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| Page Six oC Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. 1113 W, Washington Blvd., Chicago, Il. Phone Monroe 4714 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Sy mall (In Chicago only); $8.00 per year $4.50 six months $2.50 three months aie caanannas By mal! (outside of Chicago): $8.00 per year $2.00 three months Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 1113 w. Washington Bivd., Chicago, #1, ——___. J, LOUIS ENGDAHL WILLIAM F, DUNNE MORITZ J, LOWS. Watered aa second-class mail Septem cago, Ill., under the weesessstenersacettersem ECILOTS, Business Manager ber 21, 1923, at the post-office at Chk aot of March 3, 1879. Advertising rates on appiteation, “Dollar Diplomacy” in Nicaragua Dollar diplomacy at Washi of what it terms “bolshe Grande stretching all the way to bevause it professes especially ‘to stand aghast at every show of sym- iy displayed by the Mexican government for its,sister republics ta Central America, including Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, | Nicaragua, Costa Rica and. Panama. Diaz has been hurriedly warships with the inevitable mariz verial’sm, are on the job te sup stablishes its “protectorate” over ngton feels very much outraged vistie activities’south of the Rio the Panama Canal. is charged that Mexico is interfering in the internal affairs | sua. That privilege dollar diplomacy reserves for itself. | recognized by Washington and the vangugard of Ame press all opposition. Washington Nicaragua, seeking to make it an- 1eS, ther colony of American finance. The Washington corresponde ferring to alleged activities of Mexico in Nicaragua,’ says that, ‘Presumably, the chief purpose of this interference is the fostering of radical propaganda and Bolshevist philosophy.” This is the usual charge of to be nervous. His department s ds claim law issue controve’ nt of the Ass Nervous Nellie’* Kellogg, secretary of state, who’ ways has half an eye on Moscow. Now Kellogg has: greater need ees the Tong pending oil and land s, with the religious question sxico, overshadowed by the mutual | thrown in for good measure in Me | relations developing between Mexico and Central America. It is inevitable that Mexico, oppressed by American imperial- isim. should seek its allies among others similarly oppressed. Such allies will be found not only as far as the Panama Canal, but even to the southernmost tip of South America as far as the Straits of Magellan Senator Bora in China. Only yesterday armed intervention Mexican or ot of terroriza will suffer th ‘aimed that if any during this proc countries involved, ment. Washington wishes to isol: the other problems American republics. Instead Wa ‘ making common cause against its Most workers in the United inconsequential spot on America. It doesn’t mean much concern themselves very little wi to the far south. But Nicaragua or Guatemala republic, may be the tinder box th my by, American workers conscripted time for lz best the interests of all oppressed thr (Continued from page 1) ot his military coup of Octo- Kellogg’s Trick, Kellogg bases his grant of recogni- tion of the reactionary Diaz on the pretense that the Nicaraguan con- | gress which “elected” Diaz was the ' one in office when Chamorro drove out 1 the elected government of Salorzano | a year The fact that the liberals | who controlled that congress are now n open revolt, and hence would not i] dare come within the Chamorrist mili- tary zone to vote in the congress, “wakes no impression on Kellogg when he is anaious to prevent the Nicara- fuan liberals from getting back what they won in the last election Rich Stakes, stakes of this bold game are possession of the Nicaraguan bank, the national railw: and rich conces- sions, The liberals had repurchased The tvom the Wall Street bankers their na | tional bank and railroad, and were re- fusing to give away the national wealth in concessions, The bankers backed Chamorro, When he seized the government he began offering these properties for sale in New York, Kellogg was unwilling at first to per- mit the sale of stolen national prop- erty. President Green of the Pan- American Federdtion of Labor pro- tested against this proposed sale of loot. Now, thru formal recognition, Kellogg gives his approval for the dis- posal of the Nicaraguan nation’s rail- road and bank SHINGTON, Nov, 18,—A formal acensation against the Mexican gov- | ermment of having aided Nicaraguan revolutionists, and an equally forma) request for American Intervention to make Mexico stop such activities, wag Miled with the state department today Presideut Diaz of Nicaragua, pup- pet of United States interests ANOTHER SUCCESS FOR THE DAILY WORKER We have just received a check for $29.79 as the proceeds from a DAILY WORKER supper held at Gineburgs Restaurant in, Los, An- bpp Why not similar affairs on nk ors! 4 But today Washington is marines to shoot down the Diaz opposition in Nicaragua. It is boldly h warned the imperialists against sending her outside influence is discovered, tion and subjugation, $3.50 six months | ee can im-} ated Press, in re- then those Karl By THURBER LEWIS ARTICLE I ROM the manner in which the particular star flashed across the sky and then died suddenly “out, it would appear that Henry Ford's famous five-day week did not exactly have the enduring qualities of a planet. We refer to the sensational manner in which the announcement of this great boon, like a meteor, was, catupulted across the innumer- able front pages that constitute the firmament of American pub- Karl Marx licity only to die in the whining and whirring of “ the machinery in Highland Park and Fordson, But there is a reason why the vaunted five-day- week was but a flash in the pan. There is a reason why it was startling for only the moment, Its novelty has been eaten up in tHe realization by the workers themselves that it is just another capitalist fraud. It is a capitalist fraud that Karl Marx exposed in print before 1867. Ford, and when we say Ford we mean, not the man, but the Ford administrative machine, has learned in the process of an advanced type of capitalist production what, Karl Marx analyzed on the b of his study of the capitalist system about the time that Henry was being born. Ford on “Labor Cost.” EAD the books that have been written for Henry by men who know how to write and who have translated the Ford experience tm production to the printed page. Upon what is laid the chief stress? What is the determining factor in the Ford system? The central feature of Ford’s industrial program is What he calls, labor cost. The phenomenal profits made in the Ford industries have been created on the basis of “labor saving” machinery, The entire Ford system works toward the one end: devising means to cut down on the labor used in production and intensifying that labor to a maximum. No one“ disputes this—least of all Ford. What does Karl Marx, the greatest of all'eco- nomists, the economist of the workers, have to ay about it? What Ford technicians call labor, Marx calls labor power. Why? He calls it labor power because he wants to make clear ‘the social aspect of it and also to separate LABOR POWER, as such, from the laborer who gives it because LABOR POWER is what the worker sells to the capitalist. As soon as a Ford worker enters the Highland Park plant he is parted from something that has been bought from him. Ford has leased his brain, his muscle and his energy for eight mn: THE DAILY WORKER Marx on Fordi Ford's 5-Day Week Is a Capital- ist Fraud That Karl Marx Ex- posed Before Henry Was Born—Some Lessons in Marxism with Relation to the Ford Method of Slave Driving. hours. In a word, Ford has bought his labor power, “As soon as his labor really begins,” Says Marx, “it no longer belongs to him.” Ford's Eight Hours. HE worker slaves away for eight hours and Ford's specialists are busy devising meang to make him produce as much in eight hours as pos- sible. Why? Because the biggest profits are derived when, by employing less labor, more’ pro- ducts@afe created. But’ Ford pays his men $6.00 a day. He only works them eight hours. Other capitalists pay less money and work their men more hours, At the same time Ford’s profits are bigger, as a rule, than theirs, How come? Ford’s economists would analyze it in the fol- lowing way. Very simple. The.labor cost is the big cost. The payroll at Highland Park is the biggest daily item of expense. Compared to this the ‘cost of the raw materials is small. We can sell Ford cars at a low price and thus swell our sales’ on: the market only if we can manage to cut dawn the biggest cost of production, that is, the labor cost. So the conveyor system came into: use. So the division of tasks was worked out in detail. So constantly improved machin- ery requiring the application of less and less labor was installed. And so more cars were pro- duced with less expenditure of labor to produce them and profits were consequently greater. All of this is quite true. But it is only half the story. As is usually the case with capitalist ex- Derts, they leave the social implications of their calculations entirely out* of account, They see only the matters directly pertaining to their par- ticular business. ace Marx Goes Deeper. B= Marx saw much more deeply.’ He was not not satisfied with a simple accounting such as that.; He not only wanted to know HOW these things: could be done, but, more important to the exploited worker, WHY they were done and what conditions made it possible. ¥ ¢ sm In this case, for example, Marx was more in- terested in determining the process of making bigger profits by working your men eight hours * a day and paying them six dollars for it, than In the fact that big profits resulted—the chief inter- est for Henry, Well, let us begin. When the Ford worker lets Henry use his labor, or as we prefer to call it, labor power, he gets six dollars in return for | eight hours work. It is as plain as the nose on your face that Henry hag purchased something | And it is as equally when he spends six dollars, plain that the worker has sold something, > What Are Commodities? dl ameds that satisfy a human demand or a want, and are bought and sold are called commodi- ties. Well, that makes the labor power that the worker sold to Ford a commodity, doesn’t it? Henry Ford and William Green would be the last persons to agree with this definition, It is a very vulgar way of expressing it, But is so obvious that the vulgarity has to be excused. Labor power is a commodity as surely as tin lizzies. Why Six a Day? _ No why is it that Henry pays SIX DOLLARS for the use of it? Why doesn’t he pay two dollars or fifty? There must be come basis upon which this is calculated. What could be more logical than to assume that the basis for such a calculation would be how much the worker needs to live on and to keep his family going? Let us assume that the minimum upon which a person can get along according to the standard of living in the United States is four dollars, The facts are that Judge Gary pays his men in the steel plants as low as three dollars, other employers pay four and Ford pays six. From this it is very easy to see that the daily wage is fixed upon the basis of what the worker requires to get along on from day to day and keep on working. We saw that labor power was plainly a com- modity, it satisfies a demand and is exchanged on the market. Now, what is common to all com- modities? Upon what basis are they exchanged? Well, all commodities are useful. That is com- mon to them all. But are they exchanged on this basis? Let us say Ford decided to exchange ten Ford automobiles for a pin point of radium to be used in his hospital. Wouldn’t it require a round table of philosophers to decide upon the relative usefulness of the two? There must be something else common to commodities that de- termine the basis upon which they are exchanged. It is plain. They have all been made by labor. Upon all things that are bought and sold labor power is expended. So that labor power is the thing common to all commodities, (Continued tomorrow) A involved in dealing with the Centra « subject to American profit rule. The ensuing war would be fought U. S. Plans to Take Nicaragua e wrath of the American govern ite the problem in Nicaragua from and South shington will find these countries imperialist aggressions. States look upon “Nicaragua” as the patchwork map of Central to them. The result is that they! go puns the news in Cal Coolldge’s th the grievances of this republic | nome state. Walsh has decisively de- : | teated Butler in Massachusetts, which , or some other Central American °?/¥ two years ago rolled up a major- * * ity for Coolid, 422,645. at will set aflame the nations now ee ace teay pone pep of the fact that the republicans harped for the purposes of murder.” The upon the plea thruout the campaign By BERT MILLER, AVID I. WALSH elected by 40,000 votes! por to prepare against an American “Morocco” is | that a vote for Butler is a vote for now. The interests of the workers in this country are identical with |C°°!dge, in spite of the fact that the ‘usually Silent Cal came out of his shell to send a moving personal appeal ‘for the support of his right-hand man, and in spite of the fact that our par- | Simonious president and his wife even | Went so-far as to make the trip all the way from Washington to Massa- chusetts to vote for his favorite. Coolidge was repudiated! How come? Victory Looked Sure, HEN the campaign opened it looked like a Butler runaway The early operations of his well-iled machine gave promise of an easy vic- tory, Huge clam bakes and outings were arranged during the late summer, at which as many as 10,000 of: the uout both the Americas. MEMBERS OF FLAT JANITORS’ UNION HELD AT INQUEST Face Trial in Shooting of Edward Dunn faithful gathered to hear the republi- ag ne can spellbinders. In a “Pollyannic” Michael Sexton, organizer and busi- »iography of Butler in the Boston Her- ness agent of the Chicago Flat Jani- 2/4 he was painted as the epitome of |tors’ Union; Albert Cress, also a busi- #!! virtues. The Boston labor fakers |ness agent, and Thomas H, Conner, a ‘umed the Labor Day parade into a ‘picket, of the same organization, were "Publican rally after they had suc- yesterday bound over to the grand aor Meu the movement for a jury at an inquest held at the morgue, '#?0T Ucket. charged with the murder of Edward |,, The textile mills picked ub slightly. Dunn, vice-president and organizer of Coolidge, the tarit, 'sn8 Taek ica the Afro-American Janitors’ Union, | became the stirring slogan whic! ingen | who was shot and killed at the corner ‘° Ca'ry the mill-owner candidate to _ victory, | ’ t eaenment and Francisco Aves., las’ i Walsh Silent. | The accused men were represented [)URING this time Walsh was jat the inquest by Attorney William/*~ Strangely silent. Altho a move- Scott Stewart, who defended William ment for Walsh had been started |D. Shepherd on triat tor the murder among the former LaFollette group as jot his foster son, “Billie” McClintock. | ~~ | On the advice of their counsel, all jthree of the accused refused to testi- fy at the inquest, Stewart's line of questioning of the witnesses, who were chiefly police of- |flcers and members of the detective | bureau, indicated the line of defense as being that, after the accused had. called Dunn over to their parked car, jto talk with him, two other Negro The Coolidge slogan, “I need thee, appeared at the entrance to the alley, | Butler,” was broadcasted, and it even jand at the same time, they saw Dunn | entered the religious services of the ‘reach toward his pocket, whereupon | Churches at the Back Bay, | Sexton drew his gun and fired, Just let your imagination take it up | Find No: Revolver. ‘and behold a very large congregation | In his examination of Capt. Will | of some 5,000 people all standing and {fam Kennedy, of the 17th precinct, At-|Joining in the song of six verses: ltorney Stewart brought out the fact | “I need thee every hour, every hour I | that cartridges had been found in need thee, | the pocket of the deceased, Thereup- Stand thou near by, |on, the clothing was put in evidence Temptations lost their power when | and a seareh of the pockets revealed | thou art nigh, a pocket knife with a three-inch blade, I need thee, O I need thee, how mucn, six loaded cartridges, but no revolver, how much I need thee.” ‘j Neither Dunn's wife nor any mem- Chorus, ad libitum, ber of the family appeared at the in. In a big, big church with spires and quest, altho officers were sent out to domes and steeples and towers. Make find and bring in Mrs. Dunn if pos- tt funny, for it was rich in humor to sible, Jdentification.ef the body was the party who has a bit of humor made thrig the tesiimony of friends about them. The congregation poured who wake Phen. . vot its heart to the song. Honor in Boston. Dear Comrad There is an irony about the late election in the state of Massachusetts that deserves the at- ention of your cartoonist, 2 The Bay | Its mem- | Big Business Revolts in Mass early as the spring, the democrats tried to eréate the impression that | Walsh was reluctatit to accept the nomination. This me-worn trick of capitalist politi . But appar- jently the bashful swain was per jsuaded, Walsh subniitted to the over- whelming pressure Of the miasses(?). |He accepted the nomination, In the course of 4 few weeks the jentire picture changed, With a tew | swift, decisive strokes’ the accepted | Butler victory was timed into an igno- | minious defeat. , | “Labor” Supports Walsh. _ JT was not until the’democratic state |+ convention that}the democrats | broke their silence, and then they pro- |claimed as their major plank-—prohi- bition. As the campaign drew into its last two weeks; the democrats brought up their heayy guns. Disre- | Sarding the fact that Walsh was the ‘running mate of William A, Gaston, banker and traction attgrney; that he had not come out squarely for a single [labor issue; that he refused to raise |a finger in behalf of Sacco and Van. |zetti; that by his statements and his record he was clearly shown to be the smooth-tongued spokesman of big business and the enemy of labor, the official machine of the A. F.. of L. endorsed Walsh. The state was lit- erally plastered with letters and hand- bills and posters to show labor's es- teem for Walsh. One poster in par- ticular was most powerful, especially in the mill towns, . It was entitled, “Butler's Prosperity,” and portrayed a ‘mill town, with factories closed, un- jemployed workers idling about, and the legend “Vote for David I, Walsh.” : Effeat of Bankers. BOUT*a week before election day the internati bankers, headed by J. P. Morgan, is: their noto- rious manifesto d ding the aboli- tion of tariff walls {n the interests their investments abroad. This was Letters From Our Readers nally yours, A Comrade, bers are all of the“ faithful, Frater- ‘ Boston, We Spirit in Florida, Dear Editor; 1 in a very good, and also uplifting, conversation with one of the I, W, W. brothers concern- ing the uplift of the laboring class. fam a member of the carpenters’ local union. I am a coléred man and stand for right and honesty, My determina Uon fs to help build and educate my race a8 much as I possibly can, so I am asking you to please send me about 500 copies of your paper that I can distribute among my people. And | very soon we will establish a firm foundation. My alm is to distribute the paper, and after I can show them the necessity for you to help us orgap- ize as & body of workers, My motto is: Together we stand; divided we fall, — close, with de- voted alms. 1 be@ to be your friend, Fe also brother, R. H., Fort Lauderdale, Fla, * yea a direct challenge to the republican party and to Coolidge. Coolidge ac- cepted the challenge and denounced the proposal, adhering firmly to the principles of the high protective tariff. By that act he sealed his doom, and the Massachusetts election was de- cided; The prohibition plank fur- nished an easy bridge for the Lodge |faction of the republican party to | ¢ross over to the Walsh camp. This | Syoup, headed by Mrs, Lodge, Jr., and /Tepresenting the banking interests, as opposed to the manufacturing group ‘(Butler et al.) came out openly for |the wet plank and for Walsh. Neither |the franctic appeals from the white house, nor the attempted terrorization |of mill workers could counteract the ‘disastrous division in the republican |Party. Bis business—ethe international bankers have revolted from Butler and Coolidge, to Walsh and . . . Will it be Al Smith? “OHIO GANG”, By LAURENCE Topp, m Federated Pre: WASHINGTON, Noy. 14.—Washing- ton is seething with discussion—chiefly cynical in tone—of the scandals that attended the Harding regime and the period when Calvin Coolidge was try- ing to stave off the investigation of the graft and corruption which marked |the return of the republican party to Power in the capital. For “Revelry,” * so-called historical novel of that time, has appeared. Samuel Hopkins Adams has thrown jmto a book a | hodgepodge of veiled reference to all |the chief characters in the sordid drama of the Ohio gang and Teapot Dome and the department of justice, The effect is as nauseating as the most disillusioned citizen could expect, The white house is shivering in disgust. Harding Period Story, ‘Willis Markham {s the handsome, easy-going, stand-by-my-friends poli ticlans whom a crooked lobbyist naw shoved into the presidency of the United States. He plays poker, drinks heavily, finds congenial company among criminal characters who love him as a friend and make use of him 4s a tool with which to rob the gov- ernment and the public. Their pri- vate morals are on @ par with ‘their gutter vocabulary, and in, the myste- rious little house on Blue street they gamble and quarrel and fight. There is the “suicide,” the oil stock deal, the cabinet member who last year was unable to pay his taxes, but who sud- denly is able to buy a great ranch, There is the senator who is on their trail, relentless in his pursuit df facts on which to prosecute them for rob: bing the government, There is the Uttle government stenographer who has incriminating documents which the gang must buy. And there is the cabinet officer whose manner is that of private monopoly of goodness in the world. He 1s secretary of state. Finally there comes t lapse of the house of cards, Willis Markham he would hedpomittes, achusetts bee the workers of Massachusetts the election marks a turning point from the recent period of unemploy- ment, wage cuts and speed-ups to a Period of more intense and ruthless attack upon the workers. Walsh and the democrats, in whom many work- ters have blindly placed their trust, will be the willing tools of the banking interests to lower the present tariff | walls, and to seek to reduce the stand- ards of the workers of Massachusetts 0 the starvation level of Germany. Better experiencé will teach them the lesson which the campaign has failed | movement—internatidnal trade union unity against the international unity of the bankers—a labor party of the workers against the parties of capi- talism, Use your brains and your pen to aid the workers in the class struggle, “REVELRY”, NEW BOOK EXPOSING STARTLES CAPITAL is not the first victim of the tragedy that was implied in the reckless arro- gance of the gang. But when he dias, of poison taken by mistake, but which he deliberately refuses to have coun- teracted, his friends conspire to hide the fact that he was poisoned. Ho becomes a martyr, and because he is So represented to the country the trail of the grafters who were his pals is covered, Not a Novel, “Revelry” is not a novel in the lit- erary sense, nor is it historical in the sense of truth of events. But it is a performance which turns up to the reminiscent nostrils of the American people all of the rotting relics of the Harding-Coolidge term. Whether it is published in order to annoy the white house and its satellites or to stimu- late further research into the doings in the Little Green House on K street and in the McLean house on H street, as described before senate committees two years ago, the author does not explain, “There came, too,” he says in the death-bed scene, “the vice-president 80 soon to be president, who looked inscrutably at the dying man out of his fishy eyes and assured him that the Markham policies would be faith. tully adhered to, Vice-President Wi- Mot did not know what the Markham policies were, Nor did Markham, Nor anyone But it made a hit when sent out over the news association wires. \ Coincides with Trial, On the day when a hundred press correspondents were hastily scanving their advance copies of “Revelry,” Albert W, Fall came back to Washing- ton to be arraigned in the federal dis- trict court on charges of conspiracy in the Teapot Dome frauds, His trial is soon to begin, but he has lost none of the assurance which was his when he helped to dominate Warren Harding. He announced that he was confident to, do—organize a strong trade union’ ‘CURRENT EVENTS By T.. J. O'Flaherty. | (Continued from page 1) | sssigned to protect scabs if a supply | of liquid encouragement were not on hand? And if all our police are tm- _prisoned where can a reliable distri- buting agency be found? Those are \serious questions Mr, Mayor, almost as serious as; “When are you going to start digging that subway?” | 7 @ re O*® of the funniest bits of news that happened this week was the action of the Cuban government in handing his papers to the Uruguayan minister after an incident (very likely in a cafe) when the Uruguayan said to the Cuban that Cuba was not a self-governing eountry but merely: a dependency of the United . States. | Small men—in brain as well as phy- |sique—are usually more conceited |than those of heavier proportions, and the same plies to countries, parti. jeularly if their independence 4s in such a deplorable position as Cuba's is. P | “ee CARTER the Cuban used all his. di- | plomacy to seduce the Uruguayan into impaling himself on his (the Cuban’s) sword, he disappointedly re- jsorted to more civilized methods of |warfare, He induced the Cuban govern- ment to break off relations with Uru- guay. But. as soon as Washington jheard about it, Kellogg threw a fit jand ‘Cuba resumed diplomatic. rela- tions. Uncle Sam is not going to have any one of his puppies disturb the serenity of the imperfalist kennel, | "i see F is said that doctors differ and pa: | tients die tho death is rather \swifter when they agree, And yet | compared to reporters doctors are al- Ways unanimous as to whether a pa- tient has tuberculosis or an infected tooth. While driving a smart sports model the princess Ileana ran into a truck, Both vehicles were hurt, One | Paper hadvit that when the irate truck |driver learned that a queen ran into |him, so to speak, he became incoher- ent and with hat in hand hoped that the princess wasn’t hurt. Another news- paper equally reliable stated empha- | tically that the truck driver declared a princess was nothing in his young life and wanted to know who was going to pay the damage to hig fender. Another reason why you should read The DAILY WORKER. eee : ING BENJAMIN PURNELL of the House of David has hunted all his religious competitors off the front page, You all know Ben, if not because of his business, at least on account of his whiskers, Ben had a nice line and made so much money that other rel!- sious sects got jealous and ratted on him. Ben called himself king, declared | that he got the appointment from god |and assured his followers that as long |as they obeyed him they would never | all his converts from their worldly goods, which they would no longer need he said,\as long as they depended on him, They could also work for nothing but had their room and board |free, in addition to such diversion as | Ben could afford to dispense to such |& numerous following. | see | BEN would not be in the toils of the |7? law today had not some of his followers died. -But did that feaze | Ben? It was the fault of the deceased! |Had they really obeyed their king | they could not have died, And Ben's |logie did not have a single hole in it | Ben knew that he would die some day | but his motto was: “After me the un- |dertaker.” However, greedy eyes were ;cast on the king’s riches and it was {suddenly discovered. that Ben was | living according to some of the most ;sodly characters in the bible, taking junto himself many of the fairest | daughters of Israel, Whether Ben gets | to. jail or not is a doubtful question |but it is almost a certainty that by | the time he gets thru with his lawyers | he will not-+have enough money to take | his favorite girl to a movie, ‘ iF ederation of Russian Schools Will Give Concert-Dance Nov. The Federation of Russian Ohil- dren’s Schools of Chicago and vicinity will give a concert and dance Sunday, Nov, 28, at Schoenhoffen Hall, corner Ashland and Milwaukee avenues, The following will participate in the pro- gram: Russian Singing Soctety, Prei- heit String Orchestra of 45 people, Russian folk dancer, A, Kotov; Manya Moller, soprano; Ivan Polkov, . bari- tone, and many others, at 3:30 p, m, Tickets in advance, 30 cents; at the doors, 65 cents, Russian Women Will 4 s Give Affair Dec. 5 A performance concert and dance will be given by the Russian Progres- sive Women’s Mutual Aid Society, Sunday, Dec, 6, at Shoenhoffen Hall; cor, Milwaukee and Ashland Aves, All friendly organizations’ are. re- quested not to arrange other affairs on that date. y ee on AY P7ininay Nor KE | die, taking the precaution to separate’ = y!