The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 27, 1929, Page 2

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PRES, BOYLAN TELLS WORKERS THEY ARE LAZY Had Struck to Protect Old Miners The striket region, the A. broke another stri miners, at Olyphant five hundred min United ™ Wor! who had gone on s' to protest the firing of old mine and taking on of new ones, were forced back to work by John president of District No Mine Workers of Amer officials of his machin On April 22, Olyphant, the mi: and other r Temple, \ddy Creek DAIL¥. WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1929 ial for Coming War In Air Train School Pupi school pupils are being broken in for war by the militarists Breaks St PORTO RICAN NEGROES MUCH EXPLOITED HERE Pay High Rents for Miserable Rooms (Continued from Page One) kee enlightenment. They tried to eve the enacles of the monster only to find themselves caught in its flame and fire. During the last six years this wave of immigration grew and is still growing today. Porto Ricans, being natives of United States, can pass the statute of liberty, in as many numbers as they please. They are allowed to seek slavery nearer the torch of liberty if they choose. As a result of the Porto Rican hurricanes the immigration has swelled considerably. Many Are Negroes. It must be remembered that many of the Porto Ricans are-Negroes. It is estimated that 60 per cent of the Strike of the Anthracite Miners at Olyphant, $$" May Day in California By E. GARDOS, Organizer District No. 13 (Califor- nia), Communist Party. May Day in the “Golden State” must be one of mobilization for coming struggles. Thanks to its strategical location, natural re-)| MAY DAY APPEAL | | TOU. S. WORKERS: a Un sources and cheap labor, this west- ern stronghold of American im- perialism is constantly surging for- “Down. Tools,” Is Call | ward as an important military and| to Militant Labor industrial center, A “melting pot” of all the immi- (Céattauad: Pram Page Oow) |and the intensification of the at- grant European, Asiatic, Latin- American and other races, a labora-| ¢201.5 by the bosses and their agents | upon the whole working class. tory of practically every problem “On the first of May, 1929, the facing our movement, from argricul-| | Trade Union Educational League, tural work to seamen through the hundreds of unorganized industries, | \ hich has led the warksra tute bat tle on many sectors of the class-war a center of anti-imperialist and/| Labia ets) ea front, notes with hope and joy the militant western traditions with the | increasing mood of the workers for revolutionary experiences of scores’ struggle against the vicious speed- of countries—California gives an up systems, wage-cuts and worsen- excellent basis for carrying 0n| ing conditions which have given rise Communist work, — |to increasing radicalization.” Strategic Military Position The manifesto tells of the origin Occupying one-half of the Pacific, of May Day as International Labor | coast, the sea ports of San Francisco| Day in the eight-hour agitation in| and San Pedro, the San Diego na-| the U. S. and points out that in the} val base, the Vallejo shipyards and| basic industries the 9, 10, and 12- T.UEL, ISSUES MOBILIZE FOR MAY DA the rapidly growing air ports give| colliery, Hudson Coal ¢ voted to p A. strike and the ne mine was unction with the war department, as illustrated by the con- completely shut do They voted! struction of this baby blimp by junior high school pupils at Long to call out Gracie Mine, also of the| Beach, Cal. Hudson Coal Co., and the next day Porto Ricans in New York City are| California a strategical importance Negroes. | in connection with the coming war, The Porto Rican toilers of the soil be it against the Soviet Union or! Whan'a committee of Boylan officials | “The Working Woman” Opens appeared at the mine, and prevented Campaign for New Readers them from going out. Eee WEISBORD URGES After this strike-breaking act, the officials, together with John Boylan, | District 1 president, attended a The subscription campaign for the Working Woman, published by the National Women’s Department of |came to New York City, and found | Mexico, China or Japan. And in} | that not only must they live in filthy | the fight against the war danger | of |and crowded tenements, but that|the hundreds of thousands they would be constantly subjected | Mexicans, Chinese, Japanese, Philip- |to the ripping teeth of the saw of|pino and other oppressed people discrimination and racial prejudice. | are responsive allies of the revolu- Their lot is even worse than that tionary whites and Negroes against of American Negroes. They do no'| the éommon enemy. hour day is still worked. It tells of | the unemployment and low wages | in this, the richest country in the world, and the creation of a per- manent, unemployed army in times | of “prosperity.” It calls for a fight by the workers to secure social insurance against | |unemployment, old age, sickness, ac- | cident and disease. It specifies so- cial insurance shall be charged | against the industries and the state, and not against the workers, but strikers meeting called at 1 o’clock at Labor Temple, Olyphant. Here the strikers were ordered back to work by the Boylan machine, Boylan himself taking part in the strike- breaking, telling the workers to go back the next day. When some pro- tested at the low wages they were getting, besides the fact that old miners were replaced by new ones, Boylan said “Those of you who dont make much money, are lazy, that’s the trouble with you.” Miners Silenced. The miners were not permitted to have the floor, on threat of vio- lence. “Sit down or we'll knock you down” was the way the Boylan machine controlled the meeting. The men were not allowed to take a vote —just ordered back to work, Boylan trying to soft-pedal his strike- breaking by sayin; After your'e back at work, if everything isn’t ar- ranged -all right, we'll call you out on Friday.” Many miners present openly stated amongst themselves that this action of the Boylan machine was another example of strike breaking and bit- terly resented it. Copiesef the Coal Digger were hamded to all the miners present, by membets”of the National Miners Union, who also were unable to get the floor at the meeting. IMPEACH LONE ON 15 COUNTS House Adjourns Voting Last 8 Charges BATON ROUGE, La., April 26.— The Louisiana house of representa- tives voted eight additional impeach- ment charges, contained in an omni- bus- bill, against Governor Huey P. Long, today and then adjourned. The vote was 59 to 39, one of the strongest polled by anti-administra- tion forces. The senate was to convene today to receive official notification from the house it had indicted the | governor on 15 counts, Senate Must Try Him. The senate will then resolve it- self into a trial court. The gov- ernor will be notified of its action and given a minimum of 15 days in which to prepare his defense. The omnibus measure contained eight specific charges against the | executive: 1.—Requiring undated resigna- the Communist Party, U. S. A,, is now going «n. The slogan of “20,000 subscriptions for the country” is be- ing heard by women in the shops, | : : | factories, stores and the homes, and {many work have already re- sponded. Rose W of the Needle Trades Work Industrial Union, said last night: “The Working Woman is fulfilling a long felt need not only for the women in industries where there is no organization at all, but for women in the organized industries as well. “The women in the needle trades in particular appreciate the im- | portance of the Working Woman in | the present period when we have em- barked in a campaign to organize the thousands of unorganized women |in our industry. Thru the Working Woman we can reach many wokers to whom we have no other access | and bring them the message of ‘ unionism, — | “The women in the needle uwades | will give their full support to the orking Woman and work toward the end of making it the center of | activity for the working women, the | mass organ that will champion their | interests, give them hope and cour- jage to fight militantly against the bosses, and all reactionary forces. “We are confident that the mem- | bers of our Union will contribute | their share to extend the influence of the Working Woman and see that | it reaches out to every shop and fac- tory where working women are ex- ploited.” The next issue of the Working Woman will be out May 1. Sub- scriptions received at 43 E. 125th St., New York. | SubpoenaWarder,State know the language. The sound of foreign syllables added to the color of the skin gave the exploiters the excuse to make a doubly strong sound and color larrier of frenzied hatred. They learned this soon enough. Textile Workers to At- They found that real estate men | would not rent them apartments, un- | tend Celebration less they would live in Negro Har-| “The armed terror inaugurated by |lem, where every available bit of | the National Guard of South Caro-| space was taken and where the| lina,” Albert Weisbord, secretary- | shears of rent z:a‘ses cut many lives | treasurer, of the National Textile to pieces. Workers Union stated last night, “is They also learned this, when Ly |2 glaring example of the lengths to | mere force of numbers, they broke | which the employing class is ready | their way into lower Harlem, and | to go in its frantic efforts to stem were allowed to live in large num-| the growing tide of militancy and| bers when the landlords discovered | desire for organization among the{that they could use the color of | workers. New York is not @ their skins and the strange sounds | stranger to such methods—witness of their language to demand higher ; the police terror against pickets in| rents, the cafeteria strike and the recent) Many Porto Rican Negroes were | dressmakers’ strike. The bosses|weleomed to the tune of street, have not yet dared to use the bay-| fights and the splash of blood. They | onet in the streets of New York City found that there was some strong | against the workers as they are do-| force at work arousing antagonism | ing Gastonia, but there is no ques- | between them and the Jews. The | tion that Mr, Walker and Mr. | petty bourgeoisie of Harlem—own-| Whalen will not hesitate to use the|ers of small grocery stores and) same methods, when they find it | other businesses, many of them, | necessary, to do so. * | Jews—were threatened by the grow- | Gives Endorsement. ing tide of immigration. Some, “The National Textile Workers | Porto Ricans turned into petty | Union appeals to the workers of | bourgeois themselves, opening small | New York City to make the May dingy grocery stores and poached | Day meeting at the Coliseum ajupon the property of the Jewish | rousing and demonstrative protest | businessmen. The antagonism which against the rule of the bayonet and | developed grew out of. this competi- | the police club, with which the | tion between the petty businessmen American bosses are seeking to/of different nationalities. Jewish! MAY 1 TURNOUT shackle them to the doom of merci- ‘less speed-up, wage cuts and ruth- less exploitation, and imperialist war, a demonstration of sympathy for the striking textile slaves of the South.” AG a Window Cleaners to Attend. At a pusheart vendors found that Latin-| American housewives would buy | from men of their own color. | The landlords had no small part| to play in instilling this antagonism, They took advantage of color and) languages to set up different scales of rent, refusing to give the least} comfort to the newcomers, In industrial and agricultural! ‘pan be administered by the work- output, this so-called tourist state |° ne ae mel p c j ers, is putting others to shame. The| "the ‘T, U, E, L, statement calls fast growth is due to the natural for 9 fight against the war danger, resources, to the very cheap labor) the speed-up and wage cuts, Jim power of not only the Mexican and | Crowism, segregation and lynching Negro workers, but also of the/of the Negro workers ,and_ points whites, who, misled by the high-! out the significance of the Cleveland pressured publicity about the land Trade Union Unity Convention. of “sunshine and happiness,” went Se west in order to find the lowest wages, the greatest unemployment STORM DESTROYS | and the absence of labor unions. | The organization of the unorganized, | from the oil, steel, rubber, automo- | bile, shipyard, etc., workers to the seamen, agrarian laborers, fruit pickers the leading of many strug- gles, usually arising spontaneously, must be our tasks. Leader of Mass Struggles. r j The Communist Party of Bae Hundt eds Injured nia, if it wants to make good on| ATLANTA, Ga., April 26.—A vic- the great tasks before it, must throw tim of the severe tornado which itself into work, orientating itself| spread destruction, especially in the toward the factories, drawing the | poorer sections of Georgia and South most highly exploited masses into| Carolina yesterday, Mrs. C. 0. New- its ranks, A unified Communist! ton awoke last night to find rain Party in California, entrenched.-in| and hail beating on her face. Her the factories, the organizer of the! roughly constructed home had been unorganized, the leader of anti-| blown down while she slept. Around militarist and anti-imperialist work, | her were the bodies of her four chil- fulfilling its historical mission—this | dren. The total known dead in the is the message of May Day in Dis-| storm-swept area is now 71. Several trict No. 13. hundred are injured. —_— Tronically termed Happy Hill, the On May Day—mobilize for the | entire Negro “reservation” of the struggle against colonal oppres- {town of Cochran was practically sion! Long live the revolutionary | wiped out. At Statesboro, Ga., nine struggle for the liberation of the | Negro children were killed in one cppressed peoples! house during the storm. Statesboro is reported to be the heaviest hit. in _ Town authorities were forced to ap- peal to the Georgia Board of Health for nurses. But the Negro victims are not likely to get very much of this emergeney aid. New Guide Book to 71 Dead in Georgia; Communist Party San Francisco Plans MayDayDemonstration SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—For the | NEGRO DISTRICT! meeting of the window | first time in many years, San Fran- late | \Bank Superintendent jin City Trust Exposure A subpoena was issued yesterday for the appearance of Frank H. Warder, former superintendent of banks, before Henry K. Davis, ref- eree in the bankruptcy proceedings now under way on the City Trust | Co. The subpoena was obtained by | the Royal Indemnity Company. When told that the man who, as state banking head approved the City Trust Co. of his friend and benefactor, Ferrari, just before it crashed with a loss of $5,000,000, was planning to slip abroad, Gov- ernor Lehman expressed no concern. | He made the rather incredible state- ment that he expected Warder to “give his fullest cooperation” in the investigation. Out of this antagonism between | the petty vendors there grew street | fights, murders, stabbings, It‘ was dorsed, and all window cleaners were |angerous for two Porto Rican | called upon to.attend in mass. This | Negroes, during the period of these | action was previously indorsed at a|®ttificially instilled riots, to be! meeting of shop chairman and the | heard talking Spanish on the streets. | executive board of the union. Presi-| , The workers of all races and na- dent Thomas Owerkin declared that | tionalities have no reason for such as far as the Window Cleaners |4"tagonism. The causes of the race | Union is concerned, the members| Tits in lower Harlem are a clear Cleaners Union held recently with 700 workers present, the Coliseum meeting was enthusiastically en- would attend as a body at the May First meeting. Out of school on May Day. Workers Library Asks Agents to Rush Orders for May Day Meetings Workers Library Publishers, 53 - tions as a condition of appointment. | 2.--Interference with the school | system. | 8.—Fraudulently _ attempting to subpoena William Thomas in civil | suit through issuance of a criminal | Expose $100,000 Graft summons. . 4.—Undignified deportment. lin the County Clerk’s 5.—Use of blasphemy in public Office; No Charges Yet utterances. 6.—Being insulting and abusive to | ‘ Nes public officials and private citizens. | A shortage which when it is fully vas, | counted up is expected to amount 4 + a wobbying of members of the \to $100,000 was made public yes- |be rushed to insure prompt delivery : | terayd in the office of the New York {°" May Day meetings. as parole officer while the officer | County Clerk. Some of the Tam-) neglected his duty. | many appointees have been steadily | 3 mg had previously been im- | diverting money to thefr own uses | peached for graft and corruption of |for a number of months. No names the press. are mentioned yet. Supreme Court : y Justice William T. Collins was! 1 > | county clerk in 1928, the period dur. and Former Governor’s ling which the thefts were made. | Brother, Shot in Duel OLIVF HILL, Ky., April 26,— Police Chief B. B. Carter and Justin | Fields, brother of former governor | W. J. Fields, were wounded in a gun duel in front of the City Hall here ‘and Deputy Sheriff James Walker, ‘of Grahn, a bystander, was struck by a stray bullet. | The shooting started when Sheriff _ Carter attempted to search Fields who came to the City Hall pending | trial on a charge of alleged drunken- ness. Fields was arrested last De~ cember, but the ease had been con- |E. 125th St., asks all city, sub-dis- trict and district literature agents of the Communist Party to make a careful check of all literature on hand and to order new books and ;pamphlets at once, to be sold at May Day mectings. Workers Library announces it has a supply of new books and pam- |vhlets just off the press which, com- bined with the older publications, can be easily sold. All orders must Workers’ children! on May Day! No school legislature in chambers. $—Mauintaining O. B. Thompson a Don’t seab on the working class hy going to school on May Duy! Don’t scab on the working class by going to school on May Day! “THE MASONIC CHURCH,” “COHESIVE CATHOLICS,” “HILLBILLYISM,” “DR. GLADMAN’S COUNSEL,” and HE STRATON CASE” are some of the titles in the Third nnual Report of the 4A. For free copy, write: ican Ass'n for the Advancement of Atheism, Inc. E. lth St. New York, N. Y. indication of how race barriers are built up by petty trading people and exploiters. The antagonism was made all the stronger when the chain stores began putting these |small fry out of business, making | their, struggle for profits all the | sharper. More Discrimination. On top of all this, and in addi- | tion to discrimination when they | tried to work for bread, the Porto Rican Negroes found that the ex-j cisco is going to celebrate May Day under the direct auspices of the ‘2 | Communist Party. May 1, 1929,, Aid to Travellers) will be celebrated by all Commu-| nist workers and sympathizers at . The arrival of the travel season Eagle’s Hall, 278 Golden Gate Ave., finds travel agencies all over the under direct Party auspices with| country devoting special attention the fullest drawing in of unions to the Soviet Union. Curiosity and and other workers organizations. | interest are steadily augmenting the New Policy. stream of travellers to that vast This decision to come out openly, country. New conditions, new with the Party’s face symbolizes) names, new objects of interest have the change in leadership in District created a demand for a new guide No. 13, an earnest effort to elimi-| book to the Soviet Union. To meet nate the right mistakes which made | this growing demand, International this district so notorious in the past. | Publishers have published a “Guide The failure to see the enormous | Book to the Soviet Union,” prepared changes the entire labor movement! by the Soviet Union Society for went through—including our Party Cultural Relations With Foreign —the inability of the former lead-| Countries. ih ership to apply the Party’s policy| This volume, which is of con- re | venient pocket size, is te first com- Ve Me tneak guoaiuions, 190520 the prehensive guide to the Soviet Union. the Soviet Union Is keeping up of the International La- Police Chief, Sheriff ploiters here had developed their system of barbed-wire fences of racial prejudice into so subtle a net- bor Day Federation, which during the past few years narrowed down to the Party and its close sym- work, that in the radiating point of! pathizing organizations, | which enlightment, degree of color offered | would endorse the Party meeting as | the occasion for another grade of | wel), | discrimination. They found that there was a barbed-wire fence between them- selves and white Latin-Americans and Creoles. The poisoned fangs of /exploitation and discrimination, hiss \their way through lower Harlem. | In tomorrow’s Daily Worker, read how landlords and bosses | reap the profits of barbed-wire | fences, how the workers are | corralied off into these fenced areas for more vicious exploita- tion. | Tenants of all colors and na- tionalities, of all parts of the country, write your letters to your Daily Worker and tell about the house you live in. A relique of the old socialist party days, with one or two fossils still sticking to it, doesn’t meet with the approval of the militant workers to whom May Day means more than a lukewarm affair with a few pink of dancing. It was therefore to be expected that the news of the Com- munist Party meeting would be greeted with general enthusiasm ex- | cept on the part of a small group! of Right wingers, who, instead of learning their lesson, are still stick- ing to their mistakes. Militant Meeting. The Communist Party meeting at Eagle’s Hall will have no dancing to “draw the crowd.” There will be several good speakers, including | Workers Strike, Prove | x. Gardos, District Organizer of the Communist Party, and also “Loyalty” Boast a Lie spokesmen of the Negro, Mexican, MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (By Mail) | Chinese and other oppressed races. —At the same time anti-union build-| A good musical program will be ing contractors ran an adyertise-|given by the Russian-Ukrainian ment in the capitalist press boast-| Chorus, the South-Slav Orchestra, ing that their workers were “loyal,” | the Pioneers, ete. It is the duty of | “united front” speeches and a lot! the country are also enabled to find All points of interest, both histori-| cal and contemporary, are described | in detail in this 1,000-page book. In, addition to information regarding the social, cultural, political and economic phases of Russian life, the book contains valuable details to meet the everyday needs of the traveler—railreads, hotels, theatres, | museums, art galleries, etc., includ- |ing numerous maps. Economists, educators, scholars, and political students, travelling in and understand the valuable collec- tions of works of art and science | which have been carefully preserved | since the Revolution. G.O.P. Leaders Named | as Liquor Customers in Bootleggers Story) CHARLESTON, W. Va:, April 26, —Prominent republican leaders, members of the state legislature, are named as regular liquor customers of Harold G. Enos, local bootlegger, in a confession before Federal Judge George W. McClintock made known yesterday. Enos declares Republican National Committeeman W, 8. Hallanan as he- | ing only one member of the state | one of the signers of the ad, the C.;every Communist and sympathizer tinued. seit ¥, Haglin Co, had a strike of low-|to support the only meeting held | paid workers on its hands, by the Party in San Francisco, Ca a en legislature who had ordered liquy. | delivered to “delegates and others” at wild parties in local hotels, t (Continued from Page One) O'Fallon, April 28, 7 p.m. Speakers: Kjar, Slinger. Benld, May 5. Speakers, Matheson, Kruse. Hegewich, May 5, Workers Educational Club, 1351 Baltimore Avé } Speaker: Gannes. Springfield, 8 p. m., Richbury Hall, 841 Dwight St. I. Kupisker. Speakers: Zam, g INDIANA. te Gary, 7:30 p, m., Rumanian Hall, 1208 N. Adams St. Speakers: ,, Fisher, Ross. noe IOWA. ine Sioux City, May 3, 8 p. m,, 5181-2 Sth St. Speaker: Roy Stephens, «.- 1 MARYLAND. | . Baltimore, 8 p. m. Speakers: W. Murdoch, YWCL speaker. As F ro. MASSACHUSETTS. ARR) Boston, 8 p. m., Franklin Union Hall. Speaker, Hathaway. Kod New Bedford, 7:30 p. m., Bristol Arena, Purchase St. Speakers, Ae.” Weisbord, A. Bail, E. Keller, and Southern textile striker, eee Gardner, May 5, 12 m., Holmes Park, Speakers: A. Zuorela, J. Kamgus. Winchester, 8 p. m., Belmont Hall, 52 Belmont. MICHIGAN. Detroit, 7:30 p. m., Danceland Auditorium, Woodward near Forest. Speakers: N. Tallentire, others. Pontiac, 7:30 p. m. Speaker: A. Goetz, Flint, 7:30 p, m. Speaker, A. Gerlach. Saginaw, 7:30 p.m. Speaker: A. Ziegler. 2 Grand Rapids, 7:30 p. m. Speaker: J. Schmies " Muskegon, 7:30 p. m. Speaker, P. Raymond. MINNESOTA Minneapolis, 8 p. m. Speakers: P. Devine, YWCL and Local speakers. 2 St. Paul, 7 p. m. Street meeting, 10th and Wabasha (Old Capitol), then parade to 435 Rice St. (indoor meeting, 8 p. m.). Speakers; Pat Devine, C. Korsen, YWCL and Pioneers. f Duluth, 8 p.m. Speakers: H. Puro, W. Watkins, YWCL and others, Chisholm, 8 p. m. Local speakers. MISSOURI. St, Louis, 2 p. m., Amalgamated Clothing Workers Hall, 11th and Franklin Aves. St. Louis, 8 p. m., Hibernian Hall, 3619 Finney Ave. Milgrim, Slinger, Ellman. St. Louis (date later), 1243 No. Garrison Ave. Kansas City, April 30, Open-air meeting. Speaker: Roy Stephens. NEBRASKA. Omaha, 7 p. m., Jefferson Park, 16th & Cass. NEW HAMPSHIRE, West Concorse, May 4, 7:30 p. m., Elk Hall. NEW JERSEY. Newark, 8 p. m., Progressive Labor Center, 93 Mercer St. Speakers: M. J. Olgin, H. Willia I, Potash. Jersey City, 8 p. m., Ukrainian Workers Home, 160 Mercer St. Speak- ers: D. Benjamin, P. Rogers. % New Brunswick, 8 p. m., Workers Home, 11 Plum St. Gussakov, Peters. Speakers: - Speaker: Roy Stephens. Speaker: F. B. Chase. Speakers: A.” Paterson, 8 p. m., Carpenters Hall, 54-6 Van Houten St. Speakers: C, Alexander, Blake. Passaic, 8 p. m., Workers Home, 25 Dayton St. Speakers: A. Markoff, R. Ragozin. Union City, 8:30 p. m., Nepivoda’s Hall, 418 21st St. Speakers: Aw. Bimba, I. Zimmerman, z Perth Amboy, 8 p. m., Workers Home, 308 Elm St. Speakers: Lus- tig, Wright. : aS Elizabeth, May 5, 8 p. m., Liberty Hall, E. 2nd St. Biedenkapp, I. Zimmerman. ¥ Trenton, 8 p. . Speakers: W. Lawrence, YWCL speaker, Bayonne, April 30, Jefferson Club, 35-7 E. 23rd St. Speakers: A. Markoff, M. Pasternak. ? Atlantic City, 8 p. m., Volks Institute, 205 Atlantic Ave. M. Olken, Speakers: F.. Speaker: NEW YORK. “ New York, 4 p. m, N. Y. Coliseum, E. 177th Street and Bronx., River Ave. x Yonkers, May 4, 8 p. m., Workers Cooperative Center, 252 Warbur- < ton Ave, Speakers: Bert Miller,.Richard B, Moore. ' Yonkers, May 4, 4 p. m., street meeting. Manor House Sq. Speakers, Adams, Powers, Nessin, i? Buffalo, 8 p. m., Harugari Frohsin Hall, Genesee and Spring Sts. | Speakers: Chas, Mitchell, I. Green and James Rush, and a Pioneer. ‘7 Rochester, 8 p. m., R. B. I. Auditorium, 172 Clinton Ave. So. Speak- : ers: Franklin Brill, Sam Essman, = Jamestown, 8 p. m., Business College Auditorium, Cherry St. be- tween 3rd and 4th Sts. Speaker: Rudolph Katz. Niagara Falls, 8 p. m., Hippodrome Hall, Pine and 19th Sts. Speak- er: James Campbell. . Schenectady, 8 p. m., Red Man’s Hall, 11 Mohawk Ave., Scatia, N. ¥so Speaker: D. Dwafsky, $4 Utica, May 4, 8 p. m., Labor Lyceum, 131 Washington St. Sam Essman, Prenis, Pioneer. Binghamton, May 5, 8 p. m., Lithuanian Hall, 315 Clinton St. ers: Rudolph Katz, R. Miller, YWL. Syracuse, May 5, 8 p. m., Kosciusko Hall, Tioga and W. Fayette St Speakers: D. Dwafsky and Franklin Brill, Troy, May 5, 2:30 p. m., Youngs Hall, 18-20 State St. Sam Essman. Poughkeepsie, 5 p. m., meeting before De Laval Co. Moore, M. Rees. Speakersr > Speaker i % Speaker?» Speakers: R. By» Little Falls, May 4, 8 p. m., Sokol Hall, 75 Flint St. ale Endicott, May 4, 8 p. m., Kacik Hall, Hill Ave. Speaker: Steflik. Little Neck, L. I, May 4, Fire Hall. we % : OHIO, un Cleveland, 7 p, m., Public Hall. tan Canton, 8 p. m., Canton Music Hall, 87 E. Tuscarara St. Speaker—-. “9 8. Van Veen, Columbus, April 28, 2 p, m,, 581 South St. Speaker: G. Lloyd. ie Warren, May 5, 7 p. m., Walnut St. Speaker— S. Van Veen. f Youngstown, 7:30 p. m., Speaker—D. Martin. Toledo, 7:30 p.m. Speaker—G. Lawrence. Akron, 7:30 p. m. Speaker: Jack Ross. Ashtabula, Apr#i 28. Speaker: J. Marshall. E. Liverpool, April 28, 2 p. m., West 6th Speaker: R. Sivert. Yorkville, April 27, 7 p. m., Misko Bldg. Speaker: S. Van Veen. Akron, 7:30 p. m., Ziegler Hall, Miami St. Speaker: Jack Rose. Toledo, 7:30 p. m., Workers Center, 2011 1-2 Canton St. Speaker; |. . George Lloyd, Salem, May 4, 8 p. m., Czechoslovak Club, 88 Depot St. Elyria, 8 p. m., Workers Home, 5 Woodford St. tick PENNSYLVANIA, bes Pittsburgh, 7:30 p. m., Labor Lyceum, 35 Miller St. f Philadelphia, 8 p. m. Speakers; R. Minor, H. Benjamin, and Negro speaker. 5 Chester, 8 p. m. Speakers: Ben Thomas and a YWCL speaker. ~ Allentown, 8 p. m. Speakers, L. P. Lemley and a YWCL speaker. Wilkes-Barre, 8 p. m. i Scranton, May 4, 6:30 p. m., Workers Center, 508 Lackawanna Ave. Minersville, 8 p, m. Easton and Bethlepem, 8 p. m. - i Erie, May 5, 2:30 p. m., Scandinavian Hall, 701 State St. Speak J, Campbell, Set RHODE ISLAND, Providence, 8 p. m., A.C:A, Hall, 1753 N, Westminster. Speakers: J. R. Reid, L, Nardella. nt ‘East Pittsburgh, May 11, 8 p. m., Workers Hall, Electric & North Ave. WISCONSIN. vie Superior, 8 p. m. Speakers: H. Puro, W. Watkins, YWCL and local. : speakers. “9 Madison, 7:30 p. m. Speaker: Bechtold. : Milwaukee, 8 p. m. Speaker: Cline. Kenosha, 7:30 p. m., German-American Hall, Grawaert. © Racine, 7:30 p. m, Slovak Sokol Hall, 1625 Racine St, Speaker: Kjar, |) Speakers: Early, : TON ome reer tieahe tenant ine

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