The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 13, 1934, Page 4

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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1934 WORKERS’ HEALTH | | Conducted by the | Day Worker Medical Advisory Board Dandruff and Dandruff Cures ; As a rule, people do not think of | dandruff as a symptom of disease, | out merely as an annoying and unsightly scaling of the scalp. With | this in view, they yield readily to/ the suggestion of the barber who bed into the scalp after shampoo- ing in all cases of dandruff. The following can be made up by your druggist and is helpful for those| with dark hair, but will discolor light colored hair (grey or blonde): Resorcin—two drachms. | Bichloride of Mercury two applies something from a bottle to| make their hair look nice. If the} 8Tains é: dandruff is severe, they even buy| Betanaphthol—ten grains. — a bottle of some widely advertised | psp rel leaned rand hair tonic and hope for the best. | or ra Mass retig Actually, everyone who has dand-| _ (Shake well before using and rub has a disease of the scalp, thoroughly into the scalp.) Those with light hair can use the| nown as Seborrheic Eczema. It} may occur on other parts of the| formula, provided they substitute skin, as shoulders, chest and face.| for the first ingredient, resorcin. | written above, another drug called | Euresol. This unfortunately, is an expensive substance. The lotion must be rubbed into the scalp, not applied to the hair. Take five to ten minutes to do this, massaging the scalp the while, with | the finger tips. Massage the scalp Tt is caused by a micro-organism; that is, a germ. Hence, it is con- vagion It follows that all of us should use separate comb and br and wash these frequently witl soap and boiling water. In the more advanced stages, dandruff is accompanied by rapid loss of hair, leading finally to permanent bald- ness, Careful treatment of scalp and hair is essential and must be done regularly. Treatment 1. Shampoo the scalp at least twice a week, or oftener if the dand- ruff scales are abundant and greasy. Use a mild soap like castile or tinc- ture of green soap and then wash the lather right out with plenty of Water. If the scalp is inflamed, with thick crusts and very itchy it re- quires tender handling. Warm olive oil rubbed into it with a brush will be of help. After the shampoo, if the hair is too dry, a hair dressing of castor oil, one teaspoonful; and alcohol (fifty per cent) to one half glass of water, will soften it and Jend it gloss. 2. A lotion with antiseptic and stimulating qualities must be rub- IN THE HOME By The Irreducible Minimum “For a long time we'd been plan- ning to write some swell articles | Gater to be incorporated into the Cook Book) on how to get the housework done in two live shakes of a dead lamb’s tail and so have time left for other activities, pre- ferably revolutionary, but, by Jinks, we just couldn’t get away from the housework long enough to do it. After pruning down non-essen- tials, looking for the quickest. meth- | ods, and shifting the remaining program around this way and that, we submit: the: following list of chores as “the barest minimum of things that have to be done: Market for the food and other necessities, looking around, of course, for the best values per dime: prepare the meals (and even if you're not given to cooking but live on fruit, raw vegetables, milk, dark bread, cheese and eggs, you must at least scrub and pick over the fruit and vegetables and pare the rinds off the cheese); wash the dishes and put them away; scrub the sinks, bowls, tubs; clean out the cupboards when they get too clut- tered; sweep the floor, dust and mop at least once in a blue moon; keep the papers, clothing, etc., put away; give the windows a lick and a- promise whenever you've been able to scratch together another months rent, and change the cur- tains for fresh ones. Get in ice if you have no electric tefrigeration, and empty the ice- pan night and morning; empty the wastepaper baskets and garbage ¢an; see that the clocks are right; put up a fresh roll of paper occa- sionally if you are not down to newspapers yet; if you are still prosperous enough to send things out, check the laundry in and out and argue about the extra two or three pounds that appear on the hill, and the good tea towel and one sock that fail to appear in the bag; or, if you cant afford to send ié out, wash and iron the whole blessed works yourself, this alone accounting for a day or two of time ind labor. If you live in New York and you're not rich the chances are strong that you'll also have to fuss around at least occasionally with mousetraps or insecticides, and lye %o open the drains. The tasks outlined are only the zrimmest necessities to make any place habitable, and at that assum- ing no children in the house, and that the place is a flat with hot running water, electric and gas. In winter instead of the icebox to look after in many homes there is @ coal ‘stove, giving off ashes and soot. Then there’s always mending to do, and some colored and fragile shings must be laundered at home. So what if you want to dash off to batch of cookies, a pie, a kuchen, ‘r a new apron once in a while? = After all our painful research, About all we can offer at the pres- Bat writing as a time-saver is that HELEN LUKE in addition twice daily with the fingers alone, to stimulate the blood flow. 3. Wear loose-fitting hats or caps, if exposed to dust and dirt, Where | air is clean, expose your scalp to | sunlight and fresh air. | 4, Pay particular care to general | conditions, such as, constipation, j excess weight, and badly balanced | diet. Reduction of starches and j increase of green vegetables, milk |and fresh fruit are helpful con- siderations, You can see at once that giving advice about the care of the scalp means also advice about general health, and this economic condition may make impossible to follow. A healthy scalp is not an easy thing to accomplish and it cannot be gotten by throwing some well- advertised dandruff remedy on the hair or scalp. {if you do the ironing just after mopping you won't have to put down and pick up a newspaper, The saving will be approximately seven and a quarter seconds per week. We demand a leather medal. Can You Make °Em Yourself? | Pattern 2008 is available in sizes PUB OF ‘RE ‘9G ‘bE ‘ze ‘Oe ‘BT OT ‘BI 42. Size 36 takes 2% yards 39 inch fabric. Pattern 2002 is available only in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 36 takes 2% yards 39 inch fabric. Illustrated step-by- step sewing instructions included. Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (l5c) in coins or stamps (coins prefvrred) 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 Biss! “It pleased me greatly to if I did receive unpleasant news a few minutes before. It didn’t weaken my courage and faith whatever se 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 11th St. | New York City I contribute $.........+.....for the Seottsbore-Herndon Appeals and Defense. NAME ADDRESS aa SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND have received your letter today $15,000 In Ware, Mass. Shut Dow n By a Worker Correspondent WARE, Mass.—Last two of three mills closed at 9:30 this morning. First (Otis Co. awnings) out at 8:30. (About 300 to 500.) First striker relates: “Our looms were stopped, and as we were get- ting ready to go out the boss came up and said: ‘You can go out, this room is shutting down.’ ” Second striker: “Not a Trame was going in the whole room and the boss says we better get out now!” Ware Valley ‘about 500), worst underwear sweatshop in New Eng- land, all out in a body at 9:30. School Children Suffer As Rural Teachers’ Pay Is Slashed in Missouri By a Farmer Correspondent HARTVILLE, Mo.—The wages of rural teachers have been slashed during the last three years and many teachers are without jobs in Wright County. The children are not so wide- awake as formerly, which fs a di- rect reflection of the bad economic conditions of the farmers. A county nurse examines the children’s teeth, takes their weight, etc., but there is never any money on hand to provide doctor’s care. Then, what is the use of these ex- aminations? Half of the children in school are underweight. It is known that 75 per cent of the school children in the state of Missouri are defective in some way. This is rich and advanced America! “Strike Looks Good” Says Worker Writing From New Bedford By a Worker Correspondent NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—I am a painter way back in my dues. I am from North Boston and there is no work in my trade. Here the strike is on 100 per cent for the two days. Some landlords are looking to boost their rent $1 more per week. Food is up high. The strike looks good here. I read a letter from Lowrston, Maine, and the French Canadian priests there told their people to go to work last Tuesday. The people here are very much interested in Ann Burlak. Hope we have millions like her and Com- rade Burke. ‘Daily’ Indispensable As the Organizer of Farmers, Unemployed By a Farmer Correspondent JOPLIN, Mo—tI cannot restrain myself from expressing my enthu- siasm for the “Daily,” particularly as a guide and organizer in our day-to-day activities. To carry on any kind of effective work for the Party and among the working and farming masses without it is im- Possible. At Joplin we are successfully iso- lating the fakers in the Unemployed Union from the rank and file, at the same time increasing the pres- tige of the Communists. i { jcrush any real By a Textile Worker Correspondent Bridgeport, Conn. From the announcement in the capitalist press that Wm. Green is to hold a meeting of representa- tives from all international unions during the week of Sept. 9, we can see Green's preparations to organize reactionary forces from interna- tional unions outside of the U. T. W. in order to crush any resistance by the rank and file of the U. T. W. (with their flying squadrons and, mass picket lines and local auto- nomy) to the maneuvers of the mis- leaders. Green intends to mobilize the fakers to go into the field and to stifle the militancy of the work- ers. During the San Francisco strike the Central Strike Committee for the general strike was loaded with loyal henchmen of the reactionary A. F. L. leadership to control and sincere drive for victory. The slogan of the reaction- aries became, “A general strike to | action if national guards and federal | Union as a scab agency which was Textile Mills Workers Must Stand Firm) Motion Picture For Convention Demands Unions Status Is Explained mobilize our forces of reaction to crush the longshoremen’s strike.”| By a Worker Correspondent |“"We do not need the misleaders| in our midst,” members of the| NEW YORK.—In the Daily Strike Committee in E. Conn. say,| Worker Trade Union Section of Aug. The international officials should | 27, a worker correspondent of Mo- cape all of ang see ‘9 | tion Picture Operators Union, Local gather finances and to build up as| : a i much moral support as possible, and | 906, wrongly referred to the Em stand ready for sympathetic strike! pire Motion Picture Operators troops are sent against the textile | out to break Local 306. strikers. This is what we workers, ; Its origin dates back to 1925, Sighting under the banners of the) when, as a result of faulty organiza- U. T. W., ask for at this time; not | | tional methods on the part of Local reactionary forces to maneuver to | 306 leadership, many operators who send back the workers without vote| found thamselves helpless and or voice on the settlement of their| hopeless on the street, organized demands. No arbitration: Only on|the Empire Motion Picture Oper- the basis of our original demands | ators Union. A cut-throat competi- at the Convention must we settle | tion between the two organizations the strike, is our cry. We do noi | followed, which (to the delight of need your loyal henchmen, Mr.! the boss exhibitor) lasted for a few Green. You spout you are mobi- Yeats. During that period all kinds lizing forces to help the strike when you are mobilizing to crush us. Officials’ Jingo Speeches Permeate Legion Convention By a Worker Correspondent PEORIA, Ill—The Illinois De- partment of the American Legion held its 1934 State convention here Sept. 1 to 4, inclusive. The entire convention, all the sessions of the Legion proper, its auxiliary, the 40 and 8, etc., were permeated through and through with rabid national- ism, tirades against Communism, and preparations for the oncoming imperialist war. Edward A. Hayes of Decatur, TIl., the present national commander of the Legion, in several jingoistic speeches made during the course of the convention, made it plain whom the official leadership of this legion of budding fascists will support in the next war for Wall Street, plun- der. Speaking at a dinner given for Charles C. Kapschull, Illinois State Department Commander, Hayes said, in part: “Tf we are to be a bulwark of protection to America [read bosses! —Ed.j against the Communistic movement; if we are to uphold the Constitution of the United States, we must declare a constant war- fare to counteract the inroads of the radicals, Warfare means or- ganization. The American Legion has that organization. ... ” Hayes’ demagogic appeal to his membership in Legion and Auxil- jary “to maintain and defend the Constitution and to see to it that it is not made a mere joke,” has a hollow sound to the heroic textile strikers, thousands of whom are veterans, as they face the boss- violence of tear gas, clubs, fire arms, ete., and see their fellow workers shot down on the picket lines by company thugs and the National Guard, as they strike for the right to live. In another speech at the first business session of the Legion Hayes deplored the spread of mass resentment against the starvation set-up of Roosevelt's “New Deal.” At this business session he admit- ted Legion responsibility for vio- lence against the California agri- cultural workers, saying: “In California, some time ago, be- fore the trouble out there attracted nation-wide attention, the Ameri- can Legion clashed with a set of Communists in one of the beautiful valleys of that state.” If there are still any doubts ex- isting in the minds of honest rank- and-file ex-service men as to why the Legion was really organized, not to serve the interests of the veterans, but as a social prop for the bosses, let Hayes clear their minds. He said, “in making war upon the radical teachings that ex- ist, the Legion is taking the leader- ship in the thing for which it was organized, and is a bulwark of pro- tection to America [read bosses! ] against the Communistic menace.” The usual rowdyism of Legion conventions was present during this one also. On one evening, a gang of Legionnaires overpowered city firemen at No, 3 Engine House, stole a hook and ladder truck and raced madly through the streets, endan- gering the lives of autoists and pe- destrians. The police, when they caught up with them, conveniently made no arrests, The height of Hayes’ lying dema- gogy was reached in his speech to the young people’s church societies at, Central Christian Church, Sun- day evening, where he bid for their support to the bosses’ government in the coming imperialist war. “Communism,” he spouted, “is in direct opposition to our American ideals and principles which are guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States. In guarding jealously the Constitution, we are protecting the principles of freedom and democracy.” Hitler could do no better, A., the facts of the drought situa- tion, the program and line to be We met the “red scare” of the ' followed in meeting both the at- fakers just as the “Daily” has been ‘tacks of the capitalist enemies of telling us to do. The writing of |the farmers and the drought dam- leaflets, the numerous maneuvers | age—here again we find the Daily resorted to, the speeches, the stub- . Worker indispensable. bornness of the fight against the workers’ enemies—all these were learned from our “Daily.” Study of the “Daily” brings results. i We are organizing a farmers’ march to the State capital, organ- izing election campaigns among the farmers—and here, too, it is our So in our work among the farm- ; paper that serves as the leader and ers. The struggle against the A. A.’ inspirer, | NOTE We publish letters from farm- ers, agricultural workers, lumber and forestry workers, and can- nery workers every Thursday. These workers are urged to send us letters about their conditions of work, and their siruggles to or- ganize. Please get these letters to us by Monday of each week. of foul means were used by either organization to undermine the po- sition of the other. The sum total of this struggle, which the rank and file of both or- ganizations had to pay for, was wage-cuts to the bone; a lowered standard of living and a progres- sive slippage of theatres from union control. The stark reality brought both organizations to their senses and about 18 months ago, the two unions came to the only logical conclusion, to merge and form one | union. But here is just where the so- called “Allied Union” steps in. The exhibitor, through the I.T.0.A. (In- dependent Theatre Owners Associa- tion), faced with the prospect of a solid labor front in the motion pic- ture industry, resorted to the noto- rious method of injunction. Of course, an “impartial” judge was easily found to issue a sweeping in- junction against the merger. Not fully satisfied with this, the exhib- itors played upon the old mistrust and suspicion against Local 306, which Empire members still had and organized the so-called Allied Union. Theatre after theatre that formerly employed Empire Union men or 306 men, took in the Allied Company Union on the most mis- erable conditions. In these thea- tres new batches of license holders from the schools were constantly broken in so as to enable the com- pany union to widen its poisonous sway. The strategy of the exhibitors was quite simple. Let the unions fight the injunction in court, for which a few years will have to be spent. Then if the organized work- ers ever do get a legal victory they will be faced with a company union throughout the industry. The Em- pire Union and the Local 306 union began a life and death struggle against the Allied compeny union. Mass picketing and open air meet- ings were held in which both or- ganizations were fighting shoulder to shoulder. During this period of over 18 months our unemployed were repeatedly approached by the exhibitors’ agents and promised enough theatre contracts to elimi- nate unemployment in the Empire Union, if only they gave up the idea of a united front with Local 306. Fully well realizing the objective behind these sweet promises, our members disregarded all these ap- proaches of the exhibitors and stuck to their guns in the fight against the common enemy—the Allied company union, In view of this situation in the Motion Picture industry, the above references by a worker correspond- ent labeling the Empire Union as a scab agency is extremely harmful. It serves into the hands of the extileWorker Warns Against Green’s Maneuvering to Sell Out Strik PARTY LIFE United Action and The recent experiences of our sec- tion in carrying on correctly the activities of the Unemployment | Councils are interesting and valu- able from several points of view. First, the results of our most re- cent work as contrasted with the results of activity by the Party be- fore our section stepped in; second, the organizational structure that has been developed to carry on the struggles of the Councils; third, the existing defects in activity and or- ganization and the necessary remedy. Two months ago there were in North Philadelphia three Councils, one very young and very small, an- other five years old and in a dis- integrating condition, and the third fairly large with much fluctuation in membership. There existed no organizational relationship between these Councils, although all received their relief from the same relief agency. Plans for struggle were separately drawn up and separately carried out. Consequently, improve- ments in the lives of the unem- ployed were few and far between not only for those workers not in the Councils but for our member- ship as well. Unemployed and needy workers and the relief agency were largely unaware of the exist- ence of the Councils. The relief agency certainly never considered the Councils in its daily malprac- tices, Upon underiaking unemployed work our unit considered that two steps were immediately necessary to lift the work of the Councils to a higher level. The creation of a Council in our own territory, which was also served by the same relief station, was imperative. The co- ordination of all the Councils was considered even more imperative. A fraction was established for the development of the new local, Today our Council has 75 members and has given birth to another Council with about 30 members. All the Councils were called to- gether for a general meeting at which a section organizer was elected and the idea of a section committee to serve as the political guiding and organizing body for the whole territory was unanimously ac- cepted. Two representatives from each Council and the section or- ganizer were to constitute the sec- tion committee. The committee was | to meet each week. i The functioning of this plan has brought about radical improvements | in the Councils and in the lives of many of the needy workers in our section. The attitude of the relief station to the Councils has under- gone a complete metamorphosis. Several very important demands have been won through the united strength of the Councils. Discrimi- nation against the many Negro families in our section is steadily being done away with, relief has been won for separate family units who are forced to live together, food orders have been won immediately for starving families, and the re- lief agency now recognizes the Un- employment Councils as the sole or- ganized representative of the un- employed and needy workers. We are receiving immediate considera- tion of all cases that we bring be- fore the agency. Once every two weeks our Councils send a commit- boss, the exhibitor, and as such it should be condemned. [on Bearing Contributions to $60,000 Drive Show Faith of W orking Class in Daily Worker ‘EW things are more inspiring than the letters received by the Daily Worker from those contributing to such a drive as fhe present one for $60,000. The faith of the American working class in the Daily Worker shines through almost every line. These are letters of sacrifice—letters that, make one feel with the writers that to take the Daily Worker away would mean to take a part of one’s being away. “I am sorry I cannot send more,” writes Harry Stemler, of Brooklyn, attaching a doflar, “but I won’t be able to eat lunches this week as it is, prow CONNEAUT, Ohio, comes this letter, signed T. B., the Bowery Tailor: “Please accept my small donation of two dollars towards the sixty thousand dollar campaign fund. I am very sorry I could not send more, but I think if the other seventeen million tramps, who run around looking for a bite just to quell their hunger, would send in just a half or a quarter of this small donation, you would not have te worry about the campaign of sixty thou- sand dollars, ® Saar of the work that is being done throughout the United States for the purpcse of meeting the $60,000 goal is the follow- ing correspondence from J. Jasper, of New York: “A group of workers who had gathered together last week,” he writes, “hecame enthused over the new three-edition Daily Worker, They wished to be among the first to contribute funds to finance this splendid project. A collection was taken up and a ten-dollar and twenty-five cent pot was gathered as a start. We wish you success and assure you of our co-operation during the campaign.” * E ALMOST every one of the letters that are received the things that the “Daily” stands for are stressed repeatedly. These are let- ters from workers aware of the miminent dangers facing the Amer- ican working-class—letters from workers who see the crying need of bringing the last full measure of exposure of the Roosevelt New Deal to the American masses, more adequate paper will mean. They are letters aware of what a larger, “Our enthusiasm and confidence in the Daily Worker's future cannot be measured merely by the enclosed $2.00 contribution,” declared Paul and Muriel Dean, of New York City, “Three editions mean that the Daily’ can, , . events and enter even more personally « localize and hence more perti- nently, into the lives of its far-flung readers. The working-class can now thunder forth its protest and its power as never before!” wr can doubt the power of the of Brooklyn? ing-class newspaper such as the $60,000 fund over the top.” Socialist competition with Comrade . * the country. are donating money and soliciting Daily Worker. They are raising the $60,000! fulfillment of its mission, after reading such letters? What does one feel after reading the words of Hyman Hirschorn, “It is not only with pride but also with joy that I feel that. Tam in a position to do my share in keeping alive a daily work- “Enclosed please find one dollar, . . tion T initiate a series of contributions of equal amount every week that the drive for the $60,000 is maintained. . . . “I, therefore, take this opportunity to challenge 5,000 work- ers and intellectuals to emulate my example in putting the So far only William Allegro, of Brooklyn, has entered into this working class, and the successful ‘Daily.’ » With this contribu Hirschhorn, * QUT unofficial Socialist competitions are actually going on all over All over the country, workers singly and in groups, contributions. They are giving parties and inducing others to give parties—for the benefit of the They are by their acts bringing the Daily Worker to an ever widening circle of the working class. They are performing the function of the vanguard of the proletariat. Here Is My York Editions of 8 pages, the ii NAME Toward the $60,000! To help the Daily Worker launch its three editions, two New pages (8 Saturday), I enclose my contribution. ADDRESS Bit improved National Edition of 6 AMOUNT $ 5 EAST 13th St. Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER New York, N. Y. tee to meet with a group of super- visors of the agency to take up the problems of the needy workers in our section. The coordination of the Councils has strengthened each Council, in- creased their membership, and given them a new healthy spirit. The re- lationship between each local and the section committee is clear and strong. The two delegates from each local are leaders and well de- veloped volitically. This strength- ens both the section committee and the local. These comrades serve as well on the executive committee of their own locals, to which they report the plans of the section com- Fraction in Unemployment Councils Coordinate Work Establishment of Section Committee Brings Wins More Relief mittee. The Council receives the report of the section committee from the Council Organizer, also on the executive committee. The work of the section commite tee has centered largely about, the raising of demands at the relief station during demonstrations, the united committee meeting. careful inspection of the condi and growth of each local, the sibilities for developing new lo: the preparations for each dem Stration, the establishment of strict financial system in each loc and between the locals and the! \} section committee, the instituting of a campaign for funds, and the inception of a broad drive among liberals, sympathizers, health as- sociations, etc. to force the relief station to install toilets. AN ac- tivities are carefully analyzed, con- clusions drawn, and remedies ap- plied. Despite the effective organiza- tional and agitational work of the Councils and the Section Commit- tee certain defects and problems still present themselves. Members of the section committee sometimes fail to carry out within their own locals the decisions of the section committee. Relying upon memory to receive these decisions they oc- casionally forget some of them with a subsequent defective functioning of their locals. They fail also to make their reports to the executive committee of the local, reporting instead on the floor of the meet- ing. This procedure weakens at once both the relation between the local and the section committee and the organizational condition of the local. The section committee thus far has not realized completely the Political significance of the strug- gles of the unemployed. Our ac- tivities have been concerned too | much simply with winning our de- mands.and raising others. We have not successfully pointed out the ef- fects of the N. R. A. on unemploy+ ment and the unemployed, the re- jation between the government (state and federal) and unemploy- ment, and the tie-up between the bosses and the government, The section has not approached other working class organizations in an effort to involve them together with us in the struggles of the un- employed. We expect shortly to affiliate on a permanent organized basis with such organizations. Our section has failed thus far to draw into the Councils a satis- factory . proportion of unemployed white workers. Needless to state, there are many of these in our ter- ritory. Particular efforts will be made to overcome this deficiency through open-air meetings in white neighborhoods, fighting evictions there, canvassing there, etc. The cessation of state and gOV= ernmental relief on Sept. 1 has awakened the section committee to the potentialities of the situation, Mass activity will be carried on in connection with this event. It is our hope to recruit large numbers of unemployed workers, Negro and white, into our Councils, to build up new ones, and to raise the ef- fectivenesa of our struggles to a» much higher plane. R. 6, Section Organizer, Section 7, District 3. Join the Communist Party % KE. 1%h STRROT, N.Y. 6. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name Street City Box Score of $60,000 Drive WINNING Total Percent to of Date Quota Distriet T $1877.66 | 6.2 25 Districts TRAILING District Total Percent to of Date Quota 2—New York City | $1571.81 | 5.2 | 3—Pittsburgh \ Received September 11 Previously received Total to date DISTRICT 1 (Boston) Sec 9 Back Bay Unit * $8.00 Sec 2 Dorchester Unio $11.00 Total Sept. 11 $14.00 Total to date x $416.72 DISTRICT 2 (New York City) 10 $5.00 Group of Govern- 2 Unit 208 5.00 Sec ment em Sec 15 Unit 3 3.00 —_ployees 6.25 tee 10 Jamaica J A Elliot 1,00 Unit 8.55 H Huschhorn 1.00 Samp Kinder- William Allegro 1.90 land 50.00 J Karlin CJ Charles Zeler 30 76 | | | 3—Philadeiphia | 426.75 | WA ‘ok 73.56 | 6.1 ! i r 4—Buffalo | 11.96 \ 15 #, 13—California } —_ | — ! i j | 1 1 6—Cleveland | W241 | 37 “ I—Detroit i} 176.21 | 5.9 I | AG, | 18—Milwankee | 30.55 | 3.9] «| 12-Seattte | | 19—Denver 2st. Louis | 8 H Brooklyn 1.9 Mrs. John Workers Colony McCormick Corp 100.00 Anonymous DISTRICT 15 (New Haven) F Peterson Total Sept. 11 Total to date DISTRICT 18 (Milwaukee) Sec 1 $1.20 Kenosha iit Sec 1 3.85 8 Sley Club Sect 1 2.00 “Djakovich” 1.28 Kenosha Sec 5 3.18 -=- Russian Mut Ald Tot Sept 11 12.68 Tot to date 92.24 DISTRICT 19 (Denver) Ft. Stanton Unit 85,00 Gallup Section 227.00 ‘otal tember 11 $82.00 Total fordate 887.53

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