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/ Page Four J a DAILY WORKER. YEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1934 CATTLE SHOT AND LEFT TO ROT ON PLAINS OF NEW MEXICO Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board DENTAL CARE (Concluded) Most patients, when denti question as to the h brush, wi certainly, I brush my I don’t get up too late say, in the minds of most mouths. It is true|ing cattle and sheep. The terrible] the tooth brush is u that certain people are immune to|drought continues unabated and} Personal clean dental decay; that is, their teeth y we are faced with the crop de- nothing to ma will not decay whether they use the | struction and cattle killing plans of their mouths. i om the; brush or not. But since they are|the last two years. truth. The t if y used,/so few in number, and since many| Wwe traveled yesterday 90 miles 48"a very useful aid in preserving | people are liable to have tro out in the ranch country and almost the health of the teeth and gums.|with their gums, we recommend | eyery mile the smell of dead cattle At the present time, it is the only| that all workers make use of the| made us mad to think of the ‘crazy means that working men and wom-/ tooth brush. We do not mean tojryle of capitalism. No planned en have for helping themselves.|say that once decay has set in,| economy, whatever, no provision to But it is also we remember that | that a worker himself, without treat-| save th vast herds for food and the tooth brush has certain limita-| ment by a dentist, can stop the \leather. They are not even taking tions; that there are certain things | mouth healthy by keeping his gu »| have healthy food. He can help to keep his strong and tough. Often, objections to the use of the brush amples of individuals who never brushed their teeth and yet progress of this disease. Nor is it are raised by giving ex-| have No A ttempt To Salvage Vast Herds By a Worker Correspondent working out of this town now shoot- |the hides now. Hide houses are all full of hides that cannot be sold at any price, and still shoes are $6 a Today it made our hearts heavy to see even dairymen driving out the dairy cows two miles to be shot 1, poor faithful cows ing along. fellow remarked that it would not be long until they would be leading the workers out to execu- tion in just the same manner. To |see what is going on in California |it seems altogether a possibility. Each morning as we come to work | Wwe pass a church where they are praying for rain and deliverance |from these intolerable conditions. Soviet Union, by using | planned and scientific economy and | safeguards, the farmers have over- and economic head-work and simply by proper application of known meth- ods, while here we destroy our food reserves in order to bring about re- lief, and, when this fails, pray to the supernatural to save us. AAA Offici 1 ‘Threatens To Cut Relief of Those Who Don’t Vote Right | The fallers were put on the 8 cents | By a Worker Correspondent S. Dak.—Aiong the |fascist road which the government administration is travelling, with its many Hitlers and would-be Hitlers bloom. Even out here, where it is so dry | ~ that the cactus can hardly live and ROSWELL, N. M.—Five crews are | Oregon Lumber Workers’ “‘Home”’ * Lumberjacks Speeded By Contract System | By a Lumber Worker Correspondent POWERS, Ore.—Powers is a small logging town, where the main in- dustry is cutting and logging timber on Eden Ridge. The logging and railroad crew work on day pay, buckers log cutting Jripo system. As the men are as yet tem here is only a speed-up, for the , Workers have absolutely nothing to | say in regard to work, conditions or | Price per thousand feet. | At present the fallers get *eight cents per square foot and the buck- | rs cut logs for 18 cents a thousand. | Before the crisis hit we got 25 and | 30 cents a thousand for long logs, | 30 cents for unusually rough ground, Now we cut for 18 cents regardless | of ground conditions or length of | logs, with white cedar, which has }@ much higher commercial yalue, | the same price as fir. | This cut in wages and conditions was taken with the understanding that we were on a sliding scale, | that when the price of lumber rose our wages would also raise. At one time wages for buckers and fallers went down to 12% cents a thou- sand, then cut back to 18 cents. a square foot basis. The rigging men get $4.75 low, while 50 cents an hour or $4 a day is low on sec- tion work. Workers leave here and generally return with a report of conditions being much worse outside. That is the main reason for them sticking | like grim death to their jobs in spite of the fact that lumber has raised a great deal and wages are so little, The N. R. A's boast of prosperity is false. The conditions are some- | what better here than they were {shuts down. There is talk at the | because of the N. R. A. code. | The workers’ lot here is thi | When the camp runs, get up, at 4:30 |in the morning, eat your breakfast | at 5:30, catch the jitney at 6. It |takes over an hour to ride the 14 miles or more. Hurry to your work | place. Hit the ball at top speed. Climb back to the jitney, which| necessity of saving Cort Stuart's | leaves, if we are in luck, at 5 p.m,,| cattle and tools as the first step in|engage in any struggle without |and gets us home at 6 and some- times 7 o'clock, | The railroad and rigging men get |time and a half for overtime but | we do not. Under these conditions we lumberjacks produce the fine | lumber that goes in the swell homes of the parasites and their hangers- | on who call themselves 100 per cerit | | Americans and organize mobs of/a plow. | hoodlums and send force and vio- jlence against the intelligent work- ize and demand a decent standard | Workers, answer the reign of ter-} | ror against your daring comrades | by joining and supporting the Com- | munist Party, the Party that fights | ;, | the battles of your class, the work- ing class. Organize. Farmers In Ohio Fight Forced Sale By a Worker Correspondent MEDINA, Ohio.—Farmers of Me- | dina and Lorain counties, Ohio, at- tempted their first “penny sale” on | | Tuesday, Aug. 21, near Spencer, Ohio. Cort Stuart, a Medina county |farmer, was faced with the sale of | his farm macinery and cattle to | Settle a $387 chattel morigage held by the Spencer Cooperative Eleva- tor Company. Members of the Ohio Farmers League, affiliated with the United Farmers League, |decided to organize to hold a | “penny sale” as soon as they got | wind of it. | Leaflets were put out urging the | farmers to protest the sale in order |to,set an example for the mort- gage-holder and prevent the future sales of farms and chattels. Plans were not carried out successfully, | however, and the sale went through | despite the efforts of the 500 farm- the fallers and/ under Hoover, but we don't get our|ers and city workers gathered at on contract or bills caught up with until the camp | Stuart's farm. In opposition to the farmers and unorganized the contract sys-| present of no work for September | Workers there were business men | from Spencer and some rich farm- | ers of the community, attended by | the sheriff, 14 deputies and four officers. Shortly befare the sale was ready | to start, Leo Wene, of the Ohio | Farmers League, spoke to the crowd, explaining the situation and im- pressing upon the farmers the saving their own farms ‘and chat- tels. F. K. Amer followed with an | appeal to stop the sale and also to |fight for the Moratorium Bill of | the Small Home and Land Owners | Federation, which he represented. |A rope was hung from a nearby | tree as a warning to anyone who| |dared bid over eight cents. The first thing on the block was The auctioneer asked a |dollar bid to start with. He was | offered two cents have the right ers who have the courage to organ-| to reject any bids,” said the auc-| tioneer, “You get two cents,” yelled | of living. \a farmer, All of a sudden a scab bidder, half drunk, bid one dollar for the plow at the direction of the attor- ney, One of the men took off his | Jacket, walked up to the cowering scab bidder, and asked him to with- | draw his bid. The deputies crowded ____..|around and, meetings no resistance |from the crowd, were able to hold I and a few others of my poor ¥ farmer neighbors exercised | our constitutional right to sign a petition for some independent can- Forthwith a little A. A. A. official (oh, yes! they say he pulls |down about $100 per month for being what he is) started to run | around the neighborhood, threaten- | of relief, which as it is is barely sufficient to keep us and our families in existence. |Land Owner and Store Rob Farm Laborerin North Carolina Area By a Sharecropper Corre- spondent ST. PAULS, N. C.—In this cotton and tobacco section it's everywhere for the wage it can do, and other things it can-| possible to cure pyorrhea with a { Rot do. | tooth brush. Here again, it is im- eb We all know, of course, that a| possible for him to treat himself ef- pair. FE tooth brush will help to keep the| fectively. = teeth clean; that it will remove par-| Working men and women, if they ticles of food, and deposits which | are to safe-guard their health, must Stick in the teeth. However, this is| force the city to make medical and fs not the only good w dental care available to them. The | down and brush can do. If it is used o -| demand of workers’ that the city as- | With calves t it will give the gums, w sume this responsibility should be| One old surround the teeth. hat exercise | supported by every physician and Which is so necessa to keep them | dentist. Together with the working healthy, It is generally admit class they must carry on the most today that because of our soft d: intense activity for the enactment the teeth and gums are not used| of H. R. 7598, the Workers Unem- sufficiently to keep them strong and | ployment Insurance Bill, the only healthy, We know, for example, | measure which will give the working that a muscle if not used, becomes | class adequate medical and dental soft and flabby. In a somewhat simi-| care and which will insure the phy- jar way the gums become soft,|sicians and dentists a decent stan-|In the spongy, and sometimes even bleed. dard of living. With a tooth brush, a worker can $ * * supply his gums with the necessary Note: An article describing the|come the drought exercise which they do not get in| proper way to brush your teeth| stfess the ordinary process of chewing | will soon appear. eee 7 E IN THE HOM By HELEN LUKE Milk, Milk Everywhere, and Not a Drop to Drink! c lism is sure full of con- Delegates will be taken to visit a tradictions. Presenting a map of;new Workers’ International Relief the United States showing relative} Center for children in the Negro average prices of milk over a five-| district of the South Side. year period, “Consumer’s Guide” | . . OACOMA, (issued by Consumers’ Counsel of | the A. A. A.) says: “Consumers in|,, 1 New Sata Nie ee Sinaia news cities along the Atlantic Coast and | Hons Sgatnst Wien 20 a : rea: A. A. N. R. A. and kindre in San Francisco paid most for their | Cl@lly those of milk, are being led | natched eaglets, milk in those years. This is the|PY the Women’s separa area where the demand is greates che sep net, sd bats hones and the supply relatively smallest.” | ids. Empty mil ee on eet : But it seems somebody threw a/ Will be featured. Brownsville dem-| the grasshoppers starve to death, we monkey wrench into the old vaunted | Onstration, Hopkinson and Pitkin have them. . “law of supply and demand” which |AVes:; assemble at 11 am. Wil-| 4s supposed automatically to create | iamsburgh rally at Varet and Gra-| snow cheap prices for plentiful goods. ham Aves. same hour. For there was such a huge “sur- plus” of milk in New York state) Can You Make ’Em_ | dicates. that the State Agricultural Depart- 7 ment authorized the expenditure of Yourself? half a million dollars to advertise and “sell” this “surplus” milk—at| Pattern 2012 is available in sizes . the same time that prices were|smali, medium and large. For in-| ing our line raised, making it impossible for| dividual yardages see pattern. Tl- Workers to buy as much milk as|lustrated step-by-step sewing in- formerly! Truly the ways of the|structinos included, Jord and capitalism are marvelous | to behold. | The farmers’ total cash income} for milk dropped from $1,847,000,000 fa 1929 to $985,000,000 in 1923, re- forts Consumers’ Guide. The ay- ‘erage drop in milk trust prices over @ corresponding period, judging by| 4 figures issued by Secretary Wallace, | oy wasn't nearly so great in percentage. r i In the Chicago shed the profit fig- hell ure was: 1929, 27.07 per cent, and in 1932, 18.16 per cent; in Boston, 25.19 per cent, dropping to 15.37 per | cent; in Philadelphia, 36.21 per cent dropping to 23.22 per cent. Though | the profit figures had dropped) further by 1933 they were still out- | Tageous, being 10.85 per cent, 16.26 per cent and 21.71 per cent for these | three sheds, respectively. (The New Work shed warded off A. A. A.| @udits, which were made in other sheds.) The effort of the Chicago dealers to climb back to the former tre-/ Mendous profit figure is shown by the recent increases in the price of | milk in the “windy city.” Milk is| quoted in Consumers’ Guide at | eight cents in Chicago on May 22} Of this year and at ten cents on} duly 3, an increase of 25 per cena +) We_do not need to ask the unem-| * ployed and the employed workers | ) 4 their incomes increased 25 per} "ent in the same time. | Bread: took a jump in Chicago} ’ from 6.9 cents per pound for white | /@nd 8.8. cents for whole wheat on| March 27 to 7.3 and 8.9 cents, re- Spectively, on June 5. (The most ~~ recent figures will doubtless show| further increases.) | Only determined resistance to} ‘ising prices of food by the masses | ‘Of workers will avail to hold these | back “from rocketing flights | the stratosphere. Pee Once more we remind the Chi-| ‘Gago comrades of the Conference mst the High Cost of Living, Vilnis Hall, 3116 S. Halsted St., 7 pm. tomorrow. All workers’ nizations should send dele-| ; housewives are invited. Plans be discussed for a city-wide against high living costs.| 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. know you will stick by me... tional Labor Defense SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND ‘ree 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 Letter from Haywood Patterson, Kilby Prison, June 29, 1934. $15,000 slave on the farms. Sixty cents or 70 cents per day and from 10 | to 14 hours per day is the way they work, and then in most cases they have to take an order to some high priced grocery man—which still reduces your day's work by 10 cents to 25 cents. ‘Vote Communist To | Fight Against Hunger (By a Worker Correspondent) BEMIDJI, Minn —The unemployed workers here have to get along with just as little as possible. A com- mittee representing all mass organi- zations in Beltrami County met about 1% months ago with the Re- lief Board of Beltrami County for | an interview. At this meeting one of the Board members, also a Red} Cross member, admitted that it| takes her (a family of five) $24 per| month for the most necessary staple | groceries, But the Relief Board changed Relief Agents as soon as} the workers and farmers demon- strated and won their demand, in order to cut them down again. The biggest protest the workers and farmers can give this fall is by voting Communist. NOTE, We publish letters from farmers, agriculture workers, lumber and forestry workers, and cannery workers every Thursday. These workers are urged to send us let- ters about their conditions of work, and their struggles to organize. Please get these letters to us by Monday of each week. Unless Every Section and Unit in the Party Throws its Forces Vigor- ousty into the Circulation Drive, the Daily Worker Remains Un- 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) 430, 80 East 11th St. |] Name .. New York city |] Address... “I contribute $...............for the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals and Defense. Oty . State .. A DEIN nada sys se evedersethesean vette eths censnessraceviecsescasécens Note: This offer does not apply to re~ newals, nor does it hold good for Man- hattan and Bronx. BOOST “DAILY” DRIVE— | slow workers are put on a piece | work basis, by the cord. These men |tion of the daily progress made Lumber Company Robs Worker at Every Step | By a Lumber Worker Corre- spondent PORTLAND, Me.—The Great | Northern Paper Co. has its camps | and mills spread all over the north- ern part of Maine, many of them |many miles from any village, At | the present time they are recruit- | ing workers through labor agencies. The men are told that they are | being hired at $150 per day, and | board. Working hand in hand with the camp bosses, the agency gets a fee of $1.25 for each man. From as many workers as can be drawn into this scheming net, transporta- tion is extracted also. If there is a long waiting list, often earn less than $1 per day. Then the boss sends for more men, and the office and transportation fees begin all over again, they are discharged $.75 and some- wages for board, In the men are paid the generous sum of $1 for 10-hour day, and are charged for board, Due to rainy weather and other causes, many of the men are in debt to the company after a season of hard labor. After the men arrive at camp, they buy their tools at the company | store—$1.75 for an axe, that. may) be purchased elsewhere for $,75— $.75 or $1 for a peevee, sold else- where for $.25. Working clothes, gloves and other necessities at exor- bitant prices. When the men leave the job, the company buys back from the men, | for a few cents, these same tovis, | which are sold over again to the| next group. A few spirited men, embittered by this treatment, either | break their tools to pieces, or throw | them into ponds when they leave | If the men quit the job before Letters from (Because of the volume of letters re- ceived by the Department, we can print only those that are of general interest to Daily Worker readers, However, all letters received are carefully read by the editors. Suggestions and criticisms are welcome and whenever possible are used for the improvement of the Daily Worker.) WANTS MORE NEWS OF U.S.S.R. Brooklyn, N, Y, Editor, the Daily Worker: I have read your paper for the past year, May I offer a sugges- tion? While it is true that you have from time to time written of cer- tain events about Soviet Russia, there hasn't been enough informa- there, I am sure that it would add to your circulation if you could have a daily column giving us the latest events transpiring in Russia today. If conditions for the workers of Russia have not improved I know there are many defenses that can honestly be niade. If, however, con- ditions have improved, why should we not be familiar with them? I would like to know, and I am sure many more would be interested to know, how Soviet Russia is pro- gressing with her industrialization. This is just a recommendation. I offer no criticism, realizing the dif- ficulties you are forced to work un? der. I. H. READER, AT 72, ASKS TO JOIN C. P. Chicago, Ill. | In writing this letter, I wish to say I have been reading the Daily Worker. I am an American for three generations. I have been crippled for years, both arms broken and broken knee cap. I walk with @ cane and have to go out every day selling A. W. Faber’s stationery. ‘When I get my stock paid for and my carfare paid I don’t have much left. My business is slack this month, | and my husband is also out of work, and has a crippled shoulder. | I have no money to pay this month's rent, and the landlord shows no mercy. I do not get a the job, Our Readers born and raised in this state of good old honest stock. At the Relief Buro I told them I was a Communist and I will tell the world also. I wish I could travel from coast to coast and spread the Blad tidings of freedom through Communism. My brothers were soldiers in the Civil War. One died for his coun- try. I am trying to get the bonus money but the U. S; won’t pay it, and it’s due me. They used to call it bounty money. | Well, I hope you will enroll me with the Party. I am 72 years old, American third generation. RED BUILDER NEEDED Van Etten, N. Y. Dear Comrades: The Youth School, for the New York * Eastern District Y. C. L., at which there is an attendance from 11 states, on the Finnish property at Van Etten, N. Y., was attacked about three weeks before closing by the K. K. K. Seventy-five to 100 Klansmen came over to the school at midnight, threw rocks and at- tempted to provoke the students to battle, threatening to close down the school, The students resisted the attack and the K. K. K. prom- ised to come back. The next day 16 W. E. S. L. men came up from New York, and other Syracuse, to guard the school. the following Saturday, after the arrival of the guards, the K, K. K. mobilized in full strength and ar- rived at 10 p.m. The veterans, armed with slingshots and clubs, were prepared to meet them. Soon after the arrival of the Klansmen the state police arrived, under or- ders from the Mayor, who had been deluged with protest telegrams from all over the state, to break up the Klan. The Klansmen, intimidated by the presence of the police, be- came orderly and stayed to talk to the students. The school continued its session for the next ten days as per sched- ule. At the closing session a meet- ing and festival was held which 400 cent of relief because I would not sign their pauper affidavit, 2 was local farmers attended. Ss. WwW. G times $1 per day is taken from their | some camps} reinforcements from Elmira and} On! back the one man who dared threaten the bidder. The crowd was sullen, tense, dazed. Nobody acted and the bid went through, |The crucial moment was lost: By the time the farmers and workers had their forces organized again, several more tools had, been | sold to scab bidders. Then a young worker appealed to the crowd to throw out the scab bidders. A deputy getting the worst of it, the sheriff drew out his handcuffs and blackjack and went after the | worker. Only one more attempt was made to stop the bidding. The farmers and workers were urged to rush down to the barn in a body to save the cattle. The sheriff and auc- tioneer evaded the crowd, however, by taking the cows to the other end of the barn and selling them there. Reactionary propaganda, filled with lies, has been started by the capitalist press against the Ohio Farmers League and the workers who came down from Cleveland to help the farmers. The sheriff has threatened to arrest any militant farmers and workers who attempt to resist future evictions, fore- closures, and sheriff's sales. The Ohio farmers will not be intimi- dated, however, They have learned their lesson 'TexasFarmers’ Need Grows, As Relief Is Cut (By a Farmer Correspondent) MINEOLA, Texas.—Down in the East Texas piney woods we will have to do without our peas this winter, and almost everything else, for the drought sure has made farm- ing a failure here. Farmers here sure dislike the Bankhead bill. Some farmers here have been allowed the small amount of 350 pounds of lint cotton to be sold or ginned tax free. Just how =z SClENTUFIC” RuTcHes ‘ can a family of four live and clothe themselves this winter, feed their stock, when they have no feed on account of the drought, and be able to make a crop next year when they are only allowed to sell such a small amount of their cash crop? The drought is going to make 75 per cent of the farmers here ask for relief. The relief rules here will be double last winter. The government is paying from $4 to $20 they say, for cattle, providing they are not poor, and the cattle that are. too poor, well, they are shot and buried and $3 or $4 is all they get. To all toiling people take notice. We may suffer the same fate as the cattle for being poor some of these days. People, let’s stand united. Many here are being taken off the direct relief and given from two, three and four days per month, at $2.40 per 8-hour day, on the county roads. | PARTY LIFE | Hunger, Fascism and War Are Issues in Connecticut Against Unemployment, Terror, Munitions | By PHIL STERLING } Connecticut is a perfect example of the Communist Party’s reasons |for basing its national election | platform on the struggle against |war, fascism 4nd the starvation | measures of the national and state governments under the New Deal. | Connecticut is an important in- dustrial area. Its principal cities contain some of the most important | | American munitions and arma- ment plant and to the workers in | these plants the growing threat of | | war is an everyday reality. Moreover these, as well as work- ers in other industries, have re- peatedly felt the heavy head of budding American Fascism in re- cent strikes. The Pratt and Whit- ney aircraft workers in Hartord. The workers of Remington-Rand, | which can turn from the manufac- | | ture of office machines to machine |guns in 24-hour notice, the Dan- |bury furriers and the Bridgeport |moulders have all felt the clubs of local or State police within the past |six months. They are not blind to | the complete likeness of thei i |uations to those of the striking workers on the West Coast and in the middle West. See Need of Struggle Workers never go on strike or | | | grave reasons, Their recent experi- ences have thus convinced them that the Communist Party demands | against Roosevelt's “New Deal” at- tacks on their living standards is| rooted in every-day fact and that | local, State and national elections can serve them as a means of con- | tinuing their fight to protect these living standards. Workers Distrust McLeyy In his brief tenure of office, McLevy has managed to earn the distrust of large mass of workers by | his use of police against jobless snow-shovellers who demonstrated against delays in the payment of their wages. More recently he further alienated new masses by his ruthless smashing of the relief workers strike. Lest there be any mistake about his attitude, Mayor McLevy has referred, on several oc- casions to jobless workers as chis- ellers and connivers.” This in part, was his reply to charges of graft in unemployment relief, in his, a So-| cialist city. But whatever the workers of this State may have learned from their recent experience, they cannot be benefitted by their understanding sav through organizd effort. ‘They cannot strike a blow in their de-| fense during the election campaign Communist Election Platform Hits Squarely except under the leadership and organization of the Communist forces. The Communist Party of this State has undertaken, in the elec- tion campaign to furnish jut such guidance and organization, The importance of this job is not yet fully recognized, however, by all Party members and groups in which the Communist Party carries weight. Nevertheless, the work. is under way. Commitees Set Up Special election committee have been set up in all the important cities. | Nomination petitions for the collection of 6,000 signatures necessary to place the Communist candidates are in circulation, Greater speed in this work, inci- dentally is still necessary, according to latest reports. What is more, realizing that the ime to build the Communist Party during, and not after, the Struggles in which it engages, the Party in Connecticut has set, itself the task of “800 members by No= vember 1.” The menace of demagogy by So- cialist leadership has made Bridge- port a concentration point in the campaign, The struggle against war and fascism is being carried directly to the factory gates of many important war industries, such as the Winchester Repeating Arms Company of New Haven and the Ship and Engines Company of New London, which specializes in submarines. But the effectiveness of all these efforts to make the election cam- paign an instrument of intensified struggle by large masses of workers for their most vital and immediate demands depends ,on every Party member and class-conscious worker in Connecticut, Realization of the importance of the election cam- paign not only in Connecticut, but in every square mile of the United States must go hand in hand with action. Join the Communist Party 36 E, 12th STREET, N. Y. ¢, Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. NAMO coecsedccscseecsronseccess Street City campaign over the top, $625 per day. Districts must enter in WINNING Dist, Total to Date Quota % of daily box score of the District competitions will be ‘Bax Sic of $60,000 Drive Donations to the $60,000 Daily Worker drive must be speeded. To put this and insure a three-edition paper, receipts must average ito Socialist competition immediately. A published. TRAILING /Rest of Country) $677.56 | 2.2] vs. 2—New York i I | | 3—Philadelphia| 250.00 | 7.1 * 5—Pittsburgh i ; i | T I—Detroit | 35.45 | 10] “ 6—Cleveland l 12—Seattle “ /18—Milwaukee 19—Denver “ 121—St. Louis Received August 28, 1934 $121.51 DISTRICT 9 (Minn,) , y 4 Previously received 828-42 | otal to date rey TOTAL TO DATE 3954.93 DISTRICT 12 (Seattle) DISTRICT 1 (Boston) Seattle Branch MWIU 1.00 Total to date $239.50 DISTRICT 2 (New York City) rag ea a4 Picnic PB $10.00 Vender Molen _50| DISTRICT 14 (New Jersey) SecSec 2, Unit A Friend 2.00| Total to date $5.00 1, PB 5.00 Anonymous —_5.00 DISTRICT 19 (Denver) Sec 2, PB 15.00 Wm Allegro 1.00) Torrington PB $5.00 Mothers & Daugh- Sce 12, PB 20.00 ———— | Collected by Dist. ters Club 50 N Jackson, FSU 2.00 Total Aug 23 $61.50| tIcor 3.80 Collection from Nick Dinos 1.00 Total to date $277.37| Hungarian IWO 2.00 Mise, donations 3.00 DISTRICT 8 (Philadelphia) ua as ie delegates :70 Unit A scan aera Total to date sarzat) Ont 3 ‘b0 Total Aug 28 $20.51 DISTRICT 4 (Buffalo) Unit 10 2.23 Total to date $20.51 Total to date $3.75 pisTRior #0. (0K) DISTRICT 5 (Pennsylvania) Total to date $1.00 TURE. Fe Oace: bisa DISTRICT 2% (St, Tons) DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) Total to date $4.00 Total to date $35.45 DISTRICT 4 (Louisiana) DISTRICT 8 (Chicago) Total to date $1.00 Total to date $109.75! TOTAL ALL DISTRICTS TO DATE—$954.93 “Accurately anaiyses the best our ‘Daily’!” ‘ 3,000 new readers!” tremendousiy!” how to sell the Daily Worker!” Send for YOUR copy today Builders.) per copy, Parcel Post collect.) 50 East 13th Street, Here’s What They Say-- “Every Party member should read this booklet!” EARL BROWDER methods for winning workers to CLARENCE HATHAWAY “Explains, in a large measure, how New York added nearly CHARLES KRUMBEIN “A real sales manual for our ‘Daily’... Helped our Red Builders HARRY LICHTENSTEIN *"T've never been a salesman, but this pamphlet sure taught me NEW YORK RED BUILDER r About That Important Booklet — “HOW TO SELL THE DAILY WORKER” ! Price, 2 cents. (Free to Red Sections should order a bundle for their Units. (Price 1 cent Every Party member should buy a copy. Daily Worker Circulation Depariment New York, N.Y.