The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 4, 1934, Page 4

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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1934 TEXTILE WORKERS URGE MILITANT STRUGGLE WORKERS’ HEALTH Conducted by the Daily Worker Medic ral Advisory Board VACCINATION The following letter has been re- ceived from a worker. Dear Comrades and by I have vast majority of doctors their organized societies. |no information on the number of | doctors having investments in drug Lauds Record Of National Textile Union By a Textile Worker Correspondent DANVILLE, Va.—I am a worker in Danville, Va., one of the worst Letters Describe Terrifie Soule, Old Colon y and Speed-Up ‘B’ Hour System Keeps (New Frames | | By a Textile Worker Correspondent | CONCORD, N. C.—Gibson Mill is PARTY LIFE Ohio Campers Renew Invitation to Negroes In Mill Means | Condemn White Chauvinism | Extra Work) At Finnish Workers’ Camp “T have been trying to find out| companies, but can assure you the|siavedriver’ towns in the South Gosnold Increase | Setting Continually | preparing to put in new frames. | After Attempt To Bar Them Is Denounced if physicians have money invest-| percentage is very small, and that| They try to make me believe that/| > % %j Negro workers are breaking up the | ments in, vaccin and serum fac- | if doctors advocate the use of|the bosses want the workers to| Stretchout | Faster Pace Aas with sledge Saeiew apaal tories. The profit made in the use| serum, it is not through any mo-| organize but I see that it is a lie — | ee seth i g | ‘The a t of ie of the various se ums is said to be tive of personal gain, but because | If they want the workers to organ-| By a Textile Worker Correspondent | SHIRLEY, Mass.—In this little| throwing them aside. The new) white Saae Pane tee tian ca vite eamiert ake around one aerate ee oy are pease ty ore of its | ize, why do they put every organizer) NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—While| one mill town there is a textile| frames are said to be three stands | workers from “Red Beach,”the Ohio| ing an anti-workingclass posie Senet un Ss praptlgDiia iene in preventing or treating | in jail which comes to Danville. | the local leaders of the United Tex- | braid mill that is the height of | larger on each side. This makes | Finnish Workers’ summer camp,| tion which hurts the cause of eas ae axe aren be ie Sa sae : : ae : I was at the trial when they tried | tile Workers, Batty and Binns, talk | speed-up, which has resulted in} 420) frame six stands longer alto- | ¥85 defeated at a full meeting of| labor and prevents the unity of & aoe”. prieeinia Be) pnitisinga come of your statements—that | Clark. They had to frame some| about the 30-hour week and reduc- | close to 100 workers being Jaid off the campers last Sunday. So| Negro and white workers in the g rs, clergymen, S,|“serums cause many deaths from|kind of a charge against Clark so| tion of the machine load (speed-up) | within a year. Last year 320 work- gether or 36 ends longer. This} aroused were the workers against| class struggle. oe a oe, ee Se ae heart disease,” or that they have |they put him in jail for vagrancy.| in the cotton textile industry, the |er were employed. Now there are | means more stretchout! the white chauvinists that while| 3. That Negro workers are wele | eir children inje soy ieee a Proved themselves scientifically | Clark beat the case. I knew Clark| mill owners are cutting hours down | 230 workers, doing more work. ce i i1| the meeting was in progress two} come to this camp on the same theria anti-toxin, as they have al-| worthless” are simply not true.| when he*was working in the mills} to Jess than 30 hours. Some mills | We have what is known as the} Tt means each of us spinners will) o¢ the group sneaked away while| basis as any other workers and Teady forced vaccination upon us. “These serums are made from animals made sick with the dis- Diphtheria toxin-antitoxin has been proved to protect 95-99 percent of those injected from any danger of before the strike, and will say he| work only three days a week, and is a good worker. How comes he i i | speed-up is the order of the day in |belongs to the National Textile} practically all the mills, “Bedule” system, or the “B” hour ystem. No one knows what the ” hour norm is. One is supposed be running 36 ends more and for the same wage. The doffers will also be doing 36 more bobbing for the third member remained to register a lone vote against allow- ing Negro workers to vacation at that this meeting goes on record in support of the fight for full social, economic and political eases they are supposed to prevent, | contracting the disease. The per-| Workers Union? Because he tried | 3 e but many die of heart disease and| centage of ‘serum sickness” or|the Unit 1 ion,| Last week the handkerchief 'to turn out so much production in| the same wage. a, equality of the Negro masses. | ag s” or|the United Textile Workers Union. | f | . ‘ 8 After a discussion by the camper: Following the adoption of this other ills caused by these inocula-| other untoward effects is even|He told me he was sold out in two| Weavers in the Soule mill were/a “B” hour, but since we have an the followi Vie = was cata io See a tions. Let us hope no worker will| smaller, and these effects are now |strikes by the leaders of the United | SPeeded up two extra looms, now | efficiency expert who constanty| We have already been stretched sit | Aitiowing resolution Was resolution the campers voted te foolish enough to part with his| fairly well understood and pre-| Textile Workers Union, I know he|TUnning eight. In the Old Colony | keeps on retiming different jobs, the | out till we can hardly crag home | a a ees , |Send the proceeds of their recent hard-earned money to pay for|ventable. The anti-vaccinational | has worked hard day and night to| Silk mill workers are now running | norm for a “B” hour is constantly | after work. But Aiie-posn pany Wes | Gan res t ail S = Worse | Gene bests Denenb ot ane vey ving this poisonous blood of ani-| argument about the “blood of dis- |help get members for the UT.w.| six looms. In the Gosnold mills | changed. this method to further increase our tanta at al f workers eee [wore ani ae print Hy an mals injected into the body of any| eased animals” is on par with the|He was the one which got me. to| Workers are running five box looms} If a good fast worker produces; Work. We should make a united) 088 Of race, Color OF navionality | Sgalnst mule poo aoa es bea of his family anti-Communist argument that| join the union and believe me, he| on silk, most of them unable to | over the norm per hour he is given | protest against this stretchcut and | s Daily and the Finnish daily, the | demand that they lessen our task! ‘Eteenpain. The M.D., serum- vivisecting. ising not only uses serums on ani- since Communists believe in the necessity of an armed overthrow mals, and orphan are likely to become but the poor clinic patient | of the capitalist dictatorship, they ‘material’ for experimentation.| bomb plot, every act of violence, These serums have proved them-/ that takes place. selves scientifically worthless as well as dangerous to health. | got a whole lot of others to join| even make $13 a week on these jobs. the union. a bonus, which uually amounts to about 50c a week, After drawing a Did he get any praise for what he had done. No. Gorman are responbile for every hold-up or /|80t the praise, the dirty rat. I have learned that if you lie to the workers you are called an Amer- Today the tone of workers is not that of reliance on the leaders (U. |'T. W.) but they talk that they must j do something themselves if they are |to better their conditions, Just as workers do not believe in|ican gentleman, and if you try to, Our conditions in the mills can | destroying machinery, but in cher- |help the workers by trying to get only be improved if we organize few such bonuses he finds that the efficiency expert (speedup man) is jat his elbow retiming him, The | result usually is that his norm is | raised and in order to make his “B* hour (workers here get paid by the “B” hour) he has to turn out A SPINNER IN GIBSON MILL. Have No Time To Leave Loom. LETTERS FROM OUR READERS ON VACATION Cape Cod, Mass, (Signed) P. H. Secretary of Camp Committe, ’ JOPLIN, Me, “Dear Comrades: “I am writing you regarding the laxness of the section and also the district office in sending applica- Rn | e r : e 1 ishing each technical advance till|/ them to join a good union, which | ynited frqnt movements in the | Comrade Editor, Dail; 5 teri pods | Sr iy Worker: ig i Ee 2 |the time when they can take it|is run by the workers, like the Na-| mills for better conditions over the | 3,£004 deal more production than mile Ealtar, DN Woes. | Hon cards and other mate al we ar Repl; over and run it for their own bene- eee they put you in jail. _ _| heads of the U. T. W. leaders. eras | “Daily” to the local lighthouse | results, nomination petitions which Your letter raises two important | fit, likewise they should not join| The judge told Clark at the trial In the card room four men are FQ (,et CLEC eee oat toiteds oo he sallaa| neat kava: bean bereiene ceeetn points. individual dentists may manufac- In the first place, whereaz| the ranks of those who would de-/he would not give him a job and |stroy modern medicine, but should | he knows nobody else in Danville | MEMBER OF U. T. W. Unity of Employed and |forced to run 98 carders. Here- tofore they had a 13-inch produc- | |tion gear on their machines; now | see it in the dark. It was given without discussion; we wanted to ago and were just received yester- day. ture and advertise their own tooth-| welcome each new advance until| would give him a job, and he told : By a Textile Worker Correspondent it. “ ii ance powders, nowadays even a few med- | the time when they can take it \him he could stay in Danville and [Jnemployed Is Stressed | they have a 16-inch production | ~ jeer eee te geen near the place. | to built tha Panty bok ct For {eal schools or research institutions | over and put it to effective use in| look for a job. But he told him ploye ss Bear, CONCORD, | N.O-—1-ain 8 BROWEL LT. ceever spotted ts and’ started:| years awae- cohmeckedi Witt the are, with many insincere apologies, | improving their own health. that he was not wanted in Dan-| ae Here we workers have an inde-| Mill spinner. In the spinning de- running down to the road to in- socialist Party, but, finally, became beginning to patent and exploit! A popular description of the | ville. | By a Steel Worker Correspondent pendent textile union. About 90 per | : . Brey, c i ‘ 4 Fi | i - partment we are stretched out and | tercept us. convinced that the Communist road. their own important discoveries. | various kinds of immunizing agents| why does Judge Carter not want| SO. CHICAGO, Ill.—Time and|cent were organized but since the ded to the iitni “Say!” he yelled on the way.| the revoluti way out, is the Such practices are considered un-| used will be given in another /clark in Danville? Because he is | %éain steel workers and their fami-| union has not carried on any | SPested’ UP seas “That was a good paper you gave oe thing ton tie eee ethical and are condemned by the! article. IN THE HOME LUKE By HELEN Women—and Groceries, Strikes and War This letter comes from a house-| your stories, women in mine, mill | just |drivers in Danville. We have seen all over this unfair country how | good deal of the workers know that | 40 per cent. much right the workers have to |Join a union, You can join from|ers who participated in the east| tem, this speed-up and strecth-out, | now till Judgment Day and there | preparation for strike should double | is our main issue today. If the | will be nothing said about it just| their organization work, and or-|union is to justify its right to But | ganize workers that are on -part! existence it must organize a struggle |as long as you don’t strike. | you let the workers strike and them | you will see how much right you | have to belong to a union. They try. to make the workers| like the rest of the slave-| lies had been faced with problems struggles for better conditions its | | of class struggle in many ways. A we have to organize. Those work- | time and unemployed in unemploy- | ment Councils, memberhip has dropped to about | | Sys- | The issue of this “Bedule” against this system that must lead | to its abolition. We have no water spiget in the spinning room. Our work is so hard we don’t have time to go to} the toilet or to the card room to} get water. The United Textile Workers Union | is organized in Brown Mill, but their big shot leaders say nothing about our conditions. We workers must take this union into our own hands me.” And he wants us to leave it as often as we can. We shall and what's more there's a sub for sure. Yours for 100,000, TWO VACATIONERS. “ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO PRINT” Brooklyn, N. Y. I would ljke to call your atten- tion to a very striking inaccuracy “My impression was that the dis- cipline and punctuality of the Party was good. I joined the Party in February, but have ne* got my membership book yet. I ti\:k there should be a little more attention given to these matters. I have secured some new members and they are in the same shops. “St. Louis and Kansas City must wake up. wife of Brooklyn, N. Y.: and factory to the “Working| believe that every one which be- and control it ourselves. We must! thi i i District please ” Box 87 ‘i ‘ i aay | v | | i g in one at least of two reports of| Will the Missouri pl “tm a worker's wife and feeling | Woman,” Box 87, Station D, New longs to the National is a xussian BOO CHIS S IN demand the end of this stretchout | the esteemed N. Y, Times. In that | answer this?—Editor. | York Ci Red. How can anyone be a Rus- and speed up. We must demand aj paper for Suly 20, 1934, under the | the pressure of the high cost of living. How we housewives are hit! Things are going up from day to day and all the blame is put upon the unemployed. Yourself? “LaGuardia and his henchmen ; a Genes seas See is cs : —-— ee eats : are putting asales tax on the small | Pattern 2009 is available in walst oe york: They are junking 1,000 of BY 8 Tanto “Worke: Corsemgnrent 6 ate oe pea tea | And on the first page of the same || 95 — 12th STREET, N. Y. C. business men and unemployed | Sizes 26, 28, 30, 34 and 36. Size 28| more looms to move spinning in| LOWELL, Mass—One of the Dut it is nee costes bo An A al to the newspaper for Aug, 27, 1934, in re-|] 51 cong me more informa- workers, under the pretense of re-| takes 1% yards 54 inch fabric, |the place, which means more) Ost antique pay systems in the | thousands of hours that the work- | porting the Richberg Report, under || “MNS Se Me raunist Party lief. At the same time big interest | ._, | Weavers out of work, and no more % > is being paid to the big trusts. Pattern 2007 is available in waist | spinners and doffers will have Here we workers have to stand in| 8s well as the sickness that results : A | 000 persons employed in June, 1934, ne che bosses and their agitator, 2% % 28 30, 32, 34 and 36. Size | jobs, line each week, rain, snow or shine, in some of us catching cold, etc. | | @XTHE LIK GL | tnere were 4120,000 more persons |] Name ...s-esserseeereeesrsees the capitalist. press, instigate the|28 takes 2 yards 54 inch fabric.) There is no law against anything | {70m 2 p.m. till 2:45 pm. to get) If we workers would get together | , sapret ee iene ey Street ... fence | Illustrated step-by-step sewing in- | structions included with each pat- | tern, middle class and the employed workers against the unemployed relief takers. They try to instill in the minds of the masses that those who get relief are the cause of this chaos. | “But we class-conscious workers | know better: that the boss class are responsible for this situation, | that they have no way out except war. They are spending billions} Can You Make °Em | |sian Red when he is born in the South, Now what are they doing at the change. Of course, we know that furniture in the street if you have no job where you can’t pay your rent, and they can cut off your lights and water. Now you let the {workers put his furniture back in the house or turn on his water or lights, and they will put them in jail. I hope that everyone who has |not already joined the National Textile Workers Union, will join. | Riverside mill? They are making a| the grafters do. They can put your; country is that of the Boott mill. our pay before going to work on the second shift each Friday. The day shift has to stand in line after | they come out from work. When we workers asked the com- pany why they could not change | this system and pay us inside, the ‘super said that such a change would cost them about $600 a year and that the company was unwill- ing to spend that. ON WORKERS’ TIME | ers lose standing in line each week, jand send a committee to the boss, backed up by all the workers, we | would soon force the mill owner to change his pay system. If further conviction would be needed on the | part of the mill owner that we want the system changed, a stoppage on the job should be organized. This, if nothing else, would soon bring | him to his senses that it is cheaper | to spend a few hundred dollars a year on a new pay system than to water spiget in the spinning room. We want more of the Textile | Workers Voice, | The Daily Worker invites all textile workers to write on their strike activity. During the strike, first con- sideration in the publication of news and correspondence will be given to the textile strike. This invitation is extended not only to Communists, but to ALL | headline: “Jobs and Payrolls De- clined in June,” but above the ar- ticle itself we find this: “Weekly at Work 2,900,000 over March, 1933. item 1 we find this: “With 40,180,- when the N. R. A. came into being.” H. A. Wages Decreased $2,000,000—Total | Join the Communist Party City igs Sani of Donations to the $60,000 Daily W campaign over the top, and insure a $625 per day. Districts mus Only nine districts are enga; t enter into Socialist competition immediately. daily box score of the District competiti ged in Soci $60,000 Drive drive must be speeded. To put this edition paper, receipts must average orker three- ions will be published. jalist competitions for the Daily Worker allenge $60,000 drive. This is a serious lagging. All Districts must immediately ch for war preparations and various | textile workers. weapons, etc., which can annihilate cities, towns, armies. “We housewives should organize and carry out the plans our dele- gates have brought to us from Paris, how best to combat this men- ace of war and fascism. Before I conclude I want to say something about the return of our Mother Bloor, as I read . . . that on the same ship with our delegates came also the President's mother, that all camera men flocked around jus picture. This mother went to Eu- rope for no other reason except her Personal pleasure. The other mother was of the working class, Mother Bloor, who went there for | the cause of humanity, to lay plans how best to fight the war danger. There was only one re- porter to greet her—the reporter of the workers’ paper, the Daily Worker. It is about time that we realize who are our friends and who are our enemies. “Forward to a workers’ mass paper!” Speaking of the Paris Congress, there’s a vivid report on it in the “New Masses” of Sept. 4, by Ann Bartcn.. If we can manage the space and the permission we'll try to reprint at least a portion of it. “No More Helling,” a true story | appearing in the September issue ofthe (greatly improved) “Working Woman,” now out, tells of a hard | won victory of women wastepaper sorters in a Detroit factory, who struck against unendurable condi- tions. These women are also alive to the war danger and the fact that the paper scrap they handle can) used in war materials. This} story, sent in response to a call for such accounts, represents just the | So think it over, good workers, and| The company is unwilling to lose a few thousand a day in having | and | ; for a glance and to snap her | } Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15e) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly name, address and_ style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. type of story, written by the work- ers involved in the struggle, that) the magazine wants to print. Send Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th St., New York City. if I did receive unpleasant n $15,000 International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East 11th St. New York City 1. contribute §.......... AIOE and Defense. NAME Is 455 les Se csekh'ecee cs Free Herndon and Scottsboro Boys “It pleased me greatly to have received your letter today . ews a few minutes before. It | Join the N. T. W. U. 'Pickets Solid in Milwauke New Gary Furnace Cuts Pay By a Steel Worker Correspondent GARY, Ind.—Here is the latest news in Number 3 open hearth. I reported two weeks, ago about the rebuilding of the furnaces. Weill, | they all produce steel through this furnace. Furnace No. 41 with two ladle stands and a double spout, in other words, two ways tapping. Fellow workers, this improving of | furnaces and new devices might be all right for the bosses but what becomes of the second helper’s pay and the cinder snaper. There is | also a first helper, but it does not | second and third heipers. Fellow workers, before this furn- ace was remodeled, their pay was | from $5.80 to $6.40 for the eight hours, but now their pay is, for the | second helper $4.40 a day, and for the third helper $3.80 to $4.10 a than there was before this furnace was rebuilt. That shows you where | you are standing, Now Fellow Workers, something about the company union represen- tatives. In the Coke Plant depart- |ment, the representatives says he is trying to endorse the unemploy- | ment insurance bill, H. R. 7598. The | representatives of the No. S open | hearth says he is trying to indorse affect him as much as it does the! | day, with two times more work now | spend a few hundred dollars a year the mill out on strike. | ® | By a Worker Correspondent | MILWAUKEE, Wis.—The workers | at Gender, Paeschise & Frey, 324 N. | 15th St., Milwaukee, are on strike. The factory is a metal works, manu- |facturing granite and tin wates of | jall kinds, employing in . “good” | times 1,200 to 1,500 people. There |are now 800 employed, all of whom’ jare on strike, except the, office | force, under the leadership of the | A. F. of L. Federal Local No. 19340. At first the engineers and elec- | tricians did not come out because | they did not have the permission of their officials. So much pressure was brought to bear from within the unions that on the second day |of the strike the fires were drawn |and the power turned off. The strike is solid so far. The | workers are very militant. The A. F. of L. has made an attempt to keep all outsiders off the picket line by giving the strikers badges to wear and cards to carry. They said that if they allowed outsiders the Reds would come and cause trouble. | Not all the workers agreed with this. Some wanted the Reds on the picket line; but the A. F. of L. offi- cials said that they did not want to spend the local’s reserve fund giving lunches to the Reds and out- |siders. So the rule was made and carried out by the captains in all cases. Last night the bosses pulled a false fire alarm and during the ex- citement sneaked 12 or 14 thugs into the plant under the protection of police. The Kenosha firm that owned ; demanding that all unemployed or- and toilets when the workers | | struck. | This is the first strike Gender |A. F. of L, Leaders, However, Try To Weaken | Lines by Barring Unity with ‘Outsiders’ ganizations be asked to help picket | and that the Communists be asked to help, also. So far the union has not acted on the committee’s de- mands. X Not all the workers in the factory belong to the A. F. of L. There is a local of the S. M. W. I. U. in the factory, and there are some strikers who belong to no union. The S. M. | W. I. U. has issued a leaflet raising the demand for a broad shop com- mittee ‘so that all the workers, or- ganized and unorganized, should be represented on the committee. I am enclosing this leaflet and the leaflet issued by the Communist Party, Section 1, District 18. The Indus- trial Union has been hammering in every leaflet it has issued to the shop on the sanitary conditions, | and as a result the company had just begun to install new lockers Paeschise has ever had. For 54 years this has been known as the Black Hole to the workers of Mil-' waukee. “For years this was the | High School for the children of the workers,” said one old man. “The kids went to parochial school, got’ their diploma, were confirmed, and | then went to Gender Paeschlse and got their fingers cut off.” This is one of the largest factor- ies of its kind in the United States, This story should be brought to the attention of the workers of Strat- ton é& Sturstage (I am not sure of the name) in Louisville, Ky., on e Tinware Strik Shutdown In Lorain didn’t weaken my courage and faith whatever so long as I know you will stick by me... .” |a bill to the company where any-} body that has been working for the} company five years straight is to} | be allowed one week vacation with |some of the dies—so they say—yes- 15th and Main, which is the only terday got a court order to remove | other factory equipped to make the certain dies from the factory. The Letter from Haywood Patterson, Kilby Prison, June 29, 1934. SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND $15,000 the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals firm wishes to remove these dies so that they can have another firm) fill their rush orders. The dies were removed today under the protection of the sheriff's department. Police Attack Pickets | Today one of the picket lines tried | to keep the office force from going in and extra police were sent to get them in. Two men were arrested. The police were brutal in their treatment of the picketing strikers, many of whom are women. As a result a committee went from the | pay, and if anybody had over seven | years of service continuously they | were to be allowed 10 days vacation with pay. But fellow steel workers, unless you push this yourselves there can’t | | be any passage of it | NOTE: We publish letters from steel, metal and auto workers every Tuesday, We urge workes, in these industries to wriie us of their working conditions and of their | | question of spreading the strike to ;claims it is making some effort to 4 efforts to organize, picket line to union headquarters, same kind of stuff made in Gender Paeschlse. This shop will probably make some of Genders Paeschlse’s rush orders. The S. M. W. I. U. raised the National Enamelling & Stamping, which is only two blocks from Gen- der Paeschise, has similar working conditions and is equipped to scab on some orders. The A. F. of L. spread the strike. There is a Fed- eral Union in National Enamelling. They have voted strike a number 3-Week Mill By a Worker Correspondent LORAIN, O.—The Lorain National Tube Co., the only factory in the city of Lorain, has been closed down for two weeks, and now the bosses have extended the shutdown for an extra week. Layolls at Sheet Mill in Baltimore By a Worker Correspondent BALTIMORE, Md—I hear the company will lay up all of their own boats as fast as they come in| with cargo. That means the Oregon Steamship and Calmar liner. The Swedish ship under charter will) continue for a while. | The Ware House Sheet Mill is now working six hours per day, four days per week. About 300 were laid off there. Looks like a grave- yard at night. The company union is. now post-| ing minutes on bulletin boards. The /next scheduled meeting is on Au- | gust 25th. The minutes give the im- | pression the company men are try- | ing to work for the week for the men, Here is an example. Mr. Wolf reports, “The catches on mill No. 12 need air fans.” Mr. Wilson re- | plied, “Due to the present business ‘conditions, the company is not spending any additional money. Cooler weather is coming and that will be a help.” | if OH A Red Builder on every busy | street corner in the country means and accept challenges from other Districts! % of ; i z & ear | 25 Districts $995.05 | ~ we | WINNING TRAILING Received Sept. 1, 1934 Previously received TOTAL TO DATE DISTRICT 1 (Boston) tal to date, $ ‘Total York City) DISTRICT 2 (New 6 PB $5.00 o/p 5.20 ae {2 PB 10.00 Jacob Fradin 1.00 Sec 2, Un 148 A Friend 1.00 PB . 3 Okum 3.00 3ec 2, Unit 5B Wm Narolsky —_ 1.00 5. 3ec 12 10.06 Marcus 2 PB . Sec 2, Unit 33S PB 5.00 , Sec 2 Total Sept 1 $58.20 Seo? Un 68 Total to date $667.42 DISTRICT 3 (Philadelphia) 5.00 Total to date $250.00 DISTRICT 4 (Buffalo) Total to date 6.05, DISTRICT 5 (Pittsburgh) $39.04 Total to date DISTRICT 6 (Cleveland) Total to date DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) Sec 6 Un 3 PB $3.54 W Mollenhauer 10.00 Sec 6 Un 2.C/p 1.00 Total Sept 1 $24.54 W Mollenhauer 10.00 — Total to date $91.46 DISTRICT & (Chicago) £2.00 Epstein Section 1 Sec 1, PB ‘Workers Bookshop vs. | \ | | 3—Phila. | 250.00 7.1 « 5—Pittsburgh | | j 1—Detroit. | 91.46 | 2.6 ih 6—Cleveland | | | 18—Milwaukee | 39.55 \ 3.9 = i | 19—Denver | 31.51 | 7.8 it 5.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 Total Sept 1 $60.50 5.00 Total todate $177.25 PB | DISTRICT 9 (Minn.! SS Rubin $4.00 Total to Total Sept 1 $4.00 DISTRICT 12 (Seattle) ) date $14.08 Total to date $1.00 DISTRICT 14 (New Jersey) , Total to date 95.00 DISTRICT 15 (Conn.) Russian Nat'l Total Sept 1 $10.00 ‘Mutual Aid $10.00 Total to date $19.78 DISTRICT 16 (Virginia) Total to date 91.00 DISTRICT 18 (Milwaukee) Sub-Sec PB $3.00 Section 1, PB 5.00 Sec 1, PB $5.00 Section 5 8.55 Sec 1, PB $5.00 Total Sept 1 $3 Sub-Sec PB _1.00 Total to date $39.55 DISTRICT 19 (Denver) Total to date $3151 DISTRICT 20 (Houston) Total to date 1.00 DISTRICT 21 (St, Louis) Total to date 08 DISTRICT % (Lonisiana) Total to date 1.08 DISTRICT 2% (Florida) .50 | Total to date . 5.00 TOTAL ALL DISTRICTS TO DATE $1662.47 Here Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! York Editions of 8 pages, the NAME To help the Daily Worker launch its three editions, two New pages (8 Saturday), I enclose my contribution. improved National Edition of 6 ADDRESS AMOUNT | a tremendous step toward the of times, but aren't out yet. i dictatorship of the proletariat! 4 Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER 50 EAST 13th St. New York, N. ¥.

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