The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 17, 1934, Page 4

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Page Four Police Break Up Strike Solidarity Mee | WORKERS’ HEALTH Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Patent Medicines and Reformists threaten to diminish the profits of corporations, all the big shots get together at Washington, begin pull- DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1934 Guards Called In No. Carolina Mill Center By a Textile Worker Correspondent CONCORD, N. C.—The workers SP. | i} Two Parties Shane Same Platform When Com-| | In Fall River ting of Bo ston Workers Speaker Calls Strikers Grab | For Workers’ Unity Daily Worker | (By a Worker Correspondent) | | | FALL RIVER, Mass.—There have | I.W.O. Prepares for Drive To Add to Membership. Youth and Adult Sections Hope to Recruit 25,000 Members in Fall Campaign C. B., Brooklyn.—'‘Syrup of Red ing strings in Congress, and the a z ° . .: | Gckee Lise no weiue a5 a modicine.| il ie Ht panned: Tis only under of Concord are giving the mill munists Are Denied Permit been reports through the town that : : The o1 in it is the sugar it | correct leadership and militant mass OWners a real fight. After the sheriff e ASSL“ i Be | the National Guard are in training,|_ The week-end outing at Camp demanded sed wed re ae conain je of Lime,” to have| action that Congress will be forced | of ik coun Promised ye call] By a Worker Correspondent hind the refusal of the police to al- | We heard that all National Guards Eta Sanne or heb Ben fodiens a eecieentratid nena vis laws a t ire | out the state troops, we have the ; a8 | ea i a , was Steady, conce ar ar gael ai all pee TR NS *niz| BOSTON.—When the Socialists|10¥ Communist speakers, the fear are reporting at the armories. We | success, Wile the chock-up is not| bring this program to the youth in ever, in such Its alue is questionable toiling population. Citrus Fruits today. shows to the workers of Concord that the Cannon Mfg. Co. runs this and Communists tried to hold a | joint solidarity meeting on the tex- of the ruling class of the solidarity ;of the working class, the fear of | exposure of local conditions in in- | are going to verify the reports. The strike situation was the same yet complete,. the indications are that a substantial sum was raised | the factories, in the schools, and to the children of our aduit comrades, ¢ pat . ¥. C— i tile strike on the corner of F and “ in-|on Wednesday. The A. F. T. O. | to assist those of our comrades who, | will enable us to reach our goal of Soe qeene ie on cee wie us The ee city, and the city and county officers |Rroadway, South Boston, the|ustty and politics, The marine | jeaders still speak of the strike as a| falling victim to tuberculosis, have| 1,500 new members with eas. | ‘The ater pat ims. It is supposed | toa false " etc., is in the posses-| 2T¢ OM the side of the mill owners. |stronghold of the State Democratic |Worker had too much to tell the | lockout, even though all the A. F.| used up all their constitutional ben-| ground has been prepared by des to be good fo trouble, but enough acid or idney and bladder does not contain kali to be effective. The important reason for objectiv-| ing to the use of “Cystex,” or in fact, to most patent medicines ad- vertised to the public, is that self- sion of large amounts of vitamin C; if this vitamin is not given in sufficient amount, over a period of time, the disease scurvy develops. Its frequency is greatest in infancy, but it also occurs in adult life. Even if the disease proper does not oc-| The Governor of North Carolina said he was for the worker, but the workers say, just like the C. P. Says: He is a rubber stamp of the mill-owning class. The C. P. is learning the workers how to fight the mill owners and the capitalist machine and the home of workers in the basic industries of longshore and railway, the cops broks up the meeting. Jack Wheelwright, Boston or- }ganizer of the Socialist Party, se- cured the permit in the name 0! workers on the docks. The Social- | ist pointed out that on that very |night a Democrat was sharing the | soapbox with the Socialists in Hyde |Park; that was democracy; but the | legal Communist Party was denied the right of free speech and dis- T. O. workers are on strike. The Daily Worker is’ being grabbed every place. We figured out that yesterday and today we sold and distributed 1,200 Daily Workers. efits but are still in need of further help. As opening day for the member- ship drive (October 1) draws near, our Sections and Branches are completing preparations to assure the success of the campaign. State- tailed directives, training our \best members at our I.W.O. training schools, and by offering prizes stimuli; a complete gymnasium, three complete libraries, banne! ete. On October Ist the “GO” signal On October Ist the £ criminated against. We were distributing the Daily | ments issued by the Youth and Jun-| will sound. treatment is dangerous, and valu-| cur, the absence of the vitamin class, Workers of the South have |the Socialist Party. The Commu- | i . «Weer ee y, : jon will ‘move forward as able time may be lost by the patient | gives rise to symptoms (chiefly re-| jearned their lessons from the Gas- : A member of the Irish Workers’| Worker at the meeting in the! ior Sections evidence the seriousness | Youth Section will move before going to physician for a cor- brings up an inter- of the position of re- formists and other class collabora- tors. Recently, the Tugwell-Cope- duction of vitality, sore gums, even bleeding gun loosening of teeth, poor digestion and muscular weak- ness.) Orange juice, lemon juice and to- mato juice, are the most important tonia strike of 1929, that if they get anything we will have to fight. De- spite of the top leadership of the A. F. of L., the workers are putting up a very stiff fight and hope to nist Party had been refused a per- | Club was not allowed to speak. It mit, so their speakers were invited | was when he took the box that the | to share the platform with the So- cops reejly did break up the meet- cialist speakers. ing. Before the first speaker was in-| An attorney present came up to troduced a cop walked over to Pe-er the cops and stated that they were | Broadway Theatre, Some vigilantes chased one worker away (but afier | he had gotten rid of the Daily ‘kers), but when they tried to! another one away, the other | workers came to his defense, yelled with which these sections of our) der are facing their tasks in the Statement of Youth Section Shoulder to shoulder, youth and ' one body towards 1,500 new recruits, Although the- Junior Section of our Order has increased its mem- bership somewhat, its growth dur- ing the past few months has not kept pace with the growth of the rest of the Order. During the mem- 1 r : for tk vita t n i rgani isobeyi i inat- adult members of the I.W.O. are land Bill was up before Congress.) foods for tt vitamin C content. close the Kannapolis Mill this week, | King, organizer of the M. W. I. U.,| disobeying the law in discriminat: i ‘ adul : ' iz eA ee This bill, in its original form, was Grapefruit is less valuable, The| as this is a very strong hold of the |and told him that HE WAS NOT'|ing against a legal political party. | ° ae oti as eee ae beginning the march towards 25,- | bership ceive) sal ae uae an attempt to compel manufactur- | value of orange juice is not affected! Gannon Mills. GOING TO SPEAK. A Socialist It was obvious to all of the work- StTiker when he said: “Don't fight | 000 new recruits. Together they| 1, the entire Order must regal ers of patent medicines to tell the truth about their products, so that by standing over night in the ice box. speaker sprang on the soapbox, put SON! D Wi - AiCONGON ORES, the matter before the 100 workers (ers present that the cops and the | bosses were already using fascist | among ourselves, fight the bosses!” | At the meeting of the American seek to build the Order into a firm working class fraternal organiza-| building of the Junior Section as one of our primary tasks. people should not be deceived and As to canned juice, various brands 7 TE who had gathered for the meeting, | discrimination against, workers’ in- League Against War and Fascism, | tion, ane shales Loman uses ot led to believe that miracles could| have different amounts, although Me Governor and asked for a vote. The ayes|ierests. They refused to be dis-| the membtrs protested the use of | _The Youth Section is a vital sec- | 3 demberaip to 10,000 children, be performed. Even after the teeth | they all are fairly good. It is hard 3 Maced were loud and unmistakable. Then persed and followed the speakers | National Guards in Saylesville, R. I.,| tion of the order, breathing its fu-| 0" _™ K = were taken out of the bill, it did to say exactly, since the value of a show of hands was called for. for three blocks, eagerly listening the members protested the use of | ture, for the youth will take the It is not a hard job to recruit that ; i if the City Com- not pass. This is typical of all re-| any particular type depends on Calls I TOODPS Me speaker pointed out that the |to their conversation and laughing | armed thugs in Dighton, the break- | Place of our adult comrades in con- payee oe Tne eos formist activities. They try to fool (1) How long it has been in the LELe EF United States is a democratic | at the police who escorted the So- ing up of the Ann Burlak meeting, | tittting to build it. The Youth| 1"). “ttention to this work. the working class into believing that| can; (2) the amount of time it was gountry and the will of the people |cialist and Communist speakers the framed arrest of two young Section has pledged to bring 1,500 ’ The plan of the Junior Section they are bringing about reforms.| boiled before canning; (3) eontent A py | “4 fhould be obeyed. However, the| until they got on the street. car. ak : - new youth members into our ranks ie a Aa ‘ yen. intl ey j 4 * workers announcing the Ann Burlak |} nea very | includes a number of valuable prizes When any attempt is made to|of alicali, as a preservative; (4) ter Election cope got pasty amd threatened the|\ ‘The ‘Boston Post, local paper| Yorcars samowncitg the Ann BUCK | yy. Jerwuary. lak, and to, use. every| ilies s niltaber of TUS Beoes change existing laws, or to make] presence of any oxidizing agent for se |speakers. While the cops were. carrying shipping news and read by 4 mite of their energy in accomplish- best children’s work. These prizes new laws, which in their enactment the same purpose. IN THE HOME By Another Reactionary Fable Bites the Dust bourgeois fairy tale, that women are HELEN LUKE | By a Worker Correspondent |demonstrating the already fascist LEWISTON, Maine. — Monday |Methods of the Boston police, the night 2,000 workers (men and/| Speaked pointed out the reasons be- ;Women) gathered around the en-| _ jtrance of the Androscoggin Bates, | | Hill & Continental mill gates—when | |truckloads of workers (strikers) | from other sections (Waterville, etc.) | came here to Lewiston to induce the | By a Worker Correspondent Enthusiasm of Pickets longshoremen, refused to carry the story, although it was given in de- | tail just after the meeting. | | What extent these officials will go | air meeting to welcome back the YCL Song Leaflet Wins | town of two young workers from Boston for selling the Daily Work- | er. The American League also) plans to try a test case for an open- delegate from the Second UV. S./ Congress Against War and Fascism. | FlyingSquads ing this goal. The youth of today are suffering from the economic crisis. Some of them have never had the oppor- tunity to work for any length of time, Those who are working are speeded up and given the lowest wages, Physically they are weak- ened; mentally they are demoral- ized. American youth need the benefits of our fraternal order, they need our sick benefits, medical care, unemployed, or ill; fighting for the include a bugle and drum corps out- fit, sports materials, books, as well as individual prizes, The Chicago District of the I.W.O, is trying to win these prizes for building the Junior Section. Orig- inally assigned a quota of 500 new members, they have taken upon themselves to increase their quota to 1,550 new juniors. The leading Chicago committees are confident ready to organize the campaign and t , of reaching this goal. In a chapter d ed to the sub-| number is steadily declining, but | Turned Back [AHEM eT s They need us because The training schools in the east ject of women and labor, in the new | some still remain, and nobody inter- SS a eee | ‘ We are a workingclass youth organi-| anq middle west will be a great aid pamphlet, “Women in the Soviet/feres with them. But even these Songs Help Break Down ‘Red Scare” | B P B C puung [ear aver thes govectinent ca ag ge ecm eeet Union,” by Nurina, some data are women have an opportunity to take | EE es lb | ey OSS ops take care of them when they are|sirecdy returned to” th fe alti given which refute another old part in social work and to contrib- | | already return eir cities, | less efficient or less productive than men in industry. A paragraph or two: “Experience has shown that with the female labor protection laws in the U. S. S. R. female labor is quite as efficient as male labor. “A large number of investigations of female labor have been carried out in a number of factories, and tinese have}shown that the produc- ute to the general tasks of socialist | construction.” LOWELL, Mass—The Young Communist League here has done a swell job to bolster up the spirits of the strikers. Besides being active on the picket lines distributing to split the ranks of the strikers. |. These song sheets were distributed in leaflet form to the pickets Mon- | day morning and were enthusias- \tically accepted. At the strike Can You Make ’Em | Yourself? Pattern 1998 is available in sizes | ™i!l workers here to support the The pickets eagerly seized them and 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 takes 2% yards 54-inch fab- strike, | Ab when 3 o'clock Tuesday morning, | re-elected Gov. Brann was/| leeflets, and selling Daily Workers, |meeting one of the reactionary of- they made up a song sheet for the | ficials of the Protective Union, (his ich lines and distributed them|happened at the regular morning Monday morning to the pickets.|strike meeting of the Protective ‘Monday, Sept. 10), Chaurettete, got |up and said, “I’ve been authorized | \by the president to tell you to de- | stroy those Communist sheets, and sang our songs al! morning and at their strike meetings. These song sheets hag quite an By a Worker Correspondent | SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Textile news from Western Mass.: Easthampton: Flying squadron of strikers from Holyoke came here/ today (Thursday) to picket Hamp- den Mfg. Co. But the company with hired police barricaded road to the plant with construction signs, Fity workers came out on strike. One picketer arrested for trying to pass signs. Two machine guns were passage of the Workers Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill H. R. 17598; | fighting against fascism and the wer danger that is fast approach- ing. put their districts over the top. Many Junior Branches in the dis- tricts have issued challenges to each other for Socialist competition in the drive. The children in the While we seek to solve some of| branches, where they have learned these problems, we also carry on} about the drive and the prizes of- all of those activities desired and | fered, are very enthusiastic. Letters from Our Readers ric. Illustrated step-by-step sewing — i ‘i | ; e fi lace the co. bri } | stivity. of sicilled’-female labor is not | instructions inchided, sure he won the election, he sends / effect in breaking down the “red |those union members who are dis-|Placed on the company bridge inferior to that of its male counter- part. In the Krassny Putilovetz factory of Leningrad, men and ‘women workers of the same cate- | gory working on similar lathes and | doing the same work produced in the ratio of: men, 100 per cent; women 120 per cent. In the Podolsk sewing machine factory ciency of women employed in the assembly and testing department was 1015 per cent, and in the stands department, 112.3 per cent, in comparison with the productivity of the men employed. The women were better observers of labor discipline,, and the quality of their work was in no way inferior to that of the men. “All this applies to highly skilled Working women... “The labo: departments of Lenin- grad, Moscow, the Urals, North Cau- casus and Northern provinces have collected material on the employ- ment of women in skilled occupations, and en the ad- _Visability of the employment of ‘Women in a number of trades. The investigation revealed that the work of women in productivity is at least equal to that of men and in many cases exceeds it. “The slowness with which women are appcinted to skilled trades has been due to the fact that a tremen- dous struggle had to be conducted against the old prejudices from the past, that women are unfit for skilled work. . . . The number of women in skilled occupations is steadily growing. Another myth about the backwardness of women is thus being shattered. . . “Thousar of new Women are joining the working factories, the effi- | semi-skilled and | in the National Guard to handle the scare” campaigns of the reactionary jSituation. Three hundred sixty Na- officials of the textile unions here. jtional Guard (6 companies; 60 in a|In Lowell there are two unions; |company coming from Waterville; |one of them is a local of the U. T. 1—Rumiord; Augusta—1; and to top| Ww, which is very small here and it off two companies from Lewis-/has a small influence due to its ton itself) .The other places I don't | sell-out tactics of the leaders in the recall. 5 past. The other union is the Lowell | The local National Guard are) Textile Workers Protective Union, |rather sore about the whole thing;|which is much larger than the here they are staying up all night|U.T.W.A. and has a membership of |and day (no food or sleep and only|8,000 and is constantly growing. geiting a couple of dollars for it all,!This union is controlled by reac- while at the same time they have|tionary officials, who are doing or had jobs in the mill with at least |ineir utmost to split the ranks of a bit better wages and not such|the workers by a “red scare” cam- hours—and now the company hiring | paign. One of these officials, Cote, scabs on the strikers’ jobs and on|the president of the union, admitted their (soldiers’ jobs—the National’at the strike meeting Tuesday Guard are rather peeved about it. morning that he had already gone Only a few workers are on sirike| down to the Police Station twice to —the “Flying Squadrons” are ex-| get help from them to stop the ac- pected to arrive here this afternoon | tivities of the “reds,” showing to by the hundreds (the strikers say) | |tributing those sheets, should stop| it, or else we know they are Com- munists.” Despite this statement| ithe strikers did not destroy the) |song sheets, and held on to them. | To show how well the songs were} accepted, another union official who | was acting as temporary chairman | |towards the end of the meeting} called upon the workers present to_ |sing our songs. The latest informa- tion is that the union wants to re-| print the songs but leave out the | Part “Issued by the Young Com- |munist League of Lowell with their compliments, 339 Central St.” Tuesday morning the pickets pa- raded around the mills and in the |surrounding neighborhoods, singing | | songs and every one opened their | windows and cheered and applauded the pickets. This has bolstered up the spirits of the strikers, from different parts of the state. | —— Biddeford & Saco, Maine, have two large mills—the Pepperel and) | “York” mill; both mills are work- | ° ing—and while going through there I stopped and spoke to a few work- | ers at the mill-gate and they said that most of the mill is willing to {come out on strike—but the loom- | fixers refuse to budge. This keeps | the rest in. | One of the National Guard here |told me that he heard the higher- | |ups remark that they were sending |them (the N. G.’s) to Saco-Bidde- | |ford mills toda: By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—“We don’t fix teeth here—we just pull them.” It was the assistant dentist (earner) speaking, I, a poor man, was in the chair at the Dental Clinic in the Lincoln Hospital, 143rd ic pen) «.| I had a tooth that was paining Camp Wage Strike Wins me, I was dead broke; ae was i\As Counsellors Join freed to go to the city clinic. . | | I expected the “city’s clinic” to With Food ‘Workers tix my tooth—ihat is, to put in a \filling, even if it was a cheap cement filling. When I came to the “clinic” there Was a good-sized crowd there. Chil- by the same person for the past 12|dren came with their mothers. I years, She has been chiselling | had to wait some time before it was every year in the wages of the |My turn to get a card from the By a Worker Correspondent RHINEBECK, N. ¥.—The place where we worked has been owned Y. Dental Clinics Sacrifice Poor Patients to City Economy |Street and Concord Avenue, Bronx.) , When one of us was called in to get ‘his tooth pulled I was glad to take \his seat. Sitting down relieved me a little. There was a bed in the! room, I felt like lying down. But | | | | know in the small towns with the Holyoke: All out. No further de- | velopments in textile. The last two days newsboys of Holyoke Transcript went on strike} for 1 cent a paper, having been cut down to % cent. Papers were taken} from purchasers and newsstands and torn up. Street knee deep with torn newspapers. Strike settled and the boys won their demands. Chicope Falls: Johnson & John-| son Co. shut down. Five hundred | workers organized into the U. T. W. Need Flying Squadrons to Hit Hard and Fast, Textile Worker States By a Worker Correspondent TROY, N. H.—The information I have covers Cheshire County. Keeve, the county seat, a city of 14,000, has one woolen mill, two or three nerrow fabric, one silk mill. Swanzey, N. H. has one woolen mill. Troy, N. H. has one woolen mill,! Gilsum, N. H. has one, and I would say roughly all these mills employ approximately five to six thousand persons. There is no fiying squadron here such as is operating in other sec- tions. This to my estimation is the best weapon for this district, as the workers will have to hit hard and quick to stir the innermost feelings of the workers so they will know something is taking place. At our local mill there are two watchmen inside, and three patrol- ling outside. Evidently they expect something and why not give it to them? We have no unions so far as I! exception of Swanzey. It looks as though there were something there, as they empioy a lot of outside help. Cheshire County needs all the} help we can muster, the bosses are RED BUILDER SEES AN OPENING Niles, Oho. to became friendly with the dish- washer, who was a Negro. After gaining his confidence, I gave him a Daily Worker. The following day the Negro worker remarked that he would like to have it more often, that it was “damn good” and had “good stuff.” I proceeded to give him the paper daily; within a short time the dis- trust he had had in white workers began to break down. Noticing the Dear Editor: This is the first time I ever wrote to you, but I have read the Daily Worker and I like your paper very much. I would like to become a Red Builder for the “Daily.” I think we need a paper like the “Daily” in this town. This is a hot bed of the old K. K. K.'s. qT) would like you to send me some! copies of your paper for samples. I will try and see what I can do} with them, Money is pretty scarce here, as nothing is working. There were five sheet mills here but they tore two of them down. And it won't be long before they tear the others down, Please send me information on how to become a good Red Builder. A. G. A COMING EVENT New York, N. Y, Dear Editor: When James Casey resigned from the New York Times to join the Daily Worker, it was announced that he would write a series of ar- ticles. exposing the policy of the Times *a regard to working class news. Upon hearing this, I im- mediately told it to many of my friends, who, like most people, be- licve the Times to be an impartial paper. I know that I am not the only “Daily” reader who hones you have not changed your mind abcut run- ning these articles. Congratulations on the forthcoming three editions which will be a big step towards becoming a mass paper. B. B. Re iis oe NOTE: Comrade Cascy’s articles will begin to appear as soon as | the re-organization of the paper change in him I stopped giving him the “Daily,” observing what his re- action would be. After a short time he approached me and_ asked, “Where is the Daily Worker? I | miss it.” | The next day I inserted a leafiet calling upon the food workers to | organize into the Cafeteria Workers Jnion. He joined the union, be- came very active, and brought a \few Negro workers into the union. With the outbreak of the strike he was elected to the strike com- mittee because of his activities. After the strike he was elected by | the workers to be on the shop com- | mittee, 8. 3. LET’S LEARN HOW Baltimore, Md. Dear Editor: One simple yet highly effective bit of periodical selling technique that I learned back in kid days seems seldom to be used by “Daily” sellers. They should call attention of the people to whom they want to sell the Daily Worker to articles in it that would be of special in- terest, to them. There is always an article in the “Daily” about the particular trade to which the customer belongs, quite often a report of happenings in his factory or town. Unemployed work- ers should be shown the reports of the unemployed struggles. It’s a mills and offices “There are some wives of workers -and office employes who have not as yet been affected by this general enthusiasm for socialist construc tion. They prefer to take care of | starving them to death since the} | prices of goods have gone up. My estimate for the County of ; Cheshire might be low for textile. is completed. DAILY WORKER UNITES AND ORGANIZES New York, N. Y. workers and she used to have all | “lerk. 2 in Ea When my time came I was asked! (coins preferred) ese Gee RUIN Aso Bait SLL ,& good many humiliating questions plainly name, address and style| A Strike was called to get pay for Hates rere tS NES ara number. BE SURE TO STATE ,®ll the kitchen help and the out-|“y -.¢ down on a bench, After a! SIZE. side help in full for the rest of the llong wait I was called in. i | disgrace when the babes selling capi- | talist magazines command a better technique than Daily Worker sales- men. This technique is especially effective in house-to-house selling, ae you can get a short inter- lew, Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (13c) coins or stamps for this Anne Adams pattern. Write | Unemployed Heip in Lancaster (Special to the Daily Worker) it was newly made up and I figured they would holler at me if I, a pa-| Dear Editor: I lended a job in the Grant lunch their little home rather than work in a factory or office. They are in the minority, of course, and their Address orders to Daiiy Worker | Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th St.. New York City. ete Is My Bit 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 50 EAST 13th St. Rotes for De é Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER New York, N. ¥. season. | The proprietor certainly did not |like that. She was all upset andj The learner told me to get into tient. lay down there. While T was in the room I heard the chair. “What's the matter?” he | said one of the dentists shout: “Madam, |yelling at the help, who refused to | Work but demanded their wages. |I told him. “I want it fixed.” The couhsellors of the children and| “We don’t fix teeth here,” he said. alco the camp doctor were prom- “We only pull them.” ised that their pay was well se-| As a citizen, I was sure surprised jcured by the owner of the camp. | to hear such talk. I was stunned They need not worry or sirike like |that the city should be so callous the kitchen help, They were prom-|to its poor people. I asked if the ised they will be given their wages | tooth could be fixed by a private jon the boat going to New York dentist. “I got a tooth that’s paining me,” | He jabbe i thelr: checks sand ttley iett!|aeuc Sauce ne. eens, tnee, ay tained |gums. Then he told me to wait in the boat singing the International. |the small room. There were a We urge that no other workers couple of other victims there who shall ever come up io work at hed becn given the needle. Camp Kanawha, Rhinebeck, N. Y., It was a hot day. The room was unless she pays them in advance.|very warm. I felt rotten and sick, ip ne >» |take your child home. He's going to faint.” The tone of his voice sounded as if it was an offense to faint in a hospital, After I had been waiting about | ten minutes the dentist called me in. The drug he had injected had jtaken effect. The toothpuller pulled my tooth, For a couple of days after that done work for relatives of mine. I ‘only went for the estimate; I didn’t heve a nickel with me. I figured a new tooth would cost about $10. He told me it would cost $3C. The way things have gone ‘at night. Quinland, U.T.W. organ- LANCASTER, Pa. Sept. 6— Picket lines are being strengthened in Lanesster County, which is a weak spot due to lack of prepara- tion. The following places are closed tight: New Holland, Leola, and Columbia. A drive is on to close up the whole town. The Workers’ Protective Associ2ztion is rallying the unemployed in street meetings izer, was the speaker. We poor people should get to- | | gether and demand proper treat- ment in the city’s clinics—especially ; through our trade unions, fraternal | | organizations, etc. if If we don’t we'll all get our teeth with me this past year I'll have a pulled. { chain, Immediately I tooks steps BALTIMORE SEAMAN. Free Herndon and Scottsboro Boys! “It pleased me greatly to have received your letter today if I did receive unpleasant news a few minutes before. It didn’t weaken my courage and faith whatever so long as I know you will stick by me... .” Letter from Haywood Patterson, Kilby Prison, June 29, 1934. ; “ ‘ | “Why don’t you go see one?” he|I sure regretted I had gone to the pages (8 Saturday), I enclose my contribution. Ser atas wane cab mect ot chem | answered. clinic, The chances are nine out $15,000 SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND $15,000 were broke and needed money for| ‘I have no money.” of ten a private dentist would have | jong beard before I am able to save ADDRESS Hactibol night away “Well, do you want the tooth |filled it— and I'd have my tooth | $39, eer tlane Line: ieete ree: [ | They formed a united front with |Pulled or not! I have no time; we for many more years. | Why doesn’t the city pay these |] Room 430, 80 East 11th St. i} |the food workers to obtain their don’t get paid.” A I was wondering how much a new | assistant dentists? New York City peo immediately for the date. | The tooth was paining me. I|white tooth would cost me—so I| Isn't this a clear case of forced | | | with the united etioct Wey ove muttered, “All right.” visited a dentist who has already | labor? ‘| I contribute $...............for the Scottsbero-Herndon Appeals and Defense. NAME ADDRESS . mocrats and Republicans Are Votes for Cuts in Relief for Starving Families t (

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