The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 13, 1934, Page 6

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_Page 6 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1934 ° SHAMOKIN WORKERS. TURNING TO COMMUNIST PARTY Old Pa ek Losing Ground as Workers Learn Need To F ight é S * 3 tive. This local is one of the |/main strike halls of the Marine | cumulated fluids from the blood. R bli s aker Has Small Audience as| !2#¢" Write about everything |By = Mine Worker Correspondent | Miners of America,” There "was ® || righting - locals’ ir) “MoDowell || Workers Industvial Union In coe Now, if there is much pus present epublican Speaker as small Audience as) that you discuss with your fellow | ALPHA, Tll.—I, myself, have not split three ways, some for a com County of W. Va. The mi de bo we i Workers Th OF i 1U Protest workers. This will make it pos- had the class struggle in mind un- Pany union, some wanted U.M.W.A.,|| COM Me eM aie eter Lie ie pote ee under your cuticles, i “may be orkers rong to U, F. anc » u. Frotes' abe cgsirdcny =e rE a ereaanalliagies ood i ; ind r es. || a grea hount of First Aid sup- necessary to consult a surgeon who y Sat UL sible for us to hetp in organiring til the last year and then if Decamie se Su eek alee Pisaranieneaee tie have been ‘fighting against the || plies is needed. We urze all drug-|may have to remove portions of By a Worker Correspondent yy, who died last ap eubacteria Sabi <tc of the P.M.A. and Illinois. Workers come to work by car or bus; we had sothee oP a e ie ad rae we lise bs bent rd aad ee eae hee SHAMOKIN, Pa—We had iwo|the family ha Alliance of which We have 40 mem- | struggle to organize. | bays t os Renee a va a eee ey. tee ra ceiep Pig bag eullatis - j meetings here in town enough food and bers. I have been living on relief, We are working only a few days || °° he pou aoe ms ee S on oes ee as Pasi ra ae oe the other, and, Rnee is a { One wes in the t I ed t him about for the past summer because the 2 ‘eek now, last week only one and a Si Neh i ers ve ee pa i ia ae ei fee haa of- chronis low grade inflame \ Township High School the sheriff sale that had taken mine is only open during the win- 3 half days, We are still on relief.|| ‘ember 2lst the union check- Bd ak on ed oo ee fee | mation: of the’ tisnie sarotnd ths the Rep wblican can e recently. I wanted to ask ‘ AY ter, am One man wants to get the “Daily” weighmen took potion “against |) bend ite card and we will have a jnalls which may be due to ordinary ernor. was the main attraction for about the “bo miners Get N oO Hol tee been sending for the Daiiy 0Ut has no money, can't pay his this spay ot SAOFs aoe The Leaueee eal fot f Henber ot ig cr to fungi (vegetable paras figricst petty politicians: 1 pong Mactan Ree a Seb — thea af Hi yee dues in the Party, Things are so|| Company shui Basch the mine lena ee Fess spas ‘ oe site). : This apes ans Bee od no yj dhels holes shut by the Seis ones s or! one month ai bad, we can’t help out in any way. |] #0d told the miners if they want || ¢ ‘ San a cs0 asked to helpj arises in women who, because of i wes page the crowd. The working for the coal opera‘ors. I I n a l l Uu me all summer to get enough Some of our members of the I.w.A,|| Work they'll have to elect new ||/in First Aid duty. All material] house work, have their hands in r among the crow e | working h 1 rs. G y 5 < pels * | sho bE y, | Wi unemployed workers were conspicu- wanted to him, since he spoke P pones x et fot: a, can’t find enough to pay ten cents | suede sesbnen ntative, fak ievawcee city fan ot eR ale age (om ae eee ously ebsent. Schnader made a dry | so glibly about “collective bargain- This spring we organized for re-/_ month dues. We sent a delegate paige Salihea aay wr cada tamnn tel, | peat abate pus here is very small, or not even eech for about a half hour, ing,” about the textile picket that | By a Mine Worker Correspondent |ef under IW.A. We had some|ig the War and Fascism Congress. || Dyson, ins‘ead of calling a strike ||¢rs International Relief. Abode ‘ Talialy critic sine the New Deal, but was shot recently when the pickets | GALLUP, N, M-—The miners of |tTUS#le. It was done by pressure|"” Alga is in the district of Rock || in the shaft mine Local Union let i as oon is tea tal bt da malig span oe Pan ly iz: New v shot recently %, , NM 2 4 + 2 ee . Me 9 whi i is needed. Respond quickly. | ou vater important. declaring in favor of the adminis- | tried to close down the mill in| Gallup were called to a meeting of | against our superior who later |tjand, Galesburg in the district of || 5797 which meets in the same e A a q it of water is importa: this tration in every “sane and sensible” measure. He also appealed for der going to do about all these | purpose of splitting the miners into | S¢2¢Y Relief over twenty-four hours |t9 hear a ©. P. speaker sometime || trict and left the miners to || One ee raene wes tye pwnd trl but take 9 fi votes for David A. Reed, calling | things? the U. M. W. A. The labor faker | With 18 men. They made promises./ago, Two or three are thinking of || starve. | sa Haye been plagued dor ions) tinie eeenie Ree Pata oe him an “honest, fearless and de- The workers of Shamokin are |Fantacko, the U. M. W. A. organizer, |¥@nted us to go home. We stayed |joining in Rock Island soon as we gue Dg | s g. pp) voted worker for the interests of the people.” David Reed is sure in the interests of the people, all fight! “People like Andy Mellon, Grundy and the rest of the rich parasites that feed on the blood of tingdon, Pa waking up, as proved by the small attendance at the Schnader meet- ing. With greater and greater in- terest they are responding to the meetings of the Communist Party election campaign. They are be- Seamen! Longshoremen! The Daily Worker urges all sea- men and longsheremen to write about all developments connected with the strike, the sentiments among their fellow workers, ac- tions to establish one united strike front along the entire Atlantic and Gulf Coast, and . to prevent any sell-out or arbitration scheme of the International Seamen's Union What was Schna- |the U. M. W. A. last week for the | was there to speak. The miners Relief Fight Won, —— oe Miners Look Forward To Future resigned. We stayed at the Emer- nevertheless; we had come for help. Peoria. We were down to Galesburg can fix the uate, It has to be done S iruggles Company Closes Mine When Militant Local Fights Indirect Pay Cut By a Worker Correspondent HEMPHILL, W. Va.—On Sep- tember 21st the Kingston Poca- hontas Coal Company shut down one mine in Hemphill, W. Va., where Local 5716 of the United Mine Workers of America is ac- hall, took this matter to the dis- WORKERS’ HEALTH | Conducted by the > Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board | First Aid Material Needed |. Pus is a grayish or yellowish gray for Marine Strike |fluid, of thicker consistency than | The Workers International Re- | water, and is made up of broken |lief Medical Aid Units have set up/down tissue cells, white blood cells |three First Aid stations in the three |and bacteria together with the ace is not possible, use rubber gloves time with the formation of pus/an ointment made up of 30 grains |have been members of the National| We won our demands and had re- Miners Union for over a year, and |/ief all summer. they tried to get away with telling) We have been in a company the miners about four people in, union for a few years. This summer Gallup that were paid to poison the while on relief we started a move- District 3 py letter as oil and gas is a ques-| tion with us. | This letter is only in good faith | and tells of some of the problems we have to face, Hoping to be a Miners Fight | under my cuticles. I have tried all | kinds of remedies with no lasting | results. “This ailment is seriously inter- fering with my work.” of ammoniated mercury in one ounce of vaseline is helpful. In some cases X-ray treatment will |help clear up the condition. : i feet es : Ce ee Contributions received to the ees nee finilng te oes te ditferches Ss |g MCMC MPA TEE oe CER Re ae | UM W Chi f | Our Reply credit of the Medical Advisory At the other meeting, members of tween the fighting working-class Would not join the U. M.W.A. The eer re VEILS) your complaint of pus under your | the Unemployment Council and the Communist Party spoke to a crowd of about 300 workers at Bear Val- ley Avenue and Market Street. The Meeting was a protest against a shefiff sale of furniture of an un- employed worker. The workers de- manded that the lawyer who bought the furniture sell it back for the sum ‘of $1; that rent be paid to unemployed workers; that sheriff sales and evictions be stopped in Shamokin, and Unemployment and candidates on the Communist ticket and the empty demagogs of the ruling class parties, John Kuchinski, our local candidate for legislature on the Communist ticket, is known te many workers as the leader of struggles for more relief and against evictions and sheriff sales. Mank workers have already said they are through with the Democrats and Repub- licans and are going to vote Com- munist, and laughed when he got through. He claimed the government was be- hind the U. M. W. A., which was affiliated with the A. F. of L. At the same time of the meeting, the Gallup press came out with head- lines telling the death toll in the textile strike. Fifteen workers were killed by the troops. This labor faker never said one word of this. | If the U. M. W. A. were for the | workers, why didn’t he speak about this? Instead, all he said was that, 10 Roars Work Brings Miner iin 3-Foot Chute 85c a Day Wage By a Mine Worker Correspondent WILKES-BARRE, Pa.—The con- ditions in the mines today are very \bad. The workers must work in the ‘mines for almost nothing and be two cars, and the company only pays you $2.20 a car, After buying explosives, ‘etc., one makes approximately 85 cents each day. If you are able to get home aa | By a Mine Worker Correspondent | YUKON, Pa.—It is no longer a question of debate among the min- | ers of District No. 3, U.M.W.A. as| |to what side of the fence the Dis- | |trics officials stand on. Grievance jafter grievance that was taken up| [before the District officials was al- |ways settled in favor of the coal | operators. | In the Yukon mine, where the |Board in its Socialist competition |with Del, Mike Gold, Harry Gannes, |Jacob Burck, David Ramsey and \Helen Luke, in the Daily Worker idrive for $60,000. Quota—$1,500, cuticles is not sufficient informa- tion for us, because many people think that redness or swelling al- ways indicates the presence of pus. Very frequently we have heard patients refer to the serum in the blisters of poison ivy as pus. Total to date $131.15 RED BUILDER DEFIES Social Insurance. Much interest is being shown in the government was behind the satisfied or else quit the job and|without being carried home, you|one-car per man per day originated Gl INS {| O AID Ss ] RIKE I wented to ask Schnader some the coming meeting, at which Pat | miners if they joined the U. M. W.|go out and starve. If you go to the|go straight to bed with one BIG| and spread throughout the coal| qué=tions, but the meeting was ad- | Cush from Pittsburgh, who is the |A. The miners of Gallup called a/Poor Board they say that they will| headache. The next morning one/| fields, as the only way the men journéd very quickly and he skipped béfore I could get to him. I wanted | to‘ask him about Mrs. Dumbroski’s | Communist candidate for Governor, will speak. This meeting will be held on Thursday, Oct. 18. NEW YORK ALMOST TIED WITH 26 COMPETITORS New York is gradually creeping up in its Socialist competition with the rest of the, country in the “Daily” $60,000 drive. Once almost 50 Per cont behind, it. is mow 5 per cent away from tying its competitors. It is noteworthy that Seattle and California, though each is in competition with two districts, and with each other, have completed less than 10 per cent of their quotas. Philadelphia, leading all the districts, has almost ten times as much money and its pe: its competitor, Pittsburgh. reentage is more than three times as much as that of Strike under the leadership of the 'N. M. U. and once one was called by the U. M. W. A, which was) broken up by state troops sent down by the government. conclusively that the government is against all unions of the workers | When they come out on strike.. Why then should a faker tell us that the government is behind us when it is not so? From the very be- ginning of the meeting, police came jover to the workers and warned them not to say anything against Fantacko. They would be put in jail if they did so. We could see send an investigator over to the | jhouse. But when they start send- ing the investigators they will be/ )sending them for weeks and weeks | We can se€/and all you can do is to look at|tem. |them and starve. | Last week I went out to look for ta job and I happened to get a job|then we will improve our condi-|want you to bring production of |™e talking to the longshoremen. by dumb luck as a miner and I} was told to get two laborers to| work with me. When I got the la- borers and the tools we went down into the mines to look at our place {and, boy, what a place. | The coal was three feet high and gets up all sore and back again to|can stop paying the $1.00 per day work. So that it is the kind of a/fine, the District officials are try- job you can get only by good luck|ing to take this away from the under this rotten capitalist sys- | miners. The District officials say this. When we establish a Workers’|“If you load one car per day, we| Government and control the mines|are going to fine you. We don't tions as we see fit. |coal down.” This was stated to the | The only thing that is left for us| ®XPort local, who have been strik- | workers to do is to organize into |{ng on the job for two days, to re- the Rank and File Opposition in| Place ® motorman who had been | the bureaucratic unions and lead |auling coal on the flat road for 2_| the workers in the right direction | Y¢47s- val and fight for the interest of the| This motorman was fired for his | right then the meeting was ecalled|we had to pitch the coal three and | workers and not the operators (as |activity, but the fundamental reason by the company, and the leaders of four times to the chute and then |the present, leaders do). jthe U. M. W. A. were with them. Av a meeting of the N. M. U., we never had police. | Despite all this, the secretary of ;Push the coal down the chute, but | |the chute did not have much of a pitch, and so we had a hell of a |time pushing the coal down near |friend is out of work and needs re- | jwas because, “We are going to sce | i who is going to run this mine, the | RY OURSte 5 UUM) ERODOD OF ny siete) an nee Gr He WER Hlief, organize them into the Un-|™oreland Coal Company,” as the! |employment Councils to show them |SUperintendent Rymer stated. | By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—I was selling my Daily Workers at the corner of 14th Street and 11th Avenue (Dock 52) when a gang that was standing on the dock across the street noticed | The gang came over to me. I recog-| nized the leader as Sullivan, an I. L. A. delegate. He had about six! men with him, | The men started cursing. One of | them said. “Get the hell out of| here with the Daily Worker.” I| stayed where I was and started to| call “Read the Daily Worker.” The gang tried to strround me. The biggest one said, “Come on. get the hell off the waterfront.” He asked me whom I represented and I told trying to sell my Daily Workers to the longshoremen who were stand- ing around. Sullivan said, “Now remember, we'll get you anyway. You've been around here long enough.” Sullivan and the others walked back across the street to the dock. Five minutes before I was threat ened, a group of men tore the leaf- lets calling for united rank and file strike action out of the hands of a Y. C. L'er, and tried to chase him off the docks. The longshoremen there said that the man leading the group was Ryan himself, head of jthe LL, A. WILLIAM J. CLAY, (Signature authorized), \ er coummaormmcesias | it- | him The Marine Wo: NOTE: the Sub District board of the Na-/ the platform. Then we hed to pitch |now to get relief, clothes, and rent| The Westmoreland Coal Commit- Union aid he Rubee Sa Wei pablichseveoenstaeanpnee? tional Miners Union asked for the it on the | ‘ tee (Opposition) is fightil like Cor P y y 5 * wer : | ti ‘s ‘ platform, from there into! and water bills paid. pos: ghting tte. | WINNING TRAILING floor when the faker got through|the car. While you are shovelling | hell against both the operators and | “yo, thesmen eau that tidkin' fers from ore and coal miners % speaking. Immediately the police |the coal into the car you can’t see | |the District officials. The pit con co, Sullivan and! one Bethe oe and oil workers. We urge workers rj to of 0 o of 3 > i ‘ | . i " Date Quota Pate Quote | “We paid for this hall to hold this| While going up to the place to On New Bridge Job cays to settle the Export question | ™Y artificial arm and said, “You| their conditions and their strug- ; |meeting.” But this worker tured | make some co Ae ae bored i and put the old motorman on the | on hook and we'll use our) gles to organize, Please get these 25. Distriets | $9000.89 | 30.04] VS 2—New York City 7608.48 | 25.4 ee Maske a ee Pears | hands and knees (the place is only By a Worker Correspondent Veniget committee also. said that| 1 Stayed where I was and went on cic oe ty Thapar ct seek Baer 1 1 “ | | With this the th out of | three, feet high). In so doing we) NORTH BEND, Ore—Construc- no charters were to be revoked in Boston | 885.69 | 443 14—Newark | 236.61 | a5] | ugs ran out of) bruise our backs so much that|tion work is progressing on the N chav Hidiad i | H | [See ane ve pri Ny ie when the day’s work is over we|New Bridge for Coos Bay, one of Dee count pies reer 3—Philadelphia =| 2504.92 | 71.6] ” 5—Pittsburch | 988.26 | 23.6) | held about a two-hour meeting. ma} are eo gears bade ae a ive Sta Be i the Coast !would only revoke charters if the | I N T H E H O M E | Police had to stand there and take| After working eight to ten hours | this summer and next. men called a “wild cat” strike, and | ‘ | STS Pee aia jall_that was coming to them. At|in a low place like that our knees| Workers are speeded up quite alto them, striking on the job is a| 6—Cleveland Detroit 650.07 | 18.6} |this meeting the Gallup miners were | all cut up. After firing the} bit and were fired on little pretext. | wild cat strike. And then they will By HELEN LUKE Sai en Pe ie \_______}_ |shown that it was only the U, M,|coal with dynamite or black pow-| Efforts are being made to bring |pick out the leadership and expel } a aR ee Pl CE TS } s9| |W. A. officers that were paid to|der, we then go into the place to| other workers who have worked for them from the union, This means an note from a member of the drive for $60,000. Quota—$500. i = Basen dR cas Rips aie __| (Poison the minds of the workers, Work. One gets so sick from the the company before in and cut local that all miners that will fight for | Women’s Counc! | Total to date $5.40 | ae —— = So Se j as every man holding any office in| lack of ventilation that the result men off. Well, we all have to live better conditions will be expelled.| “Most of the workers of the | 18—Milwaukee | 294.90 295] 12—Seattle oer | 7. the N. M. U. is a worker and no/|is that we must carry ourselves out| and if they don’t hire local workers | Miners, we must fight much | Williamsburg Working Women’s G Y Make °E: Fe I One | from the outside tells them /of the mines, In that place, the we will make them come through harder and call a conference of all Counel (Branch 18) "are unem- an You Make “km : Fi j : es foe, what to do. most that three men can is‘ with relief, Hlocals in District No. 3 and elect Ployed, and those who are working | Yi 1£? ] 12—Seattle 79.97 | 3 13—California 117.58 y |find it very hard to make ende| ourse! ; 2 aise | i! meet. Yet when I came to the| 19—Denver 240.34 | 40.08 21—St. Louis 62.18 | 124 I N Condlicted hy Mary iacrrow, Cbil- | meeting although there were only | : ar an Pete Pirie ia re 4 eeee | I | D RS dren's editor, The Daily Worker, 50 {|| f°) a a ee a8 takes 31; yards 36 inch fabric, Received October 11 $ 514.46 DISTRICT & (Chicago) |! m East 13th St.. New York City. doin; ndi a ‘i re | Tlustrated step-by-step sewing in- : Previously received 1610438 | Camp Nitgedaiset | thizer_ 10.00 Hh coeeeap Gera vacant oe structions included. 3 —— | & Kinderland 3.23 ‘ot t 3 a 'e foug! for rie 4 Total to date 1699.27 | Reader & Sympa- Tot to date 1405.33 | vi Take it down at once, at once!”, “I will go.” and won free hy il- : Sic f Unit 1D 500 Colny sttair 6731 L din Masia EOE Te Ose 1 sso WE WILL NOT And they stamped back and forth bca boldly toward the De See dren of the fener ee ee % fee 1 Unit fac 1. Unit aD 100| Alle Miskala 3.00 Tot to date 260.25 FORGET waving their arms helplessly in their | wreath, Looking carefully at the “We are also very active against | : See. 1 Unit Sec 1. Unit 2D 50 DISTRICT 10 (Omaha) terror and anger. Then one of them | pox, he saw that it was bullet-rid- war and fascism. Our delegate, who | Bec 1 Unit Sec 14 Unit 10 5.00, C A Pt Dodge 1.00 Tot Oct 11 1,00 jhad an idea. “We'll have to call! if ‘i has ret | sinctnde Ree oy REAR iba SabAD . MN den. There must be nothing inside eturned from the Chicago Sec 2 Unit Sec 1 Mrs. Ric ei ieunceun (arias The cold damp of early morning | the Storm Troopers,” and he sent at all. Then, with one jerk, h Congress, will give a report on Oct, | Bee sunt fis 2e7. Tily Goldstein “30 sungaries Whee as 2o9/ still hung over the city as Kurt|two of his men off to get help. pallet: tha wits, bringite tite poe 13 at 8 pm. at 223 Rutledge Street, ee eco wee actreee aan | Cae’ Of Lee-Ane | John Haintilon 10 /Hulreled alone the side of is fathers) che exowd stood’ slleht,call’ eves|| anti wreath tothe gaViaA: |mear Marcy Avenue. We also will | ee A 8 Meccano 188) pele 8 BO aia di 73 boriehaess ie See Seopa Taleo to the oe message, that} The wreath was down, but its [have an entertainment, assuring a | pledge at 10-7 “Monti 2:00| eer Buro 5.00 rs on vy, butt ~|rallied the workers to carry on the! message had stayed up lony good r ost 1.50 | Sam Pivo, Col 4.09 Tot Ort 11 19.54) ing something was going to happen. | tight where their dead comrades had | for ery marker to me: we Wal | of Tritico atime eae ‘y R Puller 5.00, Boyle ae Lon ld Con 117.53/It was a Secret that Kurt shared | jos, off. Suddenly, big police cars|Not Forget!” tend > Be oe aM Ga eo ee pete NS the Tiiht beture, he bad Halpedl 49 cae rumbling over the cobble i “T. JONES, 5 wis telt 5 t Oct 11 20.94 | the . | Stones. Thi a +6 : Nr # 0 Nature Friends 2.00| RNMAB picnic 184 Tot to date 29861 |carry out a bold plan. Bursting eoers had ante ae oe nbiighis fuged se he Peeauanel Dreton 5 3ee 1 Unit 2D 9.75 A K 2.00 ‘ DISTRICT 16 Geet) with excitement he urged his father |bawled out his order. “Break uplas he clattered, hic aie aan * ® : a "Seay pledge 5.00 Tob Oct 11 oni2| Two Norfolky Va. Fen ‘30|t0 hurry, Soon they Joined a stream /this mob.” And with thelr guns,liron fence, te would be ales we the AVE ote the. call ds out for: food | Poteet Nomen see Tok te data Teka Becgs "100 Br 300 wo 5.00/0f workers nearing the factory gate.!the storm Troopers pushed aside evening to see his father’s com- for the striking seamen, victuals be- DISTRICT 3 (Philadelphia) Perlin 2.00 ey Pa le instead of entering, the men|the workers. There was a great|rades and have them. call him a ing needed at four kitchens in Man- V} Soke $00 Malakom, Wash 2.00| Aken” +93 Tot to date 4225/St00d Around in little groups, talk-!deal of running around. Men scat- good brave comrade, and playfully hattan and Brooklyn. Collecting this i~ gl ies idee dl 100 Col by Br 92 jing quietly, | tered and watched from a distance.|call him “monkey,” because he had food is valuable work almost any a §S Lehlenstein 10.00 S nitz 2.00 | 100 IWO hh) Silhouetted against the weak sun-|Kurt became separated from his climbed the factory gate so easily. housewife can accomplish. And i L Minkin 5.00 D Shiffman 3.00 1.99 IWO, Richmond, | jight, the tall iron gate stood closed.|father. Somehow, he found himself He felt a little thrill of pride at you couldn’t supply food for a bet- | ae ee 8 ane 2 hogan eaet a.09/In the center of the gate, and from alone, behind a wagon and quite |being able to help the cause of the ter purpose, for it is to be borne a fen 10.00 Samarof 3.00 | 1.00 Cohen 100 its very highest point hung a huge/near the gate. He watched breath-| workers, of Torgier, of Thaelmann, in mind that supporting the ma- ¥ Seidman 500 OT s 2 3.00... Letbowits red wreath. Draped across was 4 /lessly, and Dimitroff. Kurt's chin went rine workers is a big step in anti- SEU Ee eran an eR coh 1o9|Proad red ribbon with the words,’ Having scattered the workers, the up and he walked faster—bravely— war work. So all out with your ) Sera 200 Unit 2 3.50 3.90 Lerner 1.00 “To the Memory of Hans Huber and | Nazis approached the gate. The big|like Dimitroff. How boldly had doughnuts, pies, cakes, fruit, meat, Solemen 2.00. Col. 3 Minkin 10.00 2.00 Perl 2.00 Walter Gottlieb. We Will Not For-|brave words on the wreath threw |Dimitroff faced his accusers. Now 5 vegetables and canned goods. Take ks 100 George i | 7 era joo Bet.” The day before, two Com-|them into a terrible rage. One of |he was in the Workers’ Fetherland, | Picture Puzzle anything you can collect or donate Seu" Son wae Ost 1) 21300 io UNE 2's) Munist workers from the factory |the officers, his face distorted with |the Soviet Union. And he had been to the W. I. R. at 870 Broadway, or Getkin 3.00 Tet to date $2504.92 | Rosen 1.00 -——\had been executed. They were|anger, muttered, “These cursed{rescued by workers all over the Read the pictures from left to| any of the following places nearest fg “S0¢DISTRICT 6 (Cleveland) Leibowitz 100 Tob Gek. Ih, 75 caught with leaflets and the pen-|Communists, what will they do|world—workers like his father, and write. You will find the names of | you: Mohn Peaver 6.50 Shikas alee area as aelioraneey **alty was death, next?” The big warning on the|by workers’ children—Pioneers like| two of our working-class leaders) 505 W. Nineteenth St., 140 Broad EN.MAS., Steu- is sen) Oe “64 0-308 1.00, Several men pushed their way | box filled the Nazis with terror, and | himself, and BOO! the third is the name of|St.; 25th St. and Eighth Ave. or Rermitonice 1op Tot te date 1079.21 | Finnish women 8. Slav Club roughly through the crowd. They|kept them a safe distance away. an enemy of the workers, 15 Union S$‘. Brooklyn <- DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) piggeee Cin et One were foremen, and others in the|Not one dared com: near it. They| ‘This is based on a true story i" ; as ei a Athor Roumanian Wrks | et ts ‘Total Oct 11 26.4 factory who were known as Nazis.|gathered together in little huddles| which happened recently in Ger- If you can find two names, write whi : b: f oabe 135 Club eg Brof | Union Yritys 5.00 Total to date 294.90 As they passed, little groups of|to decide upon a plan, while they/many. In many other ways the| them on the back of a penny post- ile we're on the subject. o' fete a6 akaceagnian Prop | DISTRICT 21 (Sh Louis) 95 Workers turned to watch them. Kept one eye turned fearfully toward | workers are carrynig on their fight |CoT™ @md mail it in, Then you can b icedaders haat have an cg ae go 30.00) Orit g8 Seo 6 95 Total to dete 6215, “What will they do?” asked a tall|the box hanging from the wire. for a Workers’ and Farmers’ Gov- pa ai Pe pale baleen paritnion te oNe oN Seo. o-3 a ee } «A aaa ee neti “worker. “These Reds would do anything.”|ernment. There is much work to| VOFKer Puzzle Club. Ais ie a indoles ine wie. i pag os 1.82 ce; Urge Members of Your Union to) “Tear it down, I suppose,” an-| “I swear I can hear a ticking|be done, but they will do it. And| % deine eae Weed Gt Sika: {ec 7 Shop Tot Oct 11 46.97 @ the Daily Worker! other answered. inside, can’t you?” said one, his|we will help, too. THE WINNER OF STERNA- | oy J i * 6. Mut bo fH Unit 3.00 Tot to date _630.07| Rea wd J “No, they can't,” said a third, and|eyes round with fear. Ernst Thaelmann, who has been TIONAL WORD PUZZLE” So eIOE uv cues, un nie we he pointed to the gate, “can’t you| Finally an officer had an idea.|in prison since Hitler's. rise - to oie eget Some ceey20 Yaknes e LM H Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! see the reason?” |He gave orders. The Nazis turned| power, will be brought to triai| The most correct list of wordswas|rid of one. The union would c ere is my As the Nazis came close to ‘the and walked away from the factory|around Oct. 15. The Nazi courts|sent in by Jane Raevky, who found | for such a piano. (They need also amount | N7eath. they stopped and Serine 100 yards. Then with rifles | will bring ee) their lies and faked 293 correct words. The nex’ best eee ue a ayy Goethe toe ee pase E the wreath as a strong wire. “To|bom ns ne MADE POPGctmgnm to Geathe Mists Were sent in by Blanch Kugler | (ue at an umn anne 8 the end of this wire was attached| “Fire!” German ‘workers are calling on|and David Wieck. would be returned in .good condi- a large box, with a warning painted} There was a loud report that/their brothers throughout the ‘world | tion.) Union Headquarters, 60 W.| Send FIFTEEN, CENTS (15e) in on it. “Danger! Don’t touch—high | ended in silence. There was no ex-|to save him. Only the determined | 45th St., or notify our column. coins or stamps “(coins preferred) explosive!” plosion. |action of workers in every country | phia not long ago, a group of Pio- for this Anne Adams pattern. Write Tear off and mail immediately to “Look, look father,” Hans tugged| “Verdammdt! Can’t you hit it?” | will force the Nazis to free Thael-/| neers succeeded in getting into the| Contributions received. to the |Plainly name, address and style @i at his father’s sleeve. “They don't}. Again they fired, and—silence. mann as they did Dimitroff. German Consulate and presented | credit cf Helen Luke in her Social- Number. BE. SURE TO STATE dare touch it.” “Someone will have to sce what’s| In their cities, children form | their demands for Thaelmann’s re- ist competition with David Ramsey, | SIZE. DAILY WORKER Immediately, the Nazis became|the matter,” said the. officer. \picket lines in front of the German |lease. Throughout the country chil- | Jacob Burck, Del, Harry Gannes,| Address orders to Daily Worker 50 EAST 13th St. New York, N. ¥. | very excited. They swore and de-|' No answer came for several min- | Consulates. In Cleveland, Pioneers | dren are collecting 50,000 signatures | Mike Gold and the Medical Advis- | Pattern Department, 243 West 17th manded loudly, “Who did this?!utes. Then one stepped forward. Picketed the Consul, In Philadel-'and pennies for Thaelmann. ory Board, in the Daily Worker Street, New York City.

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