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amr: “ endorse the bill and notify their DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1934 Page Three A. F. of L. in Arkansas Endorses Workers’ Unemp Urges Locals To Back Action Announces Support of Congress Against War and Fascism PINE BLUFF, Ark., Sept. 17—| The Arkansas State Federation of | Labor, meeting here on Sept. 10 to 12, endorsed the Workers’ Unem- | Ployment and Social Insurance Bill, | sént resolutions of endorsemen to the Arkansas Congressmen, recom- mended that all locals affiliated with t#he State Federation likewise Congressmen, and instructed the A. F. of L. officials to introduce a similar bill into the State Legisla- ture for adoption pending the en- actment of the Workers’ Bill on a} national scale. The convention endorsed and sent | Sreetings to the Polk County Relief | League, a militant farmers’ relief organization, demanded the aboli- tion of the state poll tax which dis- franchises 50 per cent of the voters, and sent greetings to and demanded the release of Tom Mooney. Greets Anti-War Congress Another ‘resolution endorsed and sent greetings to the Second Na- tional Congress Against War and Fascism to be held in Chicago. All these resolutions were intro- duced by rank and file locals of the U. M. W. A. (anti-Lewis machine), and by Commonwealth College Local 194 of the American Federation of Teachers. Rey. Claude C. Williams, ousted from his church in Paris, | Ark., for his activity in behalf of the miners’ autonomy movement, was also instrumental in drawing up the rank and file resolutions. Miners Fight Lewis Officials The rank and file miners, whose autonomy movement has been tem- porarily suppressed, opened a vig- orous fight on the convention floor upon the Lewis-appointed officials of District 21 of the U.M.W.A. The Workers’ Unemployment In- surance Bill, which was endorsed by the Arkansas Federation of Labor, the sixth State Federation to thus far back the Workers’ Bill, calls for ‘unemployment insurance to be en- acted on a national scale. Under House Resolution 7598, as intro- duced into Congress last Febru- ary by Congressman Lundeen of Minnesota, the bill provides for minimum weekly insurance of ten dollars to all unemployed, and three dollars for each dependent. The committees of workers will control Workers’ Bill provides that elected the funds, no worker will be dis- criminated against because of race, religion or color. It is the only un- employment insurance bill which provides benefits to all workers re- gardless of the nature of their past empolyment or because of sickness, old age or maternity. Troops Will Be Used to Break Strike Lines, Says Arizona Governor LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16—Gov. Moeur of Arizona will support “to the fullest extent the use of troops and police’ in breaking and at- tacking workers’ picket lines and the terror of vigilante bands against strikers, it was said today by the International Labor Defense. ‘he Governor's position was re- vealed in a telegram he sent to Pettis Perry, organizer of District 14, of the International Labor De- fense. On Sept. 4, Pat Calahan, Section Organizer of the Communist Party was kidnapped and beaten in Tuscon. Three days later the police viciously attacked Phoenix workers, Gov. Moeur issued orders to the National Guard to stand-by and commended the arrest of all known Communists. The I. L. D. wired a protest to Goy. Moeur, who replied: “The laws of Arizona are going to be enforced to the full letter of the law and whenever we need any advise from you or any of your bunch we will wire you for it.” The I. L. D. is answering these attacks on the working class by mobilizing the workers in a huge protest movement. Nurses Picket Hospital As Authorities Force Signatures Against Two NEW YORK —Officials of the Israel Zion Hospital, Brooklyn, are attempting to force nurses of the hospital to sign a petition against the reinstatement of Dorothy Sklar and Sally Kahn, two discharged nurses. The officials’ action came after several days of mass picketing in front of the hospital by nurses and sympathizers mobilized by the Hospital Workers’ League. Miss Sklar was discharged several months ago for refusing to order nurses under her charge to give up their off hours. Miss Kahn was fired for housing Miss Sklar during the period of her unemployment. The Hospital Workers’ League is planning to hold street meetings and issue 25,000 leaflets to rally the neighborhood organizations against the bureaucracy of the hospital authorities which is endangering the welfare of the patients. CREEK WORKERS TO MEET PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 17.— Employed and unemployed workers in the Turtle Creek area will meet next Friday at 7:30 p.m, at theU.H. §. Auditorium to plan a campaign for the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill, of L. Record on Strikes, Unemployment Insurance And Anti-Red Drive Is Cited as 54th Convention Nears a) Drive to Pass Workers’ Bill | Urged by C.P. | Text of Measure Is Re- printed to Spur Its Enactment NEW YORK.—While relief is be- ing slashed throughout the country, the Communist Party calls upon all workers to intensify the struggle for the Workers’ Unemployment Insur- ance Bill as the chief immediate need of the entire working popu- lation. The Workers’ Bill, reprinted in full, is the only unemployment insurance bill that provides bene- fit payments to the present unem- ployed workers and farmers. In support of the Workers’ Bill, arrangements are being made for @ National Congress on Social Se- curity, to be held in Washington at the time that the 73rd session of the United States Congress con- venes. The Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill as it was in- troduced into Congress on Feb. 2,| 1934, under House Resolution 7598, differs from the original bill as sponsored by numerous workers’ or- ganizations in the following re- spects: 1. It does not provide for the use of war funds for unemployment and social insurance. 2. It does not specifically state that workers shall be entitled to benefits irrespective of citizenship. Aside from these very important omissions, the bill, as presented, em- bodies all the essentials of genuine social insurance. The following text of the Work- ers’ Bill follows: . * 8 A Bill To provide for the establishment of unemployment and social insur- ance and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and the House of Representatives of the United States of America in Con- gress Assembled, that this Act shall be known by the title “The Work- ers’ Unemployment and Social In- surance Act.” Sec. 2. The Secretary of Labor is hereby authorized and directed to provide for the immediate establish- ment of a system of unemployment and social insurance for the pur- pose of providing insurance for all workers and farmers unemployed through no fault of their own in amounts equal to average local wages. Such insurance shall be administered by workers and farm- ers and controlled by them under rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Labor in confor- mity with the purposes and provi- sions of this Act, through unem- ployment insurance commissions composed of the rank and file mem- bers of workers’ and farmers’ or- ganizations. Funds for such insur- ance shall hereafter be provided at the expense of the Government and of employers, and it is the sense of Congress that funds to be raised by the Government shall be secured by taxing inheritance and gifts, and by taxing individual and corpora- tion incomes of $5,000 per year and over, No tax or contribution in any form shall be levied on workers for the purposes of this Act. In no case shall the unemployment in- surance be less than $10 per week Plus $3 for each dependent. Sec. 3. The Secretary of Labor is further authorized and directed to provide for the establishment of other forms of social insurance in like amounts and governed by the conditions set forth in section one of this Act for the purpose of pay- ing workers and farmers insurance for loss of wages because of part- time work, sickness, accident, old age, or maternity. Sec. 4. The benefits of this Act shall be extended to workers and farmers without discrimination be- cause of age, sex, race, or color, religion or political opinion, or af- filiation, whether they be industrial, agricultural, domestic, or profes- sional workers, for all time lost. No worker shall be disqualified for the benefits of this Act because of re- fusal to work in place of strikers, at less than normal or trade-union rates, under unsafe or unsanitary conditions, or where hours are longer than the prevailing union standards at the particular trade and locality, or at any unreasonable distance from home. Los Angeles Workers Cheer C. P. Candidate LOS ANGELES, Sept. 17—The Communist program for solution of the crisis won the hearty approval of a Negro audience of 150 last week at an election campaign meet- ing addressed by representatives of five political and economic groups. Lawrence Ross, Communist can- didate for Congress in the 14th Dis- trict presented the position of the Party against spokesmen for the Republican Party, the Sinclair Democrats, the Utopians and a technocrat group. The meeting was held in th Ross-Snyder club house on 38th St. near Hooper Ave. COUNCILS TO HOLD BENEFIT WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Sept. 17.— The County Committee of the Un- employment Councils of Luzerne County will hold a dance for the benefit of the County Committee on Saturday, Sept. 22, at the Workers’ Center, 325 East Market Street. — @ |New Leadership Arises in Workers’ Battles Throughout U. S. By Bill Dunne IL | | ‘The American Federation of Labor | | officialdom (and included in this | term are the leading officials, with | |some minor exceptions, of all the ational and international unions) greed fully with and adopted as the basis of their program, as men- tioned previously, the description of the relations between the unions, the employers and the government | as stated and restated by President | Roosevelt: “Now, to be more specific in re- |gard to N. R. A. itself. You have set up representative government in | | industry ... Your industrial groups | | are composed of two parts — labor | |and management; the Government | is a participant in this organization |in order to carry out this mandate of the law ‘to promote organization of industry for the purpose of co- | operative action of labor and mai agement under adequate Govern- | ment sanction and supervision’.” | ON. Y. Times, March 6.) | This description of the role of | | “labor” under N. R. A, taken in connection with the elaboration of | and emphasis upon this funda-| mental point in the speeches of | General Johnson, Senator Wagner | and Secretary of Labor Perkins to | the 53rd Annual Convention of the A. F. of L., remembering the “labor- | Management cooperation” theory and program of the officialdom which came to full bloom during and after the world war, represents a fascist conception of the relation- ships between labor, capital and | government. But this is the program of Presi- dent Green and his partners in crimes against the American work- ing class and their organizations. Endorsed Hoover's Before the dawn of the New Deal they had endorsed the no wage in- creases, no strikes and no wage | cuts” Hoover -camouflage for the most sweeping and drastic wage cuts in history affecting a like num- ber of workers, They had endorsed the stagger plan of Walter ©. Teagle, head of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey, the “share the | work” plan which workers promptly dubbed the “share starvation” plan. They endorsed the Black 30-hour week bill—a legislative variation of the Teagle plan as the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist Party at once pointed out. By a whole series of maneuvers ranging from brazen lying and mis- Dayton County Board Backs Workers’ Bill DAYTON, O., Sept. 17.—After a prolonged struggle, with constant committees and delegations visiting | them, the County Commissioners of Montgomery County, individually and collectively have endorsed the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, after its presentation by the executive board of the Montgomery County Unemployment Councils. The resolution adopted and signed by the Commissioners follows: “We, the County Commissioners of Montgomery County, State of Ohio, individually and collectively do hereby endorse the Workers’ Un- employment and Social Insurance Bill, H.R. 7598, introduced in the 7and Congress by Representative Lundeen of Minnesota. “We recognize the fact that of all unemployment insurance bills so far introduced, the Workers’ Bill is the only one that adequately pro- vides security to all the workers and farmers now unemployed be- cause of no fault of their own, “In recognition of this fact, we. therefore, request that you use all the influence your official position affords, to have this Workers’ Bill | enacted into law of the U. S. A., at the coming session of Congress. Workers To Be Taught Court Tactics by I. L. D. in Los Angeles School LOS ANGELES, Sept. 17.—Due to the increasing use of the courts | to frame workers engaging in re- lief and strike struggles, the Inter- national Labor Defense has decided to conduct a series of classes to en- able workers to defend themselves | in the courts, under the apspices of | the Workers’ School, 230 Spring St., beginning Sept. 24 and continuing for 12 weeks. The series, to be given by I. L. D. attorneys, will contain a complete | survey of recent cases in which | workers have defended themselves in the bosses’ courts. This instruc- tion will serve as a foundation for workers who are arrested in the future. Other courses will be given on | “Spies and Provocateurs in the La- | bor Movement,” to be conducted by Perry, district Secretary of the I. L. | D. and “The I. L. D. In Strike | by Echols and Lillian | ' Earn Expenses Selling the “Daily” representation (as at the Vancouver convention), by trying to shift the issue to the various state legislatures (as at the Cincinnatti convention), | by ignoring it as at the Washington | convention of last year, President | Green and his conspirators fought | and continue to fight the demand} for compulsory unemployment in-| surance at the expense of the em-| ployers and their government. 35 Per Cent Unemployed | ‘Their own figures (if we leave the} printing trades out of the general average) published in the Sept. issue of “The Federationist,” show that more than 35 per cent of the union membership is entirely un- employed, that the percentage of part time workers reaches a stag- gering total. Yet, to minimize the need for unemployment insurance for all workers in the gigantic army | of permanently jobless workers, these labor leaders keep their es- timate of the number of unem- ployed around the minimum figure of 10,000,000. Every research worker in America knows that in this, the | fifth year of the crisis, the total number of unemployed — workers who had jobs in 1929, workers who were unemployed in 1929, boys and girls who have reached working age | during the crisis, ruined farmers, | bankrupt businessmen, wives and| daughters compelled to seek outside | jobs for the first time because of | unemployment of the breadwinner, | etc—is anywhere from 16,000,000 to | 18,000,000. | In many large cities 60 per cent of the entire population ,is officially registered on the relief rolls—to say nothing of those living on the charity of relatives and various in- stitutions. (In San Francisco, where the 54th Convention will meet, in August 63,000 persons were on the relief rolls — only 5,000 of whom were single men. The rest were heads of families, Multiply 58,000 by 4 and one gets 232,000—or just about half the population of the shining city on the Golden Gate.) President Green and his col- leagues had cleared the way for the enthusiastic support of the shorter work week and reduction of wages under N. R. A—the share-starva- tion plan on a nation-wide scale, disguised by new garments labelled “Increase of mass purchasing power,” the “spread of employ- ment,” ete, Employers Were Organized The employers were organized, under the various codes, on a scale they themselves had never dared to dream of. The codes were power- | ful weapons in the hands of mono- | poly capital for shaking down the | working class into a new phase of | d middle class employers and further- | ing the centralization of capital. Fur Workers Union Forces Boss To Rehire | Worker and Raise Pay | NEW YORK.— The Fur Workers Industrial Union gained a signi-| ficant victory in its fight to organize | floor workers and shipping clerks} when it won a one-hour strike for the reinstatement of Coleman Reiss, a floor-boy discharged for member- ship in the union, |L. Although NR.A. code regulations | provide that unskilled workers in the fur industry shall receive $16 for a 40-hour week, the eleven floor workers in the firm of Harry Lymet, | 350 Seventh Ave., where the strike| occurred, receive only $15 for a work week of 60 to 70 hours. When Reiss was discharged the ten other floor workers went on| strike and were joined an hour later by the 40 skilled workers in the plant. | Yorkville Council Calls) Meeting on LaGuardia Relief Tax Schemes NEW YORK.—A mass meeting on| the LaGuardia relief tax schemes | will be held tomorrow night at 8/ o'clock at the Yorkville Labor Tem- ple, 247 E. 84th St., under the aus- pices of the Yorkville Unemploy- ment Council. Speakers will include James Gay- nor, chairman of the United Action | Conference on Work, Relief and Un- employment; James Hogan of the Irish Workers Club; Joseph Moiers | of the German Workers Club, and | Michael Cassidy of the Unemploy- | ment~ Councils. Communist Candidates Will Explain Program | in Ohio Farm Centers NAPOLEON, Ohio, Sept. 17—A series of campaign meetings in which the program of the Commu- nist Party for the immediate relief of drought-stricken and impover- ished farmers will be presented to the farming population of the State hhas been arranged for John Mar- shall, candidate for Congressman- at-Large and William Patterson, nominee for State treasurer. The speakers will stress the de- mands of the Party for the Farm- ers Emergency Relief Bill, for im- mediate cash relief for all needy farmers, for the abolition of the Ag- ricultural Adjustment Administra- tion, for the exemption of poor farmers from taxation and the can- cellation of their debts. McGuffey, scene of the militant strike of onion weeders, is scheduled | in the itinerary of the two for Sept. 23. 2 Workers trying to put into prac- tice the vague “collective bargain- ing” phrases of Section 7A found | themselves confronted by employers organized better than ever before, they found themselves facing em- ployers who had quicker and more open backing of the police, troops and other armed forces than ever | before. Workers trying to organize to step out of the pit of hunger and slow starvation, found the employers bul- warked by phalanxes of federal mediators, conciliators, arbitrators— | and A. F. of L. officials pleading | for “peace in industry in the in- terest of national recovery,” for | “faith in the President,” pleading, cajoling, threatening and bludgeon- ing for peace in the abstract, advo- cating every kind of settlement ex- cept that providing for union rec- ognition, job control, settlement of all questions by negotiation directly between employers and organized workers, and wage increases. Workers organizing, workers de- manding wage increases, workers demanding union recognition never saw “the recognized leaders of the legitimate labor movement” until it was a question of preventing or stopping a strike. (Steel, auto, etc.) Industrial Centers Battle Fields American industrial centers be- came battlefields. The list of killed, wounded, gassed and jailed workers reached the thousands. The blood | of Negro and white workers, of na- | tive and foreign born, flowed and mingled in the gutters of a hundred | cities. | But the ballyhoo of A. F. of L.| officialdom for N. R. A. never cease even when it was drowned out b; the thunderous tramp of stern-eyed | workers marching behind their murdered dead as in Toledo, Min neapolis, Cleveland, San Prancisci New Orleans, New York, Philadel- | phia, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Detroit, | Woonsocket, Providence, Seattle. | New Leadership Arises The battle lines extended. Some: thing was happening that all “the faith in the President” could not stop. A new leadership was aris- | ing from the ranks of labor, New| tactics were being discussed, adopted | and practiced. Class lines became | more marked. Structure of A.F.L. and Other Issues Loom at National Parley | sabotage of these great struggles by the A. F. of L. bureaucracy. The West Coast struggles took place in |spite of all that President Green and his henchmen in the various unions and Central Labor Councils |could do, | The “Red” Scare | It was time for the alarmed and | trembling bureaucrats to try once | more to shift the issue, to try to add to their role as the chief sup- porters of N. R. A.’s program of hunger, fascism and imperialist war | that of saviors of the nation. The new Red Scare, the an- | nouncement of the drive “to purge” the labor movement of Communists, was the result. Tt seems that the elimination of the “Reds” from the unions— | posed to have been successfully ac- complished in 1923-24—has to be done all over again. There can be no doubt that this will be one of if not the main issue in the com- |ing Fifty-fourth Annual Conven- tion. Other Issues Loom But there are other issues that | cannot be downed even by the ‘Red” Scare although this is con- idered by such experts as William Randolph Hearst, the National | Civic Federation staff headed by | Matthew Woll and others of their | ilk as a most potent weapon. | There is for instance the ques- jon of the American Federation of abor and its affiliated unions—in- | dustrial unionism versus craft} | unionism, the question of more ef- | fective organization to combat the | mslaughts of monopoly capital, the | uestion greater solidarity and more | militant methods of mass struggle | as against division into a hundred | separate organizations and depend- mce upon “the goodwill of enlight- | ned employers,” and “faith in the President.” These issues will be before the San Francisco convention. They will arise in a distorted form be- cause of the almost purely official | and consequently unrepresentative composition of the convention. But | The strike on a 2,000 mile front | they will be there because they are of the Pacific Coast maritime work- ers—ten unions in the first united front of its kind — and the sym- pathetic general strike in San Fran- cisco and the Bay Counties of some | 125,000 workers — can be said to mark the entry of the American the mass battles against the N. R. |Herndon, Mrs. Norris, iWin R | already issues in the minds of many | million American working men and | | women, organized and unorganized, | | because they arise directly out of the widest and highest wave of mass Ff ene Big Attendance Urged at Film On Thaelmann Turn 4 Showings Into Anti-Fascist Rallies, Sponsors Appeal NEW YORK.—“Every individual anti-Fascist worker in this city and every organization opposed to Fas- cism, have before them in the next few days the great possibility of rallying 30,000 to 40,000 workers in a gigantic “Free Thaelmann” rally, This statement was issued yester- Committee in an appeal to all an‘i- Fascist organizations to convert the showing of the new film “Ernst Thaelmann—Fighter Against Fas- cism” into an immense public dem- onstration against war and fascism. | It is a call to every anti-Fascist in New York to his friends, fam- ilies and shopmates to the four-day showing from Sept. 19 to 22, at the Twenty-Eeighth Street Theatre, at Broadway and 28th St. Earl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party, will ap- pear on the screen to introduce the film, The Thaelmann Liberation Com- mittee also stated that the theatre has a maximum capacity of 1,500 | seats per performance, or 9,000 a day. Arrangements can be made by organizations for theatre parties at the special midnight showing Sat- urday, Sept. 2, under the auspices of the Youth Section of the Ameri- can League Against War and Fas- cism, 213 Fourth Avenue. loyment Bill itnoleRonaa | Seek to Keep C.P. Off Ballot Voters Warned Against Attacks by Horner Political Gang (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Sept. 17—The danger that the State government, con- trolled by banking and utility ine terests through Democratic Goy- ernor Horner's political machine would attempt to keep the Com- munist Party off the ballot on tech- nicalities was seriously warned against today by A. Guss, State election campaign manager. For this reason, Guss pointed out, collection of nominating signatures for local candidates must go on un- flaggingly until Thursday. Horner, using his reputation as a “great humanitarian” to sponsor large appropriations for national guardsmen to “police” the mining districts, is an ardent supporter of the “New Deal,” and as such is prepared to strangle any protest against it made by Illinois workers, “The clear-cut demands of the Communist Party for unemploy- ment insurance and other forms of social insurance, for the right to organize, strike and picket, for the end of camouflaged attacks on liv- ing standards by inflation and crop reduction,” Guss said, “make the Party a threatening rallying point in the election campaign for the fight of Illinois workers to end the continued precipitated fall of their living standards. Only the mass support of the workers of Illinois, can bring sufficient pressure to pre= vent the Horner machine from cars rying out its plans to force the Communist candidates off the bale lot.” More than 25,000 signatures have already been collected and turned in to the State election campaign committee. First Film Showing of “ERNST T HAELMANN Fighter Against Fascism — A Film Smuggled Out of Nazi Germany — AT 28th ST. THEATRE AT BROADWAY Only Four Days in New York — Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, September 19, 20, 21 and 22 from 9:30 AM, to 11 P.M. Continuous Performance | struggle in American labor history. | leadership and the strike record of ' A, hunger program and against the| A. F. of L. officials, ) elief in to Speak Wednesday | at Chicago Meetings | CHICAGO, Sept. 17.— Angelo Herndon, Mrs. Ada Norris, Scotts- boro Mother, and Richard B. Moore, national field organizer of the In-| ternational Labor Defense, will) speak in this city Wednesday at two| meetings being arranged by the I. D A central meeting will be held at the People’s Auditorium, 2457 West Chicago Ave., and another at the Pilgrim Baptist Church, 33rd_St.| and Indiana Ave. Both meetings will start at 8 p.m. A call sent out by the I. L. D. to| organizations appeals for support of the mass fight for the freedom of Herndon, the Scottsboro boys, Ernst Thaelmann and other class- war prisoners, and asks that or- ganizations send delegates with con- | tributions for the Herndon-Scotts- boro appeal fund. Fifteen thousand dollars is needed to carry the ap- peals to the U. S, Supreme Court. Initiate Forced Labor Farm for Homeless Men in Kohler, Wisconsin KOHLER, Wis., Sept. 17—A gov- | ernment forced labor project, at which homeless men are being made to work 35 hours a week for their board, lodging and $1, is being developed here on the property of | | the Kohler Company. Under the plan, a 45-acre farm is being rented from the Kohler Land Improvement Company on a share basis and is being operated | by the Sheboygan Federal Tran- | sient Bureau. A group of 45 men was employed there when the harvest of navy beans and cucumbers s‘erted. This | force has now been cut to 15 and! will be reduced to eight during the | Winter. Working hours are from 7 to 11 a.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m. Many have refused to work under the forced labor scheme, demanded living wages and the right to live | where they wished, but more men | were sent to the farm. Y. C. L. MEMBER ACQUITTED LOS ANGELES, Sept. 17.—George | Mendoza, Communist League, was acquitted last week of a charge of “contempt of court” for failing to answer a subpoena. Grover Johnson, Inter- national Labor Defense attorney, forced the police to admit that the | paper had not been served directly | on young Mendoza. The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its. Circulation. | member of the Young |. Pennsylvania WEST BROWNSVILLE, Pa., Sept. 17.—Led by the Unemployment Council here, a broad committee of 75 unemployed workers met with County Relief Director Hibbs and won $2 weekly cash relief and in- crease of 50 cents a week for all single workers, clothing and house- | hold utensils for unemployed fami- lies and other demands. Under this arrangement, unem- ployed will not ‘be penalized, as in the past, for owning cows, chickens, hogs or canned goods. In the past, jobless families owning cows were penalized as much as $1 a day from their food checks for milk which they could not sell. A deduction Was made on all canned goods. Plication is made, and emergency clothing orders will be issued to school children, Part time workers, mostly miners in this section, will be granted re- lief on the basis of their net earn- ings after rent, lights, powder, etc., (The next article will deal in more | letail with the question of new) Coal Fields. |\Cam | | | In the future, clothing will be fur- | nished within two weeks after ap- | Wingdale, MORE ROOM @ MORE $14 a week Cars leave 10:30 A. M. dail; (Allerton Ave. subway on Whit CAMP UNITY Is Open All Through September! PHIL BARD DIRECTS PROGRAMS ; $2.65 a day New York FUN @ CRISP WEATHER iy from 2700 Bronx Park East ¢ Plains line). ALgonquin 4-1148 Np Ideal Time $14 a week. Finest accommodations. 60 steam- heated rooms in our modern hotel. Hot and cold Best food obtainable COME FOR REST AND FUN! water in each room. Cars leave 10:30 a. m. daily Nitgedaiget NUE NEW YORK | FOR AN INDIAN SUMMER VACATION! | Weather Is Crisp. The Hillside Is Colorful Estabrook 8-1400 for Sports from 2700 Bronx Park East Sr eS inladel phia, Pa. DAILY WORKER are checked off. Since many of the company houses, the Unemployment Council forced granting of this sup- plementary relief. Ohio Workers Urged to Register by Oct. 16 CLEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 17.— The Communist Party Election} Campaign Committee here reminded all workers yesterday of the need | for registering if they wish to vote | in November that Oct. 16 is the last registration date. All citizens are eligible to register if they have lived in the State one year, in the county 30 days and in their precinct 20 days. Those who voted in the last elections need not register if they have not changed their addresses since. 2 Pennsylvania Towns Plan Election Rallies WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Sept. 17.—| The Communist Party of West Wyoming and Exeter will hold elec- | tion rallies tomorrow, one in West Wyoming at 2 p.m. at the baseball field back of the school house and the other at Exeter, at 5 p.m. at the corner of Susquehanna and | Sullivan Sts. Solicit Subs for the “Daily” miners work part time and live in| | | | 15th ANNIVERSARY of the Communist Party FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28th, 1934 at TURNGEMEINDE HALL Broad and Columbi. @ SPEAKERS @ PROGRAMME Pat Toohey, Earl Browder and Clarence Hathaway Bella Dorfman of the Artef — Freiheit Gesangs Ferein Admission with tickt 25 cents Without ticket 30 cents Philadelphia, Pa. “SUPPORT THE ®@ Soviet Movie DAILY WORKER” ®@ Russian Bazaar Speakers Just Returned from the Soviet Union FRIDAY, SEPT. 21, at 8 P. M. 1208 TASKER STREET ®@ Dance ADMISSION 25 CENTS @ Buffet AUSPICES: C. P., SECTION 1 Votes for Communists Are Votes Against the Hunger Deal, for Socia | Insurance, Against Fascism