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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1934 Conducted by y Daily Worker Medic the Kept Open ral Advisory Board i ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Chronic Constipation—Dandruff Comrade A. T. writes as fol- lows: “I am one of 000,000 unemployed, and so am compelled to trouble you for advice, regarding my wife's ailmer Chronic con- stipation and dandruff of the scalp which seems to cause her hair to fall out. The constipation at times causes her acute indigestion. In the last attack, she took an enema, bicarbonate of soda by mouth, and used a hot water bag. Please let me know what I can do to alleviate these troubles with the very least expense.” the 1 Our Answer For the dandruff, get some 5 per cent sulphur ointment and rub it into the scalp well, twice a week. Shampoo the hair once every week or two weeks with ordinary soap and water. Constip: m is a frequent com- plaint, especially among women who have borne several children. This is partly due the resulting lax- ness of the abdominal walls, which no longer adequately help in pro- pelling the intestinal contents on- ward. If your wife happens to do hard Physical work, this should be enough; but if she gets insufficient exercise, exercises particularly to strengthen the abdominal muscles should help. Such exercises include lying on the back and raising one leg and then the other; or lying down and sitting up in succession without using the hands to help. In addition, since regular bowel movements are a habit, she should 0 to the closet once a day at the same hour, and remain at least ten minutes. Diet is important. Plenty of leaf vegetables, carrots, turnips, stewed fruits, bananas, and butter- milk should be taken with at least eight classes of water a day. Mineral oil is perhaps the best laxative, because it is not harmful and does not overstimulate the in- testines. It may be taken in doses of two tablespoons or more a day. Enemas are good when needed. In fact, your treatment for an acute : . attack is very good. But the whole | have the troops in readiness. The purpose in the long run should be | Sheriff said they were ready and to overcome a bad habit by a good could be sent to any place in the} one, and gradually be able to cut | Country in a minute's notice. down on the number of enemas and| The Hanes cotton mills, located the amount of mineral oil as regu- | three miles west of the city, is still lar habits become established, till|running with a skeleton force. It one is able entirely to do without |/is guarded by 30 thugs deputized such artificial aids. However, for|by the sheriff, armed with shot this, of course, will and persistence | guns and machine guns. Ben Felps, on the part of the patient is neces-;2 one-time railroad buil, later a sary. member of the Winston-Salem po- lice force, who ¥ lired some years {ago for his part in protecting a fashionable Bouchy house, and who | was also discharged from the sheriff force for his immoral conduct, is a By Terror By a Worker Correspondent | WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.—Govy- ernor Ehringhaus has called out troops in Winston-Salem at the re- quest of Sheriff Transon Scott. The sheriff said through the columns | of the Winston-Salem Journal that | he and the police department and} other citizens thought it best to Poor Circulation—Gelatins L. K., Bronx:—Poor circulation in he hands and feet is usually part of a general body condition and not a local thing. As such, the under-j|fair example of the force on lying general cause should be in-| “Suard” duty. vestigated and treated. The elec-| A committee of textile workers trical vibrators you speak of are | Visited the plant and wanted to see of no particular use. the superintendent, which was granted. They asked him to shut Gelatins are polysaccharides, sub- ; stances related to sugars, and as down the plant without any trouble, , “ ‘ that if he didn’t, they would have such may have considerable 008 | to do it by force. He told them Movabatare Oe sel Raae Ue, if they could get one over 50 per cece HRS RUS en Mourishing | cent to join the union he would| close it. They worked that night | ar ery until a late hour signing up mem- Greater Circulation Will Decrease ‘bers, Then the next morning when the “Daily's” Need For Financial | they went back to finish the work, | : & great number came to them and IN THE HELE By After offering proof that, when sensibly protected by maternity laws, etc., the labor of women in industry is as skillful and produc- | tive as that men, F, Nurina (in her booklet, “Women in the Soviet wanted to have their names taken | | off. Some even cried, and said,| “Please take our names off as we| H O M E | Would lose our jobs.” Then not/| lonly the mill, but the mill village | {was roped off, and the guards | strengthened. | The Arista Cotton mill closed its} doors indefinitely at the first visit | of the flying squadron. The) Chatham Woolen mills are running | N LUKE she worked on her many books and scientific research. Though still young she is on the editorial boards of three magazines, is organizer of | with the protection of the police the section of the Communist | force. This is the condition here. | Academy devoted to the history of This is the most intimidated town Lovestoneites Disrupt Picket Line to Provocations of Misleaders Resisted by Y. C. L. Members, Who Help Mallinson Walkout (By a Worker Correspondent) ASTORIA, L. I.—Today we, some | about the heroic fight for bread of| members of the Young Communist League and of the Communist Party went to the Mallison Silk Mills to join the picket line. We took severai hundred Daily Workers to distribute in the shop and on the line, and they were on our arms as we picket- ed. In a few minutes we were called aside by several pickets, some of whom we knew to be Lovestoneites. They started arguing that we should not distribute the Daily Workers. They said it was throwing a red scare among the workers. We answered that the reason for the distribution of the Daily Work- ers was to eliminate the red scare by showing the workers that we were fighting with them and not against them. We also said that by this distribution the pickets would get a true idea of what was happen- ing in the textile strike throughout the country, To this they answered: “The pickets can get information about the strike in other papers. Why an- tagonize them by giving them Daily Workers and making them think that this is a red strike and not a textile workers’ strike?” Disrupt Picket Line? ‘These people kept on arguing that the distribution was harmful and some went back on the line and complained excitedly about the ac- tions of the Communists, and they made such a fuss and got so excited that they really got the pickets pan- icky and the picket’ began to walk | away one by one until in a little while the line was broken up. Then this same small group said that we were the cause of the disrupting of the line. If they had not brought so much attention to themselves while argu- ing with us, and if they had not gone back into the line complaining about the actions of the Commu- The Daily Worker tells the truth the workers and of the bloodshed | that the capitalist troops themselves | Start, it also warns the workers of the enemies in their own camp. It | arbitration board and for federal troops, and he is not presenting the demands in their original form, and that he is putting forward the de- mand of compulsory arbitration which the strikers never put for- ward. It shows that the Socialist Rieve and the Lovestoneite Keller both knife the strike in the back, the one by sending back the hosiery workers, the other by refusing to| | call out the dyers, Besides this, its | editorials give invaluable advice and | directives on spreading the strike relief, defense and the arousing of | Sympathy in the general population. Plainly, you need the Daily Work- er, you need the only paper thai agitates and organizes constantly on | your behalf. And we Communists want to help too, because you and | we are all workers and your victory | will be ours too in that that it will | give fresh life and enthusiasm to! | the whole working class and make! | it conscious of its own power to| raise its living standards, (It wasn’t | we who broke up this line, it was this small bunch of disruptors, the | Lovestoneites). All this is true and that is why| those people and those honest work- | ers who raise the red scare or who| let, the red scare fool them are| really hurting themselves, By deny- | ing themselves the Daily Worker,| they are blinding themselves. By| | being antagonistic to the Commu- | nists, they are being so to sincere | friends who inspite of all will con- | tinue to exert every effort towards | the victory of this great textile strike, | JEAN ROSWELL shows that Gorman asked for the} |The mill owner asked what the} Bar ‘Daily Worker / WORKERS’ HEALTH | Hanes Mill Say Strikers Should Guardsmen Get Only Boss Press Trained in | By a Guardsman Worker Corre- | spondent PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—T h e howitzer company I belong to has been given special strike-breaking drill the last couple of weeks, Last week we were forced to go through a half hour of solid drill | in wedge formation, wearing gas masks, Then we were instructed in the use of various types of gas bombs. The captain warned us to wear masks when we handle this gas, as a whiff of it would knock us out for several hours. He said we would be sick for a while afterward, and that there was a danger of tuberculosis in five years or so, as a result. Most of the company are be- tween ages of 18 and 25, and are quite uneasy about being called against strikers, since the call to stand ready came some time ago. Several of them have said in pri- | vate that they would refuse to shoot, but most of them are too scared of rats to say anything. | UTW Leader . Allows Mill To Reopen By a Worker Correspondent FALL RIVER, Mass.—The Val- veray Mill, called No. 7, was closed. Tuesday the mill owners tried to open the mill. Immediately the news ran through the town and a huge picket line was formed, Then Mr. Bishop, President of the U.T.W. in} Fall River, went in to the mill owner, strike was about. Mr. Bishop said | that it was for 30 hours work and 40 hours pay. The mill owner said | phia District to the Textile Strikers: | troy it, Union”) goes on to show that when | the proletariat, a professor on the given a real opportunity women are | staff of the Institute of Red Pro- capable also of great intellectual |fessors, and a member of the State achievements, naming and describ- | Scientific Council of the Commis- ing many women, both scientific |sariat of Education. workers and professors, who have Such a list of women and their made distinguished contributions to | achievements provides of course Science. Among them are: only the most fragmentary glimpse N. A. Beach, Z. ¥. Berestner, R.| of the wide, wide world opened up K. Burstein, S. D. Levina, and F.|to women by the proletarian revo- M. Marshak, who have been work- lution, ing in the Karpov Institute for Scientific research and produced a number of interesting results. > N.. P. Yegorova received a} premium for research work in| connection with thé plating of iron Can You Make ’Em Yourself? | with copper by a galvanic process, Pattern 1897 is available in sizes gold and silver. E. I. Dyadicheva | Tlustrated step-by-step sewing in- the place of tin in solder and in of the Institute of Physiology | | physiologist, who has carried out | V. M. Byrhovskaya, specialist in| Y V. V. Suslova ditto for her inves- | 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size tigation of ores for extraction of |36 takes 3!2 yards 39-inch fabric. ed out a new method of get- | Structions included. ting cadmium, a metal, which takes — alloys for ball-bearings.” | Professor L. S. Stein, organizer | | ‘i where half of the fellowships are held by women) is a prominent about 250 scientific projects in the | | field of physiology. histology, is director of the Zoo-! logical Institute of the Moscow City University, and manager of the Zoological section; also a member of the university section of the State Council of Science of the Commissariat of Education of the ae 8... 8. R. Comrade Yanovskaya is head of the Mathematical Department of the Communist Academy, and} directs the department of philos- ophy of mathematics in a Moscow institute for scientific research. “Marx’s mathematical manuscripts were recently worked over under | her direction.” | In the field of the arts are the) Prominent sculptors N. V. Krandi- gevskaya and A. S. Manannikova. As painters great distinction has/| been won by E. S, Zernova, whose work is popular in many countries | besides the Soviet Union, and S./ V. Ryangina, whose picture “Agit- prop Brigade” hangs in the Tret-| yakov Gallery. Open-hearth and blast furnaces of the Soviet Union are constructed according to plans worked out by| the first woman Soviet construc-| tion engineer, Comrade Umova.| Other prominent engineers who} have made ususual contributions to engineering and construction tech-| hique are Olga Wep and Mikhey- | eva: a discovery by Natalia Scholtz, | in the field of long-distance con munication will save the state} 5,000,000 rubles of gold. | Anna Mihailovna Pankratova, | Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in author of many books in connec- coins or stamps (coins preftrred) tion with history and industry, was | for this Anne Adams pattern. Write born of a working class family and| plainly name, address and style only through the October Revolt- | number. BE SURE TO STATE tion was able to develop the great | SIZE. ability she had as a historian. She! Address orders to Daily Worker graduated from the Institute of | Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th Red Professors in 1925, after which 'St., New York City. ! _| 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. $15,000 =SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East 11th St, New York City ‘ $15,000 1 contribute $.. .for and Defense. ssberoacsevs the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals of working people I have even seen anywhere. All Chicago Delegates | | Will Meet Wednesday (Daily Worker Midwest Burean) | CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 14. — All Chicago delegates, arrangements committee members and interested people are called upon to attend) a most important meeting to be held Wednesday, Sept. 19 in the Main Auditorium of the Medical) and Dental Arts Building, 185 Wa- | bash Avenue. i Very important problems {n con- nection with the Second U.S. Con-| gress Against War and Fascism will! be taken up. Our Readers Must Spread the) Daily Worker Among the Members of All Mass and Fraternal Organ- | izations As a Political Task of First | Importance! | Get Daily Worker Subscribers! Speed-Up, Unemploymen Girls at Phileo Radio Co. Are Cheated on Pay | By a Worker Correspondent | The majority of these are youth | under 25 years of age. Of these 60 per cent are girls. Conditions there are becoming worse through the intensified speed-up. The girls do heavy work, which is Classified as “female.” At present there is very great discontent among the Philco wark- ers, especially in the ranks of the women. Rates have been repeatedly raised, until now the girls are work- ing for a basic rate of 44 cent an | hour. In Department 33 the girls are | forced to make their unit rate. The | belt moves so fast that they are compelled to use up all their energy to make the bonus, In Department No. 78 the girls are placed on repair work. This work is extremely hard, yet all that of 44 cents, although this work re- ; quires more energy to complete than the ordinary job. There are three Federal locals of the A, F, of L. in the Philco plant. | The workers are organized 100 per the girls make is their basic rate | nists, the line would surely not have | been broken up. However, by their | actions, they succeeded in frighten- ing the workers and themselves in- stilling the red scare of which they | later accused us. | The line was broken up and groups gathered on the corenrs. They started arguing and all of them put the entire blame on the yelled, “To hell with the Reds, let’s | get back on the picket line.” We} Y. C. Lrs immediately began shouting with her “Organize an-| other picket line.” The new picket | line was formed and for about an hour we had good militant mass picketing with songs and slogans. Any textile worker who reads the Daily Worker can see at a glance! that our paper is not against him. | | Those people who say that the news of the strike can be had from other papers are all wrong. The Times calls the heroic Rhode Island strik- ers “hoodlums.” So did all the other capitalist papers. All you can get from those papers are lies and slanders. | | that before he closed the mill would Pepperell Plant Run | Mr. Bishop let him finish his work in South With Guards |for two days, and Mr. Bishop said, “O, K.,. finish your work for two All Around the Mill | days, then you'll have to close.” It is | |a printing mill, and Mr. Bishop was | not even ashamed to give the news | to the paper. Leaving a mill opened | during a strike! And the workers By a Worker Correspondent ATLANTA, Ga—The Pepperell Company says they’re not going to shut down, but are going to run or kill us. Guards are all around the | mill and are working every day | making full time. Pickets came over from Georgia to make them close down and said they were coming back. The work- | were so mixed up they walked away bewildered from the picket line. Even the cops couldn’t understand what was what, Something else hap- pened in town. Two young workers were taken to the chief of police for selling “Daily Workers” and then ers here are still on the job. The bosses say they are going to run full time. Local 1882 is somewhat | awake, but it seems they know not | what to do. | All of the mills of the Chauhooh | Valley are doing the same thing. | The companies are paying the| guards 50 cents an hour. Opelika | Mill has about 75 armed guards. | Local 1882 at Opelika are not doing anything as yet, but we hope to win | them over, | kicked out of town. At the meeting on Liberty Lot, Friday at 3 o'clock where Fred Beidenkapp spoke, we protested this action of the chief of police. It shows that he is work- ing with those against the strike and attacking us who are working for the strike. We must sell the “Dailies” because only by spreading the “Daily” can we prevent a sell-out. Join the Red Builders! Ica By a Steel Worker Correspondent , GARY, Ind.—Well, fellow work- ers, you've heard and, seen how things get along in the open | hearths—especially in No, 3 open | hearth. | | The bosses spent more than $20,- |000 to rebuild furnace No. 41, at the same time reducing the pay of the first and third helpers to little or nothing. But how long did that furnace last? Altogether they produced 15 to 18 heats from that furnace. And where did that steel go to? Yes, you fellow work- |ers should know that all that high |carbon steel went to Milwaukee, Wis., for special high carbon armor plates. And after they had produced it, what did they do? They suddenly called a stoppage of production of more than 20 per cent toward the end of August. And how many of us workers are walking the streets {in Gary as if we were struck by lightning, and thinking, where are | we to get our next meal? Fellow workers, we've got to or- Gary Plant Are Reduced by 20% |cent. There was a special mem- | ganize, and I mean organize in the |bership meeting last Thursday of |right kind of union; and that is Local 18368 to take up some of the |the Steel and Metal Workers In- many grievances in the shop. \dustrial Union. We have got to One of these was that the com- organize and stay in the ranks of |the militant union that is really fighting for our rights — a union |that has no discrimination against the Negro, or against any worker's color, creed, or political opinions. Fellow workers, you know as well as I do that in some departments there are only six or seven jobs to a shift, but the bosses are keeping | 15 to 18 men on these six jobs. The workers are supposed to get two and three days a week, but bear in |mind that the open hearths are not working the full length of the week. pany has been having some of its coils made in a non-union shop in Springfield, Mass. This is in the | Sickles Plant, in Springfield, Mass. Here the workers get a lower money rate for making coils. The Philco | Company is trying to increase the | unit rate in order to get more work | for the same basic rate. | Another burning grievance is the question of women replacing men |on many jobs. The differential be- tween the wages of male and fe- | male is 12 cents an hour. | The meeting decided that a | grievance committee negotiate with | the employers in regard to re- classification of jobs and wage rates. The workers are determined to wipe out these grievances. When | the committee reports the workers | must be alert to see that no trick: have ben played on them to mis guide them from getting their de- | mands granted. The workers must | be alert to the leadership of Hines and the rest of the A. F. of L. offi- | cialdom. Past experience has shown | that such men as Hines are not to e trusted in fighting boldly for the In that case some workers only get. one day a week, or three days in all for the whole of 15 days. What is the way out of this open, | brazen and persistent wage-cut- | ting? The way is open for every worker in the steel industry. The leaders of the Amalgamated Association are trying again to “organize” on the excuse of last week’s announcement by the Steel Corporation reducing the weekly work days of the salary paid staff. Fellow workers, do not take the A. A, ballyhoo and their preach- ing. You know damn well their proposal of last June. They'll col- lect their dues again, give you a general alarm for a while, and then cool you off again. The only way out is to join the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, Striker Who Voted for LaGuardia Finds Only Scabs Get Benefit “ By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK—I am a worker who voted for LaGuardia in the Jast election, but after what I’ve seen while on strike, I won't throw out my vote that way again. I am one of the workers on strike from the Supreme Briar Pipe Co., 125 Navy St., Brooklyn. Detectives have come to our strike headquarters twice to search us for dangerous weapons. But the seabs carry iron pipes openly and wave them under the strikers’ noses, and even though we com- plain to the policeman on duty, he doesn’t do anything about it. In other words, scabs have a right to be armed and protected by po- lice besides, but workers on strike get treated like criminals. The police even chase our chairman | off the streets, when the scabs are | supposed to come out of the fac- tory. The whole shop is solidly on strike. We all belong to the In- tin Steel Trade @ No Pay for Overtime at Castings Co. By a Metal Worker Correspondent | LANCASTER, Pa.—I worked for the Lancaster Malleable Casting Co. here for almost 10 years. About, two} years ago the plant shut down, throwing most of the workers out} of jobs. About Aug. 1, Oscar Campbell, foreman, came to my house and promised 56 cents an hour for eight hours a day (code); 7 to 4 pm. one hour for lunch. Well, I and the others he got worked two weeks from seven in the mornng till five or six at night, but only got paid for eight hours work. The third week we were told to go on piece- work, and at the end of the week we were getting $1 to $3 short of the promised pay. The men are very much dissat- isfied but most are too scared of the sword of dismissal hanging over their heads to say anything yet; however, a bunch of us are going to lead them into a more militant attitude, Protest Killings NEW YORK.—Workers of the Quanti-Products Machine Corpora- tion, 341 39th Street, Brooklyn, who have been on strike for four weeks under the leadership of Machine Shop Local 301 of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union yesterday adopted a resolution pro- testing the murder of striking tex- tile workers in the Southern strike areas. Copies of the resolution will be sent to the Governors of North Carolina and Georgia. NOTE We publish letters from steel, metal and auto workers every ‘Tuesday. We urge workers in these industries to write us of their working conditions and of their efforts to organize. Please get the letters to us by Friday of each week, Unless Every Section and Unit in the Party Throws Its Forces Vigor- | ously into the Circulation Drive, the Daily Worker Remains Un- PARTY LIFE | To Educate, to Lead and to Support Struggles of Workers Is Role of Communist Party | The capitalist press is filled with | stories about Communists in the | Textile Strike; Governor Green of | Rhode Island has stated that there is a Communist insurrection in that state, because the textile workers Work of the Communists in the T there are militantly struggling to | fight extile Strike and the Ford Strike in Chester. It has strangled the Auto-Workers strike even before it started. It smashed the steel strike likewise— | always by presenting “methods” for | settling differences “peacefully.” We arbitration because it has win the demands of the strike. | shown itself to be an instrument for What are the Communists doing in the strike? THEY ARE FIGHTING TO HELP THE TEXTILE WORK- ERS WIN THE STRIKE. We print below an extract from “Strike News,” a bulletin issued by the Communist Party of the Philadel- “The Communist Party Supports | You.” “Greetings, Fellow Workers! | “The Communist Party congratu- | lates you on your militant demon- | stration to smash once and for all the stretch-out system, the scien- | tific instrument which barbarously , squeezes out the workers’ vitality, to make super profits for the bosses. | IT MUST BE SMASHED! And we | pledge you our fullest energetic sup- port in your historic struggle to des- “We are, like you, unalterably op- posed to the stretch-out. We have} fought it wherever it has raised its ugly head. We have always fought | the Labor Boards; we have exposed | them as the bosses’ legal machinery to force company unions down the throats of the workers, to force wage-cuts, speed-up, stretch-out on the workers, to force the workers to bear the burden of the crisis, “Mr. Green and Mr. MacMahon have warned you against us. WHY? Not because we favor the stretch- out. Not because we back the NRA boards, that have been giving you the run-a-round, and raw decisions, | Both Mr. Green and Mr.MacMahon, and everyone who knows anything about the Communist Party, knows we have fought these with all our! energy. “They are trying to poison your minds against us because we staunchly oppose arbitration. WHAT IS ARBITRATION? Placing the fate of the strike into the hands of | men who are bitter enemies of the smashing strikes, rather than tling them. “FELLOW WORKERS IT’S TO YOU! “The President has just appointed three politicians to a special board to arbitrate the Textile Strike. Will you trust the fate of a million work- ers to these politicians, who have never shown themselves to be the friends of the workers? Or will you use your own powerful weapon of MILITANT STRIKE to force the bosses to grant our demands. “Oppose Arbitration in any shape or form! “The Strike Must be Settled by the Strikers! “Spread the Strike! We are With You! sete Communist Party, Philadelphia District.” eee Comrades in the Textile Centers! What are you doing in the Tex- tile Strike? What is your unit and your section doing? How are you combatting the “Red Scare?” Are you recruiting textile workers for the Party? How are you bringing the Election Campaign into the strike? You experiences belong to the entire Party. Write them up for Party Life and send them to the Org. Commission, CC., P.O. Box 87, Station D. The Party wants to hear from you! Join the Communist Party 3% EK. 12th STREET, N. Y. 6. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name workers. WHAT HAS ARBITRA- TION DONE? It has smashed the | Taxi Strike, the Budd Strike here, (Because of the volume of letters re- ceived by the Department, we can print only those that are of general interest to Daily Worker readers. However, all letters received are carefully read by the editors. Suggestions and criticisms are welcome and whenever possible are used for the improvement of the Daily Worker.) SUBSCRIBER THANKS A RED BUILDER Dear Editor: Detroit, Mich. Just a word of praise for our indefatigable Red Builder, Comrade Kinney by name, stationed at the corner of Michigan and Griswold Streets, Detroit. Were it not for this comrade, I would probably never have become a subscriber. There has been much improve- ment in our paper, and may it con- | tinue to improve. | Here’s hoping that Detroit may Letters from Our Readers Street City . see a Red Builder of this type on every busy corner in the city. H. G. HOW THE BOSSES “THINK Brooklyn, N. Y. Dear Comrade Editor: I am working as elevator man in a high-class apartment house on Park Avenue, and as I was running the elevator I heard the following conversation between two big shots: “What we need in this country is a war to kill off some people” (he meant workers, of course). “Science must’ve run away with people” (blaming “science,” not the social system). “What we need in the U. 8. is compulsory labor.” The “gentleman” who came with these “intelligent” remarks is & wealthy man—an exploiter who owns a lot of mills in New England, AN ELEVATOR MAN, $60,000 Received Sept. 14 $371.87 Previously Received 4033.44 Total to date 4405.31 | DISTRICT 1 (Boston) Sec 4 Unit 415 1.25 DRIVE DISTRICT 6 (Cleveland) District 0.8 Total Sept. 14 60.61 Total to date 393.02 DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) Bee 6 Wor- Sec 2 Unit 2 Sece 1 Unit 1 2.82 Sec 9 Unit 4 1.00 cester 30,00) Hoxbury. 6.30) Sec 7 Unit 2 5.00 Ben West YOL .50 Sec 9 Bo End Seo 2 Unit 1 Sec 6 Unit 1 5.00 Total Sept 14 24.68 Unit Roxbury 5.02| Sec 1 Unit 1 5.00 Tot to date 212.18 Sec 1 No End Sec 1 Central sec 6 Unit 1 531 Aine Unit 2.00 Unit | DISTRICT 9 (Minneapolis) - © Pfeiffer Prov- Wm D Strong | | Mesaba Range Section 3.00 incetown 10.00 RT. 50 woe Sec 9 Rox. Cross. ‘Total Sept. 14 47.68/ Total sept. 14 3.00 unit 7.38 Tot to date 467.40| Total to date 962.33 DISTRICT 2 (New York City) Received Sept. 15 #11247 1 Unit 3 Sec 2 Unit 398 50 bah Sort See 4 Unit 427 10,00 | PTerously recelved Sec 1 Unit 11 Sec 4 Unit 417 10.00 417.31 Einenko foo Bead Unie act aco) Total te date DISTRICT 2 (New York City) » Sec 1 Unit 3 See 2 Unit 7 $5.00 H Williams 2.47 pee) ‘Unit 9 : poe ¢ Sait ‘te 9) See 2 Unit 7 3.18 Halpern 18, ‘Burns i ‘Affair 5.00| Sec 1 Unit 5 Collection at Camp Sec 1 Unit 11A Sec 8 Unit 7 15.00; H Berman 00 ‘Unity be Muller 5.00 Sec 8 Unit 1 5.00/Sec 2 Unit 7 50 J Jones M4 See 1 Unit 16 Sec 8 Unit 5 5,00) Fur Workers of William Allegro 2. Elman .25 = Sec 8 Unit 8 5.00} Glasser Fur M Minkin 5.00 Sec 1 Unit 10 50 Sec 6 35.00| Shop 2.00 ‘Total Sept. 15 92.33 Sec 1 Unit 8 2.00 Sec 6 21.50|E Williams 5.00 _ Tot to date #7 Sec 1 Unit 11 50 Sec 6 12.75 DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) Sec 1 Unit 2 1.50 White Goods Wkrs | A. McKean 3eo 1 Unit 9 200 Club ILGWU Op. | Total Sept. 18 Sec 1 Unit 18 2.00 _ position f Bec 1 Unit 14 1.00 Wkrs of Shop of | Total to date See 1 Unit 2 Coop. Colony 6.55 DISTRICT 8 (Chicago) Hamilton 4.00 Employees of Pop- | Fank Herzog, Tri City John Sec 2 Unit 1 5.00 lar Lunch 2.00/Ft Wayne = $50. Reed Club Sec 2 Unit 15S 5.00 E H Everett 2.50| John Harla 1.00 Total Sept 15 fe 3ec 2 Unit 14B 5.00 Dr B Latinsky 5.00) G 2.00 Tot to date $259. 3ec 2 Unit PP 5.00 Celia Kummel 2.00 DISTRICT 18 (Milwaukee) : Zee 2 Unit 3B 5.00 Toomey ‘70| Sec 1 $5.55 John Reed Club .2! Sec 2 Unit 3B. 5.00 Ackerman ‘50 Sec 1 Unit 118 1.84 i 3ee 2 Unit 398 3.25 Total Sept 14 285.95 Finnish Wkrs Club Total Sept 18. 12.68 Sec 2 Unit 288 6.00 Tot to date 2096.88' West Allis 5.00 Tot to date $68. Here Is My York Editions of 8 pages, the pages (8 Saturday), I enclose m; NAME Toward the $60,000! To help the Daily Worker launch its three editions, two New ADDRESS Bit improved National Edition of 6 y contribution. Tear off and ma 50 EAST 13th St. demands of the workers, dependent Smoking Pipe Makers Union, known to Thousands of Workers. DAILY WORKER il immediately to New York, N. ¥. \)1 omen OR