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Page 4 DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, MONDAY ANUARY 28, 1935 “S x a E HOM LiF C.C. C. Boy Relates Story of Fight Against Bad Food in Idaho Camp We used to saye our bread so that when we got in a couple of hours we would not start chewing on the blani These condi kept up for about months il one of a work and dis vers did a little police vered that the army | cook and the food supply sergeant were stealing $500 every month of our camp's food allowance. They o dump our food on the way am town, selling it to farms and stores When the boys in camp got wind of this, we were all so angered that a strike was called. We stuck to- gether one hundred per cent and refused tc do any kind of work. This angered and frightened the officials so, that they sent a hurried call to the Army base at Fort Wright, Wash. When these troops came they rounded up twenty-five oo Grae Ann Barton THE HALL OF THE KLEIN- By a Worker Correspandent OHRBACH str mn New York NEW YORK.—I read witha grea City is up a fii of stairs. It is deal of interest your story on the @rawded with department store |™ass revolt in a ©. ©. C. camp in West Or; 3 erkere 0 to relate a. story a MEW >. camp I was I -/ to contrad he ingcards as in your editorial a corners pr this was the first revolt in one Seoeusive ese Camps. Brours 50 dis To relate our experiences at thi i aateaga camp would fill a book. To tel acne : about the rotten conditions there v te collar v to whom mics * strike is a comparatively new , Yould fill two books. ae : Not once during five manths . we get milk, yet all around us w : farms with an abundance of cows. ANNE MILLER AND AN Seven o'clock in the morning we FRIEDMAN, are two pretty would eat a breakfast of oatmeal A few months ago they would black coffee, three slices of bread e dreamed that a feat re-jand sometimes potatoes. At eight ring unusual courage would be o'clock we would go out to work required of them. But the other | with a bag of lunch consisting of night entered the swanky three sandwiches; hard baloney, Waldorf along with Mayor welcome to N; hr ehained themselves to the balcor the theese and peanut butter. This was upposed to last us until five o’clock in the evening. We would walk five les to the place where we were upposed to work. By the time we got to our destination, every fellow and when Mayor LaGuardia in had his lunch already eaten. When duced “that man whom we aill/we got back from the woods, we know—N: 1 Ohrbach” one of the /sure were hungry. Then came our led the well-fed audience | supper of either salmon or spa- in a cool, clear voice “I diuce myself—an Ohr- ” Then while hotel at- ghetti with the same old black coffee. i ay sawed at their Water Denied Jobless chains, wile some of the swanky 4 e e my ones booed, and others applauded,| Family in Lodi théy continued giving an account of the exploitation by Nathan Ohr- bach that caused the strike . IF IS SUCH COURAGE on the part of these awakened white-collar workers that will win their strike * ’ By a Worker Correspondent LODI, N. J.—We are two families living in the same building. Both of us are dependent upon relief. The owner of the house shut our | water because we did not pay the for them. Several weeks ago, I in- | Tent terviewed some of the strikers In the two families there are 7 rar’ in: Ps aine children who are suffering eek worked in Ohrbach’s for four|/on, this lack of water, We went | years. On wages of $14.35 a w he had to support a mother. brothers and sisters. The strikers ; to the relief office and told them about the water having been closed, and told us they that they had tell angrily about the so-called hi 1 tl vater, benefits they were supposed to gei nothing to do with the water. from the store, for the fifteen cents and twenty cents weekly taken from their sal: If they got sick while they were in the store, they were given a pass, and allowed to go up to a room to lie down. At the end of a half hour the nurse would tell them acidly that a half hour had passed, and they should go back to their work. If they had to take the day off, they were docked for it. If they were out sick more than a cer- tain length of time, they returned | to. find they had been on a “leave Of absence,” and there was no pay for them. S for vacations, to which they are supposed to be entitled after two | years work, one dark haired bright- | eyed girl who had been working there three years, said to me “Va- eation! They never gave me a vaca- tion! They always found some way to get out of it!” She told how the Company, just before vacation time would lay a girl off. They could | Callabrece, We went to see the Mayor of Lodi and he said that he could not do anything. The Board of Health| knows about this case but nothing has been done to get the water opened. The water was closed on Jan. 14, and the Board of Health that claims to have the welfare of American | children at heart, does not consider | this case a very serious one. The name of the landlord is Maria Building Men Largest Group on Relief WASHINGTON, D.C. (F.P.)—The largest group of workers on relief | rolls come from the building indus- try, according to a survey made by the Federal Emergency Relief Ad- ministration in May in 79 cities, and released Jan, 22. The F. B. R. A. estimates that | the picket line all last winter (dur- | mouths. This lackey of the hotel| | higher-ups boasts of having killed | ardent of the 3,645,000 workers on urban fellows and put them in jail at St. Mary's, twenty-three miles away, and also fined them a few days pay each. For six days the troops patrolled aur company street and | refused to let us congregate in! groups of more than three. At about this time, the camps out in Idaho started to demobilize. The troops accompanied us to the | railroad station where we left for | New York. Nazi Assaulted Ohrbach Girls Ry a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK—This is what I saw in the Waldorf Astoria Hotel when the two Ohrbach strikers, Anna Miller and Anne Friedman, crashed | the Mayor's dinner and tried to put the case of the Ohrbach strik- ers before him. I am a waiter in the| hotel and so was right near there. A lackey in the hotel, the so-| called captain of the waiters, order- ed me to “go and stuff the mouths of these reds!” | I replied. “Do it yourself, I am not a cop.” I was on strike and on| ing the hotel strike) and wouldn't | do a thing like that to strikers. Then at that moment a big Ger- man waiter who is a Nazi, without being asked, rushed at the two girls and with brutal force tried to stuff his dirty side-rag into their | workers and is an| among the in Germany Hitler agitator waiters in the Waldorf. Today, he calls himself a hero in the waiters’ locker room. His head waiter made an example of the lackey, introdused him to Boomer, | and gave him advantages in the/ waiting for the future. | I suppose he'll get a medal from Boomer or his head waiter, or at| least a letter of thanks. The Ruling Clawss Ill By Redfield | AF, L. Officials Attempt to Block | Strike of Indiana Electric Workers “The depression has played havec with me, tea—I lest 13 ounces since 1929,” I, W. O, Executive Committee Calls For Third National Convention The branches of the International Workers’ Order will busy themselves | in the next months with prepara- | tions for the Conyention. A dis- | cussion of the Convention resolu- | tions will begin in the month of | February. In the meantime the | branches are carrying on a cam- paign to increase their membership to secure them adequate represen- tation at the Conyention. The National Executive Commit- tee has issued the following call for | the Convention: Call for the Third Convention of | the I. W. 0, In May, 1935, our International Workers’ Order is five years old. Its first five years of life were years of rapid growth, years of activities | and struggles, and also years of achievement. It was with pride in | this growth, with pridein these ac- tivities and these achievements that the National Executive Committee i (and year 1935 to at least 100,000 mem- | bers. The Convention must also discuss and provide plans for the solution of the problem of the inner life and the activities of our various branches. To fulfill its avowed purpose of developing closer unity and workers’ solidarity among its members, our Order must increase improve its educational and cultural activities. To devise methods of doing this will be the major problem of the Convention. This Convention must orientate our Order consciously toward the increase of the membership in the existing branches. It must find ways to establish closer organiza- tional ties between the language groups en a national and especially on a local basis. More collective efforts must be develaped between all sections of the Order in every locality. The City Central Commit- tees in composition and in function |must be made real leading bodies | From Factory. Mine, Farm and Office By a Worker Correspondent TERRE HAUTE, Ind.—Girding their forces fer a fight ta the finish, the Brotherhood of Utility Em- ployes of America, Local No. 254, an independent organization of elec- trical workers, has laid the ground- work for a renewed and militant strike struggle. Taking advantage | of an object lesson gained from | their thwarted strike action of two months ago, the workers have set up rank and file cmmittees of ac- tion in the affected power generat- ing plants. This timely step was taken to prevent a recurrence of the con- niyement that smashed the strike movement of last November, when the reactionary and bureaucratic | B.U.B.A. heads, capitulated te the arbitrary demands of the utility gosses and carried out their orders by splitting the union ferces and delivering the workers’ struggles in- |to the control of the utility czars. | The November sellout sz’ the B.U.E.A. into three separate groups; the electrical transportation wark- ers, the electrical maintenance workers and the power generating group. The division of these work- ers was granted the utility bosses when they refused to negotiate the differences or bargain collectively with them as a single. unit. The demand for decisive strike action on the part of the power generating group reached its yortex | after a heated session at the | Knights of Pythias hall here on Jan. 15, follawing the steadfast re- | fusal ef the Public Service Company | of Indiana to join into negotiations | Vet States Case For Bonus | | By a Worker Correspondent WEST MIDDLESEX, Pa.— As a | disabled veteran of the World War, I denounce the pummeling that has | been administered to the veterans) during the past. | The pay of the average civilian | during the war was five dollars a {day and up, while the combat |saldier received approximately 65) cents a day after all deductions were | |made. He was compelled to take | government insurance, and pay for it too. He was asked to make an |allotment which the average soldier did. The soldiers also contributed | |generously for the French orphans | | that were a result of the war. Belgin figures indisate that out of five who die, four are former | soldiers. Trench wear and tear, old | wounds, ravages of gas and army maladies left them much more vul- nerable than those who had ‘not | seen service. Belgin mortality tables show that the death rate for the non-mobilized part of the population is eight per thousand, and for former soldiers YOUR HEALTH ay aa Medieal Advisory Board ; With them upon demands presented | Treating Infections of Rones | by the B.U.E.A. last November. | G, H, Cleveland, Ohio: Your fre Prisapee Pe egal es of § | deseription of your ailment seems olution, coucl in yigorous and | i ‘ A |Ungompromising terms, was drawn hak — AS st at | up at this meeting. Copies of it osteomyelitis. Such a se is apt ; were sent to the recently inaugu- to be chronic and recur either at j Fated mayor of Terre Haute, Sam | the point of virginal injury or some Beecher, Governor McNutt, the other part of the baqy. | Public Service Commission and the | Osteomyelitis is a disease of the res beans. Pre yaik aut bones: Tt is essentially an infec load mates ivoire Highs Pees | tion with typical abscess formation | Generatin, Plant, the auxiliary | and around the bape or bones, t water poe eaigaeae hl The difficulties of treating this “ Bee A Pant eo ® disease as it should be treated, illus- urban relay sub-stations, thus com- \trates the woeful inadequacy of pletely severing power communica- medical onan under eaoiialiaon Eas St. Louis and Indian- Here the patient needs careful inc ’ | vestigation, \- | Steps to defeat the strike have | Mitts re Her J Sa already been taken by the Public i Service Company. Notices have been enh Sera, Peurening wee sent to the unorganized and jobless | ; i reserves to stand ready to return hoe ii ee sive the bady 4 |to work at the auxiliary plant on | Rates ire! setae we Pete |Water Street. Thus taey are trY- | tion. Imagine ioe ace ie jing to use the unemployed as a | . . ad |thveat against the atrike. | these memes untested | The A. - of L. remained true to | system! : FaRER its colors by unseating the B.U-E.A.| Gooq treatment can fr | delegates at the meeting of the Ven- | this disease men ns EAR babes) | tral Labor Union last Monday, Jan. | the aid of such an_ institution as an FAAS Manet che beaks: Mount Sinai Hospital in Cleveland, eal- ‘ loratic State Federation Official. This [pee 4s no Teasan for hopelessness, was done despite the fact that the | ‘a B.U.H.A. had an application pend- Stomach Trouble and ing with the local Central Labor Loss of Weight Union for a charter and their per} g w, of Bri .N. ¥,, : capita tax paid up until Feb. 1. The | «7 ae preoklva, a eres A. F. of L. officialdom is evidently |the best treatment for stomagh ail- interested in demoralizing the im- | ments which became evident about pending militant rank and file ac- |, year ago and continued with three Hon of the B.U.E.A. membership. | attacks in the first six months — ae headache, vomiting, severe pain in abdominal regions, complete ex- haustion, fever and chilis; have | since corrected my diet, but am now suffering with pain in the upper gastric region, which toward eve- ning becomes very severe. While I | have an appetite and feel hungry, | I fear to eat anything, as I attribute Workers’ Bill Gains Support By a Worker Correspondent MOBILE, Ala—The Workers’ Un- employment and Social Insurance Bill, H.R. 2827, is getting quite a the sereve attack of pain to the foods, so that I am now subsisting on milk and crackers only. Our Reply You must realize that just read- weleome in Mobile. The Metal Trades Council, con- sisting of the boilermakers, ma-|_ chinists and several other locals |ing a brief description of your unanimously endorsed the Bill. La- | symptoms, in spite of the fact that cal 200 of the United Garment | they are well-worded, is not suffi- Workers Union, consisting of about | cient in itself to permit us to give 250 garment workers, alsa endorsed | you a definite diagnosis or point out the Bill, Local 1872 of the United | the source of your trouble. Oon- ‘Textile Workers of America also | sequently we are also unable to unanimously showed its approval of | prescribe any specific treatment. the Workers’ Bill. i | We do say, however, that any pa- It is important to point out that | tient 58 years of age, who has lost the entire attending membership of | twenty pounds in one year and who the County Unemployed League in | has suffered as you have, most as- Mobile more than welcomed the Bill | suredly deserves a complete medical and hailed the Unemployed ©on- | study—preferably in a hospital. gress recently held in Washington There, under a competent man, you to which they had elected a dele-| should secure a thorough labora- gate but due to lack of funds were | tary, X-ray and clinical study. We unable to send him. knaw your reaction—how is a poor At one of the Unemployed League worker going to enjoy these med- membership meetings bath the ical attentions ordinarily reserved Workers’ Bill and the Wagner- | for those who are usually less sick, Lewis Bill were presented to them | ut have more money. See a com- for endorsement. When the dif- petent physician and he can ference between the two bills was Pointed out, some of the workers | haps arrange for this hospitaliza- then say she had not been working i Hin, | 4] ft is 28 per thousand. tion in a city institution if you cans relief, who had “nreviualy worked jis calling upon the branches and | of the local organizations of our PF | a full two years for them. THEY APPRECIATE THE SUP- PORT OF OTHER WORKERS. Their strike hall is at 220 East 14th Street. New York supporters of the strike should report there for picket | duty, to help in the general strike | work that is to be done. Funds are | needed, and no matter how small | the contribution, it will help the | effectiveness of the strike. Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 2174 is available in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Size 16 takes 3% yards 36 inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions included. | | Send for your copy of the ANNE ADAMS SPRING FASHION BOOK! PRICE OF BOOK FIFTEEN CENTS | BUT WHEN ORDERED WITH AN ANNE ADAMS PATTERN IT IS ONLY TEN CENTS. TWENTY- FIVE CENTS FOR BOTH (one cent additional on each order must be enclosed by residents of New York | City in payment of City Tax. Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department. 243 West 17th | Street, New York City, | to achieve excellent results in sell- jon time, and these readers form a in industry, 465,000 are from the building industry—or 25 out of every 100 workers in this industry are on relief. The iron and steel workers | with 263,000 of their number on Te= | lief constituted the third largest | group. | Other industries have forced still | larger proportions of their workers | into destitution. On the basis of Court Tries to Frame Shoe Worker* PHIADELPHIA, Pa,, Jan. 27.— Determined to find means for | framing up Constantino Lippa, or- | ganizer of the Shoe and Leather | Workers’ Union, on a bombing the sections of the Order to prepare for the Third Convention and fifth | anniversary celebration of our Or- der, to open in New York City on | |May 5th and te remain in session for six days. Simultaneous with and as a part of this National Convention, all of the language sections of the Order will hold national conferences to the 1930 census occupational figures, | charge, police requested that he be | consider the problems of the fur- the F. E. R. A. estimates that of |held for a further hearing, yester- | ther development and building of | the workers usually engaged in con- struction and maintenance of streets, 48 in every 100 were on re- lief. In coal mining the propor- tion on relief is estimated at 39 per cent, in other mines and quarries at 42 per cent, in tobacco factories at 20 per cent. Other industrial groups showing large proportions on | relief include domestic and per- sonal service, 20 per cent and lum- ber and furniture, 18 per cent. ‘Daily’-—-Easy to Sell, Eas Dear Comrades: It is within the power of anyon ing the Daily Worker if he goes about it in an active, systematic way. To ilustrate: I first began sellin “Dailies” at 14th St. and 7th Ave last August, and sold only 25 copic- the first night. But I did not stop. I kept on harder, In a few days, my average jumped to 73; in a month. to 114. Now, in January, my average for each day this month has gone up to 176 copies. How did I do this? First, the seller must be on time, I make it a point to be on my corner prompt- ly at 7:30 pm. Give readers the certainty that the “Daily” will ap- pear on a corner without fail and habit of coming to that corner, And once you have chosen your post, stay there long enough to give the corner its full play—not less than four hours. Keep the paper in full view! Call | out the different headlines, the brief, clear slogans of the “Daily.” Call the readers’ attention to the} fact that this is not just another| paper, but a workers’ paper. But try not to antagonize non- readers, When I have been asked for the Daily Mirror or the Daily News, I have found it the best policy to direct the person to where they can be obtaned, but recom- mending that he or she read the “Daily” and compare the difference. Out of this I have been able to make a number of steady readers. Take every chance you get to) open conversation with non-read- ers: people waiting for a bus or a street car, or people merely curious about the “Daily.” If they disagree, | leave them with a smi | is proven by the fact that she sends day morning, when the first hear- ing took nlace before Megistrate Fitageraid. The magistrate promptly gave the police another week, hold | ing Lippa on $2,500 bail. The In- ternational Labor Defense is de- | fending Lippa, and raised the bail. | Worker after school and make | expenses. Write to 50 East Thir- | teenth Street, New York. ‘able us their sections and of the Order. | Out of the experiences of our five years of existence, our Third Con- | ention will crystallize policies and | tactics that will enable us to build | and lead the Order on to quicker | growth, to more activities and to | greater achievements. The Con- | vention will make organizational Plans and will generate the neces- sary spirit and enthusiasm to en- | to build our Order in the y MARY E, MOORE, one of the} most active and beloved Negro lead- ers of Boston, who declared that she “will not stop in the subscrip- tion contest until she is on board the boat that will carry her to the May Day celebration in the Soviet | Union.” That this is no idle boast | three yearly subscriptions with her entry into the contest. Shock Brigader Moore's past record shows her energy and de- termination, She was instrumental in raising more money for the Scottsboro boys’ defense than any one else in the New England dis- trict. She was Communist candidate | for the State Legislature, from the! South End of Boston, last year, | women and youth—but. in Get Sube Great Falls, Mont. Manager Daily Worker Dear Comrade: Please enter my name on the competing list for Daily Worker subs (for a trip to the Soviet Union) and supply me with the necessary special sub blanks for the pu rpose, It is high time that we the work- ers start in in earnest to combat our enemies, and I would be ashamed _ no to do my share, I shall not use any excuse for doing nothing. Comradely yours, L, F. KING. Comrades: ! The enclosed nine subs were se- cured by one sympathizer who at- tended a housewarming party given by the writers’ group of the Madison John Reed Club, At this party a report on the Na- tional Unemployment Insurance Congress was given by the worker who had been sent by the club as a delegate, In his enthusiasm, this sympathizer got nine friends to sub- scribe immediately. Fraternally, Fred Keller, Madison, Wis, few blocks from me, has already built up a circulation of about 70 papers a night, by following them. In conclusion, I believe that not only American workers—men, foreign- born workers, too, have the duty of building up the Daily Worker, In this way the Daily Worker can planted something in them that will take hold later, | To prove that the above tactics ile, You have! are correct, another seller, only a/ really achieve its function, In build- ing up mass sales, the little h- let, “How to Sell the Daily Worker” is of great help. WILLIAM J. CLAY, SHOCK BRIGADERS, CARRIERS, CANVASSERS, ALL WHO SELL THE DAILY WORKER, experiences to the “Daily.” tell your We want a living picture of the Daily Worker in action—before factories, at unin meetings, on street corners, in front of workers’ halls, at mass meetings, in the homes. We want your egperiences in getting subscriptions and in selling the paper to Socialists, A. F. of L, members, farmers, women, white-collar, professional workers. Negro work- Order. The Convention must define con- cretely the tasks of our Order in the class struggle, so that it may most effectively fulfill its rele as a proletarian fraternal benefit or- Ganization. A minimum accom- Plishment of these tasks must be fixed by the Convention for the sections and the city organizations of the Order. Another important problem be- fore the Convention is the estab- lishment of a clearer undersianding on the part of all sections and of the membership of the Order of the importance and the needs of our youth section; we must crystallize out of such a clearer understand- ing a definite plan and material help for the establishment of youth centers and for the development of leadership for the youth section in the fields ef education, sports and other endeavors. The Convention must also dis- cuss further plans for the struggle for social and unemployment insur- ance, and for the support of Social and Unemployment Insurance Bil] HR. 2827. The actual growth of a formidable fraternal united front in most of the important centers of the ceun- try and the development of a na- tional united front of fraternal or- ganizations for the support of this Bill put befere the International Workers Order a special duty; it | must become the cost active part of this united front and thus make it- self the driving and leading force within it. To accomplish this duty the Convention must work out care- ful plans and must mobilize the sec- tions and branches through the Convention delegates for intensive action. Representation te the Convention is based on the numerical strength of the branches. Every branch with 75 members or a major fraction thereof is entitled to a delegate. Branches must have at least 35 members by January 1 to be en- titled to one delegate. In accord- ance with Constitutional provisions, branches up to 35 members have no delegate. Branches from 35 to 112 members have one delegate, Branches from 113 to 187 have two delegates, Branches from 188 to 262 have three delegates. Branches from 263 to 337 have four delegates, and so on in the same ratio, By provision of the Constitution, new branches organized after Jan- uary 1 will be entitled to a full- fledged delegate if they reach 35 members or more by April 1. Comrades: To make this anniver- sary Convention of our Order a suc- cess we must assure the fullest rep- resentation of the membership. The Convention must become the reflec- tion of the will and spirit of the membership, The delegations to the Convention, in turn, must bring back to their branches a reflection of the will and spirit of the Con- vention. Therefore the National Ex~- ecutive Committee decided that any Branch that did not have 35 mem~- bers on January Ist and would or- dinarily not be entitled to a dele- gate, will be allowed a full-fledged Those wounded or sick at the, front are dying approximately six) times as rapidly as those who took | no part in the war. Even those mobilized in the rear, neyer subject to shell fire, die two and a half times faster than the strictly civilian population, solely because of the fact that they passed months away from home, in bar- racks in the weather and on army rations. Time has brought many changes |since the war. Many veterans who considered their disability as minor | ailment, now find themselves in- capacitated because of “war vision- jary" or other ailments, which come | to the surface after years of dejec- | tion and discontentment. Yet when jone of these veterans appeals for a pension or compensation, his claim is disallowed. After reviewing the above facts, do our readers consider the veterans worthy of the remaining half of their bonus? Is it just to charge | the veterans interest on the amount already drawn, especially when our government has the crust to charge | the veterans four per cent on their own money, while they lend the tax- payers’ money to the Morgan ship- ping interests and others at one half of one per cent? Peasants Resist Eviction PIEDRAS NEGRAS, Mexico, Jan. 27.—Three sants were killed and two wounded at Villa Union today when virtually the entire agrarian | community there turned out to give | armed resistance to Mexican State | Tangers and Federal troops who sought to evict twenty-five agra- rians from their land holdings. The agrarians had a truckload of | arms and ammunition. BACK H. R .2827 FALL RIVER, Mass., Jan, 27.—_ The Textile Council of the Federa tion Textile Operatives, an indepen- dent union of Fall River, endorsed the Workers Unemployment, Old Age and Social Insurance Bill, H. R, 2827, at the last regular meeting. delegate to the Convention if it will increase its membership to 35 or more by March Ist. Material prepared by the National Executive Committee for the consid- eration of the Conyention will reach the branches in ample time to allow the most intense discussion and to make it possible for them to send to the National Executive Commit- tee the results of these discussions in the form of their own proposals and amendments. For the election of delegates to_ the Convention, the branches shall | be guided by Article IV of the Con- stitution. In conformity with See- tion 2 of that article, the credentials for all delegates elected shall be! transmitted to the National Office | not later than the Ist of April, Forward to 75,000 members by the | Convention! Fraternally, For the N. E. C. of the Order Max Bedacht, General Secretary. immediately took the floor and said, “We want the kind of insurance that will give us immediate cash relief," meaning, of course, H. R. 2827, which they realized was the Bill they needed, and not the Wag- ner-Lewis scheme, which does not previde for the workers that are unemployed at the present time. Strikers Spurn Offer not afferd any ather. ¥ou, undoubtedly, haye definit trouble in your stomach or gall- bladder, but with what information we have, we can be no more definite, except to say that you haye been neglected, or have neglected your- self long enough. ORDER WORKING WOMAN NOW SHEBOYGAN, » Jan. a7—| Trade unions, factory groups, The °F strikers Me wea | clubs, fraternal organizations! Or- Manufacturing Company, Kohler, | der your bundles of the “Working Wis., members of Federal Local) Woman,” 50 E. 13th St., N.¥.C. The 17545 of the American Federation Price is five cents per copy up to of Labor, who have been out since five copies; four cents per copy July 16, haye tumed down the| five to 25 copies; three and a half proposal of the Kahler Company, |°ents Per copy for more than 26. manufacturers of plumbing supplies, to place 200 strikers on the prefer- ential reemployment list. The union points out that no provision is made for 600 other strikers. SUBSCRIPTION BLANK || For the Medical Advisory * | seas ehaeaa Board Magazine wis I wish to subscribe to the Medi- International Lahar Defense Sian al oe ae for 3 Room 610, 80 East 11th Street, year’s subscription, New York City Name . I enclose $,.......-...a8 my immediate contribution te the Seattsboro-Herndon Defense ll Mercere eerrer errr tre seoee State......, Join These Shock Brigaders in the Daily Worker Subscription Contest! DISTRICT 1— Boston, Mass.: William Cageciola Mary E, Moore DISTRICT 2— New York, N. ¥.; Dora Gausner Lorenzo Stokes Clara Reimer S, Soulounia Albert Marki Bill Clay, Jr. Ben Fin) Hudson DISTRICT 4— Syracuse, N. ¥,: Virginia Dix Ontonagon, Mich.: Arvola Ted DISTRICT &— Chicago, TL.: A. A, Larson Sam Hammersmark Walter Johnson DISTRICT 5— Omaha, Neb.: Pittsburgh, Pa.: Calvin Kibbe Brown DISTRICT 14— DISTRICT 6— Little Falls, N. 3: Cleyeland, Ohio: Ki George Stefanik lame ae ied Jerry Ziska F. Pravenzano Anna Schotsneider Union City, N. J: DISTRICT 7— Camillo John Calissi ase ay ee Benjamin Abromowitz Ben Green DISTRICT 18— A, Kazamihas Milwaukee, Wis.: R. Shark Walter Richter : John Klein Louis Powell Win a Free Trip to the Soviet Union!