The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 21, 1934, Page 4

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Page Four Y \ILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1934 DU PONT RAYON MILL SEETHES WITH STRIKE DISCUSSION WORKERS’ HEALTH |PicketGets Bosses § Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board COMRADE GARLIN’S POLITICAL APPENDIX Somrade Garlin’s poli- to No doubt tical development enough make his appendix class-consci is But that is not what the “more Politically active medico” meant when he spoke of the itical im- piteations of an appendix operation. Indeea, self was in a state of political “faintness” when he made the comment It seems that Comrade Hathaway while drinking his ‘teenth cup of “unspoiled-by-cream” coffee, had been telling our medico some very politically pointed stories. Among these, was the story of his own visit to a doctor. In all innocence and medical correctness, this doctor comrade advised C. A. H. to leave his many arduous duties for a period and take a thorough rest, “Can't be done; its contrary to Political Bureau decisions,” cried our edit in excrutiating political pain. “Leave the Daily? The Cen- tral Committee shall hear of this!” Only the weeping supplication of the good doctor and his avowal of good intentions prevented our com- rade from carrying out the dictates of his politically outraged feelings. Therefore, when shortly after- wards, our medico met and spoke with Comrade Garlin, it was “faint- ness” indeed that caused him to speak of the political implications of the operation—faintness at the thought for the “Change the World” column in his absence. “And might he ‘sabotage’,” he cried? Thesitua- tion was no less than hazardous Who else would do otherwise than the medico did namely, apprise Comrade Garlin of his (the medico’s) political integrity. Furthermore, this lesson has af- fected us, with equal force. We feel that, IN THE HOME By of the Medical Board, | HELEN tempting as it might be to throw ench into Comrade Garlin’s works should they speed him too pidly toward his $500 quota, our ive hair should stand on end at the mere suggestion of such sabotage and its consequences. We hereby promise to refrain from all irty work. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Crazy Water Crystals Crazy Water Crystals, as its name suggests, is a product of the profit- made capitalist system, in which the bourgeoisie do not hesitate to market medicines under extravagent and misrepresenting claims. Taese medicines are a method of picking the pockets of the workers and are harmful for at least four other reasons First, they are often bodily harm- ful; Second, they are often so much flavored valueless water; Third, if not in themselves harmful, they are harmful by deluding the worker and so keeping him from getting com- petent medical advice; Fourth, even if they happen to contain real drugs, they are drugs you could get for one-quarter the price under their proper names. For instance, your Crazy Water Crystals may be Epsom Salts, Rochelle Salts, phos- phates or what not, anyone of which you could get for much less under its right name. Recently, waters were sold to unsuspecting people, some of whom consequently con- tracted a frightful bone rotting dis- ease. It is best, therefore, to stay away from these medicines put out by racketeering, conscienceless drug houses, which are protected by the federal so-called pure food and advertising laws. The legislative | bureaucrats find profitable to it take orders from these murderers as from well as bosses, steel and textile LUKE Protest Ill-Treatment of Women in Italy “The whole world ought to know} had lessons in roller-skating isn’t| with the war department and the | what happens to women political | going to stop us either. This is the| biggest Wall Street kings heavily | prisoners in Italy,” says the fore- word to the text in another new booklet called “Fascist War on Women,” which was printed in England, selling here for ten cents. This preface continues: “So shocking is the news which has leaked out during the last two or three months, as to what these first revolution we ever tried to | help to make, too, but we'll learn as we go along and never mind the | bumps, if any! We'll be heard from again. Can You Make ’Em Yourself? women are suffering, often merely | for being related to of fighting against public opinion must aroused to manifest defense. men suspected Fascism, that everywhere be itself in their Pattern 2032 is available in sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12, Size 6 takes 3 {yards 36-inch fabric. Tlustrated | step-by-step sewing instructions in- 30 Days In Maine | et Up Arsenal Seek to To ‘Protect’ Property containing radiant energy | Militant Worker Is Sen-| tenced on Trumped-Up Charge of “Assault” By a Worker Correspondent LEWISTON, Me.—Dave Halpern, shoe worker here in Lewiston, Me., was arrested last Thursday night while standing in front of the Androsscoggin Mill (Textile), was arrested on a frame-up charge of “assault,” by a special policeman three times Dave's size. At court the next morning, after a severe beating in the jail, Dave was questioned all through the | trial of his revolutionary activities | (as everyone noticed he could “asault” a giant fascist), and that this was nothing but an attack on | the workers’ militancy, especially | with the textile strike going on. The judge has threatened that “Maine will not stand for Commu- nism and if they try to establish it here, the court will do its ut- ;most to stop it.” On this state- |ment he sentenced Dave to 30 days in the County Jail—on the charge of “assault.” An appeal would have been $500, fe Dave would appreciate mail from the comrades. Write to County Jail, Auburn, Me. Visiting hours |are from 1 to 4 p. m., Saturday only, R.R. Workers Speeded Up In St. Louis Workers, Cheated by Arbitration, Building the Rank and File Movement to Boost Conditions By a Textile Worker Correspondent | NASHVILLE, Tenn.—In the past two weeks, since the beginning of |the National Textile Strike, the at- |mosphere at the Du Pont» Rayon jand Cellophane plants at Old Hick- ory, Tenn., has become very tense. \Everywhere workers are discussing the strike in sympathetic tones. Ef- forts by the bosses to terrorize the workers into ceasing the discussion of the textile strike have not, and are not being heeded. The bosses The American rayon industry is one of the greatest exploiters of American labor. Their profits even today range from 300 to 400 per cent. The du Pont Co. alone re- ports that its net profits for the first quarter of this year were $10,- 000,000. costs on the one hand, and the enormous profits of the rayon in- dustry on the other, it is necessary that we in unison make immediate demands for an increased living have become frantic with fear of| Wage. The rayon industry is in a what the consequences will be of | Position to grant a 40 per cent in- such open discussions. In their | Crease in wages to all workers. maneuvers to further terrorize the), We must also demand and fight workers, they have started a whis- | for the abolishment of the so-called pering campaign, spreading among |®0rth and south wage differentials, the workers fantastic rumors about | demanding instead equal pay for the probability of textile strikers |€qual work. making an attempt to wreck the| Last winter, when a large section waterworks. of the poate: Rayon peel : ” (some 30, in number), roug! firme ee i peepee «10 | their representative of the National this may happen, have proceeded Rayon Workers Councils (among into making of Shh wabie. WOKE whom Vice President Kelly of the building a veritable arsenal. Not ee Daly sabg oe eng N arsiar ee only this, they have placed armed | e jguards along the entire length of | font Joes ee vbrrceh ceased the main water line (from water | sue to the National Labor Board | Works to plant). __|for settlement. The rayon workers | The workers here, who are active | well remember what happened when in their efforts of trying to organize | they went to Washington to ar- |@ real labor union, understand! bitrate. The workers getting the |these provocative actions of the|run-around and the rayon bosses | bosses and these are now being ex- | getting the 40 per cent. posed; the workers here will not| Fellow Rayon Workers! From our |be provoked into any untimely ac-| past experience we have learned |tion, they realize that to accom- |that we cannot rely upon the bosses’ |Plish any adjustment of their griev- | arbitration machinery. If we are |ances, they cannot rely on the so-|to realize a higher standard of liv- |called workers council, they know ing, we must prepare ourselves not that they must first build their own | for arbitration, which will surely jrank and file-controlled organiza-| mean our defeat, but for a deter- | tion. mined rank and file movement Rayon workers! which will help us win our just de- In view of the rising living | | By a R. R. Worker Correspondent National Rayon Workers Council! ST. LOUIS, Mo—I am a track} Members of the | mands, worker at the Terminal Yards in St. Louis. It is one of the biggest | | railroad concerns in the country. | All the great railroads from North, South, West and East use its | FEE | grounds for switching, warehous- |ing and for making connections, | C8) () | etc. This is a very rich company, | By a Taxi Driver Correspondent \interested in its operation and | NEW YORK. — After hounding profits. | 2 But, we track laborers, colored | ‘he @arages for a car for almost and white, certainly do not share |two weeks I ‘nally got myself |in all the pleasure and ease tha’ jour bosses get from these fat | profits. push a “Radio Car” around. At 5 a. m. I was standing in front of set in, all we have been getting is him to ask me, “Did you ever. work Jone pay cut after another, speed- | |up and lay-offs. In 1926, for in- | stance, there were 30 men working in Section 3 (16th St.). Now, there are only 11 and they have to do| the same amount and more work. | HEY! You'Re GOING TKE vy! Since 1926, way before the crisis | the dispatcher's pulpit waiting for | “Help, material and moral, is | Uded. needed from all Ses, and with the utmost rapidity. “Several of these women are in a particularly critical condition “This pamphlet is published in the hope that drawing attention to these cases in particular, will mo- bilize in their aid the support ther so urgently need.” And shocking indeed are the stories contained in this expose of the brutal treatment of the many women jailed during the bloody Fascist Italian regime, often with- out trial, merely “on suspicion of belonging to secret anti-Fascist or- ganizations.” The book at its con- clusion presents six demands which should be made upon the Fascist government of Italy, such as the release of all women imprisoned without trial, decent treatment for all political prisoners, and release or transfer to clinics of Camilla Ravera, Giorgina Rossetti, Lea Giacaglia, and Maria Baroncini, who are very seriously ill. We think the book should be Spread immediately, especially among women’s clubs and groups, and protests sent to the Italian government as directed in the book “Helen, enclosed you will find a dollar to help you and all females like you to get more space in the Daily Worker,’ writes “Hobo| Whitey” from California, “so that the females of this land can keep on telling the Mussolinis and Hit- Jers of any and all countries to go to hell again and again.” Righto, Hobo Whitey! And just | for that, and considering the above- described booklet, which we have! just read, we are in an excellent frame of mind to consign the bloody pair of them to the flames all over | again and throw Chiang-Kai-Shek | in for good measure. The doliar means in any event that we don’t have to go into the inter-column competition in the Daily Drive (for the year’s finances to keep it alive) empty-handed. We are turning in our first dollar to the office and buckling on our roller skates with grim determina- tion, and the fact that we never Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (l5c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly name, address |number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Daiiy Worker Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th 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 20, 1034. ! $15,000 SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East 11th St. New York City 315,000 I contribute $.........0005 and Defense. for the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals NAME ADDRESS . ; | only too true, and style) | Section 1 (2ist St.) used to employ 40 men. Now, only 22. The; Ewing Ave. Section had about 54/ including the extra gangs. Now | there are less than half. There are | {many other sections all over the | Yard covering even larger areas | that have cut their gangs in half! and more. | This goes for all the round house | laborers too. Before 1926, there were thousands of these men —| | mostly Negroes—employed at the | Terminal. Now there are~ only) hundreds. It is interesting to give | one example: At one time a shop| maintenance worker would just | build fires and keep watch on nine engines. Another man did nothing | else but bed the engines. There} was also a special man who would | just blow the fuses. All these were | | separate full time jobs. Now, 1934 finds one man doing all these jobs. I can go on and on to show how all this speed-up efficiency has in- jured all of us—colored and white— in every yard and shop craft. Neither the bosses nor the big chiefs of the different Railroad Unions worried in the least about | those that were laid off. Hundreds |of these men with families who worked 10 years and over were jcast on the scrap-heap. All this |not yet enough to satisfy our greedy bosses, they slash our wages. Our big union leaders say nothing | |— do nothing — but philander around with the bosses and the government mediation boards. We here before?” “Where did you work last?” “How long ye hackin’?” “Whadja get knocked off in the last place for?” At about 6 a. m. about have gained nothing by this tom- foolery and never will. The key to changing these conditions is to make our unions more militant, bring them under the control of the rank and file—fight for the amalgamation of all the railroad unions; for a uniform agreement to begin and end at the same time, for all crafts. And the way to victory can only come through the firm fighting solidarity of colored and white workers fighting against jim-crow unions, discriminations, for wage increases, better working conditions, against speed-up, for full crews and for all the rights of the workers. I know that the Daily Worker and the Communist Party will help us in this fight because they repre- ice the real voice and heart of labor. No Job for Wass Driver n’tJoinCo.Union ,100 day men were loused around | the ‘pulpit’. With yesterdays book- | ings in front of him this labor lov- | ing weasel decides who shall work t | located in Bennie Gold’s Garage to| today and who shall take off or | | This garage employs about 300 night men | and 300 day men. At least 100 are get knocked off altogether. sent home to “Take a Rest.” In front of me on the wall are | various signs. “We must get 10 cents per mile.” “The Radio Ass'n. | of Drivers [read Company Union] offers insurance,” etc, This dis- patcher, the boss’s brother, hands you the company union application at the same time with your dis- patch sheet. Suddenly, a rat came over to me and asked me did I belong to the ass’n. I told him I belong to the union. “The Taxi Driver's Union of Greater New York.” He then told me that in this garage “we have our own union.” The men gathered around us and started snickering at this | Punk and would have given him the business only it was not yet 7 a. m. and they figured they might still get a car. From out of the office suddenly came another “delegate” and told me to “shut up” if I wanted to work here. I didn’t shut |up and naturally the dispatcher who didn’t take his eyes off me once did not give me a car. The men in this garage certainly know what it’s all about. This garage was out 100 per cent in both strikes and that’s the reason for the intensive campaign of the com- pany union. However, they're not getting to first base, because of the 600 men working here practically nobody signed up. However, many are under the illusion that the A. F. of L. charter will answer their Prayers. But they'll get on to that just as they did to the company union. We hackmen are not through yet. You'll hear plenty more from us. We're not going to take this starvation program from General Motors and their lick-spit- tles without a fight. ‘Daily’ Sale In Fall River Police Failin Attempt to |Frame Charges Against] | Red Builders FALL RIVER, MASS.—The strike | situation remains the same, No attempts were made to open the mills. Mayor Hurley, sent to the | A. F. T. O., a scab strike-breaking | statement that most of the strikers want to work but only want “ade- quate protection.” We heard that a member of the council of the A, F. T. O. was trying to explain to the leaders that they were acting like scabs and strike-breakers. An- other member opposed to the strike got up and tried to punch him, It ended in a free-for-all. But no matter if the leaders of the A. F. T. O. show their. fighting spirit be- hind closed doors—publicly they beat General Johnson as workers’ enemy No. 1, Today, two red builders were ar- rested for selling Dailies. The chief | of police, Violette, and the cop that | pulled them in, pored over the laws of the town trying to frame them, They kept threatening these Fall River people that they would be kicked out of town like the two} Boston red builders. Then they tried | to find an excuse because there were | | the two Daily Worker leaflets about. the strike in the paper. When they couldn’t find any law under which} to arrest them, the cop who pulled them in told them not to yell! “extra,” because this wasn’t an “ex- | tra” edition. ‘They are going crazy trying to find means by which to stop the sale of the Dailies. But the two red builders will be back on the job tomorrow. ‘The cops have another bad habit here in town, which we intend to break. They keep dropping into the Workers Center, 222 Spring St., Jook at the posters, take a Daily and walk out. Then they hang around the doors or near the win- dows in order to scare any workers who want to come in. Penn. Fires Member of Brotherhood By a Group of R. R. Brotherhood Workers LONG ISLAND CITY.—Tuesday, | Sept. 4th, ashes were found dumped {in Sunnyside yards. A track em- ployee brought Morrison and ac- cused a dining car worker of dump- ing the ashes. This worker pro- | tested he was innocent but was forced to pick up the ashes. On his return from dumping the jashes, the track employer threat- ened to have him fired and used | abusive language which was | strongly resented. This dining cav worker was taken off and fired a few hours later. He is a member of the Brother- | hood. What is the Brotherhood | going to do about this case? It must take this up and fight for the ‘reinstatement of this dining car | employee. This case shows that the Penn is using greater terror against its | employees because the spirit of or- ganization is alive among them. The Penn hopes to break this spirit. The answer is we workers must build our organization and fight for our rights. NOTE: We publish letters every Friday from workers in the transporta- tion and communication indus- tries—railroad, marine, surface lines, subway, elevated line, ex- press companies, truck drivers, ete., and post office, telephone, telegraph, etc. We urge workers trom these industries to write us of their conditioms of work and their struggles to organize. Please get these letters to us by Tues- day of each week. By a Seaman Correspondent NEW YORK, N. Y—I presume | | the class-conscious workers realize | | how the Ward line is guilty of an. archy in the disaster of the Morro} Castle and also you realize how im- | portant our workers’ press is in ex-| posing such criminals who try to. accuse us seamen of anarchy which | they themselves are guilty of. | am a ships carpenter and my work on board ship has much to do wit! | life boats and gear; also with) | water-tight doors, which are sup- | |posed to be used for emergencies | in fire or water. I have also been | in a ship fire at sea and I know that from my own experience a fire which would burn a small chair or | even a half of a chair would cause smoke to be noticeable through a large area of the inside parts of ship. I have often told many people |—both seamen and passengers alike, |—that a great danger exists at sea | under the present conditions. That | | the first time a ship had any seri- | | ous emergency at, sea that due to | the conditions of all the emergency |euipment and the small size of the | | crews nowadays, there would surely | be disaster. My belief seems to be Ship Owners’ Greed Is Cause of Disasters Like Morro Castle Fire, Seaman Charges The life boats and their gear are never in proper condition. The fire and boat drills are a farce. The watertight doors are seldom in working order. Some of them have not been worked closed in years and furthermore cannot be closed. I have had to work hard many times trying to get them in working rder on different ships; they are supposed to be repaired in port, but. the shipowners will fire a man if he insists on such. Steamboat in- spection is likewise a vicious sham; fire hose are often allowed to oc- cupy the hose rack long after they are rotten and leaking badly. The gaskets (rubber) which are sup- posed to be in each hose coupling are often missing, and the water pressure causes the water to leak out at least one quarter of the force | of water. The spanners, (hose coupling wrenches are often missing; each hose rack and fire hydrant is sup- | posed to have one but in many cases a seaman has to search at. different hoses until he finds one. Then often it is a wrong size. We are not allowed to talk to the pas- sengers for fear we will tell them of the way our crews are so small and how the slave drivers like Worms and Abbot make life at sea a prison to us; and a deathtrap for all on board except these yellow slave drivers who run to the life boats and to the bow of the ship and order the anchor out so that | the ships bow will stay to the breeze \and carry the fire aft to roast and cremate others; and who conveni- ently leave the ships book aboard or at least that part of it about the fire—after they have acted crimi- nally negligent in not calling the crew as soon as the fire was dis- covered; who would then be able to save every life aboard and also put the fire out. Questions for the Bosses The shipowners’ profits is all they ever cared for, and with the rest of this rotten capitalist system has led to a catastrophe. I am sure that the Ward Line officers, also Hoover and Conboy and the rest, would be ferced to answer these few questions about the Morro Castle fire disaster: (1) Why were the Ward Line lawyers allowed to take the acting captain and the chief « H engineer in tow and also the rest of the officers to a private frame- up while Alagna is jailed, held in- communicado and a Communist in Cuba jailed; (2) What do they be- lieve smoke from burning wood, paint, varnish stain, rugs, curtains, upholstery, rubber insulation, in- flammable. liquids, etc., smell like; (3) How would the materials which the bulkhead (partitions) were | made of and all the furniture and other equipment in ihe library, social hall, bar room, and state- rooms burn, fast or slow? After they were allowed to become heated so from .afire neglected to be ex- tinguished, the material was largely wood and other inflammable ma- terials; (4) Wha: do they under- stand about the so-called Red unions’ policy in cases of anarchy? Do they know that such unions condemn all such acts of violence and will be the ones to fight such acts to a finish to prove the truth and place the responsibility where |is belongs; (5) What do they be- lieve organized seamen would do to such as the tool (Red baiter) who is trying to save his own neck for on an act of anarchy on the high seas Halt || PARTY LIFE Party, Y.C.L. in Kensington Active in Textile Strike Building of Rank and By J. R. Kensington, Pa. is a compact tant branches of the industry. This section, however, is known as a center of hosiery workers, and has a history of militant struggle. following branches of the industry answered the call of the general strike: Wool and worsted, up- holstery weaving, plush, carpet, silk, knitted underwear. The hosiery workers, however, who are the best organized, and having a tradition of struggle, remained at work at the order of Gorman and Rieve, under the excuse that the hosiery workers already have what the textile work- ers are fighting for, meaning, that they have recognition of the union and an agreement. Messrs. Gorman and Rieve disre- gard completely the demands of the textile workers and that the hosiery workers too have a fight for the 30-hour week and the improvement of their working conditions. The Party members in the dif- ferent branches of the strike are active and are in leading positions. There is tremendous spirit in the strike, and they are keeping up the spirit of the strikers by organizing mass picketing. They are also help- ing to establish broad rank and file strike committees. The comrades in the hosiery union are agitating and organizing |the workers to join the general strike, to refuse to work scab work, and to fight for the 30-hour week, for wage increases and other im- provements in their working con- ditions, The Y. C. L. is very active in this section. Some are directly par- textile center, composed of impor- | File Groups, Recruiting for Party Are Major Tasks of Communists | Tt is necessary to mobilize all of j;our forces among the strikers as |Well as among the hosiery workers to get the latter out on strike, which would to a great extent, strengthen |the strike of the tens of thousands | of textile workers. | Recruiting in the Party and the | League is very weak. This must be, | immediately corrected. It is by strengthening the Party in the |union that we will strengthen the |strike, counteract the “red scare” propaganda, and show to the masses the role of the Party in the strug gles of the workers. It is the major task, however, to build rank and file groups in every |branch of the industry. Such |groups are to be established per- manently with the aim at the pres- lent, during the strike, to guard jagainst the possible sellout and to |lead the workers on the picket line |and in the strike halls; and in the future, it will be the aim of the rank and file committees to fight for the interests of the wor=ers for trade union democracy and rank and file control, spe . Note: Will other comrades in. | the textile areas send us their ex- periences? How are you utilizing the Daily Worker in the strike? | What methods do you use to com- |bat the “Red Scare?” What is the |Trole played by the units made up |of non-textile workers in the tex- tile towns? How do you carry on Party recruiting? Are you building opposition groups in the U. T. W.? What work do you do among the |National Guard? Write us these things for publication in this column. Send us your leaflets, and we will publish them, ticipating in the picket lines and others are busy distributing the Daily Workers, the Young Workers, and leaflets. The Party members, however, are not on the job. It is still the task of the Section and District to mobilize the Party membership as well as the sym- pathizers for more effective par- ticipation in the strike, for system- atic distribution of the Daily Worker, not only at the strike halls, but especially on a territoriay basis, since the distribution of the Daily Worker at the strike halls has been | interfered with by the police and the dicks, Letters from Our Readers (Because of the volume of letters re- ceived by the Deparment, we can print only those that art interest Join the Communist Party 36 E. 12h STROET, N. Y. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Cemmunist Party. Street City This is true boss class style: not one cent in relief but hundreds of thousands of dollars to prepare the editors. Suggestions and critic: welcome and whenever possible are used for the improvement of the Daily Worker.) A CALL TO THE Y. C. L. Birmingham, Ala. To the Editor: The city of Birmingham cannot give the workers relief. Large num- bers of workers all over town are starving. Of the little relief that is given out, not any of it is given to the youth. The city of Birmingham is broke, but they can find $35,000 of the city’s funds and $130,000 of the federal funds to build the armory in the city for the National Guard. youth for war and in case of strikes to become strike-breakers. Sunday, Sept. 2, two I. L. D. meetings were held in Bessemer workers’ homes with about 30 young miners. Here we have only a weak unit of the Y. C. L. and in a short time we expect to set up a |¥. C. L. unit in the biggest ore | mine in the country. | This is the best answer to the | building of new armories to train the youth for war. MLN, ‘Unless Every Section and Unit in the Party Throws Its Forces Vigor- ously Into the Circulation Drive, the Daily Worker Remains Une known to Thousands of Workers. The $60, Here Is My Bit To NAME ADDRESS 000 Goal. Received Sept. 19 930.00 ) Unit 3-42 53 League, Lorain, Previntsly: roselved 5426.26 | Unit 16-3 1.00. Ohio 3.08 one 346, 100 rot sept 19 01a’ Total to date 0958.35 | Unit 3-46 i ‘ot Sep y DISTRICT ¥ (New York Clty) Youngstown, Tot to date 434.44 hac 4 Unie a8 5.00 DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) anit 19 S00 /See 8 Un 6 5.00 Soc. 5.00 + Uaioe 3.90 | See 9 Unit § 234 Corea. Sarbean 5.00 ies Soo | Sec 10 Unit 10 2.61 Fred Berthauer .16 aoe ue $0 | Sec 2 Unit 2 5.84 Helen Deavigian .63 et Ser townie {as Sec 8 Unit 6 5.00 Ralph Dzavigian 44 a wars © 100 See 2 Unit 8 898K Magorlicnion a0 y mi . fagorlichian .| LW.O, Br. 10 Pinsker Affalr 26.00 | ee ish, Workers tes “30 | Soe. 0 Tot Sept 19 44. bene tig rte tes mech aa $00| Finnish Workers Tot to. date 260.01, AD oscilla vaey DISTRICT & (Chienge) ol. by workers in Rockne Dress Shop 2.40 pray eam cs Total September 19 BO gat 1 ae Total to date a1e7.s6| Total. Seok. wn DISTRICT 3 (Philadelphia) DISTRICT 18 (California) District Whitney—For Helen Luke 1.00 ener | Total to September 565.90 | Total Sept. 10 1.00 Total to date 995.08 | Total to date an DISTRICT 5 (Pittsburgh) DISTRICT 14 (Newark) Unemployment Couneil 116 1.50 | District 5.00 Wilkensburg Unit 3.00 Johnstown Sec. Comm. 5.00 | Total September 19 5.00 Unemployment Council 8.00 | Total to date 5.44 Soutlt Slav Workers Club 5.00 DISTRICT 15 (New Raven) South Slav Workers Club, Masontown 5.00 | John Ogulnick South Slav Workers Club, Ambridge 5.00 | Lithuanian Workers Organizations of 5th Ward East 1 Unit a = ‘Waterbury, Conn, . ent Council Library g Library Unit 3.00 | Total September 19 15.35 Lithuanian Workers Club 5.00 | Total to date 30.66 South Slay Workers Club, Clairton 5.00 DISTRICT 18 (Milwaukee) South Slay Workers Club, N. Pgh 5.00 Sect 2 4¢ Club 18.00 | see 2 108 Dimitroy cit, Total to September 19 53.35 | Sec 178 West Allis. | 5. Total to date 144.91 | Sec 2, Kasun 84 DISTRICT 6 (Cleveland) Sec 1’ Bookstore 25 Tot Sept. 19 24.39 Unit 101 $5.00 Ohio 10.00 | Bulgarian Wkrs Tot to date 90.27 Unit 103 ‘84 Steubenville 5.00 DISTRICT 19 (Colorado) Unit 104 3.00 Youngstown _5.79 | Helper, Utah, Sec. C.P. i Onit 107 242 Unit 1-2 Toledo 1.25 | Bishi Unit 110 2.00 Un 7-8, Toledo 2.30| Total September 19 Unit 111 9.19 Un 7-11 Toledo 2.89' Total to date Onit 112 10.68 Un 7-13 Toledo 80) DISTRICT 21 (St, Louis) Unit 113 2.25 Un 17-5, Toledo 3.32| Section 1 00 Unit 114 115 Russian Workers || Section 6 5.00 nit 3-46 20.00 Club 2- : nit 3-48 1.80 D. Rallis 1.00! Total September 19 10.00 Onit 2-23 2.00 Macedonian Peopi. Total to date 35.25 ward the $60,000! AMOUNT | 30 EAST 13th St. Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER New York, N. ¥.

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