starve. | Russia is the greatest country in |the whole world. There are no cowardly capitalists to press the | Workers to death there. | Dir | Good Laboratory | | Equipment in Soviet at the highest. You can readily see that the boss makes $12 profit, less LSNR inF orefront of plus material, which is usually 5 cents, 10 cents or 25 cents, Phila. Terror Fight By a Worker Correspondent PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—We live in the I. L, D. Community Center in Philadelphia, which is in the heart prepare to hold the Center here as a central point for all comrades of the section in the coming police terror by LeStrange which has al- other auto unions militant industrial union. F.S.U. Secretary Is - Clubbed Unconscious by Vancouver Police By a Worker Correspondent _ VANCOUVER, B. C..— We have just come from a demonstration in which the police were as brutal as ever. The district secretary of the Friends of the Soviet Union was clubbed unconscious. The thugs who always get their men (when he is unarmed) were out in full force with gas bombs. The Daily Worker is getting better every issue: Our own Worker is twice a week for the first time. I hope it will increase to a daily before another year is out. “Poor Folk Haye No Right to Choose Food” By a Worker Correspondent _UTICA, N. Y.—Poor folks have no Tight to the choice of food they would like. The capitalist scum of the earth have got their heads to- gether and made out a list telling | us what we can eat. Merchants of different grocery stores say they have investigators call at the stores and hang around to build one} race to the Consulate. The dem- onstration started out pretty good. Of course, I had expected a much bigger turn-out, but one couldn't say it was a poor demonstration, yet by the time we adjourned we looked like a committee instead of & mass demonstration. After each speaker more and more people be- gan dispersing, yet every speaker felt that he must speak on, and on whether he was listened to of not, and the chairman kept on an- nouncing more speakers, forgetting completely that the day was ter- Tifically hot and that the people who listened to them at Union Square and then ran down to the Consulate, will not listen to too many speakers in that scorching sun. What was the result of such a meeting? Does that encourage the newcomer to come again, or the sympathizer to come to all demon- strations called for? Or is it just on the contrary that the only ones who remain until the end are only shoe who are conscious of their uty. The same thing happened at the Section demonstration. Before our Section split a demonstration was held before Congressman Carley’s office in support of H. R. 7598. It also started out well. We demon- strated in a neighborhood which Square, then a march, or rather a/ rangements committee, who think |we must have many speakers, | whether anything is said or not, or j Whether there are any ears left to jhear them. Those were the things |we discussed, and which we feel should be discussed by others. Whether our demonstrations would not be much bigger and better if we would have less speakers and more impressive speakers keeping the crowd so that when the meet- ing is adjourned, all the demon- strators leave as one; leaving a good impression on those who |watch us and a desire to come again for those who demonstrate with us, 8.1. Organizer Unit 10L, See. 17, N.Y. Join the Communist Party 36 E. 12th STREET, N. ¥. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name Street City was never or very little penetrated. Listof $60,000 Drive Donations The following tables list all Party, organization and individual donations to the day, we will publish a table of the donations received the previous day. It is highly $60,000 Daily Worker drive received up to and including Thursday, August 28, Each _ | important that the early weeks of the drive produce funds neces to te greater masses of people with the | trated step-by-step sewing instruc- | Electrical Plant ot the Negro section where the tre-|ready begun. The section is cov- standing obligations and sccare the new threeeaitieg “Dally. re anti-war message. Jessica Henderson of the Wom- en’s Committee Against War and | Fascism, told how the Manifesto | presented at the Congress was adopted unanimously, except that four of the 1.088 delegates did not vote. She told how fifteen German delegates, there under assumed names, would take their lives in| their hands to return to carry on their work. She said that the women of her League would sell copies of Rev. Fosdick’s sermon} against war in order to raise money for the anti-war work. | Clara Bodian of the Women’s | Councils told how the delegates who boarded the boat, mostly “strangers” to each other, felt | within two days that they had known each other for years. She told how Mother Bloor immediately got busy among the delegates, form- | ing them into committees to draw | up resolutions to present to the Congress. Some of these resolu- tions were accepted | “In spite of the lack of a com- | mon language,” she said, “the ex- | pression on the faces of the women | at the Congress spoke, showing one thought, one purpose, to fight | against war and fascism. There | ‘were women from fascist countries, present at the risk of their lives; | many of them widows of victims of | fascist terror, of comrades killed in | the class struggle. One little boy | of eleven, whose father had been | hanged, made a stirring speech de- | manding that the struggle go on.” Comrade Bodian concluded with a | strong call for a big delegation to | go to the Chicago Anti-War Con- | gress, and pointed out that the cost | of sending a delegate there is/ twenty-five dollars, a fraction of | the cost of sending one to Paris. | Mary Rayside, Negro delegate) from Harlem, was so flaming with | enthusiasm that she couldn’t de- | scribe it and her repeated declara- | tions to that effect were hugely | relished and applauded. “Com- rades, it was marvelous,” she cried. "It was just wenderful. I was sick and could hardly sit up, but it was so marvelous I forgot all about my aches and pains. It was really so wonderful! I am not well right now, but as soon as I am I sure am | tions included. | By a Soviet Worker Correspondent MOSCOW, UV. S. S. R—I am working in the bureau of investiga- | tion at Dynamo, a large plant! manufacturing electric —- motors, | locomotives and equipment. At} present I am working on quality} babbitt bearings. I am _ highly| pleased with the laboratory equip-) ment. The laboratory is much| larger and better equipped than any | I have had the privilege of work-| ing in in the States. I marched with the factory in| the Noy. 7 demonstration. It was highly impressive with the march-| |ing millions—red square, area of) marching figures, placards, banners and flags. |Moldy Breakfast || Brings Struggle to | Head at Camp Wyeth By a Worker Correspondent CHICAGO, Ill. — Twenty-five C. C. C. young workers are en route on the Union Pacific Railroad to Chicago, having been dishonorably discharged from Camp Wyeth. One morning, last week, Captain Boender came upon one young fellow supposedly “sleeping on the job” and ordered him out of the camp. Two of the tent buddies of this discharged young fellow desired | to accompany him to the railroad} station. The captain forbade them, but regardless, they boarded a truck and proceeded to the rail- road station. Captain Boender | follower, stopped the truck and hit one of the boys in the face, which provoked a fist fight. With this incident, there was ob- vious a smoldering resentment of the camp towards the captain. The following morning just prior to a heavy day of work in the forest, the boys were served with a moldy breakfast of scraps. Hell was raised in the dining-room, and Captain Boender finally called the sheriff from Hood River County. Twenty-five were dishonorably dis- charged after the several hundred boys in camp refused to permit the x« \ At \ \Y \N \ Lx \ NI \ \) SN) \ WANE \ \ : K \\ Send FIFTEEN CENTS (lic) 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 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 International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East lith St. New York City I contribute $...............for and Defense. ADDRESS SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND sheriff to take them to jail. Several young workers are still in the camp drawing the lessons from ! | this little experience amongst the remaining fellows and preparing to further their struggle for better conditions. = Elevator Operator Gets 20¢ an Hour) $15,000 By a Worker Correspondent | | NEW YORK,—The writer of | this is an elevator operator in an | apartment house. He works | daily on this schedule: | 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. minus 1 | hour for supper equals 12 and a | half hours, 6 days or 1 week, 75 hours 26 days or 1 month, 325 hours, the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals | Total 325 hours for $65 a | | month. | ! One hour for 20¢. Where is the New Deal? mendous upsurge took place last week. The entire section is perme- ated with a tension which is ready to break at the slightest provoca- tion. Our comrades are working hard to lead the struggle, also to ered by police, and several workers’ organizations have been evicted. The L, 8. N. R. has taken con- siderable lead in the struggles which resulted in the demonstra- tion of 3,000 on Thursday, Aug. 9. MUD PIES FOR RELIEF By a Worker Correspondent LOS ANGELES, Cal—The 8. E. R, A. has a new system of finding employment for workers. This is what happened on one of the S. E. R. A. projects to which 69 other workers and I were assigned. In the first place, we were given a false address and told to go there. After we had spent a day in look- ing for the place that wasn’t, we called up and found out where the right place was. I understand that this was pre-arranged, because the right address was nothing like the false one which they had given us. When we finally reached our des- tination, we saw that our project was to tear down a hill of dirt on a certain school ground, which only two wecks ago we had been ordered to build up. ‘When thousands of workers are homeless, and when thousands of workers live in nothing better than pig pens, it seems very funny that the state should order us to make mud pies instead of building clean | homes for these workers. I under- | stand that the bosses are only doing this to make the people think that the thousands of dollars which have been appropriated for unemploy- ment relief are going for a good cause. Yes, the cause is good—good for the boss; it helps to make him fat. Workers, the bosses will always use us for the goat unless we or- ganize against such stupidities as cccurred on our project in Highland Park. Demand that all the money which is being used to train thou- sands of young workers in the United States to go out and kill young workers in other countries should be used for the unemployed. Refuse to make mud-pies or re-dig | ditches so that more workers can be fooled. Talk with your fellow work- ers. Organize! Letters from WORKERS ASK FOR MORE New York City. Dear Del: Today’s strip in the Daily Worker is just fine. I hope you will give us more of these action strips. Just now there is nothing more interest- ing than the news about the drive for new readers. But, in between drives, why not have such cartoons every day? So many young workers are in the habit of reading the “funnies.” I shake your hand, Yours for a million D. W. oe 6 SPEAK TO YOUR NEWSDEALER Brooklyn, N. Y. Td like to make a suggestion which I believe will help increase the circulation of the Daily Worker. I have noted that all news stands that sell the Daily Worker put it in an obscure corner where it is not noticed. I believe you should urge the news dealers to put the Daily Worker in the same prominent position on the news stand as other papers, so that it can be noticed whenever workers buy r>wspapers. A. S. | SOCIALIST WORKERS FORCE) ISSUE OF UNITED FRONT Brooklyn, N. Y. Last night 500 workers, Socialist, Communist and others, witnessed a debate forced upon the Socialists by popular demand and passed a reso- lution opposed by 11 Socialists, that Our Readers the National Executive Committee of the Socialist Party at once an- swer the letters of the Communist Party and enter into negotiations for the United Front. This meet- ing was held at Eastern Parkway and Utica Ave., Brooklyn. Again and again, during the course of the debate, the assembled workers expressed their approval of the efforts of the Communist Party to establish the united front and laughed down the futile efforts of the Socialist speakers to explain why, “although it was desirable, it could not take place at this time, ete.” When the Socialists raised the question of the sincerity of the Communist Party, the speaker for the Communists, John Morris, pointed out that any unit of the Party, any organization in which there was a Communist group, could upon their own initiative en- ter into local united front actions, whereas the Socialist Party leaders forbade their rank and file, the So- cialist Party and Y. P. S. L. locals from not only entering into joint actions, but even from speaking from the same platform with Com- munists. | ; At the time that the workers de- ;manded the debate, the Socialist speaker said that he was willing but discipline bound him to the de- j cisions of the N. E. C. However, the insistent demands of the audi- ence forced the debate and a ques- tion period as well, J. M. ‘ to see if the merchants are letting | other groceries than what is on this list go out. They say they have to | comply with their lists, or it would go hard with them. | If the poor folks are found out getting things that are not listed, such as cold meat, or a roast, or Pickles or cookies, there would be hell to pay. My husband and I are 100 per cent for the Communist Party, be- cause we know that times will not change until the workers are in power, and then the capitalist graft- | ers will be done with. Leviton Electrical Wages Are Cut 15% By An Electrical Worker Corre- spondent NEW YORK.—The conditions in the Leviton Electrical Manufactur- ing Co., at Greenpoint, Brooklyn, are getting worse and _ worse. Starting the week of Aug. 14 they cut pay 15 per cent, and are forcing the workers to turn out more pro- duction for less money. The pressers in the porcelain department were making an ay- erage of $21 a week, which has been cut to $18.50. The foreman keeps timing you with a watch, telling you to hurry up, turn out better and more products. Raise on Relief Joba Sought in Lake Wales By a Worker Correspondent LAKE WALES, Florida—I am chairman of the local Unemployed Brotherhood and we are short of finances now, and, if you can, try to get us a donation, even as much as $2 a week, while we are fighting to get a raise. We have got a hard fight, the relief heads are fighting us and the capitalists also. Of course you can’t let this be known right now too much. Last Saturday there was trouble when the fellows were getting paid off. One of the men that was work- ing on the relief got in a little fight. I didn’t see it, but it seems the man that pays off the workers slapped the worker and he hit him. It was something about a check or something. Anyway, the relief worker is in jail, but the boss is free and never was arrested. NOTE: We publish letters from steel, metal and auto workers’ every ‘Tuesday. We urge workers in these industries to write us of their efforts to organize. Please Total Received August 20, 1984 to August 23, 1934 Distriet 1 (Boston) Picnic $186.05 Helma Hianna 1.00 Total to date $187.05 District 2 (New York City) Harlem Finnish Club Joint Comm. $ 6.88 Comm, of United Workers Orgs. of Hempstead, L. I—Affair 12.15 Red Builder Affair 5.00 Section 16 Unit 1—P. B. 10.00 Section 17 Unit 7—P. B. 5.00 Jackson Unit 1, Section 16—P, B. 10.00 United Front Supporter 1.00 Sam Miller 5.00 Osius Miller 2.31 Sara Tovren 2.00 Jacob Fradin (Youngstown, Ohio) — 1.00 William Allegro 1.00 F. Makler 30 A. Garcia Diaz 2.00 Paul and Muriel Dean 2.00 W. P. Shannon 1.00 A Friend 3.00 Cohn Hill 5.00 Max Shulman (shop) 5.00 Lee Satzman 1.00 Faier ols H. Halpern 15 Total to date $ 81.84 District 3 (Philadelphia) Daily Worker Picnic $250.00 Total to date $250.00 $561.69 District 4 (Buffalo) Z, W. Rose $ 135 Makela 2.00 Total to date $ 325 District 7 (Detroit) Karamekas—P. B. § 6.15 Sophie Kishner—P. B, 6.15 Estell Wolfe—P. B. 6.15 Matt Radich—P. B, 5.00 Detroit Of.—P. B. 5.00 Total to date $28.45 District 8 (Chicago) J. Heltber # 1.00 Total to date $ 1.00 296668FB) etaoie shrdlue shrdiue hrdlu District 9 (Minneapolis) Duluth ©. P., Unit 1 § 2.00 8. T, Yhdistys 3.25 Total to date #525 District 20 (Oklahoma) HC. Schad 3 10 Total to date $ 1.00 District 21 (St. Louis) J. Kunzelman § 4.00 Total to date $ 400 TOTAL ALL DISTRICTS TO DATE $561.69 Detroit District School Opens for One Month DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 26—The District Training School of the Communist Party will open tomor- row at the Workers School, 321 Erskine, at Brush. It will be a full- time school for a one-month period. Selected students from various parts of the Michigan district will receive intensive instruction in the basic elements of Marxism and Leninism, trade union strategy and tactics and in other subjects to qualify them for leadership in workers’ struggles. The majority of the enrolled students are auto- mobile workers, TRIAL SUB OFFE) DAILY WORKER 30 KE. 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 ... Note: This offer does not apply to re- nor does it hold good for Man- ind. Bronx. BOOST “DAILY” DRIVE— —— Here’s Wha oak Party member should our ‘Daily’!” 3,000 new readers!” “A real sales manual for our tremendously!” “T've never been a salesman, how to sell the Daily Worker!” _ Send for YOUR copy toda; Builders.) per copy, Parcel Post collect.) Every Party member should get the letters to us by Friday of each week, 50 East 13th Street, t They Say-- | read this booklet!” EARL BROWDER “Accurately analyses the best methods for winning workers to CLARENCE HATHAWAY “Explains, in a large measure, how New York added nearly CHARLES KRUMBEIN ‘Daily’... Helped our Red Builders HARRY LICHTENSTEIN ‘but this pamphlet sure taught me NEW YORK RED BUILDER About That Important Booklet “HOW TO SELL THE DAILY WORKER” yy! Price, 2 cents. (Free to Red Sections should order a bundle for their Units. (Price 1 cent buy a copy, Daily Worker Circulation Department New York, N. Ys yds