The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 19, 1934, Page 4

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Page 4 DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1934 Group Insurance Plan Racine Workers Win|4lL NIGHT Reliet Probe Demand oe at | 1,500 Also Force Supervisor to Back Move for | Special State Session SIEGE WINS A HEARING By a Worker Correspondent MORGANTOWN, W. Va.— After | many months of struggle led by the Monongalia County Unemployment Dism issal Means Loss of Benefits yp 40 P. ¢. Worker Who Paid 50 Cents A Month for 9 Years Loses All He Put in When He Is Fired Bared by Nabisco Worker WORK LOAD | IN HOTEL By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—Please tell us how to form a union for the maids in the Hotel Victoria. Bat-Wing Skin or Lupus Erythematosus . F. C., Cleveland, Ohio:—This is a chronic inflamation of the skin which usually results in atro- WORKERS’ HEALTH Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board their real class position. Strong ef- forts are now being made to organ- ize these professionals and to bring them to a clearer realization of their role in society. 4 = came ther the workings of the re- | COURcil, the county relief adminis- | We have already formed a small | phy (withering) of the affected skin. Acne By a Worker Correspondent gate together th BF | tration has been forced to call a | By a Nabisco Worker Correspondent, About three months ago a worker | dependable union group but we have |The disease often recurs even after ; RACINE, Wis—At the Board of | lief department k Lunn of |SPecial meeting of the relief board| NEW YORK.—The shop I work| was fired. He had worked in N. B.| to be careful because of the stool|it has cleared up. At one time it] WH deal once more with the ques- Supervisors meeting in the Court) At this meeting a Fran siceisiie to listen to the demands of the|in is a branch of the National Bis-|C. for more than nine years. In| pigeons around us. was considered a form of skin tuber- tion of Acne, since there have House last week, 1,500 workers |the Workers Committee, a alist | orkers. | suit Co., a company which has over | all these nine years he paid 50 cents| Working conditions here are bad |culosis, but it is now generally be-|been quite a few letters on this | controlled outfit, spoke very radical- | ly, but when asked to stay and fight | for these demands, he sneaked out jammed the chambers and halls to put before these men their demands of a 5¢ per cent increase in relief, question sent into the Medical Ad- For several months the various |60 factories in the United States. visory Board: every month for this fake insur-| beyond description. The maximum locals have been electing committees | The one in which I work is on 10th lieved to be an eruption due to ance. When he was fired he lost | work load for one maid is to clean poisons in various parts of the body. to present the grievances of the St. near the Fast River. all his money. |and scrub 18 rooms and baths a Pimples on the face and back are more and better clothing and im-/as usual workers to the relief officials with} Several months ago our shop was| Not only does the boss try to give | day. We often have to do 25 rooms| ‘Tuberculosis may be one of the proved medical attention | This Frank Luhn says that he was! (victories won, ‘The committees | organized into an A. F. of . Fed-|us fake insurance, but William| snd baths. ‘That is a 40 per cent | Possible causes. Any point of infec- | Ale! Ame. |. No ous Knows ihe They demanded to be put back on |in St. Louls organizing the workers.| 7.1. usually attacked because |eral Union. The leadership of our|Green, head of the American Fed- | speed-up. tion or any general toxemia (polson- | O16 cure, It usually lasts for a few W. FE. R. A. projects at a union | It might be a good idea if the a known Communists were on them. | local was forced to do what the|eration of Labor, tries to tell the| We are hired to work from 8 a. m.| 108 of the entire body), regardless years and then goes away. It has cale of wages, a 6-hour day and/rades in St. Louis check up on al! “However, the Osage local decided | workers wanted them to do, because} workers to support the Wagner-| to 5 p. m., but many times we have |°f the type of germs involved, may | Acciutely nothing to do with sex. a 5-day week, and to get pay for a| new speakers and let the workers | 10+ they were going to present|the workers were militant and the | Lewis Bill, which is against the in- | to work until 6 or 7 at night with- |S affect the smaller blood vessels|7i°). sot serious. ‘These things will full week when they don’t work a|know through the Daily Worker] (10). grievances and stay at the re-| union leaders saw that they would terests of the workers. First, pay-| out a cent of overtime pay. of the skin as to produce lupus ery- help a. great deal: full week through no fault of their} what fakers like Frank Tahn are)je¢ cece until their demands were esi Every day the hotel takes 25 cents | ‘hematosus. Tt is obvious, therefore, |" ; cman | doing. that it is necessary to carefully ex-| 1—Regular bowel habits. One After holding the fort all day, the workers were able to win a demand that a delegation be sent to Madison to demand that the Governor call a special session to take up the question of relief, and that workers and five supervisors investi- There is another outfit here called F. E. R. A. Post No. 1. This is a company union that refuses to par- ticipate in mass demonstrations, but resorts to telling the relief fakers how thankful they are for the crumbs they get granted. Consequently a committee came to the office on Monday, Nov. 5 at 10 a.m. They informed the wished to see Miss Davis, the relief administrator. Miss Dayis came out and told them that she would not see any of 32 men, women and children | “watch dog” at the door that they | | NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY out of our pay for a lunch that is really unfit to eat. At times it is so rotten and sour that we just can’t eat it. Even. under these conditions we are subjected to a constant rain of abusive criticism. The housekeeper, Mrs, Sullivan, has said many times that we are too lazy to work, and amine the teeth, tonsils, sinuses, chest, etc., in all such cases in order to discover any sources of infection. The usual treatment is the use of gold sodium thiosolphate or bis- muth injections or local applications of a bismuth ointment in conjunc- tion with the bismuth injections. movement a day. 2—Regular meals. Avoid candie: and sweets. 3 3—Wash face and back often with hot water and soap. Castile soap is best. 4—Get Lotio Alba at the drug store and sop it on your face bee ; Y i M4 Communist committee. The com- | AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES that the Home Relief system is|Sometimes local treatment with|fore going to bed. Keep this up A Letter to Comr ade Crosbie mittee stayed through the night-at| ss wese Fourteenth Street spoiling the country. If all the|tincture of iodine together with in-jevery night until it starts to burn, the relief office until 2 p. m. of|- ‘wRravorK people were deprived of Home Re-}gestion (taking by mouth) of qui-|Then stop using it for a few days, By a Postal Worker Correspondent , NEW YORK.—Greetings to Com-} rade Crosby, from a postal clerk ‘The lot of the postal worker is di- rectly tied up with the rest of the workers, because both are at the mercy of the capitalist machine. the following day, and then decided to go back home and mobilize more workers to come hack. A mass meeting was held in Osage on Monday, Noy. 13, and the next lief, she could get help that would be glad to work for her. She knows of our bad working conditions, and so does the manager, Mr. Moulton, but they do nothing nine is helpful. Injection of the gold salt solution directly into the diseased skin has in some cases been beneficial. Applications of carbon dioxide snow is used in some 5—Sunlight is good for most cases, The ordinary case does not need any more treatment than this. In those cases where there are very who is with you in your fight hi 1 ver is a militant fight s large disfiguring pimples and boils, 4 rticularly | The only answer is a m: day a committee again came to the i to corect them. We ourselves must | instances. Recently good results| other treatments are necessary, ope nae Aerie Leen: at eta orgmnleahice Deke relief office, con Davis very “gra 10 THE EMPLOYEE NAMED IN THIS CERTIFICATE: improve our condition through de-| Were reported with the use of a ” ‘ 5 a OOS cl iy” asker ne committee in! Your prosecutor, who is a postal | make many more Communists be- As a means of assistance to your family in case of termined militant organization. salt-free diet. The use of Xrays in MEDICOS IN COMA clerk, does not speak for or repre-| N nr a her office. She listened to the de- We ask you how to organize and | this condition is usually dangerous, sent the sentiment of all postal Ree oe tae i ‘ aie teat nek Te eee your death or total and permanent disability during your baeirA to he begets Cacti It sermas to us that you have been dij ee es pe oe vorkers, Although he is a postal) You are not alone in you ae! * 2 —Signed: ictorta Action | given the usual treatments at the Worker ihe is merely a tool used by | fight, Comrade Crosby, and be as-| cussed the problems of the unem- employment by this Company while this Group Insurance Plan is Committee. disposal of dermatologists and the| Self-hold-ups) seems to lapse ‘ to do their dirty |sured that you have the support of ployed for about three hours, and a eee poor result in your case is not due} imo a coma. Today they're the higher work, | I assure you that you would get plenty of support from many postal ups thousands of workers. We need more men like you who will help revive the rich American revolutionary traditions of the American workers. recommended that the committee put the demands in writing and elect a smaller committee to present them to the relief board at a special in effect, the Company is glad to be able to cooperate with you in the purchase of the insurance represented by this Certificate Editor's Note:—We think the workers of the Victoria Hotel have taken the proper steps in begin- ning their organization. For in- to the doctors but more likely to the nature of the disease which is often very obstinate. Your characterization of racket- practically unconscious, the low- est of all features. At this rate, they'll reach their $1,500 quota by 1964! — workers if @ poll were taken i Id be called f in appraciation of your loyal service to the Company and with |Use the witness stand to expose | meeting, that woul cal lor PP’ 5 ty % Pearl Mashesky .....8 50 Calm prevails at present in the|¢hose who will prosecute you, and | that purpose. hopin os ere beplgaiicn oni bese practicing medicine is not en- Previously Rec’d ..., 374.81 Post Office because a good part of | also expose the system they repre-| This the committee agreed to do, the hope that your employment will continue to be pleasant and ba ey on get in ing: 2 pat ete: ti Lei it is had : > ! r : they rep d ote! Restaurant Work: inscrupulous physi- , our 15 per cent cut was restored, but | sent. As long as they're bringing |The demands are as follows: mutually beneficial Union at 60 W. 45th Street, New | cians, just as there are dishonest ncetlaaes there are many that have not for- | gotten the raw deal handed down by | in politics, you might as well give the rank and file of the American 1—That the relief administration recognize the committees elected at Cordially yours, York City. members of other professions. On the whole, however, most physicians “Your paper is getting better and Roosevelt when the total cut|Tegion a good Communist educa-|the various locals as representing — aoe ace. Rpare caer Hanes Beker ereey tae” thes G amounted to something like 28 per | tion. the unemployed and part-time em- Frese Led CFanre | iooats: ks vice have endorsed the thamaninen yee Gna: Pape sot | Sockee, Poenaie a a aay cent in one year. | Tam sure you will make a good |Ployed workers of that territory. bill. Five International Unions and ? re? af Already the bankers are clamor- job of it, and I wish you luck not ing for blood in the form of lower wages and standards for all workers, only in this fight, but in all your future battles against capitalism. New York Unit Sends $50 To ‘Daily >in One Day The two highest contributions received last Friday came from a unit of the Communist Party in New York, and from the Lithuanian Buro of Chicago, Unit 1, Section 1, contributed $50, and the latter $56. Other contributions from language organizations are $15.25 from the Estonian Workers and Finnish Workers Clubs of Boston; $10 from the Macedonian Peoples League of Cleveland; and $2 from Branch 546 of the International Workers Order. DAILY WORKER 50 EAST 13th St. New York, N. ¥. 2—That the relief committee im- mediately raise the relief standard to conform to the following sched- ule: < Per Week For single men and women. ..$5.00 For a man and wife .... For man, wife and child . For a couple and 2 children ... For a couple and 3 children... .10.50 One dollar per week for each ad- ditional child. 3—That the relief administration pay all gas, light and water bills of the workers, unemployed and part time. 4—That the unemployed and part time workers be given the medical and dental attention required, and that they be allowed to choose their he is—not a leader of the workers, but a tool of the bosses, the enemy of the working class. to its employes. stand for no fooling around. The workers forced the leaders to fight for higher wages and better con- ditions, since that was the reason they joined the union, and if the leaders fooled around they would throw them out. This is the reason we gained higher wages and better conditions. The boss of N. B. C. forces all the workers to take insurance. The workers have to pay 50 cents a month and for this they get a policy that is put out by the Metropolitan Insurance Co. The policy is from Chairman Manufacturing Committee Nabisco’s soft-soaping letter introducing the group insurance fraud ments of money to workers would not start until 1936. Many work- ers are discriminated aganst, strik- ers are not provided for. Payments will only be made 15 weeks a year, the other 39 weeks the workers are to starve. The bosses will take care of giving the money out. This, as we can easily see, is not an honest workers unemployment insurance bill. These fake insurance schemes only fool the workers and help the bosses. But there is a real workers’ insurance bill. This bill is the Workers Unemployment and Social pare for special organizational ef- forts among the Negroes during the period from Saturday, Dec. 1, to after the branch organizes it, Second, we must build the Eng- lish Section of the Order and must 30 Central labor bodies have en- dorsed the bill. The United Tex- tile Workers Union with over one- half million members has also en- dorsed the bill. ‘We workers in our local should bring up this bill at our next union meeting and have the whole local endorse the bill. We should send letters to our Congressmen to force them to endorse the bill and promise to fight to make the bill into a law. We should send a letter to William Green to demand that he support the bill and have the whole A. F. of L. support it. When this bill is made into a law, the workers will then have a certain security against unemploy- ment and sickness. We can make Quota $500, a vicious economic system. Most physicians are as badly exploited as any other workers and un- fortunately for them, at the pres- ent time, they do not understand Worker can get better and better only if the working class makes the $60,000 drive a sucess. Complete the drive by Dec, 1! IN THE HOME By ANN BARTON “They Never Heard of Wages” 4 R Comrade,” a homeless girl writes to this column, “Recently I lived at the ‘Girls WHEN IN DOUBT... When in doubt as to which of the individual columnists, re member that the weaker depart- ments (financially, of course) can use your aid in the Daily GETHER, TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department, 243 West 17th . <fe Uv Rig gibe HGR 5 ‘ 500. This is called Service League’ at 138 Fast 19th Received Nov. 15, 1994 (879.55 | Lithuantan Lyros mit 1-0 1.00! own doctor and dentist, with service $1,000 to $1,500. ; this bill into a law if we fight for ague’ A a Worker Socialist competition. Previously received pean | Sipe Ra CUM TS 2 | to ibe ail torch tba iweliet wad-| ean ere ar eee So eae Man’ Goud ColGE stats [tty and:fight ‘tor'ti'we wil Street, New York. This organiza- | This applies not only to women Total to date $38,115.68 | Total Nov. 16, 1984 (8136.38 | ministration. : gether. The whole thing is just a|as soon as the workers need the Deon ene tion is supposed to help unem- compa dee: but especially to the Unity Mtb spree oneee’4 $1.00 Susy “pISTRICE 7 (Detroit) 5—S toppage of discrimination | trick to fool the workers. First the | relief money for the relief is to be Editor's Note: In view of the | ployed homeless girls between six- mais Estonian Workers Club és Finnish v. U. T. 0. si745| against Negro and foreign-born | hoss chisels 50 cents a month from|raised by the bosses and the gov-| campaign being conducted by the | teen and twenty-one. Daily Worker Chorus $ 1.00 Workers Club of Boston—Dance 15.25 | District lek panes. An end to the division of | every worker and then he makes |ernment, workers shall not be taxed| Roosevelt administration to put |* “Tt soon found out that tis Previously Rec'd ...... 46.35 otal Nov. 16, 1934 ~~ ¢16.25 | Total Nov. 16, 1934 saa.o7| te school children into one Negro! them feel he is a swell guy and he|in any way to raise money for the| forward fake. insurance schemes, | place was a money making rape! Total to date. $2,085.37 | Total to date $1,815.08 |@Nd one white line at the school} is trying to help them. relief, workers get relief when they| so as to divert attention from the | scheme for a few social heads Total $47.35 DISTRICT 2 (New York City) DISTRICT 8 (Chicaxe) "| SOUP kitchens. The policy goes as follows: If a are on strike, unemployed sick, hurt, Workers Unemployment Insurance | For me it represented a forced Quota $500, Be 506 Unit 1s 3 e Setsesen ‘ S vi ‘ut dis |, o—That a committee elected by| worker is more than 60 years old,|or if women workers are pregnant.| Bill, worker correspondents could labor camp. cet ¥ Ser unit $1 sas | pecs 5.00 Mrs, Starr ‘25 | the unemployment council be per-|or if he is so badly hurt that he|No workers shall be discriminated| perform a real service to their “We were not allowed to go out Can You Make °Em Unit 14 5.00 Unit 22 7.71 | Sec 3 12.20 Sec 3 5.35 | mitted to meet with the relief board | wit) never be able to work again,|against because of age, sex, color,| fellow workers by sending in re- with boys—and visiting hours Unit 5 50 Sec, 1, Unit 32.28 | Rockford Sec 13.00 Br 4785, 1. W.O., | at all regular and special meetings. then he will collect a few dollars|race or political or religious affilia-| ports on how pension plans, group Yourself ? Unit 5 1.00 See, 1, Unit 32 3.41 | Sec 4 22.75 Oreck Sec 5.00 7—That the relief b di were supervised and restricted. oat ; t e $.00 Br 4785, I. W. O., oe oard endorse | from the insurance company. The | tion. This is the only honest work-| insurance plans, and other i Unit 218 «10.00 See, 6, Unit 2 .60| L Shear . the Workers Unemployment and So- ag Life is made. unbearable because pis Unit 5B 1.50 See, 6, Unit 22 .50| Pen & Ham. 10.00 Ozeck Sec 8.00 ‘ z ployment ai o- | most a worker can collect is $1,500.| ers’ bill. All the rest are fakes and| methods similar to the Wagner- | of the stool pigeons placed among Unit 33 215 Sec. 6, Unit 12 48| P Hall ae ait | Sek Serene See Fees It a worker is fired or if he quits | against the interests of the workers.| Lewis bill are being used by the | us 1 was only in the place a few |. Pattern 2071 is available in sizes Unit 33 450 See. 10, a cr Rees The Unemployment Council is de-| his job he doesn't get any of his| Millions of workers have endorsed | bosses to further trick and enslave | hours when they put me to work | 14.16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 Unit & . eee +3 | Ehateion tw. O. 5.00 eae a ere = sxenis money back. this bill. Over 2,400 A. F. of L.| the workers. washing floors oe dishes. They | 80d 44. Size 16 takes 3% yards 36 ; 5 - Bi 56.00 Br 2526, ize the workers of the i -by-step Ua ioe ak btm | goed Ha RIOR hen ee Asc deshcattatir tere els ot Maaspas oles ina dietanes | ‘ete Curtuectcl bak they ares sewing instructions included. Unit 1 50.58 Unit 8 1 jee tration to grant every one of the 5 4 Unit 1 8.00 Far, Hoot aS = oe = necessary demands of the starving, 4 “ ear Atlanta comrades is to show| heard of wages. ‘Unit 32 30 Unit 48 1.00 | Loop Bookstore 5.00 destitute workers, and to send a En lish Section Runs A head anti-Negro governments of * * * Bas GS Seats 4 /Boat awe dg Bai Be tecution They cannot stop the wnity | “aner" ie? menke of aha nit 24 See. 8, : January to help forge a united front “After two°-weeks’ of ° this, ° they Bec. 4, Section 2 36.21 DISTRICT 9 (Minnesota) o2.2 “4 of Negro and white. The best wa: “ 4 30.12 Daily Work $1.20} Program of struggle on a nation- I I. W. O R D is Y}sent me out to an ‘opportunity Unit ior 200 Oboe: re wide basis that will force the bosses n i. 2 . ecr uitin, rive of stopping terrorism against our|home.’ For the privilege of going Gan ‘se 58 Soaity” “aan | Tt Saale wt | Workers? Uiemploymens sed Bosh sa aE ization It to show that'we will not | nonce evan seu clothes and sone “| Workers’ Unemployment and Social : ry house clean, scrub clothes and other t s a Calitornia) cru uit a i100 a eromisicn 1.00 Bumbassan Swarkes Of: soca ie Insurance Bill H. R. 7598. Special Efforts Planned to Re at Negr ‘oes As be terrorized. jobs. For this work I received the Unit 428 78 Solomon Taub .50| Unit 10, Wownton 1.50 P. f Fi Ah A q G 4 i be Every leading committee and/|N.R.A. salary of $1.00 per week. If 7 5 ‘Minor 7 . 250 ‘art 0. ight ainst Georgia lerror i Unit 477 4.35 Bob Minor Troop, | Belvedere See. ase . . S ecm 8 very local organization of the Or-| a girl refuses this opportunity, she Walt S615 335 S Assherman 100 | Pionsar Bure, Mary /Astrew 5.00 LETTERS FROM Y. ler nat re iP precnnda ci a ore out the street. oe Unit tl 10.00 8 Stethes 28| Unit 3, Harbor Sec. 2.50 OUR RE ADERS The seventh week of the mem- Committees in the concentration ri mee but ingeeiaine. counetice, a me lie pakduntbierss apart Lae be Unit ‘ie ie y aeteey Fs Total Nov. 16, 1934 $25.70 bership drive of the International districts are especially called upon defense funds, and (2) a special] domestic servants. Here the social nit nthony jov. 16, 5 . Unit 416 32 M Gonzsles 10 | rotal to date $742.91 : Bf eiae eae Mig a} 660 bas tenet to prepare for this week. mass campaign to recruit Negroes | restrictions are even worse than in Unit 404 1.00 H Stathes 15 DISTRICT 15 (Now Haven) GORMAN’S ELECTION MESSAGE ruited 208 childr ere were re-| A special issue of The Negro Lib-|into our Order for the period of | the city, and the work more plenti- | ume At 680 Mente 100) ae a1, NM ieee CHEERS BOSSES eetted “rere ding erator will be prepared with I. W. O.| December 1 to December 9, ful.” , a ik PRP Poco i a i wee eS 4 gicer e 4 tee York N.Y. pthige Eres pee peat the Polite rales een If we want to get the best re- ce Sake 3 Unit 2 119 GM 10.00) Unit 1 1.00 L Laneridi 25 |Dear Comrade ir: st results. recruit 154 new | must made by our branches a hope the girl who wrote us Unit 16 300 A Dog Loving ||| Shop Nucleus Mt Plasma 2 ae have just come across the edi-|members. This is 18 less than the| distribute as many copies as Pos- bere epmenle 20 the rerun Mee: ie Se te aie : Meat ieee 2 : : rial in the New York Times edi-|172 recruited by the Jewish Section} sible of this issue of The Negro Lib- hosing uncil ‘Total Nov. 16, 1934 9395.78 | Stamfora oS 38 | torial page of November 6th quoting | but it is much better because of|erator in the Negro districts. we pe perry Oo aOR. Santis Ge ee oa Total to date $19,691.38 Unemployed L Saba %|Gorman’s statements on election| the numerical weakness of the Eng-| In the course of the coming week rights before them. We must yop There she oan take up means of 2 son DETECT 3 (Philadelphia) RG council 1.00 ¥ Del Fayero 35 | day. ae compared with the Jewish| an outline will go to all branches | poy the pitt pmcticstas thie Negroes Repaletig tue pebee. glean Ge 9 par! : 3 Mr. Gorman, betrayer, and so- ion. for discussion of the Negro problem | Secti 329 © O Braggi 25 , Total Nov. 18, 1934 $.50 | re d called leader of the textile workers,| Outside of the English Section,|in America and of the duty of the fal ieee tn Cie wate ae dissatisfied, with the oat | Total to date $3,639.08 | Total Nov. 16, 1984 $9.09 |chose this day, election day, to spit|0 one section deserves honorable|T, w. O, in regard to the solution @ 5 si | DISTRICY 4 (Buffalo) | Total to date - S6Jout fascist propaganda to the pub-|™ention except the children; this|of this problem. All branches must bey ‘relief ee them, Among see B. 8. Scholtz 1.00 DISTRICT 21 (St. Louis’ ‘ i e executives of all branches} ters sent column is one sen' 15 |lic, to sl Jatter section keeps up steady work 9 Sy lamamaiaad on aNas = ba ia me "5 monvecieae pd nS Senne "4 and maintains good results week fhaeedrd emanation sala Pisgah en oe ne Redlgilipeartag ively ae ‘Total Nov. 16, 1934 $11.50 | Allen Parrett 5\the class struggle. Hitler could|fter week. Atlanta Arrests Require Action Ing. They . Total to date $444.58 | . Italian Section Weakest must invite all members to attend.| other such “opportunity home,” DISTRICT 6 (Cleveland) Total Nov. 16, 1934 $3.75 | Scarcely have done better. On October 14 the Atlanta, Ga../mhey must urge th ok tomett id. forined’ a. com Lorain $1.00 Peoples Total to date $130.91] Gorman’s message to the work-| The weakest results of the week authorities conducted raids against u ro) meribers. 0 | ack tomeybeke and Sree, Scat Unit 3-43 3.00 League 5.00 DISTRICT 2 (W. Virginia) ers is not a message of a working | Came from the Italian Section. Only| workers organizations and arrested |PTI€ fellow workers and friends] mittee to demand better condi- i Unit 17-08 7.00 So Slavs, Canto 5.00 | 0, O. Wheeler 21 members were recruited by this along to this meeting. The meeting| tions in the “home.” The larger | Massillon 10.00 Finnish Wkers class leader but of a henchman, meckion. ."Titaris thitend a rable | 2mong others eight Negro members | must be held as a | os a mise! were charg Public discussion. | such a group is, the more effective Ricgonian Peoples Aides Seal pnieedaes $68 pie of tie carat oe waite result. During the 12 weeks from Sih tiie ae riaiee i This is a method of education as| it would be. League 5.00 Akron 4.00 DISTRICT 21 (St, Louis) the bosses, the imperialists. ‘Gor. July 1 to October 1, the Italian Sec- ‘baned on their pl barahin dni di well as of recruiting. sf * fh | So, Silay Workers DW Booster, Club, | John Feit 2.00 ‘) ‘ tion recruited 364 new members. th Dp | Let us recruit thousands of Negro The Question Is Open | Club 65 Mansfield 1.47 man merges the interests of the two fe I, W. O. The extreme penalty for This is an average of 30 per week. workers into our Order. IKE GOLD’S very eloquent col- | H Hartman 1.00 Unit 2-26 5.70 | Total to Nov. 15 2.00 |classes, the working class and the this charge is death. } J Garison 1.00 Unit 1-08 1.97 | Total to date 197.16 lexploiting class, as identical, With pane baie gitar weeks since Oct.| "41, newspaper propaganda ap- umn the other day spoke of the | So ae. vie a a3 BH ne ai ace 25 (Florida) 00 {acrobatic pl he vied Ey the period of our intensive cam- in the Atlanta press makes CASH PREFERRED — ALWAYS || Working Woman contest. Mike has ) Sampbell 2 Mii in} a aba ee the en ti paign, the section recruited 194 new acted tha-chi I am not waiting to get taken for granted, that the husband . * Geveland 6.54 Unie Ti-t4 6.00 | Total to Nov. 18 8.00 | With «toll Goria ania eal ee Leciihsirrs National | of aad ene ie the 1 WO. ig ecu petiele Sollat of |) of the woman! who. wants to aiend 131 1 W. ©., Slovak, |/fotal 4 75.50 i - pane cash at one But - = Party 74 Mecqaies 160 Cembrige 300| CANADA a hidden knife of fascism, he tells|}committee of the Italian Section| Georgia is based upon the refusal || ing you ‘ieee c ae nv ndod, pete "hee Recep errr Cult ate: gs Sear -s 3 1.93 | David Ashkins 1.00 bate tbich Aidit bie brn “celebrates” its membership cam- oo the I. W. O. to segregate and which I peddle at ten cents ‘ ver, the letter printed in the Toledo . W. O., Hun- fegroes, However, unit. 7-1, garian 5.00 | Total to Nov. 15 1.00 ite . ee s in their interest | paign by recruiting less members|Jim Crow the N » and on the |] pack. I am suggesting that ||November issue of the Working 2: increase the home and foreign|than it did recruit outside of the| determination of the I. W. O. to be rr Toledo 38 Unit 1-19 .10' ‘Total to date 4.05 you get the comrades around ‘Woman says “my husband has vari- market for textiles, and that such| campaign. one of those organizations that fight the works to take them off ous other interests outside his job— @ move on the part of the workers| This is an indication of thorough-| for Negro rights and against the || ), at ten cents . 7 : “ ” ands @ piece and || but when it comes to me, that’s dif- t Here Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! Baa a eee eee erate [ean RE Sere os Ceame): | Deesepition apy aching ate Ne credit, me with a dollar con- ||ferent.” It does not, state specific. 207) ee - “i ution the Worker Cor- ally that these interests have to do| send FIFTEEN CENTS (l5e) in Proletarian talk—Gorman means} organize; the leaders do not seem} These arrests in Atlanta put two ¢ ) | NAME ADDRESS AMOUNT ||'o cheer the workers into another| to lead.’ ‘The Socialist competition | serious tasks before us. corer ee peecumg. 18 tne ||| with the. sevoluiionary movement (coins ‘or stambe (onthe sretetren) <1) war, to increase the profits of the|of the Italian Section with the other| First, we must supply the arrested |! of Centralia, Til, eee hae qtation Opa 20° that Cee pie cate oe eee een $ textile bosses. sections of the Order is neither | comrades with the best defense pos- We never-suggested that you aatiate Will BE repaired conoderilty plainly name, address and stylenum= = It is the duty of the rank and| Socialist nor competitive. sible. To accomplish this all!| comrades send your household || both ti e Wusbend at’ the |e ee tO Seer jfile of the U.T.W.A. to expose to| Special Campaign Among Negroes |branches are urged to circulate at|| goods or live stock, Sell them || women mre prateful to Mike for us.|.,O°de? Your WINTER PATTERN the membership of the union and| By decision of the National Ex-|once the collection lists they will || frst and send us the cash! ing his eheninal pen for a question BOOK. Order it NOW! x i Tear off and mail immediately to to the workers of the industry, the| ecutive Committee all branches and| receive. This collection should be so vital in itself to working-class PRICE OF BOOK, FIFTEEN role of Gorman, pointing out whojall sections of the Order must pre-| carried through within two weeks ‘women. CENTS. BOOK AND PATTERN TO- { | RP, A QGXTILE WORKER, 5 Sunday, Dec. 9, The City Central Orman within this section thou- _——————— um feature to support in the race Street. New Yi City. *

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