The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 4, 1934, Page 4

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a a aM ai SA Page Four COTTON PICKERS HOLD OUT SOLID FOR DEMAND: lates hadalene ArelLorill ard Reported Giving In WORKERS’ HEALTH | Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board and see which one is responsibie. | The food or foods which bring on | ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. Trials Due — In Lowell Saturday Acne L. L. Bron treatment for Acne, which is the e con- dition you have on your back, was described in one of the first New Health Columns, Briefly, do not eat Sweets; cultivate normal bowel hab- its, apply lotio alba, which can be| gotten in the drug store, twice a day| till the skin peels, then after a rest, apply again. Keep your skin clean by bat: frequen using the wash cloth vigorously. If the sores aré very large or have many yellow heads, you s! id see a doctor about it, for it will require more com- plicated treatment than that here described. Eczema in Children N.T., New York.—Although most | believe that “food pro- | ph; teifts” usually cause eczema, yet re- moval of the offending food or foods from the diet does not always cure it. (We st not go into the rea- sons for this.) Many eczematous children are likely to give positive skin tests to proteins, usually food proteins. These tests have been widely used, but they are not often successful. The interpretation of these tests requires extensive ex- perience. Since your child has had eczema only during the last two years, had you added any new food to the diet shortly before the eczema oecurred? If you did, do not give these foods and see the effeets of this. HM the eczema disappears, then add one food at a time at monthly periods IN THE HOME By Michigan Candidates HELEN the rash should be excluded from | the diet | In addition to the above, use skimmed milk or buttermilk instead of miik; no cream or fat or oil. Do not overfeed the child, if that is possible nowadays. To the rash, apply Crude Coal Tar Salve five per cent every day, wash- ing off the previous application with Mineral Oil. Be sure to keep this salve out of his eyes. Do not use water on the sh. If necessary sive him a bath or once a week and then use bran water (made by putting bran in a piece of cloth in the form of a sack, the size of a | fist and immersing the sack of bran |in the water, stiring it weil until the water gets muddy). We would caution against tying the hands of the child as mothers s do to prevent scratchinz. a very serious effect on | th nd of the child. If some pro- | | tection must be given, tie mittens | tockings over the hands and| feet Contributions received to the credit of the Medieal Advisory Board in its Socialist Competition with “Change the World” and Harry Gannes in the Daity Worker | $60,000 drive. | Quota, $1,506. | |L. Pinkusson . |Mrs. D. J. Cronin . Prevtonsty recetved . | ‘Total to date LUKE By a Sharecropper Correspondent i DADEVILLE, Ala—The cotton By a Worker Correspondent pickers are still strongly holding out LOWELL, Mass.--Sat.. Oct. 6, is jto win their demand of $1 per hun- known in Lowell as “Red Satur-|dred for cotton picking. Some re- day.” That is the expression used |port that a few landlords are giv- in the local mill-owner’s press to jing $1 per hundred to get their cot- designate the day whereon the |ton picked. One landlord met a militant workers who were ar: lcropper last week to try to scare rested during the textile strike will |him into picking cotton for 50 cents. Mary Himoff, candidate for State| the Daily Worker, recording ma-| Treasurer of Michigan, is some-| terial on the subject which was what over 26 years old. Member | later used by other comrades. This | probably accounts for your natural jerror in referring to reports on Pittsburgh. Sent to strike as or-| Scottsboro mothers and homeless ganizer of children and youth. Was | youth. The I. L. D, by the way, Na‘ional Pioneer Director January | has a variety of pamphlets on the to June, 1930; elected to National | Scottsboro case which should be Executive Committee of Y. C. L.,| Widely popularized; the latest is | remaining until 7th National Con-/ entitled, ‘Mr. President, Free the | vention, 1934, then graduating into Sco! Boys,’ by Richard | Party. Worked following year in | Moore, Detroit as organizer of N. U. C.; also heiped organize Young Libera- | tors. Again went to Pittsburgh, | during miners’ strike, as youth or- | ganizer. Taught school of zaness | and. young workers. August to No- | 9 vember, 1933, toured Wortern Bins Yourself? on Youth Tour for Foster an ‘ord. | To Detroit in’1933; to take part in| Pattern 2015 is available only in auto s‘rikes. Helped organize big sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, Youth Relief Conference in Detroit /40 and 42. Size 16 takes 334 yards | of Y. C. L. since 1927; joined Party in 1928 during miners’ strike in ro “Comradely, “SADIE VAN VHEN.” Can You Make ’Em be hauled into court to faee charge of assault and battery on “loyal workers,” disturbing peace, and disturbing peaceful | meetings. First is Sam Harzigian, fighting | worker who was arrested three | times for exposing the sellout of | Molloy and Kelley, A. F. of L., and | Cote and Charette, misleaders of | the Independent Textile Workers | Protective Union of Lowell. Next is Sam Vaitses, another mil- | itant worker who was arrested in the Lowell Memorial Auditorium, | when he protested against Gor- man’s sell-out policy at a mass | meeting held by the U. T. W. fake leaders. Bur, a Daily Worker salesman, | was arrested for disturbing the | peace when he shouted “Buy the Daily Worker!” Phillips, another worker, was arrested for distributing leaflets without first obtaining permission from the Mayor. Every one is urged to send pro- tests to Judge Fisher, Court House, Hurd St., Lowell, Mass. and to Mayor Bruin of Lowell, who gave $25 to the strikers’ relief commit- tee (he’s running for representa- tive in the present election cam- paign) and then ordered his po- lice force to terrorize the militant workers who will not submit to the most brazen sell-out in the history | of the American working class. | Negroes Lead Fight Against | Eviction of 5) tienes | By a Worker Correspondent —_| NEW ORLEANS, La.—Necessity is breaking down racial prejudice io an ever greater degree way down} here in the Southland. The work- | ers, both negro and white, see their | kinship in the lines of hunger. Some.day, and it won’t be long, they'll associate race hatred with low misserable conditions of life. | The Lemoine family, 5 and white, | were to be evicted. Where were the relief officials? Where were the | preachers? The officials gave their promises and sympathy. The preach- | ers gave their deep understanding. | This is what he said: “Goddammit, good morning, John. the [I'd like to know what’s the matter | with you damn niggers. I want my cotton picked. Somebody is go- ing to pick my cotton, or else some- body's going to die.” John says, “A strike is on for $1 per hundred and I’m scared to pick for less.” The Jandiord then kicked the cropper im the stomach. Then rocks began to hit the landlord from bushes beside the road. The land- lord ran home and went to Camp Hill, and told the landlords there a crowd of niggers jumped on him, and wanted the K. K. K. to parade that night, and beat up a few, and they would get their cotton picked. But the K. K. K. refused to ride because they know what happened only one mile from where this land- lord lived im 1981. I% marked the first victory of our Share Croppers THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1934 , Union. | We are going to fight to win our demands and we are going to spread the S. C. U., until every small farmer and cropper unites with us |to fight for our liberation here in the Black Belt. We are going to |Stand out against bosses’ terror be- cause the bosses were beating and |lynching us before the 8. C. U. So we know that it is not only the |union they hate, but the old hatred of the Negroes that has been taught them from childhood. But we are going to organize and fight for the rights of the poor whites as well. When we go out to the large plantations to hold a meeting we don’t know if we will return alive or not. If the least slip is made to arouse the suspicion of stool- Pigeons or some white who has not become sympathetic with us, it means that thugs or the boss him- self will surely find out our busi- ness on his plantation. These are |Some of the things the croppers have to put up with, and yet they do organization work. But we are more determined than ever because we know we have the Communist Party to give ws the correct leader- ship, the only Party that is with the working class. HOUSES ROTTING AWAY By a Worker Correspondent CAMP HILL, Ala.—The landlonis claim I am the leader of the cotton picking strike, and threaten to cut me off the relief the last of the month. Winter is coming and we are without clothes and shoes. We will soon be put out. The landlord wants me to be out of our place by January. I want to send my children to school, but they can’t go because they have no shoes or clothes, no money to buy books. My wife is in them up. Our well too is in bad condition and is causing many ill- nesses on account of its filthiness. They tell us they're not able to fix our wells and houses but are able to get money for their own homes in order to live comfortably. They can buy fine cars and tires, eat plenty and live in beautiful homes, while we who have to do all the work live in rotting houses and only get suf- fering for pay. In spite of all the terror and fascism existing we are going to build this organization, the Com-| munist Party, the only party that | fights for the workers. I hope all workers throughout the world will join the Communist Party and help build the organizations, pregnancy and I haven't got suffi- cient bed things. The houses where the negroes live are all rotting away and the land- lord won't furnish a plank to fix Sheep Destroyed to |Cotton Tax Increases Fill Ranchers’ Pockets, Farmers’ Hardships | By a Worker Correspondent | By a Worker Correspondent | BARNHART, Tex.— The average | CHARLESTON, Mo.—The govern- sheep and cowman could hug and|™Ment has put a tax of $5.67 on buss the A. A. A., in fact the whole | °V°'Y hundred pounds of cotton. | Out of every 33 cents one-half must Blus Buzzard administration. — 1} go for government tax. The farme: Just talked to two bankers and|and grower has to pay one fourth ranchmen here at Barnhart. Out of |for rent and only has one fourth the first 27,000 sheep, the culls were | !¢ft for himself. He has to pay the Packers See NRA Is Lie By a Worker Correspondent | LANCASTER, Pa.—I have worked | |at Lorillard’s tobacco plant here for | over five years and always condi- tions have been terrible, but never so bad as now. They speed us up| by overloading the boxes which are supposed to contain 20 pounds. About three months ago a govern- ment inspector weighed a typical box and we don’t know exactly what he found, but we do know that for a short time the boxes | were much lighter. Most of the| girls had been getting less than $4.50 a week, composed of three days, before the shut-down “for repairs.” Mr. Timothy Bean, the big boss, |read us a letter about two months jago which said that the rate per box must not be less than 50 cents }a@ box, which was 15 cents more | than we were getting. Last week the plant re-opened on | a five-day basis and over 100 were not called back. We asked how much we were going to get per box. They beat around the bush and said it would be figured out later land so we expected not less than |50 cents, based on the letter _men- tioned. When we got paid Friday we found our envelopes contained from $8.50 to $11 instead of from $15 to $17.50 on the basis of 50 cents a box. Inquiry developed that the box rate was 35 cents. The code says we would be paid not less than 25 cents an hour, which is poor enough, but our pay was much |less than this. The girls, many the sole supports of their families, got up in a body and refused to go on unless there was an adjustment. Then we were told that if we didn’t like it there were plenty outside who would work 'for less, many handed their checks jin, but the bosses, Ray Erb and |Chalmers, told us to go back to work, which a few did. But we aren’t finished yet—we have just begun to fight against this shame- ful treatment of poor working women, “A TOBACCO STRIPPER. Ho p Picke rs Win Strike in Hopmere, Ore. By a Worker Correspondent TIGARD, Ore—For over a week we hop pickers at work on Homer Gouley's Yard at Hopmere, Ore,, myself, hoping some one would 1 | to dragged along, each probably like | in April. Mary has worked, between school sessions and revolutionary activi- ties, in offices, light industry, fac- |39 inch fabric and % yard con- |trasting. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions included. An appeal to the Unemployment | three thousand, at $8 each, a check Council brought down fifteen Ne-| for $6,000, and the second one, out groes who soon aroused the entire | of 20,000 head, culled 1,700 at $2.00 homeless youth, which appeared in tories, big department stores, Paper | box factories, laundry and res- taurant. | Mrs. Josephine Phillips | Another woman on the Commu- | nist ticket in Michigan is Mrs.| Josephine Phillips, candidate for | State Representative, District 21, Muskegon County. She’s 23, lived, as a child, with parents on farms or in small rural towns of Michi- | gan, attending both parochial and} public schools. Joined I. L. D, in 1931, as charter member; did} executive work; organized branch | in Muskegon Heights. Joined C. P. | end of 1931. | Organized relief workers and| carried on struggles which led to} raise in relief and changing of of- ficials. Muskegon Township was | cu from all welfare, and Mrs. | Phillips then helped organize relief | Wwotkers; a solid relief workers’ | Strike was organized, and through their militant struggle they forced | emergency orders to be given out and 150 families to be placed back | on*the welfare list. During recent strikes at Camp- bell, Wyant and Cannon Foundry, and Prosperity Laundry she took | an active part. In 1933 she helped | to-organize the Working Women’s | Educational Club of Muskegon, | Mich., of which she is vice-presi- dent: Represented this club at the | Congress Against War and Fas-} cism. Is wife of a steel worker and has four children. | Note of Correction | “Dear Comrade: | “For the sake of accuracy I ‘would like to call your attention to the following: I am not the author of “Homeless Youth, a very ex- | cellent little booklet written by a young worker, Dave Doran, and/| which every one should read. There | YY is no pamphlet entitled ‘Scottsboro 103 : anne eines Mothers’ with which you have cred- | ,, cine ur See ise oats dted me. However I did write the | +, this anne Adams pattern, Witte first article appearing in the Daily a 4 9 lainly mame, address and style Worker dealing with the Scottsboro |P mothers and the thousands of Bee BE BEBE 20: SEACe Scottsboro mothers throughout the sh South. | Address orders to Daily Worker I also wrote the first story of the pagetas Department, 243 W. 17th Street, New York City. S Wy CG SN SK SS Y SG | W 2015 atc_\Ny) Wf Y 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 $15,000 International Labor Defense Room 430, 80 East 11th St. New York City <I contribute $...............for the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals and Defense. NAME .. dishetsspaccspensoscad ORES TOE Spree Mees etn aoe neighborhood. A mass of workers, | Negro and white, assembled at the | Lemoine home. A riot squad was called which further advertised the | eviction and the crowd grew. What} could the cops do in view of such | mass pressure? | They told the Lemoines to get aj} meeting permit next time. Needless | to say there was no eviction. The} workers were jubilant over their victory, and a great big lesson was learned by all. Southwest Farmers Welcome Daily Worker By a Worker Correspondent DENISON, Texas.—I was in Sher- | man, Texas, nine miles from here, population of 11,000, a few days ago. Some of the workers in Sher- man are talking of organizing. I showed them a copy of the Daily Worker and they all thought it was fine. I was over in Bryant, Okla. a couple of weeks ago. The condi- tions there have been terrible. The workers and farmers there have surely been busy organizing for the past three months, but they are not quite clear as to the lines to fight on yet. Their lines are O. K. on the relief problems. They elect delegates or committees to go and demond relief for those that can’t get it from the burocratic relief of- ficials. They are, as an organization, against the Bankhead Bill, and are proposing one of their own, as fol- lows: 15 bales of cotton tax free, then a graduated tax of $2.50 on the 16th bale, $5 on the 17th, $10 on the 18th, etc. Double tax after the 16th bale. I was at a delegate meeting and from the number of members called out by each dele- gate present they are about 2,000 strong already. I am personally acquainted with several of the organizers of this movement—called the American Farmers and Laborers. They have no charter yet, and one of the or- ganizers that I spoke to and he feels their movement would do well to go over in a body to the Na- tional Unemployment Council. I gave them as much literature as I could while over there. I gave them some N. U. C. literature, and a few copies of the Daily Worker. EDITOR’S NOTE:—While the bill proposed by the farmers men- tioned in this report may be a little bit better than the Bank- head Bill, the whole idea of a tax on producing cotton is bas- ically wrong, and only helps the rich farmers and the speculators. These Farmers should get behind the farmers’ emergency relief bill, which puts the relief burden squarely on the shoulders of the bosses’ and bankers’ government. Our Readers Must Spread the Daily Worker Among the Members of All Mass and Fraternal Organ- izations As a Political Task of First each, a pay check or $3,400. There is a reason for those who have fallen so much in love with the Blue Buzzard administration. Ever since I have known sheep, and each, and never over $1.50 each, was a boom price. This rule of killing sheep will apply to all ranchmen, in the purchasing program of 5,000,- 000 sheep. The skinners use clubs, auto cranks, bricks, rock, just anything to down the sheep. I saw two after the hide was off get up only to be felled by a blow from an auto where I write was filled. Only then they were removed to the junkyard, and the odor is something fierce. (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, ail letters received are carefully read by the editors. Suggestions and criticisms are welcome and whenever possible are used uw for the improvement woes PI of the Daily FOR A POWERFUL WORKING CLASS PAPER f New York, N. ¥. Dear Comrade: I have a suggestion to make which I think will be very helpful to our wonderful paper and our great cause, and trust that you will print this letter: If every. Party member, every sympathizer, every militant worker, who reads the Daily Worker, would buy at least two or three copies every day and pass them on to their friends or shopmates, the cir- culation of the “Daily” would im- |mediately increase very rapidly, and at the same time help spread the message of Communism. I buy five or six copies every day and pass them around to my friends or leave some on subway trains or other places where the average worker is bound to pick it up. Every comrade should con- sider it his duty to do the same thing, which would only cost him a few extra pennies a day, and by so doing, we would have a circula- tion of a million in a short time. Cannot the comrades realize that with a large circulation daily, we would have no difficulty in reach- |ing the great masses who are not yet enlightened about the class struggle. What do you say, comrades! We | have no time to lose. Let’s get busy |and do our bit. We are not all |gifted with making speeches in Public, so let us at least build a powerful working-class paper that can talk for us to hundreds of costs so little to buy a few extra copies daily, and yet we can ac- Importance! complish so much if the average that is many summers, 75 cents | crank, and a large warehouse from| thousands of workers every day. It | worker begins to read our paper. | pickers out of that. |_ The government has put a tax on | hogs. If the people let them pass | this over their heads they will have |a@ grain tax too, corn and wheat |next. I tell them to get together and overthrow this cotton and hog | tax. Do away with it entirely, | The government has rented 7,000 acres of land in this county from |the landlords. They leave it with- out planting anything at all. If they were to plant cotton 460 men would be necessary to tend the land. If they planted corn 1,015 men would be necessary. It would feed many | horses, mules and cows this winter. I was raised on a farm, worked hard all my life, I think I know how |to speak to win them over to our | side. The people are tired of the two parties now. I am 65 years old and this is the hardest of times I ever | saw. Letters from Our Readers There would be no textile strikes lost. There would be no Frisco strikes lost. There would be no de- feat of any kind with a Daily Worker in the pocket of the average toiler. Ss. W. OUR “STRANGE” WORDS Washington, D. C. Dear Comrade Editor: The cartoon “The Chinese Wall,” \and two letters signed by R. W. and |W. A. W. published Sept. 27th, bring |up an important question. It is my opinion that our problem is one of interpretation. We must realize \that such “strange” words as ‘“So- viet,” “proletariat,” “bourgeois,” | “jingoistic,” ete., are our diamond- | edged tools. When they are used frequently and explained to the masses at every turn they rip the illusions which have been built up in the minds of the masses over a long period, into shreds. What we must show is that the “strange” words, and “long awk- ward” sentences are not the mere inventions of hacks and idle twad- dlers, but that they are “interna- tionalized” words, which have a definite meaning which the capi- talist class cannot, regardless of their many manevvers, corrupt, | twist and distort into all sorts of meanings. One hour in any so- called court of justice will convince any comrade, any worker, that |\“simple” words are twisted into a multitude of strange word-mean- ings. It will also be obvious on the other hand that they stay away from OUR “strange” words. They |know full well that revolutionary words and phrases have definite meanings which are poison to them. We must get on the job now and steel the masses with our “strange” words. Tell them, show them, ex- |plain to them what they mean. And |remember, they have only one |meaning—not a dozen. pas a 6 The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its Circulation, |start a strike. (As I’d never been in a strike I wanted to see how it was done, little thinking that I would lead this one!) Saturday morning, Sept. 7, as I was about to go to work a com- rade came along and told about the strike at Independence and that we were to strike this morning. I realized how poorly organized we were to strike, with all the work- ers not knowing about it. I sug- gested that every one go to work until noon, then call every one to- gether, and vote strike or not, go- ing by majority rule. shouting to meet immediately at camp to vote strike or not. We went on strike 95 per cent. We elected a strike committee to meet with Gouley & Son, demanding $1.50 per 100 pounds and 50 cents raise per day for yard help. Pick- ets notified Gouley’s friends and neighbors of the strike, inviting them to join us, and made them stop work. As chairman, I was arrested and handcuffed for refusing to get off the place, and for being a so-called agitator. The strikers put up such a fuss and protest that I was re- leased. (Showing that mass press- ure will do.) After a lot of argument Gouley finally agreed to pay $1.35 per 100 pounds with no bonus, and 25 cents a day more to the yard help. He tried to intimidate the chair- man to exert his influence on the workers by recommending that they accept this decision of the boss, but I refused to do this. Instead I put it up to the workers in the form of an offer from the boss and asked, “What do you want to do with it.” The motion was made and sec- onded and carried in a vote to ac- cept. A cheer went up. The strike was over three hours after it started. Our previous rate of pay had been $1 and 100 pounds, plus 20 cents bonus, yard help $2.50 per day. H. S. MacKAY. NOTE We print every Thursday letters from farmers, and agricultural and cannery workers. We urge farmers and workers in these in- dustries to write us of their condi- tions and their struggles to or- ganize. Please get these letters to us by Tuesday of each week. The success of the Daily Worker $60,000 drive means a better, larger newspaper. Donate and get dona- tions today. Send the money im- mediately to the “Daily.” At noon I went through the field | Ukrainian PARTY LIFE 8 Months of Experience In Work of a Shop Nucleus Wage of Week Workers Worker Raised as In 1933 a shop group was formed of the few Party members employed in this shop of 70 workers, who had been continually resisting ganization. Our objective organize the entire shop. As a result of our activi- ties, we succeeded in improving the conditions, to a certain extent. Wages for the week workers were increased from $8 to $14 per week. Also due to the activities and in- fluence of the shop nucleus, the wages of the Negro workers were considerably increased. As a direct result of these activities, we gained the confidence of the majority of the workers in the shop, who de- cided to join the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, and forced the boss to. officially recog- nize the Industrial Union. The nucleus was also successful in bringing the face of the Party to the workers, as for example, in the Austrian situation, where the workers stopped their toil for a few hours and participated in a demon- stration against the bloody fascist Dolifuss regime. May First was discussed at the shop meeting, and as a result of this discussion, the workers stopped work for a half day and demon- strated at Reyburn Plaga. Fifty copies of the Daily Worker were sold in the shop, and two yearly Saturday subs were secured. We are selling the Daily in the shop every day, and are also selling various pamphlets. The campaign for the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann was also brought into our shop by the shop nucleus. Thirty-five protest cards were signed and sent to the German embassy, and many Thaelmann pamphlets were sold. During the knit goods strike sev- eral of the workers in the shop actively participated and supported the strike through contributions and helping in the picket line. We were successful in recruiting two members into the Party. or- was Increased, Pay of Negro Result of Activity Due to our inexperience, however, we had many shortcomings. Firstly, our shop nucleus was not properly organized. We did not work collece tively, and we failed to approach the workers politically. We did not bring any of the Negro workers into our revolutionary organizations, and we failed to bring a sufficient num- ber of workers into the Party. SHOP NUCLEUS ORGANIZER, Cc. B. I, Section 1, District 3. Pai eh 3 Party Recruiting Drive The Central Committee has writ- ten a letter to every member of the Party, asking each one to try to bring into the Party five workers, who are closely associated with them. This column wants letters from Party members, from unit or- ganizers, particularly from the shop nuclei, giving your experiences in carrying on this recruiting. Let us know now how many workers in your shop are good prospects for the Party, and how you are going to recruit them. We ask the or- geniner of the unit which reports its experiences today, and states that its greatest shortcoming is thet it has recruited an insufficient num- ber of workers into the Party, to write us what it expects to do in this recruiting campaign, and how it intends to do it. Let us know how many members are in your shop nucleus now—and how many new members you intend to recruit. New Party members: Write brief letters, telling why you joi the Communist Party. Comrades im the textile and ma- rine industries: What are you do- ing to recruit textile and marine workers for the Communist Party? ‘What methods are you using? How many are you recruiting? How are you combatting the “Red Scare,” and bringing the Communist Party to the workers. Write letters to Party Life Column. These experiences belong to the Party. THE $60,000 DRIVE Received October 2 1269.54 ) DISTRICT 9 (Minneapolis) Previously Recetved 11428.26 | Matt Tomljanowioh 7.00 ‘Total to date 12697.80| Total October 2 00 DISTRICT 2 (New York City) Total to date 198.91 Section 12 T. Warninsky 1.00 DISTRICT 14 (Newark) ‘Mohegan 15.00 § Miller 1.48 | J, Van Beck 1.00 Section 12 H Riddle 1.00 Mohegan 2.49 Sec 2 Un 108 17.86, Total October 2 1.00 Section 12 A Schwartz —1.00| Total to date 164.01 Beacon, 5.00 K Abrahams 1.03 Hungarian page bald 35) putrict 600 TWO ER at 2.00 Wkrs. Fed sf. 3.00 Abe Hirsch 1.28 | pretheit, Gesangs Scandinavian Workers Lab Pred Dormand 5.00 | "Rolain 200 | wrkers, club. 6.00 ‘Theatre 12.98 Park Ave ‘Tip’ 35/21! Womens UME 2.00 Workers Lab Gaasian Oops 2-0) cuted 2.00 J Chuchre 10.00 ‘Meatre 16.61 Ruth Atterman 70 | Qy?ainian Mise, 17.00 Millinery United Total Oct. 2 91.87 | Sains 5,00 : Front 5.09. Tot to ‘date BOST2S | sepish Woniens Total Oct 2 52.00 DISTRICT 3 (Philadelphia) Council 2.00 Tot to date 174.25 Schneblem 1.00 J Levy 5.00| Individual donations previously listed nit 501 5.00 Unit 308 6.00| under Sections and Districts: Pintzuk ILD 5.00 Section 1 100.00 DISTRICT 1 (Boston) Pintauk ILD 4.00 Unit 606 5.00] Col in Bethlehem, I Slonim 50 R Herman, W. TWO School 1 5.00] N. H. Joe Robin (8 Phila, Wkrs IWO School 3 1.75| a Piuel 1.00 A friend 25 Club .00 IWO School 4 5.25) Freda Wishniak .50 Seaman 35 Sliva, Baltimore, IWO School 6 6.11] Kauofsky | 30 A Gross % Md. 16.00 IWO School 8 10.00] Jean Farber 50 L Luchkowsli 35 Ingram IWO 5.00 IWO School 9 3.60] Goldstein ‘50 Mary 5 Al Cades Nature IWO School 10 2.00] Dora Popler 25 Schultze % Friends 5.00 Polish Workers Freda Fraidin 125 Alanula 135 Bellow Russian Club Popler 125 Safer & Cohen .50 Orgs. 9% = Phila. Art Cohen ‘95 «Herbert Kaplan .25 N_ Summergrad, Club 3.00 Isie Chenkin 2.00 Jack Baskin 35 Vineland, N.J.'2.00 Br 76 IWO 30.00/ Clara Govrenin 1.00 J Adelson 30 Rudy, Chester, Armenian Odg 10.00/| Mrs. Govis 1.00 Harry Singer 1.00 Pa. PSU 5.00 | Tolish 1.00 Nick Perkins 1.00 Helen Green Unit 102 3.00|B Greenfield 1.00 Regina Singer .50 Arthur Barnardo, | Womens Leag. 6.00|A friend ‘50 Sternbrooks 50 ‘Wilmington Br 32 IWO 20.00 | Kammel ‘75 Sternbrooks 50, J Pertritis Br 169 IWO 20.00 | Center ‘50 Regena Bratt 50 Workmen’s Loan Russian Mutual | Cohen 1.00 Mrs Laster 35 Ass'n 5.00 Aid Br 21 11.00 | Freda Wishniak .50 Florence Gross 25 Fifty Year Rus. Mutual M Huberman 1.00 Cohen 35 Socialist 1.00 Aid 1.00| Mr Shevelove 1.00 Cohen 26 Br 30 TWO 1,00. Bill Haywood Br | Mrs Schnelder 50 Kay 50 Str. Man. Iwo 21.00 | Zachary Miroff (50 Sterman 1.00 Womens Leag. 5.00 Strawberry Man- | | Jacob Zabel 80 _-E Lerner 1.00 RR_ Brotherhood sion Wrks Ol 2. DISTRICT 2 (New York City) Unity 100 ¥ CL 2-50 | Gol by A. Miller, John Halay 10 Russian Br.ILD 5.00 Unit 307 10.00 ere ar Russian Dist. ‘Unemployment Sec 4 Unit 420 D Chiger fo Comm. IWO 2.00 Councils 5.00] HW 1.00 Gol by John Unit 306 17.00 | ow 1.00 Marin, Sec 1 Orgs. 25.00 Unit 306 8.001 sw "30H Bartoshevich 1.00 ‘Womens Section 2 12.00] 4 ‘50S Egnatouch 1.00 League 5 3.00 Shop Unit | A, Miller 50 Thos Totic! 50 Teor 2.00 Sec 5 2.00) a we :80 Thos Tottehny 50 Rank & File Unit 601 215 |. Me ‘35 © Maydon 150 Coopers’ Un'n 5.00 Unit 602 40.00| 4 4¢ [25 Willie Potonie ‘50 ILGWU Opp. 10.00 Unit 303 5.00] 4 ow [25 P. Novitsky ee Jugo Slay Wrks Section 5 35.00 | ‘a Miller 33 P. Novitsky 38 Club 2.00 Shop Nucleus 3.00} Co) by Comrade P Novitsky. 30 IWO Br 101 10.00 Individual 2.00 | “Sinux B Tabachnika 10 IWO Br. 95 .09 Br 18 IwO 10.00} John Bihun 1.00 J Greenden 2% IWO Br. 173 10.00 Butchers IKuletzky 100 Akim Traber 36 Arbeitsgemein- Union 5.00) John Hrynchuk .50 Mat Lecher 10 schaft 5.00 Group of Milli- © Stefanuk 50 S$ Antonuk 10 TWO Br. 48 25.00 _nery Wrkrs 10.00} genkowich 180 Pankevich hho IWO Br. 135 5.00 Br 201 IWO 5.00| Jacob Fivok 80 W Podolin 3 Greek Wrks Unit 604 25.50| Sohn Goenz 25s TA 2s Club 20.00 BB 3.02 | Stanley Behun .25 Col by Sec 6 Freiheit Gesangs Silver Col. 71.50) Sarah Bihun 25 Frank Kovasich 1.00 Farein 50.00 Meeting 100.77 | Stanley Bihun .25 Yosef Kovasich 1.00 Rank & File Harry Kraus, Col by N Chebrack C Blatt 50 Amalgamated 13.00 Lancaster, Pa.1.00| pr 78 R. N. M. Anton Nose ‘50 Lithuanian Sam Bechtold, ‘AS. 1.00 Morus ‘50 Organ's 46.92 Lancaster, Pa. 1.00| pr 108 R. N. M. T Altman 15 Roumanian Alex Sylvester 5.00] 4. g, 1.00 M Kellerman 25 Chorus 5.00 Tot Oct 2 996.89 | Br 18 ” 50 Gus Kramer 25 IWO School 2 150 Tot to date 2254.92/pr ig ‘89 5 Meyer 35 DISTRICT 4 (Buffalo) N Chebrack 50 A Gvetkovich . .28 Comrade Jacobs 5.00| Jules Prager .50 G Morosich 25 Comrade Harris 1.00] S Konager 125 Hude 25 Total October 2 6.00 | Max Neiber .25 Martin Gelins 1.25 Total to date 79.62| Thos Gutzaluk .25 M Vagotich 25 DISTRICT 5 (Pittsburgh) Thos Blytrick 25 M_ Gostich 25 P. Miravalle 1.00| 1 Musilewski 10 Frank Gostich .25 Total October 2 1.00 DISTRICT 12 (Seattle) Sheu ag BS (diag ee Engstrom1.00 Mildred Winters $0 icago) Ernest Koski Sec 4 5.00 Unit 916 3.00 Be Riskmese | 1-00 Sagi aault ee Bec 4 6.50 Sec 8 Womens Carl Sankki = 50 Joe Hult er) Sec 12 5.00 Council 00) Toivo Kivisto 50 A Atoikoinen 25 Seo 12, 13.25 Red Builders ae esr nares SEL nit 305 5.00 Club . Unit 305 12.00 Sec 12 10.00} Our Readers Must Spread the bed : Lie Sec e ee Daily Worker Among the Members ec 00 «Sec A Bulgarian A Abraham 1,00 | Of All Mass and Fraternal Organ- Wrkrs Clubs 23.00 Task of First Rock Island ‘rotal Oct 2123.78 | Zations AS politiont : : Section 2.00 Tot to date 1097.54’ Importance? NAME ADDRESS: Here Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! AMOUNT eo $ 50 EAST 13th St. Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER New York, N. ¥. on Lo panos

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