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Page Six DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1934 Uniontown ‘Work Program’ Proves Attempt to Halt Muss Struggles PARTY LIFE Cleveland C.P. Carries Out Party Anniversary Tasks WORKERS’ HEALTH OldPartiesFail U. C: C ontinues Bigg pare Fee Dy To Improve - Week, Leaders As 35 Workers Join Conditions Order Miners' By a Mine Worker Correspondent | No Money Available for New Program, Officials py a Mine Worker Correspondent | c ‘ ne Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board | I.—WHY VACCINATION? Introduction is necessary to ence of these diseases. prevent In re are tw al language, we say, immunity,» “4 : | : ; orgs $ : RIVESVILLE W. VA. Here in ee : : ‘ : OS eu ceeaidies a these diseases ‘must be built up.) | iyis yoee vow oni mete oo Admit; Prices Continue to Rise as Cut Continental Coal Co. in Parker Run | Unit Discussions Taking Place, Public Rallies aie The cian we of science dealing with| tinity of slectine one * | Mine the company laid off one hun- Ss . ty Lectures Arranged ee etion. (hat in, by s called immunology Poggi di igi dha ay pope In Relief Threatens laced’ ce howe ae aa ee anes Held, Special Party Lectures a scribir healthy liv nd exercise a | that ¢ y we _ made under the C.W.A. and R.w.D. | iecided that they would call a spe Workers Discover Vaccination | State and national government By a Worker Correspondent ng, ar to don’t want the same people that| —The in- : i jcial meeting and take some action! 1 carrying out the political cam-| At Columbus, Ohio, Ivanoff build bodies so be ‘The earliest work in immunology |e nave now in office. Now, Com- |yewiyarow wavs, been tiie: down | Stes Suverman ciated to the County [°% it. Just 134 men showed up St] haign arcund the ish Munters! HAIL BC etek: will greek af 8 y resist was done by a man named Jennet,| rages and fellow workmen, we have | budgetary needs of the. unemployed | Committee on September 4, namely, | his meeting. When the chairman | of the Party and the approaching| p. m., Sept, 23. diseases. The d as early as the first half of the| experience in Helper that these of-|and making definite promises that| that the new work program was an |OPened the meeting in come Frank] 7+, Congress. District 6 has already| At Akron, Ohio, Perkins School less effective one, is the cighteenth century. Jenner 0b- | ficials that are in office now, Mayor |the new relief work program will|IF PROPOSITION: simply because | Miller and Nick Alomor. They were| carried out the following tasks as| Auditorium, A. Landy will speak of disease already served that milk-maids and cattle|Gianatti and Docktor, have been |(re, new Teel Work Prog | n the ones to tell the miners what | oe acting v enable us to pay our rents, light,| there was no money allocated as| | laid down in the 15th Anniversary | ody. a } at 7:30 p. m., Sept. 28. hands who had caught “cow-pox”| trying to take away all rights that | |to do. He admitted all that we g members of tk means for prop is class who have the diet, sufficient rest n a g pox to prevent small-| We are tax payers, working on the . is proven by the fact that Jen- F. E. R. A, for relief, but our ount of this, con-| light is turned off. So it’s up to you and a we! lated life. In the|Sisted of a series of case histories} people. I think we have voted long Soviet U told to him by these workers.) enough for the Republicans and is a wor (To Be Continued) Democratis. There is no difference, tion of di nor better conditions. he entire por 01 Te eae ae _ _|_ Now a little about U. M. W. A BL PMDEre Are. AABY Contributions received to the/ Miners are all dissatisfied with con- the body credit of the Medical Advisory | ditions and checkoff especially. You a Board in its Socialist Competition | can hear most critical statements on ange the World” and/ days when checkoffs are too often nnes in the Daily Worker can invade and kill ev est body. And because of this f: artificial assistance in the form of I Queda, ce i eee Total to date . $1,500.00 WS . THE HOME HELEN LUKE By Easier Than Fighting for the Bonus A Chicago comrade sends us one we missed. Describing it as a “good recommendation” and “one of the most outstanding acts and practical recommendations of the American Legion of any state,” the “Progres- Sive Miner” organ of the P. M. A. orps; and be it further “Resolved, that this resolution be given publicity in order that it might aid in obtaining the afore- said results.” (Our emphasis, H. L.) How's that for a large dose of American fascist thinking? And the Some $6.50, some $10, up to $16. The company started to put men on. But just Sogel. Conditions are bad. Three of the men lost their lives jin two months time, and there are jonly 60 loaders. Working man, | what is going to happen when they put 300 in? They generally employ that many during the winter. Be- | sides I don’t know what the mat- | ter is with the Blue Eagle. While I am writing these lines someone | came and told me of the one more slave whose legs were broken in the Spring Canyon mine. 4 slab of coal fell on his legs. We are going to have the funeral tomorrow. Plan Hunger March To Win More Relief For Unemployed lain the whole matter to us.|new work relief program was to Wednesday, Sept. 12, Mr. O’Neil ap- | keep us from fighting for more re- peared at our regular meeting and|lief. With the prices doubling up to a crowd of about 150 men and|on lard, meat, flour, etc., in the last | Women explained the new program. three months, this increase in re- In the main it consists of the | lief does not give us as much to buy | following: jour food with as we could three | | One in each unemployed family|months ago with the lower relief. | will be entitled to get work. He But, if the government can make or sh? will be paid 50 cents an hour. |The needs of the family will be the basis for the amount of work re- ceivable. For example, a small family will be entitled to earn $9 us believe that after the 15th of September all of us will have jobs | earning up to $18 a week, then we} will not feel the needs to organize | and fight for more. His speech was | {a week and a large family up to| applauded repeatedly and after ap- | | $18 a week. The earned sum will! pealing to the unemployed to build be an allowance to that family to| stronger U. ©. 35 new membets |Spend so much for food, so much signed up. for clothing, medical needs, coal, ete. | Mr. O'Neil was compelled to admit In case of bad weather and inability | that there was mo money as yet for to work, the family will be given| the new relief work program. its pay for the work. However, Mr.| It happens that the relief work- | | O'Neil did no know whether this/| ers in Fayette County organized into| | would have to be made up. All pay-|an association and Mr. O'Neil was| ments for work will be in cash. The | elected its vice-president. However, | unemployed will not be compelled| the president of this association is to travel miles away from home;|H. H. Baer, better known as Red only one member in the family will| Baer from Brownsville. Ex-Dick of be allowed to work. Above the|the Monogahella R. R., a_slugger,| | “budgetary needs” each family will| redbaiter and grafter. Red Baer did| | be allowed for “all other need: | everything in his power to keep the | At the same time Mr. O'Neil ex-| unemployed from organizing. In one plained the new relief system, which | case he tore a man’s application for | in the main consists of the follow-| relief just because the witness for | ing: A single man or woman will| this man was someone Red Baer | be given $2 per week; two in a fam-| did not like. In another case he| Comrade, they were talking about | getting all of the men working and/| asked if we was willing to stay| home one day and let the men laid off work two days a week, that we Was supposed to work. Comrade, I want you to understand me. We are only working two days a week | and he asks us to get all. of the| men that heard this to work one | day, and let the’ men the coal company laid off to work one day, and stated it was up to us. He| told us, don’t pay attention to the | Daily Worker because it had the same people that was burning the | cross. Nothing but K. K. K. Comrade Editor, I want you to expose that mean lie of Frank Miller. I am so damn mad that I don’t know whether you will be able to read this or not. I want you to publish this in the Daily Worker. | NOTE: | We publish letters fram coal | and ore miners, and from oil field workers every Saturday. We urge workers in these fields to write us of their conditions of work and | of their struggles to organize, Please get your letters to us by Wednesday of each week. Every day of the Roosevelt New | fi ¢ " coal, buy clothing, etc. In order to| yet; secondly, because there was not |," i | Bulietin. C.P.U.S.A., issued by the] At Toledo, Ohio, P. Bart will meth from contact with cows so affected,| workers have. Another is David |have this pt dead te oun sndinibes Tedbah projects: tr some wommuinl- | 2200 from the N. R. A. But he told District Bureau | speak Sept. 30. non one and ox, no matter) Parmly. He is County Commission-| the Leithe local of the Fayette |ties to employed even 10 per cent | ‘he eed the cau Another meeting)“ (1) Unit discussions are taking] At Dayton, Ohio, A. Landy will because aac ae er. He was my foreman whe he | county. N. U.C. asked Mr. O'Neill |of the employable unemployed heey o ae oat eee Rado place, using as a basis the outline| speak Sept. 30. m of dise s were the first| was elected, now he is the super- Fed faa ee : fea’ tha “BME é | ins Vv eir w oR aey ie, va 106) Geeta Yaekaiee ok tha ake : neficial effects of|intendent with two large die ek e local investigator, to come and) Third, the whole proposal of the|yith ‘the men that Were laid off,| Prepared by the Agit-prop Com: Dt v mittee (C.C.). (2.) A special 5-day propagandists’ | class was held in Cleveland for com- rades active in the Party, mass or- ganization and trade union work, to popularize the historical develop- ment of our Party, its program and | tactics, etc. Special emphasis was placed on the Negro question and work within the trade unions. Ap- | proximately 30 comrades attended and the response was enthusiastic. (3.) Public celebrations of the 15th Anniversary of the Party have been arranged in the following cities | so far: | At Cleveland, Ohio, Metropoli- | have been arranged and are being carried out by the language groups in the city: Ukrainian, Hungarian, Italian, Jewish. ete. A. LANDY, Agit Prop. Dirtctor, Dist. 16. Join the Communist Party 36 E. 12th SYRUEET, N. Y. €. Please send me more inferme- tion on the Communist Party. | tan Theatre, 5010 Euclid, C, Hath- | neem.» es i . 30 at 7:30 bighod aiaers oc aeaa Skeet cco reeiaccssess osece At Youngstown, Ohio, J. WH- [1 city ........cccccsssssesecoeces liamson will speak on Sept. 28. WINNING TRAILING Distriet Total Percent District Total Percent to of to wn Date Quota Date Quota ” 4 vs. \ Ee a resolution adopted bist Rohe aoe See Piece . ily, $3.50; three in a family, $4.35;| jumped off a coal truck upon a| Deal shows the growing need of the | seuarielt ! becca a Rae ee I aarses j ie 1ich goes as follo’ Oe Eisai" eae eT ieee By a Worker Correspondent ete. This is an increase over the| Negro worker, Barksdale, because he| Daily Worker. But the Daily | Sees | ] a 1 Whereas, widespread economic Frvtuene first official act of Lite, McKEES ROCK, Pa—A mass | old scale of $1.50 per a single; $2.45 | demanded an additional sack of coal,| Worker needs $60,000 to be able | | 1—poston | @r1.78 | 38.5 14—Newark | 160.51 | 21.4 nn and general unemploy- | 0 the League of Nations wag | meeting was held on Thursday,|for two; $3.40 for three, etc. After|Kemenovich called to the attention| to deal more fully with the strug- | es ! ! | Edges MEd vo sign a petition for the complete | Sept. 8 in Polish Kadet, Hall, Shiniss | Mr. O'Neil got through speaking,| of the workers all these incidents| gles of the working class, Support | [7 \> aimee ae oo] esata OL aptar aes: Whereas, many capable and welt oe a of women, The issue is | 204 Ella St. This meeting was held | our county U. C. organizer, Keme-|and appealed to O'Neil and other| the Daily Worker! Send your con-| | * ’ parrot e | ‘ qualified married men who are) Tray clear — women must | Y the Unemployed Council and |novich, took the floor and brought | investigators present to remove such | tTibution today to the $60,000 drive. | | | Set “ hate Ieee ie and willing to work, are un- enGone: “Fascism and slavery, or | ®D0ut 150 workers attended. The | out the following: first that there|an element from their leadership.| ~~ fia 7 es 6—Cleveland | 728.70 | 24.1 Detroit | 413.85 | 11.8 socal employment Communism and freedom, inde- | SPeakers pointed out the main issues |is no guarantee that the new work |The U. C. pledged its support to|winter. It means that the workers| |_ ae | 4 | | whatsoever and they and those who pendence) ane seni ® for which the unemployed workers | relief program will give us jobs. He|the Association in their fight for| will have to unite more closely and ! | “ | ier are dependent on them are in dire | Pendence, and sec! ae must struggle, such as for increase | called to our attention the promises| higher wages and better conditions,| fight harder than ever before, to| | ‘Bua! { eae ons arene aa ane ee eee eons and distress: and’ > 3 of relief, for payment of water which | oars — = —————'| maintain the paltry relief we have | |—--—— 1 — t — tee: Des espe 00" Can You Make *Em ieee aie ee elegy an | U; 1 ° thus far been receiving, and to ob-| | 18—Milwaukee | “| 12-seattle | sat) 8 © = ‘ ieee ve all. the most important, which | M R [; | tai ae Pe 000 married women, whose employ- Yourself? is the Social and Unemployment | nemp oyment, eager etite | La ue a ee coe aaa : | pee it eae fk eo |Insurance Bill H. R. 7598. Includ- 78 ; | The LU. of MM. S. W. (AF, 13—California \ 30.97 | 4. 12—Seattle \ 30.27 | 3. lace for the reason tha ‘S- Pattern 2087 is available only in|ing also constable evictions and S Ll AH al W M ay eying or Gaal eal : Hus a ds are gainfully employed and 752 4 6,8 and 10. Size 4 takes | sheriff sales, that are being planned ype ar inter or mers belle ene pl piped 19—Denver | teas laze] "| aucet, conte | 59.90 | 11.9 oo Aue nae ae 2's yards 36 inch fabric and %|daily against all and part time ES |ing the most militant fighters out ee geht iG ies Re Glacbarred _ egg Teale yards contrasting. Fipbeai ig gee phones peat re ken By a Worker Correspondent ation cut, with the tools and mouth-| of their ranks, namely the Commu- tions they hold and employment in ieee sewing instructions in- cher ieee : ie! EVELETH, Mich. — The mines | pieces of its dictatorial machine| nists. The local union voted in their stead should be given to per- omuaede The ackeve he thusiastio. | here hired numerous young men (posing as the friends of labor) | favor of accepting them, they have fons now unemployed, thereby re- ally piodged A ave wanes re » this spring, when there was talk of obeying the mandates of their lord, | carried an active campaign for the eC oa Heving to a large extent, the exist- ay eae raver 4 rates ae the iron range going on strike, with paving the way for the cut by sery-| interests of the workers; but now Ks 9 ing unemployment situation in the boa 2 si eiahs ee urs, |the promise that these young men ing their boss and issuing dema-/some reactionary members and United States: now therefore be it lavad aint a = m popu- uphold the company in case of labor|gogic statements against the Steel |leaders of other locals threaten to solved by Capital City Post ‘Th follawiey dae after tt " | dispute—that if they were with the | Trust. have the charter revoked if they| Received Sept. 27 $ 439.67 Rachman Cp 5.00 Korgin U 307 Cp 5.00 American Legion, department | pape pelted lied Moewalee ab with the company, the company| E.R. A. work is insufficient, bach-| are not expelled. The dictator is| Previously Received $9209.03 | A Schwartz 5.00 ‘Unit S1 Sec 6 20.00 n0is, in regular meeting as- nie aséal wena di or relief @t would be with them, What is the|elors receiving only two days per| busy again, using the long ago ex-| Total to date $9648.70 | ‘tal Sports Ol 5.00 Davidman 5.00 gency and was ° i | - ; DISTRICT 1 (Boston) Zatajack IWO 5.00 Winotur Br 173 5.00 led this 6th day of August, fiatly refused. He became enraged |*Swt? Now that there is no pos-| month, a total wage sum of $8.80,| posed splitting tactics and red scare| cheisea unit Dist Comm Wom League 5 15.00 Winocur Br 173 5.00 1934, in Springfield, Ill, that we as at the refusal and started a little | SiPiity of strike here this summer| with which to exist on. to prevent the workers from fight-| Sec 3 Cp $5.94 Labor Day Kricheff PB 5.00 Kleiman Frei- an organization go on record urging rumpus because he needed relief any longer—summer is just over and| A few months ago a committee in- ing in an organized manner. Brighton Unit Picnic 17.58| A Bell PB ne4 a Gh F. PB re the President, and ihe congress of vere urgently. The family waste hard winter is facing us—the ma-|terviewed the mayor and he ad-| So workers, in order to better our a en att 00 eam endian 2:00 | ea eee 5. A aes the United States, the governors, starving so he demanded relief. Ta- | J0tity of these men have been laid| mitted that there were approxi-| every day needs and living condi-| sec 1 1.00 ——| heit'G F Cp 5.00 R Bizar Cp 5.00 and the elective officials of the sev- | stead the social worker called the off, swelling the already swollen | mately 600 to 700 totally unem-| tions; in order to face the hardships | Peabody Unit Total Sept 27 $49.52 | Walman St Kornfield 5.00 eral states, the administrative offi- police and arrested the man, but he | 7@4ks of unemployed in this city of | ployed. Now with the E. R. A. work-|of the coming winter; in order to den ane He 16.00 Total to date $671.73 El ee a telat 5.00 cers of counties, cities, villages, |was later released on his own ac- | Sven to eight thousand inhabitants. | ers barely able to support their| give our wives and children a better DISTRICT 2 (New York City) Manuel, Frei- 602 5.00 towns, and other municipal corpor- cordance because he needed food. | Others were notified recently to be-| families, with the mass lay-offs at|means of livelihood; organize and| sec 1 Un 1B $1.00 Sec 12 PB _20.00| heit G F 5.00 Prutzer 5.00 ations, and all business enterprises The Unemployed Council commit- | 8in to look for other jobs. , There} the O. I. M. Co., and the school| fight, by joining into these unions | Unit 12B Sec 2 H Williams PB 53 nie hala re phe Sat iad in the United States, be memoral- tee took action and brought the | have been cases where certain men| board dropping all part-time work-|and putting up a real struggle in een ae a 2.00 | cw Ley 0103. 300 Goldstein 808. 2.80 ialized to discharge from their em- |case to the relief agency and de- | have applied for jobs at the mines | ers, putting a few on full time basis| form of mass action. PB Friedman 21.0 691 Allerton 10.00 | Schwager Br 305.00 Unit 308 PB 10.00 ployment all married women whose |manded an immediate food order | 8nd have been told to leave town. |and raising the salaries of the al-| As individuals we can accomplish | sec 2 Un 10B IWO Br 2532 Samitt Cp 5.00 Sec 4 Op yh husands are gainfully employed and for the family which was later is-| The Steel Trust has been using| ready highly paid officials, the situ-| nothing; but when organized we| PB Martin 150 Portchester 1.00 | Sloan Butchers TWO Br 169 5, able to provide for them, and to sued. all their forces to obtain a tax valu-! ation is very acute for this coming|can create pressure. Poh astee 600. 8 Salaan 100 | Reduk Cp 5.00 PB 5.00 offer such employment to persons un 418 bec 2 233 W. Rosenberg 200|Oalt 602 Cp 10.00 Katz Icor 5.00 now,,unemployed, who are in dire { He dip Bee a: 100. Hele eve 100 | Cooper Br 581 Katz ILD 5.00 See 2 cisttess because Ot | Conducted by Mary M Chit Ba ae icra Jooss| Beck Uc02 8:00 Decov Br 40 Bk 435 their inability to obtain employment | nducted by Mary Morrow. ‘2 Sec 8 PB 6.00 Total Sept 27 $90.86 | Beck U 902, © §.00 Decov Br Bed to sustain themselves, and those de- dren’s editor, The Daily Worker, 50 pad ee Ae Tot to date $4312.51 Bora Gere ctw os canes doe Rie pendent on them; be it further \ East 13th St. New York City. DISTRICT 3 (Philadelphia) Goudick Sch 1 | Clark See 7 FB 5.00 “Resolved, that the peter rano oh teenie ene yeee 41590 | care ar 5.00 Mintella PB’ 5.00 vention . . . . go on recor lance proceeds District Affair i A 4 ee ail povis of the Amwerlean ADVENTURES OF MARGIE, TIM AND JERRY. S EE WHAT HAPPENS IN NEXT WEEK’S PAPER SS eet ee re ue capee ete ii ; is, and Total Sept. 27 $149.47 | pinkelstein Gp 5.00 R Booseman Cp 5.00 Legion in -cealges ees a f ay Listed Sept. 19 potica ag - us Proceeds | 301 0 307 PB 5.00 0 Gusman PB 5.00 eee te United States, to = ° L From District Affair Unit 107 5.00 Serdlow Str check their respective districts, BUT, ex-- WE DP ike Gye bott nkg Lett a sf ~ : eH Onit 602 5.00 M W Cl 2.00 and ascertain the exact number No GIRLS 4 ook sae buat tae oe oe Tobias fo 5.00 Kurtz TWO es of married women who are work- Unit 604 Mile SAe1 pos 1) 5.00,| gratia ee tee ing and have other means of self- Be: Sg 2.25 ae (rags 5.00 Tot to date $1152.08 pst oomanae, aod Prue Ae EEE! SS lcobua wanes meee” ee 2 Unit 307 PB 5.00 A Brownstein 2. i z national officers, and demand that | Sol 1B 5.00 Nagel PB ms 5.00 piltsaage 4 rrr these officials take such action as | D 3 a 0 et Menaes -4 filled from the ranks of e - | ( x » 541, . esas cesta song Ane | TPaRHEM ee be Wylnecee PET cao] ‘Toeal Bept at $3.00 ably veterans who have an honor- athe tedwe I Kastroff PB 5.00| Total to date 215. able discharge from the United PR 5.00 R Kessler PB 1.25 DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) States cand navy, or marine h iA } ee Moss us Jos 09 fee 2 a s Riche port oe walt See Salers —- | einstoc! : . 4 ; ——-- | HOW DICKON MET ROBIN HOOD |daubed with mud and overgrown His keen blue eyes were like steel,| said Dickon quietly. “Besides, sir,|Ueon Snelly 5.00 B Goldberg PB 5.00| 6-1 Karanchas "= R Palma id WORKERS SCHOOL | IN SHERWOOD FOREST—I. with creepers and briars. There was} searching his face. I've no choice. I shot a hart two ee aed 302 ad Bomenhiooe oe 4 get Un 13 PB 3,00 Total Sept 27 $41.73 acer The following story is taken from| 4 tiny ed diy penta ss but a ‘one erator ot ie outlaw lead-/| nights ago.” Unit 302 1.77 R Kaplan PB 5.00 oS arbor Un 30 Total to date $413.85 v « Against the| none of the le fields which sur-/| er, ickon had felt a sensation of} “Did you? A hart? Not bad for|W Cook PB 5.00 Martin U 301 4.00) BulgarianBuro 22.56 of BOSTON Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (12e) m|%,000%, called, “Bows Against the|none of the wide feds Gliappoiniment, “He was quite Ola boyseh Alan? "A tool han to oe|sevinns. mu S60 Suter PB Sa0| ”DISTHICY 9 Mion) Opening fethe anne hn Be reed ca aaah Hood, leader of a band of outlaws,/ “We don't go in for farming,|If his sharp beard had been black| picking off the King’s harts at his|f Rosebloom $00 Freediand Cp $00, (Previously listed but not included : OCTOBER 1, 1934 waite oe ppp ath) pei and Dickon a boy who shared with| much,” said the guide with a laugh. | instead of foxy-gold, it would have| age! How old are you?” Goldin U 308 PB 4.35 Ingber 5.00 in total) Pe ce : on Noi Gone 6 i ceeebee ee SURE TO STATE him the exciting adventures that ‘There's always the chance we may| gteyed by now. He did not look| ‘Sixteen, sir.” Waleten PB 500. Gartiman—W | Total Sept. 27 et Registration Now Going On | SIZE. 5s | befell them. have to move on in a hurry, before| the wonderful hero of whom the| “All right, don’t call me ‘sir’ We're| Dupin Yon PB 8:00 League 5.00|Totel to date $164.08 919 Washington St., Boston [Serer Life was very cruel to the English! the seeds come up.” songs and stories told. i jall equal in Sherwood—comrades.| Schiffman PB 5.00 GB 1 Sec 1 10.00) | | DISTRICT as wae REGISTER NOW! Address orders to Daily Worker | peasants and workers who lived 800/ They advanced towards the caves.| When he met those steel-like eyes,| What’s the sense of getting rid of ee tates a pots i) ey Pies city, Mb 00.2 Tetad trance: 33:00 Classes Rapidly Filling Up || Pattern Department, 243 W. 17th | years ago. The nobles took away One or two men were standing about |@nd felt the hands, friendly but! one mastér and taking a new one?”| ,SPerts Club 5.00 Dubin Cp DISTRICT 18 (California) St.. New York City. | their lands and made them slave| and called out to Dickon’s com-| Strong, gripping his shoulders, he) “very well—comrade,” said Dickon|J Lozack PB 5.00 League Cp _5.00| Los Angeles ° zou Boot s (tied CLEVELAND, OHIO | fos the (seb. | Rabin Hoods, wen | panlon.” Some «angel 3 ne ee ee ee Eptein S00. Sosdman 307 S00 | Gonference $25.00 poet ih ’ |were not just outlaws. They were| women, who were bent over fires| Mong men. | peas ha tists A Krause PB 5.00 DISTRICT 14 (Newark) poor peasants driven off their land.| cooking, or kneeling to wash clothes| He might be affable and pleasant,| “Bows Against the Barons” can| two cp 4.00 Korgan Br 30 5.00) Unit 10 $1.00 Fouse, Party ii They were poor workers who for|in a stream, glanced up curiously| not haughty like a baron, but he| be obtained from International Pub-| Allen, Holmes- Gibbs U ta hs ee se 1 om © Wiedish . some trifling offense were sentenced | and then went on with their work.|was something bigger and stronger | lishers, 381 Fourth Avenue, New| ,Dute Cp. 5.00 Solay Ut oD | een ee 50.00 ‘Total Sept 27 $63.07 to death, and fled to the forest to| There were one or two small chil-| than any of the men who went with| York City. The price of the book| 4 Ross PB 10.00 Meredith Sec Total to date $160.51 save their lives. dren who stopped their game to|rich armour and gay banners, and| is 85 cents. Pete Mauro PB 5.00 6 PB 5.00 DISTRICT 21 (St. Louis) Epstein Icor Op 5.00 Altman Cp _—5.00 | Sec 4 $2.00 Total Sept 27 $2.00 | Robin Hood stole from the rich| stare. made working men kneel as they Goldberg U106 5.00 M Beckman 1.00 Total to date $59.90 AND to give to the poor, for whose sake| “Here we are,” said the outlaw,| Passed. Pe on Nea ‘Weisman $00 Unit 103 5.00 4 qe istRICT, 2 wrest virginia) es he braved many dangers. He| leading the way into the largest} “So you want to be one of our ig P ge a Pay Gachzisn Op. BNO Total to date $9.18 VER A BY: dreamei of the day when there|cave. It narrowed into a pasage,| little gang, eh?” He laughed music-| See how many words you can find | Unit i 3 I t would be no ruling class and all| twisted, and widened again into a| ally, deep in his chest. “Think it's|in this word. Use only the letters workers would be free to work for| spacious cavern, with other passages|a fine life, I suppose, eating the|CoMtained in the word “Interna- 5 , Of the Communist Party | the common good. opening out beyond. King’s venison and the Lord’s mut-| tional.” For example, “rat.” The boy Here Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! | Light streamed in through a hole|ton? It’s not all May games, my Cabs yagi art povehatire is Suddenly before Dickon had time|in the roof. The floor was and|lad. You'd be better at the plough Sunday, September 30th, at 7:30 p. m. | to realize it, he found himself with| sandy, and mostly Aubin with| in your own village.” prize a magazine which has a whole || NAME ae yas 5010 EUCLID AVENUE | his companion standing in the midst| deer skins. Great antlers and boar| “I don’t think so, sir,” said Dickon | Page of puzzles, the ..ew Pioneer, $ | of the outlaw village. tusks adorned the walls. with a smile. the only. magazine for workers’ and Speaker: CLARENCE HATHAWAY | Village, he called it in his mind, A man and women rose from their| “There aren't many outlaws live | farmers’ children. This is only one Editor, Daily Worker (for it was not a camp, but it was/ stools on either side of a roughly-| to be as old as I am,” Robin warned Bel iaretinred 3 features, in | quite unlike Oxton or any other vil-| made hearth, him. ‘They may sing fine ballads $ D: 5 UKRAINIAN CHORUS FREIHEIT GESANGS FAREIN |) jage ne had ever seen. “Tve brought reeruit, comrade,” about us in the villages and towns.| 93 Tear off and mail immediately to ADMISSION 25 CENTS | It was a dell, sheltered on one side| said Dickon’s guide. but they forget the rough parts. -§- T-A-€- Gat DAILY WORKER i sith ry by a sandstone cliff, in the face of} “Have you?” Nights out in the rain, every man a a a Sereerere: Matiibit, end 20% to 20%) off tie, pore ey 00 He which were several caves, Close by,| Robin Hood came forward and| trying to slit our throats, hunger ww e § id Vere y 50 EAST 13th St. New York, N. ¥. Theatre. Opens at 6 P. M. in a scattered semi-circle, were half| clapped his hands on the boy's| and danger—” Answer to last week's alphabet a dozen log huts, their sides thickly shoulders with a friendly gesture. “We get hungry in the villages,” puzzle, sr —— SS.