The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 4, 1927, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

GOVERNOR TRIES! Minor charge Against | IN KLAN OUTRAGE Page Two j THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1927 TO STOP ARRESTS 3 Floggers for Beating Alabama Negro to Death’ LINDEN, Ata Nov. 3.—Three | white men are today held on bail | | h for flogging L.| | “CRIME” MEETING HEARS CALL FOR BUSINESS ARMIES |22 Demands Made By | Colorado Miners | (Continued from Page One) cordance with the state industrial law | whose purpose is to prohibit strikes. The Demands. The demands endorsed by the Laf- ayette conference, which lay stress on strike activity | no discrimination for |and call for the release of all arrested | ° [Release Féur Conmuumist Deputies From Jail For | French Chamber Sessions | PARIS, Nov. 8—Faced with! | prolonged debate over the new | | budget, the Chamber of Deputies | { | i, | The celebration of the tenth anni-| | | versary of the Russian revolution by} Speakers: |the workers of the United States will! jlast for an entire week. Besides the |mass meetings arranged for all parts) of the country, many affairs of a so- cial character are scheduled. '(Meetings All Over the Country for the Tenth; || Anniversary Celebration of Bolshevik Revolution Street Hall, 35 Waltham St., R. Shohan and R. Zelms. Providence, R. I., Nov 8. 20 p. A. C, A. Hall, 1753 Westminister St. Speakers: Bishop Brown, L. Nar- della and L. Marks, chairman. { Springfield, Mass., Nov. 7th, 8 p. Waltha: ere coh », until he died. | | A a s A 3 | | convened today after a recess of|| Meetings have already been ar-jm., Liberty Hall, 592 Dwight St. \labama Executive Put 'Coolidge Will Addr OSS | strikers before the miners retwm £0) more than three months | |ranged as follows: [Speakers: Bishop Brown and Max| ae gdh | The first act of the chamber was | J Minnesota Tours, Lerner. ™ Office by K.K.K. ‘TGOMERY, Nov. 3. — between Governor Bibb abama and Attorney ( s McCall Ku reported today Klux | ps, sae lips } whipping. The three | to be members of the which has com floggings in this within the last] Capitalists and Cops WASHINGTON, D. C., A wide-spread “vigilante” armed business men with a “decen. tralized force of trained marksmen’ town and county police deputies” was advocated yesterday at the National | Conference on the Reduction of | oommittees at all coal mines in the} 1. We demand restoration of the | Jacksonville wage scale. This scale is |rado whether affected by this strike | or not. . 2. All disputes arising in any one | |working on a “private subsidy of| mine to be settled by the mine com-|‘ fees mittee. 3. We demand recognition of mine} | |to vote by 264 to 221 for the re-| | lease from prison of four Commu-| | nist deputies so that they may at- | | tend the sessions. They had been| |imprisoned for political offenses. | INSURGENTS OUT | St. Paul, Nov. 5; Minnesota, Nov.! )8; Superior, Wis., Nov. 7, 7:30 p. m.; | Duluth, Nov. 7, 8:30 p. m., Iron |Range, Nov. 8. Benjamin Gitlow | | speaks at the above meetings. | Ohio Meetings. Akron, Nov. 18, 2:30 p.m. i. Am- ter, H. Scott. 50 Howard street. Philadelphia and Anthracite. The Philadelphia meeting will be held Friday, Nov. 4th, at Labor Insti- | tute, 808 Locust Ave., with William |. Dunne and Jack Stachel as speak- ers. William F. Dunne will speak at/| Wilkes-Barre on Saturday, Noy. 5. Connecticut Celebration. Cleveland, Noy. 6, 2:30 p. m. A.| Bittelman, I. Amter, E. Boich, F. Yes-| Stamford, New Haven and Bridge-{ port will have mectings on Nov. 6} i Both the governor and the attorney || Crime, a meeting of prosecutors, po- #43 | é ‘ ; 2 ng a bat- a 4 , |state of Colorado and recognition of} sikoff (YWL), Revolutionary Play,|amd Hartford on Nov. 11. All meet- snera ere elected by K. K. | ; : 2 | , y and Hartford on Nov. | coe hi h ea ms eas — He had been | /lice officers, business men and “wel-|the state executive board elected by |and Concert. Moose Hall, 1000 Wal-|ings are in the evening except votes, but whereas the governor con- 5 ‘ fate workers” ‘under the chairman- inf ihe qatarandseer- : pine me VAS } tintied loyal to the “Invisible Em- mainor | | ship ef I Teubesshatl Sr + | the coal miners of the state and rep: {nut street. | Rridgeport which is in the afternoon. cise” MeCall had a f. ak wal at that | |Ship of F. Trubee Davison, assistant |,esenting all the coal miners of the| |. Canton, Nov. 6, 7:80 p.m. A. Bit-| Waterbury will hold its celebration } ee Ehices of fhe tae aan aa hems ar. However, | | Secretary of war for aviation. It was ctate, . | |telman, H. Scott. boa Mou B began to gzaoke z anos s isa oe dge at Great- jumated aay RIOS army might| 4, We demand recognition of the| i D N Cincinnati, Nov. 6, 7:30 p. m. T.} Rocky Mountain Meetings. H De ‘crimes. ; r sold the car] | be useful in labor struggles. check weighman at all tipples in all| | Johnson. | Great Falls, Mont., S. J. Clark, Nov. 1 : Mites Weis: eccured. against he wire ee “Guilty Till Proved Innocent.” —_| the coal mines of Colorado, such check | — | Toledo, Nov. 13, Prominent speak- 1 ; = 0 eg eae tbs lesa ed out the : r vas y|weighmen to be elected by miners} yq7+ * . | ers. Butter, Mont., S. J. Clark, Nov. 6. hirty Klansme: 5 Cae eas | The conference was attended by|weighmen to Cee ee | » rs | ers. ; Butter, Mont., S. J. Clark, Nov. 6. Seaeeaating 102 Aches ties fisee : * the Negro to] | about three hundred delegates. All|working at the respective rainos;| WVLlL Start Dr iveAgains | Youngstown, Nov. 6, 2:30 p.m. J.| Rock Springs, Wyo., Pioneers, Nov. 8 EE SA ated hapeodesten ee ath. of the first day’s speeches were in|check weighmen to be paid by the) Millionaire |Brahtin, L. Sirotnik (YWL). 369 ¥.|5. ; : ‘ defenseless victin’ and other favor of stricter laws, more severe | miners. | Federal St. Rock Springs, Wyo., Y. W. L., Nov. counties other Klansmen w ed for still other outrages. Governor (¢ v ment defending the K. K. K., and is making an effort to shut off all funds used in prosecuting in the flogging | cases, Three Anti-Fascists Arrested; No Charge| Cleveland Workless. lnvade City Hall; Force Concessions CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 3.—Five | hundred of this city’s unemployed in- (Continued from Page One) | vaded the city council today and un- erush all opposition to the murderous | der the leadership of Sadie Van Veen, fascist regime in Italy. He is fi-| Joe Hudson, John Foley and James nanced by funds supplied by the Ital- Corregan, demanded work or relief. ian government and his sole object | City manager Hopkins denied the is the destruction of all anti-fascist |¢*!stence of unemployment tho mem- feeling in New York.” |bers of the welfare committee one To Fight Workers. | after the other were forced to admit Meant idi Revel. is ‘head of the| “DSt the situation wWanibad. assist League of. North, Ameri Israel Amter, District organizer of a, Se ah Re is ald’ by: the Greco ritte | the Workers (Communist) Party who r be ss was sitting in the audience, took the defense committee to be directing the| floor and denounced the council for prosecution of those two workers and | its failure to do anything until com- the three new defendants. |pelled by the unemployment council. “We are in a position to prove that | Chairman Sulzman tried without suc- the case against the two suspects is|cess to prevent Amter from speaking. being built in the district attorney’s| The demonstration forced the hand office with the direct aid of the fas-| of the wellfare committee which was | eist government in Italy,” Tresca said.| obliged to provide food and shelter “Unless the courts of New York| for all those who registered. The| punishments, and the requirement of less evidence to convict. District Attorney Joab H. Banton of New York made a long and de-| tailed plea for a change in the laws which would allow the conviction as accessories to crime of persons in possession of stolen property even where it could not be shown that they knew the property was stolen. He argued that in order to destroy the “fence” evil, it was necessary to procure convictions on a showing that the purchase of the stolen goods was made under “suspicious” circumstan- ces. The statute “should throw on the receiver the burden of proof,” said Banton. Briber Prosecutors. The speech calling for armed busi- ness men and expert sharpshooters was made by James E. Baum, deputy manager of the American Bankers’ Association. In addition to private subsidy of police officers and the vig- ilante organizations, he advocated private subsidy of county prosecutors to insure their~ activity in securing convictions. A beginning has been made in the creation of these private armies in Illinois and Iowa. | | Hours and Working Conditions. 5. We demand strict enforcement lof all state mining laws on the part of both employers and employes. 6. We demand strict enforcement of the eight-hour day. 7. We-demand that there shall be no ‘discrimination against any em- ploye when he demands enforcement of the state mining laws or complains to the management about working | conditions. 8. We demand that no miner shall be discharged until his case is re- ferred to. the mine committee, 9. We demand that there shall be no discrimination on account of age when men are employed. 10. We demand that mine foremen shall not place an inexperienced man with an experienced miner unless with the consent of the latter. Special Provisions. 11. All dead work shall be paid for. in accordance with the Jacksonville scale. 12. We demand that in all narrow work yardage shall be paid in accord- | ance with the Jacksonville scale. | 13. We demand that all material) (such as rails, ties, props, spikes, etc., | and all material necessary for work) and safety) shall be delivered and un-| J. m. WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—The in-|_ Warren, Nov. 6, 7:30 p. surgent republican senators, holding /Brahtin. Hippodrome Bldg. conferences here, are preparing to go) Martinsferry, Nov. 6, 2:30 p. m.| into the field with an attack upon |Carl Hacker. Hungarian Hall. | the candidacy of Frank O. Lowden,| Yorkville, Nov. 6, 7:30 p.m. Carl} who has been campaigning for more |Hacker. Miners’ Hall. | than three years in the farm terri- | Pittsburgh and Vicinity. | tory of the middle-west. Lowden is! The Pittsburgh meeting will be| recognized as a stalking horse for|held Sunday evening, Nov. 6, at 8} Vice President Charles G. Dawes and |o’clock at Labor Lyceum. On Satur- is not regarded as a candidate in his|day evening, Noy. 5, Ambridge will own name. jcelebrate and on Sunday afternoon at His candidacy is regarded as de-: 2:80 there will be a meeting at Ar- 5 | Manna, Wyo., Y. W. L., Nov. 5. Denver, Colo., M. Oehler, Nov. 13. Pueblo, Colo., M. Oehler, Nov. 6. Kansas City, Mo., J. Lovestone, Nov. 6. Omaha, Neb., J. Lovestone. Buffalo will have its celebration at the Workers Party Hall on Nov. 6, in the evening, while Erie, Pa., will hold its meeting in the afternoon, with Pat Devine at both places. Detroit will hold its meeting on signed to secure pledges of state |nold. H. M. Wicks will be the speak-| Nov. 6, in the Arena Gardens with delegations at the national republican convention and then, at the proper time, throw them to Dawes or some other candidate, in an effort to de- prive the insurgent bloc of the sup- port it would have in a straight fight against the machine. Secret Gonfab on Lowden. A secret conference between a number of middle-west senators was held yesterday in the office of Smith W. Brookhart, senator from Iowa, at which plans were made to have Sena- tors Nye and Frazier of North Da- kota open the fight on Lowden. The “insurgents” are supporting Senator Nonis of Nebraska as their candidate for the republican nomina- tion for president of the United States. er at all the above meetings. Boston and Vicinity. | Norwood, Mass., Nov. 5th, 7:30 p.! m. Lithuanian Hall, 13 St. George Avenue. Speakers: Bishop Wm. M. Brown and Dr. Konikow. | Concord, N. H., Nov. 5th, 8 p. m..| Oak Hall, W. Concord. Speaker: Al Binch, Wilton, N. H., Nov. 5th, 8 p. m.,| Stanton Hall. | Lanesville, Mass., Nov. 5th, 8 p. m.,| New Hall. Speaker: Jack Karas. | Gardner, Mass., Nov. 5th, 8 p. m., Casino Hall, 75 Main St. Speaker: H, J. Canter. ‘Boston, Mass., Nov. 6th, 2 p. m., Scenic Auditorium, 12 Berkeley St. (Corner Tremont). Speakers: Ber- Robert Minor as the princival speak- | er. On Nov. 4th Albert Weisbord speaks at Flint, Mich., and at Muske- gon on the 18th. New Jersey Elizabeth, 3. p. m. Nov. 6, Sunday. Labor Lyceum, 517 Court St. Sam Nessin, Paul Crouch. Perth Amboy, & p. m. Crouch, Primoff, Kovess. Jersey City, 8 p. m. Nov. 7, Mon- day. Ukrainian Hall, 160 Mercer St. Markoff, Crouch. Paterson, Helvetia Hall, Nov. 11, Friday, 8 p.m. Wm. Z. Foster, Lif- shitz. Newark, 8 p. m. Nov. 13, Sunday. Ukrainian Hall, 53 Beacon St. H. M. 308 Elm St. Wm. H. Taft, chief justice of the | jtram D. Wolfe, S. Weisman, A. Bail,| Wicks, Pat Devine, Pat Toohey. Pes ee St. Louis Affair. Chairman; Nat Kay, YWL; apd Rob-| West New York, Labor Lyceum, 3 p. | e St. Louis meeting of so-called | ert Zelms in Russian. m. Nov. 13. Juliet Stuart Poyntz and farm organizations of several states | Lynn, Mass., Nov. 7th, 8 p. m., Las-| others. ‘a Pek de by the insurgents 88 @/ters Hall, 34 Monroe St. Worcester,| Passaic, 7 p. m. Nov. 13. Workers’ a = performance organized by the| Mass, Nov. 6th, 8 p. m., Belmont|/Home, 27 Dayton Ave. J. J. Ballam, | Lowden crowd and directed against Hall, 54 Belmont {§t. Speakers: Ber- |J. O. Bentall, Paul Crouch. act quickly all the pressure of the| welfare committee arranged to meet | é take .. |loaded by company employes at the Italian government will be thrown| with the unemployed to work out a bees ae caer rola ha atl ce, bversively into our situation It is| relief plan. While the committee de- | Cociiawe are all scheduled to address |,, i All shots must be fired by shot well-known fact that Detectiv: ies is oe are all scheduled to address |firers in accordance with the state . who arrested Grecco and Car- ashe che he | i . mining laws. a fascist sympathizer and chamber. The speakers who Gn ea ates | Safety Demand. constantly in the company of Di| addressed the unemployed workers | liberated in a separate room the un- employed held a meeting in the city The American legal system must) 15, We demand that all powder Revel.” | pointed out that the councillors were ‘i }only making pre-election promises and that only thru organization could | they secure their demands. ‘Manchester Mills Juggle Records to ‘Tenth Anniversary Number Articles and stories by people who have lived in Russia, who know what has been going on, and who tell all about it in November issue be reformed immediately to “render new trials impossible except for real injustice” and to abolish the practice of selecting juries of weak intelli- gence, Chief Justice William Howard Taft, of the United States supreme court, declared here today in an ad- dress to the National Crime Commis- sion. The hundreds of delegates present took Taft’s speech as a reference to | the long drawn out litigation in the | naval oil eases. Justice Siddons, who must be delivered at the place by the companies in insulated: cars, instead! of a coal miner packing. | | 16. In order to insure the produc- |tion of clean and marketable coal, it} is hereby provided that it is the duty of miners to load the coal as nearly} as possible free from all impurities. | | 17. All wage, adjustments, suspen-| |sions or strikes must be settled by the lrank and file of Colorado miners thru |the medium of the state executive |board to be elected at the state min-| . | H H | presided at the Teapot Dome trial, | at ; | [ | |was the first to congratulate Tate |" convention next year. | MANCHESTER, N. H., (P) Nov. | moskeag mills, up the river from | vowell, are continuing their fight for | tax reduction. The holding company | |has turned down an offer of $42,000,- | 000 for these “largest-in-the-world” | cotton and worsted mills. | | Amoskeag is not poor, although its! books have not always shown a sur- vce profit in the last few years. The | manufacturing company has quick net | jas: of over 24 millions, the hold-| after the speech. TrainmenDemandWage Increase on 55 Roads CLEVELAND, Nov. 3 (FP).—De- mand of a wage increase of 19 per cent, or approximately $1 a day, has been filed with 55 western railroads by the Brotherhood of Railroad Train- men, it is headquarters. announced at manasl| | Elect Board. } The state executive board consists) jof seven men, six members and a} \chairman. The state executive board | has the right to call conventions and} |conferences of the coal miners of the} | state of Colorado and participate in| jall disputes and settlements between | miners and operators when they shall joceur. All settlements or agreements | made by the state executive board jmust be submitted to referendum of Colorado coal miners either by dis-| | trict or as a whole before ratification. | the farm bloc in the senate. The fact that the Coolidge administration pol- icy on farm relief was condemned was a mere camouflage, the real pur- pose being to condemn the “progres- sive blov,” in behalf of Lowden or Dawes. Much noise is being made by ‘the | insurgents, but the old guard doesn’t bother itself about them except to proceed to weaken them as much as possible. They will make a little noise and then proceed to support the reaction, as they have done in the past. “National Advertisers” Captured by Big Fellows The Associat of National ad- vertisers at its eighteenth meeting Wednesday sank deeper into the con- trol of the bigger business interests, and has adopted a number of resolu- tions opposed to small business. Wm. A. Hart, advertising director of E. I. do Pont de Nemours & Co., one of the rising factions in steel, chemicals, tram D. Wolfe .speaker at both | places. ; Fitchburg, Mass., Noy. 6th, 8 p. m.,! Girls Club Hall, 9 Prichard St. Speak- er: Fred E. Beal. Quincy, Mass., Nov. 6th, 8 p. m.,| Malnati Hall, 4 Liberty St. Speaker: | | Nat Kay. | | Maynard Mass., Nov. 6th, 7 p. m.,| '60 Tenth Anniversary ‘Meetings Will Be Held ‘In Minnesota District | By NORMAN H. TALLENTIRE. | The Workers Communist Party in District Nine, Minnesota, in addition to many other activities, has laid out an intensive organizational and agite- tion program which is to be opened | with the: running of sixty meetings lin the District to commemorate the |Tenth Anniversary of the proletarian revolution. These meetings are arranged by the | Party in collaboration with the Work- ers Clubs and other organizations, to | | Pacific Coast Meetings. Seattle—Saturday, Nov. 5th, at 8 p. m., Peoples Temple, 1819 8th Ave.: Festival and ball with costumes rep- resenting many nationalities; Sunday, Noy. 6th, at 8 p. m., Peoples Temple, 1819 8th Ave.: Big mass meeting and demonstration, speakers in many languages for few minutes and the following speakers in English: Aaron Fislerman, District Organizer; Oliver Carlson of Chicago, Emma Legar, D. G. O’Hanrahan and Y.W.L. Comrade. Tacoma—Sunday afternoon at 2, Labor Temple, city annex. Speakers: Aaron Fislerman, District Organizer; Oliver Carlson, Educator, of Chicago; Local Comrade, and Y.W.L. Comrade. Aberdeen—Saturday, Nov. 12th at 8 p. m., Workers’ Hall, 718 East Ist St. Speakers: Oliver Carlson, Educa- tor, of Chicago; Emil Paras, editor Toveri; Y.W.L. Comrade. Juanita—Saturday, Nov. 5th, at 8 p. m., social and meeting, Finnish Hall. Speakers: H. Anderson, Y.W.L. Comrade; Oliver Carlson, Educator, of Chicago. Woodland-Kalama—Saturday, Nov. of NEW MASSES. ANouae Suites Ge Watt cere for ‘an increase similar to. the one Members of the state executive hoard | Motors, ete, was elected president of |be held throughout all Minnesota, |19+h, Finnish Hall, at 8 p.m. Social THEM | R EYE- | 684,000, but the American Wool and |awarded trainmen on the southern and |¢a" be recalled at any time by a spe-| Me, isoclation, Jt. i. Keim, sales (northern Wisconsin’ and Northern ang ‘meeting. Speakers: Aaron Fis- Dee atte ow Cotton Reporter claims replacement | eastern roads was refused by an ar- | cial convention: called - by. the bocalls lengthy and visiotia attack on eu : earn aie ea ui 4 ae pevatilen URE CFG BREE a dat Lae TEN YEARS HAVE PASSED value would be more than 50 million.|bitration board. That increase was | branches thruout the state. Members ntting? aay acimhnis OF corn tutt sig roti get ear bg otek i pena wey lola, Secretary Finnish Fraction Joseph Freeman Amoskeag holds over 24 millions|7% per cent. Existing agreements |of the state executive board must be|' foul reason BP Sere mai ame eae “Aeikkin Sage *|D.E.C.; ¥.W.L. Comrade. fay REED AND THE REAL in Liberty bonds and a quarter mil-| With the roads expire March 1, 1928, |actual workers employed in the coal! +) 1:0 and novel claims for produate Tallentire, EO. uowmsaneny Oscar |: Portland—-Saturday, Nov. 20th, at Pe Michael Gold lion of Imperial Russian government ES ce mines of the state of Colorado when | avertised was age big gs illes Surce 1"Ske jedi. 6 pane wins De iy sccial a aR aU dae ce LAND AND BREAD AND PEACE | bonds (1921) which it values at $30,-| NOT TO DIE IL MARCH. |elected. The state executive board at) i torests, as the big ys ial aaa Th at ee iad seed ine ian ‘en tana Ave.; Sunday, Nov. 18th, at 8 p i a | 000. Profit for last year is registered] INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 3.—John|the present consists of the following:| tapies, | ” | the meetings in the outlying sections, (2; Mi 1:W.W. Hall, 22745 Yambil St. | ANOTHER UNKNOWN soLprrr | 8 _ $66,053, but by the government|Hall, slated to die in the electric) Karl Clemmens, chairman; ED ones S eee. :|Mass mesting. Speakers: Aaron Fis- os Rose Struns jmethod of accounting is $1,184,687,|chair at the Michigan City state |Sishroy, William B. Spatlin, K. S.) lerman, District Organizer; F. Palm, AN ENGINE man REPRODU ION OF LITHOGRAPH POS 109 YEARS R SIAN MOVIES Ernestine Evans WHAT ABOUT THE DICTATORSHIP? H. N. Brailsford IS THIS SLA Robert W. Dunn CLASS WAR BULLETINS Anna Rochester DON’T MISS THIS THRILLING NUMBER SUBSCRIBE! 25 Cents a Copy $1.00 Five Mos. 1.@NIN WA R Max E. RUSSIAN R RY? THE NEW MAS: 39 Union Square NEW YORK, N. Y. Enclosed $.. mos. subscription, | before depreciation. Amoskeag broke |the United Textile Workers union prison tomorrow, was granted a stay. of execution until March 9, 1928, by|Alfred Aparicio. | peeee--- ee. VS i | Address, after Oct. 25th: | 43 E, 125th St, New York, N. Y.| Now: 111% Washington Blvd. | Chicago, Il, % | | i ¢ SEPT..OCTOBER ISSUE Just off the press. Table of Contents: The Murder of Sacco and Vanzetti . By ROBERT MINOR. American Militarism By A. G. BOSSE. | The Convention of the Pan- American Labor Federation By ARNOLD ROLLER. Whither Wuhan By S&%-TOH-LI. China and American Imperialist Policy ByeBARL BROWDER. With Marx and Engels By AVROM LANDY. | Wartin, Tom Harris, Vinko Mihajlich, | No Discrimination. | 18. We demand that all contract) work outside the Jacksonville agree- ment be abolished: 19. In work in loading and mining coal there must be not more than two men in two places and always two places for two men. 20. There shall be no discrimination against any employe in the coal mines of the state of Colorado on ¢- count of participation in the present | strike. | 21. We demand that all coal mining {camps in Colorado shall be open for | labor organizers to come and go with- out interference, | 22. We demand that the coal strike {operators withdraw all charges they |may have made against miners ar-| | rested for picketing and that they use their best influence with the county authorities to set them free immedi- ately. If not, we cannot return to work until the said prisoners are set free and the charges withdrawn. | BOSTON PROHIBITS SUNDAY BREAD. | BOSTON, Nov. 8.—‘Bread run- the sale or delivery of bread and cake, and Europe. In rial edition ZETTI—by BUILD THE DAILY WORKER! | The. [FEandDEATH FSACCOansVANZETM oom er Sa QO poems EUGENE LYONS | A new book on the world famous case of the two courageous martyrs of Labor. With photographs of all peo- ple involved in the case and cartoons from leading newspapers of America $1.50 THE CASE OF SACCO-VAN- CARTOONS ON THE SACCO- The DAILY WORKER Book DerarTMENT 33 First Street, New York a beautiful memo- ¥F. Frankfurter Cloth—$1,00 | three Y.W.L. Comrade. Juneau, Alaska—Sunday, Nov. 6th, social and meeting. Speaker's: Local comrades, Ketchikan, Alaska—Sunday, Nov. 6th, social and meeting. Speakers: Local comrades. The following meetings, , dates, halls and assignments of English speakers to be announced: Ihwaco, J. Oravanian; Winlock, A. ° Koskelainen; Raymond, A. N. Kos-, kela; South Prairie, J. Hannull; Ken’ J. Wiirres; Astoria, K. K. Hakola; Svenson, H. Lepisto, i Other cities yet to be arranged. New York and Chicago. On Sunday, Nov. 6, there will be big demonstrations in New York City at the New Star Casino and the Central Opera House in Man- hattan and Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, In Chicago, on Nav. 6, Jay Love- stone will be the principal speaker. A number of other meetings have been arranged but no definite date has been assigned them. Among them are Denver and Pueblo .Colo., at which Hugo Oehler will speak; Butte and Great Falls, Mont., where Stanley Clark will speak. Baltimore will have a meeting that is not yet completely arranged. Further, information regarding meetings, halls, speakers, etc., will be published in The DAILY WORKER as soon as possible. FOR SALE on newsstands in New York, Boston, Detroit, Cleveland, , F ; Wee creer a) cade “angeles, Prisco, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, ete, ning” and “cake running” take their | ae ba: has Meetings up-state are being ar- _— 2 place along with rum running here ae ore Ba ranged for Pat Devine at Rochester, SUBSCRIPTION: on Sunday when the police begin en- . 8.25 Syracuse, Schenectady and other BD MAOLGRD iyi, vias ase Ne Fe forcing the ancient blue law against places.

Other pages from this issue: