The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 11, 1934, Page 4

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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDA SEPTEMBER 11, 1934 POLICE ATTACK FALL RIVER STRIKERS WHO TRY TO HEAR ANN BURLAK WORKERS * HEALTH Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board Cancer (Conelusion.) | abnorma! nows signs of growth, or lump or This is true but it is distinctly 2é the breast (one of the more com-| of a lump anywhere; true of cancer mon varieties) note that while much less common, this disease is by no means a rarity among men. And among women, | previous pregnancy and nursing| does not seem to be a factor in causing cancer of the breast, | ‘Any disturbance of digestion not | explained by changing eating hab- its, ete., occurring for the first time in a person over 30, or any fairly jefinite change in notoms in a| person previously subject to chronic recurrent ulcer or other stomach | ‘ders merits a check-up. re pain is not usually an early sign of cancer, which is why s9 many cases are not seen till too late, Pain is rarely the first symp- tom It is interesting to} ANSWERS TO QU Removal of Kidney Stones H. D., Detroit, Mich—We are Ty to say there is no medi- ine that will dissolve stones in the kidney and the nothing that the STIONS | patient can take to drive the out. If a stone is small, it may be passed out by itself. If, however, a stone is large, then the only method of removal is by operation. If the operation is done early, the stone alone can be removed and the kid- ney saved. If you wait too long, however, pus may form in the kid- ney and so damage the organ that it is necessary to remove the kid- ney also. Se ree Frequent Menstruation D. H., Sebeka, Minn.—Treatment of frequent menstruation in young girls is often a ticklish and e¢: perating problem. It usually cor- rects itself without treatment after the 20th year, providing of blood is not too great. Is, how- ever, the bleeding is profuse and the patient has a severe anemia (lack of blood), blood transfusions the loss | In closing we would again em- phasize that this article is not in- tended to alarm its readers. Worry about symptoms will only result in the morbid stirring of one’s imagination. But vigilance are sometimes necessary. At times the womb has to be scraped in or- der to give temporary relief. In extreme cases X-ray or radium treatments have had to be used as a last resort. This may stop men- without panic is the best safe- | struation temporarily, perhaps for guard against many diseases. about a year. Heretofore, medicines This article is written with the | were of no value. Recently, a new Purpose of giving the reader that knowlege which can make him vigilant withort making him Panicky. treatment has been devised for this condition which promises to give | excellent results. This consists of ‘giving injections of snake venom. IN THE HOME HELEN ne LUKE Farm Woman Beaten Trying To Retrieve Crops Creditors of Mrs. Brumme, a; The manufacturer exploits the woman farmer of Wisconsin who | “consumers,” and the newspapers has worked her farm near Kinkers | exploit the manufacturers and dis- Corners for 26 years, have been |tributors, and the bankers exploit trying to drive her off this farm,|them both, and they, all together, having already succeeded in taking | exploit the workers—that’s the away 90 of her former 170 acres, ac- | Merry-Go-Round of Capitalism, cording to a report sent to the | The sublime, naked naievete of :he Farmers’ National Weekly by a! above ad, however, reminds us of farmer correspondent the old crack about “getting Recently Mr. Marco, a rich neigh- rested for letting Merry-Go-Round bor creditor, seized some crops she without any clothes on.” had raised: 300 bushels of oats and 400 bushels of barley; for the latter, worth about $480, he gave a check for $78, which a lawyer advised Mrs. Brumme to accept and which he then took as part payment for his “services!” | When S-;+Bdumme went to Marco’s place to iry to get back | ar- Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 1972 is available in sizes ‘8, 10, 12, 14 and. 16. . Size 12 takes 3 yards 54 inch fabric and % yard PAA re rar oats, kage tbe vertet ie inch contrasting. Illustrated “ 2 » | step-by-step sewing 11 ~ “Marco rushed at her with a pitch- aed esha anya | fork, knocked her down, jumped on her and beat her up seriously.” The | district attorney, Simpson, refused | t) issue a warrant for the arrest of Marco, and tried to get Mrs. Brumme to say she was stealing Marco's oats! Workers of the Osh- kosh Unemployed Council and farm- ers of the United Farmers’ League had already prevented the eviction of Mrs. Brumme after “foreclosure sales,” farcing Governor Schedeman to okay a federal loan for her. Farmers and workers met at her home after the beating of Mrs. Brumme and set up a Committee of Action which demanded that Dis- trict Attorney Simpson issue the Warrant for Marco's arrest. Simp- son stalled. If they fail to get the warrant the committee will mobilize bigger mectings, get popular support for the demand for justice ior this | Working farmer-woman, and picket the local courthouse if necessary. The U. F. L. will fight to get a fair settlement for her oats for Mrs. Brumme from Marco. Exploiters of the Home What's really back of the gush- | ing bourgeois lyrics about the sanc- | tity of the family and fireside, and | the bosses’ terrified shrieks against the efforts of Communists to usher in economical, centrally-heated, | creche - laundry - community - din- ing-room containing housing units, | is revealed in an unusually lucid and disgusting way by a full-page | ad for the Philadelphia Evening | Bulletin in the N. Y. Times of Aug. | 28, It says, in part: “Scene of Action. Visualize a single home. - An individual house in which one family lives. | Consider the constant activity: the | washing, the ironing, the providing | of hot water and house heat, the cooking for breakfast, luncheon and dinner, the entertaining, the care o1 children, the sewing, the cleaning. the refurnishing and ;edecorating, | the painting and repairs possibly the care of the lawn, garden and | for this Anne Adams pattern. Write garage. Each one of these activi- | plainly Mame, address and_ style ties creates sales! Then, if you | number. have a product thaf sells to the | SIZE. home, tell Philadelphians about it| Address orders to Daily Worker in the newspaper nearly everybody | Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th reads.” St. New York City. Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (lic) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) 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 lc didn’t weaken my courage and faith whatever so long as I 3 know you will stick by me... .” Letter from Haywood Patterson, Kilby Prison, June 29, 1934. | $15,000 | SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND . International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East 11th St. 315,000 ‘1 contribute $. and Defense. ..for the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals ADDRESS .....-.. S tr i k ers Owner Is Foreed to Solid Line Close Meeting Hal 500 Daily Workers Distributed at Mass Gathering: U. 7. W. Offcials Organize Vigilantes Welcome Ann Burlak | By a Textile Worker Correspondent | NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—I deaf worker, and I go to a 4 this morning and Red Mike, and another. | name I don’t know, held a meeting in the Brooklawn Park, | and |this meeting. I want to tell you something about those labor fakers They are comedians. They tell only jokes to the strikers, and I saw only a few strikers laugh. I don’t think there are 5 per cent of the strikers that like those dirty rats. After the meeting the strikers |said: ‘We ought to have Ann Bur- lak for speaker.” You know, they all like our comrade Ann Burlak, because they don’t forget she sent 6,000 pickets to the Firestone Mill, and they closed the mill, and the two other tire fabric mills in the south-end with 8,000 pickets, The capitalists are still calling jour Comrade Burlak “Red Flame’ but the strikers don’t worry abou hat. They know she’s not a faker | I am a weaver at the Neild Mill |but the mill is closed by the strike. there were 3,00) strikers at| By a Textile Worker Correspondent FALL RIVER, Ma: ere con- j tinued to be m icketing all over | the town Ss are trying to ferce all factories out in a sy pathy strike. They picketed Shelburne Shirt, but the broke the picket line up. They are morrow (Saturday). The Fall River workers went to Warren today to picket the mills there. Police and national guards broke it up. Tear gas bombs were used to dis- rupt picket lines by the Shawmut mill in Fall River last night. The Ann Burlay " We got the Bigberry Stadium and jpaid for it. The U. T..W. officials |called up the owner and together with the police they intimidated the ner to refuse the place. We went éovn and convinced him to open ihe place. The chief of police threw out a workers’ delegation to protest the police intimidation. He opened the | Police | going to picket all the factories to- | l Of Pickets In Atlanta By a Worke ATLANTA, Ga trike and picketing this mill, Correspondent vith the the the meantime. the meeting was called for 4:30, by a quarter to four 460 workers had already arrived. The cops chased even though nd work the picket Th m aw But they kept coming, | den’t let any scabs in on their) more and more./ When Ann Burlak | 10S: 3 came, she talked to the workers.) The red scare is being published Then about 20 dicks and cops|in all the local press here, that the started chasing her around, the| Workers must watch out for the | workers following her. We finally} Communists who are printing a lot got her out of town, with cops and | of dangerous literature. But the dicks attacking her and all of us. workers in this strike are not pay- | Tonight (Friday) at the Bigberry | ‘ng any attention to the boss’ pap- | Stadium 15,000 workers attended a|°TS and are studying just how to U. T. W. meeting. We distributed get rid of their misery, this inhuman 5C0 Daily Workers. |Speed-up, and stretchout system, | | Some U. T. W. vigilantes threat- | 2nd low starvation wages. | |ened some of our strikers, trying to Not only this mill went out on chase them out of town. trike, but the Mar Mill, Pied The workers of Fall River plan to ™ent mills, (six mil m A hold a protest meeting about the ! ), Riv de Cotton mills a whole U. T. W. policy conc2rning © strike, and Stztedale mill s+ D us, at their own Jot—‘he Liberty c-tu:, too. About ten mills are evs. j | Lot. | We get a lot of literature and the Gar aR | Daily Worker. I got a few of them, | Our Readers Must Spread the | bul we need more. | thot Daily Worker Among the Members | About 300 in one plant in Siner | it, but again the police and U. T. W. officials took the owner to the police station and forced him to take back the place. I worked only three weeks there. I used to run four box-looms for $12 and $13 a week, and we were work- | jing very hard, and all the weavers | are very glad to be on strike, and | —— Ue asta the other departments too. We work | sis z E 8 hours on each shift with no stop) MASS PICKETING KE for dinner, and supner we have to| eat while the looms are in motion. | Je are 100 per cent on strike, and New Bedford. too. Last June I used to work at the ;Dartmouth Mill. I got fired there) because the weavers asked for the 30-hour weck, and we all stopped our looms, and went on the spare floor. We told cur demand to the boss, and he said the company couldn’t do that, and he said we have to wait until he could find out from the company the next morn- ing. They all went back to work, jand in the same tima he asked some | suckers who started the trouble, and | they said I did. He fired me the |next afternoon. So, you see, the boss was afraid of me. But the Dartmouth Mill is on strike 100 per | cent now. The strikers say we ought to have | meetings every day in the week be- | ‘cause Comrades Burlak and Burke | spend a lot of time up the north Letters from | | Qur Readers | lof All Mass and Fraternal Organ- | TOW? are out. y an-| We must give our every izations As a Political Task of First! to this strike, and. put. the Importance! energy Daily | Worker over as our main organizer. EPS SCA OUTSIDE GAS TONIA, N. C., MILLS | } A SOCIALIST PICNIC IN MILWAUKEE |Dear Comrades: July 22 was a busy day for the Socialist fascists of Milwaukee. At the Socialist State Picnic held at | Pleasant Valley Park, which, by the | | way, is the property of a prominent Socialist Party member, the social- fascists viciously attempted to pro- By a Worker Correspendent DANVILLE, Va—Fellow workers | Danville OrganizerTellsWhy | He Favors Rank, File Union IsWhyiEli Keller Holds Back Workers Union Communists to fool jthe good workers. | thermor>, | which exists in German; jthe open. an? j capitalists that Italian investments yoke a fight with several comrades ef Danville and the South; I came who were distributing some leaflets|to Danville some time ago as an attacking the Hearst newspapers for |Ozganizer. I am _ satisfied with the the appeal which it had printed to jw yy the workers have woke up here raid all the headquarters of the|in Danville. I talk to workers every Communist Party. A member of|day. Some of the workers who had | the committee in charge of the pic-|scabbed in the last strike have nic approached one of the comrades) joined the National Textile Work- and asked him where he received|ers Union for which I am an organ- ion to distribute the leaf-|izer. They tell me that the leaders 1 This comrade replied that he|jof the United Textile Workers |teceived permission from no one/ Union were the cause of them seab- but suggested that he read the bing the job. Why? because some leaflet and determine for himself|of the workers who came to join was such that it was permissible !to9 join.the union but could not. |whether the content of the leaflet after the strike was called wanted, BE SURE TO STATE; for workers to read it. The Social- ist refused to read the leaflet and said that the picnic was private (we paid 10 cents to get in) and that they would not stand for Commu- nist propaganda being spread in that park. All during this time the band was playing “‘O’ Columbia the Gem of the Ocean.” We told this Socialist committee- man that we paid admission to enter and we would not leave. By this time a large number of pot- bellied politicians gathered about. The Socialist then said that if we did not leave it would be just too bad for our hides. There were only three of us against his crowd. What were we to do? We stood there and looked at the Socialist com- mitteeman and suddenly without warning a fist shot out from some- where and hit one of our comrades souare in the face. His nose and mouth immediately began to bleed. We realized immediately what their intentions were. They had a fine broadcasting em all over the park, and this vould give them a fine opportunity to announce that Communist thugs had come to the park and were beating up innocent Socialists. A number of young So- cialists intervened and called the committeeman a Hitlerite. We then left. We were infuriated but also satisfied for we had distributed over 4,000 leaflets. And the leaflets he- came more interesting to those who |read them because of this incident. BUILDING THE DEFENSE FUND 1 Kerhonkson, N. Y. Dear Edito:, ‘We are a few women rooming at Kerhonkson. That. however, does not isolate us from contact with the daily events of the class strug- gle—thanks to our workers’ press. In response to the appeal for the Herndon and Scottsboro Boys’ De- | fense Fund, we staged a little enter- tainment by drafting amateurs from the group. The result is a collec- tion of $2.00. Please forward the small sum to the ILD with our proletarian greet- | ings to Comrade Herndon on his partial victory. We feel confident le comrade and sympathizer will do his utmot in helping to raise | the, $15,009 to snatch him and the Scottsboro bors from the clutches ; of the Southe:n lynch courts, M. K, §. (for the group) Why? Because they were not work- ing when the strike was called. They told them ‘to go to work and than come out. Then they would be accepted by the union, Why did the leaders want them to scab? That is plain to under- stand. They don’t want the ones who are not working in the union. They want a Reserve Cabin System so when the sell-out comes the workers who are not working will go in and take the workers’ jobs because they did not have them in the union to teach them not to take their fellow workers jobs. Now what did some of the work- ers tell me that scabbed? They told me how some of these workers who claimed they were such good union men and womcn called them names because they would not come out and form a union, when the leaders made scabs out of them. Now, Mrs. Rotie Dodson said one day lasi week that th: Communists hed a foothold in Danville and Schoffield. Well I will give her cre- dit. for telling the truth. We have got a foothold because the workers have learned we don't tell them lies. She calls the National Textile get their names on the payroll and! We have to work unJer cover be- cause we mean good for the work- ers. How did the loomfixers, which was a good union, organize under cover just like the National Textile Workers Union. Did the fixers get | anything out of their union? I say they did. That was what was w rying the Can River and Riverside Co. The bosses then said we will get the leaders of the Uniied Tex- ile Workers Union to come to Dan- ville and get the loomfixers to aMfili- ate with the local of the United Textile Workers Union, Then we can fool them. I got good workers to join the | United ‘extile Workers union and now I am geiting them into the} National Union, They know I | won't lie to them. If we.lose in one | Strike we won't give up, we will try some other way. I know that I have found the right union becauce they put me in jail for being an organizer for the National Textile Workers Union and the Danville paper told lies about me, They put me in jail for vag- rancy when there are 14,000,000 workers out of work. Good workers, I am here in Dan- ville to organize textile workers in the National Textile Workers Union. If you want to know any- thing about the N.T.W.U. I will be glad to tell you. So those that have not joined the N.T.W.U. line up with the rest and help do away vith the stretch-out and speed up. | Tkink about your brother and sis- ter workers that are out of wo: Fer you, yourself, mey lose youi job. So join the U.T.W.U. and, read the Daily Worker. CLAUD CLARK, Organizer for N. T. W. U., Danville, Va. (Signature authorized) Communist Candidate Defies Terror To Talk at Meeting in Lebanon By a Werker Correspondent LEBANON, Pa.—On August 28 we hed en open air mass meeting here where for the first time our work- ers enthusiastically followed a Com- munist speaker. It is quite an event for our Bethlehem Steel-con- trolled town. Everybody is talking about the meeting and the man- ager of the hall has been called to the mayor—orobabiy to be force- fully warned not to allow such a thing to happen again. Comrade Dan Slinger, for Secretary of Internal Affairs on the Communist ticket, kent 2 crowd spell-bound as he described the horrors of war and the neces- | sity of the struggle of the workers against their enemy, the capitalist. class. He told about the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill before Congress, and about the Candidate prozram and aims of the Commu- nist Party. After him Mrs. Pinchot took the floor. Her main object was to show how nics our capitalist system, if enly we get rid of some bed mon in it: for cxamp'e, General Jehn- con of the N, R. A., and about cizht Senators in the Pennsylvania Sen- ate who were oppesed to Mrs. Pin- chot’s good laws. At the end of her speech she condescended to come down to the mass of the people and even shook hands with those of them who cared to do so. DARCY TO SPEAK IN N. Y. NEW YORK—Sam Darcy, Dis- trict Organizer of the California strict, speak at a member- hip meeting of Section 2 on the A. F. of L. convention, Wednesd=y | at 7:39 p.m., at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving Place. A Red Builder on every busy street corner in the country means a tremendous step toward the dictatorship of the proletariat! Dye Workers By a Silk Worker Correspondent PATERSON, N. J. — Eli Keller showed himself up today at the U. T. W. mass meeting. He is trying | to run things as he damn pleases. He allowed Jay Loyestone to speak, | but when Moe Brown, who was! elected by the rank and file to the executive board, asked to speak, he wes refused, + The workers wanted to ques- | tions and have a discussion, but Keller stalled them off until the | end cf the meeting, and then ad- journed. When the wor! manded that a membership meet- ing be called, he said no member- shin meeting until after the strike. He is also svlitting the ranks of the strike by not calling the dve work ers out on strike. The dye workers, who are the most important, shculd have been called at the same time as the broad-silk Ww. . Most of the| workers left the meeting in disgust, and the only picket line formed was led by Moe Brown. One worker expressed himself by saying that Keller should be thrown out of the window. Well, the silk strikers should not depend upon such bureaucratic leadership, but demand that they themselves have a right to voice their opinion at all times because they are the cnes who have to fo back and slave in the mills, and not Keller and the others of his type. We muct fight fo: renk and file control in evcer to win our de- mens, ers de-| Williamsport Workers Like Daily Worker News About Textile Walkout By a Worker Correspondent, WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.—There are cizht sil pills here and several cotton weaving mi and move The A. PF. cf L, hed ergenicers here since the N. R. A. e. sturted I: i They hold msctings in the hell's | and othsrwise and also pass leef- lets cut frem door to doer. | The strike at the National Silk Dyeing Plant has been on for sev- eral weeks and they have been holding meetings in their hall eve- nings. They are also picketing the plant, The state cossacks and a Jarge number of county deputy sheriffs are there. The Dyeing Company is teaching some unskilled This evening there will be a oub- lie mesting at ihe Court House. t leaders irom out of town, in- Pinchot’s wife. | cossecks are pstrolling the vicinity of the textile plants here. | The people here are highly pleased with the Daily Worker’s reporting and editorials PARTY LIFE More Intense Fight Urged Against It While Emphasizing Struggle Against Nazis, C.P. Must Not Neglect Fight At the present time, while our Party is active in the struggle against fascism abroad, and par-/ ticularly against German fascicm, I want to show how much our Party is underestimating the strug- | gle against Italian fascism. It is not an accident that many Amer- ican-speaking comrades state: “Italian fascism is quite different from German fascism.” The same theory is supported by the so-called “liberal” press. Thousands of Italian workers have been assassinated and thou- sands are still kept imprisoned in terrible penitentiaries, and many| nds are still in the deporta- tion. is!> No cl onsc:ous worker deny the importance of the Free) Thaelmann campaign and_ the} struggle against German fascism. The struggle of the German work- | ers today is the struggle of the} entire working class. But we should not forget about the struggle of the Italian workers against fascism. Italian Economy Collapsing In this country we have about | three million Italian workers, a! large majority of whom are under the leadership of fascist and social-fascist organizations, Fur- in Italy the economic is no better than that In the last six months the workers in} Italy have been fighting fascism in are being brutally suppressed. ‘Te Italian economy is collapsing. That is why the Ital- ian fascist government is making every effort to mobilize every agency in an atiempt to cover up the real situation, They are send- ing “commercial delegations” to America, “good will emmissars,’ Balbo and his fleet, groups of stu- dents, and now a “Black-Shirt Band of Mussolini," which or-- sented a concert at Carnegic Hall, | New York Ci The vcurvos? of all this is to arouse enthusiasm among the Ital- | ian workers in America, and at the | same time to assure the American can situation are still good business. In these’ days in Furope Italian imperialism | is playing an importent role in the | war provocetions. Every capitalist | paper is full of sensational infor- mation about war preparations in Italy. Criticizes. Publicity In order to combat Italian fascist propaganda, a mass meeting was| called at the Irving Plaza, under the auspices of the League Against | Black Shirt Band alian Fascism on Mussolini Fascism War and Fascism, LUnita Operaia, the Italian revolutionary weekly paper, and other organizations. In- formation was given to the Daily Worker. Instead of calling a’ workers, regardless of nationali |to attend this meeting, to dema! the freedom of the valiant fighte and leaders of the Italian worki: cless, Gramsci, Terracini, Lucet Pertini and all the other politic prisoners, the Daily Worker printe: a call for “distribution of leaflets.’ But this is not all. In spite of the poor publicity, the meeting was a good one. It was followed at night by a big demonstration be- where fore Carnegie Hall, the Tre demonstration was very tant. For four hours the workers paraded the streets, shouting and singing. and the police found it impossible to disperse the demon- stration. The Daily Worker was informed about this, but failed to print anything, not even mention« ing the demonstration. Now this is certainly incorrect, There are many Italian workers who will believe the propaganda of our enemies, who say that the ommunist Party is not willing to fight Italian fascism to the same extent as German fascism. We know that this is one of the many slanders of our enemy, but. if the Daily Worker and the Party as a whole continues to underesti- mate the struggle against Italian fascism, it will make it very diifi- cult for the Italian comrades to explain the attitude of the Party. The demonstration was impors tant for the fact that for the first time after a long period there was a real united tront of Socialists, liberals, anarchists and Commu- nists, and a good basis was laid for the united front against fae cism and war. G. F Unit 1, Section 1. Join the Communist Party 35 KF. 12th STREET, N. Y. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party Name Street. City i... Box Score of $60,000 Drive Donations te the $60,000 Daily Worker drive must be speeded. compaign over the top, and insure a three-edition pape: Districts mnst enter into Scctelist 1 $025 per dey. receipts must etition immediatel; daily box scors of the District competitions will be published. Only nine districts $60.000 drive. This is a serious lagging. engaged in Socialist competitions for the Daily Worker All Districts must immediately ebslenge and accept challenges from ether Districts! WINNING Total Pereent to ol Date Cros District 25 Mistricts | sisi1.a9 | 54 TRAILING | 425.75 | t21] “ 3—Philadelphin i— 11.96 | 15} | | | 4—Buffalo | 6—Clereland 121.66 | 4.1) 4 39.55) 3.9] « 18—Milwaukee 19—Denver Contributions previously listed under Dis- | triets or Seetions: DISTRICT 2 (New York City) S Namier 00 Morris Seltzer 1.00 Mary Mayer 1.00 Benny Wiss 1.00 Garfinkel $0 I Liershen 50 Aspriel 50S Seltzer 50 Leibowitz 30 Goodman 50 Lucy Gordan 50 F Gershein 50 B Bausvo 5 Raler ety J Merato 25 Pally 35 Abe Kiel 2% Pally 25 | John Verderosa .25 Pally 5 H Gordon 1.00 K A Steinman 1.00 B Condiotty 1.00 Emil L Karp 1. M_ €immens Mo Wertanen 30 Larenga AK Alsak Joan Johnson a G wirta om Anna Mekela © Anderson — .35| Ale: Vyberg 25 ol Aurel D Saurio 1.00 Hundely 100 Jos Pinsky 1,99 Ama Friedland .30 Tony Masiello 50 Georgia Cooper 30 D Penchio 30 Olare. Gordon W Lefkowitz — .30/ M Geteugo M Dierrit 30 Rae Fintg 8 Utons 35 Tacety 25 -B Unessina 25 Rose Marauner .25 B Paris 135 Bertha Blenk R DiBarr 35 I Goldberg 1.00 Rese Chsifen 1.90 S Lerner 1.00 Ananrmous 1.00 Jos Novotny 80° Tuintizer 50 L 30S Bosh 39 30. T Laurio 39 District Total Percent to of Date Quota 2—New York City | sinas.72 | 4.6 3 I 5—Pittsbargh 18—Californin 7—Detroit 12—Seattle 21—St. Louis A Ripps 50 Brenner 38 George Brandon .28 Ananymous 30 Ezekiel Maller .25 Mr. 8 B John Ciodo 25 Paul Larosa = 25 8 Geif (25 SoniaWeinstein 1.00 N. Pisacone 10 John Leon 8 Anonymous “10 Max Sosberg 25 DISTRICT % (Detroit) Frarionsly Hsted. as Plente proceeds: Fi ‘ 2 Br 30 TWO 5. What Bhook alt 108 ped Social Workers Workers Shook- Group 5.00 shop Unit 701 2.00 Bill Haywood Br Br 40 TWO 1.58 81 T.W.0. 19.00 Yugo-Slev Baen, Sec $5.00 evs Club 2.00 fection. 8 5.00 eihelt, Gesangs czm> 2.05 Farein 25.08 Rese Evans 5.00 Br 173 IWO 5.00 {Maz Yenik © 1.00 Unit ¢o1 2.90 Daily Werker Rank & File des meet. 9.00 ILGW0 5.00 Unit 605 718 -YOL 138 Tris W'ks Club 5.00 Individual dons- Br 535 1.W.0. 5.00 _ tions 5.00 Polish W'krs O1 4.09 Silver col 1848 Grees Wkrs C -0.00 Kluchnick Br Unit 308 19.99 TLD 5. Unit, 602 15.00 Int. Labor Sports best Lithuanien Br ub 5.00 ILL. 2.00 Nature Friends 3.00 Unit 502 2.85 Unit 60¢ 2.25 Unit 398 SA 1 fee 6 $.00 Rese Evans 10. Unit 561 Bec 5 3.04 Cecpers Shop 2.00 Nature Friends 5.90 Br % TWO. 3.00 Mendy Shain 5.00 Danis 303 6.09 Tayler, Seo 5 1.04 Here Is My NAME Toward the $60,000! To help the Daily Worker launch its three editions, two New York Editions of 8 pages, the improved National Edition of 6 pages (8 Saturday), I enclose my contribution. ADDRESS Bit AMOUNT $ 50 EAST 13th St. Tear off and meil : DAILY WORKER 1 immediately to New York, N.Y.

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