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_D AILY WORKE R, N VEW SORES TU ue >A APRIL § 30, 1929 Bridgeport Seeks Che eap Labor from N. Y. NMATANT TRADITION OF MAY DAYS Charities; Workers Are Compelled to Go OFFER OPEN SHOP AS INCENTIVE TO - GET UNEMPLOYED.’ Women Bench Hands At 20 Cents Hour | This Means Mill Striker Loses His Home $4.00 Weekly Rental -SUWMARY PROCRELINGS 70 RE NON OF LANDS FLOM TENANTS WHO ROLO a \ 7 \\ OATH 0. XXOXEXIORK Garton __counry- DOA RRRET, Ay Be Nolte AGAINST -_ Odelly Turner The plaintiff maketh oath, that the defendant entered into the possession of a piece of landjin‘said County adjoining the lands of —. G BRIDGEPORT, Conn., April 29 With a population of appro: mately 180,000 from cruit the humblest or the skilled mechanic 1 2s for open shop job local Chamber of} Comme king to consolidate | its supply of cheap labor by im-| portation. | Open Shop Town. “Bridgeport, an open shop town, with its div fied industry, offers exceptional security as to perman- ence of employment the year round,” it declares in a glowing letter to charity societies and other New York organizations from which it hopes to transfer the city’s unemployed. The joble: then ce the prospect— “take the open shop or get off the] list.” iving conditions in Bridgeport are of an exceptionally fine char- acter,” the letter tells prospective | candidates for the open shop. “Golf| courses, tenfiis courts, public bath- | ing beaches and fine streets” are| given as only some of the attrac- tions. Naturally, the means where- by the heavy laborer can enjoy such j exclusive privileges at 37 cents an} hour are carefully omitted. Low Wage Schedule. | “The schedule of wages runs about 20 per cent below that in the New York cxvea for any given classi- fication,” the letter declares. “But living costs are so much lower that the difference in wage scale is more | than compensated for in dollar value.” | “Tt will be necessary for the appli- cant to come prepared to pay his} own fare to Bridgeport,” it is ad- vised. However, “a return railroad ticket will be given the applicant,” the “booster” graciously continues. Women Bench Hands—20c an Hour. | A minimum of 35 cents an hour; is offered “general factory help that) ean read and write English.” Dye- makers are offered 60 cents an hour minimum. Even “professionals” are not exempt from the efficiency wages, for a draftsmen gets a mini- mum of 60 cents an hour, Women bench hands get 20 cents, toolmakers 50, and a first class electrician gets 52 cents. ? ei cemneicies | On May Day—long live the Communist International! Join the ranks of the Communist Party! Hail the world revolution. TENEMENT JOKES BY ‘SOCIALISTS? Wile Away Pleasant) Hours on Housing | (Continued from Page One) the workers by making the rent laws, which had been forced by the pressure of the masses, practically ineffective for the masses in order to arrive at a compromise with the christian socialists and the fascisti. He evidently knows nothing, or pre- tends to, of the housing develop | ments for workers in the Soviet Union. He then proceeded to picture a} state of comfort similar to that under which the workers of Vienna | suffer, if the socialists should he} elected in the municipal elections in| the fall. “Then we will be able to pass laws and bring about a housing condition such as prevails in Vien-| na,” declared Feigenbaum. . Norman Objects. These expectations proved to be too much for Norman Thomas, so- cialist presidential candidate in the Jast general elections, who arose to take the floor after the chairman announced that a great surprise awaited the audience. Thomas was not scheduled to speak, but he would suffer no illusions to remain in the minds of the audience. “I find that I must disagree with Bill Feigenbaum,” declared Norman in his real school-teacher fashion. “Fiven if we were elected in New York City we could not do what they did in Vienna because the constitu- tion here is too strict and it would be hard to get our laws passed. Gg hasin I must ask the lawyers to _ check me up on that. Isn’t that bight: Louis?” A Smug Hypocrite. ‘Louis Waldman, who in a speech the previous session had boasted was a better corporation now than he was five years showed that he did not even sconfidence in the reformist m of the socialists, and fully trated his smug hypocricy. OW WAGES IN CUBA. ‘ANA (By Mail).—The aver- wage here is reported as $2.50 Bricklayers get $3, as do workers. Common labor the Chi- Long live fet acres, under’ leasé trom the pl z that the term of defendant expired on the the defendant. who refuses t® surrender it, biit holds over: that the estate of the plai and'the plaintiff asks to be put in posseision of the premises, Oth-----— day of that the plaintif? has demanded the posséssion of the premises of Aprda_ iff is still subsi inti claims. Mars for rent of the premises from the day of me ot 19. and Dollars for occupation of the premises since the Hea Agent, «tage gate feof — tated = day of — Plaietit This is a sample dispossess notice sent out by the landlord, who s acting for the mill bosscs, telling a striker to get out of his house and sleep on the ground. The Gastonia strikers need not only cover but food. The Wo International Relief calls on all to hurry contributions to its office, No. 1, Union Square, to buy food and provide shelter for these strikers. The Cafeteria Workers’ First May Day By IRVING ROSENBERG (A Cafeteria Striker.) Come out of the kitchen, Come into the sun; The old day is over, The new has begun. Too long have you slaved, Too long bowed your head. Now cast off your chains, The old order is dead. Lift up your head, Look the world in the eye. Fall into the ranks, As the workers march by. March shoulder to shoulder, With the numberless throng; Take your place with the others By whose side-you-belong, March shoulder to shoulder, An army firm and true, You fighting for the others As the others fight for you. March on, March on, Along labor’s great way. March on, March on, On this your first May Day. Let your march step echo Its way around the world, And let the whole world see Another labor flag unfurled. March on, March on, On this your first May Day. The workers await your coming, They’ll help you on your way. On May Day—rally to the | Struggle against imperialist war!- ar to the defense of the Soviet Union! 'Three Are Killed in Coast Airplane Crash | LOS ANGELES, 4 April 29 (UP). |—Three men were killed today when DEVELOP AIRCRAFT. their airplane crashed half a mile} CHICAGO, April 29 (UP).—An |from Mines Field. The exact cause |¢xtra-fare air liner, “The Skyline of the mishap was unknown. The dead are: William Obiatt, snd Ae ae ate eure ae iy e Universal ir Lines Sys- renee Sabai bees gan and | tem tomorrow. Planes will pee the trip in two hours and 40 min- utes, clipping 85 minutes from the Limited,” running between Chicago! On May Day—fight for social insurance against unemployment, sickness and old age; for the or- ganization of the unorganized; for militant, fighting unions. Long live the Cleveland Trade Union | Unity Convention! | time of other ships operated by the company. Down with discrimination against the foreign-born, women and youth workers. Demonstrate your solidarity on May Day, He YOUTH CONGRESS GREET SOUTHERN MILL STRIKERS | at Convention (Continued from Page One) | Plicd in the name of the Convention, and ¢ e worke Northern worker He pointed out the same they have the North and decl d that the ilitaney of |showed that they would not be in- \timidated and that they would build up a fighting militant movement. The discussion on the Party re- port then continued. The following spoke: Marshall of California, Car- |son of California, Carson of Minne- sota, Lurye of Chicago, Gannett of Weisberg, Walker of | California, Shohan of Kansas, Alex- ander Patterson of New York, Har- }man of Kenosha, Rosenberg of N. Y., and Gray of New: Haven. ed, consisting of the following: Woodard of Kansas, Newton of |Boston, Williamson, Zam, Lucy An-| dree of Boston, Schiffman, Schan-} dler of New York, Marks of Chi-| cago, Stengel of Superior, Tashin- |sky of Pittsburgl, Krassavin of De- |troit, Siro of Seattle, Carr of Pitts- burg, Novack of the Anthracite, ie Taft for the Pioneers and the |Party representative, for May Day—fight the speed-up and for the winning of the eight-hour day. Long live the seven-hour day, and the six-hour day for young work- ers! NEGRO DYERS ARE of Conditions By F. BOULDIN. BALTIMORE, M. D. (By Mail). | —Out of the many new industries Jin which Negro labor plays an im- | portant part in Baltimore the clean- | |ing and dyeing business employs | entirely Negro workers. There is no other industry in |Baltimore in which Negro labor so | completely predominates, This is especially true of pressing. The) |Wages here are very low and the | speed-up great. They are often cheated by their employers, who often only yesterday were workers \themselves. Negro pressers must lalways draw money from day to |day to subsist, for their wages are |too small to tide them over the | weelk, Negro workers in general need organization, and a Pressers Union jin the Cleaners and Dyers Union in particular would help them. Our employers are constantly em- ploying new help for lower pay, due to our competition for the jobs. We are constantly getting less and less |money. We must unite and fight rotten conditions in the shops. It lis true that the A. F. of L. never \gave us a chance to organize in |their union. They practiced Jim 'Crowism against us. There is only jone movement where we are re- ceived with open arms in great num- bers as equal members of the work- jing class, the movement built and developed by the Communist Party. 5 Killed, 10 Hurt in Bus-Auto Crash ELKHART, Ind., April 29 (UP). —Five persons were killed and 10 passengers on a Detr‘t-Chicago | motor bus were injured when an | automobile and the bus met head- |on on a curve near Briston today. ees dead were occupants of the au- tomobile. «_ Brenek — dda Here to dor Srdibisimoa bd Flight Photo shows the latest French imperialist flyer, Rene Lefevre, with his scant Hispano Wane, has arrived in the United States planning @ transatlantic flight to boost French imperialiom, pone CarolinaWorkerSpeaks © the unity of the Southern | the Southern’ strikers | A presidium of fifteen was clect-| MOST EXPLOITED | Raltinare Warker Palla | W l, R, CHILDREN GENEVA REJECTS | THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE WORLD The Ame hurdvels of thousands of n workers who on Wedne: day will ¢ - 4 too’ | their revolutionary the workers of the re can look back upon ¢ tant demonstrations ‘ of the past 16 years h viewed recently in the I er, and today we summarize briefly the last fi May D i of Filipino ers on ers in 1 jeral strike with all wo lidarity with of the world des of mili- me of those e been re: y Work- very t plantat rike of oil wor participat- ing. dn Germany the workers who were forbidde monstrate, battled the pd to the Comin | nist Party on demonstr: " and a few days later, the Party polled 4 million votes. In Tokyo 10,000 workers demon- | strated and many were arrested. In | Osaka, a like number paraded and many in Kyoto. In Moscow, hun- dreds of thousands demonstrated at the tomb of Lenin, who had died in Jenuary of that year. Huge Chieago Strike, In Chicago, 100,000 workers struck, including 40,000 men’s cloth- ing workers, thousands of food, building and other workers, The Pullman shops were struck, with the strike gaining momentum daily. | May Day in 1925 was one of mi tant mass demonstrations through- out the world, with frequent clashes with the police. In London, Rome,! Berlin, Copenhagen, there were huge demonstrations, at which many] workers were arrested. Raided Party Headquarters. In headquarters were raided and mem- bers thrown out, their literature | burned, and great hysteria evidenced by the police. | demonstration was held, and a num- |ber of Party members arrested for distributing literature. In 1926, May Day found the great British coal strike under way, fol- lowed by the general strike of four million workers in sympathy with the miners. In Warsaw, there were great demonstrations, with clashes between the Communists and the traitorous socialists. Paris large demonstrations, with 12,000 nd demonstrate | America the Workers Party | In New York, a great | saw | | taxi drivers striking. | New York Workers Demonstrated. onstrations, and in Passaic the tex- 1 the mills. quiet, but in the millions of workers demons’ ed cn the streets thru- out the country, as usual. On May First, 1927, 20,000 work- e> and against interven- with 2,100 women In Yokohama hun- ng ships’ cooks par- ted in the street parade. In jin 309,000 demonstrated, and in nna, 150,000. Union Square Rally. In New York, a large demonstra- tion was held in Union Square, fol- lowed by large indoor meetings in | the evening. | On May Day last year there were great parades and demonstrations throughout the world. In Warsaw, 10 workers were killed and hundreds | wounded, as the socialists tried to | break up the demonstration to Opera in Chin on | Square of over 50,000 workers, led by the Communists. In Berlin, the workers marched for over five hours to Treptow Pary, ted Front Fighters, the Left wing workers defense corps. Vienna Workers Paraded. In Vienna, thousands marched in| ja demonstration led by the Commu- ists, partly in protest against the | jailing of Bela Kun. In Paris there | were two score meetings, despite the | attempt of 12,000 police and republi- can guards to break them up. The | militant workers of Sofia held a} number of demonstrations despite | conditions of brutal illegality, In Mexico City, 75,000 market martyrs. Tokyo, Yokahama, and other Jap- anese cities had great demonstra- tions. In Shanghai, two Commu- nist women were handed over to the nationalists by the French authori- | ties in the foreign concession and executed as a warning to the work- ers against participating in May Day demonstrations. New York militant workers jammed Madison Square Garden with 18,000 May Day demonstrators, |and other big demonstrations were held in hundreds of cities through- | out the country. | SHOW UP HOOVER Denounce . Fake Child Health Day on May 1 The Children’s Section of the | Workers International Relief, has | issued the following May Day call in answer to the hypocritical Child | Health Day which Hoover is trying | | to get the worker§ to celebrate on! May Day: President Hoover has declared the First of May a “Children’s Health Day.” What does it mean to the workers’ children? Does this mean that President Hoover will send relief to the strikers’ children in the South? Does this mean that kitchens will be opened for the millions of children of the four million unemployed workers in this country? Does this mean that the three and one-half mil- lion children who are slaving in the factories, mines and on the farms will be sent back to school, or that their parents will get more pay so that their children won’t have to leave school? Charity For Slaves. & No, it means nothing of that sort. It means that a fev ladies will donate a few dollars for char- ity institutions, where the children of the poor are taught to hate their own class, the working class, and where they are being brought up to be scabs, slaves for the bosses, and soldiers for the bosses’ | wars. Do we, the children of the work- ers, want charity? No. We want | workers’ solidarity. We say, “Every worker's child, for the working class.” We say, “May Day a solidarity day of all wozk- ers’ children in this country.” How can we help these children of the strikers, the children of the unemployed workers? We can help them by organization, We must organize strong children’s sections of the W.LR. to gather relief, to sell meal tickets, to fight child labor, to organize tag days, to run affairs for the purpose of helping all strikers’ children and the children of the unemployed workers, Day of Solidarity. We must build workers’ camps for workers’ children—where thou- sands of children of the workers will improve their health and where they will learn the spirit of workers’ solidarity. We say: Join the Workers International Relief scout groups. Every worker’s child for the working class. We do not want charity, we want workers’ solidarity. Solidarity of the working class children will strengthen, will en- courage, will help the entire work-, ing class. - Workers, stand by your chil- dren. Workers’ children, stand by your class, Act for the health, the Power, the liberation of all workers’ chil- dren and the entire working class _ ARMS CUT PLAN Militarists s Shocked at) | New USSR Program | (Continued from Page One) armaments will not be put until the | Fall. * * Britten Gives Game Away. | WASHINGTON, April 29.—Repre- sentative Britten of the house naval affairs committee issued a statement | today objecting to Gibson’s agree- | ment not to cut army reserves. Brit- ten is in favor of a bigger navy, and | against the large armies of some of the rivals of U. S. imperialism. “This is the second time within ten days that Gibson has played directly into the hands of British and French diplomacy. The first was * | category theory for measuring the naval strength of the five leading powers instead of by Global tonnage as was the case in the Washington conference,” Britten said. “Both of Gibson’s proposals should be very effective in the com- jing British elections although |neither has the slightest chance of acceptance by the League of Nations disarmament preparatory commis- ie for many years to come, if at all. “Tt must not be forgotten that the secret Anglo-French treaty of 1928, which created a storm of disapproval throughout America and England be- [eause it was inimical to the best in- terests of the United States, con- tained the very clause now being sponsored by the American ambas- sador.” Gov. Long Laughs at Senate Graft Charge Notice; Trial May 14 BATON ROUGE, I La., April 29.— Formally served today” with notice of the impeachment charges, on nineteen counts, Gov. Huey P, Long laughed as he glanced through the papers which direct him to appear before the senate at noon on May 14. The grafting governor is appar- ently confident that unless his po- litical enemies outmaneuver him, he will be able to utilize the same legal machinery which enabled him to di- rect his widespread campaign of graft for the purpose of offsetting the charges. Long has begun preparations for his defense. Expert constitutional lawyers will defend his case, though it is believed that the real work of quashing the conviction will be done as much outside the court house as inside, Two thousand dollars is the mod- est sum which the governor is ac- cused of “converting to his own use.” To carry out his schemes it was necessary for him to organize a system of newspaper control and widespread bribery of legislators, From ench Lsqiyrdaren. to hin on- pacity, to each cordl, to his workers | honored the memory of the Hay-| In New York there were big dem- | in Tokyo demonstiated for the| s , 8-hour \led by the Communist Party and the/ | his proposal to accept the British | | DEMONSTRATE MAY ist Workers Everyivhere Will Down Tools That the workers throughout the country are mobilizing enthusias- tically for the celebration of their revolutionary holiday, International Day, can be seen by the steady increase each day in the list of s where May Day parades, factory gate meetings, outdoor demon- rations, and hall meetings are being arranged. Down tools on May Day, is the slogan of the demonstrations, and they will be militant mobilizations against the war danger and attacks upon the Soviet Union and the rising colonial peoples, against capitalist ex- ploitation and rationalization, against yellow socialist reformism and A. F. of L. reaction. Workers! Gather by whole shops for these meetings and show your solidarity with the revolutionary proletariat throughout the rest of the | world, CALIFORNIA. San Francisco, 8 p. m., Eagle Hall, 273 Golden Gate Ave. Speakers: E. Gardos, A. Whitney, D. Ettlinger, Negro, Mexican and YWL speakers, Oakland, April 30, Fraternity Hall, 708 Peralta St, Gardos, A. Whitney, Chaplick, M. Martin. Eureka, Apri] 27. Speaker: E. Gardes. Fort Bragg, April 28. Speaker: E, Gardos. Speakers: E, Sacramento, May 5, Open-air (Park). Speakers: M. Daniels, EB. Gardos, Los Angeles, Details to be announced. DELAWARE. Pa Wilmington, 8 p. m. Speakers: F. Mozer, L. Meldin. ILLINOIS. Chicago, 7:30 p. m., Ashland Auditorium, W. Van Buren St. & Ash- land. Speakers: J. L. Engdahl, Sklar, Griffin. Open-air demon- stration at 6 p. m. at Union Park, Ashland & Washington; then parade to Auditorium, Also 20 noon-day factory gate meetings. Chicago, April 28, 8 p. m., Polish Workers Club, 1555 W. Division Street. Speaker: Masoth. Waukegan, 8 p. m., Workers Hall, 617 Helmholtz. Speaker: Childs. Rockford, 7:30 ‘p. m., Lyran Hall, 7th St, and 4th Ave. Speakers¢ Kruse, Amis. West Frankfort, April 28, 7 p. m., Rex Theatre. Speakers: Kruse, Rice. ee O'Fallon, April 28, 7 p.m. Speakers: Kjar, Slinger. tooling Benld, May 5. Speakers, Matheson, Kruse. ulus Hegewich, May 5, Workers Educational Club, 1351 Baltimore ‘Ave. Speaker: Gannes. Springfield, 8 p. m., Richbury Hall, 841 Dwight St. Speakers: a I. Kupisker. INDIANA. ~ ™, Gary, 7:30 p. m., Rumanian Hall, 1208 N. Adams St. Speakers: her, Ross. w = - st IOWA v 5 — eet | Sioux City, May 3, 8 p.'m., 518 Fifth St. Sioux City, May 3, 8 p. m., 5181-2 5th St. Speaker: Roy Stephen@ 4 KANSAS Kansas City, May 1, 8 p. m., Stanley Hall. Speaker, R. C. Garsin (In Russian). 4 Se coe H & MARYLAND. habs Baltimore, 8 p. m. Speakers: W. Murdoch, YWCL speaker. MICHIGAN. Detroit, 7:30 p. m., Danceland Auditorium, Woodward near Forest. Speakers: Norman H. Tallentire, others. Pontiac, 7:30 p. m., Wolverine Hall, 311-2 W. Pike St. Goetz. Flint, 7:30 p. m., Tilden Hall, 829 Tilden St. Saginaw, 7:30 p. m. Speaker: A. Ziegler. Grand Rapids, 7:30 p. m., Lithuanian S. & D. Hall, 1057 Hamilton Speaker: A. Speaker: A. Gerlach. Ave. Speaker: J. Schmies. Muskegon, 7:30 p. m., Viking Hall, 1504 Palmer Blvd. Speaker: P. Raymond. « shes ial MINNESOTA E ee rome Minneapolis, 8 p. m. Speakers: P. Devine, YWCL and Local speakers. 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. 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, Milgrim, Slinger, Ellman. St. Louis (date later), 1243 No. Garrison Ave. Kansas City, April 30. Open-air meeting. Speaker: Roy Stephens. NEBRASKA i) Omaha, Jefferson Park, 16th and Cass, 7 p. m. Speaker: Roy Stephens. Missouri, (Outdoor) April 30. Omaha, 7 p, m., Jefferson Park, 16th & Cass. NEW YORK. New York, doors open at 4 p. m., N. Y. Coliseum, E. 177th Street and Bronx River Ave. Parade begins at Union Square at 1 p, m. preceded by demonstration in Union Square. 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, Negsin. Buffalo, 8 p. m., Harugari Frohsin Hall, Genesee and Spring Sts. Speakers: Chas, Mitchell, I. Green and James Rush, and a Pioneer. Rochester, 8 p. m., R. B. I. Auditorium, 172 Clinton Ave. So. Speak- ers: Sam Darcy, 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. Y. Speaker: D. Dwafsky, ” 3619 Finney Ave. Speakers: Speaker: Roy Stephens. 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. Speak. ers: Rudolph Katz, R. Miller, YWL. Syracuse, May 5, 8 p. m., Kosciusko Hall, Tioga and W. Fayette Sts. Speakers: D. Dwafsky and Franklin Brill, Speakers: Troy, May 5, 2:30 p. m. Youngs Hall, 18-20 State St. Speaker: Sam Essman. Poughkeepsie, 5 p. m., meeting before De Laval Co. Speakers: Richard B. Moore, Maria Rees. Little Falls, May 4, 8 p. m., Soko? Hall, 75 Flint St. Endicott, May 4, 8 p. m., Kacik Hall, Hill Ave. Speaker: Steflik. Little Neck, L. I, May 4, Fire Hall. ‘ OHIO. Cleveland, 7 p. m., Public Hall. Canton, 8 p. m., Canton Music Hall, 87 E. Tuscarara St. Sadie Van Veen. Columbus, April 28, 2 p. m., 581 South St. Speaker: G. Lloyd, Warren, May 5, 7 p. m., Walnut St. Speaker— S. Van Veen, Youngstown, 7:30 p. m., Speaker—D. Martin. Ashtabula, April 28, Speaker: J. Marshall. E. Liverpool, April 28, 2 p. m., West 6th St. Speaker: R. Sivert, Yorkville, April 27, 7 p. m., Misko Bldg. Speaker: 8S, Van Veen. Akron, 7:30 p. m., Ziegler Hall, Miami St. Speaker: Jack Rose. Toledo, 7:30 p. m., Workers Center, 20111-2 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, Speaker— WISCONSIN. Superior, 8 p. m. Speakers: H. Puro, W. Watkins, YWCL and local speakers. Madison, 7:30 p. m. Speaker: Bechtold. y Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Speaker: Cline. Speakers: D. Early, Kenosha, 7:30 p. m., German-American Hall. Grawaert. ae 7:30 p. m., Slovak Sokol Hall, 1625 Racine St. Speaker: ; Nels