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Page 6 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1934 United Farmers Le 66 imsurance Firm Kept FromFarmer’s Home Farm Laborers’ Pay | Cut by Piece Work By a Farm Worker Correspondent HIGHTSTOWN, N. J.—My last job of the harvest was at John Cormar’s truck farm. He said that he could not pay more than a dollar a day. Two other workers and myself Defended by Pickets SENN Tax Burden Reduces Farm Living Standard By a Farmer Correspondent OHARLESTON, Mo.—I am writ- ing you a few words in regard te tax on grain. The hog tax is $2.50 on every the cotton tax, hog tax, and the WORKERS’ HEALTH ague Grows in Fight Against Evictions Land Shark’s Victim Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board Medical Care Under Fascism E following was quoted in N. Y. Times of Oct. 28, 1934. It placed your name in the ranks of the classics of Natural Science.” It is plain to see that Socialism | Belongings Are Rescued from Sheriff, and Home Petition Campaign Blocks Foreclosure; New| Is Won Through Mass Mobilization U. F. L. Local Built as Result | were put to picking beans at 15 cents a bushel while they were +he | @S8ks: how useful to society is your Povey puna enn lks BE! a erielly Se | Work? Socialism asks, will the mass also taxed $2 on every hundred is a proclamation published in Physicians’ Gazette of Berlin b" green. When the frost killed them, bushels of corn he sells, How is |Seiles, head of the Medical sso- ee etiee helped or harmed by he pat uski orn ..| the poor farmer goii live and | ciation of Duesseldorf: ¥ ‘ B Farmer Correspondent circulate petitions in the neighbor- Se te heating 0 aS By a Farmer Correspondent part of law and order served their ne eS ee pentive : In short, in the Soviet Union y a Fa pon! Pe cents a shock. i f pay thene taxne? “In the elect: f Aug. 19, the | tl limits to the PORTLAND, Ore.—The Sherman | hood. When he found out that we | SOLWAY, Minn—Grover Doyle| Clever end by distracting attention n the elections of Aug. 19, here are no limits to provisions 3eeley eviction did not yet take) Five cars worked all day Sunday, place, and the Seeleys are as yet|the final day given the Seeleys to could make more than a dollar a day, he stopped two of us and | came to this state and county from |from the Doyle residence. While Nebraska one year ago, through the | the victims were in court and only The government rented thou- sands of acres of land from the Maria Hospital of Duesseldorf re- jected the Fuehrer and - National} which workers can make for their own welfare through their Soviet big landlords and paid them $7 to $20 an acre, and let it lay idle this year. If it was planted with crops, it would have worked thou- Socialism by a vote of more than|State. Under fascism, as in Ger- * 50 per cent. This election result} many, today there are no limits to L¢ represents a provocation of the pro- | the oppression which financiers and fession of the city and of the State. | industrialists level against the wel- in their old home. leave the place. It was a hard day’s They had no title to the place./ work, driving from farm to farm, Mr. Seeley had signed that away to| put we did it and got home for | the Prudential Insurance Co. three | chores in the evening. We had | subtle inducement of one Martin|® handful of sympathetic U.F.L. Sorenson, shrewd politician and|™embers were on hand, 17 deputy land shark of this place. Through | Sheriffs armed to the teeth, with correspondence with him, he pur- | sawed-off shotguns, swooped down Put us on old frost-bitten beans at 25 cents a bushel. We could not even pick two bushels a day. We stopped the whole thing, and years ago, before there was a United twelve petitions filled out with the | i | | i i i f ules, cattle, |to make good this alien attitude by | their fascist state. when the insurance company had | mines Of Delghhors far and near. | kim to the Tabor Boaed.bat, wa :| 6 cast Raymiend of $300 down cn the | en es oa all on thelr crore ie A hoes aus eine seh pha the strictest boycott of the hospital | * * . When the insurance company had | did not know how. So I decided | ttansaction. The farm purchased, | en = neg a ae eir Lelaiey | as : Sk eat iota Gone OF Beanie wae ‘ made a contract sale with another ae ae aah ee fenemehes|| that one way-to show him up was | Deing at the time occupied by an- | &ffects, even to the destruction of rom starving : lige A Correction farmer, Mr. Seeley had permitted | 4. comm! | | Ore- | the new farmer to move his cattle,|Judge of Clackamas County, Z machinery, etc., into the place and/S0n, and then down to Salem to to store his furniture in a| Hawkins and Roberts, the Pruden- ¢ room in the house. day, which lasted until after mid- night in the school house at Wil- sonville. We decided it was best to Dye Serihest Appreciate Daily Worker After the 1998 strike we went|same bank, the Grosvenor Savings | and the time of rental being up, the | SMeriff at the Wilton liquor store. | Hardy can’t go back to the place|Payloy, eminent physiologist. Dur-|A: K_-- By a Dye Striker Correspondent | pack to work on two frames again | Bank, Jonesville, Mich, Some of the | Hoyles were ordered. {teen thelr Balaapings. Released at all. ing the period when Pavlov was| Mrs. P. Kelly GARFIELD, N. J—I am a dye|The men started to talk about one|robbed depositors, last Halloween, | shelter. It is needless to say that in a very|, We have learned that Hardy went | speaking openly against the October | Previously received . striker from the National Dyeing | tial representatives. Leniency has the case we were able to build an- other local of the U.F.L. at Wilson- ville. they never read a paper that tells | the truth like the Daily Worker | does. For about three years we work- \ers worked on two frames in the fmishing room. The night workers | worked from 6 pm. to 7 am., with |only 20 minutes for lunch, from midnight to 12:20 am. |frame for one man. We told the and Printing Co., East Paterson,|shop chairman, John Tovano, that the three of us wanted to report to publish it in the Daily Worker. ILD Aids Fight Of Farmers Against Bank By a Farmer Correspondent MOSHERVILLE, Mich.—One far- mer out here and his four sons have to cut a 10-acre wood lot to sell the wood so as to pay the banker and keep his farm, One of the farmer's sons got only 50 per cent of his deposit from the drew a row of “privies” into town and put them in front of this bank. chased a farm near Solway, making |" the Doyle family in the early other farmer, Mr. Sorenson oblig-| their food supply, and drove the |ingly secured temporary quarters | helpless mother and children out for the Doyle family, $35 additional |OMto the public highway. Their being paid by Mr. Doyle for rent of | Possessions were taken to a store- find instead of the comfortable home, represented to them by Mr. Sorenson as being on their farm, they found only a small three-room | log hut, and, in place of 30 cul- tivated acres on the farm, there was a clearing of 6 or 7 acres. However, with the typical courage of his race, Mr. Doyle and his family took up residence on the rented house, pending the vacating of their own home, but, alas it was never vacated! After being bled to the last drop Farm Foreclosed Suit was brought against Mr. |same. When the family of eleven | House in Solway. | mined men and women marched to | the store manager at Solway and |demanded that he contact the sheriff. at Beltrami County and | secure release of the personal prop- erty of Grover Doyle. This righteous storekeeper made a pretense of call- ing the sheriff from the Court | House in Bemidji. Our brave mem- | bers were not to be trifled with and | soon discovered the ruse, whereupon Mr. Storekeeper saw that discretion was the better part of valor and at once made connection with the few minutes, the Sheriff released to | the U.F.L. all of Mr. Doyle’s belong- sands ef men and fed thousands Negro Farmer For His Cotion By a Sharecropper Correspondent SELMA, Ala—W. J. Jones, over- seer for Mrs. J. A. Punrich, shot W. H. Hardy, a Negro farmer, in the arm and shoulder. Jones took a bale of cotton from Hardy and sold it. When Hardy went to him and asked him about the cotton, Jones told him that he was going to give him hell. Now to the headquarters of the A.A.A. They told him they couldn't do | social activity, no matter how use The Duesseldorf physicians will try “I, therefore decree that any as- signments to the hospital are rigidly forbidden. I will publish in a cir- cular the names of all. German This proclamation neatly contains the attitude of fascism toward a ful. Fascism does not ask, will the doctors and patients be benefitted or harmed by boycotting this hos- pital? Fascism will only ask, does this hospital support our reign of terror? Fascism will only ask, who dares to challenge the greedy rule of capital? | In striking contrast to this at- titude is the one shown by the So- viet Union toward Professor Ivan Revolution, the Soviet Government gave Pavlov money and apparatus fare of the working class through The date set for the lecture on | “Sex Attitudes as Factors in Mental Health,” previously announced for Friday, Nov. 14, should have read | presented by Dr. Frankwood E. Wil- liams, well known authority on ental hygiene. First Aid Needed in Drive! The Board leads its competitors in contributions, but compared to Mike Gold’s 58.8 per cent of quota, its thermometer registers a mightily low 22.4 per cent, Comprising about 45 members, the Board is practi- cally a “mass organization.” Doce tors! We expect “mass” support! Quota oom $1,500.00 Total to date .._... N.'J. We all came out on Oct.|we wanted one frame. He told us/They draped them with wreaths | poyle and eviction from the rented | ings. ‘These were taken again to|®4ything for him until he went|to furnish his work. On Paviov's 25th. | that he couldn't do everything at|and signs such as “frozen assets,”| place was ordered. Simultaneously | the scene of eviction and the Doyle's | back to Mr. Jones. Hardy has) 85th birthday, the Council of Peo-| At symposiums, lectures, de- There is a picket line every | once. | drop your deposits here,” “4 per| proceedings of foreclosure were in-| went to housekeeping in a tent on| failed to do so. ples’ Commissars sent him the fol-| bates, discussions, tie up topic morning morning. About 100 to} About two or three months later 150 are on the picket lines. We are| we brought it up again. Then the| out to win with the rest of the shop chairman, another worker and cent paid on all deposits,” and many others. About 8 a.m. we iried stigated against Mr. Doyle on the farm he had paid down on, but dye workers. |myself went to the manager. We I am a member of the U.T.W.,| told him that two frames was too| local 1733. Our shop chairman, | much work. He asked us what we) John Tovano, did not want a picket | had to do. He knows well what line in the general strike. The | we had to do. The manager asked militant workers demanded one. | the chairman two or three times I read the Daily Worker every) if it was a justified demand. The day. After I read the paper I give | chairman said yes. Three days it to my fellow workers. They say later we got one frame. New York Workou Schovl | Contributes $114 in Drive An indication of what can be achieved with concentrated effort is shown in Tuesday's receipts of $1,160.11. Chief among the day’s con- tributors are the N. Y. Workers School which sent $114 and the City Central Com. of the International Workers Order, also in N. Y. Boston | and Pittsburgh districts contribute $213 and $102 respectively. A $50 donation raised by the Woodstock Group of Woodstock Colony, N. Y., in September was erraneously listed as a donation from Mr. Herman Baron of the A. C. A. Gallery. Continue soliciting for the $60,000 fund, and raise this necessary to get a photograph, but the bank| never had possessiétr of. The good got them away too soon. Judge ordered a 24-hour limit for This farmer must pay the bank. | vacancy on the rented place, which At that, only the resentment of the | any sane man of mature judgment local farmers organized through the | would know to be a practical im- Hillsdale branch of the I. L. D.,| possibility for a farmer with a fa- from taking the farm away over a| machinery. year ago for a debt of $135. This} The United Farmers League at Was on a purported note said to be | this juncture stepped into the pic- negotiated by the deceased father | ture and started moblizing to fight of this farmer, the deceased father | the eviction. | the roadside. Here began picketing by the U.F.L., which maintained a camp of guards and pickets in pro- test before the public eye of these | outrages being perpetrated upon helpless farmers and home-owners. Now the county workers of the Federal Emergency Relief came stopped this banker, Charles White, | mily, household goods, stock and) fearful lev: public opinion be| | aroused in behalf of the Doyles, and | attempted to force them into a | shack not fit for a stable. In the meantime, the U.F.L. sent a tele- gram to the Governor of the state, having left his son a life lease, and | deed in fee to his grandsons on the | death of his son. | | Mass meetings were held, leaflets | and petitions circulated, collections | made, legal talent supplied, and now he has time to pay his debt, where- | as at first they wanted him to pay | immediately. The weapon used was a petition | |giving him the facts. At last, a| | representative of the State Relief | Administration arrived on the scene | | and secured a suitable home for the | This seeming victory left them,! Doyles and such temporary aid as} however, with a bitter pill to swal-| was needed. A victory for the low. Grover Doyle and one U.F.L.| U.F.L. and mass pressure, but member were hailed to court on a/| tremendous hardship and untold trumped-up charge of stealing tim- | agonies suffered by Grover Doyle} ber. These shrewd ‘tactics on the! and his brave family. Four burly deputfes came to en- force the good Judge's decision. The UPL. by holding the doors, resisted successfully their first overtures. up the Negroes, and taking food and stuff and throwing ground and stamping it with their feet. to say anything about it. The Negro masses almost had a rebellion here in the fields when Mrs. J. A. Funrich told them that Jones had killed Hardy. She found the spirit of the Negroes so high that she was forced to take back | what she had said to the Negroes. This is what the landlords do here in the countryside. It is getting so that the Negroes cannot have a dance at all here when the landlords have a gather- ing. The landlords drink and they go out on the countryside beating it over the And they dare the Negroes LETTERS FROM OUR READERS by said bank through Charles White | — : to the Probate Court to have the| e claim allowed. Then an injunction tS) l W was gotten, stopping the farmer Octad or from deposing of the wood or any- thing on the place. The wood is all | the farmer has to pay the debt | kers Protest Relief Cut in Chicago PICTURE OF A FASCIST New York, N. Y. ear Comrades: For the first time I heard a fas- cist at Union Square. He was of lowing greetings: “The Council especially notes your inexhaustible energy in scientific creativeness, the with role of the “Daily” as organ- izer for a better society. Call for support, take up collection for Successes of which have deservedly IN THE $60,000 drive. HOME By ANN BARTON Mrs. Roosevelt Offers Too Litile E must be thankful this Thanks- giving. Farmers and their wives who live in the drought area must be thankful. Men and women living on relief, however inade- quate, must be thankful. We must, all count over our “unusual bless- ings” this year of the ‘depression, 1934. The prinicipal woman spokes-|! man for the Roosevelt administra- tion says so. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt hersolf says so, in her regular monthly article for a wo- man’s magazine. She says we must be thankful mand more than that. Wh, the Communists organize the women for that time when we can wrest from the ruling class, the joy as you describe it, of giving us charity. The best, Mrs. Roosevelt, that you have te offer is too shoddy, too shallow, too hypocritical, too little for us. mT. @ The Working Woman, which is steadily growing, needs some vol- unteer to act as business manager. It would require work three times a week, about three hours each day. The Working Woman also needs sum by Dec. Ist! with, Then, a motion in chancery | the “real American” type, blond | at Thanksgiving because there are ists. Apply to Mare | 4 . . . to set the deeds aside. These papell with a blue shirt, open at the collar.| “the possibilities which open up voluntoes, S70 Isis Bply -%0 have all been check: | i a aa ROE VADER About six cops were protecting him. | before us to help our fellow human | 8@ret Cowl, 35 East 12th Street, DISTRICT 19 (Denver) {Jewish Buro 18.75 Jesnette U 4.75 | Have al en checkmated for Over | By. a Social Worker Correspondent) were unable to supply them at all He was very eloquent, could hold | beings.” New York City, at once. Josie Hallquist 50 | Slassport Unit 6.15 Finleyville y%|a year now by our local ILD.| CHICAGO, Ill—Just prior to the|and food cards were consequently BS, John Rdissvall 1.00 | Slassport, LW. J Waesell 332| Samuel B. Keene of Detroit is the | rinois Unemployment Conference destroyed as worthless. The dietary | #4 Move a crowd, and quote by “Be Thankful” are Br. 581 8 Side Unit 2.32 Sara Leek bee . rote from Lenin and the Communist | __,,. : Contributions received to the Total November 5, 1994 150 | Slassport, U0 4.00 Arnold U 3.00 | attorney in this case. which was held in Springfield, Oct.| habits of certain racial groups have Manifesto. Let each of us this Thanksgiv-| edit of Ann Barton, in her Social- Totaltodate 342.37 | Slassport Womens © Washington U 5.00| A Hillsdale doctor told a comrade 29, the Illinois Emergency Relief| been completely ignored, since no : , ‘y ing Day count over our unusual| © iHone Wik Deivid | RAtnae; League 4.00 © Slay Club = 10.00 | A fei .| He sounded very radical in his ist competition av amsey, DISTRICT 10 (Omaha) last week that he has many w rovisi has been made for sub: } Baunbarder, N Spoler 3.00 s S iy work- | Commission quietly announced a 10) provision jabber about the c tratic ft blessings wherever we may be Jacob Burck, Del, Harry Gannes, J. 8, Kerpan 50 ' pee PeT Ei od. ing to him that are simp! ief cut ty, | Stitute foods.” : (sega aa onigser > » “ aia : yan Sharpsburgh 1.00 ers coming to e simply | per cent relief cut for Cook County, wealth. But it soon became evident | living,” she writes, “Even if it is|\ixe Gold and the Medical Advis- Total November 5, 1994 “50 | Total Nov. 6, 1934 .98 | starving to death. Malnutrition is | effective Nov. 1. This decision, com-| The resolution also attacks the whom he was really for. He attacked | in the drought area, perhaps some ory Board, in the Daily Worker Total to date 8.60 | Total © ote ri aa rampant. This county has never |ing at a time when thousands of! commission for placing “the burden Communian of the gre id that it| Of us may find that our positions} griye for $60,000. Quota—$500 a DISTRICT 12 (Seattle) 1.00 | T- Lerien See 99 |Set aside any money for emergency | unemployed workers were storming | of responsibility for carrying out its did not it ki Hag oa are improved a little... . Others like Aaa ©. K. Stone Red ey relief. A very inadequate sum is/Telief stations demanding more food| [the commission’s] policy squarely re ee ik fue eae be is | che Wormand heard of in the south, Total to date $23.95 ‘Total November 5, 1934 Ei aa RSS appropriated quarterly by the | because of # shen rise in prices, | yoon the shoulders of the employees, veganliea tien: = igen eae nat Idd" ago, have fo be thankful seueees tee Total to date 293.71 . 6, County Supervisors for soldiers’ and | Came as a shocking surprise even | despite the fact that the relief em- that relief hi to th fi DISTRICT 18 (California) Total to date bs > reli |to the employees of the Illinois| e ited | to the white collars); that it put | that relief has come em. from > ae range 50 DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) sailors’ relief. The Federal Emer- | poy Me |Ployees were not even consulted) 1 engineer on the same level as a| the quarter from which they dared] Can You Make ’Em Lillian Hodghead 2.00 | Daily Worker Show gency Relief administered here, | Emergency Relief Commission hard- Aim to Cut Wages Further ditch “ai not hope it would come. Even if 4 Ga kaclen 5.01 | John Margaritis while very poor, is nevertheless bet- | €ned by five years of faithful service} Besides saving money for the| {itch digger, and gave them the it is lief i Y 1? | Sf Ie ar ey as , es Hes f same wages. only relief, and relief inade- ourse ter than what the v to the relief administration and the| bankers and industrialists, the cut sie Total November 5, 1034 ay eae ieee ee bankers. set at og. | RRS 8s its major objective the driv-| | He quoted Lenin in order to pore eee oe eee DISTRICT 14 (Newark) “| D. Horowitz 0 _In one relief station the profes-|ing down of wage levels even lower. soe ationalism,” and several 3 i unit 9 omer n90| Mrs. P. Kelly ; sional workers at a staff meeting |In a bulletin which was issued to) Workers clapped, showing that they] Be thankful you 150,000 homeless|. 2attem, 2068 is available in sizes Unit 1 LOO 2 Fe are ae eee . voted almost unanimously to pro-|the personnel of the Illinois Emer-|Were being taken in. He referred! women, you nearly 16,000,000 un- Sth tattle and % yard cohtrasenl . ee sola eae neer Tells test the relief cut. A sharp reso-| gency Relief Commission (No. 1976),| to his “movement,” but never men-| employed, you millions working Seiten tio breaios comin cine Totaltodate 72.26 DISTRICT 8 (Chleago) lution describing the terrible effects| it was boldly stated that unem-| tioned what the name of the move-| part time, you who are striking | Lustrate a ee R. M. Spillman $10 ere ae cut would Pee upon tens ce ployed workers on relief must ac-|ment was, and had no sign up to| against wage-cuts. You still can estiatsett acta Received Nov. 6, 1934 $1,160.11 | A b V, ousands of families in Cook) cept jobs offered as long as wages| signify it. He said openly, “We are| help your fellow. By this time, if : Previously received IED | al we ae #9,00802 out Usit | County was drafted by an elected | equal the family’t relief budget. Ob-| anti-Communist,” but his repetition soi ses serenely vy properly may to date “$02,000.80 Ra DISTRICT 9 (Minn.) ey penmunlere Be five. The resolution | viously then, a slash in the relief|of the word “revolution” and his thankful, Mrs. Roosevelt has done DISTRICT 1 (Boston) jonagon Section $12, Oo onsulate also exposed the illusory promises| budget will force unemployed work-|demagogy confused the workers, | her work well, and may law down District 5 1994 $12.00 of the agents of the commission that|ers to accept jobs at even lower|some of them at least. her work well, and may lay down Si eseeng Auto Body a $250.26 the slash in relief would be offset} wages than was the case hereto-| Fellow workers, this man is a A me "i Ee 110.00 District DISTRICT 10 (Omaha) August Hultgren $1.00 $2.00 EW some more. meha Shagor 1.00 ah |eral surplus foods. That the bankers and industrial-|of the Marxists in order to inci Gott Hucst commm., Worcester Ne sate aine pad Seren ae cgi si Pion- | Protest Circulated ists of Chicago were primarily re-| you against the Communist ae Mrs, Roosevelt tells the sad story ee ei Fags | Total to date Gsnsute tte cEyowee a Under the pressure of the rank) sponsible for the cut and not s0|which is the leader in the fight | °f @ Woman she knows well. This ov. 6, y . i = the rs Petal to cate $2,008.83 | 5 yigg DISTRICT 32 (Seattle) and file case workers, the execu-|much the F. E. R. A. pleading lack| against capitalism and its off-shoots, | Woman is “not exactly what you By a Worker's Child Correspondent | by an increased allotment of fed- committee of four Pioneers and two | fore. Fascist. He distorts the teachings You are not thankful? Well here is tive committee of the Social Work | of funds, is clearly born out by the and I would call poor.” This lady DISTRICT 2 (New York Cit; ¥ } = Sec 17, U7 $15 00. Health Seater | ee par ine paebarsy went up to the 19th | Association, an organization having | private statements of Leo M. Lyons, lake low wages, unemploy still lives pretty much as she al- Sec 17, affair 3.07 AK B00 [rere ge aoed gem | ee See the consul: the official endorsement of the ad-|relief administrator for Cook Watch him when he bends to quote | W2YS has, but she can no longer See 14, Unit 4 2.00 Internation pe DISTRICT 18 (California) When the janitor directed them ministration, also sent a vigorous | County, who boasted that he could ‘The words that Mark and uae give charity to persons and funds ee 400 Be ee, Wik san |, Mictcher $.25|to the office, he told the elevator | protest to the commission, circu-|reduce ‘relief standards in Chicago iota is to organizations. She therefore Unite Coun Wking J W Jacobson .25| John Howard Lawson 10.00 | man, “Get some plain clothes men.” |jating at the same time copies of| still further. He said that he hoped| we recognize this f: ist feels she has little fo be thankful ‘Women: .C.L. Party 40 | H. Helbuck 00 | The committee was not allowed | the resolution to its membership for|in time to reduce relief in Chicago Who stabs pay fi epee for. But Mrs. Roosevelt consoles Gounctl : pe pte ST 1.00 | otal Nov. 6, 1084 12.25 | inside but a secretary came outside | endorsement of its stand. The work-| still further. He said that he hoped. btaad if * her. She can give, Mrs, Roosevelt hon rae Pas 4,00 | Total to date $334.75 | to speak to them. The committee ers in the relief stations were so|in time to reduce relief standards % 5 says, sympathy, understanding, RN. M, A. 8. City Central DISTRICT 1¢ (Newark) ne told him that they came from a aroused over the high-handed ac-|to the Rockford level, where he was COMR. strength. But for the general run Youth Br., Comm., page pet Molders ‘Union *o9| Children’s organization to lodge @\tion of the commission that large|a faithful agent for the relief ad- OMRADE SPIVAK ENTERS of us— Greenpoint, pa ‘a gem eee mare tees, 1.00 | Protest, and he told the committee |numbers of them paid $1 initiation | ministration. He explained to one THE DRIVE “If you live ‘acco to Ne eunter” 23.05 N Steingart 1.00 | Pearl Matlaga 100| that the consul did not wish to | fees to join the organization in or-|of his supervisors that he could New York City. aie tradi iri will ie Wkers School 114.43 D Bloom 35 |G. Picila s speak to them. When the spokes- | der to register their protest. Many carry out any budget reduction and) Dear Comrade Editor: bran ‘ ned ” ae Sunday Night J Westsmank 2.00 | M. Filmanchik “S| man asked him if he could take that | workers frankly admitted that they| still. keep the unemployed from Realizing the need of funds for | UT*ey With “fixings” and soup and Basten 200 Wxees Center 5:00| Total Nov. 6, 1034 46.25/88 the consul’s answer he replied, | fear to go out in the “field” to tell|creating too much distrubance as| the support in the drive for the | °°, See and plum Lanse ae M Greenberg 50 A & M Neute 1.00| Total to date $478.51 | “Yes.” their “clients” of this cut. long as he had a loyal staff. The| Daily Worker, a group of comrades | MUS” ‘Hear ye, New England tex- J Milton 10.00 Philip, Party 2.25 DISTRICT 15 (New Haven) Then the spokesman asked him if| The Federation of Social Service| present avalanche of relief workers’ have decided on an idea to enter tile and shoe working women). Fed Build. 4.76 Anna Roth 3.00 pha oes “eS bit 30 |that was the answer he wished to | Employees, the rank and file pro-| protest proves that social workers) John L, Spivak into Socialist com- | SUPPOS®, We each of us, makes up etal Hov. € 1994 9748.44 | Mo Rusicoff 150 R Malkin 1.00| be printed in the press. He replied tective organization in the field of| are ready to show an identity of in- petition with his articles, “Plotting our mind that if we are able to “Total to date $17,442.76 | L Epstein 100 L Blum 1.00 | that he didn’t care. The committee | Social work in Chicago, in its sharp| terest with other workers. the American Pogroms.” have at least a “chicken in the pot’ DISTRICT 3 (Philadelphia) A Epstein 7 ee 449 |Saw that they couldn't get anything | protest resolution to the Illinois| The argument that Mr. Reynolds, Wer Wait: to eachaee dmira- | His year, we will try to get to- 3419 Hamilton St. $2.00 | 3 Reeder $0 collection‘on ~~” |more, as he went in and locked the |Emergency Relief Commission,| secretary of the commission, was tion for Comrade Spivak's marr. | gether with some other people, to ‘Total Nov. 6, 1934 $2.00 | M Malkin 10 «= PB 2.05 | door, so that the committee should | Pointed out that the new starvation | supposed to have brought back withijous work in eco alist ists make an effort, really to see that ‘Total to date $3,579.99 not be able to get in. budget, effective as of Nov. 1, actu-|him from Washington, lack of and anti-Semites, wh a th ates those in the community who have DISTRICT 4 (Buffalo) Total Hor, 6, 1934 Arey, A PIONEER. | ally slashed relief by much more] funds, was blasted in the same reso- erties to the’ et ho hota Us nothing, have at least something ©. Gismene Abed aalacus tien RM Ae Sor Ee cee than 10 per cent, since the price of lution, which pointed out that “the| onemes t the working class and to| ror their Thanksgiving dinner.” 4 es mer. 0, 19% $13.96 | Lars Rundahl $2.00 NOTE: milk and the food boxes was raised|R. F. C. has loaned countless mil- ‘SEncloeed pica frit a aaah to. * * oF Fi Total to date $360.20 ere and the value of the grocery orders| lions to railroads, banks, and other tart thi: She Offers Too Little ; DISTRICT 5 (Pittsburgh) TotabNov. 6, 1994 ‘i tee We publish every Thursday let- | was decreased accordingly. Actual| industries. The P. W. A. has al-| Star! is competion at once, y E Stassell $1.00 Anna Getto | Total to STRICT % (Se, Dakota) “| ‘ers from farmers, agricultural |calculations show that for large| located hundreds of millions for war| _YUrs for a Soviet America with|jRS, ROOSEVELT, is this the E Miravalle 1.00 ‘aoeeo: st oxitipan $520; 8nd cannery workers. We urge | families getting large boxes, the | purposes and other non-liquidating| the help of the Daily Worker, best plan the leading bourgeois ern coure 200 Locat UC 2.00 | farmers and workers in these in- | slash in relief is about 25 per cent.| projects. More recently it was HH. woman of the country has to Beaver Falls Curtisville U 5.00| Total Nov. 6, 1934 fried dustries to write us of their con- |The previous budget, at the time] learned through the Senate Arms In- offer? Do you really think that Unit 3.06 Russelton U 6.15" Total to date —,| ditions and their efforts to or- | it was prepared (March, 1934), was| vestigation Commission that the so.| COMRADE GOLD’s COLUMN those “who have nothing” will be ganize. Please get these letters to | “subsistance” (starvation), budget.| called cotton and wheat loan for APPRECIATED content with your Thanksgiving Here Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! us by Monday of each week, Since then, however, food prices’ $40,000,000 to China was used to Baltimore, Md, |dinner? Do you think that the pier Te have risen over nine per cent, ac-| arm Chiang Kai Shek’s armies. Dear Comrade Editor: :, millions of working women awak- pee lace ree cram to the | Eording to the Bureau of Labor Sta-| Funds available for such purposes Michael Gold’s column on the{ening to class-consciousness will ADDRESS )UNT 1 orkers Correspond- | tistics. can be readily converted for unem- x ‘or from your vile oe NAME |ence Department in its Socialist! The statement of the commission| ployment relief.” a iste Hi tbalsdy Ninerrt atiosophee: Hos the misery and FIFTEEN CI ie s jcompetition with David Ramsey,/that the relief cut will be offset by| The following demands were sub-| THis col a ‘a okt re “ t Wwerty of these yeate ale blessined 40°" EI ENTS (15¢) : . | ]/Jacob Burck, Del, Harry Gannes, an increase in federal commodities | mitted to te commission: (1) The|# SeParate pamphlet or circular, for Because they afford the opportu. | cis oF stamps (coins preferred) ; |Mike Gold, Ann Barton, and the! is exposed as an empty promise by/| immediate rescinding of the 10 per|it is an outstanding contribution. pape een give that| ‘°° this Anne Adams pat‘ern. Write |Medical Advisory Board, in the) the resolution of the Federation,|cent cut and the consideration of |The stark tragedy of the starving a ee eee er vom oun ruling | Plainly name, address and style ‘ Tear off and mail immediately to Daily Worker drive for $60,000./ which states, “Previous experience|an increase in the food allowance| Miners and the vicious greed of the| help? Of one of your number. BE SURE TO STATE | | ” Kk \S. Wuls $ 1.00 ‘foods was faulty. Since grocers average rise in food prices since the| understood. One cannot help but|she has always lived,” you as DAILY WORKER Previously Received . -22.75 | were not being paid for this service, | last budget went into efect. (2) The|be sympathetic and wish for en-| nothing more than strength, sym- New York, N. Y. |) | they were reluctant in handling} substitution of cash relief for the|lightenment, particularly after read- ‘Total to date ..sssecssmm.. -23.75 | these commodities. Frequently they’ present method of relief in kind.” | Quota—s500, | has shown that distribution of these commensurate at least with the ‘ rulers of their country can be vividly ing Michael Gold's ‘i class, who is living “very much as : : ‘ Wednesday, Nov. 14, 8:30 p.m. t were handicapped in every|been promised. We hope for a arrived from Nebraska, we can pic-|__ With all possible haste, faithful Shot or Askin | Physicians, who, in spite of this pro- | place: Tee Plaza BAC Rae ‘ We had several meetings two | Square deal for both farmers. ture the surprise and disappoint- | UFL. members gathered from every ig. nines still assign patients to that | and Irving Pl. The lecture will be» weeks ago, the final one on Satur-| Due to the widespread interest in | men which greeted thé Doyles to | Warter and in a mass of 10 deter- peck