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Goodyear Makes Movies Of Its Troubles
Goodyear Makes Movies Of Its Troubles
TitleGoodyear Makes Movies Of Its Troubles
TranscriptionGoodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despite the fact that it was blockaded by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' (photo caption) Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned. Goodyear Makes Movie Of Its Troubles; Paychecks Passed Through Plant 2 Entrances; Vet Marches Again Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is taking movies of its troubles. The locale is the vicinty around Plant 2 gate on S. Martha av. and the players the pickets who have tied up plant operations for more than 24 hours. George Blake,, company, movie cameraman, who has taken thousands of feet of more peaceable scenes, turned his lens on an unusual scene at Goodyear. A short while after Blake went on the job Tuesday afternoon and filmed some crowd scenes, the negatives were on the way to the main office for development. The films were then flashed on the screen in a Goodyear theater room for company officials to view, without getting too close to the actual picket lines. ICICLES FREEZE ON MUSTACHES - . Bitter cold, wind sweeps down along the Little Cuyahoga river across S. Martha av. where Goodyear workers shiver on the picket lines...Little groups of pickets huddle around blazing embers in metal drums...Here and there is a worker with an icicle dangling from his mustache...reddened faces attest the fact that the men have been out on the line for hours...A or wind-break is erected from two-by-fours and canvas but the cold does not diminish...Occasionally a picket goes across the street to the crowded restaurants... Every day is payday in one or another of the many departments in the vast Goodyear (Continued On Page 14) MAKE PICKET MOVIE (Continued From Page One) plant. Tuesday was no exception at Plant 2 despte the fact that it was blockaede by hundreds of workers. The men who called where there for their checks did not enter the building. Instead the pay envelopes were handed out through the front entrance by Paymaster H.W. Clawson. Tony Pnaiczek, 804 Hunt st, was shaking like a leaf when he arrived. Tony had been ill with influenza for several weeks and came to get his aid check. He went away trembling and in greater fear of another attack of the "flu". VETERAN BREAKS 'NO-MARCHING' VOW Herbert Rose was a member of the 134th field artillery when the World war ended. He had been through the thick of some of the worst fighting and was pretty tired marching, also. Home, he often said to his buddies he was "through marching for life." He had had enough, he said. But today—some 17 years later—found Rose on the march again. Only it was a different kind of marching. Rose was a link in the endless chain of marchers that circled in front of Plant 2. He is a tire builder. OFFICIAL WATCHES, FEARS HARDSHIPS A Plant 2 official looked at the picket scene with dismay and misgiving. "Out there" he said, "are men who have long service records. Ten, 15 or 20 years. Some of them have benefits or pensions coming or will have shortly. Suppose this lasts for two or three months? "I tell you it will be bad for the whole city. "Few of these men have any money saved. Most of them live from pay to pay. They'll be broke soon if this thing lasts. "I tell you I don't like it." UNION DENIES PRINTING BILLS The pamphleteers got busy Tuesday afternoon and distributed several hundred handbills through the crowd. The handbills urged the workers to continue their struggle and join the United Rubberworkers' union. Signed by "Communist Workers in Goodyear" The Goodyear union disclaimed the handbills. 'Aha---We're In Movies' Pickets joked at Plant 2 when a movie camera operator set up his tripod Tuesday afternoon to make a picture record of the scene for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The view above depicts workers crowding around an improvised oil barrel stove while the camera turned.
DescriptionGoodyear officials film the strike at Plant 2 as a means of staying informed about happenings at the picket lines. Strikers ham it up for the cameras. Strikers weather the bitter cold. One striker who served in World War I gives up his vow to never march again as he marches with his fellow tire builders on the picket lines.
Date1936-02-19
SubjectGoodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
Strikers
PublisherAkron Beacon Journal
ContributorsAkron-Summit County Public Library
TypeText
Format8.25 in. x 11.25 in.
SourceGT_Goodyear Makes Movies.jpg
LanguageEnglish
RelationBusiness & Government pamphlet file
RightsCopyright owned by the Akron Beacon Journal
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