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shone. Page 6 HOME ‘t HAVE READ THE LETTER OF MRS. LORA P. in today Worker, and although bachelor and have had ence im the rearing of have observed how reared them and I know would attempt to rear mine should T have any. “TO TAKE THEM TO RUSSIA, where tt tem of tion x ly resembles o be imposing on ou there, for they have made to develop their s: who have done prac 1g to assist them, would elfish indeed, were we to ta advantage of the good things they have created comrades over sacrifices and we. “WE WOULD NOT BE LOYAL on the other hand, to our cla here, were we to leave our children to struggle alone. We must help them erect here at home a system such as we need and desire. 8 Re “I'M QUITE SURE t ur sym- Pathizer (I'd like to call her com- rade) is quite capable of instil in her children, the spirit of c consciousness if she takes advantage of the opportunities made available by the Communist Party. I would suggest that she become a com- panion to her children, explaining questions from a working class point of view; that she make easily avail- able the proper kind of literature; that she attend working class meet- ings herself as much as possible, and encourage them to join the Pioneers at the proper time. “IT SEEMS TO ME that the most important thing is that you join the Communist Party, where you will meet others who are as much concerned over the welfare of their (and your) children as you are, and will assist you to instill class consciousness in them to the best of their ability... . I wish I could send Mrs. Lora P. an applica- tion card. ROBERT COLE.” Not that advice from a bachelor is not valued, but I think Mrs. Lora P. would like also to know the ex- Periences of mothers faced with 4 similar problem who have raised children, or are raising them now. You mothers who know through experience how te solve this prob- lem write te Mrs. Lora P. The readers of this column must feel that it is their cokimn. They should write freely to it, expressing their ideas on matters that those “In the Home” are concerned with. ‘This inchides a broad range of sub- jects, as we said in our very first column, “all the way from menus to revolution.” The women who read this column are interested in potato soup, and they are interested in the struggle to better their con- ditions. AW this is preliminary to our asking all readers of this col- umn to sit down today and write us. Do you like the column? Don’t you like it? What do you think should be discussed here? Has this colurnn been useful to you in reach- ing women who are new to the! movement! On the basis of these letters, we will have a column that appeals te the greatest number of women. Take this time to send in your favorite menus, your house- hold hints. Write us any sugges- tton or criticism you have. It will make for an improved cotumn. Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 2106 is available in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 Size 8 takes 234 yards 30 inch faforic. Tiustrated 3 Same sewing imetructions in- a . Address orders to (Baik Worker) ttern Be} 2g West ith New York ’ 2 the Batty Worker, DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1935 From Factory. Mine. Farm and Office Company Union President Reports Grewing Discontent of Membership By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK The December. 1934, iseue of the Telegraph World gan of the Association of Western nion Employes (company es a summary of the recent an- inferences with the company anion) Burton of the President ‘General a of the company’s economy program.” This statement is quoted verbatim the Telegraph World. Its loquency speaks for itself. The sleek company union officials are getting scared. They no longer can hold their followers in line. Em- barrassing questions are asked and an inadequate answer leaves the Boss Union Pads Membership result from By a Telegraph Worker Correspondent | NEW YORK. — The Company | Union, the Association of Western Union Employes, has been pleading before various government agencies that it represents over eighty per cent of the telegraph workers in the Western Union. That this is a false and deliberate | lie can be proven by referring bedi | their own magazine, the December, 1934, issue of the Telegraph World. On page nine it admits that only | 27,000 of the 42,500 employes are members, that is only 63.5 per cent. ‘This total was swelled by the forced joining of 3,000 messengers who were going through a strike situation. These messengers at the storm centers were signed up en masse by their managers. ese messengers were not eligible for membership before they began to rebel. Deducting this paper figure | (they don’t pay dues nor are per- mitted to hold meetings) the mem- bership total (most likely padded) would be only 24,000 or 56 per cent. | There is a wide growing discontent among the workers as admitted by General President Burton before the officials of the company. | Now it is our task to crystallize this healthy sentiment by leaving no stone unturned to pepularize the United Telegraphists of America. Oust Communist; Cause Split By a Worker Correspondent | TIFFIN, Ohio. — The Unemployed | League here last Friday ousted Herold Henry, vice-president of the | |local, by a vote of twenty-three to} seventeen, with fifty-five present not | voting. The charges against Henry, | |who had fought for the Workers Unemployment, Old Age and Social | Insurance Bill, H. R. 2827, was that | \his Communist sympathies had | caused a drop im the membership, Henry did not deny his Commu- |mist sympathies, but challenged any | member to prove that his activities | | had caused a drop in the member- |ship. He cited the figures of the membership, showing that at the |last general election, eighty-seven members were present, while sighty- five attended the present meeting. His expulsion caused a split in the ranks, when fourteen members fol- | lowed him out. They will fight fér |the unqualified reinstatement of | Henry and the building of the Un- employed League. J. F. Piffer, a misled worker who | is chairman of the publicity com- | mittee, said that the Communist | Propagandizing of the workers | caused business men and the em- | Ployed to leave the League. NOTE We publish every Friday letters from workers in the transporta- tion and communication indus- tries: raiiroad, marine, trucking, taxi, traction, telegraph, tele- phone, etc. We urge workers in these industries to write us of their conditions and efforts to or- ganize. Please get these letters to us by Tuesday of each week. | | | | | |LYNN CITY COUNCH. BACKS | WORKERS’ BILL, H. R. 2827 LYNN, Mass., Jan. 24.—The City | Council here unanimously endorsed | the Workers Unemployment, Old| Age and Social Insurance Bill, H.R. | 28627 last night when a delegation of fifteen, which was organized by the Lynn Action Committee for Unemployment Insurance presented | demands. The delegation was headed | by Benjamin Waite of the Cutters Local, Frank Gilbert of the Pack- ers Local, and Charles Gibson of | the Lasters Local of the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union. Street units: Workers in your territory will respond more readily to organization for relief, against evictions, against the hich cost of living, ete., if they read the Daily Worker. Strengthen your unit work and build the cincefation of 'To Scettsboro Fund | questioner in a more questioning mood. Talk of an independent heard on all sides ing company union o: pleading to their mast union » of the telegraph employes. ow, on to the conference It type of conferen reasons; very seriou: Ss, even if not in mediate weight in poten- their Since the last con ference shadows have fallen on the usual serenity of the company union existence. Messenger strikes have broken out. Others have threatened An independent union, the United Telegraphists of America, has come upon the scene, holding out a real promise to the severely exploited telegraph workers. Win Improvements In Western Union By a Telegraph Worker Correspondent NEW YORK —Comptroller Gal- laher of the Western Union re- | ported that the five’ per cent in- crease (return of part of the cut) was a load too heavy to carry, as the expected increase in business failed to materialize, Incidentally, this five per cent was granted as a direct result of agitation for a ten per cent increase by leaflets and articles in the Daily Worker by the United Committee | for Action. Mr. Gallaher intimated the possibility of a further cut by} pointing out that the steel industry recently cut ten per cent. | However, the company officials reconciled themselves to parcelling out a few concessions. To fail to do so would have further discredited the A. W. U. E. officials in the eyes of | the membership. For example, full | vacations with pay were restored by eliminating the twenty-five per cent reduction. Later, the company re- leased a confidential letter to all de- | partment heads that vacations should be awarded without reliefs so that there would be very little added | expense. Increased speed-up and | reduced time will pay for this empty | concession, Other complicated concessions | which mean nothing but look very formidable on paper were made. However, the real victory is awarded to the messengers. Why? Precisely | because they evidenced their poten- tial danger by striking and organiz- ing. The company well knows that the most vulnerable link in the com- | munication chain is the messenger, | as wel as the most exploited. This proves conclusively that the telegraph workers can learn a real | lesson in trade unionism from the lowly messengers. More militancy, more unmasking of the company union, will result in more conces- sions, but lasting security can only be gained by joining the only in- dependent union in the telegraph field, the United Telegraphists of | America, Seton Workers Giv | NEW YORK—The following is | a letter received by the Interna- | tional Labor Defense from Mont- gomery, Ala.: “We the Seottsboro and Hern- don Committee of this city are sending you two dollars in stamps, as we are few in number we want to show what side we are on, by getting our pennies together and sending them in. And please send me a, receipt at once, and also put | an ad in the Daily Worker stating the amount and where from, It will boost our work here. The LL.D, is not very strong here.” Comradely, SECTION ORGANTZARR. The Ruling Clawss By Redfield GRedpated: “There goes Mrs, Lapifp—her husband makes tear-gas bombs.” Pharmacists Forc e Concessions | whether they belong to the U. B. U. |N. R.A. eagle.” | the loading place, waiting to load | man with about $25 or $30 a month NRA Attempts to Into the United By a Marine Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—You can’t tell the bargement of the Nassau Sand and Gravel Company that the govern- not interested in ur the , seven men, into the office Tu and told them: An officer from the United Boat- men's Union (affiliated to the Inter- national ) and an A. officiel were here and ed us to sign with the U. B. U. The company refused on the ground that they didn't believe the U. B. U. represented the men on its barges. The government man then told the company, “It doesn’t matter or not. The government recognizes the U. B. U. and you will have to force your men into it, or lose the The company official also told |the men that under the U. B. U. “agreement” they would not be paid for “catch time”—time laid up at That means any where from two days to two weeks at a time, with- out pay. The U. B. U. scale is $60 a month, so this leaves the barge- to live on. One of the scow captains objected that not one of them belonged to the U. B. U., but belonged to other | unions. “I know it,” said the company official. “I told the U. B. U. and Herd Bargemen Boatmen’s- Union N. R. A. officials that, and they told me I'd have to ‘build up’ the v5.0," The scow captains will not be alone in getting the wage cut. The forty men on the sand bank got °| their wages cut about half already The steamshovel men got cut from ;$1 an hour to 50 cents, and the laborers got cut from 70 cents to 40 cents, The government policy of forcing the scow captains into the U..B. U. is part of the general drive to get workers into unions where they will} be “controlled” by officials who work in close harmony with the govern- ment and the boat owners. At present there is a bitter war| on between the Tidewater Boat- men’s Union, affiliated to Joseph P. Ryan's International Longshore- men’s Association and the U. B. U., affiliated to the International Sea- men’s Union. Both are A. F. of L. affiliates. The U. B. U. is larger, but the T. B. U. has more “political pull” in municipal and State quarters, be- cause of Ryan’s Tammany connec- tions, The U. B. U. is exploiting men into the U. B, U. where Olan- der will collect the “per capita.” The two unions have been ordered | the present struggle is to see which | “International” will eventually con- trol the cash, Through Building Organization 14-Hour Work-Day (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK. — I should like to call your attention to a group of workers, that a few years ago were considered impossible to organize. I am referring to those white collared professional workers known as pharmacists. For years, they have been the butt of vaudeville jokes, slandered during the prohibition era and ac- customed to working inhuman hours and taking it on the chin. A pharmacist, is expected to be a gen- eral encyclopedia of information; knowing all about postal rates, the best books to read, how to make sandwiches, serve drinks and how to remove real estate from people’s eyes. There is no such thing as a pub- lic holiday for the pharmacists— he works all days. And how he works! Split shifts, 60 to 80 hours a week, sometimes from opening to closing without getting a chance to go out and eat, all for the magnifi- cent remuneration of $20 to $25 per week. Let me explain to you what the pharmacist has to go through be- fore he is permitted the privilege of this slavery. registered pharmacist, he is com- pelled to spend from three to four years in college and must have four years experience in a drug store before taking his licensing ex- amination. The exploitation of those who work in stores while go- ing to school or before they become licensed is unimaginable. The proprietor of the store thinks he should be paid for permitting the man to get experience, similar to the “volunteer work of bacteriolo- gists... .” Despite the long hours, a pharmacist must constantly be alert and accurate, for if he hap- pens to make an error which is detrimental to a patient’s life, he is liable to a prison sentence and loss of his license. The psychology of most clerks was a boss psychology. Their am- | bition in life was to eventually own |their own drug store, You can readily see the tremendous obsta- cles that one would be confronted with in organizing such people. Two years ago, the Pharmacists Union of Greater New York came into existence and had for its goal the organizing of all the drug clerks Before becoming a | in New York City. From a handful of pharmacists it has grown to a membership of 2,000 pharmacists. | The union had to overcome the pro- | fessional conceit drummed into the | heads of the pharmacist clerks by their employers and by the college professors. At first, the clerks had | a general apathy towards concerted ;and organized cooperation with | other clerks and an attitude of re- | moteness towards labor organiza- | tions. In addition, the drug journals |kept shouting: “Pharmacists are | professionals and too ethical and | simon pure to align themselves with unions.” Despite this opposition, |the union succeeded in organizing |the clerks of the Bronx into a co- | | hesive mass of enthusiastic workers who responded to the Pharmacists Union call for a general strike in| the Bronx, last October, | | At first, the employers paid no | attention to the demands of the | union, thinking that the clerks | would never picket due to their “professional” pride, However, they | got the surprise of their lives when they saw 500 clerks walk out and form picket lines in front of their | stores. The picket lines were so | effective that over 90 per cent of the stores signed agreements with | the Union during the first two weeks of the strike. A few stubborn die hards refused to sign and thought they would | bleed the treasury of the Union and | eventually destroy the Union. They | were supported by the proprietors of the other boroughs—Manhattan and Brooklyn. These supporters | thought that they would prevent | the Union from coming to their | territory by keeping the Union busy | |in the Bronx and prolonged the | | strike for 12 weeks. | The result of the battle was a/ complete victory for the Union. The following conditions were won for the Bronx men; $32.50 minimum for a 54 hour week for registered | pharmacists; $23.50 minimum for | junior pharmacists, union recogni- tion and closed shop conditions. _| During this period of the crisis and of widespread unemployment, | this is a tremendous victory and of | national significanee not only to) pharmacists but to other profes- sionals. The Pharmacists Union of Greater New York intends to or- ganize the clerks of Manhattan and and Brooklyn, For Truckinen By a Worker Correspondent PATERSON, N. J.—Here are just some of the conditions the truck drivers and helpers have to work | under in Paterson under the N. R. A. code. Mr. Gill's Interstate Trucking Company, a member of the N. R. A.| and of the Chamber of Commerce, forces the drivers and helpers to | start work at 6:30 a, m. and work until as late as 10 and 11 p. m. Sometimes they have to work Satur- days also, They do not get any more in their envelope on pay day than the magnificent sum of fifteen | dollars per week. An unemployed: worker got a job | as a helper on the truck. This worker started work at 6:30 a. m.| and knocked off at 7:30 p.m. He asked the driver if they worked this late every night. The driver told him that they had gotten through early, They generally worked until 10 and 11 p.m. This worker then asked how much they made when they worked overtime. The driver answered that the boss does not pay more than fifteen dollars a week | even if they worked Saturday. These | workers have to handle cases that | hundred pounds. The Public Auto Delivery Com- | about the same conditions, and the | Same pay. | The only time these workers will get better conditions and more pay | is when they organize and put up a fight until they win these things. The Communist Party will help them in organizing. They should | get in touch with the Communist | Party at the Workers Center at 201 Market Street, Paterson, N. J. STRIKERS RETURN WATERTOWN, N. Y., Jan. 24. — After one day of strike, twenty-six | relief workers here, who had struck against a cut in wages from forty cents. to thirty cents an hour, res | turned to work when relief authori- | ties threatened them with legal} prosecution if they did not do so. A month’s vacation or $50 in cash—second prize in the Daily Worker subscription contest. Join now! Write to 50 E. 13th Street. By a Worker Correspondent AUSTIN, Tex. — His hands dyed red with the blood of the German working class, Dr. Hans Luther, Hitler’s ambassador, came to the South. From one little German set- tlement to another, and into some of the major cities, he traveled with his subjects and a special convoy of various state officials who did him homage. At every stop, he planted the seeds of his poison propaganda in the hope that they will grow and bear fruit in this region where the} workers are just beginning to} awaken and struggle against their | exploitation. | But Hans Luther did not leave the | | South unchallenged! At New Orleans, La., Communists, | Socialists, and other anti-fascist ele- | ments presented a united front | against his appearance with a res- olution which stated: “We particu- larly protest your arrival in this city for the purpose of spreading prop- aganda of hate and prejudice and we hereby pledge ourselves to accept your challenge by carrying on a re- lentless fight against fascism and a!) its implications by setting up a broad permanent united front to fight fascism.” The release of Thaeimann was demanded, Campus Protest Simultaneously with his appear- ance as guest of honor on the Uni- versity of Texas campus, Luther was met with an avalanche of what ap- peared to be bright confetti until the horrifted officials saw the letter- ing. The confetti was really bright cireulars which registered a protest against Dr. Luther's visit. The or- ganization was the Austin Branch of | the American League Against War) and Fascism, With bold headlines declaring “Fascism Comes to Austin,” the culars read; “Today the Universi PROTESTS MEET LUTHER’S TRIP TO SOUTH NAZI AGENT Hans Luther, Hitler’s ambassa- dor to the United States, Despite the efforts of state officials, Hans found the Seuth not very hos- pitabte. has been turned into a shambles. At the same time that Ambassador Hans Luther is being entertained in & supposedly democratic country, enemies of Adolph Hitler are being tortured and mutilated by the thou- sands. Under the regime of Hitler, politieal prisoners have bean sub- officials have ag an honored guest the ambassador of a country which jected to the treatment of besttal savages; an entire racial commun- ity, the Jews, has been subjected to the foulest discrimination; and the leading intellectuals of Germany, including Albert Einstein, have been driven into exile. Only a few months ago, Erich Muhsam, a great German poet, was tortured to death in one of the camps. Two years ago the National Student League, which Stood for a collective, humanitarian social order, was outlawed on the University campus. Now Hans Luther, who stands for the preser- vation of a vicious, sadistic social order, receives the hand of weleome. Thus the University of Texas is af- fillating itself with publicly sup- ported institutions in other states which have aligned themselves with the Fascist enemies of democracy!” Discusses Saar ‘This was the only sore spot about Dr. Luther's visit to this state. Here, there failed, just as in Louisiana, to be that “understanding” which he had especially requested on the Texas tour. Im Schulenberg, where he was wined and dined, he was in| his glory. Herd this Fascist, ques-| tioned about the Saar, calmly stated, “Tt is foolish to think the Saar would have voted any other way”— that very moment, terror was break- ing out in the Saar. From Schulen- berg to Houston, where he was again entertained, and thence to Austin, he was accompanied by a special cavalcade of the highway patrol, In Austin he was received by the newly-inaugurated Governor James V. Allred, who was boosted to office by the major off and utility com- panies, and by Attorney General William McCraw, who presented him with a ten-galion cowboy hat for his bald dome. This made On Friday night, Governor Allred gave the Nazi gang a party, Again, Luther mentioned the Saar, declar- ing, “The result of the Saar plebis- cite has made clear to the whole of | Europe what all Germans knew,) that the Saar was a real German district. Now rumors of war will disappear and there will be a new basis for confidence and prosperity.” He proclaimed Hitler to be “the salvation of Germany,” and said that the “real meaning of the last few year, evolution (bold face mine) in Germany is an effort to con- centrate political power. We had over 30 political parties. This led to inaction, The German struggle has been to find one man who would be accepted as a leader by the whole people.” The real German struggle as one of the working class there against the vicious rule of capital- ism, and now Fascism, was not brought out by Luther, and neither did he mention the brutal murder | of German workers and intellectuals antagonistic to the Hitler regime. Neither was there one word of the Political prisoners who are today suffering torture and death in Nezi concentration camps and dungeons. The newspapers here, although having every knowledge of the pro- test against Luther, are at present suppressing the news. No doubt, af- ter the fine gentleman has departed the state, the protestors will be ex- pected to take chastisement. Of- ficials are attempting to find the names of the members of the Austin Branch of the League for Struggle Against War and Fascism, and it is declared that this organization “has no backing.” The Austin Branch of the League of Struggle Against War and Fascism pledges solidarity with Luther “a good Texan.” McCraw, three years ago, assisted in the Dallas whitewash of the Ku Klux Klan beatings of the two unemploy- ment organizers, Goder and Hurst, that organization in this country, and sends revolutionary greetings to | job for me. Welfare Sanctions Forced Labor (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Roosevelt’s recent message, demanding Con- gress enact forced labor legislation at below union wages, had imme- | diate response here in Philadelphia. Until recently I had been receiv- ing $3.30 a week from the County Relief Board for my family of four. When I was threatened with evic- tion, I demanded they pay my rent. They then sent me to the Jewish | Welfare. After considerable nego- | tiation and investigation, the Wel- fare allowed me $11 a week. For a while this enabled me to pay my rent and pull through. A: few days ago, however, the Jew- | ish Welfare decided to get the jump | on Congress in putting the forced labor scheme into operation. They called me and told me they had a They knew I was a carpenter, and they asked if I couldn’t also do some plumbing and electrical work. I said I could, and pronto, they had a job for me as maintenance man for a_ public building. would be. “Oh, what do you care about the | weigh as much as three and four | pay?” the young lady asked. I in- sisted on knowing what I would be paid. She finally broke down and |pany’s drivers and helpers have | told me I would get $15 a week for doing three men’s work—just 70 cents a week more than I was get- ting on relief, I asked for some time to think it over, since I was a union man and would not work | for less than union wages—$1 an hour. She told me that since this pentry work, she could fix every- thing up with the union. What has happened to me, makes it clear that we must immediately get to work to prevent this. Work- ers must intensify their campaign of exposure of the whole scheme, the line up of Democratic and Re- publican politicians, bankers, indus- trialists for such a scheme, and put all our efforts behind the drive for passage of the Workers’ Unemploy- (H, R. 2827), the only Bill that gives |real adequate unemployment and | Social insurance to the workers. Scottsboro-Herndon Fund International Labor Defense Room 610, 86 East 11th Street, New York City T enclose $............a8 my immediate contribution te the Scottsboro-Herndon Defense Fund. I asked what the pay | was not exactly and only car-| ment and Social Insurance Bill| YOUR HEALTH —By— Medical Advisory Board injection Treatment of Varicose Veins M. M. A., Paterson, N. J.—The condition of swollen veins of the legs is called “varicose veins.” These may be caused by occupations thas require standing for hours at a time, day after day, as is so common in |department store workers, policemen, postmen and the like. During and following pregnancy, certain women. develop varicose veins due to pres- re of the womb and changes in ie circulation. Lack of sufficient rest periods or alternation in work is often the cause, and by proper hygienic con- ditions, these disfiguring and harm- ful results may be avoided. | The modern treatment of varicose |veins consists in the injection of |certain medicines directly into the affected blood vessels. This closes |the veins and causes the disappear- |ance of the varicosities. After the closure of these veins, the circula= | tion is taken up by other veins. | The procedure is very simple ‘and \ any physician who has done this |work is qualified to administer | treatments. The number of injece | Victor Olander’s connections with| tions varies, depending on the num- | the national administration to drive | ber of veins affected. | In answer to your question, we would say that by no means con- sult a chiropodist, as they are to- |to amalgamate before May 1, and |‘#lly incompetent to treat conditions |of this kind, | Ms kk | Oranges—Freshened Up to Look Real Comrade F. L., of New York, jwrites: “I have noticed on the | market oranges marked “color add- \ed.” Could you explain just what |color is added, and if it has any |injurious substance which pene- trates into the orange? | “I realize that the color must be government inspected, but I am wondering whether this doesn’t come under the law that lets those adulterations slip by, which even- tually go to breaking down health, |such as sulphur dioxide.” ae ee Our Reply The dyeing of oranges is a recent development to improve the appear= |ance of inferior oranges. They are dipped into a mixture of an oil soluble orange dye and a water- | Soluble green dye. The green dye jis selectively taken up by the stem button to mask the discoloration of the button by the orange dye. The need for such treatment is said to occur only in connection with the Valencia orange. The process rep= |resents just another important vio- lation (tolerated by the government officials) of the Food and Drugs Act. All food products which are | known to have b2en changed in ap- | Pearance by such chemical or other Processes should be strictly avoided, aba ay Wishing Us Success “I think the magazine is a good idea and wish you every success in. the venture,” writes L, J. B. of | Pittsburgh, Pa., in sending in his |advance subscription for the Med- ical Advisory Board’s magazine. Many are taking advantage of the |Special advance subscription offer |of $1 a year. After publication of the first issue, the rates will be $1.50 |@ year, 80 cents for six months. Many are sending in suggestions for the name of the magazine. Tne name-choosing contest closes on Jan. 31, The winning name will be announced in the Daily Worker of Feb. 2. Send in your advance sub= scription. Cut this out and send it with $1 to the Medical Advisory ‘apes 35 E. 12th Street, New York, A month’s vacation or $50 in cash—second prize in the Daily Worker subscription contest. Join Write to 50 E, 13th Street, | now! SUBSCRIPTION BLANK For the Medical Advisery Board Magazine I wish to subscribe to the Madi- cal Advisory Board Magazine. Enclosed find one dollar for a year’s subscription. Name Address in the Daily Worker DISTRICT 1— Boston, Mass.: William Cacciola Mary E. Moore DISTRICT 2— New York, N. ¥.: Dora Gausner Lorenzo Stokes Clara Reimer ‘ 8. Soulounia DISTRICT 6—~ Cleveland, Ohio: George Stefanik Jerry Ziska Anna Schotsneider DISTRICT 4— Syracuse, N. ¥.: % Virginia Dix DISTRICT 7— Detroit, Mich.: Jack Sepeld Ben Green A, Kezamihas R. Shark John Klein the oppresed of Germany, Austria, and all other Faseist coun- tries, wee ae Win a Free Trip Join These Shock Brigaders te the Soviet Union! Subscription Contest! DISTRICT 8— Chicago, Ill: A. A. Larson Sam Hammersmark Walter Johnson Rae Jorkins Eva Kanofsky John Lukianowich Bertha Lukoff Hans W. Pfeiffer Irving Snider DISTRICT 10— Coleridge, Neb.: Paul Burke Lincoin, Neb,: Harry M. Lux Omaha, Neb.: Calvin Kibbe DISTRICT 14— Little Falls, N, J.: Union City, N. J.: Camillo John Calissi Benjamin Abromowitz DISTRICT 18— Milwaukee, Wis.: Walter Richter Louis Powell | t }